puppeteer/test
2023-01-23 10:09:19 +01:00
..
assets feat: add ability to collect JS code coverage at the function level (#9027) 2022-10-06 23:53:05 +02:00
fixtures chore: use strict typing in tests (#8524) 2022-06-15 12:09:22 +02:00
golden-chromium feat(chromium): roll to Chromium 110.0.5479.0 (r1083080) (#9500) 2023-01-12 11:31:20 +01:00
golden-firefox chore: add missing golden asset for firefox (#9171) 2022-10-27 09:33:38 +00:00
installation chore(deps): Bump glob from 8.0.3 to 8.1.0 (#9531) 2023-01-18 09:12:52 +01:00
src chore: use named import for devtools-protocol module (#9511) 2023-01-17 11:34:57 +00:00
.eslintrc.js chore: use braces in function bodies (#8525) 2022-06-15 12:42:21 +02:00
package.json chore: use test runner for installation tests (#9110) 2022-10-14 13:37:07 +02:00
README.md docs: various doc improvements (#9396) 2022-12-09 13:57:39 +01:00
TestExpectations.json chore: fix bidi expectations (#9562) 2023-01-23 10:09:19 +01:00
TestSuites.json chore: add BiDi integration for Chromium (#9410) 2022-12-20 14:37:31 +00:00
tsconfig.json chore: refactor utils (#9053) 2022-10-06 10:27:14 +02:00

Puppeteer tests

Unit tests in Puppeteer are written using Mocha as the test runner and Expect as the assertions library.

Test state

We have some common setup that runs before each test and is defined in mocha-utils.js.

You can use the getTestState function to read state. It exposes the following that you can use in your tests. These will be reset/tidied between tests automatically for you:

  • puppeteer: an instance of the Puppeteer library. This is exactly what you'd get if you ran require('puppeteer').
  • puppeteerPath: the path to the root source file for Puppeteer.
  • defaultBrowserOptions: the default options the Puppeteer browser is launched from in test mode, so tests can use them and override if required.
  • server: a dummy test server instance (see packages/testserver for more).
  • httpsServer: a dummy test server HTTPS instance (see packages/testserver for more).
  • isFirefox: true if running in Firefox.
  • isChrome: true if running Chromium.
  • isHeadless: true if the test is in headless mode.

If your test needs a browser instance, you can use the setupTestBrowserHooks() function which will automatically configure a browser that will be cleaned between each test suite run. You access this via getTestState().

If your test needs a Puppeteer page and context, you can use the setupTestPageAndContextHooks() function which will configure these. You can access page and context from getTestState() once you have done this.

The best place to look is an existing test to see how they use the helpers.

Skipping tests in specific conditions

To skip tests edit the TestExpecations file. See test runner documentation for more details.

Running tests

  • To run all tests applicable for your platform:
npm test
  • Important: don't forget to first build the code if you're testing local changes:
npm run build && npm test
  • To run a specific test, substitute the it with it.only:
  ...
  it.only('should work', async function() {
    const {server, page} = getTestState();
    const response = await page.goto(server.EMPTY_PAGE);
    expect(response.ok).toBe(true);
  });
  • To disable a specific test, substitute the it with it.skip:
  ...
  it.skip('should work', async function({server, page}) {
    const {server, page} = getTestState();
    const response = await page.goto(server.EMPTY_PAGE);
    expect(response.ok).toBe(true);
  });
  • To run Chrome headful tests:
npm run test:chrome:headful
  • To run tests with custom browser executable:
BINARY=<path-to-executable> npm run test:chrome:headless # Or npm run test:firefox