The Robot Framework not only works on the native python (CPython/pypy
installations ), but also supports Java and .NET based runtimes in the form of Jython and ironpython respectively. While there are some features that are exclusive to native Python-or Jython-based Robot Framework installations, most of the functionality is equivalent on all the runtimes. As people might have different OS and application software a stack setup according to their needs or desires, so they can integrate this tool in their existing runtime without requiring a separate runtime.
Based upon the installer environment used, the Robot Framework will create appropriate startup and post-processing scripts:
Environment |
Startup command |
Post-processing command |
---|---|---|
Python |
|
|
Jython |
|
|
Iron Python |
|
|
In addition to these commands used in starting the execution, the Robot Framework can directly be started through the robot.run
module itself if the standard Robot Framework is installed. This can also be used instead of the standard commands as the commands also call the module internally. The module can be called if the Python command in use is the one that has the Robot Framework installed:
python -m robot.run jython .../run.py ipy -m robot.run
This is handy if the Robot Framework is called by some the Python script. Instead of executing the scripts separately, you can call the framework from inside the same program easily.
The post processing command is useful to recreate test executions in the long run. After the test has been executed, you can save the XML file generated as output without saving any other file. To recreate the report and log files again in future, the rebot
command can be used which takes the XML file as an argument and results in the generation of the log and report files without recalling or running the actual tests again.
The Pybot
command provides the following major options: