Book Image

Mobile Test Automation with Appium

By : Nishant Verma
Book Image

Mobile Test Automation with Appium

By: Nishant Verma

Overview of this book

Appium is an open source test automation framework for mobile applications. It allows you to test all three types of mobile applications: native, hybrid, and mobile web. It allows you to run the automated tests on actual devices, emulators, and simulators. Today, when every mobile app is made on at least two platforms, iOS and Android, you need a tool that allows you to test across platforms. Having two different frameworks for the same app increases the cost of the product and time to maintain it as well. Appium helps save this cost. With mobile app growth exploding, mobile app automation is mainstream now. In this book, author Nishant Verma provides you with a firm grounding in the concepts of Appium while diving into how to set up appium & Cucumber-jvm test automation framework, implement page object design pattern, automate gestures, test execution on emulators and physical devices, and implement continuous integration with Jenkins. The mobile app we have referenced in this book is Quikr because of its relatively lower learning curve to understand the application. It's a local classifieds shopping app.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
5
Understanding Appium Inspector to Find Locators
7
How to Automate Gestures
9
How to Run Appium Test on Devices and Emulators

Chapter 6. How to Synchronize Tests

In the earlier chapters, we completed the journey of writing a basic test scenario that runs on the emulator. We started with the machine setup, creating an Appium Java project and then writing the first Appium test. We also looked at how to use the Appium inspector to find locators. During this process, we wrote a couple of scenarios and automated them. Robustness and reliability are the traits of a good automated test. However, while writing a test, sometimes we need to keep the test execution speed in sync with the actual app performance; this way, the script won't fail for issues such as the app not loading rapidly. So far, we handled it using Thread.sleep() in our code, which is not the best way to handle synchronization.

In this chapter, we will learn about the following:

  • Different driver types available in Appium
  • Wait strategies:
    • Implicit wait
    • Explicit wait
    • Fluent wait

And we will refactor the code to implement these.