Book Image

Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing

By : Carl Cocchiaro
Book Image

Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing

By: Carl Cocchiaro

Overview of this book

The Selenium WebDriver 3.x Technology is an open source API available to test both Browser and Mobile applications. It is completely platform independent in that tests built for one browser or mobile device, will also work on all other browsers and mobile devices. Selenium supports all major development languages which allow it to be tied directly into the technology used to develop the applications. This guide will provide a step-by-step approach to designing and building a data-driven test framework using Selenium WebDriver, Java, and TestNG. The book starts off by introducing users to the Selenium Page Object Design Patterns and D.R.Y Approaches to Software Development. In doing so, it covers designing and building a Selenium WebDriver framework that supports both Browser and Mobile Devices. It will lead the user through a journey of architecting their own framework with a scalable driver class, Java utility classes, JSON Data Provider, Data-Driven Test Classes, and support for third party tools and plugins. Users will learn how to design and build a Selenium Grid from scratch to allow the framework to scale and support different browsers, mobile devices, versions, and platforms, and how they can leverage third party grids in the Cloud like SauceLabs. Other topics covered include designing abstract base and sub-classes, inheritance, dual-driver support, parallel testing, testing multi-branded applications, best practices for using locators, and data encapsulation. Finally, you will be presented with a sample fully-functional framework to get them up and running with the Selenium WebDriver for browser testing. By the end of the book, you will be able to design your own automation testing framework and perform data-driven testing with Selenium WebDriver.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface

Designing base setup classes


When the Selenium page object classes were designed, we created an abstract base class to derive all the common components and methods for each subclass in the framework. This provided a way to reduce the number of elements and code being written, and a way to share common methods among pages.

Now we are dealing with the other side of things: the test classes and data. In this case, we want to design a common setup class using the TestNG annotations for methods, which will perform common setup and teardown for all the classes in a suite. Up to now, we've seen how each test class can create its own setup and teardown methods. Another layer of setup and teardown can precede the test class ones very easily.

Here are some examples:

  • If the user wants to run a set of test classes as part of a <test> section in their suite file, then they would want to invoke and close the browser or mobile application before and after each set of tests execute. You wouldn't want...