# Using Selenium and WebDriver From [ChromeDriver - WebDriver for Chrome][chrome-driver]: > WebDriver is an open source tool for automated testing of web apps across many > browsers. It provides capabilities for navigating to web pages, user input, > JavaScript execution, and more. ChromeDriver is a standalone server which > implements WebDriver's wire protocol for Chromium. It is being developed by > members of the Chromium and WebDriver teams. ## Setting up Spectron [Spectron][spectron] is the officially supported ChromeDriver testing framework for Electron. It is built on top of [WebdriverIO](http://webdriver.io/) and has helpers to access Electron APIs in your tests and bundles ChromeDriver. ```sh $ npm install --save-dev spectron ``` ```javascript // A simple test to verify a visible window is opened with a title const Application = require('spectron').Application const assert = require('assert') const myApp = new Application({ path: '/Applications/MyApp.app/Contents/MacOS/MyApp' }) const verifyWindowIsVisibleWithTitle = async (app) => { await app.start() try { // Check if the window is visible const isVisible = await app.browserWindow.isVisible() // Verify the window is visible assert.strictEqual(isVisible, true) // Get the window's title const title = await app.client.getTitle() // Verify the window's title assert.strictEqual(title, 'My App') } catch (error) { // Log any failures console.error('Test failed', error.message) } // Stop the application await app.stop() } verifyWindowIsVisibleWithTitle(myApp) ``` ## Setting up with WebDriverJs [WebDriverJs](https://code.google.com/p/selenium/wiki/WebDriverJs) provides a Node package for testing with web driver, we will use it as an example. ### 1. Start ChromeDriver First you need to download the `chromedriver` binary, and run it: ```sh $ npm install electron-chromedriver $ ./node_modules/.bin/chromedriver Starting ChromeDriver (v2.10.291558) on port 9515 Only local connections are allowed. ``` Remember the port number `9515`, which will be used later ### 2. Install WebDriverJS ```sh $ npm install selenium-webdriver ``` ### 3. Connect to ChromeDriver The usage of `selenium-webdriver` with Electron is the same with upstream, except that you have to manually specify how to connect chrome driver and where to find Electron's binary: ```javascript const webdriver = require('selenium-webdriver') const driver = new webdriver.Builder() // The "9515" is the port opened by chrome driver. .usingServer('http://localhost:9515') .withCapabilities({ chromeOptions: { // Here is the path to your Electron binary. binary: '/Path-to-Your-App.app/Contents/MacOS/Electron' } }) .forBrowser('electron') .build() driver.get('http://www.google.com') driver.findElement(webdriver.By.name('q')).sendKeys('webdriver') driver.findElement(webdriver.By.name('btnG')).click() driver.wait(() => { return driver.getTitle().then((title) => { return title === 'webdriver - Google Search' }) }, 1000) driver.quit() ``` ## Setting up with WebdriverIO [WebdriverIO](http://webdriver.io/) provides a Node package for testing with web driver. ### 1. Start ChromeDriver First you need to download the `chromedriver` binary, and run it: ```sh $ npm install electron-chromedriver $ ./node_modules/.bin/chromedriver --url-base=wd/hub --port=9515 Starting ChromeDriver (v2.10.291558) on port 9515 Only local connections are allowed. ``` Remember the port number `9515`, which will be used later ### 2. Install WebdriverIO ```sh $ npm install webdriverio ``` ### 3. Connect to chrome driver ```javascript const webdriverio = require('webdriverio') const options = { host: 'localhost', // Use localhost as chrome driver server port: 9515, // "9515" is the port opened by chrome driver. desiredCapabilities: { browserName: 'chrome', chromeOptions: { binary: '/Path-to-Your-App/electron', // Path to your Electron binary. args: [/* cli arguments */] // Optional, perhaps 'app=' + /path/to/your/app/ } } } let client = webdriverio.remote(options) client .init() .url('http://google.com') .setValue('#q', 'webdriverio') .click('#btnG') .getTitle().then((title) => { console.log('Title was: ' + title) }) .end() ``` ## Workflow To test your application without rebuilding Electron, [place](https://github.com/electron/electron/blob/master/docs/tutorial/application-distribution.md) your app source into Electron's resource directory. Alternatively, pass an argument to run with your Electron binary that points to your app's folder. This eliminates the need to copy-paste your app into Electron's resource directory. [chrome-driver]: https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/chromedriver/ [spectron]: https://electronjs.org/spectron