Run Selenium tests more easily with automatic installation and updates for all supported webdrivers.
webdrivers
downloads drivers and directs Selenium to use them. Currently supports:
Works on macOS, Linux, Windows, and Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) v1.
In your Gemfile:
gem 'webdrivers', '~> 4.0', require: false
In your project:
require 'webdrivers'
The drivers will now be automatically downloaded or updated when you launch a browser through Selenium.
If you want webdrivers to only manage specific drivers you can specify one or more as follows:
require 'webdrivers/chromedriver'
require 'webdrivers/geckodriver'
require 'webdrivers/iedriver'
require 'webdrivers/edgedriver'
The default download location is ~/.webdrivers
directory, and this is configurable:
Webdrivers.install_dir = '/webdrivers/install/dir'
Alternatively, you can define the path via the WD_INSTALL_DIR
environment
variable.
If you would like to use a specific (older or beta) version, you can specify it for each driver. Otherwise, the latest (stable) driver will be downloaded and passed to Selenium.
# Chrome
Webdrivers::Chromedriver.required_version = '2.46'
# Firefox
Webdrivers::Geckodriver.required_version = '0.23.0'
# Internet Explorer
Webdrivers::IEdriver.required_version = '3.14.0'
# Edge (Chromium)
Webdrivers::Edgedriver.required_version = '76.0.183.0'
You can explicitly trigger the update in your code, but this will happen automatically when the driver is initialized:
Webdrivers::Chromedriver.update
You can set Webdrivers to only look for updates if the previous check was longer ago than a specified number of seconds.
Webdrivers.cache_time = 86_400 # Default: 86,400 Seconds (24 hours)
Alternatively, you can define this value via the WD_CACHE_TIME
environment
variable. Only set one to avoid confusion.
Cache time will be respected as long as a driver binary exists and the major.minor.build versions of
the browser and the driver match. For example, if you update Chrome or Edge to v76.0.123 and its driver is
still at v76.0.100, webdrivers
will ignore the cache time and update the driver to make sure you're
using a compatible build version.
If there is a proxy between you and the Internet then you will need to configure
the gem to use the proxy. You can do this by calling the configure
method.
Webdrivers.configure do |config|
config.proxy_addr = 'myproxy_address.com'
config.proxy_port = '8080'
config.proxy_user = 'username'
config.proxy_pass = 'password'
end
If you are getting an error like this (especially common on Windows):
SSL_connect returned=1 errno=0 state=SSLv3 read server certificate B: certificate verify failed
Add the following to your Gemfile:
gem "net_http_ssl_fix"
Add the following to your code:
require 'net_http_ssl_fix'
Other solutions are documented on the RubyGems website.
Each driver has its own set of rake
tasks (with Railtie
support) that
you can call once before executing the tests. These are especially
useful if you're running tests in parallel and want to avoid performing
an update check per thread.
If you are using Rails default configuration the webdrivers
gem will only be loaded in the test group
so you will need to specify the test environment when using the tasks:
RAILS_ENV=test rails webdrivers:chromedriver:update
If you are not using Rails, you'll need to load them into your Rakefile like this:
require 'webdrivers'
load 'webdrivers/Rakefile'
The full list of available tasks is:
$ bundle exec rake -T
rake webdrivers:chromedriver:remove # Force remove chromedriver
rake webdrivers:chromedriver:update[version] # Remove and download updated chromedriver if necessary
rake webdrivers:chromedriver:version # Print current chromedriver version
rake webdrivers:edgedriver:remove # Force remove msedgedriver
rake webdrivers:edgedriver:update[version] # Remove and download updated msedgedriver if necessary
rake webdrivers:edgedriver:version # Print current msedgedriver version
rake webdrivers:geckodriver:remove # Force remove geckodriver
rake webdrivers:geckodriver:update[version] # Remove and download updated geckodriver if necessary
rake webdrivers:geckodriver:version # Print current geckodriver version
rake webdrivers:iedriver:remove # Force remove IEDriverServer
rake webdrivers:iedriver:update[version] # Remove and download updated IEDriverServer if necessary
rake webdrivers:iedriver:version # Print current IEDriverServer version
These tasks respect the WD_INSTALL_DIR
, WD_CACHE_TIME
, WD_CHROME_PATH
,
and WD_EDGE_CHROME_PATH
environment variables, which can also be passed
through the rake
command:
$ bundle exec rake webdrivers:chromedriver:update[2.46] webdrivers:geckodriver:update[0.24.0] WD_CACHE_TIME=86_400 WD_INSTALL_DIR='my_dir'
2019-05-20 19:03:01 INFO Webdrivers Updated to chromedriver 2.46.628388
2019-05-20 19:03:04 INFO Webdrivers Updated to geckodriver 0.24.0
Please note that these tasks do not use any of the configurations from your
project (code) and only respect the ENV
variables and the version (optional)
passed to the rake
tasks.
The logging level can be configured for debugging purpose:
Webdrivers.logger.level = :DEBUG
While WSLv1 is not designed to run headful applications like Chrome, it can run exes; as such when found to be running
in WSL, webdrivers
will use the Windows chromedriver.exe
.
It's recommended that you install the new PowerShell (PS7) to avoid a known issue with the console font being changed when calling the old PowerShell (PS5).
You can use chrome headless on WSLv2. Install chrome on the WSL Linux and set WD_USE_WINDOWS=0
to disable WSL detection, this will detect the system as Linux and use the chrome binary on Linux.
The version of chromedriver
will depend on the version of Chrome you are using it with:
- For versions >= 70, the downloaded version of
chromedriver
will match the installed version of Google Chrome. More information here. - For versions <= 69,
chromedriver
version 2.41 will be downloaded. - For beta versions, you'll have to require the beta version of
chromedriver
usingWebdrivers::Chromedriver.required_version
.
The gem looks for the Chrome/Chromium version that chromedriver
will use by default.
You can override this behavior by providing a path to the browser binary you want to use:
Selenium::WebDriver::Chrome.path = '/chromium/install/path/to/binary'
Alternatively, you can define the path via the WD_CHROME_PATH
environment
variable.
This is also required if Google Chrome is not installed in its default location.
Follow the specific instructions here if you're using heroku-buildpack-google-chrome
.
Microsoft Edge (Chromium) support was added in v4.1.0. Notes from the Chrome/Chromium section apply to this browser as well.
Please note that msedgedriver
requires selenium-webdriver
v4.
Please see the wiki for solutions to commonly reported issues.
Join us in the #webdrivers-gem
channel on Slack
if you have any questions.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License, see LICENSE.txt for full details and copyright.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub.
Run bundle exec rake
and squash the commits in your PRs.