This project was created using a Serenity/JS template to demonstrate how to integrate Angular Protractor and protractor-cucumber-framework
together with Serenity/JS and its reporting services to produce HTML reports and living documentation of your project.
Learn more:
To use this project, you'll need:
- Node.js, a Long-Term Support (LTS) release version 14 or later - download
- Java Runtime Environment (JRE) or a Java Development Kit (JDK) version 8 or later - download
- Chrome web browser - download
Follow the installation instructions to help you verify your setup.
Once you have the code on your computer, use your computer terminal to run the following command in the directory where you've cloned the project:
npm ci
Running npm ci
downloads the Node modules this project depends on, as well as the latest version of chromedriver
and the Serenity BDD CLI reporter jar.
If your network administrators require you to use proxy servers or an internal artifact registry (Artifactory, Nexus, etc.), your development environment might require some additional configuration.
The easiest way to do it is to create an .npmrc
file in your home directory:
proxy=http://user:password@host.mycompany.com:8080/
https-proxy=http://user:password@host.mycompany.com:8080/
strict-ssl=false
registry=https://artifactory.mycompany.com/artifactory/
If you encounter issues downloading the Serenity BDD CLI jar, please follow the detailed instructions in the Serenity/JS Handbook.
Similar instructions are available for the chromedriver
module.
The project provides several NPM scripts defined in package.json
:
npm run clean # removes reports from any previous test run
npm test # executes the example test suite
# and generates the report under ./target/site/serenity
npm start # starts a mini HTTP server and serves the test reports
# at http://localhost:8080
To execute only those scenarios which names match a given pattern, run:
npm run test:execute -- --cucumberOpts.name="Adding numbers"
Note that this technique works with partial matches, i.e. specifying --cucumberOpts.name="numbers"
would match both scenarios in the example .feature
file.
You can limit the number of scenarios to execute using Cucumber tags and tag expressions, for example:
npm run test:execute -- --cucumberOpts.tags="@smoke-test and @fast"
You can also run a single scenario by specifying its exact file:line
location, for example
npm run test:execute -- --specs=features/super_calculator.feature:24
Do you find Serenity/JS useful? Give it a star! ★
Found a bug? Need a feature? Raise an issue or submit a pull request.
Have feedback? Let me know on Twitter: @JanMolak
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