Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@serenity-js/playwright-test

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
95
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@serenity-js/playwright-test

Serenity/JS reporter and test APIs for Playwright Test

  • 3.13.0
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
2.6K
increased by6.58%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

Serenity/JS

Follow Serenity/JS on LinkedIn Watch Serenity/JS on YouTube Join Serenity/JS Community Chat Support Serenity/JS on GitHub

Serenity/JS is an innovative open-source framework designed to make acceptance and regression testing of complex software systems faster, more collaborative and easier to scale.

⭐️ Get started with Serenity/JS!

👋 Join the Serenity/JS Community!

Serenity/JS Playwright Test

@serenity-js/playwright-test module offers a Serenity/JS reporter and fixtures that integrate Playwright Test with Serenity/JS Screenplay Pattern APIs.

Installation

To install this module, use an existing Playwright Test project or generate a new one by running:

npm init playwright@latest

Install the below Serenity/JS modules in your Playwright Test project directory:

npm install --save-dev @serenity-js/assertions @serenity-js/console-reporter @serenity-js/core @serenity-js/serenity-bdd @serenity-js/web @serenity-js/playwright @serenity-js/playwright-test

To learn more about Serenity/JS and how to use it on your project, follow the Serenity/JS Getting Started guide for Playwright Test.

Serenity/JS Playwright Fixtures

To use Serenity/JS Screenplay Pattern APIs and benefit from the in-depth reporting capabilities, import Serenity/JS test fixtures instead of the default ones:

// example.spec.ts
+ import { test } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'
- import { test } from '@playwright/test'

test.describe('Serenity Screenplay with Playwright', () => {
    
    test.describe('New Todo', () => {

        test('should allow me to add todo items', async ({ page }) => {
            //...
        })
    })
})

If you prefer, Serenity/JS also offers the more concise BDD-style describe/it syntax:

// example.spec.ts
import { describe, it, test } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'

test.use({
    headless: true,
})

describe('Serenity Screenplay with Playwright', () => {
    
    describe('New Todo', () => {

        it('should allow me to add todo items', async ({ page }) => {
            //...
        })
    })
})

Serenity/JS Screenplay Pattern Actors

Serenity/JS test fixtures simplify how you instantiate and use Serenity/JS Screenplay Pattern Actors.

Single-actor scenarios

If your tests need only a single actor, you can inject it using the actor fixture. To configure the name of your default actor, use the defaultActorName configuration property:

// example.spec.ts

import { describe, it, test } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'   // import fixtures
import { Navigate, Page } from '@serenity-js/playwright'            // import Screenplay Pattern web APIs
import { Ensure, equals } from '@serenity-js/assertions'            // import Screenplay Pattern assertion APIs                            

test.use({
    headless: true,
    defaultActorName: 'Serena'  // change default actor name
})

describe('Serenity Screenplay with Playwright', () => {
    
    describe('New Todo', () => {

        // inject default actor:
        it('should allow me to add todo items', async ({ actor }) => { 
            
            // define test workflow
            await actor.attemptsTo(                                                  
                Navigate.to('https://todo-app.serenity-js.org/'),
                Ensure.that(Page.current().title(), equals('Serenity/JS TodoApp')),
            )
        })
    })
})
Multi-actor scenarios

For multi-actor scenarios where you need each actor to use a separate browser, use the actorCalled fixture. You can also use this pattern to override the default actor name on a per-scenario basis:

// example.spec.ts

import { describe, it, test } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'   // import fixtures

describe('Serenity Screenplay with Playwright', () => {
    
    describe('Chat app', () => {

        it('should allow actors to send and receive messages', async ({ actorCalled }) => { 

            // define part of the workflow performed by the first actor:
            await actorCalled('Alice').attemptsTo(                               
                // navigate to a chat app
                // post a message to Bob
            )

            // define parts of the workflow performed by the any other actors:
            await actorCalled('Bob').attemptsTo(                                 
                // navigate to a chat app
                // post a reply to Alice
            )

            // Note that invoking actorCalled(name) multiple times
            // while using the same name and within the scope of a single test
            // returns the same actor, so you don't need to cache them:
            await actorCalled('Alice').attemptsTo(                              
                // check if the reply from Bob is received                      
            )                                                                   
        })
    })
})
Customising Actors

The default cast of actors is limited to using a single ability to BrowseTheWebWithPlaywright.

If you'd like to give your actors additional abilities, like to TakeNotes, CallAnApi, or ManageALocalServer, you can install the relevant Serenity/JS module and configure them as follows:

// example.spec.ts

import { Cast, TakeNotes } from '@serenity-js/core'
import { test } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'
import { BrowseTheWebWithPlaywright } from '@serenity-js/playwright'
import { CallAnApi } from '@serenity-js/rest'                            

test.use({
    actors: async ({ browser, baseURL }, use) => {
        await use(
            Cast.where(actor => actor.whoCan(
                BrowseTheWebWithPlaywright.using(browser),
                TakeNotes.usingAnEmptyNotepad(),
                CallAnApi.at(baseURL),
            ))
        )
    },
})

For scenarios where different actors need to be configured differently, you can also implement your own Cast:

// example.spec.ts

import { Cast } from '@serenity-js/core'
import { BrowseTheWebWithPlaywright, PlaywrightOptions } from '@serenity-js/playwright'
import { test } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'
import { CallAnApi } from '@serenity-js/rest'
import { Browser } from 'playwright'

class Actors implements Cast {
    constructor(
        private readonly browser: Browser,
        private readonly options: PlaywrightOptions,
    ) {
    }

    prepare(actor: Actor) {
        switch (actor.name) {
            case 'James':
                return actor.whoCan(BrowseTheWebWithPlaywright.using(this.browser, this.options))
            default:
                return actor.whoCan(CallAnApi.at(this.options.baseURL))
        }
    }
}

test.use({
    actors: async ({ browser, config }) => {
        await use(new Actors(browser, {
            defaultNavigationWaitUntil: 'domcontentloaded'
        }))
    }
})
Customising test fixtures

useFixtures lets you configure Serenity/JS Screenplay Pattern actors in a single place, and define custom test fixtures if needed.

// my-custom-api.ts
export const { 
    describe, it, test, beforeAll, beforeEach, afterEach, afterAll, expect
} = useFixtures<{ email: string }>({
    
    // Override Serenity/JS fixtures:
    actors: async ({ browser, baseURL }, use) => {
        await use(
            Cast.where(actor => actor.whoCan(
                BrowseTheWebWithPlaywright.using(browser),
                TakeNotes.usingAnEmptyNotepad(),
                CallAnApi.at(baseURL),
            ))
        )
    },
    
    // Add your own fixtures:
    email: async ({ actor }, use) => {
        await use(`${ actor.name }@example.org`);
    },    
})

With the custom test API definition in place, use it in your test files instead of the default one:

// example.spec.ts
import { Log } from '@serenity-js/core'

import { describe, it, test } from './my-custom-api'    // Note the custom test API

describe('Serenity Screenplay with Playwright', () => {

    describe('New Todo', () => {

        // inject default actor:
        it('should allow me to add todo items', async ({ actor, email }) => {

            // define test workflow
            await actor.attemptsTo(
                Log.the(email),
            )
        })
    })
})

UI Component Testing

You can use Serenity/JS and Playwright Test to write UI component tests and reuse your test code between component and end-to-end test suites.

To get started with component testing:

// src/App.spec.tsx
- import { test, expect } from '@playwright/experimental-ct-react'
+ import { test as componentTest } from '@playwright/experimental-ct-react'
+ import { useBase } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'

+ const { test, expect } = useBase(componentTest)

import App from './App'

test.use({ viewport: { width: 500, height: 500 } })

test('should work', async ({ mount }) => {
  const component = await mount(<App />)
  await expect(component).toContainText('Learn React')
})
Using Serenity/JS Screenplay Pattern Actors for Component Testing

Serenity/JS useBase(test) creates a test API that gives you access to all the SerenityFixtures you could access in any other regular end-to-end test.

This capability allows you to use Serenity/JS Actors and design and experiment with your Screenplay Pattern Tasks before incorporating them in your high-level acceptance and end-to-end tests.

import { test as componentTest } from '@playwright/experimental-ct-react'
import { Ensure, contain } from '@serenity-js/assertions'
import { useBase } from '@serenity-js/playwright-test'
import { Enter, PageElement, CssClasses } from '@serenity-js/web'

import EmailInput from './EmailInput'

const { it, describe } = useBase(componentTest).useFixtures<{ emailAddress: string }>({
    emailAddress: ({ actor }, use) => {
        use(`${ actor.name }@example.org`)
    }
})

describe('EmailInput', () => {

    it('allows valid email addresses', async ({ actor, mount, emailAddress }) => {
        const nativeComponent = await mount(<EmailInput/>)

        const component = PageElement.from(nativeComponent)

        await actor.attemptsTo(
            Enter.theValue(emailAddress).into(component),
            Ensure.that(CssClasses.of(component), contain('valid')),
        )
    })
})

Serenity Reports

To use Serenity/JS reporting capabilities, register the @serenity-js/playwright-test reporter in your playwright.config.ts and define the appropriate reporting services (a.k.a. your "stage crew").

For example, to enable Serenity/JS Console Reporter and Serenity BDD reporter, install the relevant modules:

npm install --save-dev @serenity-js/console-reporter @serenity-js/serenity-bdd

Next, configure your Playwright project as follows:

// playwright.conf.ts

import type { PlaywrightTestConfig } from '@playwright/test'

const config: PlaywrightTestConfig = {
    reporter: [
        [ '@serenity-js/playwright-test', {
            crew: [
                '@serenity-js/serenity-bdd',
                '@serenity-js/console-reporter',
                [ '@serenity-js/core:ArtifactArchiver', { outputDirectory: 'target/site/serenity' } ],
                // '@serenity-js/core:StreamReporter',
            ]
        }],

        // optional
        [ 'html', { open: 'never' } ],          // built-in Playwright HTML reporter
    ],

    // Other configuration omitted for brevity
    // For details, see https://playwright.dev/docs/test-configuration
}

export default config

Note that Serenity/JS reporters work well with the built-in Playwright reporters.

Reference implementation

You can find a reference implementation demonstrating how to integrate Serenity/JS with Playwright Test in the Serenity/JS GitHub repository.

📣 Stay up to date

New features, tutorials, and demos are coming soon! Follow Serenity/JS on LinkedIn, subscribe to Serenity/JS channel on YouTube and join the Serenity/JS Community Chat to stay up to date! Please also make sure to star ⭐️ Serenity/JS on GitHub to help others discover the framework!

Follow Serenity/JS on LinkedIn Watch Serenity/JS on YouTube Join Serenity/JS Community Chat GitHub stars

💛 Support Serenity/JS

If you appreciate all the effort that goes into making sophisticated tools easy to work with, please support our work and become a Serenity/JS GitHub Sponsor today!

GitHub Sponsors

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 19 Oct 2023

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc