![Maven Central Adds Sigstore Signature Validation](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/cgdhsj6q/production/7da3bc8a946cfb5df15d7fcf49767faedc72b483-1024x1024.webp?w=400&fit=max&auto=format)
Security News
Maven Central Adds Sigstore Signature Validation
Maven Central now validates Sigstore signatures, making it easier for developers to verify the provenance of Java packages.
@wdio/sync
Advanced tools
A WebdriverIO plugin. Helper module to run WebdriverIO commands synchronously
A WebdriverIO plugin. Helper module to run WebdriverIO commands synchronously
A WebdriverIO plugin. Helper module to run WebdriverIO commands synchronously. It overwrites global functions depending on the test framework (e.g. for Mocha describe and it) and uses Fibers to make commands of WebdriverIO using the wdio testrunner synchronous. This package is consumed by all wdio framework adapters.
If you are using the WDIO testrunner all you need to make all your specs run synchronous is to have @wdio/sync
installed in your project. The testrunner automatically will detect it and transform the commands to make a test like this:
describe('webdriver.io page', () => {
it('should have the right title', async () => {
await browser.url('https://webdriver.io')
await expect(browser)
.toHaveTitle('WebdriverIO · Next-gen browser and mobile automation test framework for Node.js | WebdriverIO')
})
})
easier to read and write like this:
describe('webdriver.io page', () => {
it('should have the right title', () => {
browser.url('https://webdriver.io')
expect(browser).toHaveTitle('WebdriverIO · Next-gen browser and mobile automation test framework for Node.js | WebdriverIO')
})
})
Given you have a simple standalone WebdriverIO script like this:
// standalone.js
const { remote } = require('webdriverio')
const sync = require('@wdio/sync').default
;(() => {
const browser = await remote({
outputDir: __dirname,
capabilities: {
browserName: 'chrome'
}
})
await browser.url('https://webdriver.io')
console.log(await browser.getTitle())
await browser.deleteSession()
})().catch(console.error)
With this package you can make WebdriverIO commands synchronous by using the sync
wrapper:
// standalone.js
const { remote } = require('webdriverio')
const sync = require('@wdio/sync').default
remote({
runner: 'local',
outputDir: __dirname,
capabilities: {
browserName: 'chrome'
}
}).then((browser) => sync(() => {
/**
* sync code from here on
*/
browser.url('https://webdriver.io')
console.log(browser.getTitle())
browser.deleteSession()
}))
While using @wdio/sync
you can still switch between both by using the browser.call()
command. It allows you to run async code and return the result into a synchronous environment. For example:
describe('webdriver.io page', () => {
it('should have the right title', () => {
/**
* synchronous execution here
*/
browser.url('https://webdriver.io')
const result = browser.call(async () => {
/**
* asynchronous execution here
*/
await browser.url('https://google.com')
return Promise.all([
browser.getTitle(),
browser.getUrl()
])
})
/**
* synchronous execution here
*/
console.log(result) // returns: ['Google', 'https://www.google.com/']
})
})
FAQs
A WebdriverIO plugin. Helper module to run WebdriverIO commands synchronously
We found that @wdio/sync demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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.
Security News
Maven Central now validates Sigstore signatures, making it easier for developers to verify the provenance of Java packages.
Security News
CISOs are racing to adopt AI for cybersecurity, but hurdles in budgets and governance may leave some falling behind in the fight against cyber threats.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncovered a backdoored typosquat of BoltDB in the Go ecosystem, exploiting Go Module Proxy caching to persist undetected for years.