grunt-ptor
Run Protractor e2e tests.
Motivation
Other plugins exist, but I just wanted something simple that passed the required options through to the Protractor command.
Getting Started
This plugin requires Grunt ~0.4.5
.
If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a Gruntfile as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command:
$ npm install grunt-ptor --save-dev
Once the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-ptor');
Note that this plugin leaves the Selenium server management up to another tool. I use grunt-protractor-webdriver, which is then set up as a pre-requisite task to this plugin.
The "ptor" task
Overview
In your project's Gruntfile, add a section named ptor
to the data object passed into grunt.initConfig()
.
grunt.initConfig({
ptor: {
options: {
},
your_target: {
options: {
}
},
},
});
Options
See the Protractor reference conf for the options you can use in both the Gruntfile
and via the command line.
The order of precendence for options is: command line > target level > task level > Protractor conf file.
Example
grunt.initConfig({
ptor: {
options: {
configFile: 'protractor.conf.js'
},
smoke: {
options: {
suites: 'smoke'
}
}
}
});
$ grunt ptor --chromeOnly --params.login.user=Jane --params.login.password=1234
Tests
To run:
$ grunt test
Test notes
A child process is spawned within each test so we can execute the task from end to end. This makes method stubbing a little tricky since we are executing in a different process, so a couple of helper tasks are also used:
pre
sets up any required stubspost
sends the required information back to the parent process.
This way we can test our expectations in the parent process.