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Selenium Tests for support.mozilla.org - the Firefox Support Site (SUMO)

Thank you for checking out Mozilla's SUMO test suite. Mozilla and the Mozwebqa team are grateful for the help and hard work of many contributors like yourself. The following contributors have submitted pull requests to sumo-tests:

https://github.com/mozilla/sumo-tests/contributors

Getting involved as a contributor

We love working with contributors to fill out the Selenium test coverage for sumo-tests, but it does require a few skills. You will need to know some Python, some Selenium and you will need some basic familiarity with GitHub.

If you know some Python, it's worth having a look at the Selenium framework to understand the basic concepts of browser-based testing and especially page objects.

If you need to brush up on programming but are eager to start contributing immediately, please consider helping us find bugs in Mozilla Firefox or find bugs in the Mozilla web-sites tested by the WebQA team.

To brush up on Python skills before engaging with us, Dive Into Python is an excellent resource. MIT also has lecture notes on Python available through their open courseware.The programming concepts you will need to know include functions, working with classes, and some object-oriented programming basics.

Questions are always welcome

While we take pains to keep our documentation updated, the best source of information is those of us who work on the project. Don't be afraid to join us in irc.mozilla.org #mozwebqa to ask questions about our Selenium tests. Mozilla also hosts the #mozillians chat room to answer your general questions about contributing to Mozilla.

How to Set up and Build SUMO Tests Locally

This repository contains Selenium tests used to test the website support.mozilla.org on development: http://support-dev.allizom.org or staging: http://support.allizom.org

For information specific to Firefox Support see the GitHub repository.

Mozilla maintains a guide to running Automated tests on our QMO website:

https://quality.mozilla.org/docs/webqa/running-webqa-automated-tests/

This wiki page has some advanced instructions specific to Windows:

https://wiki.mozilla.org/QA_SoftVision_Team/WebQA_Automation

###You will need to install the following:

Git

If you have cloned this project already then you can skip this! GitHub has excellent guides for [Windows][GitWin], [MacOSX][GitMacOSX] and [Linux][GitLinux]. [GitWin]: http://help.github.com/win-set-up-git/ [GitMacOSX]: http://help.github.com/mac-set-up-git/ [GitLinux]: http://help.github.com/linux-set-up-git/

Python

Before you will be able to run these tests you will need to have [Python 2.6][Python] installed. [Python]: http://www.python.org/download/releases/2.6.6/

Run

easy_install pip

followed by

sudo pip install -r requirements/mozwebqa.txt

note

If you are running on Ubuntu/Debian you will need to do following first

sudo apt-get install python-setuptools

to install the required Python libraries.

####Virtualenv and Virtualenvwrapper (Optional/Intermediate level) While most of us have had some experience using virtual machines, virtualenv is something else entirely. It's used to keep libraries that you install from clashing and messing up your local environment. After installing virtualenv, installing virtualenvwrapper will give you some nice commands to use with virtualenvwrapper.

Credentials

Some of the tests in sumo-tests require logging in to https://support.allizom.org with credentials of varying privilege levels.

  1. Create two username and password combinations on https://support.allizom.org
  2. Join #sumo and ask for one of these users to be upgraded to admin (or ask someone on #mozwebqa to do this for you)
  3. Copy sumo-tests/credentials.yaml to a location outside of sumo-tests. update the 'default' and 'admin' users in credentials.yaml with those credentials

Running tests locally

Before each test run, clean up the repo: find . ( -name 'results*' -or -name '*.pyc' ) -print0 | xargs -0 rm -Rf

To run tests locally its a simple case of calling the command below from this directory

py.test --driver=firefox --destructive --credentials=/full/path/to/credentials.yaml .

Output Output of a test run should look like this:

============================= test session starts ==============================
platform darwin -- Python 2.6.1 -- pytest-2.2.3
collected 35 items 

tests/desktop/test_kb_article.py .X....
tests/desktop/test_new_user_registration.py .
tests/desktop/test_questions.py ....
tests/desktop/test_rewrites.py .....................
tests/desktop/test_search.py ..X

==================== 33 passed, 2 xpassed in 172.03 seconds ====================

Note "~" will not resolve to the home directory when used in the py.test command line.

Some options for py.test are pre-specified by the file sumo_tests/mozwebqa.cfg

The mozwebqa plugin has advanced command line options for reporting and using browsers. See the documentation on [davehunt's pytest mozwebqa github][pymozwebqa]: [pymozwebqa]: https://github.com/davehunt/pytest-mozwebqa

Troubleshooting

If the test run hangs with Firefox open but no URL gets entered in the address box, some combination of the Firefox version, the Selenium RC version, and the python Selenium bindings version may not be compatible. Upgrading each of them to latest should fix it.

Writing Tests

If you want to get involved and add more tests, then there's just a few things we'd like to ask you to do:

  1. Use the template files for all new tests and page objects
  2. Follow our simple style guide
  3. Fork this project with your own GitHub account
  4. Make sure all tests are passing, and submit a pull request with your changes

License

This software is licensed under the MPL 2.0:

This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.

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