зеркало из https://github.com/mozilla/gecko-dev.git
5b6047f4b6
The old version of arsenic uses deprecated geckodriver features which this stack of patches removes Also bump structlog and apply condprof patch as required by arsenic. Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D212123 |
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README.rst | ||
mach_commands.py | ||
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setup.py | ||
tox.ini |
README.rst
Conditioned Profile =================== This project provides a command-line tool that is used to generate and maintain a collection of Gecko profiles. Unlike testing/profiles, the **conditioned profiles** are a collection of full Gecko profiles that are dynamically updated every day. Each profile is created or updated using a **scenario** and a **customization**, and eventually uploaded as an artifact in TaskCluster. The goal of the project is to build a collection of profiles that we can use in our performance or functional tests instead of the empty profile that we usually create on the fly with **mozprofile**. Having a collection of realistic profiles we can use when running some tests gives us the ability to check the impact of user profiles on page loads or other tests. A full cycle of how this tool is used in Taskcluster looks like this: For each combination of scenario, customization and platform: - grabs an existing profile in Taskcluster - browses the web using the scenario, via the WebDriver client - recreates a tarball with the updated profile - uploads it as an index artifact into TaskCluster - maintains a changelog of each change It's based on the Arsenic webdriver client https://github.com/HDE/arsenic The project provides two **Mach** commands to interact with the conditioned profile: - **fetch-condprofile**: downloads a conditioned profile and deecompress it - **run-condprofile**: runs on or all conditioned profiles scenarii locally How to download a conditioned profile ===================================== From your mozilla-central root, run: :: $ ./mach fetch-condprofile This will grab the latest conditioned profile for your platform. But you can also grab a specific profile built from any scenario or platform. You can look at all the options with --help How to run a conditioned profile ================================ If you want to play a scenario locally to modify it, run for example: :: $ ./mach run-condprofile --scenario settled --visible /path/to/generated/profile The project will run a webdriver session against Firefox and generate the profile. You can look at all the options with --help Architecture ============ The conditioned profile project is organized into webdriver **scenarii** and **customization** files. Scenarii -------- Scenarii are coroutines registered under a unique name in condprof/scenarii/__init__.py. They get a **session** object and some **options**. The scenario can do whatever it wants with the browser, through the webdriver session instance. See Arsenic's `API documentation <https://arsenic.readthedocs.io/en/latest/reference/session.html>`_ for the session class. Adding a new scenario is done by adding a module in condprof/scenarii/ and register it in condprof/scenarii/__init__.py Customization ------------- A customization is a configuration file that can be used to set some prefs in the browser and install some webextensions. Customizations are JSON files registered into condprof/customizations, and they provide four keys: - **name**: the name of the customization - **addons**: a mapping of add-ons to install. - **prefs**: a mapping of prefs to set - **scenario**: a mapping of options to pass to a specific scenario In the example below, we install uBlock, set a pref, and pass the **max_urls** option to the **heavy** scenario. { "name": "intermediate", "addons":{ "uBlock":"https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/downloads/file/3361355/ublock_origin-1.21.2-an+fx.xpi" }, "prefs":{ "accessibility.tabfocus": 9 }, "scenario": { "heavy": {"max_urls": 10} } }