gecko-dev/testing/webdriver
Henrik Skupin 7e2ab8502e Bug 1403923 - Safely shutdown Firefox from in delete_session. r=jgraham
With the request to shutdown the browser, a given amount of time
has to be waited to allow the process to shutdown itself. Only
if the process is still running afterward it has to be killed.

Firefox has an integrated background monitor which observes
long running threads during shutdown, and kills those after
65s. To allow Firefox to shutdown on its own, geckodriver
has to wait that time, and some additional seconds.

MozReview-Commit-ID: 4LRLQE0jZzw

--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c33c163d4d06768ea6616b97a25f986f5ea37e5d
2017-10-05 23:49:17 +02:00
..
src Bug 1403923 - Safely shutdown Firefox from in delete_session. r=jgraham 2017-10-05 23:49:17 +02:00
.gitignore webdriver: Merge pull request #25 from danlrobertson/nullable 2016-03-27 17:30:04 +01:00
.hgignore Bug 1368265 - Add testing/webdriver hgignore file. r=automatedtester 2017-09-03 17:19:37 +01:00
.travis.yml webdriver: Merge pull request #27 from jgraham/travis 2016-04-04 13:04:07 +01:00
Cargo.toml Bug 1422366 - Update webdriver Rust crate to cookie-0.10. r=jgraham 2017-12-01 10:12:07 -08:00
README.md Bug 1368265 - Provide a webdriver README. r=automatedtester 2017-09-03 17:15:03 +01:00
moz.build Bug 1412904 - fill in missing bugzilla_components in testing/webdriver. r=ato 2017-10-31 12:27:48 -04:00

README.md

webdriver library

The webdriver crate is a library implementation of the wire protocol for the W3C WebDriver standard written in Rust. WebDriver is a remote control interface that enables introspection and control of user agents. It provides a platform- and language-neutral wire protocol as a way for out-of-process programs to remotely instruct the behaviour of web browsers.

The webdriver library provides the formal types, error codes, type and bounds checks, and JSON marshaling conventions for correctly parsing and emitting the WebDriver protocol. It also provides an HTTP server where endpoints are mapped to the different WebDriver commands.

As of right now, this is an implementation for the server side of the WebDriver API in Rust, not the client side.

Building

The library is built using the usual Rust conventions:

% cargo build

To run the tests:

% cargo test

Usage

To start an HTTP server that handles incoming command requests, a request handler needs to be implemented. It takes an incoming WebDriverMessage and emits a WebDriverResponse:

impl WebDriverHandler for MyHandler {
    fn handle_command(
        &mut self,
        _: &Option<Session>,
        msg: WebDriverMessage,
    ) -> WebDriverResult<WebDriverResponse> {
        …
    }

    fn delete_session(&mut self, _: &Option<Session>) {
        …
    }
}

let addr = SocketAddr::new("localhost", 4444);
let handler = MyHandler {};
let server = webdriver::server::start(addr, handler, vec![])?;
info!("Listening on {}", server.socket);

It is also possible to provide so called extension commands by providing a vector of known extension routes, for which each new route needs to implement the WebDriverExtensionRoute trait. Each route needs to map to a WebDriverExtensionCommand:

pub enum MyExtensionRoute { HelloWorld }
pub enum MyExtensionCommand { HelloWorld }

impl WebDriverExtensionRoute for MyExtensionRoute {
    fn command(
        &self,
        captures: &Captures,
        body: &Json,
    ) -> WebDriverResult<WebDriverCommand<MyExtensionCommand>> {
        …
    }
}

let extension_routes = vec![
    (Method::Get, "/session/{sessionId}/moz/hello", MyExtensions::HelloWorld)
];

…

let server = webdriver::server::start(addr, handler, extension_routes[..])?;

Contact

The mailing list for webdriver discussion is tools-marionette@lists.mozilla.org (subscribe, archive).

There is also an IRC channel to talk about using and developing webdriver in #ateam on irc.mozilla.org.