The "wd_host" parameter of Selenium2 sessions specify the URL used by
the Selenium driver to connect with the Selenium server. Thus, when the
Selenium server is at a different host or port than the default one (for
example, when run on Drone) the "wd_host" parameter must be set for each
of the Selenium2 sessions defined in "behat.yml".
The "BEHAT_PARAMS" environment variable, which extends the "behat.yml"
configuration file, was used for that. However, this required adding to
the "BEHAT_PARAMS" in "run-local.sh" each new session added to
"behat.yml", including those added in the acceptance tests of apps.
To address that limitation, this commit introduces a simulated variable,
"selenium.server"; just before the acceptance tests are run the
"selenium.server" variable in the "wd_host" parameter is replaced in the
"behat.yml" file used by the acceptance tests. Note that the file that
is modified is the one inside the Docker container used to run the
acceptance tests, so the original file is not touched.
Note that a simulated variable is needed because Behat does not support
overridding nor setting configuration parameters with environment
variables.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Before, the acceptance tests checked the header colour just once, as the
header colour was immediately changed once the new theming colour was
saved. This is no longer the case, as currently a transition is used to
change between the original colour and the new one, so now the
acceptance tests check repeteadly for the expected header colour until
it matches or the timeout expires.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Although in the case of the acceptance tests for the server it is not
strictly needed it was modified for consistency with the configuration
used for the acceptance tests in apps.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Due to a bug in the Mink Extension for Behat it is not possible to use
the "paths.base" parameter in the path to the custom Firefox profile.
"paths.base" is a special parameter in the Behat configuration that
refers to the directory in which "behat.yml" is stored. This comes in
very handy to set the path to custom Firefox profiles in the acceptance
tests for apps, as even if the "behat.yml" file belongs to an app its
paths are relative to the directory in which the tests are run, that is,
the "tests/acceptance" directory of the server.
Until the bug is fixed, just before the acceptance tests are run the
"paths.base" parameter in the path to the custom Firefox profile is
replaced by its value in the "behat.yml" file used by the acceptance
tests. Note that the file that is modified is the one inside the Docker
container used to run the acceptance tests, so the original file is not
touched.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The acceptance tests are currently run on Firefox 47; in that version
the CSS grid support was not enabled by default, but it could be enabled
through a setting in the Firefox profile.
By default Selenium uses a clean Firefox profile when a new session is
started, but it also allows the customization of the profile through a
zipped "user.js" file. The contents of that file have to be provided in
the "firefox_profile" capability when the Firefox session is created.
In the Mink extension for Behat several Mink sessions can be defined in
the "behat.yml" file. Each Mink session uses a different browser session
in Selenium, and each of those browser sessions is initialized with the
capabilities provided in the "behat.yml" file.
From the point of view of the acceptance tests each Mink session is an
actor, so different actors can use different browsers with different
capabilities.
Due to all this a new actor was introduced, "Rubeus", who uses a Firefox
browser that has CSS grid support; this actor is meant to be used only
in those acceptance tests that require proper support for CSS grids.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
For consistency with the helper for the Apache web server the helper for
the PHP built-in web server was renamed too.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The default and only helper to run acceptance tests run them on the PHP
built-in web server. This commit introduces a new helper that can be
used to run them on an Apache web server instead.
This helper is meant to be used by the acceptance tests of apps that
require a multi-threaded web server to run (like Talk, due to its use of
long polling). To use the helper it is only needed to set it in the
Behat configuration for the acceptance tests of the app, as explained in
the "NextcloudTestServerContext" documentation.
It is assumed that the acceptance tests are run using the default setup,
and therefore inside a Docker container based on the image for
acceptance tests from Nextcloud. Due to that the helper is expected to
have root permissions, and thus it starts and stops the Apache web
server directly using "service start/stop apache2". In the same way it
also restores the owner and group for "apps", "config" and "data" to
"www-data", as it is the user that Apache sub-processes are run as.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Before, the domain was automatically added assuming that the
NextcloudTestServerContext had no parameters defined in the Behat
configuration. However, in order to use a helper for Apache it would
need to be specified in the configuration with something like:
- NextcloudTestServerContext:
nextcloudTestServerHelper: NextcloudTestServerLocalApacheHelper
The substitution now works both when a helper is specified and when it
is not; note, however, that providing custom parameters to the helper is
not supported, although they are not needed anyway so it is not really a
problem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Apache sub-processes are run as the www-data user, and they need to be
able to write to the "apps", "config" and "data" directories, so they
have to belong to that user, and therefore the Nextcloud server has to
be installed and configured too as the www-data user. The PHP built-in
web server will still be run as the root user, but in that case the
owner of those directories makes no difference, so this is compatible
with both cases.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The Docker image for acceptance tests provides support for both the PHP
built-in web server and the Apache web server; the acceptance tests for
the server are run on the PHP built-in web server, but the acceptance
tests for some apps will have to be run on the Apache web server (for
example, Talk, as it uses long polling), so a Docker image to support
both cases has to be used in "run.sh". ".drone.yml" was just updated for
consistency, although it was not really needed.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
When the acceptance tests were run they were always loaded from the
"tests/acceptance" directory of the Nextcloud server. Now it is possible
to set the directory used to look for the Behat configuration and the
Nextcloud installation script, which makes possible to run acceptance
tests for the apps too instead of only for the server (although if no
directory is explicitly given the tests for the server are the ones
run).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
In order to autoload the server context classes the "bootstrap"
directory was explicitly listed in Behat autoload configuration. This is
fine in the configuration of acceptance tests for the server, but it
would force the configuration of acceptance tests for the apps to
explicitly include the path for the server context classes to be able to
use them (for example, for the login step).
Besides with its own configuration Behat also supports autoloading
classes using Composer, so now context classes are autoloaded using
Composer instead; thanks to this the server context classes are
autoloaded also in the acceptance tests for apps without any explicit
configuration in them.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The "FileListContext" provides steps to interact with and check the
behaviour of a file list. However, the "FileListContext" does not know
the right file list ancestor that has to be used by the file list steps,
so until now the file list steps were explicitly wired to the Files app
and they could be used only in that case.
Instead of duplicating the steps with a slightly different name (for
example, "I create a new folder named :folderName in the public shared
folder" instead of "I create a new folder named :folderName") the steps
were generalized; now contexts that "know" that certain file list
ancestor has to be used by the FileListContext steps performed by
certain actor from that point on (until changed again) set it
explicitly. For example, when the current page is the Files app then the
ancestor of the file list is the main view of the current section of the
Files app, but when the current page is a shared link then the ancestor
is set to null (because there will be just one file list, and thus its
ancestor is not relevant to differentiate between instances)
A helper trait, "FileListAncestorSetter", was introduced to reduce the
boilerplate needed to set the file list ancestor from other contexts.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The file list is used in other places besides the Files app (for
example, the File sharing app); in those cases the locators for the file
list elements are the same, but not for the ancestor of the file list.
To make possible to reuse the file list locators in those cases too now
they receive the ancestor to use.
Note that the locators for the file actions menu were not using an
ancestor locator because it is expected that there is only one file
actions menu at a time in the whole page; that may change in the future,
but for the time being it is a valid assumption and thus the ancestor
was not added to those locators in this commit.
Although the locators were generalized the steps themselves still use
the "FilesAppContext::currentSectionMainView" locator as ancestor; the
steps will be generalized in a following commit.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Besides the extraction some minor adjustments (sorting locators for file
action menu entries to reflect the order of the menu entries in the UI,
moving parametrized locators like "createMenuItemFor" above the locators
that use them and placing "descendantOf" calls always in a new line)
were made too.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
NoSuchElement exceptions are sometimes thrown instead of
StaleElementReference exceptions. This can happen when the Selenium2
driver for Mink performs an action on an element through the WebDriver
session instead of directly through the WebDriver element. In that case,
if the element with the given ID does not exist, a NoSuchElement
exception would be thrown instead of a StaleElementReference exception,
so those cases are handled like StaleElementReference exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
MoveTargetOutOfBounds exceptions are sometimes thrown instead of
ElementNotVisible exceptions. This can happen when the Selenium2 driver
for Mink moves the cursor on an element using the "moveto" method of the
Webdriver session, for example, before clicking on an element. In that
case, if the element is not visible, "moveto" would throw a
MoveTargetOutOfBounds exception instead of an ElementNotVisible
exception, so those cases are handled like ElementNotVisible exceptions.
Note that MoveTargetOutOfBounds exceptions could be thrown too if the
element was visible but "out of reach"; there is no problem in handling
those cases as if the element was not visible, as the exception will be
thrown again anyway once it is verified that the element is indeed
visible.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Instead of checking that the list contains one comment it is now checked
that a comment with certain message is visible. This makes the step (and
the locator) more reusable in future tests and also simplifies the code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Depending on the previous steps the new comment field may be already
shown or not when the step to create a new comment is executed.
Therefore, the timeout was increased from 2 to the "standard" 10 seconds
used in other tests.
If the new comment field was found there is no need to use a timeout
when looking for the new comment button; it is either there or not, it
will not appear after some time.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The locators are moved above the step definitions for consistency with
other context files; besides that I made some minor adjustments for
consistency too in the locator descriptions and identation, and moved
the locators for ".newCommentRow" descendants together.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>