Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: gossamerui
Version: 0.9.5
Summary: Website user interface regression testing
Home-page: https://github.com/ijl/gossamer
Author: Jack Lutz
Author-email: uijllji@gmail.com
License: Apache 2.0
Download-URL: https://github.com/ijl/gossamer/archive/0.9.5.tar.gz
Description: Gossamer
        ========
        
        Gossamer watches you browse a website and record screenshots of your UI,
        then recreates your browsing session and passes or fails tests depending
        on whether the UI has changed. It's a way of automating in-browser
        visual regression testing, using Gossamer to automate Selenium
        WebDriver, expose test statuses of pass/fail/error, and provide visual
        diffs of failing tests. You needn't write Selenium tests, or make and
        keep in sync static pages for testing UI: this tool will test full
        webpages run on a development or testing webserver. Gossamer can be
        integrated into your continuous integration either via the command-line
        interface, or, if you're testing a Python application, via Python
        unittest integration.
        
        Usage
        -----
        
        Gossamer is a command-line application, called with ``gossamer``. You
        create tests you wish to record in a text Gossamerfile. For each test, a
        WebDriver window is opened and you interact with the browser as a normal
        user, going back to the command line when you wish to take a screenshot
        and pressing enter. Your screenshots, and a JSON record of your test, is
        written to a data directory. Playback is done by reading this directory,
        and comparing against 'good' screenshots. Gossamer assumes that Selenium
        Server is already running.
        
        To start, create a file ``Gossamerfile`` and specify a name and URL to
        visit for every test.
        
        ::
        
            [example]
            url=http://www.example.com
        
        You can also add in additional settings:
        
        ::
        
            [example]
            url=http://www.example.com
            desc=Example.com hasn't changed
            screensize=800x1000
            browser=chrome
            expect_redirect=false
        
        By default, Gossamer looks for a file called ``Gossamerfile`` in the
        current directory, and stores data in ``./gossamer`` with one directory
        per test. Each test directory contains a ``record.json`` containing the
        data to reproduce the test, as well as good screenshots, and in a
        sub-directory ``last``, the last test run's (possibly failing)
        screenshots.
        
        You can run your tests with:
        
        ::
        
            gossamer --file Gossamerfile --data <data_dir> --record --save-diff
        
        If you wish to run only a subset of tests in that file, specify those
        tests' names as positional arguments.
        
        When you browse, wait for requests to finish and rendering to be
        complete before moving on to another action. If you navigate to a new
        page, you will need to take a screenshot before new events are observed.
        
        If your UI has changed and you wish to update the screenshots to match,
        then run with ``--rerecord``: the test will be rerun automatically, and
        new PNGs will be saved. To playback the tests, simply call without an
        ``-r/-rr`` flag.
        
        If you're running Python tests, you can integrate your Gossamer tests
        like so:
        
        ::
        
            # myapp/test.py
            from gossamer import run_gossamerfile
            run_gossamerfile(locals(), <filename>, <data_dir>)
        
        This mutates your module's locals to include a ``unittest.TestCase``
        instance for every test in the given Gossamerfile(s). Your test runner
        will then detect and run them. You will, however, need to ensure that
        your Selenium server and test webserver are up when your tests are run.
        
        Installation
        ------------
        
        Your testing machine will need
        `Pillow's <https://github.com/python-imaging/Pillow>`__ system-level
        dependencies for PNG support. Gossamer can then be installed from PyPi
        with ``pip install gossamerui``.
        
        On that machine or another accessible to it you will need `Selenium
        Server <http://docs.seleniumhq.org/download/>`__ installed and running.
        Note that Selenium Server comes with Firefox by default, needing an
        additional system package for Chrome, and for Internet Explorer an
        IE-specific standalone version of Selenium Server.
        
        You'll also need your 'target' webserver running on any machine.
        
        Authors
        -------
        
        See the file ``AUTHORS``. Based on Facebook's
        `Huxley <https://github.com/facebook/huxley>`__, and rewritten.
        
        License
        -------
        
        Apache 2.0
        
        Known Issues
        ------------
        
        -  Scrolling is unreliable.
        -  Opening a slow iframe will likely timeout on playback.
        -  Internet Explorer < 11 (which is all Selenium supports) shouldn't
           work at the moment because we use MutationObservers, but an older way
           of observing changes can be added for IE<11 (see
           ``js.pageChangingObserver``).
        
        Issues
        ------
        
        Please create issues and pull requests at the `GitHub
        repository <https://github.com/ijl/gossamer>`__.
        
        Contributing
        ------------
        
        -  Once you have the repository, setup using ``make develop``.
        -  Please add tests and use the included .pylintrc; you can run
           ``make test`` and ``make lint``.
        -  If any breaking changes are made to data structures, increment
           ``constant.DATA_VERSION`` and modify ``util.import_recorded_run`` to
           handle both new and old data.
        -  Feel free to contribute any functionality you want.
        
        
Keywords: selenium webdriver testing regression ui automated visual diff screenshot huxley
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Environment :: Console
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Testing
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Quality Assurance
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
