Expand description
Thirtyfour is a Selenium / WebDriver library for Rust, for automated website UI testing.
It supports the W3C WebDriver v1 spec. Tested with Chrome and Firefox, although any W3C-compatible WebDriver should work.
§Getting Started
Check out The Book 📚!
§Features
- All W3C WebDriver and WebElement methods supported
- Async / await support (tokio only)
- Create new browser session directly via WebDriver (e.g. chromedriver)
- Create new browser session via Selenium Standalone or Grid
- Find elements (via all common selectors e.g. Id, Class, CSS, Tag, XPath)
- Send keys to elements, including key-combinations
- Execute Javascript
- Action Chains
- Get and set cookies
- Switch to frame/window/element/alert
- Shadow DOM support
- Alert support
- Capture / Save screenshot of browser or individual element as PNG
- Some Chrome DevTools Protocol (CDP) support
- Powerful query interface (the recommended way to find elements) with explicit waits and various predicates
- Component Wrappers (similar to
Page Object Model)
§Feature Flags
rustls-tls: (Default) Use rustls to provide TLS support (via reqwest).native-tls: Use native TLS (via reqwest).component: (Default) Enable theComponentderive macro (via thirtyfour-macros).
§Example
The following example assumes you have a compatible version of Chrome
installed and chromedriver running on port 4444.
use thirtyfour::prelude::*;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> color_eyre::Result<()> {
let caps = DesiredCapabilities::chrome();
let driver = WebDriver::new("http://localhost:4444", caps).await?;
// Navigate to https://wikipedia.org.
driver.goto("https://wikipedia.org").await?;
let elem_form = driver.find(By::Id("search-form")).await?;
// Find element from element.
let elem_text = elem_form.find(By::Id("searchInput")).await?;
// Type in the search terms.
elem_text.send_keys("selenium").await?;
// Click the search button.
let elem_button = elem_form.find(By::Css("button[type='submit']")).await?;
elem_button.click().await?;
// Look for header to implicitly wait for the page to load.
driver.find(By::ClassName("firstHeading")).await?;
assert_eq!(driver.title().await?, "Selenium - Wikipedia");
// explicitly close the browser.
driver.quit().await?;
Ok(())
}§The browser will not close automatically
Rust does not have async destructors,
and so whenever you forget to use WebDriver::quit the webdriver will have to block the executor
to drop itself and will also ignore errors while dropping, so if you know when a webdriver is no longer used
it is recommended to more or less “asynchronously drop” via a call to WebDriver::quit as in the above example.
This also allows you to catch errors during quitting, and possibly panic or report back to the user
If you do not call WebDriver::quit your async executor will be blocked meaning no futures can run
while quiting. you can use the feature debug_sync_quit to get a backtrace printed if your webdriver ever
quits synchronously
§Element queries and explicit waits
WebDriver::query is the recommended way to find elements. It polls
until the element appears, supports filtering and chained alternatives,
and produces clearer error messages when nothing matches. Custom filter
functions are also supported.
The WebElement::wait_until method provides explicit waits using a
variety of built-in predicates, plus an escape hatch for custom predicates.
See the query documentation for more details and examples.
§Components
Components allow you to wrap a web component using smart element resolvers that can automatically re-query stale elements, and much more.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Component)]
pub struct CheckboxComponent {
base: WebElement,
#[by(tag = "label", first)]
label: ElementResolver<WebElement>,
#[by(css = "input[type='checkbox']")]
input: ElementResolver<WebElement>,
}
impl CheckBoxComponent {
pub async fn label_text(&self) -> WebDriverResult<String> {
let elem = self.label.resolve().await?;
elem.text().await
}
pub async fn is_ticked(&self) -> WebDriverResult<bool> {
let elem = self.input.resolve().await?;
let prop = elem.prop("checked").await?;
Ok(prop.unwrap_or_default() == "true")
}
pub async fn tick(&self) -> WebDriverResult<()> {
if !self.is_ticked().await? {
let elem = self.input.resolve().await?;
elem.click().await?;
assert!(self.is_ticked().await?);
}
Ok(())
}
}See the components documentation for more details.
Re-exports§
pub use alert::Alert;pub use common::capabilities::chrome::ChromeCapabilities;pub use common::capabilities::chromium::ChromiumCapabilities;pub use common::capabilities::chromium::ChromiumLikeCapabilities;pub use common::capabilities::edge::EdgeCapabilities;pub use common::capabilities::firefox::FirefoxCapabilities;pub use common::capabilities::ie::InternetExplorerCapabilities;pub use common::capabilities::opera::OperaCapabilities;pub use common::capabilities::safari::SafariCapabilities;pub use common::command::By;pub use stringmatch;pub use common::capabilities::desiredcapabilities::*;pub use common::cookie::*;pub use common::keys::*;pub use common::requestdata::*;pub use common::types::*;
Modules§
- action_
chain - Action chains allow for more complex user interactions with the keyboard and mouse.
- alert
- Alert handling.
- common
- Common wrappers used by both async and sync implementations.
- components
- Components and component wrappers.
- error
- Error wrappers.
- extensions
- Extensions for specific browsers.
- manager
- Auto-download and lifetime-managed local WebDriver process management.
- prelude
- Allow importing the common types via
use thirtyfour::prelude::*. - session
- Everything related to driving the underlying WebDriver session.
- support
- Miscellaneous support functions for
thirtyfourtests.
Macros§
- resolve
resolve!(x)expands tox.resolve().await?- resolve_
present resolve_present!(x)expands tox.resolve_present().await?
Structs§
- Switch
To - Struct for switching between frames/windows/alerts.
- WebDriver
- The
WebDriverstruct encapsulates an async Selenium WebDriver browser session. - WebElement
- The WebElement struct encapsulates a single element on a page.