Am posting the below query after failed to understand the practical purpose of Gradle in selenium..
I am quite successful in using selenium webdriver without using Gradle or any other build tool.
I have seen Selenium developers using Gradle as a build tool for their selenium projects. I fail to see the reason behind using Gradle as a build tool except dependency management. I understand that it is crucial in java development projects.
I have explored a lot as to why we need to use Gradle.. what is the practical use in a selenium project..
Please correct me if am wrong.. As per my knowledge,In a selenium project,No one requires to do continuous build(If any changes made to source every time) or perform some operation after build except few stuffs like deploy jar in some location.... Because, we would make that as part of execution plan...
Being in Automation for quite some time below are the things that i use to perform and believe most of the projects would go in the same way..
No need to perform any task after saving my script every time
After developing the script, schedule as a batch for execution...
Heard, using build tool only for dependencies management
Below are my queries:-
What can be achieved in gradle(Except dependencies), I understand that we can put up tasks in the build file so that it will be executed after every build.. like creating a file or put jar in some location..Could you please explain me, what kind of realtime tasks that we would need to perform after / during the build..
What else can be done with gradle- selenium to utilize it in a maximum level...
We can build Check in , check out mechanism for selenium codes. People working from different machines can do check out , do the changes then commit and push the code to the master and check in the code.
Users can create their own build mechanisms. Running the test suite is also quite simple in Gradle
Related
I'd like to automate a process. I'm using Spark Java framework and after build and run the first time, I'd like IntelliJ Idea to watch file changes, stop, build and run the Spark Java application with the latest edits.
I know that there is the File-Watchers plugin, although I'm not able to configure it correctly.
Any help appreciated. Thanks!
As kindly suggested in this thread by Serge Baranov, it seems that a special InteeliJ Idea run configuration would be needed to support this kind of feature.
I made a feature request over at JetBrains: https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-196700
Stay tuned
We are generating a Web Service for deployment to Azure. This includes four pipeline stages for Dev, Test, Full UAT and production. On initial deployment to Dev I want to perform a set of Selenium smoke tests. Then when deployed to UAT, a full set of automated tests should be triggered.
Our test team are happier using Selenium through its Java route. After a couple of days it became clear that the process was to generate a UI agent (really important to anyone who hasn't done this yet, as ChromeDriver does run without a session, but will just hang, making you think it must be close to running), assign a SELENIUM_TEST agent property, and set this flag as a build dependency (this helps it to find the correct agent), and ensure that you set the required java and maven variables in the VSTS settings (apart from the path), rather than the local machine environment. Finally to use the clean, update and -X parameters to force the environment to be configured as part of the test process.
Now I have the problem of how do I trigger these tests from the deployment pipeline. I have searched and found articles on a large number sites and cant find anything on how this may be achieved using the Maven Java Selenium combination.
Can anyone help?
For build and deploy Java Selenium Tests in VSTS, you can refer the document Testing Java applications with VSTS for detail steps:
Besides, you can also refer the blog Continuous Testing of a Java Web App in VSTS using Selenium for build and deploy Java Web App in VSTS.
I am not posting this as a full answer, but I wanted to respond to the kind input from Michele and Marina. I am not sure that there isn't a better way of approaching this but with the assistance of both I was able to at least get closer to an answer. I did prepare images, but apparently you need a reputation to do so.
So this is what I actually ended up doing.
Step 1 – the MVC web app was generated and appropriate deployment slots set up to receive the web build artefacts.
Step 2 – Created a CI process purely to generate code I could deploy into the WebApp CD pipeline.
Step 3 – Generated an empty “Smoke Test” environment in the WebApp Deployment pipeline, and added the new Artefact from step 1 into this.
Configured the Smoke Tests item
Configured it to only receive the _AutoTest-CI artefact
Set it to use the “default” pipeline
Added the “Demand” that specifies the machine configured for Selenium tests.
Added the Maven task, and pointed it at the Maven POM
At this stage it succeeded to run through the configured tests. The Maven deployment step seems to have the idea that it can generate test results, but the output gives warnings that no test results were generated. It will generate the output, and reports a success or failure, so this is a semi-success. The missing last piece is to report the full test results, which I have yet to achieve.
You can trigger the Tasks inside of an Environment by configuring the Triggers with this tools in the Release management UI.
If the trigger contitions are met the process will start automatically. Inside of your process you can do whatever Task you need.
Reference
Microsoft VSTS Docs
I'm getting started with SonarQube usage for JSF page static analysis[1] in Maven. I'm only really interested in using it in Maven since I don't like the idea to introduce another build command.
After going through Analyzing the source code and the specific Maven guide I gained the impression that the plugin can only be used after downloading, installing/unpacking and starting a SonarQube instance at localhost and specifying the connection information in the plugin declaration in the POM. The plugin configuration parameter confirm that.
While this workflow might have advantages it is painful to use on CI services and the necessity to start a service manually in order to be able to build seems not very user friedly (given the fact that other development tools like Selenium or Arquillian pull entire browser, driver and servers in the background without one single line of configuration). Am I missing something about a separate plugin or configuration which manages an embedded or otherwise temporary instance to perform the analysis with a single plugin declaration?
[1] I'm aware that there're other tools based on XML validation which could do the job, but setting up a much more powerful tools like SonarQube seems to be a more flexible approach which will probably pay off.
You don't have to install SonarQube on your build server, but it is necessary to execute analysis (results will be pushed to it). It means that you have a working server somewhere and next you have to set required parameters:
sonar.host.url (http://localhost:9000 is a default value)
sonar.login and sonar.password (if your SonarQube server is secured)
See all Analysis Parameters.
I have my java based custom application. I am very much new to Jenkins and I have a requirement where Jenkins should perform build activities on check in/commit files in SVN for my application.
What are the steps or processes that needs to be followed for working with Jenkins and SVN while working on a custom java based application.
Please guide.
You can have Jenkins poll for changes and build when one or more commits have been detected. By decreasing the wait time between polling you can trigger a build on a new commit.
You can set this in the following location:
Go to your project > Configure
Scroll down to 'Build Triggers'
select 'Poll SCM'
Here you can set your polling schedule to:
H/5 * * * *
this setting makes Jenkins poll your configured source repository every 5 minutes. The '?'-button behind the input field explains more detailed use.
edit: for setting up Jenkins in general I recommend the same tutorial by vogella mentioned by henriquedsg89, or this tutorial which also gives more information about other possibly interesting settings for use with SVN.
At jenkins click at New Job, type the project name and chose a initial configuration, can be free-style. At configuration page, select the source code management as Subversion and type the svn configs.
There you can add Build steps, where you can chose to execute a shell script or whatever and move up or down the build step.
Here is a good article about configuring jenkins to an android app.
http://www.vogella.com/tutorials/Jenkins/article.html
For your requirements there are 3 high tier steps but Jenkins has pretty helpful tooltips for each of these:
Configure your source code repository. This can be done globally or per job. (Ie; git etc). Do this as one job and test before moving on.
Configure how you would like Jenkins to be notified of new builds on your repo.(Poll SCM, or you can look at this plugin)
Configure Gradle within Jenkins to do your Java builds.
Low level tiers are whether your are hosting Jenkins locally or on a hosted environment which could affect how you need to setup your Jenkins environment.
I know its a super late answer, never the less it might be useful for someone who checks it out later. There are mechanisms to do away with polling. There is a plugin which would trigger Jenkins on commit pushes to repo. It is available for Git and Subversion. However, do note that it is necessary to enable polling for this commit trigger to work as well.
Click on New Job tag on the left upper corner:
It will bring up a webpage that you have to give a job name also choose a style.
You should choose either a free-style or Maven project if you are using maven to build your project.
As you said, you are using SVN. Then you should choose Subversion under the Source Code Management options. Copy our svn URL there and it might ask you to enter credentials.
Example
You might have one generic account provided or your own.
Use the build tools to build the application. Depends on what unit test or other code metrics you want to test out, you might can utilize some plugins for your after build process. You can use JUnit to have a plot of your unit test in track. Also, you can choose the person you want to send the email to if the build failed.
Hope this is helpful.
Video reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RR0LabeUQ88
I currently mantain an open-source project hosted in SourceForge.
My project is written in Java using ANT build scripts. (Ant has a few extensions installed, but let's ignore that for now.)
Unfortunately, there seems to be no easy way to automatically generate daily builds. Is there any workaround I can use. Here is what I want:
It should always use the most recent SVN version.
It should build it.
It should publish it online. If it fails, it should publish the error report.
These tasks should be done automatically.
How can I do this? How can I emulate automatic daily builds of a project hosted in SourceForge?
As far as I understood your problem what you need is a Continuous Integration tool. It will pool the SCM for you, start a build and publish/store the error report in case of failure.
My favorite one is Hudson:
https://hudson.dev.java.net/
I think SF has a hook for emails on commits.
http://apps.sourceforge.net/trac/sitedocs/wiki/Subversion
http://apps.sourceforge.net/trac/sitedocs/wiki/Subversion%20hook%20scripts#svnnotify
I would imagine that you could trigger off of that.
Alternatively a process that checks the latest revision every hour (or whatever period you want) using (svn up) would be enough to trigger a build? (keep a record of the last known built revision and if the current revision if different, then trigger a build)
I am not familiar with them, but I suspect third party tools (CI/Continuous integration) to do builds have a way of determining a build trigger event from SVN.