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· 5 minutes de lecture

Today the WebdriverIO team announced in their OpenJS Foundation Q&A session that the project opens an OpenCollective to allow users and companies to donate to the development of the project and support community members to run WebdriverIO workshops and other types of events. This allows everyone to be paid to work on features and bug fixes as well as help the community to pay for pizza or rental space when hosting WebdriverIO workshops or meetups.

If your company uses WebdriverIO and benefits from it, please ask your manager or your marketing team to support the project by donating to the collective. Support will allow the maintainers to dedicate more time for maintenance and new features for everyone.

As part of this we also like to announce the official WebdriverIO Swag Store: shop.webdriver.io, which will be used as an income source for the collective. All purchases from that store will directly go into our fund and to you. We start our collection with a T-shirt, a sweatshirt and a couple of accessories but will soon extend to more. So stay tuned!

We want to be transparent in the way we accept expenses to the collective. Everyone should be eligible to participate and send in expenses for development on certain features. We also want to give back to the community by allowing us to expense event expenses. The following expense types may be eligible to be reimbursed from the collective:

Event Expenses

If you host an event that has a speaker talking about using WebdriverIO and it's features you can expense up to $100. Reimbursement requirements for event expenses include:

  • You or the event account must share the project on social media (Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn) at least 3x
  • The event page must have the WebdriverIO logo and a link to the project page in your meetup description
  • You must use the funds for qualified event expenses such as food, beverage, room or equipment rental.
  • You must submit receipts with your reimbursement request.

Our goal with this expense policy is to help the community to run events, to promote the project and support anyone learning about WebdriverIO. We've already seen project meetups happening in New York and The Netherlands and hope to see more of this in the future.

Development Expenses

If you have done development work on any of the repositories within the GitHub WebdriverIO organisation you may reimburse up to $1000 if the following requirements are met:

  • You must have submitted qualifying pull requests that have closed at least 10 issues that were labeled with Expensable 💸
  • Every additional issue closed with that label can be expensed with $100
  • You must submit links to all issues you’ve closed due to your pull requests
  • In order to close the ticket automatically, you must have one commit message with the Fix keyword. For example, Fix #1234 to close ticket #1234.
  • Pull Requests must be merged by someone from the core team. If there are several Pull Requests, the core team member either selects the most recent one or the best one - that’s up to them to decide what is best for the project.
  • You must claim an Expensable 💸 issue by commenting to the issue thread to ensure that no one else is working on the same issue.
  • Anyone contributing to WebdriverIO is eligible to expense their work if the implemented features or bug fixes are not objectives of a commercial job.

Please note that contributing on behalf of a company does not make you eligible to also get reimbursed by the collective. If a company pays you to work on WebdriverIO we see this already as a contribution to the project by the company.

We understand that $1000 for fixing 10 bugs or implementing 10 features may seem arbitrary because some work items will take longer than others. However by requiring someone to finish 10 work items we hope that this uncertainty of effort and time will balance out. We also understand that this will not reimburse someone by their market value and it certainly won't allow someone to work full time on WebdriverIO. The goal of the collective is to reimburse people that usually would contribute in their free time in a very transparent and open way.

Travel Expenses

If you are a member of the Technical Steering Committee team you are eligible to expense flights and hotel accommodations for travel to conferences or meetups as part of a speaking engagement on WebdriverIO, not paid by the event itself or a company. You may expense up to $500. Reimbursement requirements for travel expenses include:

  • You must send out a post from your main social media account (e.g. Twitter, LinkedIn or personal blog) thanking all contributors of the collective after the event took place.
  • You must use the funds for qualified travel expenses such as ground or air transportation to the event and hotel accommodations.
  • You must submit receipts with your reimbursement request.

Even though currently there are no in-person events happening due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we hope that we come back to times where we can reconnect with the community on a personal level. For that we would like to support the core team with their travel expenses.

Overall we hope that this expense policy is fair and inclusive enough that anyone can participate. Opening a collective might sound easy in the beginning but doesn't end up being a trivial effort when you consider transparency and fairness. We expect to make amendments to our policies once we gather more experience from the process.

Thank you to everyone who will donate money to the collective and therefore will support the project and everyone contributing to it. It really means a lot ❤️

· 3 minutes de lecture

Until now, WebdriverIO has created a separate instance to run each of the spec files. So, if we have a directory structure that looks something like this:

test
└─── specs
│ test_login.js
│ test_product_order.js
│ test_checkout.js
│ test_b1.js
│ test_b2.js

and the config file has specs defined as follows:

    "specs": [
'./test/specs/test*.js'
],

then when WebdriverIO is run, the specs definition will be expanded to create a list of all the test files, and a separate instance will be created to run each test (up to the value of "maxInstances"). Remaining tests will be queued until tests complete. Consequently, each test is run in its own instance.

This model has many advantages. It means that tests can be run in parallel and makes it easier to retry tests that fail etc.

However, there are cases where this does not work so well. In one case a users flow involved transpiling tens of thousands of Typescript files for each of the ~250 test files, resulting in a huge overhead in the speed of the testing. In another case a remote device farm was provisioning a new device for each test with all the associated setup thereby impacting performance and cost.

At Vertizan we are integrating our AI-driven and functional coverage-led Vitaq test automation tool with WebdriverIO and Mocha. For Vitaq AI to work, it needs to be able to select which test/action to run next and that requires having all of the tests available in a single instance.

Consequently, we have worked with the WebdriverIO team to implement a syntax which allows the user to specify which tests should be grouped together for execution in the same instance. All of the three test execution frameworks (Mocha, Jasmine, Cucumber) are supported by this approach, and by default they will run the tests sequentially.

To take advantage of this capability, the definition of the specs in the WDIO config file has been extended so that it can now accept arrays within the specs array. All of the files within an inner array are grouped together and run in the same instance.

So, the following specs definition:

    "specs": [
[
"./test/specs/test_login.js",
"./test/specs/test_product_order.js",
"./test/specs/test_checkout.js"
],
"./test/specs/test_b*.js",
],

when run against the previously described directory tree would result in three instances:

  • One instance would run the group of test_login.js, test_product_order.js and test_checkout.js
  • Another instance would run test_b1.js
  • A final instance would run test_b2.js

It is only the specs definition that supports this syntax.

EDIT: This syntax has now been extended to support specs defined in suites, so you can now also define suites like this:

    "suites": {
end2end: [
[
"./test/specs/test_login.js",
"./test/specs/test_product_order.js",
"./test/specs/test_checkout.js"
]
],
allb: ["./test/specs/test_b*.js"]
},

and in this case all of the tests of the "end2end" suite would be run in a single instance.

· 8 minutes de lecture

It's the time of the year where the WebdriverIO project is releasing a new major update. It’s almost become a tradition for us to rewrite the complete code base to further grow the project. When we announced the v5 update, we moved from a multi-repository setup to a mono-repo. This time, the rewrite of the code base is just as important and impactful, but comes with almost no implications for the end user. As more and more contributors have joined the project, we've noticed that using pure JavaScript can be helpful to keep the entry barrier for contributions low, but that it ultimately decreases the quality of contributions overall. With the growing size of the code in the project, keeping up with all the different types that were thrown around was becoming more difficult for us as core contributors. Since we already had a lot of TypeScript fans among us, we decided to move to TypeScript quickly after meeting at the OpenJS Collaborator Summit.

Our hope is that by moving to TypeScript, fewer bugs will be introduced during continued development on the framework. It will help improve the quality of code contributions and the speed of development of certain features. It also brings more confidence in new versions that we ship to the user.

This major update will largely only impact TypeScript users as we have updated types in all places and changed the way we distribute them. As part of the rewrite, we upgraded to Cucumber v7, which also moved its codebase to TypeScript. Because of that we had to update some of the Cucumber hooks to ensure they come with proper type safety. In the following we go into every major change and will describe how you can upgrade to v7.

Drop Node v10 Support

We've dropped support for Node v10, which was moved into a maintenance LTS phase by the Node.js team in May 2020. While this version still receives important security updates until April 2021, we recommend updating your Node.js version to v14 or higher.

To update Node.js, it is important to know how it was installed in the first place. If you are in a Docker environment, you can just upgrade the base image like:

- FROM mhart/alpine-node:10
+ FROM mhart/alpine-node:14

We recommend using NVM (Node Version Manager) to install and manage Node.js versions. You can find a detailed description on how to install NVM and update Node in their project readme.

TypeScript Rewrite

We have rewritten the complete code base and almost touched all files to add type safety and to fix a lot of bugs on the way. This was a true community effort and would have taken much longer if we didn’t have so many people helping with code contributions. Thank you all for that ❤️! Before, WebdriverIO auto-generated all type definitions, which caused the creation of a lot of duplicate types and inconsistency. With this overhaul, all types are directly taken from the code itself and centralized in a single new helper package called @wdio/types. If you have been using TypeScript, you will now have much better type support for various commands and the configuration file.

There are two significant changes how this TypeScript rewrite will impact you. Instead of just defining webdriverio in your types you now need to set @wdio/globals/types:

// tsconfig.json
"types": [
"node",
- "webdriverio",
+ "@wdio/globals/types",
"@wdio/mocha-framework"
],

Lastly, if you define custom commands, you need to provide their types slightly different now, if using module-style type definition files (type definition file uses import/export; tsconfig.json contains include section):

// define custom commands in v6
declare namespace WebdriverIO {
// adding command to `browser`
interface Browser {
browserCustomCommand: (arg: number) => void
}
}

this now has to be:

declare global {
namespace WebdriverIO {
interface Browser {
browserCustomCommand: (arg: number) => void
}
}
}

Otherwise, if using ambient type definition files (no include section in tsconfig, no import/export in type definition file), then keep the custom command declaration the same as before, since including the global declaration as above will require the type definition file to be changed to a module.

Alongside with this change we also equipped the testrunner to auto-compile your configuration if TypeScript is detected, this allows to leverage type safety in your WDIO configuration without any additional setup (big thanks for this contribution goes to @r4j4h). With that you also don't need ts-node/register to be required in your Mocha, Jasmine or Cucumber options, e.g.:

jasmineOpts: {
- requires: ['ts-node/register', 'tsconfig-paths/register'],
+ requires: ['tsconfig-paths/register'],
},

You can read more about WebdriverIO TypeScript integration in our docs.

Cucumber v7 Update

The folks working on Cucumber have done a tremendous job moving their code base to TypeScript, which has made our lives tremendously easier. The new Cucumber integration required us to update the parameters within our Cucumber hooks.

If you have been using Cucumber, all you need to do to update to v7 is to update your Cucumber imports to their new package:

- const { Given, When, Then } = require('cucumber')
+ const { Given, When, Then } = require('@cucumber/cucumber')

Improved Google Lighthouse Integration

Since v6 WebdriverIO can run on the WebDriver protocol for true cross browser automation, but also automate specific browsers using browser APIs such as Chrome DevTools. This allows for interesting integrations into tools that allow broader testing capabilities such as Google Lighthouse. With the @wdio/devtools-service, WebdriverIO users were able to access these capabilities using Google Lighthouse to run performance tests. In this release, we’ve also updated Google Lighthouse to the latest version to enable new performance metrics such as Cumulative Layout Shifts or First Input Delay.

While in v6 performance tests were automatically run on a mobile environment, we have decided to change this and make the default behavior more obvious. Therefore, if you run performance tests in v7, there aren't any changes to the environment where you run your tests. We still recommend emulating a mobile device to more accurately capture the user experience of users most impacted by bad application performance. To do so, you can run the following commands:

browser.emulateDevice('iPhone X')
browser.enablePerformanceAudits({
networkThrottling: 'Regular 3G',
cpuThrottling: 4,
cacheEnabled: false,
formFactor: 'mobile'
})

The formFactor property has been added with the update to Google Lighthouse v7, which determines how performance metrics are scored and if mobile-only audits are skipped.

New PWA Check Command

In addition, we have deepened our integration to the tool and added audits for capturing the quality of your progressive web apps (PWA). These applications are built with modern web APIs to deliver enhanced capabilities, reliability, and installability while reaching anyone, anywhere, on any device with a single codebase. To test if your application fulfills the PWA requirements we have introduced a checkPWA command that runs a variety of audits, validating the set up of your app:

const result = browser.checkPWA()
expect(result.passed).toBe(true)

We will continue to add more integrations into tools like Google Lighthouse to provide more testing capabilities, e.g. accessibility, best practices and SEO.

Auto Compiling

In v7 of WebdriverIO we made using compiler tools like Babel or TypeScript a lot easier. The testrunner can now automatically compile the config if it finds the necessary packages in your modules. Usually these had to be defined in your framework options like so:

    mochaOpts: {
ui: 'bdd',
require: ['@babel/register'],
// ...
},

These settings need to be removed now as WebdriverIO automatically includes them. Read more about how to set up Babel or TypeScript in our docs.

Stricter Protocol Compliance

The WebDriver protocol has been upgraded to a W3C recommended standard since 2018. A lot of cloud vendors and tools have been able to update their implementation making all artifacts of the JSONWireProtocol obsolete. The WebdriverIO projects wants to support this transition by adding additional checks to its capability configuration to ensure users don't accidentally send a mixture of both protocols resulting in an unexpected behavior. With the new version your session request will automatically fail if you send incompatible capabilities along, e.g.:

capabilities: {
browserName: 'Chrome',
platform: 'Windows 10', // invalid JSONWire Protocol capability
'goog:chromeOptions': { ... }
}

Test Coverage Reporting

The @wdio/devtools-service now offers to capture the code coverage of your JavaScript application files. This can help you to identify whether you should write more e2e tests or not. To enable the feature you have to enable it by setting the coverageReporter option for the service:

// wdio.conf.js
services: [
['devtools' {
coverageReporter: {
enable: true,
type: 'html',
logDir: __dirname + '/coverage'
}
}]
]

You can also assert the code coverage within your tests using the new getCoverageReport command, e.g.:

const coverage = browser.getCoverageReport()
expect(coverage.lines.total).toBeAbove(0.9)
expect(coverage.statements.total).toBeAbove(0.9)
expect(coverage.functions.total).toBeAbove(0.9)
expect(coverage.branches.total).toBeAbove(0.9)

New Docs

As you might already have seen, we have updated our docs to give this new release a brand new face. We've upgraded our Docusaurus setup to v2 and gave the whole design a new touch. Big shout out to Anton Meier for helping us out and making our robot on the front page so lively.

That's it! We hope you enjoy the new version and update your framework soon-ish to get all these new features, type safety and bug fixes for your projects. If you have any questions don't hesitate to start a conversation on the discussions page or join our growing support chat that has already reached 6.7k active members.

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