Testing in Headless Browsers
Configure Your Test Crate
Add this to the root of your test crate, e.g. $MY_CRATE/tests/web.rs
:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { use wasm_bindgen_test::wasm_bindgen_test_configure; wasm_bindgen_test_configure!(run_in_browser); #}
Note that although a particular test crate must target either headless browsers or Node.js, you can have test suites for both Node.js and browsers for your project by using multiple test crates. For example:
$MY_CRATE/
`-- tests
|-- node.rs # The tests in this suite use the default Node.js.
`-- web.rs # The tests in this suite are configured for browsers.
Configuring Which Browser is Used
To control which browser is used for headless testing, use the appropriate flag
with wasm-pack test
:
-
wasm-pack test --chrome
— Run the tests in Chrome. This machine must have Chrome installed. -
wasm-pack test --firefox
— Run the tests in Firefox. This machine must have Firefox installed. -
wasm-pack test --safari
— Run the tests in Safari. This machine must have Safari installed.
If multiple browser flags are passed, the tests will be run under each browser.
Running the Tests in the Headless Browser
Once the tests are configured to run in a headless browser, just run wasm-pack test
with the appropriate browser flags and --headless
:
wasm-pack test --headless --chrome --firefox --safari
Configuring Headless Browser capabilities
Add the file webdriver.json
to the root of your crate. Each browser has own
section for capabilities. For example:
{
"moz:firefoxOptions": {
"prefs": {
"media.navigator.streams.fake": true,
"media.navigator.permission.disabled": true
},
"args": []
},
"goog:chromeOptions": {
"args": [
"--use-fake-device-for-media-stream",
"--use-fake-ui-for-media-stream"
]
}
}
Full list supported capabilities can be found:
Note that the headless
argument is always enabled for both browsers.
Debugging Headless Browser Tests
Omitting the --headless
flag will disable headless mode, and allow you to
debug failing tests in your browser's devtools.
Appendix: Testing in headless browsers without wasm-pack
⚠️ The recommended way to use wasm-bindgen-test
is with wasm-pack
, since it
will handle installing the test runner, installing a WebDriver client for your
browser, and informing cargo
how to use the custom test runner. However, you
can also manage those tasks yourself, if you wish.
Configuring Which Browser is Used
If one of the following environment variables is set, then the corresponding
WebDriver and browser will be used. If none of these environment variables are
set, then the $PATH
is searched for a suitable WebDriver implementation.
GECKODRIVER=path/to/geckodriver
Use Firefox for headless browser testing, and geckodriver
as its
WebDriver.
The firefox
binary must be on your $PATH
.
CHROMEDRIVER=path/to/chromedriver
Use Chrome for headless browser testing, and chromedriver
as its
WebDriver.
The chrome
binary must be on your $PATH
.
SAFARIDRIVER=path/to/safaridriver
Use Safari for headless browser testing, and safaridriver
as its
WebDriver.
This is installed by default on Mac OS. It should be able to find your Safari installation by default.
Running the Tests in the Remote Headless Browser
Tests can be run on a remote webdriver. To do this, the above environment variables must be set as URL to the remote webdriver. For example:
CHROMEDRIVER_REMOTE=http://remote.host/
Running the Tests in the Headless Browser
Once the tests are configured to run in a headless browser and the appropriate environment variables are set, executing the tests for headless browsers is the same as executing them for Node.js:
cargo test --target wasm32-unknown-unknown
Debugging Headless Browser Tests
Set the NO_HEADLESS=1
environment variable and the browser tests will not run
headless. Instead, the tests will start a local server that you can visit in
your Web browser of choices, and headless testing should not be used. You can
then use your browser's devtools to debug.