Php-webdriver library is PHP language binding for Selenium WebDriver, which allows you to control web browsers from PHP.
This library is compatible with Selenium server version 2.x, 3.x and 4.x.
The library supports modern W3C WebDriver protocol, as well as legacy JsonWireProtocol.
The concepts of this library are very similar to the "official" Java, JavaScript, .NET, Python and Ruby libraries which are developed as part of the Selenium project.
Installation is possible using Composer.
If you don't already use Composer, you can download the composer.phar
binary:
curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
Then install the library:
php composer.phar require php-webdriver/webdriver
Starting from version 1.8.0, the project has been renamed from facebook/php-webdriver
to php-webdriver/webdriver
.
In order to receive the new version and future updates, you need to rename it in your composer.json:
"require": {
- "facebook/webdriver": "(version you use)",
+ "php-webdriver/webdriver": "(version you use)",
}
and run composer update
.
To control a browser, you need to start a remote end (server), which will listen to the commands sent from this library and will execute them in the respective browser.
This could be Selenium standalone server, but for local development, you can send them directly to so-called "browser driver" like Chromedriver or Geckodriver.
📙 Below you will find a simple example. Make sure to read our wiki for more information on Chrome/Chromedriver.
Install the latest Chrome and Chromedriver. Make sure to have a compatible version of Chromedriver and Chrome!
Run chromedriver
binary, you can pass port
argument, so that it listens on port 4444:
chromedriver --port=4444
📙 Below you will find a simple example. Make sure to read our wiki for more information on Firefox/Geckodriver.
Install the latest Firefox and Geckodriver. Make sure to have a compatible version of Geckodriver and Firefox!
Run geckodriver
binary (it start to listen on port 4444 by default):
geckodriver
Selenium server can be useful when you need to execute multiple tests at once, when you run tests in several different browsers (like on your CI server), or when you need to distribute tests amongst several machines in grid mode (where one Selenium server acts as a hub, and others connect to it as nodes).
Selenium server then act like a proxy and takes care of distributing commands to the respective nodes.
The latest version can be found on the Selenium download page.
📙 You can find further Selenium server information in our wiki.
Selenium server could also be started inside Docker container - see docker-selenium project.
When creating a browser session, be sure to pass the url of your running server.
For example:
// Chromedriver (if started using --port=4444 as above)
$serverUrl = 'http://localhost:4444';
// Geckodriver
$serverUrl = 'http://localhost:4444';
// selenium-server-standalone-#.jar (version 2.x or 3.x)
$serverUrl = 'http://localhost:4444/wd/hub';
// selenium-server-standalone-#.jar (version 4.x)
$serverUrl = 'http://localhost:4444';
Now you can start browser of your choice:
use Facebook\WebDriver\Remote\RemoteWebDriver;
// Chrome
$driver = RemoteWebDriver::create($serverUrl, DesiredCapabilities::chrome());
// Firefox
$driver = RemoteWebDriver::create($serverUrl, DesiredCapabilities::firefox());
// Microsoft Edge
$driver = RemoteWebDriver::create($serverUrl, DesiredCapabilities::microsoftEdge());
Desired capabilities define properties of the browser you are about to start.
They can be customized:
use Facebook\WebDriver\Firefox\FirefoxOptions;
use Facebook\WebDriver\Remote\DesiredCapabilities;
$desiredCapabilities = DesiredCapabilities::firefox();
// Disable accepting SSL certificates
$desiredCapabilities->setCapability('acceptSslCerts', false);
// Add arguments via FirefoxOptions to start headless firefox
$firefoxOptions = new FirefoxOptions();
$firefoxOptions->addArguments(['-headless']);
$desiredCapabilities->setCapability(FirefoxOptions::CAPABILITY, $firefoxOptions);
$driver = RemoteWebDriver::create($serverUrl, $desiredCapabilities);
Capabilities can also be used to 📙 configure a proxy server which the browser should use.
To configure browser-specific capabilities, you may use 📙 ChromeOptions or 📙 FirefoxOptions.
- See legacy JsonWire protocol documentation or W3C WebDriver specification for more details.
// Go to URL
$driver->get('https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenium_(software)');
// Find search element by its id, write 'PHP' inside and submit
$driver->findElement(WebDriverBy::id('searchInput')) // find search input element
->sendKeys('PHP') // fill the search box
->submit(); // submit the whole form
// Find element of 'History' item in menu by its css selector
$historyButton = $driver->findElement(
WebDriverBy::cssSelector('#ca-history a')
);
// Read text of the element and print it to output
echo 'About to click to a button with text: ' . $historyButton->getText();
// Click the element to navigate to revision history page
$historyButton->click();
// Make sure to always call quit() at the end to terminate the browser session
$driver->quit();
See example.php for full example scenario. Visit our GitHub wiki for 📙 php-webdriver command reference and further examples.
NOTE: Above snippets are not intended to be a working example by simply copy-pasting. See example.php for a working example.
For latest changes see CHANGELOG.md file.
Some basic usage example is provided in example.php file.
How-tos are provided right here in 📙 our GitHub wiki.
If you don't use IDE, you may use API documentation of php-webdriver.
You may also want to check out the Selenium project docs and wiki.
To take advantage of automatized testing you may want to integrate php-webdriver to your testing framework. There are some projects already providing this:
- Symfony Panther uses php-webdriver and integrates with PHPUnit using
PantherTestCase
- Laravel Dusk is another project using php-webdriver, could be used for testing via
DuskTestCase
- Steward integrates php-webdriver directly to PHPUnit, and provides parallelization
- Codeception testing framework provides BDD-layer on top of php-webdriver in its WebDriver module
- You can also check out this blogpost + demo project, describing simple PHPUnit integration
We have a great community willing to help you!
❓ Do you have a question, idea or some general feedback? Visit our Discussions page. (Alternatively, you can look for many answered questions also on StackOverflow).
🐛 Something isn't working, and you want to report a bug? Submit it here as a new issue.
📙 Looking for a how-to or reference documentation? See our wiki.
We love to have your help to make php-webdriver better. See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information about contributing and developing php-webdriver.
Php-webdriver is community project - if you want to join the effort with maintaining and developing this library, the best is to look on issues marked with "help wanted" label. Let us know in the issue comments if you want to contribute and if you want any guidance, and we will be delighted to help you to prepare your pull request.