Pipe your JavaScript into a browser of your choosing:
- Local Google Chrome.
- Local Mozilla Firefox.
- Sauce Labs for the rest.
A simple alternative to bigger browser automation tools, aiming to keep the interface and initial setup as simple as possible: JavaScript goes in, console logs come out. There's also support for browser screenshots in Chrome, with the other browsers getting support for that soon too.
Designed for running UI tests on your desktop machine. You can use this, for example, to run tape in the browser and get TAP output in your terminal.
Most of the time, you'll want to use smokestack
using the command-line
interface, which accepts JavaScript on stdin. For example, to run any arbitrary
JavaScript file:
smokestack < script.js
You can include smokestack
in the middle of your pipeline too. Here's an
example of using browserify and
tape to run a test on Firefox, using
tap-spec for formatting:
browserify test.js | smokestack -b firefox | tap-spec
This works because any calls to console.log
and its variants are sent back
from the browser out to the other side of the smokestack
process.
Usage:
smokestack {OPTIONS} < script.js
General:
-b, --browser Specify which browser to use [default: chrome]
-t, --timeout Specify the maximum timeout in milliseconds
-p, --port Specify a port for smokestack to listen to
-h, --help Display this message
Sauce Labs only:
-s, --saucelabs Include to run your tests on Sauce Labs
-u, --username Username to log in with
-k, --key API Access key to use
console.log
and its variants are all instrumented such that they not only
log output to your console, but to the other side of the smokestack process
in your Terminal too! You can use these methods the way you're familiar
with them in node or your favourite browser, they'll work just the same.
window.close
is instrumented by smokestack to trigger the end of a run.
In most cases, you don't want to manually close the browser and have that
happen automatically when it's ready.
Just use this method when you've done what you wanted to do, and it'll tell Chrome/Firefox/Sauce Labs to shut down (relatively) gracefully.
For any optional extras which don't have a native browser analogue, you can
pull in smokestack
using browserify.
Takes a screenshot of the current browser window, writing out the captured file
to dest
. Currently only works on Chrome, but eventually this will be available
on Firefox and Sauce Labs too.
Images will be saved as PNGs.
var smokestack = require('smokestack')
window.onload = function() {
smokestack.capture('screenshots/0001.png', function(err) {
if (err) throw err
window.close()
})
}
Creates a new smokestack stream
. You should pipe JavaScript into it, and
pipe the console output somewhere else, much the same as you would when using
the command-line:
var smokestack = require('smokestack')
var fs = require('fs')
fs.createReadStream('script.js')
.pipe(smokestack({
browser: 'chrome'
, timeout: 15000
, saucelabs: false
}))
.pipe(process.stdout)
opts
are equivalent to what's used in the command-line interface.
Using Sauce Labs with smokestack is simple, simply include the following additional arguments:
smokestack --saucelabs --username USERNAME --key ACCESS_KEY
Your username/key will also get picked up from your environment if they're
defined too, so feel free to include the following in your ~/.bash_profile
and omit the --username
and --key
flags:
# Obviously, include your own, non-fake credentials here:
export SAUCE_USERNAME='hughskennedy'
export SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY='138b247bc5b6-b14b-a4d4-agcf-82c460a2'
You may be able to run a browser headlessly using an X virtual frame buffer.
For example, on recent Debian linux:
# Install Xvfb from Debian Repository
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y xvfb
# Install Google Chrome to google-chrome
wget -c wget https://dl.google.com/linux/direct/google-chrome-stable_current_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i google-chrome-stable_current_amd64.deb
sudo ln -s $(which google-chrome-stable) /usr/bin/google-chrome
# Start a virtual framebuffer display
Xvfb :1 -screen 5 1024x768x8 &
export DISPLAY=:1.5
# Run tests in Chrome
npm run test:chrome
- tap-closer -- close the browser window once TAP tests have finished
MIT. See LICENSE.md for details.