So far in the series of Cucumber tutorial we have covered Feature files, Gherkins, Step Definitions, Annotations, Test Runner Class and many other things. There is no doubt that you cannot set up BDD framework until you know all the concepts but there are still few more areas which are very important to know in the life of Cucumber Automation such as Cucumber Options, Regular Expressions, Page Object factory and few others. Let’s start with Cucumber Options.
In layman language @CucumberOptions are like property file or settings for your test. Basically @CucumberOptions enables us to do all the things that we could have done if we have used cucumber command line. This is very helpful and of utmost importance if we are using IDE such eclipse only to execute our project. You must have noticed that we set few options in the ‘TestRunner’ class in the previous chapter.
TestRunner Class
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 |
package cucumberTest;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith; import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions; import cucumber.api.junit.Cucumber;
@RunWith(Cucumber.class) @CucumberOptions( features = "Feature" ,glue={"stepDefinition"} )
public class TestRunner {
} |
So in the above example we have just set two different Cucumber Options. One is for Feature File and other is for Step Definition file. We will talk about it in detail now but with this we can say that @CucumberOptions are used to set some specific properties for the Cucumber test.
Following Main Options are available in Cucumber:
dryRun option can either set as true or false. If it is set as true, it means that Cucumber will only checks that every Step mentioned in the Feature File have corresponding code written in Step Definition file or not. So in case any of the function is missed in the Step Definition for any Step in Feature File, it will give us the message. For practice just add the code ‘dryRun = true‘ in TestRunnerclass:
TestRunner Class
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 |
package cucumberTest;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith; import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions; import cucumber.api.junit.Cucumber;
@RunWith(Cucumber.class) @CucumberOptions( features = "Feature" ,glue={"stepDefinition"} ,dryRun = true )
public class TestRunner {
} |
Now give it a run by Right Click on TestRunner class and Click Run As > JUnit Test. Cucumber will run the script and the result will be shown in the left hand side project explorer window in JUnit tab.
Take a look at the time duration at the end of the every Steps, it is (0.000s). It means none of the Step is executed but still Cucumber has made sure that every Step have the corresponding method available in the Step Definition file. Give it a try, remove the ‘@Given(“^User is on Home Page$”)‘ statement from the Test_Steps class and run the TestRunner class again. You would get the following message:
This option can either set as true or false. If it is set as true, it means that the console output for the Cucumber test are much more readable. And if it is set as false, then the console output is not as readable as it should be. For practice just add the code ‘monochrome = true‘ in TestRunner class:
TestRunner Class
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 |
package cucumberTest;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith; import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions; import cucumber.api.junit.Cucumber;
@RunWith(Cucumber.class) @CucumberOptions( features = "Feature" ,glue={"stepDefinition"} ,monochrome = false )
public class TestRunner {
} |
Now give it a run by Right Click on TestRunner class and Click Run As > JUnit Test. Cucumber will run the script and Console Output will display like this:
This time change the value from true to false and run the TestRunner class again. This time the Console Output will look like this:
Features Options helps Cucumber to locate the Feature file in the project folder structure. You must have notices that we have been specifying the Feature Optionin the TestRunner class since the first chapter. All we need to do is to specify the folder path and Cucumber will automatically find all the ‘.features‘ extension files in the folder. It can be specified like:
features = “Feature“
Or if the Feature file is in the deep folder structure
features = “src/test/features“
It is almost the same think as Features Option but the only difference is that it helps Cucumber to locate the Step Definition file. Whenever Cucumberencounters a Step, it looks for a Step Definition inside all the files present in the folder mentioned in Glue Option. It can be specified like:
glue = “stepDefinition“
Or if the Step Definition file is in the deep folder structure
glue = “src/test/stepDeinition“
Format Option is used to specify different formatting options for the output reports. Various options that can be used as for-matters are:
Pretty: Prints the Gherkin source with additional colours and stack traces for errors. Use below code:
format = {“pretty“}
HTML: This will generate a HTML report at the location mentioned in the for-matter itself. Use below code:
format = {“html:Folder_Name“}
JSON: This report contains all the information from the gherkin source in JSON Format. This report is meant to be post-processed into another visual format by 3rd party tools such as Cucumber Jenkins. Use the below code:
format = {“json:Folder_Name/cucumber.json“}
JUnit: This report generates XML files just like Apache Ant’s JUnit report task. This XML format is understood by most Continuous Integration servers, who will use it to generate visual reports. use the below code:
format = { “junit:Folder_Name/cucumber.xml“}
转载自:http://toolsqa.com/cucumber/cucumber-options/