5.2 KiB
capybara-webkit
A capybara driver that uses WebKit via QtWebKit.
Qt Dependency and Installation Issues
capybara-webkit depends on a WebKit implementation from Qt, a cross-platform development toolkit. You'll need to download the Qt libraries to build and install the gem. You can find instructions for downloading and installing QT on the capybara-webkit wiki. capybara-webkit requires Qt version 4.8 or greater.
Windows Support
Currently 32-bit Windows will compile capybara-webkit. Support for Windows is provided by the open source community and Windows related issues should be posted to Stack Overflow.
Reporting Issues
Without access to your application code we can't easily debug most crashes or generic failures, so we've included a debug version of the driver that prints a log of what happened during each test. Before filing a crash bug, please see Reporting Crashes. You're much more likely to get a fix if you follow those instructions.
If you're having trouble compiling or installing, please check out the [wiki]. If you don't have any luck there, please post to Stack Overflow. Please don't open a Github issue for a system-specific compiler issue.
CI
If you're like us, you'll be using capybara-webkit on CI.
On Linux platforms, capybara-webkit requires an X server to run, although it doesn't create any visible windows. Xvfb works fine for this. You can setup Xvfb yourself and set a DISPLAY variable, try out the headless gem, or use the xvfb-run utility as follows:
xvfb-run -a bundle exec spec
This automatically sets up a virtual X server on a free server number.
Usage
Add the capybara-webkit gem to your Gemfile:
gem "capybara-webkit"
Set your Capybara Javascript driver to webkit:
Capybara.javascript_driver = :webkit
In cucumber, tag scenarios with @javascript to run them using a headless WebKit browser.
In RSpec, use the :js => true
flag. See the capybara documentation for more information about using capybara with RSpec.
Take note of the transactional fixtures section of the capybara README.
If you're using capybara-webkit with Sinatra, don't forget to set
Capybara.app = MySinatraApp.new
Offline Application Cache
The offline application cache needs a directory to write to for the cached files. Capybara-webkit will look at if the working directory has a tmp directory and when it exists offline application cache will be enabled.
Non-Standard Driver Methods
capybara-webkit supports a few methods that are not part of the standard capybara API. You can access these by calling driver
on the capybara session. When using the DSL, that will look like page.driver.method_name
.
console_messages: returns an array of messages printed using console.log
// In Javascript:
console.log("hello")
# In Ruby:
page.driver.console_messages
=> [{:source=>"http://example.com", :line_number=>1, :message=>"hello"}]
error_messages: returns an array of Javascript errors that occurred
page.driver.error_messages
=> [{:source=>"http://example.com", :line_number=>1, :message=>"SyntaxError: Parse error"}]
cookies: allows read-only access of cookies for the current session
page.driver.cookies["alpha"]
=> "abc"
header: set the given HTTP header for subsequent requests
page.driver.header 'Referer', 'https://www.thoughtbot.com'
Contributing
See the CONTRIBUTING document.
About
The capybara WebKit driver is maintained by Joe Ferris and Matt Horan. It was written by thoughtbot, inc with the help of numerous contributions from the open source community.
Code for rendering the current webpage to a PNG is borrowed from Phantom.js' implementation.
The names and logos for thoughtbot are trademarks of thoughtbot, inc.
License
capybara-webkit is Copyright (c) 2010-2014 thoughtbot, inc. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE file.