class ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase
System Testing
System tests let you test applications in the browser. Because system tests use a real browser experience, you can test all of your JavaScript easily from your test suite.
To create a system test in your application, extend your test class from ApplicationSystemTestCase
. System tests use Capybara as a base and allow you to configure the settings through your application_system_test_case.rb
file that is generated with a new application or scaffold.
Here is an example system test:
require 'application_system_test_case' class Users::CreateTest < ApplicationSystemTestCase test "adding a new user" do visit users_path click_on 'New User' fill_in 'Name', with: 'Arya' click_on 'Create User' assert_text 'Arya' end end
When generating an application or scaffold, an application_system_test_case.rb
file will also be generated containing the base class for system testing. This is where you can change the driver, add Capybara settings, and other configuration for your system tests.
require "test_helper" class ApplicationSystemTestCase < ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase driven_by :selenium, using: :chrome, screen_size: [1400, 1400] end
By default, ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase
is driven by the Selenium driver, with the Chrome browser, and a browser size of 1400x1400.
Changing the driver configuration options is easy. Let's say you want to use the Firefox browser instead of Chrome. In your application_system_test_case.rb
file add the following:
require "test_helper" class ApplicationSystemTestCase < ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase driven_by :selenium, using: :firefox end
driven_by
has a required argument for the driver name. The keyword arguments are :using
for the browser and :screen_size
to change the size of the browser screen. These two options are not applicable for headless drivers and will be silently ignored if passed.
Headless browsers such as headless Chrome and headless Firefox are also supported. You can use these browsers by setting the :using
argument to :headless_chrome
or :headless_firefox
.
To use a headless driver, like Poltergeist, update your Gemfile to use Poltergeist instead of Selenium and then declare the driver name in the application_system_test_case.rb
file. In this case, you would leave out the :using
option because the driver is headless, but you can still use :screen_size
to change the size of the browser screen, also you can use :options
to pass options supported by the driver. Please refer to your driver documentation to learn about supported options.
require "test_helper" require "capybara/poltergeist" class ApplicationSystemTestCase < ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase driven_by :poltergeist, screen_size: [1400, 1400], options: { js_errors: true } end
Some drivers require browser capabilities to be passed as a block instead of through the options
hash.
As an example, if you want to add mobile emulation on chrome, you'll have to create an instance of selenium's Chrome::Options
object and add capabilities with a block.
The block will be passed an instance of <Driver>::Options
where you can define the capabilities you want. Please refer to your driver documentation to learn about supported options.
class ApplicationSystemTestCase < ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase driven_by :selenium, using: :chrome, screen_size: [1024, 768] do |driver_option| driver_option.add_emulation(device_name: 'iPhone 6') driver_option.add_extension('path/to/chrome_extension.crx') end end
Because ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase
is a shim between Capybara and Rails, any driver that is supported by Capybara is supported by system tests as long as you include the required gems and files.
Public Class Methods
# File actionpack/lib/action_dispatch/system_test_case.rb, line 156 def self.driven_by(driver, using: :chrome, screen_size: [1400, 1400], options: {}, &capabilities) driver_options = { using: using, screen_size: screen_size, options: options } self.driver = SystemTesting::Driver.new(driver, driver_options, &capabilities) end
System Test configuration options
The default settings are Selenium, using Chrome, with a screen size of 1400x1400.
Examples:
driven_by :poltergeist driven_by :selenium, screen_size: [800, 800] driven_by :selenium, using: :chrome driven_by :selenium, using: :headless_chrome driven_by :selenium, using: :firefox driven_by :selenium, using: :headless_firefox
© 2004–2019 David Heinemeier Hansson
Licensed under the MIT License.