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Selenium Testing Tools Cookbook Second Edition

You're reading from   Selenium Testing Tools Cookbook Second Edition Over 90 recipes to help you build and run automated tests for your web applications with Selenium WebDriver

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784392512
Length 374 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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UNMESH GUNDECHA UNMESH GUNDECHA
Author Profile Icon UNMESH GUNDECHA
UNMESH GUNDECHA
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started 2. Finding Elements FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Elements 4. Working with Selenium API 5. Synchronizing Tests 6. Working with Alerts, Frames, and Windows 7. Data-Driven Testing 8. Using the Page Object Model 9. Extending Selenium 10. Testing HTML5 Web Applications 11. Behavior-Driven Development 12. Integration with Other Tools 13. Cross-Browser Testing 14. Testing Applications on Mobile Browsers Index

Configuring Jenkins for continuous integration

Jenkins is a popular continuous integration server in the Java development community. It is derived from the Hudson CI server. It supports SCM tools including CVS, Subversion, Git, Mercurial, Perforce, and ClearCase, and can execute Apache Maven and Apache Ant-based projects, as well as arbitrary shell scripts and Windows batch commands.

Jenkins can be deployed to set up an automated testing environment where you can run Selenium WebDriver tests unattended based on a defined schedule, or every time changes are submitted in SCM.

In this recipe, we will set up Jenkins Server to run Maven and Ant projects. Later recipes describe how Ant and Maven is used to run Selenium WebDriver tests with Jenkins.

Getting ready

Download and install the Jenkins CI server from http://jenkins-ci.org/. For this recipe, the Jenkins Windows installer is used to set up Jenkins on a Windows 7 machine.

How to do it...

Before using Jenkins, we need to set up the following...

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