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Mastering Selenium WebDriver 3.0

You're reading from   Mastering Selenium WebDriver 3.0 Boost the performance and reliability of your automated checks by mastering Selenium WebDriver

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788299671
Length 376 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Mark Collin Mark Collin
Author Profile Icon Mark Collin
Mark Collin
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Creating a Fast Feedback Loop FREE CHAPTER 2. Producing the Right Feedback When Failing 3. Exceptions Are Actually Oracles 4. The Waiting Game 5. Working with Effective Page Objects 6. Utilizing the Advanced User Interactions API 7. JavaScript Execution with Selenium 8. Keeping It Real 9. Hooking Docker into Selenium 10. Selenium – the Future 11. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A: Contributing to Selenium 1. Appendix B: Working with JUnit 2. Appendix C: Introduction to Appium

Starting up Docker containers as part of the build

As we have seen, it's really easy to spin up and shut down Docker containers. Wouldn't it be useful if we could do that as part of a build?

In a perfect world, our build process would build our application and then install it in a Docker container. We would then be able to run tests against this container, and if everything worked as expected, we could publish the container in a private Docker registry. We could then take this Docker container and pass it through our promotional model until it hits live. We then would have something in live that is identical to the container that we originally built and tested. Thus, we would know that it works. If we have any problems with it in live, we can easily spin up another instance of this container in a test environment to reproduce the problem. Rather than passing around application...

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