Installing WebDrivers
Each browser requires a browser-specific WebDriver to be set up before tests can be run.
Tip
| If you’re creating a Maven project, consider using the automated WebDriver plugin. It automatically downloads the drivers you need. See https://github.com/vaadin/testbench-demo for an example. |
If you want to install the drivers, most of them are available through the package manager (such as, brew
or apt-get
). You can also manually download and install the following drivers:
-
GeckoDriver for Firefox: https://github.com/mozilla/geckodriver/releases
-
ChromeDriver for Chrome: https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/chromedriver/downloads
-
Microsoft WebDriver for Edge: https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/webdriver/
-
Selenium IE Driver for IE11: http://selenium-release.storage.googleapis.com/index.html
Tip
| Safari drivers are pre-installed on Macs and don’t need to be manually installed. |
Note
| The WebDriver version is often tied to the browser version. You need to make sure that the combination is a supported one. For example, ChromeDriver 2.35 only supports Chrome 62–64. |
Adding WebDriver to System Path
The driver executable must be included in the operating system PATH
or be given to the test using a driver-specific system Java property:
-
Google Chrome:
webdriver.chrome.driver
-
Mozilla Firefox:
webdriver.gecko.driver
-
Microsoft Edge:
webdriver.edge.driver
-
Internet Explorer:
webdriver.ie.driver
Usually, it’s simpler to add it to the PATH
variable so that it’s always available.
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