| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2015 DroidDriver committers |
| * |
| * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| * You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| * |
| * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| * |
| * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| * limitations under the License. |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * Helper classes for writing an Android UI test framework using DroidDriver. |
| * |
| * <h2>UI test framework design principles</h2> |
| * |
| * A UI test framework should model the UI of the AUT in a hierarchical way to maximize code reuse. |
| * Common interactions should be abstracted as methods of page objects. Uncommon interactions may |
| * not be abstracted, but carried out using "driver" directly. |
| * <p> |
| * The organization of the entities (pages, components) does not need to strictly follow the AUT |
| * structure. The UI model can be greatly simplified to make it easy to use. |
| * <p> |
| * In general the framework should follow these principles: |
| * <ul> |
| * <li>Layered abstraction: at the highest level, methods completely abstract the implementation |
| * detail. This kind of methods carry out a complex action, usually involving multiple steps. |
| * At a lower level, methods can expose some details, e.g. clickInstallButton(), which does a |
| * single action and returns a dialog instance it opens, and let the caller decide how to |
| * further interact with it. Lastly at the lowest level, you can always use "driver" to access |
| * any elements if no higher-level methods are available.</li> |
| * <li>Instance methods of a page object assume the page is currently shown.</li> |
| * <li>If a method opens another page, it should return that page on a best-effort basis. There |
| * could be exceptions where we let callers determine the type of the new page, but that |
| * should be considered hacks and be clearly documented.</li> |
| * <li>The page object constructors are public so that it's easy to hack as mentioned above, but |
| * don't abuse it -- typically callers should acquire page objects by calling methods of other |
| * page objects. The root is the home page of the AUT.</li> |
| * <li>Simple dialogs may not merit their own top-level classes, and can be nested as static |
| * subclasses.</li> |
| * <li>Define constants that use values generated from Android resources instead of using string |
| * literals. For example, call {@link android.content.Context#getResources} to get the |
| * Resources instance, then call {@link android.content.res.Resources#getResourceName} to get |
| * the string representation of a resource id, or call {@link |
| * android.content.res.Resources#getString} to get the localized string of a string resource. |
| * This gives you compile-time check over incompatible changes.</li> |
| * <li>Avoid public constants. Typically clients of a page object are interested in what can be |
| * done on the page (the content or actions), not how to achieve that (which is an |
| * implementation detail). The constants used by the page object hence should be encapsulated |
| * (declared private). Another reason for this item is that the constants may not be real |
| * constants. Instead they are generated from resources and acquiring the values requires the |
| * {@link android.content.Context}, which is not available until setUp() is called. If those |
| * are referenced in static fields of a test class, they will be initialized at class loading |
| * time and result in a crash.</li> |
| * <li>There are cases that exposing public constants is arguably desired. For example, when the |
| * interaction is trivial (e.g. clicking a button that does not open a new page), and there |
| * are many similar elements on the page, thus adding distinct methods for them will bloat the |
| * page object class. In these cases you may define public constants, with a warning that |
| * "Don't use them in static fields of tests".</li> |
| * </ul> |
| * |
| * <h2>Common pitfalls</h2> |
| * <ul> |
| * <li>UI elements are generally views. Users can get attributes and perform actions. Note that |
| * actions often update a UiElement, so users are advised not to store instances of UiElement |
| * for later use - the instances could become stale. In other words, UiElement represents a |
| * dynamic object, while Finder represents a static object. Don't declare fields of the type |
| * UiElement; use Finder instead.</li> |
| * <li>{@link android.test.ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2#getActivity} calls |
| * {@link android.test.InstrumentationTestCase#launchActivityWithIntent}, which may hang in |
| * {@link android.app.Instrumentation#waitForIdleSync}. You can call |
| * {@link android.content.Context#startActivity} directly.</li> |
| * <li>startActivity does not wait until the new Activity is shown. This may cause problem when |
| * the old Activity on screen contains UiElements that match what are expected on the new |
| * Activity - interaction with the UiElements fails because the old Activity is closing. |
| * Sometimes it shows as a test passes when run alone but fails when run with other tests. |
| * The work-around is to add a delay after calling startActivity.</li> |
| * <li>Error "android.content.res.Resources$NotFoundException: Unable to find resource ID ..."? |
| * <br> |
| * This may occur if you reference the AUT's resource in tests, and the two APKs are out of |
| * sync. Solution: build and install both AUT and tests together.</li> |
| * <li>"You said the test runs on older devices as well as API18 devices, but mine is broken on |
| * X (e.g. GingerBread)!" |
| * <br> |
| * This may occur if your AUT has different implementations on older devices. In this case, |
| * your tests have to match the different execution paths of AUT, which requires insight into |
| * the implementation of the AUT. A tip for testing older devices: uiautomatorviewer does not |
| * work on ore-API16 devices (the "Device screenshot" button won't work), but you can use it |
| * with dumps from DroidDriver (use to-uiautomator.xsl to convert the format).</li> |
| * <li>"com.android.launcher has stopped unexpectedly" and logcat says OutOfMemoryError |
| * <br> |
| * This is sometimes seen on GingerBread or other low-memory and slow devices. GC is not fast |
| * enough to reclaim memory on those devices. A work-around: call gc more aggressively and |
| * sleep to let gc run, e.g. |
| * <pre> |
| public void setUp() throws Exception { |
| super.setUp(); |
| if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT <= Build.VERSION_CODES.GINGERBREAD_MR1) { |
| Runtime.getRuntime().gc(); |
| SystemClock.sleep(1000L); |
| } |
| } |
| </pre></li> |
| * </ul> |
| */ |
| package io.appium.droiddriver.helpers; |