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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to Appium

Fork the project, make a change, and send a pull request! Please have a look at our Style Guide before getting to work. Please make sure the unit and functional tests pass before sending a pull request; for more information on how to run tests, keep reading!

Make sure you read and follow the setup instructions in the README first.

Using Appium

An Appium setup involves the Appium server, which sends messages back and forth between your test code and devices/emulators, and a test script, written in whatever language binding exists that is compatible with Appium. Run an instance of an Appium server, and then run your test.

The quick way to get started:

$ git clone https://github.com/appium/appium.git
$ cd appium
$ ./reset.sh
$ sudo grunt authorize # for ios only
$ node .

Hacking with Appium

From your local repo's command prompt, install the following packages using the following commands (if you didn't install node using homebrew, you might have to run npm with sudo privileges):

npm install -g mocha
npm install -g grunt-cli
./reset.sh --dev

The first two commands install test and build tools (sudo may not be necessary if you installed node.js via Homebrew). The third command installs all app dependencies and builds supporting binaries and test apps. reset.sh is also the recommended command to run after pulling changes from master. At this point, you're able to start the Appium server:

node .

There are some arguments you can pass into the Appium server from the command-line:

node . --app /absolute/path/to/app  // launch Appium server with app
node . --launch // pre-launch the app when appium loads
node . --log /my/appium.log // log to file instead of stdout
node . --quiet // don't log verbose output

See the server documentation for a full list of arguments.

Like the power of automating dev tasks? Check out the Appium Grunt tasks available to help with building apps, installing apps, generating docs, etc.

Hacking with Appium for iOS

To avoid a security dialog that may appear when launching your iOS apps you'll have to modify your /etc/authorization file in one of two ways:

  1. Manually modify the element following <allow-root> under <key>system.privilege.taskport</key> in your /etc/authorization file to <true/>.

  2. Run the following grunt command which automatically modifies your /etc/authorization file for you:

    sudo grunt authorize
    

At this point, run:

./reset.sh --ios --dev

Now your Appium instance is ready to go. Run node . to kick up the Appium server.

Hacking with Appium for Android

Bootstrap running for Android by running:

./reset.sh --android --dev

If you want to use Selendroid for support on older Android platforms like 2.3, then run:

./reset.sh --selendroid --dev

Make sure you have one and only one Android emulator or device running, e.g. by running this command in another process (assuming the emulator command is on your path):

emulator -avd <MyAvdName>

Now you are ready to run the Appium server via node ..

Making sure you're up to date

Since Appium uses dev versions of some packages, it often becomes necessary to install new npm packages or update various things. There's a handy shell script to do all this for all platforms (the --dev flag gets dev npm dependencies and test applications used in the Appium test suite). You will also need to do this when Appium bumps its version up:

./reset.sh --dev

Or you can run reset for individual platforms only:

./reset.sh --ios --dev
./reset.sh --android --dev
./reset.sh --selendroid --dev

Running Tests

First, check out our documentation on running tests in general Make sure your system is set up properly for the platforms you desire to test on.

Once your system is set up and your code is up to date, you can run unit tests with:

grunt unit

You can run functional tests for all supported platforms with:

bin/test.sh

Or you can run particular platform tests with test.sh:

bin/test.sh --android
bin/test.sh --ios
bin/test.sh --ios7

Before committing code, please run grunt to execute some basic tests and check your changes against code quality standards:

grunt
> Running "lint:all" (lint) task
> Lint free.
> Done, without errors.

Running individual tests

If you have an Appium server listening, you can run individual test files using Mocha, for example:

mocha -t 60000 -R spec test/functional/testapp/simple.js

Or individual tests (e.g., a test with the word "alert" in the name):

mocha -t 60000 -R spec --grep "alert" test/functional/apidemos

You can also run all of appium's tests this way. In one window, node ., in another window, sequentially (waiting for each to pass, making sure emulator is up, etc...):

alias mm="mocha -t 60000 -R spec"
mm test/functional/apidemos
mm test/functional/prefs
mm test/functional/safari
mm test/functional/selendroid
mm test/functional/testapp
mm test/functional/uicatalog
mm test/functional/webview