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- package Selenium::Firefox;
- # ABSTRACT: Use FirefoxDriver without a Selenium server
- use Moo;
- use Selenium::CanStartBinary::FindBinary qw/coerce_firefox_binary/;
- extends 'Selenium::Remote::Driver';
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
- my $driver = Selenium::Firefox->new;
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- This class allows you to use the FirefoxDriver without needing the JRE
- or a selenium server running. When you refrain from passing the
- C<remote_server_addr> and C<port> arguments, we will search for the
- Firefox executable in your $PATH. We'll try to start the binary
- connect to it, shutting it down at the end of the test.
- If the Firefox application is not found in the expected places, we'll
- fall back to the default L<Selenium::Remote::Driver> behavior of
- assuming defaults of 127.0.0.1:4444 after waiting a few seconds.
- If you specify a remote server address, or a port, we'll assume you
- know what you're doing and take no additional behavior.
- If you're curious whether your Selenium::Firefox instance is using a
- separate Firefox binary, or through the selenium server, you can check
- the C<binary_mode> attr after instantiation.
- =cut
- has '+browser_name' => (
- is => 'ro',
- default => sub { 'firefox' }
- );
- =attr binary
- Optional: specify the path to your binary. If you don't specify
- anything, we'll try to find it on our own in the default installation
- paths for Firefox. If your Firefox is elsewhere, we probably won't be
- able to find it, so you may be well served by specifying it yourself.
- =cut
- has 'binary' => (
- is => 'lazy',
- coerce => \&coerce_firefox_binary,
- default => sub { 'firefox' },
- predicate => 1
- );
- =attr binary_port
- Optional: specify the port that we should bind to. If you don't
- specify anything, we'll default to the driver's default port. Since
- there's no a priori guarantee that this will be an open port, this is
- _not_ necessarily the port that we end up using - if the port here is
- already bound, we'll search above it until we find an open one.
- See L<Selenium::CanStartBinary/port> for more details, and
- L<Selenium::Remote::Driver/port> after instantiation to see what the
- actual port turned out to be.
- =cut
- has 'binary_port' => (
- is => 'lazy',
- default => sub { 9090 }
- );
- has '_binary_args' => (
- is => 'lazy',
- builder => sub {
- my ($self) = @_;
- my $args = ' -no-remote';
- if( $self->marionette_enabled ) {
- $args .= ' -marionette';
- }
- return $args;
- }
- );
- has '+wd_context_prefix' => (
- is => 'ro',
- default => sub { '/hub' }
- );
- has 'marionette_binary_port' => (
- is => 'lazy',
- default => sub { 2828 }
- );
- has 'marionette_enabled' => (
- is => 'lazy',
- default => 0
- );
- with 'Selenium::CanStartBinary';
- =attr custom_args
- Optional: specify any additional command line arguments you'd like
- invoked during the binary startup. See
- L<Selenium::CanStartBinary/custom_args> for more information.
- =attr startup_timeout
- Optional: specify how long to wait for the binary to start itself and
- listen on its port. The default duration is arbitrarily 10 seconds. It
- accepts an integer number of seconds to wait: the following will wait
- up to 20 seconds:
- Selenium::Firefox->new( startup_timeout => 20 );
- See L<Selenium::CanStartBinary/startup_timeout> for more information.
- =cut
- 1;
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