CLI

In scope of this article the task term is a piece of work that is done on stories, scenarios, steps and other entities and that produces some output based on the work done.

Example 1. The format of a task
./gradlew <task to perform>
Example 2. The format of a task with arguments
./gradlew <task to perform> --args='<arguments to pass into the task>'
The tasks are available only through the gradlew command.

Run stories

The task runs test stories based on current tests configuration and tests state on the file system.

Example 3. macOS / Linux:
./gradlew runStories
Example 4. Windows:
gradlew runStories

Treat known issues only as a positive result

Known issues occurred during stories run fail the overall test execution with the corresponding exit code by default. Use the following property in order to not treat known issues as failures:

Example 5. Enable treating of known issues as positive result for current stories run
./gradlew runStories -PtreatKnownIssuesOnlyAsPassed=true

The treating of known issues as passed can be enabled globally for project by adding the following line into the build.gradle file of the tests project:

Example 6. Enable treating of known issues as positive result for stories runs at project level
runStories.treatKnownIssuesOnlyAsPassed = true

Write exit code to a file

Writing of the exit code can be enabled globally using project properties:

Example 7. Write exit code to a file by an absolute path via CLI
./gradlew runStories -PfileToSaveExitCode='/user/dir/exitCode.txt'
Example 8. Write an exit code to a file with a path related to the project build directory via CLI
./gradlew runStories -PfileToSaveExitCode='/exitCode.txt' -PresolvePathAgainstProjectBuildDir=true

Writing of the exit code can be enabled globally for the project by adding the following lines into the build.gradle file of the test project:

Example 9. Write the exit code to a file by an absolute path via the project property
runStories.fileToSaveExitCoded ='/user/dir/exitCode.txt'
Example 10. Write an exit code to file with a path related to the project build directory via project property
runStories.fileToSaveExitCoded = '/exitCode.txt'
runStories.resolvePathAgainstProjectBuildDir = true

Debug stories

The task runs test stories omitting VIVIDUS initialization check based on current tests configuration and tests state on the file system.

Example 11. macOS / Linux:
./gradlew debugStories
Example 12. Windows:
gradlew debugStories

Treat known issues only as a positive result

Known issues occurred during stories run fail the overall test execution with the corresponding exit code by default. Use the following property in order to not treat known issues as failures:

Example 13. Enable treating of known issues as positive result for current debug run
./gradlew debugStories -PtreatKnownIssuesOnlyAsPassed=true

The treating of known issues as passed can be enabled globally for project by adding the following line into the build.gradle file of the tests project:

Example 14. Enable treating of known issues as positive result for debug runs at project level
debugStories.treatKnownIssuesOnlyAsPassed = true

Write exit code to a file

Writing of the exit code can be enabled globally using project properties:

Example 15. Write exit code to a file by an absolute path via CLI
./gradlew debugStories -PfileToSaveExitCode='/user/dir/exitCode.txt'
Example 16. Write an exit code to a file with a path related to the project build directory via CLI
./gradlew debugStories -PfileToSaveExitCode='/exitCode.txt' -PresolvePathAgainstProjectBuildDir=true

Writing of the exit code can be enabled globally for the project by adding the following lines into the build.gradle file of the test project:

Example 17. Write the exit code to a file by an absolute path via the project property
debugStories.fileToSaveExitCoded ='/user/dir/exitCode.txt'
Example 18. Write an exit code to file with a path related to the project build directory via project property
debugStories.fileToSaveExitCoded = '/exitCode.txt'
debugStories.resolvePathAgainstProjectBuildDir = true

Print available steps

The task prints all the steps that are available for the configured profiles, environments and suites in the alphabetical order.

Table 1. Options
Description Short notation Full notation Default value

Path to a file to save the list of the available steps

f

file

by default steps are printed into the console

Example 19. macOS / Linux:
./gradlew printSteps --args='-f my-steps.txt'
Example 20. Windows:
gradlew printSteps --args='-f my-steps.txt'
Example 21. Output
vividus                                             Then `$value` matches `$regex`
vividus-plugin-web-app                              When I switch back to the page
vividus-plugin-web-app                              When I press $keys on keyboard
                            COMPOSITE IN STEPS FILE Then an element with the name '$elementName' exists
                            COMPOSITE IN STEPS FILE When I click on an image with the name '$imageName'

Count steps

The task counts steps in the specified tests folder and prints them in the descending order.

Table 2. Options
Description Short notation Full notation Default value

Directory to count steps

d

dir

story

Number of steps to print

t

top

<no limits by default>

Example 22. macOS / Linux:
./gradlew countSteps --args='-t 5 -d story/uat'
Example 23. Windows:
gradlew countSteps --args='-t 5 -d story/uat'
Example 24. Output
Top of the most used steps:                                                                  occurrence(s)
Then `$variable1` is $comparisonRule `$variable2`                                                      330
Given I am on a page with the URL '$pageURL'                                                           127
Then number of elements found by `$locator` is $comparisonRule `$quantity`                             110
Given I initialize $scopes variable `$variableName` with value `$variableValue`                         83
When I change context to element located `$locator`                                                     59

Count scenario

The task counts and prints stories, scenarios and scenarios containing examples found in the specified tests folder.

Table 3. Options
Description Short notation Full notation Default value

Directory to count stories and scenarios

d

dir

story

Example 25. macOS / Linux:
./gradlew countScenarios --args='-d story/uat'
Example 26. Windows:
gradlew countScenarios --args='-d story/uat'
Example 27. Output
5  | Stories
13 | Scenarios
6  | Scenarios with Examples

Validate known issues configuration

The task validates known issues format and prints the validated known issues into the console.

Example 28. macOS / Linux:
./gradlew validateKnownIssues
Example 29. Windows:
./gradlew validateKnownIssues
Example 30. Output
Known issues found:
VVD-5
VVD-6
VVD-7
VVD-8

Find known issues by assertion pattern

The task used to find known issues contained in the test project by one or more assertion patterns.

Table 4. Options
Description Short notation Full notation Default value

Required path to a file that contains new-line-separated list of assertion patterns

f

file

<no default value>

If you miss the file argument into the task it will behave as described per Validate known issues configuration
Example 31. assertion-patterns.txt
.*Doctor Who.*
Example 32. macOS / Linux:
./gradlew validateKnownIssues --args='-f ./assertion-failures.txt'
Example 33. Windows:
gradlew validateKnownIssues --args='-f assertion-failures.txt'
Example 34. Output
Known Issue | Assertion Error
VVD-6       | .*Doctor Who.*