Rightnow, my jenkins jobs are run by Tomcat Server user.
I wanted it to run as User 'Admin', so i tried creating a slave and
added my same jenkins machine as the slave.
I have also added this as a windows service, and have confiured the
Admin user/pwd in the Logon Tab.
But still, when i run a job which executes the UI tests, i'm not able
to see them running in the firefox but it runs and the screenshots
are captured!
Are you asking how to have Jenkins spawn a process in your session that you can see at the monitor?
Have a look here: Open Excel on Jenkins CI, replace excel with whatever you are launching.
If you use jenkins as windows service, it won't allow GUI execution.
It only allows backgound running jobs.
If you want run UI test then stop your jenkins service , use some other way to connect your slave.
Related
i'm looking for some assistance in execution of Jmeter distributed test runs using Jenkins hosted on Windows platform.
I need to know how to
Start Jmeter master/slave agents (jmeter-server.bat) from Jenkins machine.
how to stop the above process once the test run completes.
A hint: if you don't "stop the above process once the test run completes" you won't have to "start" them.
If you want to control everything from Jenkins you need to install Jenkins agent process on each machine you intend to use as JMeter slave, see Step by step guide to set up master and agent machines on Windows Jenkins wiki page for more details.
Once done you can create a job which will start JMeter processes using simple "Execute windows batch command" step on the agent machines
With regards to your point 2 - it's sufficient to set server.exitaftertest JMeter property to true on slave machines in any convenient way, i.e. by adding -J command-line argument like:
jmeter-server.bat -Jserver.exitaftertest=true
For any Distributed Load Run via Jmeter, the pre-requisite is to get the Jmeter-server.bat running to support and enable master-slave communications by Jmeter between Load agents. Initially i had a struggle how to get this executed as first step in Jenkins and then followed execution of Jmeter commands for load test using Remote distributed run. Hence instead of running the pre-requisite condition of running Jmeter-server.bat from jenkins i made it as a Windows service (as load agents are windows machines) which is running all time and whenever Load test starts from Jenkins, the Jmeter-server running in background which will allow distributed run to go.
I'm new to Jenkins, I've created a Jenkins freestyle job used necessary plugins to invoke desktop application. When I execute the job with user credentials, I cannot see the application but application got up and logged on with user credentials. I'm doing GUI Automation which causes failures all the times when I try to run the job.
I created a batch file on HOST, calling the batch file through Jenkins. I have tried injecting the environment for job. I have enabled interactive services and Jenkins-slave on HOST machine. I tried to change NT/System user to Specific user. I enabled interactive services in both conditions. I'm not sure what I'm missing here. Do I need to install anything else, so far I have Jenkins-slave.exe on my HOST, I managed to generate executable Jar file using that.
Any help on this will be appreciated.
I'm calling the batch file, Jenkins cannot find the application opening apparently, it returning error as None type Object(Python) as described in screenshot.errors on Jenkins Job execution
I had a similar issue when I was trying to run Selenium UI Test on Windows Slave.
When the Slave is connected to Windows as a Service, then it does not bring up the application in foreground. It runs only in background even if you enable the service to interact with the desktop.
I had to change my browser to headless browser and then my test cases were passed in background mode.
My Old Question
Selenium test (testNg) with mvn test from jenkins ,
I cant view the action performed on the browser, it is possible to view the real browser opened and performing action?
I suggest using SeleniumGrid.
You can then let the test run on a node, where you can see all the browser actions. For demonstration purposes, distributed and independent testing I did similar with teamcity for a regression-test project.
Basically there are two steps to setup the environment:
Start the grid for example as background-service.
Start a node which is running within a logged on user context (also as Service or autorun)
optional: Start another node for running tests in background
In your tests the creation of the the WebDriver instance changes like this:
WebDriver driver = new RemoteWebDriver(new URL("http://localhost:4444/wd/hub"), capability);
Here a link for more details to setup the Grid2: https://github.com/SeleniumHQ/selenium/wiki/Grid2
No. In typical setup, tests from Jenkins run on randomly available node. You don't know which node is available at a given point. Also typically Jenkins nodes tend to run headless browsers (like phantomjs) since they don't have displays.
Jenkins tests are meant to be run without any manual intervention, like on nightly basis for example. You develop tests locally, see how they run in a real browser and then push it to your main suite so that Jenkins can run it for you. If you want to run tests from Jenkins and view test running live then look for paid solutions like saucelabs or browserstack.
You can using BrowserStack. We have recently released a Plugin that allows you to view your test results right inside Jenkins. It's a paid tool of course :(
In Windows you should not install jenkins as windows application (because in this recent version, Microsoft decided to give services their own hidden desktop even you enable the functionality "interact with desktop" in jenkins service), you may have to deploy it from a war file as follows:
1) Download jenkins.war from Jenkins official site
2) Deploy it by the command prompt : java -jar {directoryOfJenkinsFile}/jenkins.war
3) Now you can access jenkins administration on http:// localhost:8080
Hope that helps you !
I am scheduling QTP scripts using Jenkins, intended to run on weekends. The QTP scripts are in the same Jenkins machines.
The build is not triggered at the scheduled time instead it triggers only when I login to the VM as it seems so.
Configuration:
OS : Windows 7 Ultimate
Jenkins version: 1.620 (master only)
When I do build manually, it works. Only the scheduling is not working.
If you are running Jenkins Slave as a service, you have to make sure that it runs as administrator in services.msc in the Log On tab. Make sure to restart the service after you add the Admin Account.
Cheers!
I would say that my problem rather lack of information and I need some confirmation than a real problem. It seems somebody else had similar question question.
I put together a machine (Windows Server 2012R2) for POC reasons where a Jenkins installed and it executes Selenium UI tests using nunit. The nunit tests are generated by Specflow.
I could do:
install jenkins
jenkins run by a valid user not by Service account
set up jenkins properly
it can pull the source code from TFS-GIT
it can compile the C# solution
it can execute the test project
the test results are correct
Selenium plugin installed on Jenkins but I don't think it is used in this case because the text execution is about executing nunit and it deals with everything else.
At the moment I don't need the capability to delegate test execution to other Jenkins slaves or machines because the Jenkins does have only one compile task. Compiling, executing and test running can go parallel, the machine able to deal with it.
But, when I log in the server where the Jenkins runs and I watch what happens during CI build (compile and test execution) I can't see that the browser (Firefox) starts, however, the test results and the logs show that a browser was executed.
What I did so far:
jenkins runs as service, the account is an existing account
If I remote to the machine with the account which is set up for the service, then I can't see the browser will be executed, however, the log shows that something had happened.
My question is that, what the hack is happening when my tests are executed by Jenkins? If I execute the command which is used by Jenkins from console on the same machine then I can see that Firefox starts, does what is programmed in the tests and the results are in the result.xml. Can I accept the result as valid result? Can I somehow set up Jenkins the way the browser really executed (I can believe it when I see it :) )?
I think this is because you run Jenkins as a service. Services do not show up in desktop. Workaround is to run Jenkins or slave from CMD.
Jenkins windows slave service does not interact with desktop