In the WebDriver protocol, when a command fails because it can not
interact with the target element, an "element not interactable" error is
generated. It can be a transitive issue (for example, due to an
animation), so when the error is received the command should be tried
again, just like done, for example, with "ElementNotVisible" exceptions.
However, the last version of the "instaclick/php-webdriver" library
compatible with the Selenium Driver of Mink did not support yet that
WebDriver error. And even if Chrome is run using the old protocol an
unknown "element not interactable" error can be received anyway in some
cases. When an unknown error is received by the
"instaclick/php-webdriver" library it is thrown as a generic Exception
so, until the library can be updated, the message of generic exceptions
is checked and the command is retried if it matched.
For the time being "element not interactable" errors are handled like
"ElementNotVisible" exceptions; this may need to change once the error
is better understood.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
When updating a share we should make sure to use all the old permissions
(and only change what we actually changed). So the READ permission in
this case should also be fetched instead of always granted.
Signed-off-by: Roeland Jago Douma <roeland@famdouma.nl>
The acceptance tests used the last Selenium 2 Docker container
available, which provides a rather old Firefox version (Firefox 47).
Nevertheless, despite some rendering issues, most things still worked as
expected due to the JavaScript files being built with support for older
browsers. However, now that support for Internet Explorer 11 and older
browsers will be dropped things could start to fail, so a newer browser
(and thus a newer Selenium version) should be used in the acceptance
tests.
Selenium has been standardized by the W3C, and the protocol to
communicate between the Selenium server and the browser has changed due
to that. Firefox >= 48 only supports the new W3C protocol, but the
Selenium driver for Mink does not support it yet.
The old protocol can still be used in recent Chromium/Chrome versions by
explicitly forcing it, so for the time being the acceptance tests will
need to be run on Chrome instead (although Firefox provides some
interesting features like the fake streams that would be needed to test
calls in Talk, so they should be moved again to Firefox once possible).
Finally, the default shm size of Docker is 64 MiB. This does not seem
enough to run newer Chrome releases and causes the browser to randomly
crash during the tests ("unknown error: session deleted because of page
crash" is shown in the logs). Due to this "disable-dev-shm-usage" needs
to be used so Chrome writes shared memory files into "/tmp" instead of
"/dev/shm" (the default shm size of Docker could have been increased
instead using "docker run --shm-size...", but that seems to be
problematic when the container is run in current Drone releases).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
When the value is set in some input fields a carriage return was sent to
simulate pressing the enter key and thus confirming the input. However,
different browsers use different keys (Firefox uses "\r", but Chrome
uses "\n"), so the carriage return was replaced with the WebDriver
"ENTER" constant which is common to both browsers.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Sending the "enter" key is not needed in those input fields that auto
save while the user is typing or when the focus is lost (which since
version 1.4.0 the Selenium driver for Mink is automatically done after
setting the value).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>