Test Automation Framework
Test Automation Framework
Test Automation Framework
CHAPTER 1
TEST AUTOMATION FRAMEWORK
This section gives the introduction about test automation framework, various types of
the framework and the analysis of the best suitable framework for the application under test
(the application under test is referred as AUT). This also includes the detailed description of
the format of the input (the input to the framework is referred as the test tables) that is given
to our test automation framework.
2. Using the capture feature of the automation testing tool record the user actions. The
result is a macro-like script where each user action is presented.
3. Enhance the recorded script with verification points, where some property or data is
verified against an existing baseline. Add delay and wait states points where the different
actions are synchronized.
4. Playback the scripts and observe the results in the log of the test management tool.
The basic drawback in this method is the scripts resulting from this method contain
hard-coded values which must change if anything at all changes in our AUT. The costs
associated with maintaining such scripts are astronomical, and unacceptable. These scripts
are not reliable, even if the application has not changed, and often fail on replay (pop-up
windows, messages, and other things can happen that did not happen when the test was
recorded).
Chapter 1 Test Automation Framework
If the tester makes an error entering data, etc., the test must be re-recorded. If the
application changes the test must be re-recorded. All that is being tested are things that
already work. Areas that have errors are encountered in the recording process (which is
manual testing, after all). These bugs are reported, but a script cannot be recorded until the
software is corrected. So logically nothing is tested by this approach.
The test script modularity framework is the most basic of the frameworks. It's a well-
known programming strategy to build an abstraction layer in front of a component to hide the
component from the rest of the application. This insulates the application from modifications
in the component and provides modularity in the application design. When working with test
scripts (in any language or proprietary environment) this can be achieved by creating small,
independent scripts that represent modules, sections, and functions of the application-
Chapter 1 Test Automation Framework
under-test. Then these small scripts are taken and combined them in a hierarchical fashion
to construct larger tests. The use of this framework will yield a higher degree of
modularization and add to the overall maintainability of the test scripts.
The test library architecture framework is very similar to the test script modularity
framework and offers the same advantages, but it divides the application-under-test into
procedures and functions (or objects and methods depending on the implementation
language) instead of scripts. This framework requires the creation of library files (SQABasic
libraries, APIs, DLLs, and such) that represent modules, sections, and functions of the
application-under-test. These library files are then called directly from the test case script.
Much like script modularization this framework also yields a high degree of modularization
and adds to the overall maintainability of the tests.
A data-driven framework is where test input and output values are read from data
files (ODBC sources, CVS files, Excel files, DAO objects, ADO objects, and such) and are
loaded into variables in captured or manually coded scripts. In this framework, variables are
used for both input values and output verification values. Navigation through the program,
reading of the data files, and logging of test status and information are all coded in the test
script. This is similar to table-driven testing (which is discussed shortly) in that the test case
is contained in the data file and not in the script; the script is just a "driver," or delivery
mechanism, for the data. In data-driven testing, only test data is contained in the data files.
Data input/output and expected results are stored as easily maintainable text
records.
Functions return "TRUE" or "FALSE" values to the calling script, rather than
aborting, allowing for more effective error handling, and increasing the
robustness of the test scripts. This, along with a well-designed "recovery"
routine, enables "unattended" execution of test scripts.
1.2.4.1 Example
In order to open a window, the following table is devised, and it can be used for any
other application, just it requires just changing the window name.
Chapter 1 Test Automation Framework
Once creating the test tables, a driver script or a set of scripts is written that reads in
each step executes the step based on the keyword contained the Action field, performs error
checking, and logs any relevant information.
Once the testers get used to this, however, the time required to produce a
test case is greatly improved.
what Type of component is involved and invokes the corresponding Component Function(5)
module to handle the task.
The Application Map is referred to App Map. This App Map in WRAFS
is the Application Map file created from GUI Map of WinRunner All of
these
elements of the framework rely on the information provided in the App Map to interface or
bridge the automation framework with the application being tested. The App Map is the only
means by which the framework could identify the objects in the application under test. Each
of these elements is described in more detail in the following sections. The following figure
shows the diagrammatic representation of the Hybrid Test Automation Framework.
APPLICATION MAP
The Application Map is one of the most critical components, which is used for
mapping the objects from names humans can recognize to a data format useful for the
automation tool. For a given project it is needed to define a naming convention or specific
names for each component in each window as well as a name for the window itself. Then
use the Application Map to associate that name to the identification method needed by the
automation tool to locate and properly manipulate the correct object in the window.
Application Map not only gives the ability to provide useful names for the objects, it
also enables the scripts and keyword driven tests to have a single point of maintenance on
the object identification strings. Thus, if a new version of an application changes the title of
the window or label of the components or the index of an image element within it, they
should not affect the test tables. The changes will require only a quick modification in one
place--inside the Application Map.
COMPONENT FUNCTIONS
Component Functions are those functions that actively manipulate or interrogate
component objects. In test automation framework there are different Component Function
modules for each type of component that are encountered (Window, CheckBox, TextBox,
Image, Link, etc,).
Component Function modules are the application-independent extensions applied to
the functions already provided by the automation tool. However, unlike those provided by
the tool, the extra code to help with error detection, error correction, and synchronization are
added. These modules can readily use the application-specific data stored in the Application
Map and test tables as necessary. In this way, these Component Functions are developed
once and are used again and again by every application tested.
Another benefit from Component Functions is that they provide a layer of insulation
between the application and the automation tool. Without this extra layer, changes or
"enhancements" in the automation tool itself can break existing scripts and the table driven
tests. Each Component Function modules will define the keywords or "action words" that are
valid for the particular component type it handles.
The component Functions takes the windows name in which the component resides,
the actual component name on which the action is to be performed, the values needed for
performing the action and the type of action to be performed as its arguments. The
Chapter 1 Test Automation Framework
Component Function keywords and their arguments define the low-level vocabulary and
individual record formats will be used to develop the test tables.
TEST TABLES
The input to the framework apart from the application map are the test tables, which holds
the arguments needed for the Component Functions and other information. There are three
levels in which the test tables are organized, they are as follows,
Low-Level Test Tables (or) Step Tables
Intermediate-Level Test Tables (or) Suite Tables
High-Level Test Tables (or) Cycle Tables.
StepDriver processes these Step Tables, which are records of low-level instructions
developed in the keyword vocabulary of the Component Functions. StepDriver parses these
records and performs some initial error detection, correction, and synchronization making
certain that the window and\or the component planned to manipulate is available and active.
Chapter 1 Test Automation Framework
StepDriver then routes the complete instruction record to the appropriate Component
Function for final execution.
SUPPORT LIBRARIES
The Support Libraries are the general-purpose routines and utilities that let the
overall automation framework do what it needs to do. They are the modules that provide
services like,
File Handling
String Handling
Buffer Handling
Variable Handling
Database Access
Logging Utilities
System\Environment Handling
Application Mapping Functions
System Messaging or System API Enhancements and Wrappers
They also provide traditional automation tool scripts access to the features of our
automation framework including the Application Map functions and the keyword driven
engine itself. Both of these items can vastly improve the reliability and robustness of these
scripts until such time that they can be converted over to keyword driven test tables.