DRAMA 1.0.10

There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package DRAMA --version 1.0.10                
NuGet\Install-Package DRAMA -Version 1.0.10                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="DRAMA" Version="1.0.10" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add DRAMA --version 1.0.10                
#r "nuget: DRAMA, 1.0.10"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install DRAMA as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=DRAMA&version=1.0.10

// Install DRAMA as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=DRAMA&version=1.0.10                

DRAMA

Full Stack Test Automation Framework

</br>

FAQ

Q: Where to download Playwright images from, for my solution which integrates DRAMA?

A: The Docker image tag lists can be found at the following locations:

Ubuntu: https://mcr.microsoft.com/v2/playwright/tags/list

Ubuntu With .NET: https://mcr.microsoft.com/v2/playwright/dotnet/tags/list

</br>

Q: How do I run my tests in a CI/CD pipeline?

A: Either use a PowerShell script or a Bash script, along the lines of the examples below:

# set the environment variable for the results path, which the framework will look for at runtime
[Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH", $PSScriptRoot)
${RESULTS_PATH} = [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH")
Write-Host "[DEBUG] Results Path: ${RESULTS_PATH}" -ForegroundColor Yellow

# set the environment variable for the test run name, which the framework will look for at runtime
${TEST_RUN_NAME} = (Get-Date -Format "yyyy-MM-dd_HH-mm-ss")

if (![string]::IsNullOrEmpty([Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME")))
{
    ${TEST_RUN_NAME} = [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME")
}

else
{
    [Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME", "${TEST_RUN_NAME}")
}

Write-Host "[DEBUG] Test Run Name: ${TEST_RUN_NAME}" -ForegroundColor Yellow

# create a variable that points to the directory where the test run results will be stored
# this directory needs to be known at test run start time, so that it can be passed to the "dotnet test" command
# both the framework and MSTest artefacts will be generated at this path
${TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH} = [IO.Path]::Combine("${RESULTS_PATH}", "DRAMA_RESULTS", "${TEST_RUN_NAME}")
Write-Host "[DEBUG] Test Run Results Path: ${TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH}" -ForegroundColor Yellow

# set the environment variable for the test run filter, which the framework will look for at runtime
${TEST_CATEGORIES} = "TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO&TestCategory!=WIP"

if (![string]::IsNullOrEmpty([Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_TEST_CATEGORIES")))
{
    ${TEST_CATEGORIES} = [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_TEST_CATEGORIES")
}

else
{
    [Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_TEST_CATEGORIES", "${TEST_CATEGORIES}")
}

Write-Host "[DEBUG] Test Run Categories: ${TEST_CATEGORIES}" -ForegroundColor Yellow

# if an "DRAMA_PROFILE" environment variable exists, log its value to the terminal
if (![string]::IsNullOrEmpty([Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_PROFILE")))
{
    ${PROFILE} = [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("DRAMA_PROFILE")
    Write-Host "[DEBUG] Test Run Profile: ${PROFILE}" -ForegroundColor Yellow
}

else { Write-Host "[DEBUG] Test Run Profile: Default" -ForegroundColor Yellow }

# start the test run
dotnet test `
    --filter "${TEST_CATEGORIES}" `
    --logger "console;verbosity=detailed" `
    --logger "trx;LogFileName=${TEST_RUN_NAME}.trx" `
    --logger "html;LogFileName=${TEST_RUN_NAME}.html" `
    --results-directory "${TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH}"
# set the environment variable for the results path, which the framework will look for at runtime
export DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH=${PWD}
echo "[DEBUG] Results Path: ${DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH}"

# set the environment variable for the test run name, which the framework will look for at runtime
TEST_RUN_NAME=$(date "+%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S")

if [ ! -z "$DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME" ]
then
    TEST_RUN_NAME="$DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME"
else
    export DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME="$TEST_RUN_NAME"
fi

echo "[DEBUG] Test Run Name: ${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}"

# create a variable that points to the directory where the test run results will be stored
# this directory needs to be known at test run start time, so that it can be passed to the "dotnet test" command
# both the framework and MSTest artefacts will be generated at this path
export TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH="${DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH}/DRAMA_RESULTS/${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}"
echo "[DEBUG] Test Run Results Path: ${TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH}"

# set the environment variable for the test run filter, which the framework will look for at runtime
TEST_CATEGORIES="TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO&TestCategory!=WIP"

if [ ! -z "$DRAMA_TEST_CATEGORIES" ]
then
    TEST_CATEGORIES="$DRAMA_TEST_CATEGORIES"
else
    export DRAMA_TEST_CATEGORIES="$TEST_CATEGORIES"
fi

echo "[DEBUG] Test Run Categories: ${TEST_CATEGORIES}"

# if an "DRAMA_PROFILE" environment variable exists, log its value to the terminal
if [ ! -z "$DRAMA_PROFILE" ]
then
    echo "[DEBUG] Test Run Profile: ${DRAMA_PROFILE}"
else
    echo "[DEBUG] Test Run Profile: Default"
fi

# start the test run
dotnet test \
    --filter "${TEST_CATEGORIES}" \
    --logger "console;verbosity=detailed" \
    --logger "trx;LogFileName=${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}.trx" \
    --logger "html;LogFileName=${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}.html" \
    --results-directory "${TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH}"

</br>

Q: How do I write a Docker file, for my solution which integrates DRAMA?

A: Create a file called DOCKERFILE, which will contain the image definition. Also create a file called .DOCKERIGNORE, which will be identical to the .GITIGNORE file, except for the addition of excluding Git files, more specifically the .git directory. Assuming a test automation solution called CSyphus, an example Docker file looks like the following:

#################################################################################################### STAGE 1

# add the Playwright base image, based on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS (Jammy Jellyfish)
# https://mcr.microsoft.com/v2/playwright/tags/list
# optionally, with .NET 6 included
# https://mcr.microsoft.com/v2/playwright/dotnet/tags/list
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/playwright:v1.32.0-jammy-amd64 AS dependency-resolver

# https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/dotnet-install-script
RUN curl -sSL https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sh | bash /dev/stdin --version 7.0.201

# add "dotnet" to the system path
# https://github.com/dotnet/sdk/issues/9911
RUN export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/.dotnet"

# disable .NET CLI Tools telemetry
# https://aka.ms/dotnet-cli-telemetry
ENV DOTNET_CLI_TELEMETRY_OPTOUT true

# display .NET information
RUN dotnet --info

#################################################################################################### STAGE 2

# start second stage after all dependencies have been resolved
FROM dependency-resolver AS solution-file-handler

# set the working directory
WORKDIR /CSyphus

# copy the solution files to the working directory
COPY . .

#################################################################################################### STAGE 3

# start third stage after all solution files are in place
FROM solution-file-handler

# restore NuGet packages
RUN dotnet restore

# clean solution, if this is needed
RUN dotnet clean

# build solution
RUN dotnet build

# create persistent volume for accessing the test results
VOLUME /DRAMA_RESULTS

# # # set the test run profile
#
#	ENV DRAMA_PROFILE "CI/CD Pipeline"
#
#	for running the automated tests against more than one environment
#	this variable needs to be set by passing it as a parameter to the `docker run` command
#	when starting the test run via the build pipeline
#	instead of setting it directly in this docker file
#
#	e.g.: docker run -e DRAMA_PROFILE="CI/CD Pipeline" --name CSyphus -v "$PWD/test-artefacts":"/CSyphus/DRAMA_RESULTS" testware/csyphus:latest

# set container entry point and overridable parameters
CMD ["bash", "csyphus.sh"]

</br>

Q: How do I set up my solution which integrates DRAMA to run via a GitLab pipeline?

A: Create a .GITLAB-CI.YML configuration file along the lines of the following:

stages:
    - execute

# https://mcr.microsoft.com/v2/playwright/tags/list
# https://mcr.microsoft.com/v2/playwright/dotnet/tags/list
image: mcr.microsoft.com/playwright:v1.31.1-focal

run-tests:
    stage: execute

    rules:
        - if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "main" && $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE != "push"

    tags:
        - SONIC # explicitly specify runner by name

    script:
        - curl -sSL https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sh | bash /dev/stdin --version 7.0.201 # https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/dotnet-install-script
        - export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/.dotnet" # https://github.com/dotnet/sdk/issues/9911
        - export DOTNET_CLI_TELEMETRY_OPTOUT=true # https://aka.ms/dotnet-cli-telemetry
        - dotnet --info
        - dotnet build
        - DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH=${PWD}
        - |
            echo "[DEBUG] DRAMA Results Path: ${DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH}"
        - DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME=$(date "+%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S")
        - |
            echo "[DEBUG] DRAMA Test Run Name: ${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}"
        - TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH="${DRAMA_RESULTS_PATH}/DRAMA_RESULTS/${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}"
        - |
            echo "[DEBUG] DRAMA Test Run Results Path: ${TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH}"
        - EXIT_CODE=0
        - >
            dotnet test
            --filter "TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO"
            --logger "trx;LogFileName=${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}.trx"
            --logger "html;LogFileName=${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}.html"
            --logger "junit;LogFileName=${DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME}.junit"
            --results-directory "${TEST_RUN_RESULTS_PATH}"
            || EXIT_CODE=$?
        - |
            echo "[DEBUG] DRAMA Test Run Exit Code: ${EXIT_CODE}"
        - OUTPUT_TEST_RESULTS="${PWD}/RESULTS"
        - if [ -d "${OUTPUT_TEST_RESULTS}" ]; then rm -rf "${OUTPUT_TEST_RESULTS}"; fi
        - LATEST_RESULTS="$(ls -td ${PWD}/DRAMA_RESULTS/* | head -1)"
        - |
            echo "[DEBUG] Latest Set Of Test Results: ${LATEST_RESULTS}"
        - mv "${LATEST_RESULTS}" "${OUTPUT_TEST_RESULTS}"
        - rm -rf "${PWD}/DRAMA_RESULTS"
        - exit $EXIT_CODE

    variables:
        DOTNET_CLI_TELEMETRY_OPTOUT: "true"

    artifacts:
        name: RESULTS
        when: always
        paths:
            - ./RESULTS/*.*
        reports:
            junit:
                - ./RESULTS/*.junit

</br>

Q: How do I set up my solution which integrates DRAMA to run via an Azure pipeline?

A: Create an azure-pipeline-tests.yml configuration file along the lines of the following:

# https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/devops/pipelines/yaml-schema/

trigger: "none"

schedules:
- cron: "0 5 * * *"
  displayName: "CRON Schedule"
  branches:
    include:
    - "main"
  always: true
  batch: false

parameters:
- name: "image"
  displayName: "Pool Image"
  type: "string"
  default: "ubuntu-latest"
  values:
  - "ubuntu-latest"
  - "windows-latest"
  - "macos-latest"

- name: "profile"
  displayName: "Test Run Profile"
  type: "string"
  default: "Chromium Headless"
  values:
  - "Firefox Headless"
  - "Chromium Headless"
  - "WebKit Headless"

- name: "filter"
  displayName: "Test Category Filter"
  type: "string"
  default: "TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO&TestCategory!=WIP"
  values:
  - "TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO&TestCategory!=WIP"
  - "TestCategory=Front-End&TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO&TestCategory!=WIP"
  - "TestCategory=API&TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO&TestCategory!=WIP"
  - "TestCategory=Back-End&TestCategory!=DEBUG&TestCategory!=DEMO&TestCategory!=WIP"
  - "TestCategory=DEMO"

jobs:
- job: "execute"
  displayName: "Build Solution & Run Tests"

  pool:
    vmImage: "${{parameters.image}}"

  variables:
  - name: "starttime"
    value: "$[format('{0:yyyy}-{0:MM}-{0:dd}_{0:HH}-{0:mm}-{0:ss}', pipeline.startTime)]"

  steps:
  - task: "UseDotNet@2"
    displayName: "Use .NET SDK"
    inputs:
      packageType: "sdk"
      version: "8.0.x"

  - task: "NuGetAuthenticate@1"
    displayName: "NuGet Authenticate"

  - script: "dotnet build"
    displayName: "Build Solution"

  - script: "pwsh P3.BDD.Features/bin/Debug/net7.0/playwright.ps1 install --with-deps"
    displayName: "Install Playwright Binaries"

  - script: "pwsh run-tests.ps1"
    displayName: "Run Tests"
    env:
      DRAMA_TEST_RUN_NAME: "$(starttime)"
      DRAMA_PROFILE: "${{parameters.profile}}"
      DRAMA_TEST_CATEGORIES: "${{parameters.filter}}"

  - task: "PublishPipelineArtifact@1"
    displayName: "Publish Test Artefacts"
    inputs:
      targetPath: "DRAMA_RESULTS/$(starttime)/"
      publishLocation: "pipeline"
      artifactName: "Test Artefacts"

  - task: "PublishTestResults@2"
    displayName: "Publish TRX Results"
    inputs:
      testResultsFormat: "VSTest"
      testResultsFiles: "DRAMA_RESULTS/$(starttime)/*.trx"
      failTaskOnFailedTests: true

</br>

Q: How do I build a DRAMA NuGet package via an Azure pipeline?

A: Create an azure-pipeline-nuget.yml configuration file along the lines of the following:

# https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/devops/pipelines/yaml-schema/

trigger:
  tags:
    include:
    - "*.*.*"

jobs:
- job: "execute"
  displayName: "Pack And Publish NuGet Package"

  pool:
    vmImage: "windows-latest"

  steps:
  - task: "PowerShell@2"
    displayName: "Set Build Number From Tag"
    inputs:
      targetType: "inline"
      script: |
        ${LATEST_TAG} = git tag | Sort-Object -V -D | Select-Object -F 1
        Write-Host "Latest Tag Is: '${LATEST_TAG}'"
        Write-Host "##vso[build.updatebuildnumber]${LATEST_TAG}"

  - script: "dotnet build"
    displayName: "Build Solution"

  - script: "dotnet pack"
    displayName: "Pack NuGet Package"

  - task: "NuGetAuthenticate@1"
    displayName: "NuGet Authenticate"

  - task: "NuGetCommand@2"
    displayName: "Publish NuGet Package"
    inputs:
      command: "push"
      packagesToPush: "**/DRAMA/**/*.nupkg"
      publishVstsFeed: "93c20076-464c-483b-91a7-6a900265ed53"
      allowPackageConflicts: true

</br>

Q: How to generate test artefacts which are compatible with GitLab?

A: Sadly, GitLab only supports test artefacts in JUnit format, so the following dependency can be added to the project which generates test artefacts: https://github.com/spekt/junit.testlogger. Following this, the dotnet test command can be executed with a parameter for a junit logger, e.g. dotnet test --logger "junit;LogFileName=results.junit".

</br>

Q: How to install Playwright locally, for development purposes?

A: Follow the steps below:

  1. install PowerShell by executing dotnet tool install --global PowerShell
  2. build the solution and navigate to the directory which contains both playwright.ps1 and Microsoft.Playwright.dll (e.g. .\bin\Debug\net8.0)
  3. open a PowerShell terminal and execute pwsh playwright.ps1 install

</br>

Q: How do I clean up the build artefacts, for debugging purposes?

A: Use one of the following scripts:

Get-ChildItem .\ -include bin,obj -Recurse | ForEach-Object ($_) { Remove-Item $_.FullName -Force -Recurse }

or

gci -include bin,obj -recurse | remove-item -force -recurse

</br>

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

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This package is not used by any NuGet packages.

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Version Downloads Last updated
1.0.14 216 12/31/2023
1.0.12 165 11/29/2023
1.0.11 129 11/28/2023
1.0.10 149 11/24/2023
0.3.22 492 5/15/2023
0.3.21 245 4/28/2023
0.3.20 184 4/25/2023
0.3.19 217 4/12/2023
0.3.18 346 3/10/2023
0.3.17 313 2/14/2023
0.3.16 340 12/20/2022
0.3.15 378 11/28/2022
0.3.14 327 11/22/2022
0.3.13 375 11/14/2022
0.3.12 572 6/24/2022
0.3.11 683 3/8/2022
0.3.7 648 2/24/2022
0.2.6 590 2/9/2022
0.2.5 644 1/24/2022
0.2.4 598 1/24/2022
0.2.3 592 1/20/2022
0.2.2 595 1/20/2022
0.2.1 596 1/18/2022
0.2.0 469 1/11/2022
0.1.3 4,547 11/24/2021
0.1.2 342 11/16/2021
0.1.1 474 11/3/2021
0.1.0 459 10/20/2021

Death Is Just One Character I Play, My Real Name Is Change