Espresso Web

Espresso-Web is an entry point to work with Android WebView UI components. Espresso-Web reuses Atoms from the popular WebDriver API to examine and control the behavior of a WebView.

When to use Espresso-Web

Use Espresso-Web to test your hybrid apps, especially the integration of your app’s native UI components with its WebView UI components. You can use the Espresso-Web API in conjunction with other Espresso APIs to fully interact with web elements inside WebView objects.

If you need to test only the WebView itself, and not the interactions between the WebView and native components in your app, consider writing a general web test using a framework like WebDriver. If you use a web testing framework, you don’t need to use an Android device or a Java Virtual Machine, which makes your tests run more quickly and reliably. That being said, Espresso-Web allows you to reuse your custom WebDriver atoms, which gives you a lot of flexibility, especially when writing tests that you plan to run against both standalone web apps and apps that include an Android UI.

How it works

Similarly to Espresso’s onData() method, a WebView interaction comprises several Atoms. WebView interactions use a combination of the Java programming language and a JavaScript bridge to do their work. Because there is no chance of introducing race conditions by exposing data from the JavaScript environment—everything Espresso sees on the Java-based side is an isolated copy—returning data from Web.WebInteraction objects is fully supported, allowing you to verify all data that’s returned from a request.

What is a WebDriver Atom?

The WebDriver framework uses Atoms to find and manipulate web elements programmatically. Atoms are used by WebDriver to allow browser manipulation. An Atom is conceptually similar to a ViewAction, a self-contained unit that performs an action in your UI. You expose Atoms using a list of defined methods, such as findElement() and getElement(), to drive the browser from the user’s point of view. However, if you use the WebDriver framework directly, Atoms need to be properly orchestrated, requiring logic that is quite verbose.

Within Espresso, the classes Web and Web.WebInteraction wrap this boilerplate and give an Espresso-like feel to interacting with WebView objects. So in a context of a WebView, Atoms are used as a substitution to traditional Espresso ViewMatchers and ViewActions.

The API then looks quite simple:

Kotlin

onWebView()
    .withElement(Atom)
    .perform(Atom)
    .check(WebAssertion)

Java

onWebView()
    .withElement(Atom)
    .perform(Atom)
    .check(WebAssertion);

To learn more, read Selenium’s documentation on Atoms.

Implement WebView

Follow the guidance shown in the following sections to work with WebView in your app's tests.

Packages

To include Espresso-Web in your project, complete the following steps:

  1. Open your app’s build.gradle file. This is usually not the top-level build.gradle file but app/build.gradle.
  2. Add the following line inside dependencies:

    Groovy

        androidTestImplementation 'androidx.test.espresso:espresso-web:3.6.1'
        

    Kotlin

        androidTestImplementation('androidx.test.espresso:espresso-web:3.6.1')
        
  3. Espresso-Web is only compatible with Espresso 2.2 or higher and version 0.3 or higher of the testing library, so make sure you update those lines as well:

    Groovy

        androidTestImplementation 'androidx.test:runner:1.6.1'
        androidTestImplementation 'androidx.test:rules:1.6.1'
        androidTestImplementation 'androidx.test.espresso:espresso-core:3.6.1'
        

    Kotlin

        androidTestImplementation('androidx.test:runner:1.6.1')
        androidTestImplementation('androidx.test:rules:1.6.1')
        androidTestImplementation('androidx.test.espresso:espresso-core:3.6.1')
        

Common API usage

The onWebView() method is the main entry point when working with WebView on Android using Espresso. You use this method to perform Espresso-Web tests, such as the following:

Kotlin

onWebView()
    .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "link_2")) // similar to onView(withId(...))
    .perform(webClick()) // Similar to perform(click())

    // Similar to check(matches(...))
    .check(webMatches(getCurrentUrl(), containsString("navigation_2.html")))

Java

onWebView()
    .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "link_2")) // similar to onView(withId(...))
    .perform(webClick()) // Similar to perform(click())

    // Similar to check(matches(...))
    .check(webMatches(getCurrentUrl(), containsString("navigation_2.html")));

In this example, Espresso-Web locates a DOM element whose ID is "link_2" and clicks on it. The tool then verifies that the WebView sends a GET request containing the "navigation_2.html" string.

JavaScript support

When executing your tests, the system performs all WebView interactions using JavaScript. Therefore, to support JavaScript evaluation, the WebView under test must have JavaScript enabled.

You can force JavaScript to be enabled by calling forceJavascriptEnabled() as an action in your activity under test, as shown in the following code snippet.

@RunWith(AndroidJUnit4::class)
class MyTestSuite {
    @get:Rule val activityScenarioRule =
        activityScenarioRule<MyWebViewActivity>()

    @Test fun testWebViewInteraction() {
        onWebView().forceJavascriptEnabled()
    }
}

Common web interactions

Common interactions with Web.WebInteraction objects include the following:

  • withElement() references a DOM element within the WebView.

    Example:

    Kotlin

    onWebView().withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"))

    Java

    onWebView().withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"));
  • withContextualElement() references a scoped DOM element within the WebView, relative to another DOM element. You should call withElement() first to establish the reference Web.WebInteraction object (DOM element).

    Example:

    Kotlin

    .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"))
        .withContextualElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "person_name"))

    Java

    .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"))
        .withContextualElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "person_name"));
  • check() evaluates a condition, making sure that it resolves to true.

    Example:

    Kotlin

    onWebView()
        .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"))
        .withContextualElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "person_name"))
        .check(webMatches(getText(), containsString("Socrates")))

    Java

    onWebView()
        .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"))
        .withContextualElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "person_name"))
        .check(webMatches(getText(), containsString("Socrates")));
  • perform() executes an action within a WebView, such as clicking on an element.

    Example:

    Kotlin

    onWebView()
        .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"))
        .perform(webClick())

    Java

    onWebView()
        .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "teacher"))
        .perform(webClick());
  • reset() reverts the WebView to its initial state. This is necessary when a prior action, such as a click, introduces a navigation change that makes ElementReference and WindowReference objects inaccessible.

    Note: Although using reset() is useful when making assertions against multi-page workflows, such as form submissions, your tests should usually be limited in scope and focus on a single page.

    Example:

    Kotlin

    onWebView()
        .withElement(...)
        .perform(...)
        .reset()

    Java

    onWebView()
        .withElement(...)
        .perform(...)
        .reset();

Example

The following example tests whether, after entering text into a WebView and selecting a Submit button, the same text appears within a different element in the same WebView:

Kotlin

const val MACCHIATO = "Macchiato"

@RunWith(AndroidJUnit4::class)
class MyEspressoWebTestSuite {

    @Test fun typeTextInInput_clickButton_SubmitsForm() {
        // Create an intent that displays a web form.
        val webFormIntent = Intent()
        // ...

        // Lazily launch the Activity with a custom start Intent per test.
        ActivityScenario.launchActivity(webFormIntent)

        // Selects the WebView in your layout. If you have multiple WebView
        // objects, you can also use a matcher to select a given WebView,
        // onWebView(withId(R.id.web_view)).
        onWebView()
            // Find the input element by ID.
            .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "text_input"))

            // Clear previous input and enter new text into the input element.
            .perform(clearElement())
            .perform(DriverAtoms.webKeys(MACCHIATO))

            // Find the "Submit" button and simulate a click using JavaScript.
            .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "submitBtn"))
            .perform(webClick())

            // Find the response element by ID, and verify that it contains the
            // entered text.
            .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "response"))
            .check(webMatches(getText(), containsString(MACCHIATO)))
    }
}

Java

public static final String MACCHIATO = "Macchiato";

@Test
public void typeTextInInput_clickButton_SubmitsForm() {
    // Create an intent that displays a web form.
    Intent webFormIntent = new Intent();
    // ...

    // Lazily launch the Activity with a custom start Intent per test.
    ActivityScenario.launchActivity(webFormIntent);

    // Selects the WebView in your layout. If you have multiple WebView objects,
    // you can also use a matcher to select a given WebView,
    // onWebView(withId(R.id.web_view)).
    onWebView()
        // Find the input element by ID.
        .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "text_input"))

        // Clear previous input and enter new text into the input element.
        .perform(clearElement())
        .perform(DriverAtoms.webKeys(MACCHIATO))

        // Find the "Submit" button and simulate a click using JavaScript.
        .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "submitBtn"))
        .perform(webClick())

        // Find the response element by ID, and verify that it contains the
        // entered text.
        .withElement(findElement(Locator.ID, "response"))
        .check(webMatches(getText(), containsString(MACCHIATO)));
}

Additional resources

For more information about using Espresso-Web in Android tests, consult the following resources.

Samples