## BigBlueButton Playwright Tests Tests for BigBlueButton using Playwright. ## Setup (with an existing BigBlueButton server) You need to install the dependencies: ```bash $ cd ../bigbluebutton-tests/playwright $ npm install $ npx playwright install ``` You may also need to run the following command: ```bash $ npx playwright install-deps ``` To run these tests with an existing BigBlueButton server, you need to find the server's URL and secret (can be done with `bbb-conf --secret` command). You need to put them into the `.env` file inside `bigbluebutton-tests/playwright` folder (variables `BBB_URL` and `BBB_SECRET`). Note: the value for `BBB_URL` follows the format of `https:///bigbluebutton/api`. ## Run tests We recommend to use Node version 16 or higher to avoid errors in JavaScript. Tests can be executed using `npx` and `npm test`. You can run all tests in each of 3 supported environments (`chromium`, `firefox`, `webkit`) with one of the following commands: ```bash $ npx playwright test or $ npm test ``` You can also run a single test suite and limit the execution to only one browser: ```bash $ npx playwright test chat --browser=firefox or $ npm test chat -- --browser=firefox ``` #### Additional commands To see the tests running visually, you must run them in headed mode: ```bash $ npm run test:headed chat ``` If you want to run a specific test or a specific group of tests, you can do so with the following command: ```bash $ npm run test:filter "Send public message" ``` _(note that this filter needs to be passed in "double quotes")_ You can also use this also through the test tree, adding the test suite / group of tests before the test filter: ```bash $ npm run test:filter "notifications chat" ``` If you don't have `BBB_URL` and `BBB_SECRET` set, but have ssh access to the test server, you can use the following command to obtain `BBB_URL` and `BBB_SECRET` via ssh: ```bash $ npm run test:ssh -- HOSTNAME ``` #### Recording Meteor messages A modified version of `websockify` can be used to record the Meteor messages exchanged between client and server, by inserted a WebSocket proxy between the client and server, configured to record the sessions. First, on the server, obtain the modified `websockify`: ```bash git clone https://github.com/BrentBaccala/websockify.git ``` Install additional dependencies: ```bash sudo apt install python3-numpy ``` Then add the following stanza to `/usr/share/bigbluebutton/nginx/bbb-html5.nginx`: ``` location ~* /html5client/.*/websocket { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:4200; proxy_http_version 1.1; proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade; proxy_set_header Connection "Upgrade"; } ``` From the `websockify` directory, run `websockify` configured to proxy WebSocket connections from port 4200 to port 4100, recording the sessions to files named `bbb.1`, `bbb.2`, etc.: ```bash ./run -v --record=bbb --ws-target=ws://localhost:4100{path} 4200 ``` Now reload nginx: ```bash sudo systemctl reload nginx ``` Meteor messages for Big Blue Button sessions will now be recorded for later review. It doesn't seem necessary to relay cookies, but that could be done by giving a `--ws-relay-header=Cookie` argument to `websockify`. You can print the browser console log to standard output by setting the environment variable `CONSOLE`: ``` $ CONSOLE= npm test chat -- --project=firefox ``` `CONSOLE` can be blank (as in the example), or can be a comma-separated list of the following options: | Option | Meaning | | ------ | ------- | | color | (or "colour") colorize the output | | label | label each line with the BigBlueButton user | | norefs | remove JavaScript reference URLs | | nots | remove timestamps | | nocl | remove "clientLogger:" strings |