Node Sauce Labs
Wrapper around all Sauce Labs REST APIs for Node.js (v8 or higher) including support for Sauce Connect Proxy and TypeScript definitions.
Install
To install the package run:
npm install saucelabs
Options
user
Your Sauce Labs username.
Type: string
Default: process.env.SAUCE_USERNAME
key
Your Sauce Labs access key.
Type: string
Default: process.env.SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY
region
Your Sauce Labs datacenter region. The following regions are available:
us-west-1
(shortus
)eu-central-1
(shorteu
)us-east-1
(headless)
Type: string
Default: us
headless
If set to true you are accessing the headless Sauce instances (this discards the region
option).
Type: boolean
Default: false
proxy
If you want to tunnel your API request through a proxy please provide your proxy URL.
Type: string
Default: null
headers
If you want to set request headers, as example {'User-Agent': 'node-saucelabs'}
Type: object
Default: {'User-Agent': 'saucelabs/<VERSION> (nodejs <PLATFORM>)'}
Usage
All accessible API commands with descriptions can be found here.
As CLI Tool
This package if installed globally can be used as CLI tool to access the API from the command line:
$ npm install -g saucelabs
...
$ sl listJobs $SAUCE_USERNAME --limit 5 --region eu
{ jobs:
[ { id: '19dab74f8fd848518f8d2c2cee3a6fbd' },
{ id: 'dc08ca0c7fa14eee909a093d11567328' },
{ id: '5bc6f70c777b4ae3bf7909a40f5ee41b' },
{ id: 'f40fe7b044754eaaa5f5a130406549b5' },
{ id: 'd1553f71f910402893f1e82a4dcb6ca6' } ] }
You can find all available commands and options with description by calling:
$ sl --help
# show description for specific command
$ sl listJobs --help
or update the job status by calling:
$ sl updateJob cb-onboarding 690c5877710c422d8be4c622b40c747f "{\"passed\":false}"
or download a job asset:
$ sl downloadJobAsset 690c5877710c422d8be4c622b40c747f video.mp4 --filepath ./video.mp4
or upload a job asset:
$ sl uploadJobAssets 690c5877710c422d8be4c622b40c747f --files ./video.mp4 --files ./log.json
or start Sauce Connect Proxy in EU datacenter:
# start Sauce Connect tunnel for eu-central-1 region
$ sl sc --region eu --tunnel-identifier "my-tunnel"
# run a specific Sauce Connect version
$ sl sc --scVersion 4.5.4
# see all available Sauce Connect parameters via:
$ sl sc --help
You can see all available Sauce Connect parameters on the Sauce Labs Wiki Page.
As NPM Package
The following example shows how to access details of the last job you were running with your account that is being exposed as environment variables as SAUCE_USERNAME
and SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY
. Alternatively you can pass the credentials via options
to the constructor:
import SauceLabs from 'saucelabs';
// if imports are not supported by your Node.js version, import the package as follows:
// const SauceLabs = require('saucelabs').default;
(async () => {
const myAccount = new SauceLabs();
// using constructor options
// const myAccount = new SauceLabs({ user: "YOUR-USER", key: "YOUR-ACCESS-KEY"});
// get full webdriver url from the client depending on region:
console.log(myAccount.webdriverEndpoint) // outputs "https://ondemand.us-west-1.saucelabs.com/"
// get job details of last run job
const jobs = await myAccount.listJobs(
process.env.SAUCE_USERNAME,
{ limit: 1, full: true }
);
console.log(jobs);
/**
* outputs:
* { jobs:
[ { browser_short_version: '72',
video_url:
'https://assets.saucelabs.com/jobs/dc08ca0c7fa14eee909a093d11567328/video.flv',
creation_time: 1551711453,
'custom-data': null,
browser_version: '72.0.3626.81',
owner: '<username-redacted>',
id: 'dc08ca0c7fa14eee909a093d11567328',
record_screenshots: true,
record_video: true,
build: null,
passed: null,
public: 'team',
end_time: 1551711471,
status: 'complete',
log_url:
'https://assets.saucelabs.com/jobs/dc08ca0c7fa14eee909a093d11567328/selenium-server.log',
start_time: 1551711454,
proxied: false,
modification_time: 1551711471,
tags: [],
name: null,
commands_not_successful: 1,
consolidated_status: 'complete',
manual: false,
assigned_tunnel_id: null,
error: null,
os: 'Windows 2008',
breakpointed: null,
browser: 'googlechrome' } ] }
*/
/**
* start Sauce Connect Proxy
*/
const sc = await myAccount.startSauceConnect({
/**
* you can pass in a `logger` method to print Sauce Connect log messages
*/
logger: (stdout) => console.log(stdout),
/**
* see all available parameters here: https://wiki.saucelabs.com/display/DOCS/Sauce+Connect+Proxy+Command-Line+Quick+Reference+Guide
* all parameters have to be applied camel cased instead of with hyphens, e.g.
* to apply the `--tunnel-identifier` parameter, set:
*/
tunnelIdentifier: 'my-tunnel'
})
// run a test
// ...
// close Sauce Connect
await sc.close()
// upload additional log files and attach it to your Sauce job
await myAccount.uploadJobAssets(
'76e693dbe6ff4910abb0bc3d752a971e',
['video.mp4', 'log.json']
)
})()
You may wonder why
listJobs
requires ausername
as first parameter since you've already defined the process.env. The reason for this is that Sauce Labs supports a concept of Team Accounts, so-called sub-accounts, grouped together. As such functions like the mentioned could list jobs not only for the requesting account, but also for the individual team account. Learn more about it here
webdriverEndpoint
property
You can use the webdriverEndpoint
property of the client to get the full WebDriver endpoint to connect to Sauce Labs, e.g.:
const myAccount = new SauceLabs({
user: "YOUR-USER",
key: "YOUR-ACCESS-KEY",
region: 'eu' // run in EU datacenter
});
// get full webdriver url from the client depending on `region` and `headless` option:
console.log(myAccount.webdriverEndpoint);
// outputs: "https://ondemand.eu-central-1.saucelabs.com/"
Breaking changes from v1 to v2
Public APIs have changed from v1 to v2. Methods in v1 accepted a callback
trailing parameter which is no more available with v2, instead all methods now return a Promise which can be awaited
or then
'd.
Below, you can find the list of the mapped method names:
v1 | v2 |
---|---|
getAccountDetails(callback) | async getUser(username) |
getAccountLimits(callback) | ? |
getUserActivity(callback) | async getUserActivity(username) |
getUserConcurrency(callback) | async getUserConcurrency(username) |
getAccountUsage(start, end, callback) | ? |
getJobs(callback) | async listJobs(username, { ...options }) // with option: full: true |
showJob(id, callback) | async getJob(username, id) |
showJobAssets(id, callback) | ? |
updateJob(id, data, callback) | async updateJob(username, id, body) |
stopJob(id, data, callback) | async stopJob(username, id) |
deleteJob(id, callback) | ? |
getActiveTunnels(callback) | async listAvailableTunnels(username) |
getTunnel(id, callback) | async getTunnel(username, id) |
deleteTunnel(id, callback) | async deleteTunnel(username, id) |
getServiceStatus(callback) | async getStatus() |
getBrowsers(callback) | ? |
getAllBrowsers(callback) | async listPlatforms(platform) // pass "all" |
getSeleniumBrowsers(callback) | Selenium-RC no longer supported |
getWebDriverBrowsers(callback) | async listPlatforms(platform) // pass "webdriver" |
getTestCounter(callback) | ? |
updateSubAccount(data, callback) | ? |
deleteSubAccount(callback) | ? |
createSubAccount(data, callback) | ? |
createPublicLink(id, date, useHour, callback) | ? |
getSubAccountList(callback) | ? |
getSubAccounts(callback) | ? |
This module was originally created by Dan Jenkins with the help of multiple contributors (Daniel Perez Alvarez, Mathieu Sabourin, Michael J Feher, and many more). We would like to thank Dan and all contributors for their support and this beautiful module.