All Technical Questions

Selenium Webdriver:

Selenium-WebDriver makes direct calls to the browser using each browser’s native support for automation. How these direct calls are made, and the features they support depends on the browser you are using. Information on each ‘browser driver’ is provided later in this chapter.

Selenium RC: 

For those familiar with Selenium-RC, this is quite different from what you are used to. Selenium-RC worked the same way for each supported browser. It ‘injected’ javascript functions into the browser when the browser was loaded and then used its javascript to drive the AUT within the browser. WebDriver does not use this technique. Again, it drives the browser directly using the browser’s built in support for automation. 

You may, or may not, need the Selenium Server, depending on how you intend to use Selenium-WebDriver. If you will be only using the WebDriver API you do not need the Selenium-Server. If your browser and tests will all run on the same machine, and your tests only use the WebDriver API, then you do not need to run the Selenium-Server; WebDriver will run the browser directly.

Selenium Grid: 

You are using Selenium-Grid to distribute your tests over multiple machines or virtual machines (VMs). You want to connect to a remote machine that has a particular browser version that is not on your current machine. You are not using the Java bindings (i.e. Python, C#, or Ruby) and would like to use HtmlUnit Driver.

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