java client

Java language binding for writing Appium Tests, conforms to Mobile JSON Wire & W3C Webdriver Protocol

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java-client

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Appium Java Client CI

This is the Java language bindings for writing Appium Tests that conform to WebDriver Protocol

v8 to v9 Migration

Since v9 the client only supports Java 11 and above.
Follow the v8 to v9 Migration Guide in order to streamline the migration process.

v7 to v8 Migration

Since version 8 Appium Java Client had several major changes, which might require to
update your client code. Make sure to follow the v7 to v8 Migration Guide
in order to streamline the migration process.

Add Appium java client to your test framework

Stable

Maven

Add the following to pom.xml:

<dependency>
  <groupId>io.appium</groupId>
  <artifactId>java-client</artifactId>
  <version>${version.you.require}</version>
  <scope>test</scope>
</dependency>

Gradle

Add the following to build.gradle:

dependencies {
  testImplementation 'io.appium:java-client:${version.you.require}'
}

Beta/Snapshots

Java client project is available to use even before it is officially published to maven central. Refer jitpack.io

Maven

Add the following to pom.xml:

<repositories>
    <repository>
        <id>jitpack.io</id>
        <url>https://jitpack.io</url>
    </repository>
</repositories>

Add the dependency:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.appium</groupId>
    <artifactId>java-client</artifactId>
    <version>latest commit ID from master branch</version>
</dependency>

Gradle

Add the JitPack repository to your build file. Add it in your root build.gradle at the end of repositories:

allprojects {
    repositories {
        // ...
        maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
    }
}

Add the dependency:

dependencies {
    implementation 'com.github.appium:java-client:latest commit id from master branch'
}

Compatibility Matrix

Appium Java Client Selenium client
9.2.1(known issues: appium/java-client#2145, appium/java-client#2146), 9.2.2 4.19.0
9.1.0, 9.2.0 4.17.0, 4.18.0, 4.18.1
9.0.0 4.14.1, 4.15.0, 4.16.0 (partially corrupted), 4.16.1
N/A 4.14.0
8.5.0, 8.5.1, 8.6.0 4.9.1, 4.10.0, 4.11.0, 4.12.0, 4.12.1 (known issue: appium/java-client#2004), 4.13.0
8.4.0 4.8.2, 4.8.3, 4.9.0
8.3.0 4.7.0, 4.7.1, 4.7.2, 4.8.0, 4.8.1
8.2.1 4.5.0, 4.5.1, 4.5.2, 4.5.3, 4.6.0

Why is it so complicated?

Selenium client does not follow Semantic Versioning, so breaking changes might be introduced
even in patches, which requires Appium team to update Java client in response.

How to pin Selenium dependencies?

Appium Java Client declares Selenium dependencies using open version range which is handled in differently by different
build tools. Sometimes users may want to pin used Selenium dependencies for various reasons.
Follow the Transitive Dependencies Management article for more information
about establishing a fixed Selenium version for your Java test framework.

Drivers Support

Appium java client has dedicated classes to support the following Appium drivers:

To automate other platforms that are not listed above you could use
AppiumDriver or its custom derivatives.

Appium java client is built on top of Selenium and implements same interfaces that the foundation
RemoteWebDriver
does. However, Selenium lib is mostly focused on web browsers automation while
Appium is universal and covers wide range of possible platforms, e.g. mobile and desktop
operating systems, IOT devices, etc. Thus, the foundation AppiumDriver class in this package
extends RemoteWebDriver with additional features, and makes it more flexible, so it is not so
strictly focused on web-browser related operations.

Appium Server Service Wrapper

Appium java client provides a dedicated class to control Appium server execution.
The class is AppiumDriverLocalService.
It allows to run and verify the Appium server locally from your test framework code
and provides several convenient shortcuts. The service could be used as below:

AppiumDriverLocalService service = AppiumDriverLocalService.buildDefaultService();
service.start();
try {
    // do stuff with drivers
} finally {
    service.stop();
}

You could customize the service behavior, for example, provide custom
command line arguments or change paths to server executables
using AppiumServiceBuilder

Note

AppiumDriverLocalService does not support the server management on non-local hosts

Usage Examples

UiAutomator2

UiAutomator2Options options = new UiAutomator2Options()
    .setUdid('123456')
    .setApp("/home/myapp.apk");
AndroidDriver driver = new AndroidDriver(
    // The default URL in Appium 1 is http://127.0.0.1:4723/wd/hub
    new URL("http://127.0.0.1:4723"), options
);
try {
    WebElement el = driver.findElement(AppiumBy.xpath, "//Button");
    el.click();
    driver.getPageSource();
} finally {
    driver.quit();
}

XCUITest

XCUITestOptions options = new XCUITestOptions()
    .setUdid('123456')
    .setApp("/home/myapp.ipa");
IOSDriver driver = new IOSDriver(
    // The default URL in Appium 1 is http://127.0.0.1:4723/wd/hub
    new URL("http://127.0.0.1:4723"), options
);
try {
    WebElement el = driver.findElement(AppiumBy.accessibilityId, "myId");
    el.click();
    driver.getPageSource();
} finally {
    driver.quit();
}

Any generic driver that does not have a dedicated class

BaseOptions options = new BaseOptions()
    .setPlatformName("myplatform")
    .setAutomationName("mydriver")
    .amend("mycapability1", "capvalue1")
    .amend("mycapability2", "capvalue2");
AppiumDriver driver = new AppiumDriver(
    // The default URL in Appium 1 is http://127.0.0.1:4723/wd/hub
    new URL("http://127.0.0.1:4723"), options
);
try {
    WebElement el = driver.findElement(AppiumBy.className, "myClass");
    el.click();
    driver.getPageSource();
} finally {
    driver.quit();
}

Check the corresponding driver’s READMEs to know the list of capabilities and features it supports.

You could find much more code examples by checking client’s
unit and integration tests.

Troubleshooting

InaccessibleObjectException is thrown in runtime if Java 16+ is used

Appium Java client uses reflective access to private members of other modules
to ensure proper functionality of several features, like Page Object model.
If you get a runtime exception and InaccessibleObjectException is present in
the stacktrace, and your Java runtime is at version 16 or higher, then consider following
Oracle’s tutorial
and/or checking existing issues
for possible solutions. Basically, the idea there would be to explicitly allow
access for particular modules using --add-exports/--add-opens command line arguments.

Another possible, but weakly advised solution, would be to downgrade Java to
version 15 or lower.

Issues related to environment variables presence or to their values

Such issues are usually the case when Appium server is started directly from your
framework code rather than run separately by a script or manually. Depending
on the way the server process is started it may or may not inherit the currently
active shell environment. That is why you may still receive errors about variables
presence even though these variables ar actually defined for your command line interpreter.
Again, there is no universal solution to that, as there are many ways to spin up a new
server process. Consider checking the Appium Environment Troubleshooting
document for more information on how to debug and fix process environment issues.

Changelog

Visit CHANGELOG.md to see the full list of changes between versions.

Running tests

Run a test using

gradle clean -Dtest.single=IOSAlertTest test