WebDriver is a remote control interface that enables introspection and control of user agents. It provides a platform- and language-neutral wire protocol as a way for out-of-process programs to remotely instruct the behavior of web browsers.
Provided is a set of interfaces to discover and manipulate DOM elements in web documents and to control the behavior of a user agent. It is primarily intended to allow web authors to write tests that automate a user agent from a separate controlling process, but may also be used in such a way as to allow in-browser scripts to control a — possibly separate — browser.
The standard forms part of the Web Testing Activity that authors a larger set of tools commonly used for testing.
The standard is authored by the W3C Browser Testing- and Tools Working Group, and has produced the following documents:
- Living Standard: https://w3c.github.io/webdriver/webdriver-spec.html
- Candidate Recommendation version 1: https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver/
In short, change webdriver-spec.html
and submit a pull request
(PR) with a good commit message. Changes that affect behaviour
must be accompanied with corresponding test changes to the Web
Platform Tests repository.
We use ReSpec to help us maintain referential integrity,
bibliographical data, and perform other mundane tasks such as
styling. To preview your changes, just load webdriver-spec.html
from disk in a browser.
You may add your name to the Acknowledgements section in your first PR, even for trivial fixes. The names are sorted lexicographically.
See <CONTRIBUTING.md> for more guidelines.