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Tutorial: Custom Plugins

Learning Objectives

What does a plugin do?

Plugin extends capability that enables your script to interact with AUT like SELENIUM plugin and build shared operations to be used on multiple models like RANDOM plugin.

Develop custom plugin

Custom plugins are just java classes. They can be developed in any java IDE. We will use Eclipse IDE in this tutorial, you should be able to do the same in other IDEs.

Before we can start building our custom plugin, we need to set up the java development environment:

  • create a java project
  • add following maven dependency to pom.xml

<dependency>

    <groupId>com.github.testoptimal</groupId>
    <artifactId>JavaConnector</artifactId>
    <version>1.0.2</version>
  </dependency>

Now we are ready to build our first custom plugin in Eclipse:

  • create a plugin java package to hold your custom plugin java classes, e.g. com.mine.plugin
  • create your custom plugin java class by inheriting from com.testoptimal.plugin.PluginAncestor class
  • add @TO_PLUGIN annotation to your java class
  • implement required methods
  • add your plugin functions, declare as public functions

Below is an example of the java class:

 package com.mine.plugin;
 import com.testoptimal.plugin.MScriptInterface.IGNORE_INHERITED_METHOD;
 import com.testoptimal.plugin.MScriptInterface.TO_PLUGIN;
 import com.testoptimal.plugin.PluginAncestor;
 @IGNORE_INHERITED_METHOD
 @TO_PLUGIN
 public class MyPlugin extends PluginAncestor {
 
    @Override
    public String getPluginID() {
       return "MYPLUGIN";
    }
 
    @Override
    public String getPluginDesc() {
       return "My Plugin";
    }
 
    @NOT_MSCRIPT_METHOD
    @Override
       public void start() throws Exception {
          System.out.println("My Plugin started");
 
    }
 
    @NOT_MSCRIPT_METHOD
    @Override
    public void close() {
       System.out.println("My Plugin closed");
    }
 
    public String doSomething (String something_p) {
       System.out.println("My plugin: " + something_p);
       return "Done";
    }
 }

By default, all public methods declared as well as inherited are exposed as MScript function. To exclude certain methods from being exposed as MScript function, add annotation @NOT_MSCRIPT_METHOD to the method. Add annotation @IGNORE_INHERITED_METHOD to the plugin class to exclude inherited methods from exposed as MScript functions.

Don't forget to write junit test to test the plugin functions.

Deploy Custom Plugin

Export project as jar file Copy plugin jar file to /lib folder in TestOptimal server Register your plugin package in config.properties:

 plugin.packages=com.mine.plugin

Above registry tells TestOptimal server where to look for your custom plugins. If you have multiple custom plugins in the same java package, they will all be found automatically.

Restart TestOptimal server to make the changes effective.

Using Custom Plugin

Open an existing model or create a new model Select SCRIPT tab Click on “P” icon on SCRIPT tab toolbar Check the checbox for your custom plugin Your plugin should show up on CodeAssist list as $'pluginID'