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nightwatch-axe-core

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  • License MIT

Nightwatch.js commands for running aXe-core.

Package Exports

    This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (nightwatch-axe-core) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

    Readme

    Nightwatch aXe-core

    Nightwatch.js commands for running aXe-core.

    Installation

    Install using yarn or npm

    npm install nightwatch-axe-core --save-dev

    Add these commands to the custom_commands_path in your Nightwatch.js configuration.

    {
      custom_commands_path : [
        "./node_modules/nightwatch-axe-core/commands"
      ]
    }

    Configuration & Usage

    The axe() command takes the following two parameters:

    Parameter Name Parameter Type Description
    context string or object css selector or include/exclude object
    options object set of axe options

    These can be defined globally and/or per call to the axe() command.

    In addition to the standard aXe options:

    • options.timeout configures Nightwatch's timeoutsAsyncScript() amount, default value is 1000 milliseconds.

    aXe can require a fair amount of time to run, so increasing the timeout option is often required.

    Injecting aXe-core

    Since Nightwatch 2.3.6, axe is included by default, but still requires calling both axeInject() and axeRun(). This command handles both.

    Global configuration file

    Create an axe.conf.js file in your project root as an CommonJS module that exports a default object with both the context and options parameters:

    // axe.conf.js
    
    module.exports = {
      context: {
        include: [['html']],
        exclude: [['.advertising']],
      },
      options: {
        runOnly: {
          type: 'tag',
          values: ['wcag2a', 'wcag2aa'],
        },
        timeout: 2000,
      }
    };

    Then your test simply needs to call the axe() command.

    // nightwatch-test.js
    
    export default {
      '@tags': ['accessibility'],
    
      'Thing passes aXe-core checks': function (browser) {
        browser
          .url(`${browser.launch_url}/page-to-test`)
          .waitForElementPresent('.thing-to-test')
          .axe()
          .end()
      }
    }

    Per test configuration

    When calling axe() you can can pass in the context and options values as arguments. context will override any globally defined contexts, whilst options will be merged with any globally defined options. This way you can have edge case tests that inherit global config but can easily be change one or two things.

    axe(context, options)

    For example;

    // nightwatch-test.js
    
    export default {
      '@tags': ['accessibility'],
    
      'Thing passes aXe-core checks': function (browser) {
        browser
          .url(`${browser.launch_url}/page-to-test`)
          .waitForElementPresent('.thing-to-test')
          .axe('.thing-to-test', {
            runOnly: {
              type: 'tag',
              values: ['wcag2a']
            },
            rules: {
              'color-contrast': { enabled: true },
              'valid-lang': { enabled: false }
            },
          })
          .end()
      }
    }

    Debugging

    When debugging a failure it can be useful to enable all of the output options, and set a large timeout;

    options: {
      timeout: 60000,
      verbose: true,
      selectors: true,
      absolutePaths: true,
      ancestry: true,
      elementRef: true,
    }

    This will give you as much information as possible into what caused the failure.

    Another helpful option is setting resultTypes: ['violations'], as described in the axe-core docs which can improve performance and reduce timeout failures.