Canoo is quite good;
http://webtest.canoo.com/webtest/manual/WebTestHome.html
It uses Ant to execute its tests and AFAIK there is not maven plugin
to invoke it but should be straight forward to do with maven.
Its license appears to (this non-lawyer at least) be compatible.
Also the Struts folks are using Selenium from M2 AFAIK.
TTFN,
-bd
On Aug 8, 2006, at 12:14 PM, Prasad Kashyap wrote:
> Does anybody know of any good open source tests for the console ?
> There are quite a few of those out there, most of them GPL. I
have
> never used any of them. So please share your valuable experiences,
> comments and thoughts.
>
> The itests would be a good place to stage and run any such tests.
>
> jWebUnit:
> --------------
> http://jwebunit.sourceforge.net/
> http://htmlunit.sourceforge.net/
> http://httpunit.sourceforge.net/
>
> License: GPL
>
> jWebUnit provides a high-level API for navigating a web
application
> combined with a set of assertions to verify the application's
> correctness. This includes navigation via links, form entry and
> submission, validation of table contents, and other typical
business
> web application features. This code try to stay independent of the
> libraries behind the scenes. The simple navigation methods and
> ready-to-use assertions allow for more rapid test creation than
using
> only JUnit and HtmlUnit. And if you want to switch from
HtmlUnit to
> the other soon available plugins, no need to rewrite your tests.
>
> jWebUnit also builds with maven 2. So it will be much easier
for us to
> integrate it into our project.
>
>
> Enterprise Web Test
> ---------------------------------
> http://sourceforge.net/projects/webunitproj/
> License: Common Public License (can we still use it ?)
>
> Enterprise Web Test allows Java programmers to write re-usable
tests
> for web applications that, unlike HttpUnit, "drive" the actual web
> browser on the actual platform they intend to support. Tests
can be
> leveraged for functional, stress, reliability.
>
> Cheers
> Prasad