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Robot Framework is a generic test automation framework for acceptance testing and acceptance test-driven development (ATDD). It has easy-to-use tabular test data syntax and it utilizes the keyword-driven testing approach. Its testing capabilities can be extended by test libraries implemented either with Python or Java, and users can create new higher-level keywords from existing ones using the same syntax that is used for creating test cases.
Robot Framework project is hosted on GitHub where you can find further documentation, source code, and issue tracker. Downloads are hosted at PyPI. The framework has a rich ecosystem around it consisting of various generic test libraries and tools that are developed as separate projects.
The Software Testing Automation Framework (STAF) is an open source, multi-platform, multi-language framework designed around the idea of reusable components, called services (such as process invocation, resource management, logging, and monitoring). STAF removes the tedium of building an automation infrastructure, thus enabling you to focus on building your automation solution. The STAF framework provides the foundation upon which to build higher level solutions, and provides a pluggable approach supported across a large variety of platforms and languages.
Last release was on 2010, but still available for download
Mago is a desktop testing initiative, built on top of the LDTP GUI testing framework, that aims to have a set of processes and code to make writing automated test scripts easier and more reusable. The Mago testing library is an extension of the LDTP to separate the logic of the test cases from the object recognition. The framework and many test cases work for vanilla GNOME.
The flash-selenium project aims to extend the Selenium RC clients for adding Flash communication capabilities.
Due to the high number of requests for making FlashSelenium directly test the UI components of a Flex application, we got involved in a new open source project: flex-ui-selenium. The new component, FlexUISelenium, is used with Selenium RC for testing Flex UI interactions.
The Flash/Selenium RC client extension is available for the following Selenium RC client drivers: Java, .Net, Ruby and Phyton.
The Selenium-IDE (Integrated Development Environment) is the tool to develop Selenium test cases. It is implemented as a Firefox extension, and allows to record, edit, and debug tests. Selenium IDE includes the entire Selenium Core, to easily and quickly record and play back tests in the actual environment that they will run in. Selenium IDE is not only a recording tool: it is a complete IDE. You can choose to use its recording capability, or you may edit your scripts by hand. With autocomplete support and the ability to move commands around quickly, Selenium IDE is the ideal environment for creating Selenium tests no matter what style of tests you prefer.
Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc. Expect is a program to automate interactions with programs that expose a text terminal interface. Expect uses pseudo terminals (Unix) or emulates a console (Windows), starts the target program, and then communicates with it, via the terminal or console interface. Tk, another Tcl extension, can be used to provide a GUI.
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