The monkeyrunner tool provides an API for writing programs that control an Android device or emulator from outside of Android code. With monkeyrunner, you can write a Python program that installs an Android application or test package, runs it, sends keystrokes to it, takes screenshots of its user interface, and stores screenshots on the workstation. The monkeyrunner tool is primarily designed to test applications and devices at the functional/framework level and for running unit test suites, but you are free to use it for other purposes.
The monkeyrunner tool is not related to the
UI/Application Exerciser Monkey,
also known as the monkey
tool. The monkey
tool runs in an
adb
shell directly on the
device or emulator and generates pseudo-random streams of user and system events. In comparison,
the monkeyrunner tool controls devices and emulators from a workstation by sending specific
commands and events from an API.
The monkeyrunner tool provides these unique features for Android testing:
os
and
subprocess
modules to call Android tools such as
Android Debug Bridge.
You can also add your own classes to the monkeyrunner API. This is described in more detail in the section Extending monkeyrunner with plugins.
The monkeyrunner tool uses Jython, a implementation of Python that uses the Java programming language. Jython allows the monkeyrunner API to interact easily with the Android framework. With Jython you can use Python syntax to access the constants, classes, and methods of the API.
Here is a simple monkeyrunner program that connects to a device, creating a
MonkeyDevice
object. Using the MonkeyDevice
object, the program installs an Android application
package, runs one of its activities, and sends key events to the activity.
The program then takes a screenshot of the result, creating a
MonkeyImage
object.
From this object, the program writes out a .png
file containing the screenshot.
# Imports the monkeyrunner modules used by this program from com.android.monkeyrunner import MonkeyRunner, MonkeyDevice # Connects to the current device, returning a MonkeyDevice object device = MonkeyRunner.waitForConnection() # Installs the Android package. Notice that this method returns a boolean, so you can test # to see if the installation worked. device.installPackage('myproject/bin/MyApplication.apk') # Runs an activity in the application device.startActivity(component='com.example.android.myapplication.MainActivity') # Presses the Menu button device.press('KEYCODE_MENU','DOWN_AND_UP') # Takes a screenshot result = device.takeSnapShot # Writes the screenshot to a file result.writeToFile('myproject/shot1.png','png')
The monkeyrunner API is contained in three modules in the package
com.android.monkeyrunner
:
MonkeyRunner
:
A class of utility methods for monkeyrunner programs. This class provides a method for
connecting monkeyrunner to a device or emulator. It also provides methods for
creating UIs for a monkeyrunner program and for displaying the built-in help.
MonkeyDevice
:
Represents a device or emulator. This class provides methods for installing and
uninstalling packages, starting an Activity, and sending keyboard or touch events to an
application. You also use this class to run test packages.
MonkeyImage
:
Represents a screen capture image. This class provides methods for capturing screens,
converting bitmap images to various formats, comparing two MonkeyImage objects, and
writing an image to a file.
In a Python program, you access each class as a Python module. The monkeyrunner tool
does not import these modules automatically. To import a module, use the
Python from
statement:
from com.android.monkeyrunner import <module>
where <module>
is the class name you want to import. You can import more
than one module in the same from
statement by separating the module names with
commas.
You can either run monkeyrunner programs from a file, or enter monkeyrunner statements in
an interactive session. You do both by invoking the monkeyrunner
command
which is found in the tools/
subdirectory of your SDK directory.
If you provide a filename as an argument, the monkeyrunner
command
runs the file's contents as a Python program; otherwise, it starts an interactive session.
The syntax of the monkeyrunner
command is
monkeyrunner -plugin <plugin_jar> <program_filename> <program_options>
Table 1 explains the flags and arguments.
Argument | Description |
---|---|
-plugin <plugin_jar>
|
(Optional) Specifies a .jar file containing a plugin for monkeyrunner.
To learn more about monkeyrunner plugins, see
Extending monkeyrunner with plugins. To specify more than one
file, include the argument multiple times.
|
<program_filename>
|
If you provide this argument, the monkeyrunner command runs the contents
of the file as a Python program. If the argument is not provided, the command starts an
interactive session.
|
<program_options>
|
(Optional) Flags and arguments for the program in <program_file>. |
You can generate an API reference for monkeyrunner by running:
monkeyrunner <format> help.py <outfile>
The arguments are:
<format>
is either text
for plain text output
or html
for HTML output.
<outfile>
is a path-qualified name for the output file.
You can extend the monkeyrunner API with classes you write in the Java programming language
and build into one or more .jar
files. You can use this feature to extend the
monkeyrunner API with your own classes or to extend the existing classes. You can also use this
feature to initialize the monkeyrunner environment.
To provide a plugin to monkeyrunner, invoke the monkeyrunner
command with the
-plugin <plugin_jar>
argument described in
table 1.
In your plugin code, you can import and extend the the main monkeyrunner classes
MonkeyDevice
, MonkeyImage
, and MonkeyRunner
in
com.android.monkeyrunner
(see The monkeyrunner API).
Note that plugins do not give you access to the Android SDK. You can't import packages
such as com.android.app
. This is because monkeyrunner interacts with the
device or emulator below the level of the framework APIs.
The .jar
file for a plugin can specify a class that is instantiated before
script processing starts. To specify this class, add the key
MonkeyRunnerStartupRunner
to the .jar
file's
manifest. The value should be the name of the class to run at startup. The following
snippet shows how you would do this within an ant
build script:
<jar jarfile="myplugin" basedir="${build.dir}"> <manifest> <attribute name="MonkeyRunnerStartupRunner" value="com.myapp.myplugin"/> </manifest> </jar>
To get access to monkeyrunner's runtime environment, the startup class can implement
com.google.common.base.Predicate<PythonInterpreter>
. For example, this
class sets up some variables in the default namespace:
package com.android.example; import com.google.common.base.Predicate; import org.python.util.PythonInterpreter; public class Main implements Predicate<PythonInterpreter> { @Override public boolean apply(PythonInterpreter anInterpreter) { /* * Examples of creating and initializing variables in the monkeyrunner environment's * namespace. During execution, the monkeyrunner program can refer to the variables "newtest" * and "use_emulator" * */ anInterpreter.set("newtest", "enabled"); anInterpreter.set("use_emulator", 1); return true; } }