Update Feb 25 2016: Newman v2 (which only works with Node v4.0+) has been released. If you are using Node v0.10 or Node v0.12, check the supported Node versions below.
Newman is a command-line collection runner for Postman. It allows you to effortlessly run and test a Postman collection directly from the command-line. It is built with extensibility in mind so that you can easily integrate it with your continuous integration servers and build systems.
Newman maintains feature parity with Postman and allows you to run collections just the way they are executed inside the collection runner in Postman.
Node Version | Newman Version | Installation Command |
---|---|---|
0.10.x - 0.12.x | 1.x.x | npm install -g newman@1 |
4.0+ | 2.x.x+ | npm install -g newman |
Keeping in line with the Postman Sandbox roadmap, the next major version of Newman (v3.0.0+
) will drop support for DOM (and associated libraries such as jQuery and Backbone) inside the tests. Any tests that you might have, which use these libraries might break.
Newman is built on Node.js. To run Newman, make sure you have Node.js installed. Node.js can be downloaded and installed from here on Linux, Windows and Mac OSX.
If you already have Newman, you can update with a simple command
$ npm update -g newman
The easiest way to run Newman is to run it with a collection. With the -c
flag you can run any collection file lying on your file-system. Refer the collection documentation to learn how to use and download collections.
$ newman -c mycollection.json
The -u
flag allows you to pass a postman collection as a URL. Your collection probably uses environment variables. To provide an accompanying set of environment variables, export them from Postman and run them with the -e
flag.
$ newman -u https://www.getpostman.com/collections/cb208e7e64056f5294e5 -e devenvironment.json
Newman provides a rich set of options to customize a run. A list of options can be retrieved by running it with the -h
flag.
$ newman -h
Options:
Utility:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
Basic setup:
-c, --collection [file] Specify a Postman collection as a JSON [file]
-u, --url [url] Specify a Postman collection as a [url]
-f, --folder [folderName] Specify a single folder to run from a collection. To be used with -c or -u.
-e, --environment [file] Specify a Postman environment as a JSON [file]
--environment-url [url] Specify a Postman environment as a URL [url]
-d, --data [file] Specify a data file to use either json or csv
-g, --global [file] Specify a Postman globals file as JSON [file]
-n, --number [number] Define the number of iterations to run
-i, --import [file] Import a Postman backup file, and save collections, environments, and globals. [file]
-p, --pretty (Use with -i) Enable pretty-print while saving imported collections, environments, and globals
-G, --exportGlobals [file] Specify an output file to dump Globals before exiting [file]
-E, --exportEnvironment [file] Specify an output file to dump the Postman environment before exiting [file]
Request options:
-y, --delay [number] Specify a delay (in ms) between requests [number]
-r, --requestTimeout [number] Specify a request timeout (in ms) for a request (Defaults to 15000 if not set)
Misc.:
-s, --stopOnError Stops the runner when a test case fails
-j, --noSummary Does not show the summary for each iteration
-C, --noColor Disable colored output
-S, --noTestSymbols Disable symbols in test output and use PASS|FAIL instead
-k, --insecure Disable strict ssl
-l, --tls Use TLSv1
-x, --exitCode Continue running tests even after a failure, but exit with code=1
-W, --whiteScreen Black text for white screen
Output:
-o, --outputFile [file] Path to file where output should be written. [file]
-t, --testReportFile [file] Path to file where results should be written as JUnit XML [file]
-H, --html Export a HTML report to a specified file [file]
-O, --outputFileVerbose [file] Path to file where full request and responses should be logged [file]
Use the -n
option to set the number of iterations you want to run the collection for.
$ newman -c mycollection.json -n 10 # runs the collection 10 times
To provide a different set of data i.e. variables for each iteration you can use the -d
to specify a json
or csv
file. For example, a data file such as the one shown below will run 2 iterations, with each iteration using a set of variables.
[{
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:5000",
"user_id": "1",
"id": "1",
"token_id": "123123",
},
{
"url": "http://dump.getpostman.com",
"user_id": "2",
"id": "2",
"token_id": "899899",
}]
$ newman -c mycollection.json -d data.json
The csv file for the above set of variables would look like
url, user_id, id, token_id
http://127.0.0.1:5000, 1, 1, 123123123
http://dump.getpostman.com, 2, 2, 899899
Newman, by default exits with a status code of 0 if everything runs well i.e. without any exceptions. Continuous integration tools respond to these exit codes and correspondingly pass or fail a build. You can use -s
flag to tell Newman to halt on a test case error with a status code of 1 which can then be picked up by a CI tool or build system.
$ newman -c PostmanCollection.json -e environment.json -s
Iteration 1 of 1
200 17ms Blog posts http://127.0.0.1:5000/blog/posts
✔ Status code is 200
404 5ms Blog post http://127.0.0.1:5000/blog/posts/1
200 4ms New post without token http://127.0.0.1:5000/blog/posts
✔ Body has a message
✔ invalid credentials
Test case failed: Status code is 404
The results of all tests and requests can be exported into file and later imported in Postman for further analysis. Use the -o
flag and a file name to save the runner output into a file.
$ newman -c mycollection.json -o outputfile.json
Newman can also be used to import a Postman backup file. The collections, environments, and globals will be saved to the 'data' folder. (Use the -p option to enable pretty-print)
newman -i /path/to/Backup.json -p
NOTE Newman allows you to use all libraries that Postman supports for running tests. For x2js however, only function xmlToJson
is supported.
Newman has been built as a library from the ground-up so that it can be extended and put to varied uses. You can use it like so -
var Newman = require('newman');
// read the collectionjson file
var collectionJson = JSON5.parse(fs.readFileSync("collection.json", 'utf8'));
// define Newman options
newmanOptions = {
envJson: JSON5.parse(fs.readFileSync("envjson.json", "utf-8")), // environment file (in parsed json format)
dataFile: data.csv, // data file if required
iterationCount: 10, // define the number of times the runner should run
outputFile: "outfile.json", // the file to export to
responseHandler: "TestResponseHandler", // the response handler to use
asLibrary: true, // this makes sure the exit code is returned as an argument to the callback function
stopOnError: true
}
// Optional Callback function which will be executed once Newman is done executing all its tasks.
Newman.execute(collectionJson, newmanOptions, callback);
Want your test suite to run every hour? Newman can be used to schedule tests to run hourly, daily or weekly automatically in combination with the awesome Unix scheduler CRON.
Lets setup a simple script called run_newman
to run our tests
#!/bin/bash
timestamp=$(date +"%s")
collection=/var/www/myapp/tests/collection.json
env=/var/www/myapp/tests/envfile.json
# create separate outfile for each run
outfile=/var/www/myapp/tests/outfile-$timestamp.json
# redirect all output to /dev/null
newman -c $collection -e $env -o $outfile > /dev/null2>&1
Make it an executable
$ chmod +x run_newman
To run Newman every hour, run crontab -e
and enter the following -
0 * * * * /path/to/run_newman
Check your cron
if it has been setup
$ crontab -l
0 * * * * /path/to/run_newman
With this, your Newman is set to run automatically every hour.
Note: Exact location for cron
is dependent on the linux distribution you are running. See specific cron
instructions for your distribution. For an introduction to cron
checkout this article.
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