ThreadGuard
This class is only available in the Java Binding
ThreadGuard checks that a driver is called only from the same thread that created it. Threading issues especially when running tests in Parallel may have mysterious and hard to diagnose errors. Using this wrapper prevents this category of errors and will raise an exception when it happens.
The following example simulate a clash of threads:
public class DriverClash {
//thread main (id 1) created this driver
private WebDriver protectedDriver = ThreadGuard.protect(new ChromeDriver());
static {
System.setProperty("webdriver.chrome.driver", "<Set path to your Chromedriver>");
}
//Thread-1 (id 24) is calling the same driver causing the clash to happen
Runnable r1 = () -> {protectedDriver.get("https://selenium.dev");};
Thread thr1 = new Thread(r1);
void runThreads(){
thr1.start();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
new DriverClash().runThreads();
}
}
The result shown below:
Exception in thread "Thread-1" org.openqa.selenium.WebDriverException:
Thread safety error; this instance of WebDriver was constructed
on thread main (id 1)and is being accessed by thread Thread-1 (id 24)
This is not permitted and *will* cause undefined behaviour
As seen in the example:
protectedDriver
Will be created in Main thread- We use Java
Runnable
to spin up a new process and a newThread
to run the process - Both
Thread
will clash because the Main Thread does not haveprotectedDriver
in it’s memory. ThreadGuard.protect
will throw an exception.
Note:
This does not replace the need for using ThreadLocal
to manage drivers when running parallel.
Last modified September 23, 2022: rename additional features section back to support features to re-emphasize the distinct purpose of support classes (c70272e7f8)