Clock
Accurately simulating time-dependent behavior is essential for verifying the correctness of applications. Learn more about clock emulation.
Note that clock is installed for the entire BrowserContext, so the time in all the pages and iframes is controlled by the same clock.
Methods
FastForwardAsync
Added in: v1.45Advance the clock by jumping forward in time. Only fires due timers at most once. This is equivalent to user closing the laptop lid for a while and reopening it later, after given time.
Usage
await page.Clock.FastForwardAsync(1000);
await page.Clock.FastForwardAsync("30:00");
Arguments
-
Time may be the number of milliseconds to advance the clock by or a human-readable string. Valid string formats are "08" for eight seconds, "01:00" for one minute and "02:34:10" for two hours, 34 minutes and ten seconds.
Returns
InstallAsync
Added in: v1.45Install fake implementations for the following time-related functions:
Date
setTimeout
clearTimeout
setInterval
clearInterval
requestAnimationFrame
cancelAnimationFrame
requestIdleCallback
cancelIdleCallback
performance
Fake timers are used to manually control the flow of time in tests. They allow you to advance time, fire timers, and control the behavior of time-dependent functions. See Clock.RunForAsync() and Clock.FastForwardAsync() for more information.
Usage
await Clock.InstallAsync(options);
Arguments
options
ClockInstallOptions?
(optional)
Returns
PauseAtAsync
Added in: v1.45Advance the clock by jumping forward in time and pause the time. Once this method is called, no timers are fired unless Clock.RunForAsync(), Clock.FastForwardAsync(), Clock.PauseAtAsync() or Clock.ResumeAsync() is called.
Only fires due timers at most once. This is equivalent to user closing the laptop lid for a while and reopening it at the specified time and pausing.
Usage
await page.Clock.PauseAtAsync(DateTime.Parse("2020-02-02"));
await page.Clock.PauseAtAsync("2020-02-02");
Arguments
Returns
ResumeAsync
Added in: v1.45Resumes timers. Once this method is called, time resumes flowing, timers are fired as usual.
Usage
await Clock.ResumeAsync();
Returns
RunForAsync
Added in: v1.45Advance the clock, firing all the time-related callbacks.
Usage
await page.Clock.RunForAsync(1000);
await page.Clock.RunForAsync("30:00");
Arguments
-
Time may be the number of milliseconds to advance the clock by or a human-readable string. Valid string formats are "08" for eight seconds, "01:00" for one minute and "02:34:10" for two hours, 34 minutes and ten seconds.
Returns
SetFixedTimeAsync
Added in: v1.45Makes Date.now
and new Date()
return fixed fake time at all times, keeps all the timers running.
Use this method for simple scenarios where you only need to test with a predefined time. For more advanced scenarios, use Clock.InstallAsync() instead. Read docs on clock emulation to learn more.
Usage
await page.Clock.SetFixedTimeAsync(DateTime.Now);
await page.Clock.SetFixedTimeAsync(new DateTime(2020, 2, 2));
await page.Clock.SetFixedTimeAsync("2020-02-02");
Arguments
Returns
SetSystemTimeAsync
Added in: v1.45Sets system time, but does not trigger any timers. Use this to test how the web page reacts to a time shift, for example switching from summer to winter time, or changing time zones.
Usage
await page.Clock.SetSystemTimeAsync(DateTime.Now);
await page.Clock.SetSystemTimeAsync(new DateTime(2020, 2, 2));
await page.Clock.SetSystemTimeAsync("2020-02-02");
Arguments
Returns