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File: /var/www/vhost/disk-apps/pwa.sports-crowd.com/node_modules/protractor/built/config.d.ts
import { WebDriver } from 'selenium-webdriver';
import { PluginConfig } from './plugins';
export interface Config {
    [key: string]: any;
    /**
     * The location of the standalone Selenium Server jar file, relative
     * to the location of webdriver-manager. If no other method of starting
     * Selenium Server is found, this will default to
     * node_modules/protractor/node_modules/webdriver-manager/selenium/<jar file>
     */
    seleniumServerJar?: string;
    /**
     * The timeout milliseconds waiting for a local standalone Selenium Server to start.
     *
     * default: 30000ms
     */
    seleniumServerStartTimeout?: number;
    /**
     * Can be an object which will be passed to the SeleniumServer class as args.
     * See a full list of options at
     * https://github.com/SeleniumHQ/selenium/blob/master/javascript/node/selenium-webdriver/remote/index.js
     * If you specify `args` or `port` in this object, it will overwrite the
     * values set via the deprecated config values `seleniumPort` and
     * `seleniumArgs`.
     */
    localSeleniumStandaloneOpts?: {
        /**
         * The port to start the Selenium Server on, or null if the server should
         * find its own unused port.
         */
        port?: any;
        /**
         * Additional command line options to pass to selenium. For example,
         * if you need to change the browser timeout, use
         * seleniumArgs: ['-browserTimeout=60']
         */
        args?: any;
        /**
         * Additional command line jvm options to pass to selenium. For example,
         * if you need to change the browser driver, use
         * jvmArgs: ['-Dwebdriver.ie.driver=IEDriverServer_Win32_2.53.1.exe']
         */
        jvmArgs?: string[];
    };
    /**
     * ChromeDriver location is used to help find the chromedriver binary. This will be passed to the
     * Selenium jar as the system property webdriver.chrome.driver. If the value is not set when
     * launching locally, it will use the default values downloaded from webdriver-manager.
     *
     * example:
     * chromeDriver: './node_modules/webdriver-manager/selenium/chromedriver_2.20'
     */
    chromeDriver?: string;
    /**
     * geckoDriver location is used to help find the gecko binary. This will be passed to the Selenium
     * jar as the system property webdriver.gecko.driver. If the value is not set when launching
     * locally, it will use the default values downloaded from webdriver-manager.
     */
    geckoDriver?: string;
    /**
     * The address of a running Selenium Server. If specified, Protractor will
     * connect to an already running instance of Selenium. This usually looks like
     * seleniumAddress: 'http://localhost:4444/wd/hub'
     */
    seleniumAddress?: string;
    /**
     * The selenium session id allows Protractor to attach to an existing selenium
     * browser session. The selenium session is maintained after the test has
     * completed. Ignored if seleniumAddress is null.
     */
    seleniumSessionId?: string;
    /**
     * The address of a proxy server to use for communicating to Sauce Labs REST APIs via the
     * saucelabs node module. For example, the Sauce Labs Proxy can be setup with: sauceProxy:
     * 'http://localhost:3128'
     */
    sauceProxy?: string;
    /**
     * The proxy address that WebDriver (e.g. Selenium commands) traffic will go through
     * which is tied to the browser session.
     */
    webDriverProxy?: string;
    /**
     * If specified, connect to webdriver through a proxy that manages client-side
     * synchronization. Blocking Proxy is an experimental feature and may change
     * without notice.
     */
    useBlockingProxy?: boolean;
    /**
     * If specified, Protractor will connect to the Blocking Proxy at the given
     * url instead of starting it's own.
     */
    blockingProxyUrl?: string;
    /**
     * If the sauceUser and sauceKey are specified, seleniumServerJar will be
     * ignored. The tests will be run remotely using Sauce Labs.
     */
    sauceUser?: string;
    /**
     * If the sauceUser and sauceKey are specified, seleniumServerJar will be
     * ignored. The tests will be run remotely using Sauce Labs.
     */
    sauceKey?: string;
    /**
     * If you run your tests on SauceLabs you can specify the region you want to run your tests
     * in via the `sauceRegion` property. Available short handles for regions are:
     * us: us-west-1 (default)
     * eu: eu-central-1
     */
    sauceRegion?: string;
    /**
     * Use sauceAgent if you need custom HTTP agent to connect to saucelabs.com APIs.
     * This is needed if your computer is behind a corporate proxy.
     *
     * To match sauce agent implementation, use
     * [HttpProxyAgent](https://github.com/TooTallNate/node-http-proxy-agent)
     * to generate the agent or use sauceProxy as an alternative. If a
     * sauceProxy is provided, the sauceAgent will be overridden.
     */
    sauceAgent?: any;
    /**
     * Use sauceBuild if you want to group test capabilites by a build ID
     */
    sauceBuild?: string;
    /**
     * If true, Protractor will use http:// protocol instead of https:// to
     * connect to Sauce Labs defined by sauceSeleniumAddress.
     *
     * default: false
     */
    sauceSeleniumUseHttp?: boolean;
    /**
     * Use sauceSeleniumAddress if you need to customize the URL Protractor
     * uses to connect to sauce labs (for example, if you are tunneling selenium
     * traffic through a sauce connect tunnel). Default is
     * ondemand.saucelabs.com:443/wd/hub
     */
    sauceSeleniumAddress?: string;
    /**
     * If testobjectUser and testobjectKey are specified, kobitonUser, kobitonKey, browserstackUser,
     * browserStackKey and seleniumServerJar will be ignored. The tests will be run remotely using
     * TestObject.
     */
    testobjectUser?: string;
    /**
     * If testobjectUser and testobjectKey are specified, kobitonUser, kobitonKey, browserStackUser,
     * browserStackKey and seleniumServerJar will be ignored. The tests will be run remotely using
     * TestObject.
     */
    testobjectKey?: string;
    /**
     * If kobitonUser and kobitonKey are specified, testobjectUser, testojbectKey, browserstackUser,
     * browserStackKey and seleniumServerJar will be ignored. The tests will be run remotely using
     * TestObject.
     */
    kobitonUser?: string;
    /**
     * If kobitonUser and kobitonKey are specified, testobjectUser, testojbectKey, browserStackUser,
     * browserStackKey and seleniumServerJar will be ignored. The tests will be run remotely using
     * TestObject.
     */
    kobitonKey?: string;
    /**
     * If browserstackUser and browserstackKey are specified, seleniumServerJar
     * will be ignored. The tests will be run remotely using BrowserStack.
     */
    browserstackUser?: string;
    /**
     * If browserstackUser and browserstackKey are specified, seleniumServerJar
     * will be ignored. The tests will be run remotely using BrowserStack.
     */
    browserstackKey?: string;
    /**
     * Proxy server to be used for connecting to BrowserStack APIs
     * e.g. "http://proxy.example.com:1234".
     * This should be used when you are behind a proxy server.
     */
    browserstackProxy?: string;
    /**
     * If true, Protractor will connect directly to the browser Drivers
     * at the locations specified by chromeDriver and firefoxPath. Only Chrome
     * and Firefox are supported for direct connect.
     *
     * default: false
     */
    directConnect?: boolean;
    /**
     * Path to the firefox application binary. If null, will attempt to find
     * firefox in the default locations.
     */
    firefoxPath?: string;
    seleniumWebDriver?: WebDriver;
    /**
     * Use default globals: 'protractor', 'browser', '$', '$$', 'element', 'by'.
     * These also exist as properties of the protractor namespace:
     * 'protractor.browser', 'protractor.$', 'protractor.$$',
     * 'protractor.element', 'protractor.by', and 'protractor.By'.
     *
     * When no globals is set to true, the only available global variable will be
     * 'protractor'.
     */
    noGlobals?: boolean;
    /**
     * Required. Spec patterns are relative to the location of this config.
     *
     * Example:
     * specs: [
     *   'spec/*_spec.js'
     * ]
     */
    specs?: Array<string>;
    /**
     * Patterns to exclude specs.
     */
    exclude?: Array<string> | string;
    /**
     * Alternatively, suites may be used. When run without a command line
     * parameter, all suites will run. If run with --suite=smoke or
     * --suite=smoke,full only the patterns matched by the specified suites will
     * run.
     *
     * Example:
     * suites: {
     *   smoke: 'spec/smoketests/*.js',
     *   full: 'spec/*.js'
     * }
     */
    suites?: any;
    /**
     * If you would like protractor to use a specific suite by default instead of
     * all suites, you can put that in the config file as well.
     */
    suite?: string;
    /**
     * Protractor can launch your tests on one or more browsers. If you are
     * testing on a single browser, use the capabilities option. If you are
     * testing on multiple browsers, use the multiCapabilities array.
     *
     * For a list of available capabilities, see
     * https://github.com/SeleniumHQ/selenium/wiki/DesiredCapabilities
     * In addition, you may specify count, shardTestFiles, and maxInstances.
     *
     * Example:
     * capabilities: {
     *   browserName: 'chrome',
     *   name: 'Unnamed Job',
     *   logName: 'Chrome - English',
     *   count: 1,
     *   shardTestFiles: false,
     *   maxInstances: 1,
     *   specs: ['spec/chromeOnlySpec.js'],
     *   exclude: ['spec/doNotRunInChromeSpec.js'],
     *   seleniumAddress: 'http://localhost:4444/wd/hub'
     * }
     */
    capabilities?: {
        [key: string]: any;
        browserName?: string;
        /**
         * Name of the process executing this capability.  Not used directly by
         * protractor or the browser, but instead pass directly to third parties
         * like BrowserStack and SauceLabs as the name of the job running this
         * test
         */
        name?: string;
        /**
         * User defined name for the capability that will display in the results
         * log. Defaults to the browser name
         */
        logName?: string;
        /**
         * Number of times to run this set of capabilities (in parallel, unless
         * limited by maxSessions). Default is 1.
         */
        count?: number;
        /**
         * If this is set to be true, specs will be sharded by file (i.e. all
         * files to be run by this set of capabilities will run in parallel).
         * Default is false.
         */
        shardTestFiles?: boolean;
        /**
         * Maximum number of browser instances that can run in parallel for this
         * set of capabilities. This is only needed if shardTestFiles is true.
         * Default is 1.
         */
        maxInstances?: number;
        /**
         * Additional spec files to be run on this capability only.
         */
        specs?: string[];
        /**
         * Spec files to be excluded on this capability only.
         */
        exclude?: string[];
        /**
         * Optional: override global seleniumAddress on this capability only.
         */
        seleniumAddress?: string;
    };
    /**
     * If you would like to run more than one instance of WebDriver on the same
     * tests, use multiCapabilities, which takes an array of capabilities.
     * If this is specified, capabilities will be ignored.
     */
    multiCapabilities?: Array<any>;
    /**
     * If you need to resolve multiCapabilities asynchronously (i.e. wait for
     * server/proxy, set firefox profile, etc), you can specify a function here
     * which will return either `multiCapabilities` or a promise to
     * `multiCapabilities`.
     *
     * If this returns a promise, it is resolved immediately after
     * `beforeLaunch` is run, and before any driver is set up. If this is
     * specified, both capabilities and multiCapabilities will be ignored.
     */
    getMultiCapabilities?: any;
    /**
     * Maximum number of total browser sessions to run. Tests are queued in
     * sequence if number of browser sessions is limited by this parameter.
     * Use a number less than 1 to denote unlimited. Default is unlimited.
     */
    maxSessions?: number;
    /**
     * Whether or not to buffer output when running tests on multiple browsers
     * in parallel. By default, when running multiple browser sessions, the
     * results are buffered and not logged until the test run finishes. If true,
     * when running multiple sessions in parallel results will be logged when
     * each test finishes.
     */
    verboseMultiSessions?: boolean;
    /**
     * A base URL for your application under test. Calls to protractor.get()
     * with relative paths will be resolved against this URL (via url.resolve)
     */
    baseUrl?: string;
    /**
     * A CSS Selector for a DOM element within your Angular application.
     * Protractor will attempt to automatically find your application, but it is
     * necessary to set rootElement in certain cases.
     *
     * In Angular 1, Protractor will use the element your app bootstrapped to by
     * default.  If that doesn't work, it will then search for hooks in `body` or
     * `ng-app` elements (details here: https://git.io/v1b2r).
     *
     * In later versions of Angular, Protractor will try to hook into all angular
     * apps on the page. Use rootElement to limit the scope of which apps
     * Protractor waits for and searches within.
     */
    rootElement?: string;
    /**
     * The timeout in milliseconds for each script run on the browser. This
     * should be longer than the maximum time your application needs to
     * stabilize between tasks.
     */
    allScriptsTimeout?: number;
    /**
     * How long to wait for a page to load.
     */
    getPageTimeout?: number;
    /**
     * A callback function called once configs are read but before any
     * environment setup. This will only run once, and before onPrepare.
     *
     * You can specify a file containing code to run by setting beforeLaunch to
     * the filename string.
     *
     * At this point, global variable 'protractor' object will NOT be set up,
     * and globals from the test framework will NOT be available. The main
     * purpose of this function should be to bring up test dependencies.
     */
    beforeLaunch?: () => void;
    /**
     * A callback function called once protractor is ready and available, and
     * before the specs are executed. If multiple capabilities are being run,
     * this will run once per capability.
     *
     * You can specify a file containing code to run by setting onPrepare to
     * the filename string. onPrepare can optionally return a promise, which
     * Protractor will wait for before continuing execution. This can be used if
     * the preparation involves any asynchronous calls, e.g. interacting with
     * the browser. Otherwise Protractor cannot guarantee order of execution
     * and may start the tests before preparation finishes.
     *
     * At this point, global variable 'protractor' object will be set up, and
     * globals from the test framework will be available. For example, if you
     * are using Jasmine, you can add a reporter with:
     *
     *    jasmine.getEnv().addReporter(new jasmine.JUnitXmlReporter(
     *      'outputdir/', true, true));
     *
     * If you need access back to the current configuration object,
     * use a pattern like the following:
     *
     *    return browser.getProcessedConfig().then(function(config) {
     *      // config.capabilities is the CURRENT capability being run, if
     *      // you are using multiCapabilities.
     *      console.log('Executing capability', config.capabilities);
     *    });
     */
    onPrepare?: () => void;
    /**
     * A callback function called once tests are finished. onComplete can
     * optionally return a promise, which Protractor will wait for before
     * shutting down webdriver.
     *
     * At this point, tests will be done but global objects will still be
     * available.
     */
    onComplete?: () => void;
    /**
     * A callback function called once the tests have finished running and
     * the WebDriver instance has been shut down. It is passed the exit code
     * (0 if the tests passed). This is called once per capability.
     */
    onCleanUp?: (exitCode: number) => void;
    /**
     * A callback function called once all tests have finished running and
     * the WebDriver instance has been shut down. It is passed the exit code
     * (0 if the tests passed). afterLaunch must return a promise if you want
     * asynchronous code to be executed before the program exits.
     * This is called only once before the program exits (after onCleanUp).
     */
    afterLaunch?: (exitCode: number) => void;
    /**
     * The params object will be passed directly to the Protractor instance,
     * and can be accessed from your test as browser.params. It is an arbitrary
     * object and can contain anything you may need in your test.
     * This can be changed via the command line as:
     *   --params.login.user "Joe"
     *
     * Example:
     * params: {
     *   login: {
     *     user: 'Jane',
     *     password: '1234'
     *   }
     * }
     */
    params?: any;
    /**
     * If set, protractor will save the test output in json format at this path.
     * The path is relative to the location of this config.
     */
    resultJsonOutputFile?: any;
    /**
     * If true, protractor will restart the browser between each test. Default
     * value is false.
     *
     * CAUTION: This will cause your tests to slow down drastically.
     */
    restartBrowserBetweenTests?: boolean;
    /**
     * Protractor will track outstanding $timeouts by default, and report them
     * in the error message if Protractor fails to synchronize with Angular in
     * time. In order to do this Protractor needs to decorate $timeout.
     *
     * CAUTION: If your app decorates $timeout, you must turn on this flag. This
     * is false by default.
     */
    untrackOutstandingTimeouts?: boolean;
    /**
     * If set, Protractor will ignore uncaught exceptions instead of exiting
     * without an error code. The exceptions will still be logged as warnings.
     */
    ignoreUncaughtExceptions?: boolean;
    /**
     * If set, will create a log file in the given directory with a readable log of
     * the webdriver commands it executes.
     *
     * This is an experimental feature. Enabling this will also turn on Blocking Proxy
     * synchronization, which is also experimental.
     */
    webDriverLogDir?: string;
    /**
     * If set, Protractor will pause the specified amount of time (in milliseconds)
     * before interactions with browser elements (ie, sending keys, clicking). It will
     * also highlight the element it's about to interact with.
     *
     * This is an experimental feature. Enabling this will also turn on Blocking Proxy
     * synchronization, which is also experimental.
     */
    highlightDelay?: number;
    /**
     * Protractor log level
     *
     * default: INFO
     */
    logLevel?: 'ERROR' | 'WARN' | 'INFO' | 'DEBUG';
    /**
     * Test framework to use. This may be one of: jasmine, mocha or custom.
     * Default value is 'jasmine'
     *
     * When the framework is set to "custom" you'll need to additionally
     * set frameworkPath with the path relative to the config file or absolute:
     *
     *   framework: 'custom',
     *   frameworkPath: './frameworks/my_custom_jasmine.js',
     *
     * See github.com/angular/protractor/blob/master/lib/frameworks/README.md
     * to comply with the interface details of your custom implementation.
     *
     * Jasmine is fully supported as test and assertion frameworks.
     * Mocha has limited support. You will need to include your
     * own assertion framework (such as Chai) if working with Mocha.
     */
    framework?: string;
    /**
     * Options to be passed to jasmine.
     *
     * See https://github.com/jasmine/jasmine-npm/blob/master/lib/jasmine.js
     * for the exact options available.
     */
    jasmineNodeOpts?: {
        [key: string]: any;
        /**
         * If true, print colors to the terminal.
         */
        showColors?: boolean;
        /**
         * Default time to wait in ms before a test fails.
         */
        defaultTimeoutInterval?: number;
        /**
         * Function called to print jasmine results.
         */
        print?: () => void;
        /**
         * If set, only execute specs whose names match the pattern, which is
         * internally compiled to a RegExp.
         */
        grep?: string;
        /**
         * Inverts 'grep' matches
         */
        invertGrep?: boolean;
        /**
         * If true, run specs in semi-random order
         */
        random?: boolean;
        /**
         * Set the randomization seed if randomization is turned on
         */
        seed?: string;
    };
    /**
     * Options to be passed to Mocha.
     *
     * See the full list at http://mochajs.org/
     */
    mochaOpts?: {
        [key: string]: any;
        ui?: string;
        reporter?: string;
    };
    /**
     * See docs/plugins.md
     */
    plugins?: PluginConfig[];
    /**
     * Turns off source map support.  Stops protractor from registering global
     * variable `source-map-support`.  Defaults to `false`
     */
    skipSourceMapSupport?: boolean;
    /**
     * Turns off WebDriver's environment variables overrides to ignore any
     * environment variable and to only use the configuration in this file.
     * Defaults to `false`
     */
    disableEnvironmentOverrides?: boolean;
    /**
     * Tells Protractor to interpret any angular apps it comes across as hybrid
     * angular1/angular2 apps (i.e. apps using ngUpgrade)
     * Defaults to `false`
     *
     * @type {boolean}
     */
    ng12Hybrid?: boolean;
    /**
     * Protractor will exit with an error if it sees any command line flags it doesn't
     * recognize. Set disableChecks true to disable this check.
     */
    disableChecks?: boolean;
    /**
     * Enable/disable the WebDriver Control Flow.
     *
     * WebDriverJS (and by extention, Protractor) uses a Control Flow to manage the order in which
     * commands are executed and promises are resolved (see docs/control-flow.md for details).
     * However, as syntax like `async`/`await` are being introduced, WebDriverJS has decided to
     * deprecate the control flow, and have users manage the asynchronous activity themselves
     * (details here: https://github.com/SeleniumHQ/selenium/issues/2969).
     *
     * At the moment, the WebDriver Control Flow is still enabled by default. You can disable it by
     * setting the environment variable `SELENIUM_PROMISE_MANAGER` to `0`.  In a webdriver release in
     * Q4 2017, the Control Flow will be disabled by default, but you will be able to re-enable it by
     * setting `SELENIUM_PROMISE_MANAGER` to `1`.  At a later point, the control flow will be removed
     * for good.
     *
     * If you don't like managing environment variables, you can set this option in your config file,
     * and Protractor will handle enabling/disabling the control flow for you.  Setting this option
     * is higher priority than the `SELENIUM_PROMISE_MANAGER` environment variable.
     *
     * @type {boolean=}
     */
    SELENIUM_PROMISE_MANAGER?: boolean;
    seleniumArgs?: any[];
    jvmArgs?: string[];
    configDir?: string;
    troubleshoot?: boolean;
    seleniumPort?: number;
    mockSelenium?: boolean;
    v8Debug?: any;
    nodeDebug?: boolean;
    debuggerServerPort?: number;
    frameworkPath?: string;
    elementExplorer?: any;
    debug?: boolean;
    unknownFlags_?: string[];
}