name: patrol-e2e-testing description: "Create, maintain, and run end-to-end tests for Flutter apps using Patrol 4.x. Use when writing E2E tests, adding integration test coverage, testing native interactions like permissions or system dialogs, capturing UI bug regressions, or validating cross-platform behavior on Android, iOS, and Web."
Patrol E2E Testing Skill
Design, implement, and run end-to-end (E2E) tests using Patrol 4.x in Flutter projects.
When to Use
Use this skill when:
- A new screen or user flow needs E2E test coverage.
- A feature interacts with native components (permissions, notifications, system dialogs, deep links).
- A UI bug should be captured as a regression test.
- Cross-platform behavior (Android / iOS / Web) must be validated.
- Setting up Patrol in a new or existing Flutter project.
Setup
Follow the official Patrol documentation for installation and project initialization: https://patrol.leancode.co/documentation#setup
Key Patrol conventions:
- Add
patrolas a dev dependency. - Place tests in
patrol_test/. - Name test files with a
_test.dartsuffix. - Execute tests with
patrol test.
Workflow
Follow these steps when implementing or updating Patrol tests.
1. Identify the user journey
Break the feature into:
- Actions: taps, scrolls, input, navigation, deep links.
- Observable outcomes: visible text, screen changes, enabled buttons, dialogs.
Rules:
- One test per primary (happy-path) journey.
- Separate tests for critical edge cases.
- Avoid combining unrelated flows in a single test.
2. Structure the Patrol test
Basic Patrol structure:
import 'package:flutter_test/flutter_test.dart';
import 'package:patrol/patrol.dart';
void main() {
patrolTest(
'user can log in successfully',
($) async {
await $.pumpWidgetAndSettle(const MyApp());
const email = String.fromEnvironment('E2E_EMAIL');
const password = String.fromEnvironment('E2E_PASSWORD');
await $(#emailField).enterText(email);
await $(#passwordField).enterText(password);
await $(#loginButton).tap();
await $.waitUntilVisible($(#homeScreenTitle));
expect($(#homeScreenTitle).text, equals('Welcome'));
},
);
}
Key concepts:
- Use
patrolTest()instead oftestWidgets(). $is the Patrol tester.- Use
$(#keyName)to find widgets byKey. - Use explicit wait conditions (e.g.,
waitUntilVisible).
3. Handle native dialogs
For OS-level permission dialogs:
patrolTest('grants camera permission', ($) async {
await $.pumpWidgetAndSettle(const MyApp());
await $(#openCameraButton).tap();
if (await $.native.isPermissionDialogVisible()) {
await $.native.grantPermission();
}
await $.waitUntilVisible($(#cameraPreview));
});
Use native automation only when required by the feature.
4. Selector & interaction quick reference
Finding widgets:
$('some text') // by text
$(TextField) // by type
$(Icons.arrow_back) // by icon
Tapping:
// Tap a widget containing a specific text label
await $(Container).$('click').tap();
// Tap a container that contains an ElevatedButton
await $(Container).containing(ElevatedButton).tap();
// Tap only the enabled ElevatedButton
await $(ElevatedButton)
.which<ElevatedButton>(
(b) => b.enabled,
)
.tap();
Entering text:
// Enter text into the second TextField on screen
await $(TextField).at(1).enterText('your input');
Scrolling:
await $(widget_you_want_to_scroll_to).scrollTo();
Native interactions:
// Grant permission while app is in use
await $.native.grantPermissionWhenInUse();
// Open notification shade and tap a notification by text
await $.native.openNotifications();
await $.native.tapOnNotificationBySelector(
Selector(textContains: 'text'),
);
5. Running Patrol tests
Run all tests:
patrol test
Run a specific file with live reload (development mode):
patrol develop -t integration_test/my_test.dart
Run a specific file:
patrol test --target patrol_test/login_test.dart
Run on web:
patrol test --device chrome
Headless web (CI):
patrol test --device chrome --web-headless true
Filter by tags:
patrol test --tags android
6. Stabilization patterns
Flaky tests undermine confidence. Apply these patterns:
// AVOID — arbitrary delay
await Future.delayed(Duration(seconds: 3));
// PREFER — explicit wait condition
await $.waitUntilVisible($(#targetWidget));
// For animations, pump until settled
await $.pumpAndSettle();
- Never use
Future.delayedas a synchronization mechanism. - Use
waitUntilVisibleorwaitUntilExiststo wait for UI state. - Set
settleTimeoutinPatrolTesterConfigfor slow CI environments.
Output requirements
When applied, this skill produces:
- Patrol test(s) covering the specified feature.
- Any required widget
Keyadditions to production code. - Exact
patrol testcommand(s) to execute locally. - Notes explaining stabilization or timing decisions.
Checkpoint: Run patrol test --target <file> locally to confirm the test passes before committing.
Quality bar
A valid Patrol test must be:
- Deterministic — no arbitrary delays; uses explicit wait conditions.
- Readable — clear test name describing the user journey.
- Minimal but complete — one assertion chain per journey.
- Secret-safe — credentials loaded from
String.fromEnvironment, never hardcoded. - CI-ready — passes headless with
--web-headless trueor on emulator.