355

What is the difference between these

  1. Webdriver.Close()
  2. Webdriver.Quit()
  3. Webdriver.Dispose()

Which one to be used and when?

3
  • 2
    The #dispose method appears to have been silently dropped from the WebDriver API. No mention in the changelog, most recent mention I could find was v2.26 api docs, which I can't find the link for anymore.
    – jordanpg
    Aug 8, 2015 at 19:25
  • I see where the confusion is coming from in the answers below. I think this question was originally a C# question as the methods above (Close, Quit and Dispose) start with a capital letter (C#) not lower case letter (java). Dispose has not been dropped from the C# WebDriver client bindings.
    – rcasady616
    Dec 14, 2016 at 5:33
  • Dispose is a .Net pattern and so is not documented in selenium's API docs. In RemoteWebDriver, Quit calls Dispose, which sends a Quit command (DELETE /session/{sessionId}). There are a several places in the client side where the Quit command is intercepted. The FirefoxDriver .net implementation for example will actually do a process.Kill() call if the process doesn't shutdown gracefully. May 14, 2018 at 5:01

12 Answers 12

304

This is a good question I have seen people use Close() when they shouldn't. I looked in the source code for the Selenium Client & WebDriver C# Bindings and found the following.

  1. webDriver.Close() - Close the browser window that the driver has focus of
  2. webDriver.Quit() - Calls Dispose()
  3. webDriver.Dispose() Closes all browser windows and safely ends the session

The code below will dispose the driver object, ends the session and closes all browsers opened during a test whether the test fails or passes.

public IWebDriver Driver;

[SetUp]
public void SetupTest()
{
    Driver = WebDriverFactory.GetDriver();
}

[TearDown]
public void TearDown()
{
    if (Driver != null)
      Driver.Quit();
}

In summary ensure that Quit() or Dispose() is called before exiting the program, and don't use the Close() method unless you're sure of what you're doing.

Note
I found this question when try to figure out a related problem why my VM's were running out of harddrive space. Turns out an exception was causing Quit() or Dispose() to not be called every run which then caused the appData folder to fill the hard drive. So we were using the Quit() method correctly but the code was unreachable. Summary make sure all code paths will clean up your unmanaged objects by using exception safe patterns or implement IDisposable

Also
In the case of RemoteDriver calling Quit() or Dispose() will also close the session on the Selenium Server. If the session isn't closed the log files for that session remain in memory.

11
  • How did you update your exceptions? Just go to each one and add a quit()?
    – Mark Mayo
    Jul 23, 2013 at 2:12
  • 1
    In a test frame work like NUnit, JUnit you only have to make sure that the Dispose() is in the TestTeardown() or TestFixtureTeardown(). In C# you can just use a "using" statement and Dispose is always called if an exception is raised. You can do something similar in Java by using a try catch finally and put the Dispose in the finally.
    – rcasady616
    Jul 27, 2013 at 1:33
  • 1
    @rcasady616 This is the best explanation I have got. Thanks for it and I think it's worthy for upvote.
    – RNS
    May 4, 2017 at 12:25
  • 2
    @Mr.Bultitude well, that's understandable, considering there is no difference ^^ According to this answer, Quit() is a redirect to Dispose() Jul 4, 2019 at 16:53
  • 1
    @PixelMaster, Yes are 100% correct, its basically a redirect. Not being the one who wrote the code in Selenium I can only guess as to why both methods are present in the C# client bindings. Probably they want to keep with a common method for "Quitting" across client languages, but also wanted to use the driver in a "using" statement syntax (witch would require the Dispose() method). That's my best guess, either that or the code needs to be cleaned up.
    – rcasady616
    Jul 7, 2019 at 20:01
54

Close() - It is used to close the browser or page currently which is having the focus.

Quit() - It is used to shut down the web driver instance or destroy the web driver instance(Close all the windows).

Dispose() - I am not aware of this method.

1
  • 4
    If you're using the .NET language bindings, the Quit and Dispose methods should be synonyms for one another. In other words, Quit calls Dispose.
    – JimEvans
    Feb 25, 2013 at 16:57
45

driver.close and driver.quit are two different methods for closing the browser session in Selenium WebDriver. Understanding both of them and knowing when to use each method is important in your test execution. Therefore, I have tried to shed some light on both of these methods.

driver.close - This method closes the browser window on which the focus is set. Despite the familiar name for this method, WebDriver does not implement the AutoCloseable interface.

driver.quit – This method basically calls driver.dispose a now internal method which in turn closes all of the browser windows and ends the WebDriver session gracefully.

driver.dispose - As mentioned previously, is an internal method of WebDriver which has been silently dropped according to another answer - Verification needed. This method really doesn't have a use-case in a normal test workflow as either of the previous methods should work for most use cases.

Explanation use case: You should use driver.quit whenever you want to end the program. It will close all opened browser windows and terminates the WebDriver session. If you do not use driver.quit at the end of the program, the WebDriver session will not close properly and files would not be cleared from memory. This may result in memory leak errors.

The above explanation should explain the difference between driver.close and driver.quit methods in WebDriver. I hope you find it useful.

The following website has some good tips on selenium testing : Link

1
  • I also noticed that the IEDrivers that are used for working with IE based automation does not exit if you use driver.close() method. I had to use driver.quit() to terminate it. It is because the quit() method also appears to clean up resources unlike close(), although, in my example, I have a single tab always. Jun 22, 2020 at 6:18
16

quit(): Quits this driver, closing every associated window that was open.

close() : Close the current window, quitting the browser if it's the last window currently open.

1
  • 2
    this answer misses the key difference: quit() will stop the underlying webdriver service, while close() does not. pro-tip: don't ever call close() if only one window remains Sep 9, 2019 at 0:41
10

close() is a webdriver command which closes the browser window which is currently in focus. Despite the familiar name for this method, WebDriver does not implement the AutoCloseable interface.

During the automation process, if there are more than one browser window opened, then the close() command will close only the current browser window which is having focus at that time. The remaining browser windows will not be closed. The following code can be used to close the current browser window:

quit() is a webdriver command which calls the driver.dispose method, which in turn closes all the browser windows and terminates the WebDriver session. If we do not use quit() at the end of program, the WebDriver session will not be closed properly and the files will not be cleared off memory. This may result in memory leak errors.

If the Automation process opens only a single browser window, the close() and quit() commands work in the same way. Both will differ in their functionality when there are more than one browser window opened during Automation.

For Above Ref : click here

Dispose Command Dispose() should call Quit(), and it appears it does. However, it also has the same problem in that any subsequent actions are blocked until PhantomJS is manually closed.

Ref Link

6

Based on an issue on Github of PhantomJS, the quit() does not terminate PhantomJS process. You should use:

import signal
driver = webdriver.PhantomJS(service_args=service_args)
# Do your work here

driver.service.process.send_signal(signal.SIGTERM)
driver.quit()

link

5

close():- Suppose you have opened multiple browser windows with same driver instance, now calling close() on the driver instance will close the current window the driver instance is pointed to. But the driver instance still remain in memory and can be used to handle other open browser windows.

quit():- If you call quit() on the driver instance and there are one or more browser windows open, it will close all the open browser windows and the driver instance is garbage collected i.e. removed from the memory. So now you cannot use this driver instance to do other operation after calling quit() on it. If you do it will throw an Exception.

dispose():- I don't think there is a dispose method for a WebDriver instance.

You can go to the this selenium official java doc link for reference.

1
  • " I don't think there is a dispose method for a WebDriver instance." Sure there is (at least in C#). Oct 20, 2017 at 19:48
3

Selenium WebDriver

  1. WebDriver.Close() This method is used to close the current open window. It closes the current open window on which driver has focus on.

  2. WebDriver.Quit() This method is used to destroy the instance of WebDriver. It closes all Browser Windows associated with that driver and safely ends the session. WebDriver.Quit() calls Dispose.

  3. WebDriver.Dispose() This method closes all Browser windows and safely ends the session

1
  • 5
    if you quote something you should give the source. May 31, 2016 at 11:33
3

Difference between driver.close() & driver.quit()

driver.close – It closes the the browser window on which the focus is set.

driver.quit – It basically calls driver.dispose method which in turn closes all the browser windows and ends the WebDriver session gracefully.

3

There are two difference between Quit and close.

  1. As Quit() closes all the windows opened by program whereas Close() will close the correct window where focus on set.
  2. Quit () - Consider, WebDriver driver = new ChromeDriver(); Above statement will create a session ID. Same session ID maintained for entire session. Session ID - 73e6d7c2ae55d9f059ad1cce248adb75

after entering the url the same Session ID - 73e6d7c2ae55d9f059ad1cce248adb75

After the currentUrl() the session ID - 73e6d7c2ae55d9f059ad1cce248adb75

After quit() the browser the session ID - null

if user try to execute any statement, session ID null will send to server. On seeing this, server will send the exception - Session ID is null. Using WebDriver after calling quit()?

In Close(), Random Session ID(only one) will be created and maintained for entire session. After executing the Close(), session Will be invalid or expired. Exception

So, in quit() the session is null and in close() session id is invalid.

1

My understanding is driver.close(); will close the current browser, and driver.quit(); will terminate all the browser that.

-2

Difference between driver.close() & driver.quit() with respect to session ID.

driver.close – It closes the the browser window on which the focus is set and if driver instance is used after driver.close then selenium throw NoSuchSessionException: invalid session id

driver.quit – It basically calls driver.dispose method which in turn closes all the browser windows and ends the WebDriver session gracefully and if driver instance is used after driver.quit then selenium throw NoSuchSessionException: session id is null

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