12

I realize that Selenium has a default value for implicit waits, but how do I get this value if I change it? For example:

driver.implicitly_wait( 13 );

How do I later get the 13 value from the driver?

8 Answers 8

10

Unfortunately there's no getter for that.

http://selenium.googlecode.com/git/docs/api/java/org/openqa/selenium/WebDriver.Timeouts.html

There isn't for explicit waits either.

http://selenium.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/docs/api/java/com/thoughtworks/selenium/Wait.html

2
  • 3
    +1 for right answer, but that is really unfortunate :(, Why would they not have a getter for that value... Oct 7, 2016 at 14:59
  • Those links don't work anymore. The docs might not show any getters, but we could look at the source code to see if there is a way to make our own getter. I did that and I don't see a way to make our own getter. The implicit wait is effectively hidden from us - stackoverflow.com/a/60919695/1521751
    – armani
    Mar 29, 2020 at 19:32
6

I know I'm a couple years late, and @JaneGoodall is not wrong -- there is no built-in function for that. But it's not impossible!

It's not very difficult to create your own versions of the WebDriver interface and browser-specific driver class. And then, you can put whatever code you want into the driver!

Example:

MyDriver.java (specialized version of WebDriver, not quite mandatory but a very good idea):

public interface MyDriver extends WebDriver {
    void setWait(int timeout);
    int getWait();
}

MyChrome.java (specialized version of ChromeDriver -- works the same for any browser)

public class MyChrome extends ChromeDriver implements MyDriver {
    int timeout = 0;
    public void setWait(int timeout) {
        this.timeout = timeout;
        this.manage().timeouts().implicitlyWait(timeout, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
    }
    public int getWait() {
        return timeout;
    }
}

And now, to use it, MyProgram.java:

public class MyProgram {
    MyDriver driver = new MyChrome();
    driver.setWait(10);
    assert(driver.getWait() == 10);
}

I hope this is helpful!

4
  • 1
    It would be a lot easier to just set the desired wait time using a variable. Then you can reference the variable any time you want.
    – JeffC
    May 30, 2017 at 20:03
  • Sure, but sometimes you need that value to be packaged with the driver object itself. This solution is much cleaner than passing a variable around to wherever the driver is used. Jun 6, 2017 at 16:47
  • @forresthopkinsa - Thanks for your answer. Why do you need the value to be packaged with the driver object itself ? Also, are there any good justifications to be able to get the implicit waits ?
    – armani
    Mar 29, 2020 at 19:38
  • @armani There are a number of situations where you're passing the driver around to a lot of places and you can't (or don't want to) send around a configuration object with it. An easy example is when using a DI container -- you just inject the driver and you have the info you need. This method also guarantees that the wait getter is in sync with the actual wait value. As for why, well, one scenario is that you need to know the implicit wait to be able to time other code properly. I think the activity on this question is evidence that there's a need to get implicit wait values. :) Mar 30, 2020 at 9:28
3

For those who came here from google. In 2018 it seems like there is a method to get those timeouts at least in javascript (I know question was about java):

const {implicit, pageLoad, script} = await driver.manage().getTimeouts();

Hope this will help.

1

Many years later, in Python, using selenium 4.4.3 you can access the timeouts very easily via simply:

print(driver.timeouts.implicit_wait)
print(driver.timeouts.page_load)
print(driver.timeouts.script)

Note that when I call driver.implicitly_wait(60), it changed the implicit_wait value only.

Also, there is no such function as driver.manage() in Python, as in the Java answers above.

0

TL;DR - This is not a solution to get implicit waits. You cannot get the implicit wait in Java even today, without using a workaround like this.

In 2020, selenium 3.141.59 still does not have a getter for any timeouts. The WebDriver interface has a nested interface Timeouts which does not define any getters. RemoteWebDriver, which is the parent of Chrome and Firefox drivers, implements the WebDriver interface and it does not add a getter for timeouts.

RemoteWebDriver implements WebDriver.Timeouts, but it does not store the value of implicit timeout anywhere, as you can see from the code below.

protected class RemoteTimeouts implements Timeouts {

  public Timeouts implicitlyWait(long time, TimeUnit unit) {
    execute(DriverCommand.SET_TIMEOUT, ImmutableMap.of(
        "implicit", TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.convert(time, unit)));
    return this;
  }

  public Timeouts setScriptTimeout(long time, TimeUnit unit) {
    execute(DriverCommand.SET_TIMEOUT, ImmutableMap.of(
        "script", TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.convert(time, unit)));
    return this;
  }

  public Timeouts pageLoadTimeout(long time, TimeUnit unit) {
    execute(DriverCommand.SET_TIMEOUT, ImmutableMap.of(
        "pageLoad", TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.convert(time, unit)));
    return this;
  }
} // timeouts class.

The execute() method in the RemoteWebDriver takes the wait inside a Map of parameters, but it does not make that map or the wait settings accessible to us via a getter.

  protected Response execute(String driverCommand, Map<String, ?> parameters)
  //Open the source code to see why you can't make your own getter for implicitWait.
0

This can print real timeout value (plus calculating time, usually within 100ms):

public void getCurrentWaitTimeout() {
    long milliseconds = java.time.ZonedDateTime.now().toInstant().toEpochMilli();
    driver.findElements(By.cssSelector(".nonExistingElement"));
    milliseconds = java.time.ZonedDateTime.now().toInstant().toEpochMilli() - milliseconds;
    log.info("Current waiting timeout is {} milliseconds", milliseconds);
}

So you can always call such a method to be sure you know actual timeout, not the value you tried to set.

0

For Java version of Selenium, org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-api:4.0.0-beta-4 allows you to get the current implicit wait duration:

WebDriver.manage().timeouts().getImplicitWaitTimeout()

With this method, it makes possible to temporarily change the timeout to let's say 1 second and restore it afterwards:

final Duration originalTimeout = driver.manage().timeouts().getImplicitWaitTimeout();
driver.manage().timeouts().implicitlyWait(Duration.of(1, ChronoUnit.SECONDS));
... // do something
// restore the original timeout
driver.manage().timeouts().implicitlyWait(originalTimeout);

Probably, this functionality is present even before selenium-api:4.0.0-beta-4.

0

I get the defined implicitTimeout with:

driver.manage().timeouts().getImplicitWaitTimeout().getSeconds()

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