Selenium Standalone Server and Selenium Server [Differences]

Veena Devi

Posted On: January 25, 2022

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Read time12 Min Read

A standalone server is a server that functions without the aid of a wider network, such as an enterprise-wide network, and offers services to clients. Selenium is unquestionably one of the best test automation frameworks for web test automation out of the many that are currently on the market. Any programming language that enables the creation of tests, such as Java, Python, C#, JavaScript, Ruby, etc., is compatible with Selenium. For better test administration and orchestration, it may also be coupled with other automation testing frameworks like JUnit and TestNG. To get the most out of Selenium automated testing, knowledge of its components’ architecture, such as Selenium Standalone Server and Selenium Server, is crucial.

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This blog helps to understand the difference between Selenium Standalone Server and legacy Selenium Server in detail. If you are preparing for an interview you can learn more through Selenium interview questions.

Let’s get started!

Selenium Components

Selenium is a suite of tools with a distinct approach to support automation testing. It provides more than just a base for building an automated testing framework – Selenium is an open-source project with a large community, which means there are many ways to contribute to the project, participate in the discussion and gain valuable knowledge.

Read more: The Top 52 Selenium Open Source Projects On GitHub

When writing this blog, Selenium has 22.6k Stars and 6.7k Forks on the Selenium GitHub Page. However, when integrating Selenium into your project, you need to consider that there are different ways of doing this. The latest version of Selenium (Selenium 4) has some interesting innovations. Selenium 4 was released in October 2020, with an exciting set of new features:

Also read: What’s New In Selenium 4 & What’s Being Deprecated?

However, if you are new to Selenium 4 or want to migrate from Selenium 3 to Selenium 4, this video from the LambdaTest YouTube Channel will help you get started with Selenium 4:

You can follow the channel to stay updated with more videos on Selenium Testing, Cypress Testing, and more.

Selenium has different components, which helps to achieve multiple purposes like Record and Playback test cases directly from the browser, running test cases in a remote machine, writing script-based test cases in various programming languages, and more.

types of selenium

Selenium IDE

It’s an Integrated Development Environment to record and play AUT directly from the browser. Testers who don’t have scripting knowledge can effectively use this IDE to record their interactions with the AUT and playback any number of times in the future.

Selenium IDE is available as a browser extension, and it can only be used with browsers that support extensions. Initially, in Selenium 2, it was available only for the Chrome browser. However, now we can use it with Chrome, Firefox, and Edge browsers. With Selenium 4, the Selenium IDE can also be integrated with Selenium Cloud Grid like LambdaTest. This helps in expediting the testing process as Selenium automation tests can be run in parallel on different browsers & OS combinations.

​​Also read – Detailed Selenium IDE Tutorial

Selenium WebDriver

Selenium WebDriver is an Open Source API and a script-based test framework that helps execute the same script in different browsers with the help of browser drivers.

Browser

Supported OS

Maintained by

Download

Chromium/Chrome

Windows/macOS/Linux

Google

https://chromedriver.storage.googleapis.com/index.html

Firefox

Windows/macOS/Linux

Mozilla

https://github.com/mozilla/geckodriver/releases

Edge

Windows/macOS

Microsoft

https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/webdriver/

Internet Explorer

Windows

Selenium Project

https://www.selenium.dev/downloads

Safari

macOS High Sierra and newer

Apple

Built-in

Selenium WebDriver can be integrated with TestNG and JUnit test frameworks to achieve parallel execution, manage test scripts, and generate test reports. To choose the appropriate framework for your test requirements, check out our tutorial on JUnit 5 vs. TestNG.

You can also perform Continuous Integration testing by integrating WebDriver with Maven and Continuous testing with Jenkins.

Also read: How to integrate Jenkins with Selenium WebDriver?

Selenium Grid

Selenium Grid is a tool that allows you to manage several different Selenium Server instances on different machines. It makes the process of executing tests in parallel easier and allows you to scale your tests across a number of different nodes.

Selenium Grid is most commonly used in automated web testing, however, it can be used for any type of test that requires multiple Selenium Server nodes.

Let’s deep dive into Selenium Grid in the next section:

Selenium Standalone Server or Selenium Grid

Selenium Grid facilitates test cases to execute in multiple machines and browsers simultaneously, which fastens the test case execution speed and drastically reduces the turnaround time. In Selenium 3, Selenium Standalone Server (Selenium Grid ) has two different components.

  1. Selenium Hub: Hub is a central system that accepts test case requests from clients. It also manages threads.
  2. Selenium Node: Node registers itself with the hub, and it’s a place where the actual browser exists. A node machine is connected to the hub, which receives test scripts from the hub and executes them. It is also possible to launch several nodes on different devices running different environments.

Standalone Server or Selenium Grid

In Selenium 4, the Grid becomes more flexible. For example, once the user starts the server, the Grid automatically works as both nodes and hubs, so the user does not need to start hub and node separately as in Selenium 3 Grid.

It also supports advanced tools like Docker, which is used in the DevOps process. Now Grid 4 has a more user-friendly UI also.

There are three ways to run Selenium Grid 4:

  • Starting as Standalone, Gird itself acts as hub and node.
  • Start as a separate Hub and Node.
  • Fully Distributed (Router, Session, Distributor, etc.)

Also read: Selenium Grid 4 Tutorial

Executing Test Cases using Selenium Grid in Standalone mode

In this section of the article, we will see how to execute test cases using Selenium Grid in Standalone mode.

Step1: Download Selenium Standalone Server/Grid jar file, i.e., selenium-server-4.1.1.jar

Step 2: Start the server as Standalone. Open the terminal and navigate to where the jar file is downloaded, and then type:
“java -jar selenium-server-4.1.1.jar standalone”

Step 3: Now, the local Grid is ready with the attached node and starts to accept and execute test cases.

Once the Server is started, all the available browsers and session details of browsers can be viewed at http://localhost:4444/ui/index.html#/.

Step 4: To execute test cases, initialize the browser from the grid and invoke via RemoteWebDriver, passing the grid URL and browser capability.

Code Walkthrough

In this code block, I have used one of the most popular test automation frameworks, TestNG. TestNG is a java based framework designed for Unit, Functional, and End to End testing. If you are new to TestNG, you can go through this Selenium TestNG Tutorial to get started with your first TestNG automation script.

With TestNG Assertions and Annotations, you can group and orchestrate the large test case execution, validate the expected result, and execute test cases in parallel.

@BeforeTest is the TestNG Annotation that executes the statements before each TestMethod runs. Prerequisites for each test method like launching the browser, configuring browser parameters, launching the application URL, setting browser properties kind of statements can be included in this code block.

In Selenium 3, DesiredCapabilities Class helps to set up properties of the browser. However, the DesiredCapabilities Class is replaced by Options in Selenium 4.

Each browser has a respective Option Class that provides methods to change the browser’s properties such as cookies, incognito, headless, disabling pop-ups, and adding extensions.

Here is the Options object that would be used for setting the browser-specific capabilities:

  • Chrome – ChromeOptions
  • Firefox – FirefoxOptions
  • Internet Explorer (IE) – InternetExplorerOptions
  • Safari – SafariOptions
  • Microsoft Edge – EdgeOptions

RemoteWedDriver is a Class with all driver classes like ChromeDriver, EdgeDriver, FirefoxDriver, InternetExplorerDriver, OperaDriver, SafariDriver as SubClass.

To use this Class, we have to import the “org.openqa.selenium.remote” package.
The RemoteWebDriver accepts two parameters, one is the hub URL, and the other one is an object of Browser Option. Here, I have launched Chrome browser using ChromeOption object, which provides the property of the browser to launch.

@Test Annotation is one of the most important TestNG Annotations, which drives a simple Java method as a test case.

WebElement is a Selenium class, where the driver.findElement returns a WebElement object. Here, the Elements can be identified using multiple locator strategies.

Selenium Locators makes it easy to locate elements on a webpage and perform actions on them, which helps to ease the process of Selenium Automation Testing.

Advantages of Selenium Standalone Server

Limitations of working on local Selenium Grid

  • Initial setup of various nodes in different OS, browser, browser versions and setting up devices for mobile testing is burdensome for the QA team. It requires skilled resources to set up Hub and Node in various environments.
  • The performance also wholly depends on the Server/VM used to set up nodes.
  • It’s tough to scale down or up the number of nodes on demand.

Selenium Cloud Grid is the best solution to overcome all these shortcomings of the local grid.

Watch this video to learn about collecting performance metrics in Selenium 4 using the Chrome DevTools Protocol on the LambdaTest platform.

Why do we need Selenium Cloud Grid?

  1. Easy maintenance – the team doesn’t need to take any hassle to maintain the software or hardware needs of servers for node setup.
  2. Scalability – easy to manage the number of nodes/parallel execution
  3. Reliability – Cloud servers have near-perfect availability, so there is a low risk of interruption.

Executing Test Cases using cloud Selenium Grid

This needs a minor update on code snippets, where the localhost gets to communicate with Selenium Cloud Grid like LambdaTest and access the URL.

Step 1: Register on LambdaTest and get the Username and Access Key from the LambdaTest Profile Section.

Code Walkthrough

These public variables store the values for the LambdaTest username, key, and hub URL to execute the test case in Cloud Grid.

LambdaTest username

How the cloud grid understands the browser properties needs to be changed to scale up from local Grid to Selenium Cloud Grid. Here, only the hub URL and capabilities need to be updated by generating capabilities from LambdaTest Capability Generator.

Selenium testing tools like LambdaTest allows you to perform cross browser testing at scale. list of browsers provides 3000+ browsers with a combination of different OS and versions. The ltOptions map here stores all the browser properties required to launch the browser from the cloud hub.

RemoteWebDriver accepts two parameters, one as a Hub URL with credentials and the second one as a Capability object which has all the properties about the browser to launch. Here it is Windows 11 OS, Chrome Browser version 97.0.

Once the code is executed, you can also view your test results, logs, and the test recording as well in your LambdaTest Automation Dashboard.

LambdaTest Automation Dashboard

You can also see the test results on the LambdaTest Analytics Dashboard. The dashboard shows all the details and metrics related to your tests under the Test Overview and Test Summary section.

If you’re a software developer or tester with an interest in Selenium automation testing, this Selenium 101 certification course can help you develop your skillset.

Here’s a short glimpse of the Selenium 101 certification from LambdaTest:

Selenium Server

The Selenium server in Selenium 2 is entirely different from what we call Selenium Standalone Server/Selenium Grid in Selenium 4 and Selenium 3.

Selenium Remote Control (RC) was the main Selenium project that stood for a long time before Selenium WebDriver(Selenium 2.0) came into existence. But unfortunately, it depreciated due to its complex JavaScript layers and redundant API.

Selenium RC components

  1. Client libraries for scripting language binding
  2. Selenium Server to launch and interact with the browser

Selenium RC components

Selenium server helps to execute Selenium RemoteControl client scripts. Now it’s completely deprecated, and we don’t have the option to download this jar itself.
However, when we look into older versions to better understand, To execute RemoteControl scripts, we need to start the Selenium Server first.

Here, I have mentioned a RemoteControl script, which executes the code in the local Selenium server, using LocalHost.

Difference Between Selenium Standalone Server and Selenium Server

Selenium Standalone Server

Selenium Server

Supports WebDriver scripts

Selenium RC commands/scripts

It can launch up to 5 browsers, so it supports parallel execution 

Executes on only one browser at a time

Supports headless browser and fasten the execution

Headless htmlUnit browsers are not supported.

Conclusion

In this article, we have seen the difference between Selenium Standalone Server and Selenium Server. Understanding the difference between Selenium Standalone server and Legacy Selenium Server helps use the Selenium Grid effectively either in local, distributed mode or in Cloud Selenium Grid.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is Selenium standalone server?

Selenium Standalone Server is an executable Java ARchive (JAR) that typically runs on a separate computer from the browser(s) being tested. It routes commands and tests to those browsers, gathers test data and reported problems back to the test host for reporting, and can be managed through a server-side API and web-based management console.

Do I need Selenium standalone server?

If you won’t be using the Command-Line Driver, i.e. WebDriver for writing tests, then you can skip installing the Selenium server. If your tests will all be running in the same browser, and none of them will use the Support-Class or WebDriver-API, then you can skip running a server; as WebDriver can execute your tests directly.

What is the latest version of Selenium standalone server?

The latest version of Selenium Standalone server is Selenium 4.

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Veena Devi

Having Significant experience in the information technology and services industry with different technologies including Java,C#, Xamarin, and Python Currently works as the 'Lead Developer Evangelist' at LambdaTest. Skilled in Test Automation, Software Development, and Technical Trainer by Passion.

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