This repository contains docker images for Newman.
Newman is a command-line collection runner for Postman. It allows you to effortlessly run and test a Postman Collections directly from the command-line. It is built with extensibility in mind so that you can easily integrate it with your continuous integration servers and build systems.
New to Docker? Docker allows you to package an application with all of its dependencies into a standardised unit for software development. Visit https://www.docker.com/whatisdocker to read more about how docker can drastically simplify development and deployment.
The docker image for Newman is available for download from our docker hub. You must have Docker installed in your system. Docker has extensive installation guideline for popular operating systems. Choose your operating system and follow the instructions.
Ensure you that you have docker installed and running in your system before proceeding with next steps. A quick test to see if docker is installed correctly is to execute the command
docker run hello-world
and it should run without errors.
Step 1:
Pull the newman docker image from docker hub:
docker pull postman/newman_ubuntu1404
Step 2:
Run newman commands on the image:
docker run -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 --url="https://www.getpostman.com/collections/df0a40ef41d570c48154"
Step 1:
Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/postmanlabs/newman-docker.git
Step 2:
Build the image:
docker build -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 docker-newman/newman_ubuntu1404
Step 3:
Run a collection using the newman image:
docker run -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 --url="https://www.getpostman.com/collections/8a0c9bc08f062d12dcda"
This docker image is designed to pick files from the /etc/newman
directory within the image. You may mount the
directory of your collection files into that location and provide the file references in standard newman parameters.
# Mount host collections folder ~/collections, onto /etc/newman on the docker image, so that newman
# has access to collections
docker run -v ~/collections:/etc/newman -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 --collection="HTTPBinNewmanTestNoEnv.json.postman_collection"
You are not required to mount a volume if you do not need to save newman report to the host, and your collection is available online, unless your collection requires an environment(as environments cannot be passed as URLs).
To know more about mounting volumes, visit docker documentation on shared data volumes.
Run a local collection, pass an environment to it, and save the HTML report on the host.
docker run -v ~/collections:/etc/newman -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 \
--collection="HTTPBinNewmanTest.json.postman_collection" \
--environment="HTTPBinNewmanTestEnv.json.postman_environment" \
--html="newman-results.html"
Run a remote collection, pass it a local environment, and save JUnit XML test report on the host
docker run -v ~/collections:/etc/newman -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 \
--url="https://www.getpostman.com/collections/8a0c9bc08f062d12dcda" \
--environment="HTTPBinNewmanTestEnv.json.postman_environment" \
--testReportFile="newman-report.xml"
Import a Postman backup file, and save collections, environments, and globals
docker run -v ~/collections:/etc/newman -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 --import="Backup.postman_dump" --pretty
Use a script to run a collection and do something, for example deploy the build, if all the tests pass
#/bin/bash
# stop on first error
set -e;
function onExit {
if [ "$?" != "0" ]; then
echo "Tests failed";
# build failed, don't deploy
exit 1;
else
echo "Tests passed";
# deploy build
fi
}
# call onExit when the script exits
trap onExit EXIT;
docker run -t postman/newman_ubuntu1404 --url="https://www.getpostman.com/collections/8a0c9bc08f062d12dcda" --exitCode;