Frameworks and toolsPlaywrightSMS testing

SMS testing for Playwright

Learn how to test every element of your SMS communication within Playwright

What you'll find in this guide

  • How to test differing aspects of SMS
  • Testing links and codes
  • Managing SMS tests

What you'll need

Basic usage

To use Playwright and Mailosaur for SMS testing, you need to:

  1. Send an SMS to your dedicated Mailosaur phone number.
  2. Connect to the Mailosaur API with the official client library.
  3. Search for the message sent earlier.
  4. Perform assertions in the same way you would for any other test.

To learn about Server IDs, and what to replace SERVER_ID with, see sending test emails to Mailosaur.

// Setup the API client
const mailosaur = new MailosaurClient("API_KEY");

// Search for the message
const message = mailosaur.messages.get("SERVER_ID", {
  sentTo: "123456789", // Phone number
});

// Perform test assertions
expect(message.from[0].name).toEqual("Support");
expect(message.from[0].phone).toEqual("654321");

This will search for the phone number a message was sent to, but you can also use any of the below criteria:

Parameter Description
sentTo The full phone number to which the target message was sent
sentFrom The full phone number from which the target message was sent
body Finds messages where the message body contains this text

Find an SMS message

Find a specific message within your inbox. It's always better to use messages.get(), as it will automatically wait for messages to arrive, and return the full message.

const message = mailosaur.messages.get("SERVER_ID", {
  sentTo: "123456789",
});

console.log(message.text.body);

Other ways to fetch SMS messages

It is usually better to use messages.get()

list and search methods only return basic summaries. To get the full data, such as the message body, you need to use .getById(). It's generally easier to use messages.get() as this automatically waits for a matching result and returns full data.

Search for multiple messages

Spot multiple messages that meet the same criteria.

// Search for all messages sent to someone@SERVER_ID.mailosaur.net.
// Limit results to the first 10 matches only.
const result = mailosaur.messages.search(
  "SERVER_ID",
  {
    sentTo: "123456789",
  },
  {
    page: 0,
    itemsPerPage: 10,
  }
);

// Get the most recent message (the first one in the list)
const latestMessage = result.items[0];

// Get the full message object
const message = mailosaur.messages.getById(latestMessage.id);

console.log(message.text.body);

List current inbox contents

See a full list of everything currently in your inbox.

// List the most recent messages
const result = mailosaur.messages.list("SERVER_ID");

// Get the most recent message (the first one in the list)
const latestMessage = result.items[0];

// Get the full message object
const message = mailosaur.messages.getById(latestMessage.id);

console.log(message.text.body);

Common test scenarios

Testing basic properties

Once an SMS has been retrieved, test the properties of that text:

// Test sender information
expect(message.from[0].name).toEqual("Support");
expect(message.from[0].phone).toEqual("654321");

// Test recipient information
expect(message.to[0].name).toEqual("John Smith");
expect(message.to[0].phone).toEqual("1234567890");

Testing carbon-copy recipients

// Carbon copy (CC) recipients
expect(message.cc[0].name).toEqual("Jane Smith");
expect(message.cc[0].phone).toEqual("1234567890");

// Blind carbon copy (BCC) recipients
expect(message.bcc[0].name).toEqual("Jill Smith");
expect(message.bcc[0].phone).toEqual("1325476980");

Testing SMS contents

SMS message content is available via the text.body property:

console.log(message.text.body); // "Hi Jason, ..."

Testing links

Any links in the content of your email are automatically available via the text.links array:

// How many links?
console.log(message.text.links.length); // 2

const firstLink = message.text.links[0];
expect(firstLink.text).toEqual("Google Search");
expect(firstLink.href).toEqual("https://www.google.com/");

Testing verification codes

Codes are automatically extracted from the content of your SMS message. They are available via the text.codes array:

const otp = message.text.codes[0];
expect(otp.value).toEqual("456812");

Replying to an SMS message

If you have a product that handles SMS replies, you can use our reply feature to simulate this. When you reply, the SMS is sent back to the phone number it was originally sent from:

await mailosaur.messages.reply("MESSAGE_ID", {
  text: "FYI",
});
Parameter Description
text Any additional text content to include in the reply
html Any additional HTML content to include in the reply
subject Optionally override the default subject line
attachments Optional attachments (see 'include attachments' above)

Forwarding a message to email

You can forward messages from your Mailosaur account to external email addresses via the creation of automated forwarding rules, or one at a time. Before you can forward messages, you must set up a verified external email address, so you can send email to it:

await mailosaur.messages.forward("MESSAGE_ID", {
  to: "verified-address@example.com",
  text: "FYI",
});
Parameter Description
to The email address to which the message will be sent. Must be a verified email address
text Any additional text content to forward the message with
html Any additional HTML content to forward the message with
subject Optionally override the default subject line

Deleting messages

Deleting an individual message

Permanently deletes a single message and attachments. This operation cannot be undone:

await mailosaur.messages.del("MESSAGE_ID");

Delete all messages

Permanently deletes all messages and attachments in the specified server/inbox. This operation cannot be undone:

await mailosaur.messages.deleteAll("SERVER_ID");

See also