In order to protect the host environment from untrusted web content, Chrome uses [multiple layers of sandboxing](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/HEAD/docs/linux_sandboxing.md). For this to work properly,
the host should be configured first. If there's no good sandbox for Chrome to use, it will crash
> 👋 We run our tests for Puppeteer on Travis CI - see our [`.travis.yml`](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/blob/master/.travis.yml) for reference.
Tips-n-tricks:
- The `libnss3` package must be installed in order to run Chromium on Ubuntu Trusty
- [user namespace cloning](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/user_namespaces.7.html) should be enabled to support
proper sandboxing
- [xvfb](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xvfb) should be launched in order to run Chromium in non-headless mode (e.g. to test Chrome Extensions)
To sum up, your `.travis.yml` might look like this:
> 👋 We use [Cirrus Ci](https://cirrus-ci.org/) to run our tests for Puppeteer in a Docker container - see our [`Dockerfile.linux`](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/blob/master/.ci/node8/Dockerfile.linux) for reference.
The [newest Chromium package](https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/package/edge/community/x86_64/chromium) supported on Alpine is 71, which was corresponding to [Puppeteer v1.9.0](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/releases/tag/v1.9.0).
This will write shared memory files into `/tmp` instead of `/dev/shm`. See [crbug.com/736452](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=736452) for more details.
Seeing other weird errors when launching Chrome? Try running your container
The Node.js runtime of the [App Engine standard environment](https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/nodejs/) comes with all system packages needed to run Headless Chrome.
To use `puppeteer`, simply list the module as a dependency in your `package.json` and deploy to Google App Engine. Read more about using `puppeteer` on App Engine by following [the official tutorial](https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/nodejs/using-headless-chrome-with-puppeteer).
The Node.js 8 runtime of [Google Cloud Functions](https://cloud.google.com/functions/docs/) comes with all system packages needed to run Headless Chrome.
To use `puppeteer`, simply list the module as a dependency in your `package.json` and deploy your function to Google Cloud Functions using the `nodejs8` runtime.
Running Puppeteer on Heroku requires some additional dependencies that aren't included on the Linux box that Heroku spins up for you. To add the dependencies on deploy, add the Puppeteer Heroku buildpack to the list of buildpacks for your app under Settings > Buildpacks.
The url for the buildpack is https://github.com/jontewks/puppeteer-heroku-buildpack
When you click add buildpack, simply paste that url into the input, and click save. On the next deploy, your app will also install the dependencies that Puppeteer needs to run.
If you need to render Chinese, Japanese, or Korean characters you may need to use a buildpack with additional font files like https://github.com/CoffeeAndCode/puppeteer-heroku-buildpack
There's also another [simple guide](https://timleland.com/headless-chrome-on-heroku/) from @timleland that includes a sample project: https://timleland.com/headless-chrome-on-heroku/.
AWS Lambda [limits](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/limits.html) deployment package sizes to ~50MB. This presents challenges for running headless Chrome (and therefore Puppeteer) on Lambda. The community has put together a few resources that work around the issues:
- https://github.com/adieuadieu/serverless-chrome/blob/master/docs/chrome.md (tracks the latest Chromium snapshots)
If you are using a JavaScript transpiler like babel or TypeScript, calling `evaluate()` with an async function might not work. This is because while `puppeteer` uses `Function.prototype.toString()` to serialize functions while transpilers could be changing the output code in such a way it's incompatible with `puppeteer`.
Some workarounds to this problem would be to instruct the transpiler not to mess up with the code, for example, configure TypeScript to use latest ecma version (`"target": "es2018"`). Another workaround could be using string templates instead of functions: