This patch:
- introduces Target class that represents any inspectable target, such as service worker or page
- emits events when targets come and go
- introduces target.page() to instantiate a page from a target
Fixes#386, fixes#443.
This patch:
- changes `browser.close` to terminate browser.
- introduces new `browser.disconnect` to disconnect from a browser without closing it
This patch: fixes#918, fixes#989
BREAKING CHANGE:
`browser.close()` will always close a browser, even if it was initialized with
`puppeteer.connect`. To disconnect from a remote browser, use `browser.disconnect()` instead.
This patch starts using typescript to lint JSDoc annotations.
Note: this uses typescript's bleeding edge. We should migrate to stable once
it has all the necessary bugfixes.
References #65.
This patch:
- makes `browser.close()` return a promise that resolves when browser gets closed
- starts closing chrome gracefully if a custom `userDataDir` is supplied
Fixes#527
It's very bad to have 'unhandled promise rejection' that can't be
handled in user code. These errors will exit node process in a near
future.
This patch avoids 'unhandled promise rejection' while sending protocol
messages.
This patch:
- introduces `puppeteer:error` debug scope and starts using it for all
swalloed errors.
- makes sure that every `client.send` method is either awaited or its
errors are handled.
- starts return promises from Request.continue() and Request.abort().
- starts swallow errors from Request.contine() and Request.abort().
The last is the most important part of the patch. Since
`Request.continue()` might try to continue canceled request, we should
disregard the error.
Fixes#627.
This patch:
- refactors Connection to use a single remote debugging URL instead of a
pair of port and browserTargetId
- introduces Puppeteer.connect() method to attach to already running
browser instance.
Fixes#238.
This patch:
- split browser launching logic from Browser into `lib/Launcher.js`
- introduce `puppeteer` namespace which currently has a single `launch`
method to start a browser
With this patch, the browser is no longer created with the `new
Browser(..)` command. Instead, it should be "launched" via the
`puppeteer.launch` method:
```js
const puppeteer = require('puppeteer');
puppeteer.launch().then(async browser => {
...
});
```
With this approach browser instance lifetime matches the lifetime of
actual browser process. This helps us:
- remove proxy streams, e.g. browser.stderr and browser.stdout
- cleanup browser class and make it possible to connect to remote
browser
- introduce events on the browser instance, e.g. 'page' event. In case
of lazy-launching browser, we should've launch browser when an event
listener is added, which is unneded comlpexity.
This patch
- rolls chromium to 492629
- migrates connection establishing to use browser target. This migration means
that now we have a single websocket connection to browser (implemented
in Connection class). A connection to a particular target is
incapsulated in a new Session class.
Currently, it's impossible to do screenshots in parallel.
This patch:
- makes all screenshot tasks sequential inside one browser
- starts activating target before taking screenshot
- adds a test to make sure it's possible to take screenshots across
tabs
- starts waiting for a proper page closing after each test. This might
finally solve the ECONNRESET issues in tests.
References #89
This patch remove remoteDebuggingPort option. Instead, browser
is launched with '--remote-debugging-port=0' flag, letting browser
to pick any port. The puppeteer reads the port number from the
browser's stderr stream.
This change cuts average browser start time from 300ms to 250ms
on my machine. This happens since puppeteer doesn't have to probe
network once every 100ms, waiting for the remote debugging server to
instantiate.
Fixes#21.
This patch adds browser.stdout and browser.stderr streams.
These streams allow to get the browser instance output, e.g.
```js
browser.stderr.pipe(process.stdout);
```
This patch:
- reformats codebase to use 2-spaces instead of 4. This will
align the project with other codebases (e.g. DevTools and Lighthouse)
- enables eslint indentation checking
References #19
It turned out that the tip-of-tree chromium fails to start on Travis
because of two reasons:
- inability to run LinuxSUIDSandbox
- libnss3 library version being too small
Both problems happen because of the outdated "trusty" distribution
which is used on travis.
This patch:
- reverts the previous patch 9e6f779. Instead of introducing such
a weird "api", both phantom_shim/runner.js and test/test.js no
explicitly pass '--no-sandbox' flag to the browser
- updates the libnss3 lib on travis
Fixes#33
This patch drops the chrome-remote-interface dependency and
introduces Connection class which handles all the communication
with remote target.
Closes#3
This patch introduces check_availability.js utility which looks for
available chromium binaries for different revisions and platforms.
This patch also re-factors the chromium downloader scripts so that
it can operate different platforms.