* chore: remove src/externs.d.ts
It defined global types that we don't want to use, and instead we move
to using interfaces that we import and reference just like with any
other interface.
This means other than Protocol (which I think is fine to leave as is),
there are no other magic global types and you have to import any types
or interfaces that you want.
* chore: migrate src/Page.js to TypeScript
The final one! This is a huge file and needs to be split up and tidied,
but for now I've left all the definitions in place and converted types
accordingly.
There's some additional tidying we can do now every `src` file is TS,
but I'll leave that for another PR to avoid this one getting any bigger.
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
* chore: migrate src/Input to typescript
This moves `Keyboard`, `Mouse` and `Touchscreen` to TypeScript. We gain
some nice TS benefits here; by creating a type for all the keycodes we
support we can type the input args as that rather than `string` which
will hopefully save some users some debugging once we ship our TS types
in a future version.
* Remove from externs file
* Update utils/doclint/check_public_api/index.js
Co-Authored-By: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
* chore: migrate src/JSHandle to TS
There's a few TODOs in here that all depend on typing the
`ExecutionContext.evaluateHandle` properly so that you can properly
declare what types you're expecting back. Once I've done that file (it's
next on my list) I will loop back and improve the types here, fixing
these TODOs.
* Fix doclint for {}
The codebase was incredibly inconsistent with the use of spacing around
curly braces, e.g.:
```
// this?
const a = {b: 1}
// or?
const a = { b: 1 }
```
This extended into import statements also. Google's styleguide is no
spacing, so we're going with that.
* chore: migrate `src/Connection` to TypeScript
This commit migrates `src/Connection` to TypeScript. It also changes its
exports to be ESM because TypeScript's support for exporting values to
use as types via CommonJS is poor (by design) and so rather than battle
that it made more sense to migrate the file to ESM.
The good news is that TypeScript is still outputting to `lib/` as
CommonJS, so the fact that we author in ESM is actually not a breaking
change at all.
So going forwards we will:
* migrate TS files to use ESM for importing and exporting
* continue to output to `lib/` as CommonJS
* continue to use CommonJS requires when in a `src/*.js` file
I'd also like to split `Connection.ts` into two; I think the
`CDPSession` class belongs in its own file, but I will do that in
another PR to avoid this one becoming bigger than it already is.
I also turned off `@typescript-eslint/no-use-before-define` as I don't
think it was adding value and Puppeteer's codebase seems to have a style
of declaring helper functions at the bottom which is fine by me.
Finally, I updated the DocLint tool so it knows of expected method
mismatches. It was either that or come up with a smart way to support
TypeScript generics in DocLint and given we don't want to use DocLint
that much longer that didn't feel worth it.
* Fix params being required
This PR changes `src/Dialog.js` to `src/Dialog.ts` and rewrites
accordingly. Most of the changes are straight forward; the only
interesting one from a TS point of view is the `DialogType` enum. I
expose it again as `Dialog.Type` to avoid a breaking change.
This PR also exposed some bugs with our ESLint TypeScript settings and
applying the overrides, so I fixed those too.
I also updated our DocLint tool to work on TS source files over JS lib
files if they exist. This is the minimal change to keep the existing doc
system working as we're working on moving away from this system longer
term.
I lost some time debugging before realising that I needed to run tsc. I
don't really want to put `npm run tsc` before this command else we'll
run tsc multiple times on each CI build, so I think this message is
suitable.
Travis defines `process.env.TRAVIS` and if that exists we don't want to
log this as on CI we're guaranteed to have an up to date `lib/`
directory.
This commit moves `src/DeviceDescriptors` to be authored in TypeScript. This file was chosen due to its simplicity so that we can focus on getting a mixed JS/TS codebase playing nicely before migrating the more complex files.
The file itself was a bit odd: although the array of devices was exported via `module.exports` that was never referenced by any consumers; each device was also exported via `module.exports[name] = device` and that is how it's consumed. The Puppeteer docs suggest using it like so:
```js
puppeteer.devices['iPhone 6']
```
So instead of exporting the array and then setting a bunch of properties on that, we instead define the array and export an object of keys where each key is a device. This is a breaking change (see the footer for details).
Rather than export an object I'd much rather export a Map, but that would be a larger breaking change and I'm keen to avoid those for the time being.
Note that we have to use special TypeScript specific syntax for the export that enables it to work in a CommonJS codebase [1] but again I'd rather this than move to ESM at this time. TypeScript still outputs CommonJS into `lib/` as you would expect.
BREAKING CHANGE: We no longer export an array of devices, so any users relying on doing:
```js
puppeter.devices.forEach(...)
```
…will now see a breakage. The fix is to use `Object.{keys/entries/values}` to iterate instead.
[1]: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/modules.html#export--and-import--require
This commit updates all the non-Puppeteer unit tests to run using Mocha and then deletes the custom test runner framework from this repository. The documentation has also been updated.
Our logic around missing methods wasn't quite right; if there is no set of missing methods for a class it _is_ an error and we still need to report it, we don't want to `continue`.
This is expected as we now alias `emulateMedia` in `index.js` which isn't a file checked by DocLint. We alias there to avoid having the function overriden by the `asyncInstallHooks` code.
This commit updates doclint to know about methods that we expect it will find are missing and in that case just skip over them. We should only do this for methods where we plan to deprecate them or we have to define them in an odd way to work around some problem (and if that's the case long term we should fix that problem so we can define them as normal).
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
Rather than use our own custom expect library, we can use expect from npm [1], which has an API almost identical to the one Puppeteer has, but with more options, better diffing, and is used by many in the community as it's the default assertions library that comes with Jest.
It's also thoroughly documented [2].
[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/expect
[2]: https://jestjs.io/docs/en/expect
TypeScript seems to struggle to understand `Promise.all` when the items in the array return different types. If we were authoring in TS we could fix this with TS generics (`Promise.all<OurTypeHere>(...)`) but for now we can typecast the result. We'll fix this properly when we author in TS.
TS 3.5 got much stricter on writing changes to objects with varied types [1] so we have to do a bit of typecasting work to convince TS about the types of keys and values that we are setting.
Longer term we should think about a better data structure that avoids us having to jump through some hoops but for now I think this is a reasonable step to get us onto 3.5.
Same story regarding bindings on `window`: the easiest fix is to cast `window` to `any` for the code that adds to it. I'm sure we can come up with a more type-safe way of doing this in the future.
[1]: https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/wiki/Breaking-Changes#fixes-to-unsound-writes-to-indexed-access-types
Node.js v6 was end-of-life'd in April, 2019, with AWS Lambda prohibiting updaets to the Node.js v6 runtime since June 30, 2019.
This makes it quite safe for us to remove the Node 6 support from the repository.
These getters are introduced as a more convenient substitute for
a `require('puppeteer/Errors')` and
`require('puppeteer/DeviceDescriptors')`.
This way we can make cross-browser story nicer - a single require
of `puppeteer` or `puppeteer-firefox` fully defines Puppeteer
environment.
Introduce `//lib/api.js` that declares a list of publicly exposed
classes.
The `//lib/api.js` list superceedes dynamic `helper.tracePublicAPI()` calls
and is used in the following places:
- [ASYNC STACKS]: generate "async stacks" for publicy exposed API in `//index.js`
- [COVERAGE]: move coverage support from `//lib/helper` to `//test/utils`
- [DOCLINT]: get rid of 'exluded classes' hardcoded list
This will help us to re-use our coverage and doclint infrastructure
for Puppeteer-Firefox.
Drive-By: it turns out we didn't run coverage for `SecurityDetails`
class, so we lack coverage for a few methods there. These are excluded
for now, sanity tests will be added in a follow-up.
This patch splits out `IsolatedWorld` class from Frame.
The `IsolatedWorld` abstraction is an execution context
with a designated set of DOM wrappers.
References #2671
This patch teaches `page.setContent` to await resources in
the new document.
**NOTE**: This patch changes behavior: currently, `page.setContent`
awaits the `"domcontentloaded"` event; with this patch, we can now await
other lifecycle events, and switched default to the `"load"` event.
The change is justified since current behavior made `page.setContent`
unusable for its main designated usecases, pushing our client
to use [dataURL workaround](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/issues/728#issuecomment-334301491).
Fixes#728
This adds `page.accessibility.snapshot()`. It serializes and returns the accessibility tree for the page. By default, uninteresting nodes are filtered out of the snapshot.
fixes#2033
Currently connection assumes that transport is a websocket
and tries to handle websocket-related errors.
This patch:
- moves ConnectionTransport interface to use callbacks instead
of events. This way it could be used in browser context as well.
- introduces WebSocketTransport that implements ConnectionTransport
interface for ws.
This is a preparation step for 2 things:
- exposing `transport` option in the `puppeteer.connect` method
- better support for `browserify`
References #2119
One of our checks makes sure all links from README.md to API.md
point to the last-released version of the API.
This sometimes doesn't work: when we refer to a section
in api.md that is just added, we should be able to reference
the "master" version of the api.md
This patch:
- teaches the doclint check to keep links to tip-of-tree version
of api.md in README.md intact.
- starts refering to tip-of-tree version of api.md in `puppeter-core` section
This patch adds a new require, `puppeteer/Errors`, that
holds all the Puppeteer-specific error classes.
Currently, the only custom error class we use is `TimeoutError`. We'll
expand in future with `CrashError` and some others.
Fixes#1694.
Since Node 10, `console.assert` no longer throws an AssertionError.
(This is generally good since it aligns Node.js with Browsers.)
This patch migrates all usages of `console.assert` in our codebase.
- All the `lib/` and testing code is migrated onto a handmade `assert`
function. This is to make Puppeteer transpilation / bundling easier.
- All the tooling is switched to use Node's `assert` module.
Fixes#2547.
This patch drops the markdown-toc module and instead rolls out
our own simple markdown table-of-contents generator.
As a side effect, it fixes links to `page.$` and `page.$$`.
SourceFactory was meant to cache Sources so that they could be used
in different preprocessor tasks.
This turned out to be over-engineering. This patch kills the layer.
Last release v1.3.0 had an error in the documentation, claiming
it wasn't released.
This patch makes sure we have a little bit of automation in place
to save us from this in future.