This patch improves on page.evaluate to accept a string.
The string can have a trailing '//# sourceURL=' comment which would
name the evaluation to make stacks beautiful.
In order to make sourceURL comments possible, this patch:
- removes wrapping of the client function into `Promise.resolve()`
- stops passing `awaitPromise` parameter to `Runtime.evaluate`
- starts to await promise via the `Runtime.awaitPromise` if the return type of the evaluation
is promise
closes#118
This patch removes Header class and substitutes it with a simple
Map object.
The map is chosen over the vanilla object since it has explicit
order of headers which we'd like to preserve.
References #106.
This patchs makes sure DOM domain is never enabled. The reasoning behind this is that
DOM domain is heavy-weight: it generates a lot of traffic over the protocol.
Drive-by: use Page.addScriptToEvaluateOnNewDocument instead of Page.addScriptToEvaluateOnLoad
This patch starts waiting for double raf after every mouse event.
It looks like a good enough workaround to make sure mouse events
are delivered.
The single raf might not be enough because browser might 'return' an already-prepared
frame for us without actually dispatching events.
Closes#122
This patch renames page.evaluateOnInitialized into
page.evaluateOnNewDocument to better align with the protocol and with
what the method is actually doing.
Fixes#119.
This patch removes the InterceptedRequest.isHandled method. There's
always a single request interceptor who owns all the intercepted
requests and who know if they were handled.
References #115.
This patch stops serializing console API arguments unless there are
listeners of the 'console' event in puppeteer.
This saves quite a lot CPU cycles.
Fixes#117.
Refactor Frame.waitForSelector to make room for Frame.waitForFunction
implementation.
This patch:
- removes AwaitedElement class which proved to be confusing, and
introduces a more straight-forward WaitTask.
- refactors the mutation observer to return true in case of successful
waiting or false in case of timeout.
References #91
This patch:
- introduces helper.addEventListener/helper.removeEventListeners
to simplify event management
- moves NavigatorWatchdog over to the helper.addEventListener to
stop leaking event listeners
This patch:
- adds Mouse class which holds mouse state and implements mouse primitives,
such as moving, button down and button up.
- implements high-level mouse api, such as `page.click` and `page.hover`.
References #40, References #89
This patch:
- introduces page.waitForSelector to wait for the selector to appear
- introduces polymorphic page.waitFor method, which accepts
either string (and in this case is a shortcut for page.waitForSelector)
or number (and in this case it's a promisified timeout).
References #91.
This patch implements timeout option for page.waitFor. The function
will throw if the selector doesn't appear during timeout milliseconds
of waittime.
References #89, #91.
This patch teaches doclint to regenerate table of contents
automatically whenever it's needed.
This patch:
- splits lint.js into lint.js and cli.js
- teaches cli.js to generate table-of-contents
- removes the test for table-of-contents errors from doclint
- adds a test for doclint failing to parse object destructuring in
method parameters.
This patch adds a 'visible' option to the Page.waitFor method, making
it possible to wait for the element to become actually visible.
References #89, #91.
This patch:
- gets rid of `page.emulate` and `page.emulatedDevices`
methods. Instead, it is suggested to use `page.setViewport()`
and `page.setUserAgent()` methods.
- moves DeviceDescriptors to the top level of the puppeteer so that
it is convenient to require them.
- improves on documentation to describe the suggested emulation
approach.
References #88.
This patch converts lib/DevicesDescriptors from a devtools front-end
format into a puppeteer format.
This patch does this via introducing a scripts utils/fetch_devices.js
which grabs devices from upstream of DevTools Front-end and
converts them into puppeteer devices.
References #88.