When we merge commits to master, Travis kicks job to build a new commit
and to publish new version of puppeteer@next.
If two commits are landed in almost the same time, then travis starts
two parallel jobs to build each commit. This race condition results
in the incorrect puppeteer@next revision.
This patch teaches apply_next_version.js to verify if current HEAD
is matching upstream HEAD. If it doesn't, the predeploy hook fails
which (hopefully) aborts deployment.
Fixes#2925.
This patch removes all dynamic requires in Puppeteer. This should
make it much simpler to bundle puppeteer/puppeteer-core packages.
We used dynamic requires in a few places in lib/:
- BrowserFetcher was choosing between `http` and `https` based on some
runtime value. This was easy to fix with explicit `require`.
- BrowserFetcher and Launcher needed to know project root to store
chromium revisions and to read package name and chromium revision from
package.json. (projectRoot value would be different in node6).
Instead of doing a backwards logic to infer these
variables, we now pass them directly from `//index.js`.
With this patch, I was able to bundle Puppeteer using browserify and
the following config in `package.json`:
```json
"browser": {
"./lib/BrowserFetcher.js": false,
"ws": "./lib/BrowserWebSocket",
"fs": false,
"child_process": false,
"rimraf": false,
"readline": false
}
```
(where `lib/BrowserWebSocket.js` is a courtesy of @Janpot from
https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/pull/2374/)
And command:
```sh
$ browserify -r puppeteer:./index.js > ppweb.js
```
References #2119
We had (and still have) a ton of pull requests to support
PUPPETEER_EXECUTABLE_PATH and PUPPETEER_CHROMIUM_REVISION in puppeteer launcher.
We were hesitant before since env variables are not scoped
and thus don't make a good interface for a library. Now, since we
determined `puppeteer-core` as a library and `puppeteer` as our end-user
product, it's safe to satisfy our user needs.
This patch:
- teaches PUPPETEER_EXECUTABLE_PATH and PUPPETEER_CHROMIUM_REVISION
env variables to control how Puppeteer launches browser
- makes sure these variables play no role in `puppeteer-core` package.
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
Before v1.7.0 we were creating Response objects either from protocol's
Network.Response struct, or from the data available in the
requestIntercepted.
With the recent chagens to the request interception logic, we can
always create response from Newtork.Response struct; this allows
us to simply create Response objects from protocol payload.
If referer is passed to the options object its value will be used as the referer instead of the value set by `Page.setExtraHTTPHeaders()`.
This is the correct way to set referer header: otherwise, the `referer` header will override all the document subrequests.
Fixes#3090.
Introduce an API to manage permissions per browser context:
- BrowserContext.overridePermissions(origin, permissions)
- BrowserContext.clearPermissionOverrides()
Fixes#846.
This roll includes:
- https://crrev.com/584293 - DevTools: execute scripts in addScriptToEvaluateOnLoad in order
- https://crrev.com/585630 - DevTools: introduce Browser.grantPermissions
- https://crrev.com/587156 - Revert "[Base] Use background mode for ThreadPriority::BACKGROUND threads (behind feature) (reland)."
The "revert" patch fixes headless functionality on windows.
References #846.
Fixes#3106.
I ran TypeScript against our code with `strictNullChecks` on. Most of the errors generated are noise, because TypeScript doesn't understand how our `assert` method works. But some were legitimate bugs. They are fixed in this patch.
This patch:
- merges `ElementHandle` into `ExecutionContext` (for simplicity; there's no good reason to have them in separate files).
- removes the necessity to pass handle factory when creating `ExecutionContext`
This makes it easier to create execution contexts out of payloads.
References #1215
It turned out that almost any usecase requires helper methods to access
DOM inside the ExecutionContext.
Instead of exposing execution contexts as-is, we should introduce
IsolatedWorld as a first-class citizen that will hold execution contexts
inside.
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.
This allows us:
- dogfood browser contexts the way we want them to be used
- simplifies the dance around service workers / cookies setting up and tier down.