* 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 is a simple module but took a bit of work because:
* It wraps a Promise that can return basically anything. In a pure TS
codebase we'd solve these with generics, so you could do `new
TaskQueue<T>` where `T` will be what's returned from the queue, but
because we're calling that from JS we can't yet. I've left a TODO and
once we migrate the call sites to TS we can do a much better job than
the `void | any` type I've gone with for now.
* It was used in typedefs via `Puppeteer.TaskQueue`. I've removed that
entry from `externs.d.ts` in favour of importing it and using the type
directly. This does mean that we have imports that ESLint doesn't
realiase are actually used but I think this is better than maintaining
`externs.d.ts`.
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.
This commit adds linting for `*.ts` files and loads up the recommended
list of TS rules from the ESLint TypeScript plugin. We can adjust the
exact rules overtime, but starting with the recommended list seems
sensible.
Rather than maintain our own test runner we should instead lean on the community and use Mocha which is very popular and also our test runner of choice in DevTools too.
Note that this commit doesn't remove the TestRunner source as it's still used for other unit tests, but they will be updated in a future PR and then we can remove the TestRunner.
The main bulk of this PR is updating the tests as the old TestRunner passed in contextual data via the `it` function callback whereas Mocha does not, so we introduce some helpers for the tests to make it easier.
This patch introduces a tiny test runner to run puppeteer tests.
The test runner is self-container and allows parallel (wrt IO) test execution.
It will also allow us to split tests into multiple files if necessary.
Comparing to the jasmine, the testrunner supports parallel execution, properly
handles "unhandled promise rejection" event and signals.
Comparing to ava/jest, the testrunner doesn't run multiple node processes,
which makes it simpler but sufficient for our goals.
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