* fix: test failing in headful
* fix: install Firefox for headful tests
* fix: skip favicon.ico requests in test
* fix: auth test in headful
* fix: disable NetworkTimeServiceQuerying
* fix: filter more favicon requests
* fix: network test with favicon
* fix: improve fixes
It is flakey on the bots and we're not actively using it yet, so let's
disable it for now. We will work on extracting this into its own repo
and that work is tracked in
https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/7710.
* chore: enforce pinned dependencies
Because we don't check our `package-lock.json` in, we can end up with
different versions installed locally vs CI, or even two devs having
different versions. Let's pin and enforce we pin every version to
avoid this.
* chore: temporarily disable FF tests on CI
The tests are regularly flaking (see #6861 for some investigation). In
the mean time it's blocking us landing and releasing, so we'll
temporarily skip FF tests for now.
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
* fix: wider compat TS types and CI checks to ensure correct type defs
This PR improves our TS types further to make sure they are usable in a
TS environment where ES Modules are the target output. Our use of
`export =` is problematic this environment as TypeScript does not allow
`export =` to be used and it errors.
The fix for the type issues to avoid `export =` is to instead define the
functions that you gain access to when you import Puppeteer as top level
functions in our `types.d.ts` file. We can do this by declaring them
explicitly in `src/node.ts`. These are then rolled into `lib/types.d.ts`
at build time. The downside to this is that we have to keep those
declarations in sync with the Puppeteer API; should we add a new method
to the `Puppeteer` class, we must add it to the `nodes.ts` declarations.
However, this could easily be automated by a small script that walks the
AST and generates these. I will do that in a follow-up PR, but I
consider this low risk given how rarely the very top level API of
Puppeteer changes. The nice thing about this approach is we no longer
need our script that hacks on changes to `lib/types.d.ts`.
To avoid yet more releases to fix issues in one particular TS
environment, this PR also includes a suite of example setups that we
test on each CI run. Each sample folder contains `good.ts`, which should
have no TS errors, and `bad.ts`, which should have some errors. The test
first packs Puppeteer into a tar, and then installs it from that tar
into each project. This should replicate how the published package
behaves when it is installed. We then check that we get no errors on
`good.ts`, and the expected errors on `bad.ts`.
We have a variety of test projects that cover both TS and JS source
code, and CJS and ESM imports and outputs.
Similar to our earlier Travis CI setup, we continue to run exhaustive checks on Linux, while also verifying the build + unit tests still work on other platforms.
Issue: #6726