* 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.
This PR updates some code to remove constant ESLint warnings. It also
upgrades those warnings to errors - so that they have to be resolved
as part of the PR, rather than landing as a warning and causing noise.
Fixes#7229.
We're seeing odd failures with Prettier on some CI branches; my hunch is that they are installing different versions of the package and therefore getting formatting conflicts. This PR updates them all and pins them to specific versions - something we should probably consider generally, or remove our `package-lock.json` from the gitignore.
The existing behavior is expected to be unchanged as the value defaults to true.
Adding such option would allow user to skip the initial wait.
Issue: #3630
Currently, `npm clean-lib` fails on windows with `cmd` because it does not now about `rm`.
This change uses the already installed `rimraf` to do the job instead.
The `Page#click` method relies on `Mouse#click` for execution. `Mouse#click` triggers the `move`, `down`, and `up` methods in parallel waiting for all of them to finish, when they should be called sequentially instead.
Issue: #6462, #3347
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
* feat(launcher): fix installation error on Apple M1 chips
The previous logic assumed that an arm64 arch is only available in Linux. WIth Apple's arm64 M1 Chip this assumption isn't true anymore.
Currently there are no official macOS arm64 chromium builds available, but we can make use of the excellent Rosetta feature in macOS which allows us to run x86 binaries on M1.
Once native macOS arm64 Chromium builds are available we should switch to those.
Issue: #6622
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
* fix: make `$` and `$$` selectors generic
This means, much like TS's in built `querySelector` type, you can now do:
```ts
const listItems = page.$$<HTMLLIElement>('ul li');
```
And/or:
```ts
const h2 = page.$<HTMLHeadingElement>('h2');
```
And the return value will be of type `ElementHandle<T>|null`, where `T`
is the type you provided. By default `T` is an `Element`, so you don't
have to provide this if you don't care as a consumer about the exact
type you get back.
* chore: fix test assertions
This PR fixes the fact that currently if you have:
```ts
page.on('request', request => {
})
```
Then `request` will be typed as `any`. We can fix this by defining an
interface of event name => callback argument type, and looking that up
when you call `page.on`.
Also includes a drive-by fix to ensure we convert response headers to
strings, and updates the types accordingly.