This roll includes:
- crrev.com/510651 that changes request interception methods in protocol
- s/Page.setRequestInterceptionEnabled/Page.setRequestInterception
BREAKING CHANGE
Page.setRequestInterceptionEnabled is renamed into
Page.setRequestInterception.
feat(interception): Implement request.respond method
This patch implements a new Request.respond method. This
allows users to fulfill the intercepted request with a hand-crafted
response if they wish so.
References #1020.
Similarly to the `request.response()` method, this patch adds
`request.failure()` method that returns error details for the failed
requests.
Fixes#901.
This patch moves resourceType to be all small-caps. This aligns
with our convention that all string constants should be smallcaps.
BREAKING CHANGE: this patch changes the constants of the
request.resourceType to be all small-caps.
This patch starts using typescript to lint JSDoc annotations.
Note: this uses typescript's bleeding edge. We should migrate to stable once
it has all the necessary bugfixes.
References #65.
Since protocol ignores all HTTP headers that don't have string
value, this patch starts validating header key-values before
sending them over the protocol.
Fixes#713.
It's very bad to have 'unhandled promise rejection' that can't be
handled in user code. These errors will exit node process in a near
future.
This patch avoids 'unhandled promise rejection' while sending protocol
messages.
This patch:
- introduces `puppeteer:error` debug scope and starts using it for all
swalloed errors.
- makes sure that every `client.send` method is either awaited or its
errors are handled.
- starts return promises from Request.continue() and Request.abort().
- starts swallow errors from Request.contine() and Request.abort().
The last is the most important part of the patch. Since
`Request.continue()` might try to continue canceled request, we should
disregard the error.
Fixes#627.
This patch:
- switches to objects instead of maps for headers (in Request, Response and
page.setExtraHTTPHeaders)
- converts all header names to lower case
Fixes#547, fixes#509
It turned out that either Network.requestIntercepted or
Network.requestWillBeSent occasionally report encoded URL.
This patch starts decoding URL's when generating request hash.
Fixes#558.
This patch:
- teaches request interception to ignore data URLs. Currently protocol
doesn't send interceptions for data URLs.
- teaches request interception to properly process URLs with hashes.
Currently `Network.requestIntercepted` sends url with a hash, whereas
`Network.requestWillBeSent` doesn't report hashes in its urls. @see
crbug.com/755456
- skips one more header that I spotted during debugging interception on
the realworld websites.
Fixes#258, #259.
The issue #168 is a protocol inconsistency which happens only
in case of HTTPS error. This patch starts refering to the
upstream bug instead of puppeteer issue.
Closes#168.
This patch
- rolls chromium to 492629
- migrates connection establishing to use browser target. This migration means
that now we have a single websocket connection to browser (implemented
in Connection class). A connection to a particular target is
incapsulated in a new Session class.
This patch:
- changes interception API so that it better aligns with what we'd like to see
in #121
- fixes the issue with redirect interception
Fixes#217.
This patch starts using "Failed" command for request interception instead of
"Aborted".
The "Aborted" status also has a side-effect of cancelling the navigation, so
there will be no error on the page and form puppeteer's standpoint, the navigation
will never complete.
This patch makes sure that request.text() doesn't try
to fetch response body from the backend until the request is
actually finished (finished or failed).
It turns out we're not receiving 'Network.requestWillBeSent' event
for every requestId.
This patch makes sure we don't dispatch `requestfinished` and
`requestfailed` events without passing actual request.
References #168
The Body class was inlined in the Request and Response classes.
This patch:
- removes the Body class
- adds Request.postData public property
- adds Response.buffer(), Response.text() and Response.json() methods
Fixes#106.
This patch:
- removes Body.arrayBuffer. This method is redundant since there's
already a Body.buffer() method
- removes Body.bodyUsed getter.
References #106
This patch:
- renames page.setHTTPHeaders into page.setExtraHTTPHeaders
- starts using Map instead of Object to align with other headers
arguments
Fixes#112.
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 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:
- drops Request dependency on NetworkManager
- drops Response dependency on NetworkManager
- drops requestIds from Request and Response objects
This patch implements NetworkManager, which encapsulates all the
interaction with Network domain.
The NetworkManager also uses partial implementation of Request and
Response classes, defined in the Fetch API specification.
References #26