# FAQ ## Q: Who maintains Puppeteer? The Chrome DevTools team maintains the library, but we'd love your help and expertise on the project! See our [contributing guide](https://pptr.dev/contributing). ## Q: What is the status of cross-browser support? Official Firefox support is currently experimental. The ongoing collaboration with Mozilla aims to support common end-to-end testing use cases, for which developers expect cross-browser coverage. The Puppeteer team needs input from users to stabilize Firefox support and to bring missing APIs to our attention. From Puppeteer v2.1.0 onwards you can specify [`puppeteer.launch({product: 'firefox'})`](./api/puppeteer.puppeteernode.launch) to run your Puppeteer scripts in Firefox Nightly, without any additional custom patches. While [an older experiment](https://www.npmjs.com/package/puppeteer-firefox) required a patched version of Firefox, [the current approach](https://wiki.mozilla.org/Remote) works with “stock” Firefox. We will continue to collaborate with other browser vendors to bring Puppeteer support to browsers such as Safari. This effort includes exploration of a standard for executing cross-browser commands (instead of relying on the non-standard DevTools Protocol used by Chrome). ## Q: What are Puppeteer’s goals and principles? The goals of the project are: - Provide a slim, canonical library that highlights the capabilities of the [DevTools Protocol](https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/). - Provide a reference implementation for similar testing libraries. Eventually, these other frameworks could adopt Puppeteer as their foundational layer. - Grow the adoption of headless/automated browser testing. - Help dogfood new DevTools Protocol features...and catch bugs! - Learn more about the pain points of automated browser testing and help fill those gaps. We adapt [Chromium principles](https://www.chromium.org/developers/core-principles) to help us drive product decisions: - **Speed**: Puppeteer has almost zero performance overhead over an automated page. - **Security**: Puppeteer operates off-process with respect to Chromium, making it safe to automate potentially malicious pages. - **Stability**: Puppeteer should not be flaky and should not leak memory. - **Simplicity**: Puppeteer provides a high-level API that’s easy to use, understand, and debug. ## Q: Is Puppeteer replacing Selenium/WebDriver? **No**. Both projects are valuable for very different reasons: - Selenium/WebDriver focuses on cross-browser automation; its value proposition is a single standard API that works across all major browsers. - Puppeteer focuses on Chromium; its value proposition is richer functionality and higher reliability. That said, you **can** use Puppeteer to run tests against Chromium, e.g. using the community-driven [jest-puppeteer](https://github.com/smooth-code/jest-puppeteer). While this probably shouldn’t be your only testing solution, it does have a few good points compared to WebDriver: - Puppeteer requires zero setup and comes bundled with the Chromium version it works best with, making it [very easy to start with](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/#getting-started). At the end of the day, it’s better to have a few tests running chromium-only, than no tests at all. - Puppeteer has event-driven architecture, which removes a lot of potential flakiness. There’s no need for evil “sleep(1000)” calls in puppeteer scripts. - Puppeteer runs headless by default, which makes it fast to run. Puppeteer v1.5.0 also exposes browser contexts, making it possible to efficiently parallelize test execution. - Puppeteer shines when it comes to debugging: flip the “headless” bit to false, add “slowMo”, and you’ll see what the browser is doing. You can even open Chrome DevTools to inspect the test environment. ## Q: Why doesn’t Puppeteer v.XXX work with Chromium v.YYY? We see Puppeteer as an **indivisible entity** with Chromium. Each version of Puppeteer bundles a specific version of Chromium – **the only** version it is guaranteed to work with. This is not an artificial constraint: A lot of work on Puppeteer is actually taking place in the Chromium repository. Here’s a typical story: - A Puppeteer bug is reported: https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/2709 - It turned out this is an issue with the DevTools protocol, so we’re fixing it in Chromium: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/1102154 - Once the upstream fix is landed, we roll updated Chromium into Puppeteer: https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/pull/2769 However, oftentimes it is desirable to use Puppeteer with the official Google Chrome rather than Chromium. For this to work, you should install a `puppeteer-core` version that corresponds to the Chrome version. For example, in order to drive Chrome 71 with puppeteer-core, use `chrome-71` npm tag: ```bash npm install puppeteer-core@chrome-71 ``` ## Q: Which Chromium version does Puppeteer use? Find the version using one of the following ways: - Look for the `chromium` entry in [revisions.ts](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/blob/main/packages/puppeteer-core/src/revisions.ts). To find the corresponding Chromium commit and version number, search for the revision prefixed by an `r` in [OmahaProxy](https://omahaproxy.appspot.com/)'s "Find Releases" section. - Look for the `versionsPerRelease` map in [versions.js](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/blob/main/versions.js) which contains mapping between Chromium and the smallest Puppeteer version that supports it. ## Q: Which Firefox version does Puppeteer use? Since Firefox support is experimental, Puppeteer downloads the latest [Firefox Nightly](https://wiki.mozilla.org/Nightly) when the `PUPPETEER_PRODUCT` environment variable is set to `firefox`. That's also why the value of `firefox` in [revisions.ts](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/blob/main/packages/puppeteer-core/src/revisions.ts) is `latest` -- Puppeteer isn't tied to a particular Firefox version. To fetch Firefox Nightly as part of Puppeteer installation: ```bash PUPPETEER_PRODUCT=firefox npm i puppeteer # or "yarn add puppeteer" ``` #### Q: What’s considered a “Navigation”? From Puppeteer’s standpoint, **“navigation” is anything that changes a page’s URL**. Aside from regular navigation where the browser hits the network to fetch a new document from the web server, this includes [anchor navigations](https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/single-page.html#scroll-to-fragid) and [History API](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History_API) usage. With this definition of “navigation,” **Puppeteer works seamlessly with single-page applications.** #### Q: What’s the difference between a “trusted" and "untrusted" input event? In browsers, input events could be divided into two big groups: trusted vs. untrusted. - **Trusted events**: events generated by users interacting with the page, e.g. using a mouse or keyboard. - **Untrusted event**: events generated by Web APIs, e.g. `document.createEvent` or `element.click()` methods. Websites can distinguish between these two groups: - using an [`Event.isTrusted`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Event/isTrusted) event flag - sniffing for accompanying events. For example, every trusted `'click'` event is preceded by `'mousedown'` and `'mouseup'` events. For automation purposes it’s important to generate trusted events. **All input events generated with Puppeteer are trusted and fire proper accompanying events.** If, for some reason, one needs an untrusted event, it’s always possible to hop into a page context with `page.evaluate` and generate a fake event: ```ts await page.evaluate(() => { document.querySelector('button[type=submit]').click(); }); ``` #### Q: What features does Puppeteer not support? You may find that Puppeteer does not behave as expected when controlling pages that incorporate audio and video. (For example, [video playback/screenshots is likely to fail](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/291).) There are two reasons for this: - Puppeteer is bundled with Chromium — not Chrome — and so by default, it inherits all of [Chromium's media-related limitations](https://www.chromium.org/audio-video). This means that Puppeteer does not support licensed formats such as AAC or H.264. (However, it is possible to force Puppeteer to use a separately-installed version Chrome instead of Chromium via the [`executablePath` option to `puppeteer.launch`](./api/puppeteer.launchoptions). You should only use this configuration if you need an official release of Chrome that supports these media formats.) - Since Puppeteer (in all configurations) controls a desktop version of Chromium/Chrome, features that are only supported by the mobile version of Chrome are not supported. This means that Puppeteer [does not support HTTP Live Streaming (HLS)](https://caniuse.com/#feat=http-live-streaming). #### Q: I am having trouble installing / running Puppeteer in my test environment. Where should I look for help? We have a [troubleshooting](https://pptr.dev/troubleshooting) guide for various operating systems that lists the required dependencies. #### Q: Chromium gets downloaded on every `npm ci` run. How can I cache the download? The default download path is `node_modules/puppeteer/.local-chromium`. However, you can change that path with the `PUPPETEER_DOWNLOAD_PATH` environment variable. Puppeteer uses that variable to resolve the Chromium executable location during launch, so you don’t need to specify `PUPPETEER_EXECUTABLE_PATH` as well. For example, if you wish to keep the Chromium download in `~/.npm/chromium`: ```sh export PUPPETEER_DOWNLOAD_PATH=~/.npm/chromium npm ci # by default the Chromium executable path is inferred # from the download path npm test # a new run of npm ci will check for the existence of # Chromium in ~/.npm/chromium npm ci ``` #### Q: I have more questions! Where do I ask? There are many ways to get help on Puppeteer: - [bugtracker](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues) - [Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/puppeteer) Make sure to search these channels before posting your question.