Co-authored-by: release-please[bot] <55107282+release-please[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
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Running Puppeteer in Chrome extensions
:::caution
Chrome extensions environment is significantly different from the usual Node.JS environment, therefore, the support for running Puppeteer in chrome.debugger is currently experimental. Please submit issues https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/new/choose if you encounted bugs.
:::
Chrome Extensions allow accessing Chrome DevTools Protocol via chrome.debugger
.
chrome.debugger
provides a restricted access to CDP and allows attaching to one
page at a time. Therefore, Puppeteer requires a different transport to be used and Puppeteer's view is limited to a single page. It means you can
interact with a single page and its frames and workers but cannot create new pages using Puppeteer. To create a new page you need to use the
chrome.tabs
API and establish a new Puppeteer connection.
How to run Puppeteer in the browser
:::note
See https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/tree/main/examples/puppeteer-in-extension for a complete example.
:::
To run Puppeteer in the an extension, first you need to produce a browser-compatible build using a bundler such as rollup or webpack:
- When importing Puppeteer use the browser-specific entrypoint from puppeteer-core
puppeteer-core/lib/esm/puppeteer/puppeteer-core-browser.js'
:
import {
connect,
ExtensionTransport,
} from 'puppeteer-core/lib/esm/puppeteer/puppeteer-core-browser.js';
// Create a tab or find a tab to attach to.
const tab = await chrome.tabs.create({
url,
});
// Connect Puppeteer using the ExtensionTransport.connectTab.
const browser = await connect({
transport: await ExtensionTransport.connectTab(tab.id),
});
// You will have a single page on the browser object, which corresponds
// to the tab you connected the transport to.
const [page] = await browser.pages();
// Perform the usual operations with Puppeteer page.
console.log(await page.evaluate('document.title'));
browser.disconnect();
- Build your extension using a bundler. For example, the following configuration can be used with rollup:
import {nodeResolve} from '@rollup/plugin-node-resolve';
export default {
input: 'main.mjs',
output: {
format: 'esm',
dir: 'out',
},
plugins: [
nodeResolve({
// Indicate that we target a browser environment.
browser: true,
// Exclude any dependencies except for puppeteer-core.
// `npm install puppeteer-core` # To install puppeteer-core if needed.
resolveOnly: ['puppeteer-core'],
}),
],
};