puppeteer/CONTRIBUTING.md
Andrey Lushnikov cfc6a6ab38 Update CONTRIBUTING.md
Fixes #146.
2017-07-27 11:28:35 -07:00

4.1 KiB

How to Contribute

First of all, thank you for your interest in Puppeteer! We'd love to accept your patches and contributions!

Contributor License Agreement

Contributions to this project must be accompanied by a Contributor License Agreement. You (or your employer) retain the copyright to your contribution, this simply gives us permission to use and redistribute your contributions as part of the project. Head over to https://cla.developers.google.com/ to see your current agreements on file or to sign a new one.

You generally only need to submit a CLA once, so if you've already submitted one (even if it was for a different project), you probably don't need to do it again.

Code reviews

All submissions, including submissions by project members, require review. We use GitHub pull requests for this purpose. Consult GitHub Help for more information on using pull requests.

Code Style

  • coding style is fully defined in .eslintrc. Please make sure to run npm run lint before submitting PR
  • code should be annotated with closure annotations
  • comments should be generally avoided. If the code would not be understood without comments, consider re-writing the code to make it self-explanatory

Documentation

All public API should have a descriptive entry in the docs/api.md. There's a documentation linter that:

  • makes sure documentation is aligned with the codebase
  • generates up-to-date table-of-contents

To run the linter, use

npm run doc

Dependencies

For all dependencies (both installation and development):

  • Do not add a dependency if the desired functionality is easily implementable in scope of the project
  • if adding a dependency, it should be well-maintained and trustworthy

For installation dependencies:

  • do not add installation dependency unless it's critical to project success

Tests

  • every feature should be accompanied by a test
  • every public api event/method should be accompanied by a test
  • tests should be hermetic. They should not require internet connection or depend on external services.
  • tests should work on all three platforms: Mac, Linux and Win. This is especially important for screenshot tests.

Puppeteer tests are located in test/test.js and are written using Jasmine testing framework.

  • To run all tests:
npm run unit
  • To filter tests by name:
npm run unit -- --filter=waitFor
  • To run a specific test, substitute the it with fit (mnemonic rule: 'focus it'):
  ...
  // Using "fit" to run specific test
  fit('should work', SX(function() {
    await response = page.navigate(EMPTY_PAGE);
    expect(response.ok).toBe(true);
  }))
  • To run tests in non-headless mode:
HEADLESS=false npm run unit
  • To debug a test, "focus" a test first and then run
npm run debug-unit

There are also phantomjs tests located under third_party/phantomjs/test. These are used to test phantom_shim.

Debugging

Puppeteer uses DEBUG module to expose some of it's inner guts under the puppeteer namespace. Try putting the following script in the script.js and running it via DEBUG=* node script.js:

const {Browser} = require('puppeteer');
const browser = new Browser();
browser.newPage().then(async page => {
  await page.navigate('https://example.com');
  browser.close();
});

Tips-n-tricks:

  • DEBUG=*,-*:protocol node script.js - dump everything BUT protocol messages
  • DEBUG=*:page node script.js - dump only Page's API calls
  • DEBUG=*:mouse,*:keyboard node script.js - dump only Mouse and Keyboard API calls