This pull request to adds better support for OOP iframes (see #2548)
The current problem with OOP iframes is that they are moved to a different target. Because of this, the previous versions of Puppeteer pretty much ignored them.
This change extends the FrameManager to already take OOP iframes into account and hides the fact that those frames are actually in different targets.
Further work needs to be done to also make the NetworkManager aware of these and to make sure that settings like emulations etc. are also properly passed down to the new targets.
In some situations, Puppeteer is left in an invalid state because protocol errors that could have been handled by the user where just hidden from them. This patch removes some of these cases and also makes sure that unhandled promise rejections lead to a test failure in mocha.
Enable developers to handle 'Invalid header' errors instead of hiding them to make sure they can address them properly.
Co-authored-by: Jan Scheffler <janscheffler@chromium.org>
Sometimes an element has not been layed out yet and, in this case,
clickablePoint fails because backend cannot compute content quads.
Co-authored-by: Jan Scheffler <janscheffler@chromium.org>
Puppeteer already allows creating a new CDP session
via target.createCDPSession but there is no way
to get access to any existing session to send
some additional commands.
Until now, the click would be always sent to the middle
point of the target element. With this change, one can define
offsets relative to the border box of the elements and click
different areas of an element.
Up to now, only strings starting with '//' are considered as to XPath selectors. Unfortunately, this is too restricting. This fix allows valid XPath selectors starting with: '/', './', and even '(//*[1])'
This change adds a new `channel` parameter to `puppeteer.launch`. When specified, Puppeteer will search for the locally installed release channel of Google Chrome and use it to launch. Available values are `chrome`, `chrome-beta`, `chrome-canary`, `chrome-dev`. This parameter is mutually exclusive with `executablePath`.
With this change,`request.respond`, `request.abort`, and `request.continue` can accept an optional `priority` to activate Cooperative Intercept Mode. In Cooperative Mode, all intercept handlers are guaranteed to run and all async handlers are awaited. The interception is resolved to the highest-priority resolution. See _Cooperative Intercept Mode and Legacy Intercept Mode_ in `docs/api.md` for details.
This commit adds drag-and-drop support, leveraging new additions to the CDP Input domain (Input.setInterceptDrags, Input.dispatchDragEvent, and Input.dragIntercepted).
Just some code reorder. We had a describe between it calls. I'm moving that describe to the end
Co-authored-by: Jack Franklin <jacktfranklin@chromium.org>
* 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