Node.js v6 was end-of-life'd in April, 2019, with AWS Lambda prohibiting updaets to the Node.js v6 runtime since June 30, 2019.
This makes it quite safe for us to remove the Node 6 support from the repository.
We'd like to pass an abortion signal inside Helper.waitForEvent in order to interrupt it when browser/page closes. Several approaches have been considered:
1. Pass CDPSession instance as a another parameter to the helper method and listen to Disconnected event on it. It would introduce undesired dependency on the session object.
2. Listen to the CDPSession closure at the call sites (e.g. waitForRequest) and pass an abortion promise which would be fulfilled when such event is fired. The listeners would have to be removed from the session on successful completion of waitForEvent so we'd have to pass some kind of DisposablePromise which would be disposed during cleanup. Such parameter looked somewhat hairy.
3. Create DisconnectPromise on CDPSession. One potential risk with that is all chained promises would hang around until the event is fired which might inadvertently cause memory leaks. On the other hand, adding such promise to Promise.race will remove dependency as soon as the race is finished. So this is the approach we're taking with one tweak: the promise is created locally inside Page.
Ideally the disconnectPromise would throw when the session is closed but it may lead to uncaught promise errors if all chained promises are resolved, to avoid that the promise is resolved with an Error and Helper.waitForEvent throws it later.
Fix#4733
These getters are introduced as a more convenient substitute for
a `require('puppeteer/Errors')` and
`require('puppeteer/DeviceDescriptors')`.
This way we can make cross-browser story nicer - a single require
of `puppeteer` or `puppeteer-firefox` fully defines Puppeteer
environment.
In case of multiple sessions to the same target, there's a race between
sessions to create a secondary isolated world. As a result, we might
end up having 2 execution contexts created for the needs of the
secondary isolated world.
This patch starts handling this race gracefully: instead of crashing,
we can use either of the execution contexts and ignore the rest.
Notably, the same race condition might happen if page reloads itself
in-between the calls to `page.addEvaluateOnNewDocument` and
`page.createIsolatedWorld`.
Fixes#4197.
This patch:
* unifies assets between tests
* enables a few puppeteer tests on Puppeteer-Firefox
Drive-by: beautify failing output of `expect.toEqual` matcher.
References #3889
This patch:
- introduces new testRunner methods `addTestDSL` and `addSuiteDSL`
to add annotated test / suite.
- introduces new test/suite declaration methods: `it_fails_ffox` and
`describe_fails_ffox`. These are equal to `it`/`describe` for chromium
tests and to `xit`/`xdescribe` for firefox.
- marks all unsupported tests with `it_fails_ffox`
- adds a new command-line flag `'--firefox-status'` to `//test/test.js`.
This flag dumps current amount of tests that are intentionally skipped
for Firefox.
End goal: get rid of all `it_fails_ffox` and `describe_fails_ffox`
tests.
Drive-By: remove cookie tests "afterEach" hook that was removing
cookies - it's not needed any more since every test is run in a
designated browser context.
References #3889
This patch aligns Puppeteer testing infrastructure with the approach
we use in Puppeteer-Firefox.
This patch:
- makes all tests accept Puppeteer object as a function argument
rather than require it statically. This way we can pass either
Puppeteer or Puppeteer-Firefox to drive tests.
- renames the `puppeteer.spec.js` into `launcher.spec.js`. The
`puppeteer.spec.js` is now the entry point for all cross-browsers
tests.