This patch fixes the BrowserFetcher._getFolderPath method so that it supports relative download paths using PUPPETEER_DOWNLOAD_PATH or npm config
Issues: #7592
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])'
The dom lib inserts all dom related types into the project, which is often
undesirable when working on a NodeJS project.
This change injects global stubs for the dom types required by puppeteer, so
puppeteer can work without users having to add dom types to their project.
Closes#6989
The values of these constant variables are always the exact same when the `parseAriaSelector()` function is called, so these can be moved out of the function.
* fix: added parts of website
* fix: removed unnecessary lines
* fix: updated contributing.md
* fix: added parts of sidebar
* fix: added all APIs
* fix: added version 10.0.0
Co-authored-by: Jack Franklin <jacktfranklin@chromium.org>
This patch adds a reject callback to the _processClosing promise and executes it if it catches an error on removeFolderAsync(...).
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
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 patch removes the redundant `await` from the block while fetching the target. The value in the map is a `Target` instance, which itself is not an async resource.
This commit adds drag-and-drop support, leveraging new additions to the CDP Input domain (Input.setInterceptDrags, Input.dispatchDragEvent, and Input.dragIntercepted).
* fix: modified comment for method product, platform and newPage
* fix: added comment for browsercontext, StartCSSCoverage, StartJSCoverage
* fix: corrected comments for JSONValue, asElement, evaluateHandle
* fix: corrected comments for JSONValue, asElement, evaluateHandle
* fix: added comments for some of the method
* fix: added proper comments
* fix: added comment for some methods in page.ts
* fix: rectified the comments
* fix: changed some of the comments
* fix: added comments for 3 more methods of class page
* fix: added comments for 3 more methods of class page
Co-authored-by: Jack Franklin <jacktfranklin@chromium.org>
* fix: modified comment for method product, platform and newPage
* fix: added comment for browsercontext, StartCSSCoverage, StartJSCoverage
* fix: corrected comments for JSONValue, asElement, evaluateHandle
* fix: corrected comments for JSONValue, asElement, evaluateHandle
* fix: added comments for some of the method
* fix: added proper comments
* fix: added comment for some methods in page.ts
* fix: rectified the comments
* fix: changed some of the comments
Co-authored-by: Jack Franklin <jacktfranklin@chromium.org>
* fix: modified comment for method product, platform and newPage
* fix: added comment for browsercontext, StartCSSCoverage, StartJSCoverage
* fix: corrected comments for JSONValue, asElement, evaluateHandle
* fix: corrected comments for JSONValue, asElement, evaluateHandle
* fix: added comments for some of the method
* fix: added proper comments
Co-authored-by: Jack Franklin <jacktfranklin@chromium.org>
This commit updates the JSHandle class to take a generic representing
the underlying object that it's wrapping. We can then define
`ElementHandle` as a class that extends `JSHandle<Element>` and begin
to get better type inference.
Prior to this commit the following code would have `d` set to `any`:
```
const div: page.$<HTMLDivElement>('div')
const text = await div.evaluate(d => d.innerText)
```
You could work around this in two ways:
```
const text = await div.evaluate<(d: HTMLDivElement) => string>(d => d.innerText)
const text = await div.evaluate((d: HTMLDivElement) => d.innerText)
```
But both of these have two issues:
1. Requires the user to type extra information.
2. There's no type checking: in the code above I could type `d` as
`number` and TS would be happy.
With the change here to `evaluate` the user can now type the original
code:
```
const div: page.$<HTMLDivElement>('div')
const text = await div.evaluate(d => d.innerText)
```
And TypeScript will know that `d` is an `HTMLDivElement`.
This change brings us inline with the approach that @types/puppeteer
takes. If we land this and it works, we can do the same with
`evaluateHandle` to hopefully make a similar improvement there.
BREAKING: because this changes the types, which were previously `any`,
this is technically a breaking change as users using TS could start
getting errors after this change is released.
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
The `Page#click` method relies on `Mouse#click` for execution. `Mouse#click` triggers the `move`, `down`, and `up` methods in parallel waiting for all of them to finish, when they should be called sequentially instead.
Issue: #6462, #3347
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
* feat(launcher): fix installation error on Apple M1 chips
The previous logic assumed that an arm64 arch is only available in Linux. WIth Apple's arm64 M1 Chip this assumption isn't true anymore.
Currently there are no official macOS arm64 chromium builds available, but we can make use of the excellent Rosetta feature in macOS which allows us to run x86 binaries on M1.
Once native macOS arm64 Chromium builds are available we should switch to those.
Issue: #6622
Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
* fix: make `$` and `$$` selectors generic
This means, much like TS's in built `querySelector` type, you can now do:
```ts
const listItems = page.$$<HTMLLIElement>('ul li');
```
And/or:
```ts
const h2 = page.$<HTMLHeadingElement>('h2');
```
And the return value will be of type `ElementHandle<T>|null`, where `T`
is the type you provided. By default `T` is an `Element`, so you don't
have to provide this if you don't care as a consumer about the exact
type you get back.
* chore: fix test assertions
This PR fixes the fact that currently if you have:
```ts
page.on('request', request => {
})
```
Then `request` will be typed as `any`. We can fix this by defining an
interface of event name => callback argument type, and looking that up
when you call `page.on`.
Also includes a drive-by fix to ensure we convert response headers to
strings, and updates the types accordingly.
* feat(chromium): roll Chromium to r856583
This corresponds to Chromium 90.0.4427.0
This roll includes:
- Add sourceScheme, sourcePort, and sameParty to DevTools backend (https://crbug.com/1170548, https://crbug.com/1142606)
We can use the new `Lowercase` util in TS4 to avoid duplicating the type
and instead lowercase it.
Note we still need to do the work so callbacks are typed correctly:
```ts
page.on('request', request => {
})
```
Right now `request` is `any`, whereas it should be a
`puppeteer.HTTPRequest`. You can manually set the type for now, and I
will work on adding types for events so that this is done automatically
by the compiler in a future release.
Fixes#6854.
This commit tidies up the quite confusing state of all the various types
required to launch a browser. As we saw when upgrading DevTools
(https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/master:third_party/devtools-frontend/src/test/conductor/hooks.ts;l=77),
we had to define our launch options variable like so:
```ts
const opts: puppeteer.LaunchOptions & puppeteer.ChromeArgOptions & puppeteer.BrowserOptions = {
...
};
```
This commit fixes that by introducing `AllNodeLaunchOptions`, which is
defined as the intersection of all the above types.
Additionally, the types defined as `ChromeArgOptions` are actually used
for launching both Chrome and Firefox, so I have renamed them to
`BrowserArgOptions`, and therefore this change is breaking because
anyone using `ChromeArgOptions` in their types will need to switch.
BREAKING CHANGE: renamed type `ChromeArgOptions` to `BrowserLaunchArgumentOptions`
BREAKING CHANGE: renamed type `BrowserOptions` to `BrowserConnectOptions`
Also includes drive-by when I subbed `@default` (not valid) to
`@defaultValue` (valid!) in a few places and exposed types from
`Coverage.ts` so they get exposed too.
Fixes 6876.
During the migration to TS we changed `jsonValue` so it returned
`<Record<string, unknown>>`. This is only true if all the JSON values it
returns are objects; but it could return an array, a string, a number,
etc. Therefore we make the type generic, setting the default to
`unknown`, so the user has control over the type.
* fix: wider compat TS types and CI checks to ensure correct type defs
This PR improves our TS types further to make sure they are usable in a
TS environment where ES Modules are the target output. Our use of
`export =` is problematic this environment as TypeScript does not allow
`export =` to be used and it errors.
The fix for the type issues to avoid `export =` is to instead define the
functions that you gain access to when you import Puppeteer as top level
functions in our `types.d.ts` file. We can do this by declaring them
explicitly in `src/node.ts`. These are then rolled into `lib/types.d.ts`
at build time. The downside to this is that we have to keep those
declarations in sync with the Puppeteer API; should we add a new method
to the `Puppeteer` class, we must add it to the `nodes.ts` declarations.
However, this could easily be automated by a small script that walks the
AST and generates these. I will do that in a follow-up PR, but I
consider this low risk given how rarely the very top level API of
Puppeteer changes. The nice thing about this approach is we no longer
need our script that hacks on changes to `lib/types.d.ts`.
To avoid yet more releases to fix issues in one particular TS
environment, this PR also includes a suite of example setups that we
test on each CI run. Each sample folder contains `good.ts`, which should
have no TS errors, and `bad.ts`, which should have some errors. The test
first packs Puppeteer into a tar, and then installs it from that tar
into each project. This should replicate how the published package
behaves when it is installed. We then check that we get no errors on
`good.ts`, and the expected errors on `bad.ts`.
We have a variety of test projects that cover both TS and JS source
code, and CJS and ESM imports and outputs.