When using a custom Firefox profile for Puppeteer the modified
preferences as present in prefs.js need to be reset once the
profile is no longer needed by Puppeteer. If not done this could
cause side-effects when the profile is used next time outside
of Puppeteer.
As ride-along fix the "--foreground" argument for Firefox will
only be used on MacOS because that's the only supported platform.
When the browser child process has logging enabled
and output on stdout isn't constantly processed,
the brower process is about to freeze.
To avoid such a situation at least the stdout
pipe shouldn't be set by default but only if
dumpio is enabled.
Co-authored-by: Jan Scheffler <janscheffler@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>
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.
This PR updates the socket transport code to swap between a Node web
socket transport or a web one based on the `isNode` environment. It also
adds unit tests to the browser tests that show we can connect in a
browser.
* chore: enforce file extensions on imports
To make our output agnostic it should include file extensions in the
output, as per the ESM spec. It's a bit odd for Node packages but makes
it easier to publish a browser build.
These files will be used by both the web and node versions of Puppeteer.
Another name for this might be "core" but I don't want to cause
confusion with the puppeteer-core package that we publish at the moment.
This is another step towards making Puppeteer agnostic of environment
and being able to run in Node or a browser.
The files in the `node` directory are ones that would only be needed in
the Node build - e.g. the code that downloads and launches a local
browser instance.
The long term vision here is to have three folders:
* node - Node only code
* web - Web only code
* common - code that is shared
But rather than do that in one PR I'm going to split it up to make it
easier to review and deal with.