So it appears that all bindings are added to the secondary world and all
evaluations are also running there. ElementHandle.evaluate is returning
handles from the main world though. Therefore, we need to be careful
and adopt handles to the right context before doing waitForSelector
So it appears that all bindings are added to the secondary world and all
evaluations are also running there. ElementHandle.evaluate is returning
handles from the main world though. Therefore, we need to be careful
and adopt handles to the right context before doing waitForSelector.
Reverts #6998
We unfortunately have to revert this commit for two reasons:
The approach for generating types.d.ts implemented in the commit invalidates triple-slash compiler directives since it prepends a declaration before the types.d.ts generated by api-extractor.
In particular, the directive /// <reference types="node" /> in the final types.d.ts is ignored by the typescript compiler making module resolution fail.
The commit makes Puppeteer types ship without DOM types per default. This is not ideal since Puppeteer (and usage of Puppeteer) relies heavily on interacting with DOM elements.
The existing comment suggests that only the default changes–however, even if you set `devtools: false` and `headless: true`, Puppeteer will still open with headful.
It is causing failed builds and we are not currently using it, plus we
want to move this setup into a new repository, such that it can run
independently of Puppeteer's main codebase.
For now, until that work is done, let's remove it to not cause build
issues and to not waste cycles on CI.
When the browser has been started and we have a valid reference lets make use of it instead of force-killing the process. A force kill should probably be the last resort in cleaning up the process.
This will help with Firefox as described on #7668 (comment).
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.
This updates the regular expression used to parse aria attribute
selectors so that single quotes may be used as an alternative to double
quotes, e.g. `aria/Single button[role='button']`.
Issues: #7721
Co-authored-by: Andy Earnshaw <andy.earnshaw@gmail.com>
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.
It is flakey on the bots and we're not actively using it yet, so let's
disable it for now. We will work on extracting this into its own repo
and that work is tracked in
https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/7710.