This patch teaches `page.setContent` to await resources in
the new document.
**NOTE**: This patch changes behavior: currently, `page.setContent`
awaits the `"domcontentloaded"` event; with this patch, we can now await
other lifecycle events, and switched default to the `"load"` event.
The change is justified since current behavior made `page.setContent`
unusable for its main designated usecases, pushing our client
to use [dataURL workaround](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/issues/728#issuecomment-334301491).
Fixes#728
NavigatorWatcher subscribes to Connection to get a `Disconnected` event,
causing us to hit the default max of 10 listeners constraint.
Technically we don't leak anything here and can safely bump
the maxListenersCount to Infinity.
However, we conveniently have `CDPSession`, and
can re-dispatch the event on it and keep the safety check in place.
This adds `page.accessibility.snapshot()`. It serializes and returns the accessibility tree for the page. By default, uninteresting nodes are filtered out of the snapshot.
fixes#2033
This patch fixes a case in which computeQuadArea calculates the area size correctly, but returns the area as a negative number.
This occurs when DOM.getContentQuads returns quads in a specific order.
E.g. the array: [ { x: 463, y: 68.5 },{ x: 437, y: 68.5 },{ x: 437, y: 94.5 },{ x: 463, y: 94.5 } ] will receive area size of -676.
CSS stylesheets can still be parsed and added events emitted during the CSS.stopRuleUsageTracking call. It needs to be awaited before calling CSS.disable, otherwise the text content of those style sheets will be unavailable.
This adds `browser.waitForTarget` and `browserContext.waitForTarget`. It also fixes a flaky test that was incorrectly expecting targets to appear instantly.
This upgrades us to TypeScript 3.1.1, which fixes some build failures. Annoyingly TypeScript does a better job of checking `process.stdio`, which exposes that the DefinitelyTyped definition for it is wrong. See https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/issues/11587. I'll look into submitting a patch for that later.
This patch:
- adds experimental "transport" option to pptr.connect
- uses "transport" option to make sure Puppeteer-Web works with
Target.exposeDevToolsProtocol
Drive-by: add `browser.target()` to access browser target.
This patch introduces API to manage frame navigations.
As a drive-by, the `response.frame()` method is added as a shortcut
for `response.request().frame()`.
Fixes#2918.
This patch traces all public async methods and wraps them
in a helper method that tags the sync stack trace.
Later on, if the method call throws an exception, we add
a captured stack trace to the original stack trace with the "--ASYNC--"
heading.
An example of a stack trace:
```
Error: net::ERR_ABORTED at http://localhost:8907/empty.html
at navigate (/Users/lushnikov/prog/puppeteer/lib/Page.js:622:37)
at process._tickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:68:7)
-- ASYNC --
at Page.<anonymous> (/Users/lushnikov/prog/puppeteer/lib/helper.js:147:27)
at fit (/Users/lushnikov/prog/puppeteer/test/page.spec.js:546:18)
at process._tickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:68:7)
```
This patch:
- moves implementation of page.goto and page.waitForNavigation
into FrameManager. The defaultNavigationTimeout gets moved to
FrameManager as well.
- moves NavigatorWatcher into FrameManager to avoid circular dependency
References #2918
This patch unifies logic in response trackign in page.goto and
page.waitForNavigation.
As a drive-by, we now make sure that we return the right response
for the right frame. This will come handy for future frame navigation
API.
References #2918
Bundled version of Puppeteer should rely on native WebSocket.
Luckily, 'ws' module supports the same interface as the native
browser websockets. This patch switches WebSocketTransport to
use the browser-compliant interface of 'ws'.
After this patch, I was able to bundle Puppeteer for browser
using the following config in `package.json`:
```json
"browser": {
"./lib/BrowserFetcher.js": false,
"ws": "./lib/BrowserWebSocket",
"fs": false,
"child_process": false,
"rimraf": false,
"readline": false
}
```
where `./lib/BrowserWebSocket` is:
```js
module.exports = WebSocket;
```
and the bundling command is:
```sh
$ browserify -r ./index.js:puppeteer > ppweb.js
```
References #2119
Currently connection assumes that transport is a websocket
and tries to handle websocket-related errors.
This patch:
- moves ConnectionTransport interface to use callbacks instead
of events. This way it could be used in browser context as well.
- introduces WebSocketTransport that implements ConnectionTransport
interface for ws.
This is a preparation step for 2 things:
- exposing `transport` option in the `puppeteer.connect` method
- better support for `browserify`
References #2119
This patch removes all dynamic requires in Puppeteer. This should
make it much simpler to bundle puppeteer/puppeteer-core packages.
We used dynamic requires in a few places in lib/:
- BrowserFetcher was choosing between `http` and `https` based on some
runtime value. This was easy to fix with explicit `require`.
- BrowserFetcher and Launcher needed to know project root to store
chromium revisions and to read package name and chromium revision from
package.json. (projectRoot value would be different in node6).
Instead of doing a backwards logic to infer these
variables, we now pass them directly from `//index.js`.
With this patch, I was able to bundle Puppeteer using browserify and
the following config in `package.json`:
```json
"browser": {
"./lib/BrowserFetcher.js": false,
"ws": "./lib/BrowserWebSocket",
"fs": false,
"child_process": false,
"rimraf": false,
"readline": false
}
```
(where `lib/BrowserWebSocket.js` is a courtesy of @Janpot from
https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/pull/2374/)
And command:
```sh
$ browserify -r puppeteer:./index.js > ppweb.js
```
References #2119
We had (and still have) a ton of pull requests to support
PUPPETEER_EXECUTABLE_PATH and PUPPETEER_CHROMIUM_REVISION in puppeteer launcher.
We were hesitant before since env variables are not scoped
and thus don't make a good interface for a library. Now, since we
determined `puppeteer-core` as a library and `puppeteer` as our end-user
product, it's safe to satisfy our user needs.
This patch:
- teaches PUPPETEER_EXECUTABLE_PATH and PUPPETEER_CHROMIUM_REVISION
env variables to control how Puppeteer launches browser
- makes sure these variables play no role in `puppeteer-core` package.
Before v1.7.0 we were creating Response objects either from protocol's
Network.Response struct, or from the data available in the
requestIntercepted.
With the recent chagens to the request interception logic, we can
always create response from Newtork.Response struct; this allows
us to simply create Response objects from protocol payload.
If referer is passed to the options object its value will be used as the referer instead of the value set by `Page.setExtraHTTPHeaders()`.
This is the correct way to set referer header: otherwise, the `referer` header will override all the document subrequests.
Fixes#3090.
Introduce an API to manage permissions per browser context:
- BrowserContext.overridePermissions(origin, permissions)
- BrowserContext.clearPermissionOverrides()
Fixes#846.
I ran TypeScript against our code with `strictNullChecks` on. Most of the errors generated are noise, because TypeScript doesn't understand how our `assert` method works. But some were legitimate bugs. They are fixed in this patch.
This patch:
- merges `ElementHandle` into `ExecutionContext` (for simplicity; there's no good reason to have them in separate files).
- removes the necessity to pass handle factory when creating `ExecutionContext`
This makes it easier to create execution contexts out of payloads.
References #1215
It turned out that almost any usecase requires helper methods to access
DOM inside the ExecutionContext.
Instead of exposing execution contexts as-is, we should introduce
IsolatedWorld as a first-class citizen that will hold execution contexts
inside.
This patch adds a new require, `puppeteer/Errors`, that
holds all the Puppeteer-specific error classes.
Currently, the only custom error class we use is `TimeoutError`. We'll
expand in future with `CrashError` and some others.
Fixes#1694.
When an evaluation causes a navigation, for example:
```js
await page.evaluate(() => window.reload());
```
sometimes we process the ExecutionContextDestroyed event before the ack from the evaluate. When we do get the ack from the evaluate, we try to build a JSHandle for it, and try to find the execution by id. But it is gone, and we throw an error. This patch switches createJSHandle to accept an ExecutionContext instead of just an id.
This bug was making the test `should throw a nice error after a navigation` flaky.