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`
The `Launcher` class was serving two purposes:
1. Launch browsers
2. Connect to browsers
Number 1) only needs to be done in Node land, but 2) is agnostic; in a
browser version of Puppeteer we'll need the ability to connect over a
websocket to send commands back and forth.
As part of the agnostification work we needed to split the `Launcher` up
so that the connection part can be made agnostic. Additionally, I
removed dependencies on `https`, `http` and `URL` from Node, instead
leaning on fetch (via `node-fetch` if in Node land) and the browser
`URL` API (which was added to Node in Node 10).
* 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.
* chore(docs): reduce warnings when generating docs
This is a bunch of small miscellaneous fixes that reduce the amount of
warnings logged when generating our new docs. The long term goal is to
get this list down to 0 warnings, but I'll do it in multiple PRs.
* satisfy doclint
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.