This patch:
- migrates navigation watcher to use protocol-issued lifecycle events.
- removes `networkIdleTimeout` and `networkIdleInflight` options for
`page.goto` method
- adds a new `networkidle0` value to the waitUntil option of navigation
methods
References #728.
BREAKING CHANGE:
As an implication of this new approach, the `networkIdleTimeout` and
`networkIdleInflight` options are no longer supported. Interested
clients should implement the behavior themselves using the `request` and
`response` events.
This patch moves resourceType to be all small-caps. This aligns
with our convention that all string constants should be smallcaps.
BREAKING CHANGE: this patch changes the constants of the
request.resourceType to be all small-caps.
This patch:
- split browser launching logic from Browser into `lib/Launcher.js`
- introduce `puppeteer` namespace which currently has a single `launch`
method to start a browser
With this patch, the browser is no longer created with the `new
Browser(..)` command. Instead, it should be "launched" via the
`puppeteer.launch` method:
```js
const puppeteer = require('puppeteer');
puppeteer.launch().then(async browser => {
...
});
```
With this approach browser instance lifetime matches the lifetime of
actual browser process. This helps us:
- remove proxy streams, e.g. browser.stderr and browser.stdout
- cleanup browser class and make it possible to connect to remote
browser
- introduce events on the browser instance, e.g. 'page' event. In case
of lazy-launching browser, we should've launch browser when an event
listener is added, which is unneded comlpexity.
This patch renames page.evaluateOnInitialized into
page.evaluateOnNewDocument to better align with the protocol and with
what the method is actually doing.
Fixes#119.
This patch remove remoteDebuggingPort option. Instead, browser
is launched with '--remote-debugging-port=0' flag, letting browser
to pick any port. The puppeteer reads the port number from the
browser's stderr stream.
This change cuts average browser start time from 300ms to 250ms
on my machine. This happens since puppeteer doesn't have to probe
network once every 100ms, waiting for the remote debugging server to
instantiate.
Fixes#21.
This line within `injectFile` wasn't doing much of anything:
```js
let expression = fs.readFile(filePath, 'utf8', (err, data) => callback({err, data}));
```
* That's fixed.
* A path error in examples/features.js is fixed.
* Test added for injectFile.
This patch does a step towards Fetch API:
- implements Request object to some extend. The Request object will be
sent in RequestWillBeSent event.
- implements InterceptedRequest which extends from Request and allows
for request modification. The InterceptedRequest does not
conform to Fetch API spec - there seems to be nothing related to
amending in-flight request.
- adds test to make sure that request can change headers.
References #26
This patch removes the Page.setBlockedURLs method. The
functionality is trivially implementable with the request
interception (see examples/loadurlwithoutcss.js).
Fixes#1.
It turns page.size() and page.setSize() methods are slightly
confusing since there multiple different sizes (layout size,
content size, viewport size..)
This patch renames Page.{size,setSize} methods into
Page.{viewportSize,setViewportSize} methods to avoid confusion.
This patch introduces check_availability.js utility which looks for
available chromium binaries for different revisions and platforms.
This patch also re-factors the chromium downloader scripts so that
it can operate different platforms.
This patch implements Puppeteer's Page.setBlockedURLs method.
This is a less agile alternative to the phantom's request.abort()
api.
This patch also adds a loadurlwithoutcss.js example re-implementation
to illustrate the usage of Page.setBlockedURLs.
Certain examples rely extensively on the originating PhantomJS
examples.
This patch fixes license headers of these examples to mention
PhantomJS authors.