This PR adds a basic support for WebDriver BiDi that currently includes only the ability to establish a connection and shutdown the browser. Therefore, the implementation is marked as internal and won't show up in the changelog as it's barely useful at the moment.
The API classes are kept as classes instead of interfaces so that clients relying on instanceof checks still work.
Instead of checking skipped tests in mocha-utils this PR
implements a custom mocha interface for better flexibility
when skipping tests. That should allow skipping tests without
running before and after hooks.
* chore: implement a test runner on top of mocha
This PR implements a test runner on top of mocha
that performs multiple mocha runs as defined in
TestSuites.json and compares the outcome of the runs
against TestExpectations.json. This allows us to
remove most of helpers from mocha-utils and be more
flexible when defining the test configurations.
Two main sources of flakiness addressed:
1) we should dispose the lifecycle watcher after we waited for the navigation response (bad API? we need to refactor but I think it'd be valuable to stabilize tests first without too many changes).
2) we should wait for the navigation request's response if there is a navigation request in the watcher.
Closes#8644
Previously, if timeout is falsy, the targets would only
be checked if a browser-level event fires which lead to
a race: if the events arrived before waiting for a target,
the promise would never resolve.
Fixes#8763
This PR implements automatic detection of the Firefox product when the `.connect()` method is used. This partially undoes the breaking change in https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/pull/8520 but it's also a breaking change on its own since we don't accept an explicit product name anymore (it does not look like it was used anyway).
When we attach to a frame, we send a call to get
the page frame tree from CDP. Based on the tree data
we look up the parent frame if parentId is provided.
The problem is that the call to get the page frame
tree could take arbitrary time and the calls for the
parent and child frames might happen at the same time.
So the situation where the frame tree for the child frame
is resolved before the parent frame is known is fairly
common.
This PR addresses the issue by awaiting for the parent
frame id before attempting to register a child frame.
* feat: use CDP's auto-attach mechanism
In this PR, we refactor Puppeteer to make use of the CDP's auto-attach mechanism. This allows the backend to pause
new targets and give Puppeteer a chance to configure them properly. This fixes the flakiness related to dealing with
OOPIFs and should fix some other issues related to the network interception and navigations. If those are not fixed completely by this PR, the PR serves a solid base for fixing them.
Closes https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/8507, https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/7990
Unlocks https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/issues/3667
BREAKING CHANGE: With Chromium, Puppeteer will now attach to page/iframe targets immediately to allow reliable configuration of targets.
This patch fixes page.#scrollIntoViewIfNeeded, so that it works with devtools protocol.
Now it blocks the main thread and waits until the scrolling action finishes in Chrome.
Fallbacks to the old implementation if `DOM.scrollIntoViewIfNeeded` is not supported for Firefox.
Issues: #8627, #1805
This PR greatly improves the types within Puppeteer:
- **Almost everything** is auto-deduced.
- Parameters don't need to be specified in the function. They are deduced from the spread.
- Return types don't need to be specified. They are deduced from the function. (More on this below)
- Selections based on tag names correctly deduce element type, similar to TypeScript's mechanism for `getElementByTagName`.
- [**BREAKING CHANGE**] We've removed the ability to declare return types in type arguments for the following reasons:
1. Setting them will indubitably break auto-deduction.
2. You can just use `as ...` in TypeScript to coerce the correct type (given it makes sense).
- [**BREAKING CHANGE**] `waitFor` is officially gone.
To migrate to these changes, there are only four things you may need to change:
- If you set a return type using the `ReturnType` type parameter, remove it and use `as ...` and `HandleFor` (if necessary).
⛔ `evaluate<ReturnType>(a: number, b: number) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `(await evaluate(a, b) => {...}, a, b)) as ReturnType`
⛔ `evaluateHandle<ReturnType>(a: number, b: number) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `(await evaluateHandle(a, b) => {...}, a, b)) as HandleFor<ReturnType>`
- If you set any type parameters in the *parameters* of an evaluation function, remove them.
⛔ `evaluate(a: number, b: number) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `evaluate(a, b) => {...}, a, b)`
- If you set any type parameters in the method's declaration, remove them.
⛔ `evaluate<(a: number, b: number) => void>((a, b) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `evaluate(a, b) => {...}, a, b)`