This makes dialogs disappear and prevents stalling.
Pros:
- No need to worry about dialogs for most users.
- Those that wait for a specific dialog still get to control it.
Cons:
- Those who use Playwright to show interactive browser will have
to add an empty 'dialog' handler to prevent auto-dismiss.
We do this in cli.
This patch starts downloading FFMPEG like we download our browsers
instead of bundling it in the NPM package.
With this patch, NPM size is reduced from 8.8MB to 1.7MB.
Consequences:
- `npx playwright` is drastically faster now
- playwright driver for language bindings is way smaller
- projects that bundle Playwright can pass Apple Notorization
Fixes#5193
- We don't need this, since it should propagate from the main frame.
- Forcing focus in oopif immediately focuses it and blurs currently
focused frame. This leads to undesired side effects, e.g. selects
being closed.
This switches vp8 to "realtime" mode that works fast, adapting to
the speed of incoming frames, and produces the best quality in can
given realtime constraints.
In practice, this gives 2x larger video files but no noticible quality
difference. It also eliminates huge delays for encoding the video.
Drive-by: document our ffmpeg option choices and add some links
to documentation for future use.
This fix restores the ability to display images in the Network Tab inside Trace Viewer. Previously data returned from the server was coming back as base64 encoded string, but now it is returned as a Buffer object. This required convertion to either base64 encoded string or utf8 encoded string on the frontend.
Co-authored-by: Dominik Deren <dominik.deren@live.com>
Everything but attributes in the light dom is manually compared during
DOM traversal, for example child nodes or scroll offset.
This way we get a bullet-proof solution that works with input values,
scroll offsets, shadow dom and anything else web comes up with.
We also restore scroll only on the document scrolling element, for
performance reasons. We should figure out the story around scrolling.
Changes stationary snapshots from ~0.5ms to ~2.5ms due to DOM traversal.
- Intercept CSSOM modifications and recalculate overridden css text.
- When css text does not change, use "backwards reference" similar
to node references.
- Set 'Cache-Control: no-cache' for resources that could be overridden.
- Switch from html to json ml format.
- Allow node reuse between snapshots with `[nSnapshotsBefore, nodeWithIndexM]`.
- Service worker now lazily serializes snapshot chunks into a single html.
This decreases total snapshot size on random scripts ~10x.
This also decreases snapshot collecting time on mostly static pages to ~0.3ms.
Unfortunate downside for now is that we have to intercept
`Element.prototype.attachShadow` to invalidate nodes. This
also temporary breaks scroll restoration. Needs more research.
- Move service worker under /snapshot/ instead of /.
- Fix stylesheet base uri bug, where we inherited the wrong base url.
- Introduce TraceServer and routes there, split the actual routes
between snapshot, ui and action previews.
This change is adding a new property on the BrowserContextOptions class called `_debugName`. This property allows defining a user-friendly name for the browser context, and currently it is being used in one place, the Trace Viewer. When user provides the new value in the following way:
```typescript
const { chromium } = require('playwright');
(async () => {
const browser = await chromium.launch();
const context = await browser.newContext({ _traceDir: __dirname, _debugName: 'My custom testcase name' });
await context.close();
await browser.close();
})();
```
The `_debugName` will be saved in the `*.trace` file for this browser context, on the `context-created` event, under the key `debugName`.
Later, when such a trace is displayed using Trace Viewer, the `debugName` will be displayed in the dropdown in the top right part of the app instead of the actual trace filename.
Fixes#5157.
Installer has a code to download browsers from the old version of
playwright. This, however, is never needed, since installer only
installs browsers from its own version.
This introduces an http server that serves our frontend and our snapshots. There is more work to untangle the big server into a few modules.
This change allows us:
- Maybe eventually serve the trace viewer as a web page.
- Rely on browser caches for fast snapshot rendering. This PR also adds "snapshot on hover" feature, subject to change.
feat(trace viewer): Extending existing NetworkTab view
Currently the network tab contains a limited amount of information on the resources that were loaded in the browser. This change proposes extending the details displayed for each resource, to include:
- HTTP method,
- Full url,
- Easily visible response content type,
- Request headers,
- Request & response bodies.
Such level of information could help quickly understand what happened in the application, when it was communicating with backend services. This can help debug tests quicker to figure out why they are failing.
This implementation still needs some clean up & tests improvement, but I wanted to propose such changes and gather your feedback before going too far.
- Instead of capturing snapshots on demand, we now stream them
from each frame every 100ms.
- Certain actions can also force snapshots at particular moment using
"checkpoints".
- Trace viewer is able to show the page snapshot at a particular
timestamp, or using a "checkpoint" snapshot.
- Small optimization to not process stylesheets if CSSOM was not used.
There still is a lot of room for improvement.
When `page.reload()` is racing against the renderer-initiated
navigation, we might end up with `waitForNavigation()` being rejected
before the reload implementation is able to catch it.
To avoid that, carefully use Promise.all and await `waitForNavigation`
from the get go.
Same happens to `page.goForward()` and `page.goBack()`.
This changes quoted text selector like `text="Foo Bar"` to perform
normalized whitespace match.
Most of the time users want to match some string visible on the page,
and that always means normalized whitespace.
We keep the case sensitivity and full-string vs substring difference
between quoted and unquoted matches.
Pre-BigSur, MacOS updates were labeled as "minor" releases, so we had
to bake separate builds for different 10.X releases.
In BigSur era, it doesn't seem to be the case, so for now we can re-use
our BigSur builds across all BigSur versions (11.0, 11.1 and 11.2).
If we ever need to have a custom build for some bigsur minor version,
e.g. `11.6`, we'll have a new browser platform along with generic
`mac11` platform.
Fixes#4775.
fix(trace viewer): updating default traceStorageDir value
When `npx playwright show-trace <tracePath>` command is executed, without providing the `resources` optional parameter, the function expected the `traceStorageDir` default value to be the same directory as in which the tracePath resides. This change updates it to the `dirname(tracePath)/trace-resources` if it exists. Such a directory hirerachy is the default that is created when running the tracer in Playwright.
This adds `{Page,Frame}.isChecked(selector)` and `ElementHandle.isChecked()` methods.
Useful to do assertions in tests:
```js
await page.click('text="Add TODO"');
expect(await page.isChecked('.item-done')).toBe(false);
```
- Allow specifying which browsers to install. This comes handy in playwright-cli.
- Print "npx playwright" as a tool name in help messages, instead of "cli".
These methods are useful for verification in tests, e.g.
```js
expect(await page.isEnabled(':text("Remove All")')).toBe(false);
await page.click(':text("Add Item")');
expect(await page.isVisible('.item:text("new item")')).toBe(true);
expect(await page.isEnabled(':text("Remove All")')).toBe(true);
```
This patch:
- introduces non-exported but used in api/impl struct types (e.g. Point);
- makes all client classes implement respective public api interface.
Pros:
- Typescript is now responsible for type checking.
We can remove our doclint checker (not removed yet).
- Electron and Android types can be defined in the same way
(this is not implemented yet).
- We can move most of the type structs like Point to the public api
and make some of them available.
Cons:
- Any cons?
When element with position:sticky covers some part of
the scroll container, we could fail to scroll from under it
to perform an action. To fight this, we can try different
scroll alignments and scroll to the top/bottom/center
in the attempt to scroll away from sticky header/footer/sidebar.
When the client only closes the input pipe, we are still
sending protocol messages over the output pipe. This could
probably lead to some errors, e.g. write buffer being full.
11.1 is an official update for macOS Big Sur. We should maybe add a custom macOS version parser which falls back if minor version changes so we don't have to maintain all the versions manually.
Fixes#4722
Windows 7 was end-of-lifed on January 14, 2020. We don't support this
system, but we'd like to have a best-effort to work there.
It does look like Chromium is missing some libraries on Win 7, however
it still manages to work there. To support this usecase, this patch
starts printing console warning about missing libraries on Win 7 only
instead of refusing to launch.
Fixes#3496
We now default to `text` that does substring case-insensitive match
with normalized whitespace. `text-is` matches the whole string.
`matches-text` is renamed to `text-matches`.
When parsing CSS, we assume everything is a valid CSS function,
unless it is in the list of custom functions. This way we'll parse
future CSS functions automatically.
PW_TRACE_DIR points to a directory that Playwright can
put trace files and resources into.
This does not enable video recording, although it might
in the future.
When using 'domain' module, it calls various EventEmitter methods
like 'listenerCount' that we do not expect. To avoid this problem
in the future, we validate the method name before sending it over
the protocol connection.
Currently, we always throw from FrameSession._stopScreencast
when not running with video, and immediately catch it in
CRPage.didClose (thanks to debugger to point that).
Overall, we have code prepared for start/stop API, which
we never did, so it makes sense to simplify code a bit,
and throw if something goes wrong.
This fixes the local -> remote frame swap when
Page.frameDetached arrives before Target.attachedToTarget.
Instead of error-prone logic we do currently, new CDP exposes
frame detach reason that we can use.
New webkit build, generated by 19f21b1bde, changed webkit build
layout: now there are subfolders that contain libraries and executables, and some of the dependencies are no longer bundled.
This patch:
- teaches launch doctor new directories structure: subfolders are now inspected for missing dependencies, and they are also used in the `LD_LIBRARY_PATH`.
- adds `libevent` and `libicudata` libs to the mapping for ubuntu 18.04
This enables filling the input based on the connected label:
```html
<label for=target>Name</label><input id=target>
```
```js
await page.fill('text=Name', 'Alice');
```
Consider the following sequence:
- page opens a popup;
- popup target is attached, we start initializing it;
- user calls browser.close();
- browser is closed, and popup initialization fails;
- we report "errored page" on the already closed context;
- RPC client cannot make sense of this:
"Cannot find parent object BrowserContext@guid to create Frame@guid"
This issue was revealed during Firefox pipe migration.
Certain environments, e.g. Azure Pipelines, override default user
inside container with a custom one, whereas fail to pass proper
seccomp profile for the docker image.
As a result, chromium sandboxing fails.
To ease life of devops deploying tests in various CI's, this patch
disables Chromium sandbox by default.
References #4084
There is a race between "close" event coming from the server and
"close" command issued from the client.
This is similar to calling close after disconnect, so added tests.
This saves some CPU cycles while waiting for the page to
change the state, e.g. for animations to complete.
Note that retrying logic is only applicable in rare
circumstances like unexpected scroll in the middle of an
action, or some overlay blocking the click. Usually,
action times out in this cases while retrying.
We currently spawn a process per page when recording
video in Chromium. This triggers "too many listeners" on the
process object once you have enough pages open.
A few details on locking registry to prohibit concurrent access:
- locking is done by creating a `__dirlock` directory in the top-level
of our registry.
- since `__dirlock` directory does not match any of browser
directories, old versions of the installer will ignore it
- in case of concurrent access, installation will wait for a lock to be
released for 10 minutes, periodically trying to grab the lock. If it
fails to do so in 10 minutes, the installation will fail.
Fixes#3912
- This leaves just `recordVideos` and `videoSize` options on the context.
- Videos are saved to `artifactsPath`. We also save their ids to trace.
- `context.close()` waits for the processed videos.
api(trace): introduce artifacts options
This introduces launch({ artifactsPath }) and newContext({ relativeArtifactsPath, recordTrace }) options.
- artifactsPath option controls the directory where all artifacts go. If not passed, artifacts are not collected.
- relativeArtifactsPath can be used to put context-specific artifacts into a subfolder. If not passed, shared artifactsPath is used.
- recordTrace controls trace recording.
We also expose trace types under playwright/types/trace.d.ts.
In the follow up:
- videos will be put into artifactsPath;
- downloads will be put into artifactsPath, or keep using existing downloadsPath when artifactsPath is not specified.
These methods are the only users of waitForNavigation and
waitForLoadState on the server side. This refactor lifts the
Progress wrapper to the top-most goBack/goForward/reload call
and leaves waitForNavigation/waitForLoadState as internal helpers.
This way we get a single Progress for the actual api call.
We now use 'launch' under the hood, which erroneously throws
when 'port' is present.
Instead, moved validation to the client side where it belongs,
added tests for validation errors.
Sometimes, we are unable to take a frame snapshot. The most common
example would be "frame is stuck during the navigation in Chromium",
where we cannot evaluate until the frame is done navigating.
In this case, use all other frames and just stub the failing ones
with "Snapshot is not available". Chances are, noone will even see
this frame because it's an invisible tracking iframe.
- Fill and click actions pass metadata to Progress.
- Progress reports success/failure through instrumentation.
- Tracer consumes ActionResult and ActionMetadata and records them.
Currently, only click and fill actions pass metadata to
contain the size of the change. Everything else should follow.
- Print parentGuid when it is not available for __create__.
Some bots show generic "something is undefined" error - let's
get better information about the failure.
- Ignore events on disposed objects outside of tests.
Some bots show this happening for "previewUpdated" - let's see
whether there are more important events that misbehave.
- We do not need the public BrowserType different from BrowserTypeBase anymore.
- Removing 'logName' parameter from runAbortableTask - it will
be used for metadata instead.
This patch:
- moves ffmpeg binaries from `//bin/` to `//third_party/ffmpeg`
- adds [COPYING.GPLv3](https://github.com/FFmpeg/FFmpeg/blob/master/COPYING.GPLv3)
ffmpeg license
- changes npm packaging to include `//third_party/ffmpeg` only in `playwright` and `playwrihgt-chromium` a
This is an alternative approach to #3698 that was setting up a custom
mapping between chromium revisions and our mirrored builds. For example, we were
taking chromium `792639` and re-packaging it to our CDN as Chromium 1000.
One big downside of this opaque mapping was inability to quickly
understand which Chromium is mirrored to CDN.
To solve this, this patch starts treating browser revision as a fractional number,
with and integer part being a chromium revision, and fractional
part being our build number. For example, we can generate builds `792639`, `792639.1`,
`792639.2` etc, all of which will pick Chromium `792639` and re-package it to our CDN.
In the Playwright code itself, there are a handful of places that treat
browser revision as integer, exclusively to compare revision with some particular
revision numbers. This code would still work as-is, but I changed these places
to use `parseFloat` instead of `parseInt` for correctness.
We used to do fetch() to decode the file buffer. However, this is
blocked by strict CSP policy. Instead, we can use explicit
string -> bytes conversion, and trade performance for CSP compliance.
As discussed offline, our testing scenarios assume running trusted
web content - so this warning is just a noise for this usecases.
When it comes to dealing with untrusted web content though, automation
authors need to make sure to not launch browsers under root in the first
place.
This is a large rework of selectors:
- Each BrowserContext now has a separate Selectors instance that has its own registrations.
Most of them share a single sharedSelectors instance, but contexts created for a connected
browser have their own instance.
- Connected browser now gets a RemoteBrowser object that encapsulates Selectors and Browser.
This Selectors object is registered with the api selectors.
- Public selectors.register api iterates over all registered Selectors channels
and registers in each of them.
- createSelector testing method migrated to ElementHandle._createSelectorForTest.
Sometimes I see "cannot call emit on the undefined" error on the bots.
This change adds some more logging, so we could potentially identify where
the issue comes from.
This introduces basic tracing enabled in our tests.
What is captured:
- network resources;
- snapshots at the start of most actions;
- snapshot after the test failure.
How this integrates with test runner:
- context fixture calls private method context._initSnapshotter() and uses Tracer to trace all events;
- all tests share a single test-results/trace-storage directory to store blobs;
- each test has its own trace file.
- npm run show-trace opens a bare-minimum trace viewer that renders snapshots.
Root index.js is only used for local development, so
assuming dev mode there is fine. This way we do not have
to worry about calling setUnderTest early enough.
One by one seems like a resonable minimum size for clicking.
It is not surprising to see a 1x1 native accessible control
that is covered by a custom control that handles input instead.
Due to wrong type usage, we ignored the origin while granting permissions.
Switching to generated types revealed this issue. We should follow up
with switching all dispatchers to the generated types.
This changes the behavior of slowmo to slow down user actions instead of every protocol command. This makes slowmo a lot more predictable. Without this, there is no way to set slowmo to a good value without incurring a huge delay at the start of your test when it sets things up.
This touches:
- noDefaultViewport;
- ignoreAllDefaultArgs;
- env;
- validateXYZ logic that was copying objects - we do not need that anymore;
- shuffles some converters closer to their usage.
This method waits for visible, hidden, stable or enabled state,
similar to the actionability checks performed before actions.
This gives a bit more control to the user. Some examples:
- Allows to wait for something to be stable before taking a screenshot.
- Allows to wait for the element to be hidden/detached after a specific action.
- Never write to console on the server side - we use stdout for
communication. This includes logPolitely and deprecate.
- Pass undefined instead of null in some BrowserContext methods.
- Use explicit _setFileChooserIntercepted instead of on/off magic.
This migrates Firefox to the protocol-based proxy implementation.
Benefits:
- supports secure web proxies (already supported by Chromium)
- unlocks support for SOCKS proxies with authentication
This starts downloading newer Chromium archives from our CDN, but
retains old endpoint for older Chromium revisions.
This backwards compatibility might help later on to implement
a browser bisecting tool.
References #3259
Everywhere in our api, possibly missing properties are nullable.
However, to make things easier for everyone, we just default to an
empty url instead, so that users do not have to null-check it.
Make sure executable exists before launching it. If it doesn't and
we were launched without custom executable path, print a helpful
instruction to run `npm i playwright` and get browsers downloaded.
Note: there's already a test that makes sure bad executable paths
are treated fairly: 9132d23b2b/test/launcher.jest.js (L54-L59)
This doesn't test missing default browser installation which I think is
fine.
Fixes#3161
WebKit WPE assumes `libglesv2.so` is available on the host system
and uses `dlopen` to open it.
This patch starts using `ldconfig -p` to check if the library
exists on the system.
References #2745
Renderer-based method DOM.getContentQuads and DOM.getBoxModel return
coordinates relative to the local root's viewport, but we need them relative
to the root viewport.
This adds one more protocol message __dispose__
to dispose a scope and all child objects.
Now, client side does not need a notion of scope anymore -
it just disposes the whole object subtree upon __dispose__.
Server, on the other hand, marks some objects as scopes
and disposes them manually, also asserting that all parents
are proper scopes.
This makes it easier to reason about our packages.
The only difference is what each package downloads.
When the browser is not downloaded, it will fail to launch.
Each browser gets a 'download' attribute in the browser.json file.
The original plan was to rnu some checks against libc version the
binary is compiled with, but these turn out to be a little complicated:
parsing out libc version from both static binary and host system
requires text processing, and it's hard to make sure it works reliably
across distributions.
Instead, let's start with a very particular check against running
Firefox on Ubuntu 16.04.
References #2745
Before typing/pressing, we focus the target element. WebKit
sometimes selects the value in this case. To unify the behavior
between the browsers we behave similar to human:
- when the input is already focused, we just type;
- when the input is not focused, we focus it, move caret
to the start (like if user clicked at the start to focus the input)
and then type.
Note this only affects inputs with non-empty value.
This establishes a single naming for all our blobs with browser
builds that we upload to CDN: `<browser-name>-<os-version>`
- `<browser-name>` is either `firefox` or `webkit`.
- `os-version` is the OS that was used to produce the build.
References #2745
This patch:
- specializes "linux" scripts into "Ubuntu 18.04" scripts
- renames all future linux blobs on CDN:
* `firefox-linux.zip => firefox-ubuntu-18.04.zip`
* `minibrowser-gtk.zip => minibrowser-gtk-ubuntu-18.04.zip`
* `minibrowser-wpe.zip => minibrowser-wpe-ubuntu-18.04.zip`
* `minibrowser-gtk-wpe.zip => minibrowser-gtk-wpe-ubuntu-18.04.zip`
- updates downloader to deal with the new names
References #2745
This patch detects Chromium crash with a sandboxing error and re-writes
the error to surface information nicely.
#### Error Before:
```sh
pwuser@23592d09b3bd:~/tmp$ node a.js
(node:324) UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning: browserType.launch: Protocol error (Browser.getVersion): Target closed.
=========================== logs ===========================
[browser] <launching> /home/pwuser/.cache/ms-playwright/chromium-790602/chrome-linux/chrome --disable-background-networking --enable-features=NetworkService,NetworkServiceInProcess --disable-background-timer-throttling --disable-backgrounding-occluded-windows --disable-breakpad --disab
le-client-side-phishing-detection --disable-component-extensions-with-background-pages --disable-default-apps --disable-dev-shm-usage --disable-extensions --disable-features=TranslateUI,BlinkGenPropertyTrees,ImprovedCookieControls,SameSiteByDefaultCookies --disable-hang-monitor --disab
le-ipc-flooding-protection --disable-popup-blocking --disable-prompt-on-repost --disable-renderer-backgrounding --disable-sync --force-color-profile=srgb --metrics-recording-only --no-first-run --enable-automation --password-store=basic --use-mock-keychain --user-data-dir=/tmp/playwrig
ht_chromiumdev_profile-mjSfr2 --remote-debugging-pipe --headless --hide-scrollbars --mute-audio --no-startup-window
[browser] <launched> pid=401
[browser] [0722/170825.030020:FATAL:zygote_host_impl_linux.cc(117)] No usable sandbox! Update your kernel or see https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/master/docs/linux/suid_sandbox_development.md for more information on developing with the SUID sandbox. If you want to live
dangerously and need an immediate workaround, you can try using --no-sandbox.
[browser] #0 0x55ac4f8c7be9 base::debug::CollectStackTrace()
[browser] #1 0x55ac4f841c13 base::debug::StackTrace::StackTrace()
[browser] #2 0x55ac4f853680 logging::LogMessage::~LogMessage()
[browser] #3 0x55ac4df2307e content::ZygoteHostImpl::Init()
[browser] #4 0x55ac4f40dd47 content::ContentMainRunnerImpl::Initialize()
[browser] #5 0x55ac4f45c9fa service_manager::Main()
[browser] #6 0x55ac4f40c361 content::ContentMain()
[browser] #7 0x55ac4f45b5bd headless::(anonymous namespace)::RunContentMain()
[browser] #8 0x55ac4f45b2bc headless::HeadlessShellMain()
[browser] #9 0x55ac4ccc22e7 ChromeMain
[browser] #10 0x7f0f3d736b97 __libc_start_main
[browser] #11 0x55ac4ccc212a _start
[browser]
[browser] Received signal 6
[browser] #0 0x55ac4f8c7be9 base::debug::CollectStackTrace()
[browser] #1 0x55ac4f841c13 base::debug::StackTrace::StackTrace()
[browser] #2 0x55ac4f8c7785 base::debug::(anonymous namespace)::StackDumpSignalHandler()
[browser] #3 0x7f0f437b3890 (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread-2.27.so+0x1288f)
[browser] #4 0x7f0f3d753e97 gsignal
[browser] #5 0x7f0f3d755801 abort
[browser] #6 0x55ac4f8c66e5 base::debug::BreakDebugger()
[browser] #7 0x55ac4f853aeb logging::LogMessage::~LogMessage()
[browser] #8 0x55ac4df2307e content::ZygoteHostImpl::Init()
[browser] #9 0x55ac4f40dd47 content::ContentMainRunnerImpl::Initialize()
[browser] #10 0x55ac4f45c9fa service_manager::Main()
[browser] #11 0x55ac4f40c361 content::ContentMain()
[browser] #12 0x55ac4f45b5bd headless::(anonymous namespace)::RunContentMain()
[browser] #13 0x55ac4f45b2bc headless::HeadlessShellMain()
[browser] #14 0x55ac4ccc22e7 ChromeMain
[browser] #15 0x7f0f3d736b97 __libc_start_main
[browser] #16 0x55ac4ccc212a _start
[browser] r8: 0000000000000000 r9: 00007ffd38a863b0 r10: 0000000000000008 r11: 0000000000000246
[browser] r12: 00007ffd38a87680 r13: 00007ffd38a86610 r14: 00007ffd38a87690 r15: aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
[browser] di: 0000000000000002 si: 00007ffd38a863b0 bp: 00007ffd38a86600 bx: 00007ffd38a86e44
[browser] dx: 0000000000000000 ax: 0000000000000000 cx: 00007f0f3d753e97 sp: 00007ffd38a863b0
[browser] ip: 00007f0f3d753e97 efl: 0000000000000246 cgf: 002b000000000033 erf: 0000000000000000
[browser] trp: 0000000000000000 msk: 0000000000000000 cr2: 0000000000000000
[browser] [end of stack trace]
[browser] Calling _exit(1). Core file will not be generated.
============================================================
Note: use DEBUG=pw:api environment variable and rerun to capture Playwright logs.Error
at /home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/chromium/crConnection.js:131:63
at new Promise (<anonymous>)
at CRSession.send (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/chromium/crConnection.js:130:16)
at CRSession.send (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/helper.js:78:31)
at Function.connect (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/chromium/crBrowser.js:54:39)
at Chromium._connectToTransport (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/server/chromium.js:52:38)
at Chromium._innerLaunch (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/server/browserType.js:87:36)
at async ProgressController.run (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/progress.js:75:28)
at async Chromium.launch (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/server/browserType.js:60:25)
at async /home/pwuser/tmp/a.js:4:19
(node:324) UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning: Unhandled promise rejection. This error originated either by throwing inside of an async function without a catch block, or by rejecting a promise which was not handled with .catch(). To terminate the node process on unhandled promise reject
ion, use the CLI flag `--unhandled-rejections=strict` (see https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html#cli_unhandled_rejections_mode). (rejection id: 2)
(node:324) [DEP0018] DeprecationWarning: Unhandled promise rejections are deprecated. In the future, promise rejections that are not handled will terminate the Node.js process with a non-zero exit code.
```
#### Error After:
```sh
pwuser@23592d09b3bd:~/tmp$ node a.js
(node:222) UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning: browserType.launch: Chromium sandboxing failed!
================================
To workaround sandboxing issues, do either of the following:
- (preferred): Configure environment to support sandboxing: https://github.com/microsoft/playwright/blob/master/docs/troubleshooting.md
- (alternative): Launch Chromium without sandbox using 'chromiumSandbox: false' option
================================
Error
at /home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/chromium/crConnection.js:131:63
at new Promise (<anonymous>)
at CRSession.send (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/chromium/crConnection.js:130:16)
at CRSession.send (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/helper.js:78:31)
at Function.connect (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/chromium/crBrowser.js:54:27)
at Chromium._connectToTransport (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/server/chromium.js:53:38)
at Chromium._innerLaunch (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/server/browserType.js:89:36)
at async ProgressController.run (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/progress.js:75:28)
at async Chromium.launch (/home/pwuser/tmp/node_modules/playwright/lib/server/browserType.js:61:25)
at async /home/pwuser/tmp/a.js:4:19
(node:222) UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning: Unhandled promise rejection. This error originated either by throwing inside of an async function without a catch block, or by rejecting a promise which was not handled with .catch(). To terminate the node process on unhandled promise reject
ion, use the CLI flag `--unhandled-rejections=strict` (see https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html#cli_unhandled_rejections_mode). (rejection id: 2)
(node:222) [DEP0018] DeprecationWarning: Unhandled promise rejections are deprecated. In the future, promise rejections that are not handled will terminate the Node.js process with a non-zero exit code.
```
References #2745
Currently, Ctrl-C while extracting browser might yield users in
a bad place.
This patch adds a marker file inside browser directory to make
sure that browser extraction completed.
Note: this was already attempted in #2489, but was eventually
reverted in #2534.
References #2660
We now have types for SerializedValue/SerializedArgument. This will
allow us to avoid double parse/serialize for evaluation arguments/results.
Drive-by: typing exposed a bug in ElementHandle.dispatchEvent().
Drive-by: fix electron issues, exposed by the test using
waitForNavigation.
Drive-by: mark some tests skip(CHANNEL) that were mistakenly
marked skip(USES_HOOKS).
Missing dependencies is #1 problem with launching on Linux.
This patch starts validating browser dependencies before launching
browser on Linux. In case of a missing dependency, we will abandon
launching with an error that lists all missing libs.
References #2745
This also changes timeout error format to
"page.click: Timeout 5000ms exceeded", so that all errors
can be similarly prefixed with api name.
We can now have different api names in different clients,
and our protocol is more reasonable.
We always have to reject promises with some error. Otherwise,
our error-rewriting logic in try-catch miserably fails.
With this patch, attempt to launch Firefox when it's missing
dependencies will actually result in a thrown exception with
pretty logs. Without this patch, Playwright throws internal error.
This includes page CDPSession, backgroundPages() and serviceWorkers().
This has also revealed an issue with closing order between the context
and the service worker.
We now use a few helper.waitForEvent calls to wait for internal
events kNavigationEvent and kLifecycleEvent. With these events,
we should be able to replicate logic over rpc.
Instead of checking lifecycle events on every change, we
notify precisely when lifecycle event in the subtree
is satisfied. This allows FrameTask to be later switched
to event-based approach, and will easily translate to the
rpc client.
We should not stall selector actions because of dialogs
and properly timeout instead. For this, we should not await
the handle.dispose() call because it will never happen
while dialog is shown.
Also, log information about dialogs to make it easier to debug.
We now commit protocol.ts files during the roll.
New utils/roll_browser.js helps with that.
This makes our installation very shallow:
- build installer;
- download browsers.
Firefox and WebKit require native promises to provide awaitPromise
functionality. When the Promise is overwritten, all evaluations
in the main world produce wrong Promise, so we wrap with async
function to get a native promise instead.
We now query selector and take textContent synchronously. This
avoids any issues with async processing: node being recycled,
detached, etc.
More methods will follow with the same atomic pattern.
Drive-by: fixed selector engine names being sometimes case-sensitive
and sometimes not.
We currently return undefined whenever we had an error trying
return the evaluation result by error. The most common error
is "execution context destroyed".
This produces very unexpected undefined from methods that do not
ever expect undefined. Instead, we should throw because we were
not able to return the result.
We currently have dispatchEventTask and waitForSelectorTask.
However, most selector-based operations make sense as tasks, to ensure
atomic execution, e.g. textContent(selector) or focus(selector).
This will fight hydration, elements recycling and other async issues.
In preparation, decouple tasks from selectors parsing so that
we can have common infrastructure for tasks.
- Gave all possible dom errors distinct names, and throw them on the node side.
- Separated errors into FatalDOMError and RetargetableDOMError.
Fatal errors are unrecoverable. Retargetable errors
could be resolved by requerying the selector.
- This exposed a number of unhandled 'notconnected' cases.
- Added helper functions to handle errors and ensure TypeScript catches
unhandled ones.
Element screenshot now waits for the element to become visible and
throws on detach.
Both screenshot methods accept a timeout and capture logs using Progress.
Also, carefully handling exceptions and restoring the viewport.
WebKit and Firefox are only able to continue redirects.
Firefox is faking it on the backend, so you can't even stall it.
Instead, we just do not fire routes for redirects on all browsers,
to avoid surprises.
In addition to `PLAYWRIGHT_DOWNLOAD_HOST` env variable, this patch adds a per-browser
configuration:
- `PLAYWRIGHT_CHROMIUM_DOWNLOAD_HOST`
- `PLAYWRIGHT_FIREFOX_DOWNLOAD_HOST`
- `PLAYWRIGHT_WEBKIT_DOWNLOAD_HOST`
This reverts 2 commits:
- "fix(installer): create tmp directory inside `browserPath` (#2498)"
commit 946b4efa3b.
- "feat: support atomic installation of browsers (#2489)"
commit 3de0c087bc.
This addresses installation issues we see in some CI environments.
Currently, we fail when the predicate throws on the first call,
and timeout when it fails on any other call.
There are two possible ways to handle throwing predicates:
- Fail waitForFunction if predicate throws once. This is good
since it gives you the error faster.
- Tolerate predicate exceptions. This is good because you do
not have to worry about non-initialized state during load.
This change implements the former.
Currently, Ctrl-C while extracting browser might yield users in
a bad place.
This patch extracts browsers in a temp directory that is later
moved to a installer registry.
During remote -> local transition, these two events come in unpredictable order, so we try to handle both cases. Also, remote frame detach was not handled at all.
- unifies polling timeouts with everything else,
based on the client time instead of the server time;
- prepares polling tasks for cancellation token
behavior.
Unfortunately, RerunnableTask had to be rewritten almost
entirely.
We already skip <script> and <style> tags because they are not
the page content. Similar reasoning applies to <head> that has
content that is never rendered on the page.
A progress roughly corresponds to an api call. It is used:
- to collect logs related to the call;
- to handle timeout;
- to provide "cancellation token" behavior so that cancelable process can either
early-exit with progress.throwIfCanceled() or race against it with progress.race();
- to ensure resources are disposed in the case of a failure
with progress.cleanupWhenCanceled();
- (possibly) to log api calls if needed;
- (in the future) to augment async stacks.
While checking for hittarget, we first bubble from a target element
up to find the first element without `pointer-events: none` style.
This bubbling does not make much sense: we risk desperately clicking
"body" element, when we were actually asked to click some deeply-nested
"span".
Additionally, in many cases the original intent is to click a button. In this
case, we should use the enclosing "button" as a hit target directly.
Fixes#2175
When a parent session is detached, we do not always get Target.detachedFromTarget
for child sessions. This is especially true when the socket disconnects, leaving
all child sessions in the maps.
Flakily reproducible by browserType.connect multiclient tests.
Main request for an OOPIF starts in the parent session, and the oopif
session is create only after the response has been received. Therefore,
we should adopt the request after oopif session is created.
These requests are usually internal ones, and we can safely abort them.
An example would be DevTools loading cached resources to show the content.
There will never be a matching Network.requestWillBeSent event, so we do not
report them to the user.
This is a speculative fix to the following issue from the bots:
NON-TEST ERROR #0: UNHANDLED ERROR
TypeError: Cannot read property 'url' of undefined
at WKPage._onTargetCreated (/Users/runner/runners/2.169.1/work/playwright/playwright/src/webkit/wkPage.ts:274:12)
at process._tickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:68:7)
I assume that _initializeSession did swallow an error, so we erroneously
consider Page to be fully initialized (and having main frame).
When capturing a screenshot with null viewport, we determine the screenshot size
based on body.offsetHeight. This is a very large number for long pages. We should
use window.innerHeight instead.
Since we are recommending Promise.all pattern anyway, this special
logic just adds to the possibility of timeout if something goes wrong.
For example, Firefox sometimes send Page.willOpenNewWindowAsynchronously
later than the new target arrives and input action just hangs.