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Managing browser binaries
Playwright comes bundled with browsers, and by default npm i playwright downloads
all 3 browsers inside the node_modules/ folder. This way no extra steps are needed
to get playwright up and running.
However, Playwright also has rich configuration to support various strategies for browser management.
Download from artifact repository
By default, Playwright downloads browsers from Microsoft and Google public CDNs.
Sometimes companies maintain an internal artifact repository to host browser
binaries. In this case, Playwright can be configured to download from a custom
location using the PLAYWRIGHT_DOWNLOAD_HOST env variable.
$ PLAYWRIGHT_DOWNLOAD_HOST=192.168.1.78 npm i playwright
Share browser binaries across projects
Sometimes developers work with multiple NPM projects that all use Playwright.
By default, every project will have browser binaries in its own node_modules/ folder.
To save some HDD space and to speedup installation, Playwright can re-use
browser binaries.
Sharing browser binaries is a two-step process:
- When installing Playwright, ask it to download browsers into a shared location:
$ PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSERS_PATH=$HOME/pw-browsers npm i playwright
- When running Playwright scripts, ask it to search for browsers in a shared location:
$ PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSERS_PATH=$HOME/pw-browsers node playwright-script.js
NOTE Developers can opt-in in this mode via exporting
PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSERS_PATH=$HOME/pw-browsersin their.bashrc.
Completely avoid browser installation
In certain cases, it is desired to avoid browser installation altogether because browser binaries are managed separately.
This can be done by setting PLAYWRIGHT_SKIP_BROWSER_DOWNLOAD variable before installation.
$ PLAYWRIGHT_SKIP_BROWSER_DOWNLOAD=1 npm i playwright
Download single browser binary
Playwright ships three packages that bundle only a single browser:
NOTE All configuration environment variables also apply to these packages.
Using these packages is as easy as using a regular Playwright:
- Install a specific package
$ npm i playwright-webkit
- Requre package
// Notice a proper package name in require
const {webkit} = require('playwright-webkit');
(async () => {
const browser = await webkit.launch();
// ....
})();