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@hint/connector-puppeteer
Advanced tools
@hint/connector-puppeteer)A connector that uses puppeteer
to communicate with the browsers in webhint.
This package is installed automatically when adding webhint to your project so running the following is enough:
npm install hint --save-dev
To use it, activate it via the .hintrc configuration file:
{
"connector": {
"name": "puppeteer"
},
...
}
The set of settings supported by the Puppeteer connector are:
{
"connector": {
"name": "puppeteer",
"options": {
"auth": AuthObject,
"browser": "Chrome|Chromium|Edge",
"headless": true|false,
"ignoreHTTPSErrors": true|false,
"puppeteerOptions": "object",
"waitUntil": "dom|loaded|networkidle0|networkidle2"
}
},
...
}
All properties of options are optional.
auth: The credentials and elements to authenticate on a website.
See next section for further details.browser (Chrome|Chromium|Edge): Tells the preferred browser to
use. If unspecified webhint will look for a puppeteer installation
before falling back to searching for an installed browser and fail
if it does not find one. Keep in mind that not all browsers are
available on all platforms and that you need to manually install
either puppeteer or a browser for this connector to work.headless (boolean): Indicates if the browser should run in headless
mode or not. It is true by default when running on CI or
in WSL, false otherwise.ignoreHTTPSError (boolean): Indicates if errors with certificates
should be ignored. Use this when checking self-signed certificates.
It is false by default.puppeteerOptions (object): A set of launch options to pass to
puppeteer. See the puppeteer launch options for more information.waitUntil (dom|loaded|networkidle0|networkidle2): Is the waiting
strategy to decide when a page is considered loaded. See the
puppeteer goto options to know more.To use this connector when running WSL you will have to install a chromium
browser on your distro (e.g.: sudo apt-get install chromium-browser).
Because by default WSL does not support graphics, the headless mode will
be enabled by default. If you have an X Server working you will have to
manually disable this option via the connector's options. E.g.:
{
"connector": {
"name": "puppeteer",
"options": {
"headless": false
}
},
...
}
The puppeteer connector allows to authenticate on a website that
supports Basic HTTP Authentication or:
For Basic Authentication the auth object properties are:
user: a string with the user name to usepassword: a string with the password to useE.g.:
{
"user": "userName",
"password": "Passw0rd"
}
Otherwise, auth properties are:
user: the information needed to identify the input element via
a query selector (e.g.: #login) to type the value for the
username in (e.g.: username1).password: the information needed to identify the input element via
a query selector (e.g.: #password) to type the value for the
password in (e.g.: P@ssw0rd).next: the information needed to identify the input (or button)
element via a query selector (e.g.: input[type="submit"]) to click
to get to the next step of the authentication process. This is an
optional property as not all services prompt first for the user name
before asking for the password in the following screen. An example of
such a service would be Azure Pipelines.submit: the information needed to identify the input (or button)
element via a query selector (e.g.: input[type="submit"]) to click
to submit the crendentials.E.g.:
{
"user": {
"selector": "string",
"value": "string"
},
"password": {
"selector": "string",
"value": "string"
},
"next": {
"selector": "string"
},
"submit": {
"selector": "string"
}
}
Sometimes you might need the browser to interact in some way with the content before starting the analysis. For example, in the case of a SPA you might want to click in certain elements to get to the right state.
Sometimes, this actions need to be done before navigating to the page to analyze.
To achieve this, you can use "user actions". "User actions" are defined as follows:
{
"connector": {
"name": "puppeteer",
"options": {
"actions": [
{
"file": "pathToUserAction1.js",
"on": "beforeTargetNavigation|afterTargetNavigation"
},
{
"file": "pathToUserAction2.js",
"on": "beforeTargetNavigation|afterTargetNavigation"
},
...
],
"actionsOptions": { },
...
}
},
...
}
There's a property actions in the connector configuration that's an array
of Action. You can define as many actions as you want.
An Action is an object with two properties:
file: Absolute or relative path from the execution path to the file
containing the action to execute.on: A string that indicates when the action needs to be executed:
beforeTargetNavigation: The action will be executed before navigating
to the target. If you need to set up special headers you will have to
do it at this moment.afterTargetNavigation: The action will be executed after the target
has been loaded. If the website is a SPA and you need to get to a certain
state, this is the moment to use.The file that contains the action needs to be written in JavaScript and export
an object with an action property with the following signature:
module.exports = {
action: async (page, options) => {
// your actions here
}
};
The parameters the function receives are:
page: The puppeteer Page with the tab used to navigate
to the target. This gives you full control to do anything you need with the
page (click, type, navigate elsewhere, etc.).options: The connector options. This allows you access to waitFor values
and any other user configuration. If you need to pass anything specifically
to the actions you can use options.actionOptions property to do so.The connector's authentication mechanisms rely on the user actions API. The following is the code for the Basic HTTP Auth (transpiled to JS):
module.exports = {
action: async (page, config) => {
if (!config || !config.auth) {
return;
}
if (typeof config.auth.user !== 'string' || typeof config.auth.password !== 'string') {
return;
}
await page.authenticate({
password: config.auth.password,
username: config.auth.user
});
}
};
Note: This user action uses options.auth which is already
predefined. If your user action needs another type of user information you can
use options.actionsOptions.
The following is an example of a user action that will click on an element
configured via options.actionsOptions:
{
"connector": {
"name": "puppeteer",
"options": {
"actions": [
{
"file": "clickElement.js",
"on": "afterTargetNavigation"
}
],
"actionsOptions": {
"elementId": "#id"
}
}
},
...
}
module.exports = {
action: async (page, config) => {
const selector = config.actionsOptions.elementId;
await page.click(selector);
}
};
Please look at the source code of connector-puppeteer for other built-in
actions.
FAQs
hint connector for browsers supported by Puppeteer
The npm package @hint/connector-puppeteer receives a total of 17,565 weekly downloads. As such, @hint/connector-puppeteer popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @hint/connector-puppeteer demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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