electron-eval
Run code inside a hidden Electron window
electron-eval
gives you a way to access a headless browser (Chromium) from Node.js. This can be useful for testing browser-specific code, or using web APIs that are in browsers but not yet in Node (such as WebRTC).
Running on Headless Machines
This module runs without any prior setup on non-headless machines.
To run on a headless Linux server, you'll need the xvfb
package:
$ sudo apt-get install xvfb
To run in Travis CI, see the .travis.yml file for this repo as an example of how to install the necessary packages.
Usage
npm install electron-eval
var electronEval = require('electron-eval')
var daemon = electronEval()
daemon.eval('JSON.stringify(window.location.href)', function (err, res) {
console.log(err, res)
})
daemon.eval(`
var i = 0
i += 10
i -= 2
i
`, (err, res) => console.log(err, res))
daemon.close()
Methods
var daemon = electronEval([opts])
Creates a new hidden Electron instance. This may be called many times to create many windows, but beware that Electron uses a lot of resources.
opts
may be an object containing the following keys:
{
headless: Boolean
xvfb: Object
timeout: Number
}
daemon.eval(code, [opts], [callback])
Evaluates the code
string in the Electron window, and calls callback(error, result)
. If callback
is not provided and the eval causes an error, the daemon will emit an error
event.
The opts
object may contain:
{
mainProcess: Boolean
}
Note that you may need to stringify the result value with JSON.stringify()
so it will be sent properly across processes.
If daemon.eval()
is called before the daemon has emitted its ready
event, the code will be put in a queue and evaluated once the daemon is ready.
daemon.close()
Closes the Electron process and releases its resources.
Note that the Electron process will automatically terminate when the node process exits, so this may not be necessary.
window.send(event, message)
This method is implemented inside the Electron window, so it may be called from code evaluated by the daemon. It sends a message to the node process, which causes an event named event
to be emitted on the daemon
object.
This is useful when you need the browser window to send async messages to the node process.
Example:
daemon.on('test', function (arg) {
console.log('got message: ' + arg)
})
daemon.eval('window.send("test", 123)')
Properties
daemon.child
A handle to the Electron daemon's process (of type child_process.ChildProcess).
Events
- ready
Emitted by daemon
when the Electron window has been set up and is ready to eval code.
- error
Emitted by daemon
when daemon.eval()
evaluates code that throws an error, but no callback is provided.
Environment Variables
HEADLESS
Setting this variable to true also allows the module to go into headless mode.
Related
electron-spawn