It is Ruby clean and high-level API to Chrome. Runs headless by default, but you can configure it to run in a headful mode. All you need is Ruby and Chrome or Chromium. Ferrum connects to the browser by CDP protocol and there's no Selenium/WebDriver/ChromeDriver dependency. The emphasis was made on a raw CDP protocol because Chrome allows you to do so many things that are barely supported by WebDriver because it should have consistent design with other browsers.
-
Cuprite is a pure Ruby driver for Capybara based on Ferrum. If you are going to crawl sites you better use Ferrum or Vessel because you crawl, not test.
-
Vessel high-level web crawling framework based on Ferrum and Mechanize.
The development is done in provided by OSS license.
- Install
- Examples
- Docker
- Customization
- Navigation
- Finders
- Screenshots
- Network
- Downloads
- Proxy
- Mouse
- Keyboard
- Cookies
- Headers
- JavaScript
- Frames
- Frame
- Dialogs
- Animation
- Node
- Tracing
- Clean Up
- Thread safety
- Development
- Contributing
- License
There's no official Chrome or Chromium package for Linux don't install it this
way because it's either outdated or unofficial, both are bad. Download it from
official source for Chrome or
Chromium.
Chrome binary should be in the PATH
or BROWSER_PATH
and you can pass it as an
option to browser instance see :browser_path
in
Customization.
Add this to your Gemfile
and run bundle install
.
gem "ferrum"
Navigate to a website and save a screenshot:
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
browser.go_to("https://google.com")
browser.screenshot(path: "google.png")
browser.quit
When you work with browser instance Ferrum creates and maintains a default page for you, in fact all the methods above
are sent to the page
instance that is created in the default_context
of the browser
instance. You can interact
with a page created manually and this is preferred:
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
page = browser.create_page
page.go_to("https://google.com")
input = page.at_xpath("//input[@name='q']")
input.focus.type("Ruby headless driver for Chrome", :Enter)
page.at_css("a > h3").text # => "rubycdp/ferrum: Ruby Chrome/Chromium driver - GitHub"
browser.quit
Evaluate some JavaScript and get full width/height:
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
page = browser.create_page
page.go_to("https://www.google.com/search?q=Ruby+headless+driver+for+Capybara")
width, height = page.evaluate <<~JS
[document.documentElement.offsetWidth,
document.documentElement.offsetHeight]
JS
# => [1024, 1931]
browser.quit
Do any mouse movements you like:
# Trace a 100x100 square
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
page = browser.create_page
page.go_to("https://google.com")
page.mouse
.move(x: 0, y: 0)
.down
.move(x: 0, y: 100)
.move(x: 100, y: 100)
.move(x: 100, y: 0)
.move(x: 0, y: 0)
.up
browser.quit
In docker as root you must pass the no-sandbox browser option:
Ferrum::Browser.new(browser_options: { 'no-sandbox': nil })
It has also been reported that the Chrome process repeatedly crashes when running inside a Docker container on an M1 Mac preventing Ferrum from working. Ferrum should work as expected when deployed to a Docker container on a non-M1 Mac.
You can customize options with the following code in your test setup:
Ferrum::Browser.new(options)
- options
Hash
:headless
(String | Boolean) - Set browser as headless or not,true
by default. You can set"new"
to support new headless mode.:xvfb
(Boolean) - Run browser in a virtual framebuffer,false
by default.:flatten
(Boolean) - Use one websocket connection to the browser and all the pages in flatten mode.:window_size
(Array) - The dimensions of the browser window in which to test, expressed as a 2-element array, e.g. [1024, 768]. Default: [1024, 768]:extensions
(Array[String | Hash]) - An array of paths to files or JS source code to be preloaded into the browser e.g.:["/path/to/script.js", { source: "window.secret = 'top'" }]
:logger
(Object responding toputs
) - When present, debug output is written to this object.:slowmo
(Integer | Float) - Set a delay in seconds to wait before sending command. Useful companion of headless option, so that you have time to see changes.:timeout
(Numeric) - The number of seconds we'll wait for a response when communicating with browser. Default is 5.:js_errors
(Boolean) - When true, JavaScript errors get re-raised in Ruby.:pending_connection_errors
(Boolean) - When main frame is still waiting for slow responses while timeout is reachedPendingConnectionsError
is raised. It's better to figure out why you have slow responses and fix or block them rather than turn this setting off. Default is true.:browser_name
(Symbol) -:chrome
by default, only experimental support for:firefox
for now.:browser_path
(String) - Path to Chrome binary, you can also set ENV variable asBROWSER_PATH=some/path/chrome bundle exec rspec
.:browser_options
(Hash) - Additional command line options, see them all e.g.{ "ignore-certificate-errors" => nil }
:ignore_default_browser_options
(Boolean) - Ferrum has a number of default options it passes to the browser, if you set this totrue
then only options you put in:browser_options
will be passed to the browser, except required ones of course.:port
(Integer) - Remote debugging port for headless Chrome.:host
(String) - Remote debugging address for headless Chrome.:url
(String) - URL for a running instance of Chrome. If this is set, a browser process will not be spawned.:ws_url
(String) - Websocket url for a running instance of Chrome. If this is set, a browser process will not be spawned. It's higher priority than:url
, setting both doesn't make sense.:process_timeout
(Integer) - How long to wait for the Chrome process to respond on startup.:ws_max_receive_size
(Integer) - How big messages to accept from Chrome over the web socket, in bytes. Defaults to 64MB. Incoming messages larger than this will cause aFerrum::DeadBrowserError
.:proxy
(Hash) - Specify proxy settings, read more:save_path
(String) - Path to save attachments with Content-Disposition header.:env
(Hash) - Environment variables you'd like to pass through to the process
Navigate page to.
- url
String
The url should include scheme unless you setbase_url
when configuring driver.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
Navigate to the previous page in history.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.at_xpath("//a").click
page.back
Navigate to the next page in history.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.at_xpath("//a").click
page.back
page.forward
Reload current page.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.refresh
Stop all navigations and loading pending resources on the page
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.stop
Set the position for the browser window
- options
Hash
- :left
Integer
- :top
Integer
- :left
browser.position = { left: 10, top: 20 }
Get the position for the browser window
browser.position # => [10, 20]
Set window bounds
- options
Hash
- :left
Integer
- :top
Integer
- :width
Integer
- :height
Integer
- :window_state
String
- :left
browser.window_bounds = { left: 10, top: 20, width: 1024, height: 768, window_state: "normal" }
Get window bounds
browser.window_bounds # => { "left": 0, "top": 1286, "width": 10, "height": 10, "windowState": "normal" }
Current window id
browser.window_id # => 1
Find node by selector. Runs document.querySelector
within the document or
provided node.
- selector
String
- options
Hash
- :within
Node
|nil
- :within
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.at_css("a[aria-label='Issues you created']") # => Node
Find nodes by selector. The method runs document.querySelectorAll
within the
document or provided node.
- selector
String
- options
Hash
- :within
Node
|nil
- :within
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.css("a[aria-label='Issues you created']") # => [Node]
Find node by xpath.
- selector
String
- options
Hash
- :within
Node
|nil
- :within
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.at_xpath("//a[@aria-label='Issues you created']") # => Node
Find nodes by xpath.
- selector
String
- options
Hash
- :within
Node
|nil
- :within
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.xpath("//a[@aria-label='Issues you created']") # => [Node]
Returns current top window location href.
page.go_to("https://google.com/")
page.current_url # => "https://www.google.com/"
Returns current top window title
page.go_to("https://google.com/")
page.current_title # => "Google"
Returns current page's html.
page.go_to("https://google.com/")
page.body # => '<html itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/WebPage" lang="ru"><head>...
Saves screenshot on a disk or returns it as base64.
- options
Hash
- :path
String
to save a screenshot on the disk.:encoding
will be set to:binary
automatically - :encoding
Symbol
:base64
|:binary
you can set it to return image as Base64 - :format
String
"jpeg" | "png" - :quality
Integer
0-100 works for jpeg only - :full
Boolean
whether you need full page screenshot or a viewport - :selector
String
css selector for given element, optional - :area
Hash
area for screenshot, optional- :x
Integer
- :y
Integer
- :width
Integer
- :height
Integer
- :x
- :scale
Float
zoom in/out - :background_color
Ferrum::RGBA.new(0, 0, 0, 0.0)
to have specific background color
- :path
page.go_to("https://google.com/")
# Save on the disk in PNG
page.screenshot(path: "google.png") # => 134660
# Save on the disk in JPG
page.screenshot(path: "google.jpg") # => 30902
# Save to Base64 the whole page not only viewport and reduce quality
page.screenshot(full: true, quality: 60, encoding: :base64) # "iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAABAAAAAMACAYAAAC6uhUNAAAAAXNSR0IArs4c6Q...
# Save on the disk with the selected element in PNG
page.screenshot(path: "google.png", selector: 'textarea') # => 11340
# Save to Base64 with an area of the page in PNG
page.screenshot(path: "google.png", area: { x: 0, y: 0, width: 400, height: 300 }) # => 54239
# Save with specific background color
page.screenshot(background_color: Ferrum::RGBA.new(0, 0, 0, 0.0))
Saves PDF on a disk or returns it as base64.
- options
Hash
-
:path
String
to save a pdf on the disk.:encoding
will be set to:binary
automatically -
:encoding
Symbol
:base64
|:binary
you can set it to return pdf as Base64 -
:landscape
Boolean
paper orientation. Defaults to false. -
:scale
Float
zoom in/out -
:format
symbol
standard paper sizes :letter, :legal, :tabloid, :ledger, :A0, :A1, :A2, :A3, :A4, :A5, :A6 -
:paper_width
Float
set paper width -
:paper_height
Float
set paper height -
See other native options you can pass
-
page.go_to("https://google.com/")
# Save to disk as a PDF
page.pdf(path: "google.pdf", paper_width: 1.0, paper_height: 1.0) # => true
Saves MHTML on a disk or returns it as a string.
- options
Hash
- :path
String
to save a file on the disk.
- :path
page.go_to("https://google.com/")
page.mhtml(path: "google.mhtml") # => 87742
page.network
Returns all information about network traffic as Network::Exchange
instance
which in general is a wrapper around request
, response
and error
.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.network.traffic # => [#<Ferrum::Network::Exchange, ...]
Page request of the main frame.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.network.request # => #<Ferrum::Network::Request...
Page response of the main frame.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.network.response # => #<Ferrum::Network::Response...
Contains the status code of the main page response (e.g., 200 for a
success). This is just a shortcut for response.status
.
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
page.network.status # => 200
Waits for network idle, returns true
in case of success and false
if there are still connections.
- options
Hash
- :connections
Integer
how many connections are allowed for network to be idling,0
by default - :duration
Float
sleep for given amount of time and check again,0.05
by default - :timeout
Float
during what time we try to check idle,browser.timeout
by default
- :connections
page.go_to("https://example.com/")
page.at_xpath("//a[text() = 'No UI changes button']").click
page.network.wait_for_idle # => true
Waits for network idle or raises Ferrum::TimeoutError
error. Accepts same arguments as wait_for_idle
.
page.go_to("https://example.com/")
page.at_xpath("//a[text() = 'No UI changes button']").click
page.network.wait_for_idle! # might raise an error
Clear page's cache or collected traffic.
- type
Symbol
it is either:traffic
or:cache
traffic = page.network.traffic # => []
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
traffic.size # => 51
page.network.clear(:traffic)
traffic.size # => 0
Set request interception for given options. This method is only sets request
interception, you should use on
callback to catch requests and abort or
continue them.
- options
Hash
- :pattern
String
* by default - :resource_type
Symbol
one of the resource types
- :pattern
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
page = browser.create_page
page.network.intercept
page.on(:request) do |request|
if request.match?(/bla-bla/)
request.abort
elsif request.match?(/lorem/)
request.respond(body: "Lorem ipsum")
else
request.continue
end
end
page.go_to("https://google.com")
If site or proxy uses authorization you can provide credentials using this method.
- options
Hash
- :type
Symbol
:server
|:proxy
site or proxy authorization - :user
String
- :password
String
- :type
- &block accepts authenticated request, which you must subsequently allow or deny, if you don't
care about unwanted requests just call
request.continue
.
page.network.authorize(user: "login", password: "pass") { |req| req.continue }
page.go_to("http://example.com/authenticated")
puts page.network.status # => 200
puts page.body # => Welcome, authenticated client
Since Chrome implements authorize using request interception you must continue or abort authorized requests. If you
already have code that uses interception you can use authorize
without block, but if not you are obliged to pass
block, so this is version doesn't pass block and can work just fine:
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
page = browser.create_page
page.network.intercept
page.on(:request) do |request|
if request.resource_type == "Image"
request.abort
else
request.continue
end
end
page.network.authorize(user: "login", password: "pass", type: :proxy)
page.go_to("https://google.com")
You used to call authorize
method without block, but since it's implemented using request interception there could be
a collision with another part of your code that also uses request interception, so that authorize allows the request
while your code denies but it's too late. The block is mandatory now.
Activates emulation of network conditions.
- options
Hash
- :offline
Boolean
emulate internet disconnection,false
by default - :latency
Integer
minimum latency from request sent to response headers received (ms),0
by default - :download_throughput
Integer
maximal aggregated download throughput (bytes/sec),-1
by default, disables download throttling - :upload_throughput
Integer
maximal aggregated upload throughput (bytes/sec),-1
by default, disables download throttling - :connection_type
String
connection type if known, one of: none, cellular2g, cellular3g, cellular4g, bluetooth, ethernet, wifi, wimax, other.nil
by default
- :offline
page.network.emulate_network_conditions(connection_type: "cellular2g")
page.go_to("https://github.com/")
Activates offline mode for a page.
page.network.offline_mode
page.go_to("https://github.com/") # => Ferrum::StatusError (Request to https://github.com/ failed(net::ERR_INTERNET_DISCONNECTED))
Toggles ignoring cache for each request. If true, cache will not be used.
page.network.cache(disable: true)
page.downloads
Returns all information about downloaded files as a Hash
.
page.go_to("http://localhost/attachment.pdf")
page.downloads.files # => [{"frameId"=>"E3316DF1B5383D38F8ADF7485005FDE3", "guid"=>"11a68745-98ac-4d54-9b57-9f9016c268b3", "url"=>"http://localhost/attachment.pdf", "suggestedFilename"=>"attachment.pdf", "totalBytes"=>4911, "receivedBytes"=>4911, "state"=>"completed"}]
Waits until the download is finished.
page.go_to("http://localhost/attachment.pdf")
page.downloads.wait
or
page.go_to("http://localhost/page")
page.downloads.wait { page.at_css("#download").click }
Sets behavior in case of file to be downloaded.
- options
Hash
- :save_path
String
absolute path of where to store the file - :behavior
Symbol
deny | allow | allowAndName | default
,allow
by default
- :save_path
page.go_to("https://example.com/")
page.downloads.set_behavior(save_path: "/tmp", behavior: :allow)
You can set a proxy with a :proxy
option:
Ferrum::Browser.new(proxy: { host: "x.x.x.x", port: "8800", user: "user", password: "pa$$" })
:bypass
can specify semi-colon-separated list of hosts for which proxy shouldn't be used:
Ferrum::Browser.new(proxy: { host: "x.x.x.x", port: "8800", bypass: "*.google.com;*foo.com" })
In general passing a proxy option when instantiating a browser results in a browser running with proxy command line flags, so that it affects all pages and contexts. You can create a page in a new context which can use its own proxy settings:
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
browser.create_page(proxy: { host: "x.x.x.x", port: 31337, user: "user", password: "password" }) do |page|
page.go_to("https://api.ipify.org?format=json")
page.body # => "x.x.x.x"
end
browser.create_page(proxy: { host: "y.y.y.y", port: 31337, user: "user", password: "password" }) do |page|
page.go_to("https://api.ipify.org?format=json")
page.body # => "y.y.y.y"
end
page.mouse
Scroll page to a given x, y
- x
Integer
the pixel along the horizontal axis of the document that you want displayed in the upper left - y
Integer
the pixel along the vertical axis of the document that you want displayed in the upper left
page.go_to("https://www.google.com/search?q=Ruby+headless+driver+for+Capybara")
page.mouse.scroll_to(0, 400)
Click given coordinates, fires mouse move, down and up events.
- options
Hash
- :x
Integer
- :y
Integer
- :delay
Float
defaults to 0. Delay between mouse down and mouse up events - :button
Symbol
:left | :right, defaults to :left - :count
Integer
defaults to 1 - :modifiers
Integer
bitfield for key modifiers. Seekeyboard.modifiers
- :x
Mouse down for given coordinates.
- options
Hash
- :button
Symbol
:left | :right, defaults to :left - :count
Integer
defaults to 1 - :modifiers
Integer
bitfield for key modifiers. Seekeyboard.modifiers
- :button
Mouse up for given coordinates.
- options
Hash
- :button
Symbol
:left | :right, defaults to :left - :count
Integer
defaults to 1 - :modifiers
Integer
bitfield for key modifiers. Seekeyboard.modifiers
- :button
Mouse move to given x and y.
- options
Hash
- :x
Integer
- :y
Integer
- :steps
Integer
defaults to 1. Sends intermediate mousemove events.
- :x
page.keyboard
Dispatches a keydown event.
- key
String
|Symbol
Name of key such as "a", :enter, :backspace
Dispatches a keyup event.
- key
String
|Symbol
Name of key such as "b", :enter, :backspace
Sends a keydown, keypress/input, and keyup event for each character in the text.
- text
String
|Array<String> | Array<Symbol>
A text to type into a focused element,[:Shift, "s"], "tring"
Returns bitfield for a given keys
- keys
Array<Symbol>
:alt | :ctrl | :command | :shift
page.cookies
Returns cookies hash
page.cookies.all # => {"NID"=>#<Ferrum::Cookies::Cookie:0x0000558624b37a40 @attributes={"name"=>"NID", "value"=>"...", "domain"=>".google.com", "path"=>"/", "expires"=>1583211046.575681, "size"=>178, "httpOnly"=>true, "secure"=>false, "session"=>false}>}
Returns cookie
- value
String
page.cookies["NID"] # => <Ferrum::Cookies::Cookie:0x0000558624b67a88 @attributes={"name"=>"NID", "value"=>"...", "domain"=>".google.com", "path"=>"/", "expires"=>1583211046.575681, "size"=>178, "httpOnly"=>true, "secure"=>false, "session"=>false}>
Sets a cookie
- value
Hash
- :name
String
- :value
String
- :domain
String
- :expires
Integer
- :samesite
String
- :httponly
Boolean
- :name
page.cookies.set(name: "stealth", value: "omg", domain: "google.com") # => true
- value
Cookie
nid_cookie = page.cookies["NID"] # => <Ferrum::Cookies::Cookie:0x0000558624b67a88>
page.cookies.set(nid_cookie) # => true
Removes given cookie
- options
Hash
- :name
String
- :domain
String
- :url
String
- :name
page.cookies.remove(name: "stealth", domain: "google.com") # => true
Removes all cookies for current page
page.cookies.clear # => true
page.headers
Get all headers
Set given headers. Eventually clear all headers and set given ones.
- headers
Hash
key-value pairs for example"User-Agent" => "Browser"
Adds given headers to already set ones.
- headers
Hash
key-value pairs for example"Referer" => "http://example.com"
Clear all headers.
Evaluate and return result for given JS expression
- expression
String
should be valid JavaScript - args
Object
you can pass arguments, though it should be a validNode
or a simple value.
page.evaluate("[window.scrollX, window.scrollY]")
Evaluate asynchronous expression and return result
- expression
String
should be valid JavaScript - wait_time How long we should wait for Promise to resolve or reject
- args
Object
you can pass arguments, though it should be a validNode
or a simple value.
page.evaluate_async(%(arguments[0]({foo: "bar"})), 5) # => { "foo" => "bar" }
Execute expression. Doesn't return the result
- expression
String
should be valid JavaScript - args
Object
you can pass arguments, though it should be a validNode
or a simple value.
page.execute(%(1 + 1)) # => true
Evaluate JavaScript to modify things before a page load
- expression
String
should be valid JavaScript
browser.evaluate_on_new_document <<~JS
Object.defineProperty(navigator, "languages", {
get: function() { return ["tlh"]; }
});
JS
- options
Hash
- :url
String
- :path
String
- :content
String
- :type
String
-text/javascript
by default
- :url
page.add_script_tag(url: "http://example.com/stylesheet.css") # => true
- options
Hash
- :url
String
- :path
String
- :content
String
- :url
page.add_style_tag(content: "h1 { font-size: 40px; }") # => true
- options
Hash
- :enabled
Boolean
,true
by default
- :enabled
page.bypass_csp # => true
page.go_to("https://github.com/ruby-concurrency/concurrent-ruby/blob/master/docs-source/promises.in.md")
page.refresh
page.add_script_tag(content: "window.__injected = 42")
page.evaluate("window.__injected") # => 42
Disables Javascripts from the loaded HTML source.
You can still evaluate JavaScript with evaluate
or execute
.
Returns nothing.
page.disable_javascript
Overrides device screen dimensions and emulates viewport.
- options
Hash
- :width
Integer
, viewport width.0
by default - :height
Integer
, viewport height.0
by default - :scale_factor
Float
, device scale factor.0
by default - :mobile
Boolean
, whether to emulate mobile device.false
by default
- :width
page.set_viewport(width: 1000, height: 600, scale_factor: 3)
Returns all the frames current page have.
page.go_to("https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_frame.asp")
page.frames # =>
# [
# #<Ferrum::Frame @id="C6D104CE454A025FBCF22B98DE612B12" @parent_id=nil @name=nil @state=:stopped_loading @execution_id=1>,
# #<Ferrum::Frame @id="C09C4E4404314AAEAE85928EAC109A93" @parent_id="C6D104CE454A025FBCF22B98DE612B12" @state=:stopped_loading @execution_id=2>,
# #<Ferrum::Frame @id="2E9C7F476ED09D87A42F2FEE3C6FBC3C" @parent_id="C6D104CE454A025FBCF22B98DE612B12" @state=:stopped_loading @execution_id=3>,
# ...
# ]
Returns page's main frame, the top of the tree and the parent of all frames.
Find frame by given options.
- options
Hash
- :id
String
- Unique frame's id that browser provides - :name
String
- Frame's name if there's one
- :id
page.frame_by(id: "C6D104CE454A025FBCF22B98DE612B12")
Frame's unique id.
Parent frame id if this one is nested in another one.
Execution context id which is used by JS, each frame has it's own context in which JS evaluates.
If frame was given a name it should be here.
One of the states frame's in:
:started_loading
:navigated
:stopped_loading
Returns current frame's location href.
page.go_to("https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/iframe")
frame = page.frames[1]
frame.url # => https://interactive-examples.mdn.mozilla.net/pages/tabbed/iframe.html
Returns current frame's title.
page.go_to("https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/iframe")
frame = page.frames[1]
frame.title # => HTML Demo: <iframe>
If current frame is the main frame of the page (top of the tree).
page.go_to("https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_frame.asp")
frame = page.frame_by(id: "C09C4E4404314AAEAE85928EAC109A93")
frame.main? # => false
Returns current frame's top window location href.
page.go_to("https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_frame.asp")
frame = page.frame_by(id: "C09C4E4404314AAEAE85928EAC109A93")
frame.current_url # => "https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_frame.asp"
Returns current frame's top window title.
page.go_to("https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_frame.asp")
frame = page.frame_by(id: "C09C4E4404314AAEAE85928EAC109A93")
frame.current_title # => "HTML frame tag"
Returns current frame's html.
page.go_to("https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_frame.asp")
frame = page.frame_by(id: "C09C4E4404314AAEAE85928EAC109A93")
frame.body # => "<html><head></head><body></body></html>"
Returns current frame's doctype.
page.go_to("https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_frame.asp")
page.main_frame.doctype # => "<!DOCTYPE html>"
Sets a content of a given frame.
- html
String
page.go_to("https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/iframe")
frame = page.frames[1]
frame.body # <html lang="en"><head><style>body {transition: opacity ease-in 0.2s; }...
frame.content = "<html><head></head><body><p>lol</p></body></html>"
frame.body # => <html><head></head><body><p>lol</p></body></html>
Accept dialog with given text or default prompt if applicable
- text
String
Dismiss dialog
page.on(:dialog) do |dialog|
if dialog.match?(/bla-bla/)
dialog.accept
else
dialog.dismiss
end
end
page.go_to("https://google.com")
You can slow down or speed up CSS animations.
Returns playback rate for CSS animations, defaults to 1
.
Sets playback rate of CSS animations
- value
Integer
page.playback_rate = 2000
page.go_to("https://google.com")
page.playback_rate # => 2000
Returns Frame object for current node, you can keep using Finders for that object:
frame = page.at_xpath("//iframe").frame # => Frame
frame.at_css("//a[text() = 'Log in']") # => Node
(chainable) Selects options by passed attribute.
page.at_xpath("//*[select]").select(["1"]) # => Node (select)
page.at_xpath("//*[select]").select(["text"], by: :text) # => Node (select)
Accept string, array or strings:
page.at_xpath("//*[select]").select("1")
page.at_xpath("//*[select]").select("1", "2")
page.at_xpath("//*[select]").select(["1", "2"])
You can use tracing.record
to create a trace file which can be opened in Chrome DevTools or
timeline viewer.
page.tracing.record(path: "trace.json") do
page.go_to("https://www.google.com")
end
Accepts block, records trace and by default returns trace data from Tracing.tracingComplete
event as output. When
path
is specified returns true
and stores trace data into file.
- options
Hash
- :path
String
save data on the disk,nil
by default - :encoding
Symbol
:base64
|:binary
encode output as Base64 or plain text.:binary
by default - :timeout
Float
wait until file streaming finishes in the specified time or raise error, defaults tonil
- :screenshots
Boolean
capture screenshots in the trace,false
by default - :trace_config
Hash<String, Object>
config for trace, for categories see getCategories, only one trace config can be active at a time per browser.
- :path
Closes browser tabs opened by the Browser
instance.
# connect to a long-running Chrome process
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new(url: 'http://localhost:9222')
browser.go_to("https://github.com/")
# clean up, lest the tab stays there hanging forever
browser.reset
browser.quit
Ferrum is fully thread-safe. You can create one browser or a few as you wish and start playing around using threads. Example below shows how to create a few pages which share the same context. Context is similar to an incognito profile but you can have more than one, think of it like it's independent browser session:
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
context = browser.contexts.create
t1 = Thread.new(context) do |c|
page = c.create_page
page.go_to("https://www.google.com/search?q=Ruby+headless+driver+for+Capybara")
page.screenshot(path: "t1.png")
end
t2 = Thread.new(context) do |c|
page = c.create_page
page.go_to("https://www.google.com/search?q=Ruby+static+typing")
page.screenshot(path: "t2.png")
end
t1.join
t2.join
context.dispose
browser.quit
or you can create two independent contexts:
browser = Ferrum::Browser.new
t1 = Thread.new(browser) do |b|
context = b.contexts.create
page = context.create_page
page.go_to("https://www.google.com/search?q=Ruby+headless+driver+for+Capybara")
page.screenshot(path: "t1.png")
context.dispose
end
t2 = Thread.new(browser) do |b|
context = b.contexts.create
page = context.create_page
page.go_to("https://www.google.com/search?q=Ruby+static+typing")
page.screenshot(path: "t2.png")
context.dispose
end
t1.join
t2.join
browser.quit
After checking out the repo, run bundle install
to install dependencies.
Then, run bundle exec rake test
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will
allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the
version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version,
push git commits and the created tag, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.