• Stars
    star
    19,445
  • Rank 1,331 (Top 0.03 %)
  • Language
    JavaScript
  • Created over 10 years ago
  • Updated about 1 year ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

A high-level browser automation library.

NOTICE: This library is no longer maintained.

Build Status Join the chat at https://gitter.im/rosshinkley/nightmare

Nightmare

Nightmare is a high-level browser automation library from Segment.

The goal is to expose a few simple methods that mimic user actions (like goto, type and click), with an API that feels synchronous for each block of scripting, rather than deeply nested callbacks. It was originally designed for automating tasks across sites that don't have APIs, but is most often used for UI testing and crawling.

Under the covers it uses Electron, which is similar to PhantomJS but roughly twice as fast and more modern.

⚠️ Security Warning: We've implemented many of the security recommendations outlined by Electron to try and keep you safe, but undiscovered vulnerabilities may exist in Electron that could allow a malicious website to execute code on your computer. Avoid visiting untrusted websites.

πŸ›  Migrating to 3.x: You'll want to check out this issue before upgrading. We've worked hard to make improvements to nightmare while limiting the breaking changes and there's a good chance you won't need to do anything.

Niffy is a perceptual diffing tool built on Nightmare. It helps you detect UI changes and bugs across releases of your web app.

Daydream is a complementary chrome extension built by @stevenmiller888 that generates Nightmare scripts for you while you browse.

Many thanks to @matthewmueller and @rosshinkley for their help on Nightmare.

Examples

Let's search on DuckDuckGo:

const Nightmare = require('nightmare')
const nightmare = Nightmare({ show: true })

nightmare
  .goto('https://duckduckgo.com')
  .type('#search_form_input_homepage', 'github nightmare')
  .click('#search_button_homepage')
  .wait('#r1-0 a.result__a')
  .evaluate(() => document.querySelector('#r1-0 a.result__a').href)
  .end()
  .then(console.log)
  .catch(error => {
    console.error('Search failed:', error)
  })

You can run this with:

npm install --save nightmare
node example.js

Or, let's run some mocha tests:

const Nightmare = require('nightmare')
const chai = require('chai')
const expect = chai.expect

describe('test duckduckgo search results', () => {
  it('should find the nightmare github link first', function(done) {
    this.timeout('10s')

    const nightmare = Nightmare()
    nightmare
      .goto('https://duckduckgo.com')
      .type('#search_form_input_homepage', 'github nightmare')
      .click('#search_button_homepage')
      .wait('#links .result__a')
      .evaluate(() => document.querySelector('#links .result__a').href)
      .end()
      .then(link => {
        expect(link).to.equal('https://github.com/segmentio/nightmare')
        done()
      })
  })
})

You can see examples of every function in the tests here.

To get started with UI Testing, check out this quick start guide.

To install dependencies

npm install

To run the mocha tests

npm test

Node versions

Nightmare is intended to be run on NodeJS 4.x or higher.

API

Nightmare(options)

Creates a new instance that can navigate around the web. The available options are documented here, along with the following nightmare-specific options.

waitTimeout (default: 30s)

Throws an exception if the .wait() didn't return true within the set timeframe.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  waitTimeout: 1000 // in ms
})
gotoTimeout (default: 30s)

Throws an exception if the .goto() didn't finish loading within the set timeframe. Note that, even though goto normally waits for all the resources on a page to load, a timeout exception is only raised if the DOM itself has not yet loaded.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  gotoTimeout: 1000 // in ms
})
loadTimeout (default: infinite)

Forces Nightmare to move on if a page transition caused by an action (eg, .click()) didn't finish within the set timeframe. If loadTimeout is shorter than gotoTimeout, the exceptions thrown by gotoTimeout will be suppressed.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  loadTimeout: 1000 // in ms
})
executionTimeout (default: 30s)

The maximum amount of time to wait for an .evaluate() statement to complete.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  executionTimeout: 1000 // in ms
})
paths

The default system paths that Electron knows about. Here's a list of available paths: https://github.com/atom/electron/blob/master/docs/api/app.md#appgetpathname

You can overwrite them in Nightmare by doing the following:

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  paths: {
    userData: '/user/data'
  }
})
switches

The command line switches used by the Chrome browser that are also supported by Electron. Here's a list of supported Chrome command line switches: https://github.com/atom/electron/blob/master/docs/api/chrome-command-line-switches.md

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  switches: {
    'proxy-server': '1.2.3.4:5678',
    'ignore-certificate-errors': true
  }
})
electronPath

The path to the prebuilt Electron binary. This is useful for testing on different versions of Electron. Note that Nightmare only supports the version on which this package depends. Use this option at your own risk.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  electronPath: require('electron')
})
dock (OS X)

A boolean to optionally show the Electron icon in the dock (defaults to false). This is useful for testing purposes.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  dock: true
})
openDevTools

Optionally shows the DevTools in the Electron window using true, or use an object hash containing mode: 'detach' to show in a separate window. The hash gets passed to contents.openDevTools() to be handled. This is also useful for testing purposes. Note that this option is honored only if show is set to true.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  openDevTools: {
    mode: 'detach'
  },
  show: true
})
typeInterval (default: 100ms)

How long to wait between keystrokes when using .type().

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  typeInterval: 20
})
pollInterval (default: 250ms)

How long to wait between checks for the .wait() condition to be successful.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  pollInterval: 50 //in ms
})
maxAuthRetries (default: 3)

Defines the number of times to retry an authentication when set up with .authenticate().

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  maxAuthRetries: 3
})

certificateSubjectName

A string to determine the client certificate selected by electron. If this options is set, the select-client-certificate event will be set to loop through the certificateList and find the first certificate that matches subjectName on the electron Certificate Object.

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  certificateSubjectName: 'tester'
})

.engineVersions()

Gets the versions for Electron and Chromium.

.useragent(useragent)

Sets the useragent used by electron.

.authentication(user, password)

Sets the user and password for accessing a web page using basic authentication. Be sure to set it before calling .goto(url).

.end()

Completes any queue operations, disconnect and close the electron process. Note that if you're using promises, .then() must be called after .end() to run the .end() task. Also note that if using an .end() callback, the .end() call is equivalent to calling .end() followed by .then(fn). Consider:

nightmare
  .goto(someUrl)
  .end(() => 'some value')
  //prints "some value"
  .then(console.log)

.halt(error, done)

Clears all queued operations, kills the electron process, and passes error message or 'Nightmare Halted' to an unresolved promise. Done will be called after the process has exited.

Interact with the Page

.goto(url[, headers])

Loads the page at url. Optionally, a headers hash can be supplied to set headers on the goto request.

When a page load is successful, goto returns an object with metadata about the page load, including:

  • url: The URL that was loaded
  • code: The HTTP status code (e.g. 200, 404, 500)
  • method: The HTTP method used (e.g. "GET", "POST")
  • referrer: The page that the window was displaying prior to this load or an empty string if this is the first page load.
  • headers: An object representing the response headers for the request as in {header1-name: header1-value, header2-name: header2-value}

If the page load fails, the error will be an object with the following properties:

Note that any valid response from a server is considered β€œsuccessful.” That means things like 404 β€œnot found” errors are successful results for goto. Only things that would cause no page to appear in the browser window, such as no server responding at the given address, the server hanging up in the middle of a response, or invalid URLs, are errors.

You can also adjust how long goto will wait before timing out by setting the gotoTimeout option on the Nightmare constructor.

.back()

Goes back to the previous page.

.forward()

Goes forward to the next page.

.refresh()

Refreshes the current page.

.click(selector)

Clicks the selector element once.

.mousedown(selector)

Mousedowns the selector element once.

.mouseup(selector)

Mouseups the selector element once.

.mouseover(selector)

Mouseovers the selector element once.

.mouseout(selector)

Mouseout the selector element once.

.type(selector[, text])

Enters the text provided into the selector element. Empty or falsey values provided for text will clear the selector's value.

.type() mimics a user typing in a textbox and will emit the proper keyboard events.

Key presses can also be fired using Unicode values with .type(). For example, if you wanted to fire an enter key press, you would write .type('body', '\u000d').

If you don't need the keyboard events, consider using .insert() instead as it will be faster and more robust.

.insert(selector[, text])

Similar to .type(), .insert() enters the text provided into the selector element. Empty or falsey values provided for text will clear the selector's value.

.insert() is faster than .type() but does not trigger the keyboard events.

.check(selector)

Checks the selector checkbox element.

.uncheck(selector)

Unchecks the selector checkbox element.

.select(selector, option)

Changes the selector dropdown element to the option with attribute [value=option]

.scrollTo(top, left)

Scrolls the page to desired position. top and left are always relative to the top left corner of the document.

.viewport(width, height)

Sets the viewport size.

.inject(type, file)

Injects a local file onto the current page. The file type must be either js or css.

.evaluate(fn[, arg1, arg2,...])

Invokes fn on the page with arg1, arg2,.... All the args are optional. On completion it returns the return value of fn. Useful for extracting information from the page. Here's an example:

const selector = 'h1'
nightmare
  .evaluate(selector => {
    // now we're executing inside the browser scope.
    return document.querySelector(selector).innerText
  }, selector) // <-- that's how you pass parameters from Node scope to browser scope
  .then(text => {
    // ...
  })

Error-first callbacks are supported as a part of evaluate(). If the arguments passed are one fewer than the arguments expected for the evaluated function, the evaluation will be passed a callback as the last parameter to the function. For example:

const selector = 'h1'
nightmare
  .evaluate((selector, done) => {
    // now we're executing inside the browser scope.
    setTimeout(
      () => done(null, document.querySelector(selector).innerText),
      2000
    )
  }, selector)
  .then(text => {
    // ...
  })

Note that callbacks support only one value argument (eg function(err, value)). Ultimately, the callback will get wrapped in a native Promise and only be able to resolve a single value.

Promises are also supported as a part of evaluate(). If the return value of the function has a then member, .evaluate() assumes it is waiting for a promise. For example:

const selector = 'h1';
nightmare
  .evaluate((selector) => (
    new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      setTimeout(() => resolve(document.querySelector(selector).innerText), 2000);
    )}, selector)
  )
  .then((text) => {
    // ...
  })

.wait(ms)

Waits for ms milliseconds e.g. .wait(5000).

.wait(selector)

Waits until the element selector is present e.g. .wait('#pay-button').

.wait(fn[, arg1, arg2,...])

Waits until the fn evaluated on the page with arg1, arg2,... returns true. All the args are optional. See .evaluate() for usage.

.header(header, value)

Adds a header override for all HTTP requests. If header is undefined, the header overrides will be reset.

Extract from the Page

.exists(selector)

Returns whether the selector exists or not on the page.

.visible(selector)

Returns whether the selector is visible or not.

.on(event, callback)

Captures page events with the callback. You have to call .on() before calling .goto(). Supported events are documented here.

Additional "page" events
.on('page', function(type="error", message, stack))

This event is triggered if any javascript exception is thrown on the page. But this event is not triggered if the injected javascript code (e.g. via .evaluate()) is throwing an exception.

"page" events

Listens for window.addEventListener('error'), alert(...), prompt(...) & confirm(...).

.on('page', function(type="error", message, stack))

Listens for top-level page errors. This will get triggered when an error is thrown on the page.

.on('page', function(type="alert", message))

Nightmare disables window.alert from popping up by default, but you can still listen for the contents of the alert dialog.

.on('page', function(type="prompt", message, response))

Nightmare disables window.prompt from popping up by default, but you can still listen for the message to come up. If you need to handle the confirmation differently, you'll need to use your own preload script.

.on('page', function(type="confirm", message, response))

Nightmare disables window.confirm from popping up by default, but you can still listen for the message to come up. If you need to handle the confirmation differently, you'll need to use your own preload script.

.on('console', function(type [, arguments, ...]))

type will be either log, warn or error and arguments are what gets passed from the console. This event is not triggered if the injected javascript code (e.g. via .evaluate()) is using console.log.

.once(event, callback)

Similar to .on(), but captures page events with the callback one time.

.removeListener(event, callback)

Removes a given listener callback for an event.

.screenshot([path][, clip])

Takes a screenshot of the current page. Useful for debugging. The output is always a png. Both arguments are optional. If path is provided, it saves the image to the disk. Otherwise it returns a Buffer of the image data. If clip is provided (as documented here), the image will be clipped to the rectangle.

.html(path, saveType)

Saves the current page as html as files to disk at the given path. Save type options are here.

.pdf(path, options)

Saves a PDF to the specified path. Options are here.

.title()

Returns the title of the current page.

.url()

Returns the url of the current page.

.path()

Returns the path name of the current page.

Cookies

.cookies.get(name)

Gets a cookie by it's name. The url will be the current url.

.cookies.get(query)

Queries multiple cookies with the query object. If a query.name is set, it will return the first cookie it finds with that name, otherwise it will query for an array of cookies. If no query.url is set, it will use the current url. Here's an example:

// get all google cookies that are secure
// and have the path `/query`
nightmare
  .goto('http://google.com')
  .cookies.get({
    path: '/query',
    secure: true
  })
  .then(cookies => {
    // do something with the cookies
  })

Available properties are documented here: https://github.com/atom/electron/blob/master/docs/api/session.md#sescookiesgetdetails-callback

.cookies.get()

Gets all the cookies for the current url. If you'd like get all cookies for all urls, use: .get({ url: null }).

.cookies.set(name, value)

Sets a cookie's name and value. This is the most basic form, and the url will be the current url.

.cookies.set(cookie)

Sets a cookie. If cookie.url is not set, it will set the cookie on the current url. Here's an example:

nightmare
  .goto('http://google.com')
  .cookies.set({
    name: 'token',
    value: 'some token',
    path: '/query',
    secure: true
  })
  // ... other actions ...
  .then(() => {
    // ...
  })

Available properties are documented here: https://github.com/atom/electron/blob/master/docs/api/session.md#sescookiessetdetails-callback

.cookies.set(cookies)

Sets multiple cookies at once. cookies is an array of cookie objects. Take a look at the .cookies.set(cookie) documentation above for a better idea of what cookie should look like.

.cookies.clear([name])

Clears a cookie for the current domain. If name is not specified, all cookies for the current domain will be cleared.

nightmare
  .goto('http://google.com')
  .cookies.clear('SomeCookieName')
  // ... other actions ...
  .then(() => {
    // ...
  })

.cookies.clearAll()

Clears all cookies for all domains.

nightmare
  .goto('http://google.com')
  .cookies.clearAll()
  // ... other actions ...
  .then(() => {
    //...
  })

Proxies

Proxies are supported in Nightmare through switches.

If your proxy requires authentication you also need the authentication call.

The following example not only demonstrates how to use proxies, but you can run it to test if your proxy connection is working:

import Nightmare from 'nightmare';

const proxyNightmare = Nightmare({
  switches: {
    'proxy-server': 'my_proxy_server.example.com:8080' // set the proxy server here ...
  },
  show: true
});

proxyNightmare
  .authentication('proxyUsername', 'proxyPassword') // ... and authenticate here before `goto`
  .goto('http://www.ipchicken.com')
  .evaluate(() => {
    return document.querySelector('b').innerText.replace(/[^\d\.]/g, '');
  })
  .end()
  .then((ip) => { // This will log the Proxy's IP
    console.log('proxy IP:', ip);
  });

// The rest is just normal Nightmare to get your local IP
const regularNightmare = Nightmare({ show: true });

regularNightmare
  .goto('http://www.ipchicken.com')
  .evaluate(() =>
    document.querySelector('b').innerText.replace(/[^\d\.]/g, '');
  )
  .end()
  .then((ip) => { // This will log the your local IP
    console.log('local IP:', ip);
  });

Promises

By default, Nightmare uses default native ES6 promises. You can plug in your favorite ES6-style promises library like bluebird or q for convenience!

Here's an example:

var Nightmare = require('nightmare')

Nightmare.Promise = require('bluebird')
// OR:
Nightmare.Promise = require('q').Promise

You can also specify a custom Promise library per-instance with the Promise constructor option like so:

var Nightmare = require('nightmare')

var es6Nightmare = Nightmare()
var bluebirdNightmare = Nightmare({
  Promise: require('bluebird')
})

var es6Promise = es6Nightmare
  .goto('https://github.com/segmentio/nightmare')
  .then()
var bluebirdPromise = bluebirdNightmare
  .goto('https://github.com/segmentio/nightmare')
  .then()

es6Promise.isFulfilled() // throws: `TypeError: es6EndPromise.isFulfilled is not a function`
bluebirdPromise.isFulfilled() // returns: `true | false`

Extending Nightmare

Nightmare.action(name, [electronAction|electronNamespace], action|namespace)

You can add your own custom actions to the Nightmare prototype. Here's an example:

Nightmare.action('size', function(done) {
  this.evaluate_now(() => {
    const w = Math.max(
      document.documentElement.clientWidth,
      window.innerWidth || 0
    )
    const h = Math.max(
      document.documentElement.clientHeight,
      window.innerHeight || 0
    )
    return {
      height: h,
      width: w
    }
  }, done)
})

Nightmare()
  .goto('http://cnn.com')
  .size()
  .then(size => {
    //... do something with the size information
  })

Remember, this is attached to the static class Nightmare, not the instance.

You'll notice we used an internal function evaluate_now. This function is different than nightmare.evaluate because it runs it immediately, whereas nightmare.evaluate is queued.

An easy way to remember: when in doubt, use evaluate. If you're creating custom actions, use evaluate_now. The technical reason is that since our action has already been queued and we're running it now, we shouldn't re-queue the evaluate function.

We can also create custom namespaces. We do this internally for nightmare.cookies.get and nightmare.cookies.set. These are useful if you have a bundle of actions you want to expose, but it will clutter up the main nightmare object. Here's an example of that:

Nightmare.action('style', {
  background(done) {
    this.evaluate_now(
      () => window.getComputedStyle(document.body, null).backgroundColor,
      done
    )
  }
})

Nightmare()
  .goto('http://google.com')
  .style.background()
  .then(background => {
    // ... do something interesting with background
  })

You can also add custom Electron actions. The additional Electron action or namespace actions take name, options, parent, win, renderer, and done. Note the Electron action comes first, mirroring how .evaluate() works. For example:

Nightmare.action(
  'clearCache',
  (name, options, parent, win, renderer, done) => {
    parent.respondTo('clearCache', done => {
      win.webContents.session.clearCache(done)
    })
    done()
  },
  function(done) {
    this.child.call('clearCache', done)
  }
)

Nightmare()
  .clearCache()
  .goto('http://example.org')
  //... more actions ...
  .then(() => {
    // ...
  })

...would clear the browser’s cache before navigating to example.org.

See this document for more details on creating custom actions.

.use(plugin)

nightmare.use is useful for reusing a set of tasks on an instance. Check out nightmare-swiftly for some examples.

Custom preload script

If you need to do something custom when you first load the window environment, you can specify a custom preload script. Here's how you do that:

import path from 'path'

const nightmare = Nightmare({
  webPreferences: {
    preload: path.resolve('custom-script.js')
    //alternative: preload: "absolute/path/to/custom-script.js"
  }
})

The only requirement for that script is that you'll need the following prelude:

window.__nightmare = {}
__nightmare.ipc = require('electron').ipcRenderer

To benefit of all of nightmare's feedback from the browser, you can instead copy the contents of nightmare's preload script.

Storage Persistence between nightmare instances

By default nightmare will create an in-memory partition for each instance. This means that any localStorage or cookies or any other form of persistent state will be destroyed when nightmare is ended. If you would like to persist state between instances you can use the webPreferences.partition api in electron.

import Nightmare from 'nightmare';

nightmare = Nightmare(); // non persistent paritition by default
yield nightmare
  .evaluate(() => {
    window.localStorage.setItem('testing', 'This will not be persisted');
  })
  .end();

nightmare = Nightmare({
  webPreferences: {
    partition: 'persist: testing'
  }
});
yield nightmare
  .evaluate(() => {
    window.localStorage.setItem('testing', 'This is persisted for other instances with the same paritition name');
  })
  .end();

If you specify a null paritition then it will use the electron default behavior (persistent) or any string that starts with 'persist:' will persist under that partition name, any other string will result in in-memory only storage.

Usage

Installation

Nightmare is a Node.js module, so you'll need to have Node.js installed. Then you just need to npm install the module:

$ npm install --save nightmare

Execution

Nightmare is a node module that can be used in a Node.js script or module. Here's a simple script to open a web page:

import Nightmare from 'nightmare';

const nightmare = Nightmare();

nightmare.goto('http://cnn.com')
  .evaluate(() => {
    return document.title;
  })
  .end()
  .then((title) => {
    console.log(title);
  })

If you save this as cnn.js, you can run it on the command line like this:

npm install --save nightmare
node cnn.js

Common Execution Problems

Nightmare heavily relies on Electron for heavy lifting. And Electron in turn relies on several UI-focused dependencies (eg. libgtk+) which are often missing from server distros.

For help running nightmare on your server distro check out How to run nightmare on Amazon Linux and CentOS guide.

Debugging

There are three good ways to get more information about what's happening inside the headless browser:

  1. Use the DEBUG=* flag described below.
  2. Pass { show: true } to the nightmare constructor to have it create a visible, rendered window where you can watch what is happening.
  3. Listen for specific events.

To run the same file with debugging output, run it like this DEBUG=nightmare node cnn.js (on Windows use set DEBUG=nightmare & node cnn.js).

This will print out some additional information about what's going on:

nightmare queueing action "goto" +0ms
nightmare queueing action "evaluate" +4ms
Breaking News, U.S., World, Weather, Entertainment & Video News - CNN.com
Debug Flags

All nightmare messages

DEBUG=nightmare*

Only actions

DEBUG=nightmare:actions*

Only logs

DEBUG=nightmare:log*

Additional Resources

Tests

Automated tests for nightmare itself are run using Mocha and Chai, both of which will be installed via npm install. To run nightmare's tests, just run make test.

When the tests are done, you'll see something like this:

make test
  β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€β€€
  18 passing (1m)

Note that if you are using xvfb, make test will automatically run the tests under an xvfb-run wrapper. If you are planning to run the tests headlessly without running xvfb first, set the HEADLESS environment variable to 0.

License (MIT)

WWWWWW||WWWWWW
 W W W||W W W
      ||
    ( OO )__________
     /  |           \
    /o o|    MIT     \
    \___/||_||__||_|| *
         || ||  || ||
        _||_|| _||_||
       (__|__|(__|__|

Copyright (c) 2015 Segment.io, Inc. mailto:[email protected]

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

More Repositories

1

socrates

Write and read Markdown in real-time with anyone you want.
JavaScript
482
star
2

khaos

A super-simple way to scaffold new projects.
JavaScript
407
star
3

oh-crap

Dump a heap snapshot upon an uncaught exception
JavaScript
195
star
4

yal

Yet Another Logger β€” send logs to dedicated logging servers.
JavaScript
169
star
5

date-math

Math. functions for dates
JavaScript
166
star
6

highlight

A simple, pluggable API for syntax highlighting.
JavaScript
149
star
7

sheet

A special modal that slides out from the right or left side of the screen.
JavaScript
143
star
8

metrics

Simple and pluggable business metrics
JavaScript
91
star
9

hermes

A friendly, pluggable chat bot.
JavaScript
89
star
10

s3-dynamo-lambda

An example function showing how to count events from s3 in dynamo using lambda
JavaScript
77
star
11

herd

Herd your child processes: zero downtime reloads for node.js
JavaScript
73
star
12

nightmare-swiftly

Nightmare plugin for Swiftly.com
JavaScript
73
star
13

filter

Filter JSON streams using javascript.
Go
72
star
14

analytics.js-integrations

All of the third-party analytics.js integrations.
71
star
15

sse-stream

A Server-Sent Events transform stream
JavaScript
65
star
16

multipub

Clustered redis pub/sub
JavaScript
64
star
17

sse

A Server-Sent Events component
JavaScript
61
star
18

go-log

Go core-like logger with levels and default logger
Go
59
star
19

wildcards

Wildcard event emitter matching for nodejs
JavaScript
59
star
20

terraform-datadog

Go
57
star
21

google-spreadsheets

A nicer Google Spreadsheets API for node.
JavaScript
51
star
22

analytics-swift

The hassle-free way to add analytics to your Swift app.
Swift
50
star
23

csv

Uber simple CSV formatting/parsing for node
JavaScript
49
star
24

tableize

Generate a table-friendly object by flattening and normalizing the keys
JavaScript
48
star
25

metalsmith-templates

A metalsmith plugin to render files with templates.
JavaScript
46
star
26

yal-server

Extensible server for the YAL logger
JavaScript
43
star
27

toggle

A toggle UI element.
JavaScript
39
star
28

analytics-wordpress

[DEPRECATED] The hassle-free way to integrate analytics into any WordPress site.
PHP
39
star
29

serve

Tiny featureless Go file server – amaze.
Go
36
star
30

hn-button.com

The code behind the Hacker News button.
JavaScript
35
star
31

netx

Go package augmenting the standard net package with more basic building blocks for writing network applications.
Go
31
star
32

google-analytics

Query Google Analytics from node
JavaScript
31
star
33

go-map-path

Get map value via dot-delimited path or nil.
Go
29
star
34

koa-params

Add express style params support to koa
JavaScript
26
star
35

json_to_nsq

Publish newline-delimited JSON messages to an NSQ topic.
Go
26
star
36

loggly

Loggly client for node.js
JavaScript
26
star
37

concurrent-transform

Add some concurrency to a transform stream.
JavaScript
24
star
38

go-utils

Assortment of little Go utilities.
Go
23
star
39

integration-google-analytics

Google Analytics server-side integration
JavaScript
23
star
40

validate-schema

Validate an object against a redshift schema.
JavaScript
22
star
41

geckoboard

Geckoboard API for node.
JavaScript
22
star
42

auto-schema

Generate Redshift schemas from sample objects
JavaScript
21
star
43

backo-java

Exponential backoff for Java
Java
21
star
44

go-env

Go wrapper around os.Getenv() that returns an error instead of empty string
Go
21
star
45

tfe-state-explorer

Simple shell for exploring remote terraform enterprise state, with autocomplete.
Go
18
star
46

iphone-5-template

An HTML template for easily adding an iPhone rendering to your site, which you can then fill with your own content.
CSS
18
star
47

forward-events

Forward events from one emitter to another
JavaScript
17
star
48

go-start-nsq

Helper program to boot nsqd / nsqlookupd / nsqadmin nodes for local development
Go
17
star
49

raf-scroll

requestAnimationFrame for window scroll events
JavaScript
17
star
50

marketo-python

Marketo python library
Python
17
star
51

throttle

Tool for throttling JSON streams.
Go
17
star
52

consul-router

HTTP proxy with service discovery capabilities based on consul
Go
17
star
53

go-shipit

Proxy stdio for seamless local/remote logging
Go
17
star
54

view

Create reactive views.
JavaScript
16
star
55

analytics-magento

[DEPRECATED] The hassle-free way to integrate analytics into any Magento store.
PHP
15
star
56

superagent-csrf

Adds CSRF headers to client-side superagent requests
JavaScript
15
star
57

metrics-aws-billing

Visualize your AWS hosting costs on a dashboard
JavaScript
15
star
58

sherlock-segment

The core Segment integrations for Sherlock
JavaScript
15
star
59

co-event

Consume events from an event emitter in generators
JavaScript
14
star
60

go-mapped-csv

Write CSV mapped by column.
Go
13
star
61

errors

Simple abstraction to handle custom errors in your codebase.
JavaScript
13
star
62

loggly-cat

Stream logs to loggly via stdio.
Go
13
star
63

integration-facebook-app-events

The Facebook App Events server-side integration.
JavaScript
13
star
64

locale-string

Convert locale strings to english names and back
JavaScript
12
star
65

koa-request-id

Add a request id
JavaScript
12
star
66

monlog

MongoDB log server with human-friendly query language support
JavaScript
12
star
67

redis-lock

Node redis lock implementation for locking with a TTL.
JavaScript
12
star
68

component-jade

A plugin to transpile Jade files for the component builder.
JavaScript
12
star
69

metrics-stripe-subscriptions

Visualize your Stripe subscriptions and MRR over time on a dashboard.
JavaScript
12
star
70

form

Dynamically generate a form by adding fields from a schema.
JavaScript
12
star
71

analytics-c

The hassle-free way to integrate analytics into any C application.
C
11
star
72

khaos-node

A Khaos template for node.js modules.
JavaScript
11
star
73

npub

Publish a message to NSQ from the command-line
JavaScript
11
star
74

metrics-helpscout

Visualize your Helpscout activity on a dashboard
JavaScript
11
star
75

read-metadata

Load a JSON or YAML metadata file and return it as an object.
JavaScript
11
star
76

proxy-events

Use https://github.com/segmentio/forward-events instead.
JavaScript
10
star
77

component-sass

A plugin to transpile Sass files for the component builder.
JavaScript
10
star
78

to-transform

Create a transform stream constructor from a function
JavaScript
10
star
79

slug

The slugging function we use for Segment projects, usernames, etc.
JavaScript
10
star
80

mocha-broken

Only run previously broken mocha tests
JavaScript
10
star
81

metrics-express

Express server plugin for your business metrics
JavaScript
10
star
82

go-json-datatypes

Get JSON datatype for given value.
Go
10
star
83

go-dup

Dup an fd for a RW pipe
Go
10
star
84

segmentio.github.com

Parkour!
9
star
85

metrics-stripe-charges

Visualize Stripe charges over time.
JavaScript
9
star
86

nsq-manage

Manage nsqd instances
JavaScript
9
star
87

node-sass-wrapper

A wrapper around the command line Sass gem.
JavaScript
9
star
88

showable

Mixin for views to make them show and hide
JavaScript
9
star
89

source-postgres

Postgres database source -> Segment
Go
9
star
90

myth.io

The site for Myth, the pure CSS postprocessor.
CSS
9
star
91

metalsmith-prompt

A metalsmith plugin to prompt the user for series of answers and add them to the global metadata.
JavaScript
9
star
92

analytics-java-benchmark

Simple benchmark illustrating flushing mechanism of the java client
Java
8
star
93

hash-mod

Node module to hash strings into numbers and then mod them into buckets
JavaScript
8
star
94

gh

little github client
JavaScript
8
star
95

mockwebserver

Scriptable web server for testing HTTP clients.
Go
8
star
96

go-loggly-cli

Loggly search CLI written in Go
Go
7
star
97

node-json-to-dynamo

JavaScript
7
star
98

load-script-once

Load a Javascript file asynchronously if it hasn't been loaded.
JavaScript
7
star
99

overlay

A simple overlay UI component.
JavaScript
7
star
100

go-stathat

Stathat client with batching support.
Go
7
star