Using a smaller viewport speeds up both tests, and lets us know what
dimensions to expect in TestCaptureScreenshot.
For TestScreenshot, we can know what dimensions to expect in advance, as
we have the images in testdata.
'go test -run Screenshot' goes from ~0.9s to ~0.5s on my machine.
Finally, don't run ExampleTitle as part of 'go test', as it's slow.
The navigate sleeps can be replaced by appropriate wait actions.
Some other tests don't need any sleeps at all. This might be because
work is done synchronously now; I haven't been able to get test flakes
after hundreds of test runs with flags like -parallel=32 -count=200.
We hadn't noticed a few uncaught exceptions being received from the
browser, because the events were ignored. Start printing them via the
error logger.
The ones we were getting were caused by testAllocate running Navigate
actions when the path argument was empty. Navigating to "testdata/"
causes JS exceptions, as it's not a valid page.
Instead, leave the new target pointing at a blank document.
First, we want all of the functionality in a single package; this means
collapsing whatever is useful into the root chromedp package.
The runner package is being replaced by the Allocator interface, with a
default implementation which starts browser processes.
The client package doesn't really have a place in the new design. The
context, allocator, and browser types will handle the connection with
each browser.
Finally, the new API is context-based, hence the addition of context.go.
The tests have been modified to build and run against the new API.
- Added contrib/grab-headless_shell.sh to grab latest headless_shell
- Changed travis config to use contrib/grab-headless_shell.sh
- Reenabled TestStop since Page.stopLoading is now available with latest
available headless_shell