| 1 |
=head1 NAME |
| 2 |
|
| 3 |
AnyEvent::WebDriver - control browsers using the W3C WebDriver protocol |
| 4 |
|
| 5 |
=head1 SYNOPSIS |
| 6 |
|
| 7 |
# start geckodriver(chromedriver or any other webdriver via the shell |
| 8 |
$ geckodriver -b myfirefox/firefox --log trace --port 4444 |
| 9 |
# chromedriver --port=4444 |
| 10 |
|
| 11 |
# then use it |
| 12 |
use AnyEvent::WebDriver; |
| 13 |
|
| 14 |
# create a new webdriver object |
| 15 |
my $wd = new AnyEvent::WebDriver; |
| 16 |
|
| 17 |
# create a new session with default capabilities. |
| 18 |
$wd->new_session ({}); |
| 19 |
|
| 20 |
$wd->navigate_to ("https://duckduckgo.com/html"); |
| 21 |
my $searchbox = $wd->find_element (css => 'input[type="text"]'); |
| 22 |
|
| 23 |
$wd->element_send_keys ($searchbox => "free software"); |
| 24 |
$wd->element_click ($wd->find_element (css => 'input[type="submit"]')); |
| 25 |
|
| 26 |
# session gets autodeleted by default, so wait a bit |
| 27 |
sleep 10; |
| 28 |
|
| 29 |
# this is an example of an action sequence |
| 30 |
$wd->actions |
| 31 |
->move ($wd->find_element (...), 40, 5) |
| 32 |
->click |
| 33 |
->type ("some text") |
| 34 |
->key ("{Enter}") |
| 35 |
->perform; |
| 36 |
|
| 37 |
=head1 DESCRIPTION |
| 38 |
|
| 39 |
This module aims to implement the L<W3C |
| 40 |
WebDriver|https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/> specification which is the |
| 41 |
standardised equivalent to the Selenium WebDriver API, which in turn aims |
| 42 |
at remotely controlling web browsers such as Firefox or Chromium. |
| 43 |
|
| 44 |
One of the design goals of this module was to stay very close to the |
| 45 |
language and words used in the WebDriver specification itself, so to make |
| 46 |
most of this module, or, in fact, to make any reasonable use of this |
| 47 |
module, you would need to refer to the W3C WebDriver recommendation, which |
| 48 |
can be found L<here|https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/>: |
| 49 |
|
| 50 |
https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/ |
| 51 |
|
| 52 |
Mozilla's C<geckodriver> has had webdriver support for a long time, while |
| 53 |
C<chromedriver> only has basic and mostly undocumented webdriver support |
| 54 |
as of release 77. |
| 55 |
|
| 56 |
In Debian GNU/Linux, you can install the chromedriver for chromium |
| 57 |
via the C<chromium-driver> package. Unfortunately, there is no |
| 58 |
(working) package for geckodriver, but you can download it from |
| 59 |
L<github|https://github.com/mozilla/geckodriver/releases>. |
| 60 |
|
| 61 |
=head2 CONVENTIONS |
| 62 |
|
| 63 |
Unless otherwise stated, all delays and time differences in this module |
| 64 |
are represented as an integer number of milliseconds, which is perhaps |
| 65 |
surprising to users of my other modules but is what the WebDriver spec |
| 66 |
uses. |
| 67 |
|
| 68 |
=cut |
| 69 |
|
| 70 |
package AnyEvent::WebDriver; |
| 71 |
|
| 72 |
use common::sense; |
| 73 |
|
| 74 |
use Carp (); |
| 75 |
use AnyEvent (); |
| 76 |
use AnyEvent::HTTP (); |
| 77 |
|
| 78 |
our $VERSION = '1.2'; |
| 79 |
|
| 80 |
our $WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER = "element-6066-11e4-a52e-4f735466cecf"; |
| 81 |
our $WEB_WINDOW_IDENTIFIER = "window-fcc6-11e5-b4f8-330a88ab9d7f"; |
| 82 |
our $WEB_FRAME_IDENTIFIER = "frame-075b-4da1-b6ba-e579c2d3230a"; |
| 83 |
|
| 84 |
my $json = eval { require JSON::XS; JSON::XS:: } || do { require JSON::PP; JSON::PP:: }; |
| 85 |
$json = $json->new->utf8; |
| 86 |
|
| 87 |
$json->boolean_values (0, 1) |
| 88 |
if $json->can ("boolean_values"); |
| 89 |
|
| 90 |
sub _decode_base64 { |
| 91 |
require MIME::Base64; |
| 92 |
|
| 93 |
MIME::Base64::decode_base64 (shift) |
| 94 |
} |
| 95 |
|
| 96 |
sub req_ { |
| 97 |
my ($self, $method, $ep, $body, $cb) = @_; |
| 98 |
|
| 99 |
AnyEvent::HTTP::http_request $method => "$self->{_ep}$ep", |
| 100 |
body => $body, |
| 101 |
$self->{persistent} ? (persistent => 1) : (), |
| 102 |
$self->{proxy} eq "default" ? () : (proxy => $self->{proxy}), |
| 103 |
timeout => $self->{timeout}, |
| 104 |
headers => { "content-type" => "application/json; charset=utf-8", "cache-control" => "no-cache" }, |
| 105 |
sub { |
| 106 |
my ($res, $hdr) = @_; |
| 107 |
|
| 108 |
$res = eval { $json->decode ($res) }; |
| 109 |
$hdr->{Status} = 500 unless exists $res->{value}; |
| 110 |
|
| 111 |
$cb->($hdr->{Status}, $res->{value}); |
| 112 |
} |
| 113 |
; |
| 114 |
} |
| 115 |
|
| 116 |
sub get_ { |
| 117 |
my ($self, $ep, $cb) = @_; |
| 118 |
|
| 119 |
$self->req_ (GET => $ep, undef, $cb) |
| 120 |
} |
| 121 |
|
| 122 |
sub post_ { |
| 123 |
my ($self, $ep, $data, $cb) = @_; |
| 124 |
|
| 125 |
$self->req_ (POST => $ep, $json->encode ($data || {}), $cb) |
| 126 |
} |
| 127 |
|
| 128 |
sub delete_ { |
| 129 |
my ($self, $ep, $cb) = @_; |
| 130 |
|
| 131 |
$self->req_ (DELETE => $ep, "", $cb) |
| 132 |
} |
| 133 |
|
| 134 |
sub AUTOLOAD { |
| 135 |
our $AUTOLOAD; |
| 136 |
|
| 137 |
$_[0]->isa (__PACKAGE__) |
| 138 |
or Carp::croak "$AUTOLOAD: no such function"; |
| 139 |
|
| 140 |
(my $name = $AUTOLOAD) =~ s/^.*://; |
| 141 |
|
| 142 |
my $name_ = "$name\_"; |
| 143 |
|
| 144 |
defined &$name_ |
| 145 |
or Carp::croak "$AUTOLOAD: no such method"; |
| 146 |
|
| 147 |
my $func_ = \&$name_; |
| 148 |
|
| 149 |
*$name = sub { |
| 150 |
$func_->(@_, my $cv = AE::cv); |
| 151 |
my ($status, $res) = $cv->recv; |
| 152 |
|
| 153 |
if ($status ne "200") { |
| 154 |
my $msg; |
| 155 |
|
| 156 |
if (exists $res->{error}) { |
| 157 |
$msg = "AnyEvent::WebDriver: $res->{error}: $res->{message}"; |
| 158 |
$msg .= "\n$res->{stacktrace}caught at" if length $res->{stacktrace}; |
| 159 |
} else { |
| 160 |
$msg = "AnyEvent::WebDriver: http status $status (wrong endpoint?), caught"; |
| 161 |
} |
| 162 |
|
| 163 |
Carp::croak $msg; |
| 164 |
} |
| 165 |
|
| 166 |
$res |
| 167 |
}; |
| 168 |
|
| 169 |
goto &$name; |
| 170 |
} |
| 171 |
|
| 172 |
=head2 WEBDRIVER OBJECTS |
| 173 |
|
| 174 |
=over |
| 175 |
|
| 176 |
=item new AnyEvent::WebDriver key => value... |
| 177 |
|
| 178 |
Create a new WebDriver object. Example for a remote WebDriver connection |
| 179 |
(the only type supported at the moment): |
| 180 |
|
| 181 |
my $wd = new AnyEvent::WebDriver endpoint => "http://localhost:4444"; |
| 182 |
|
| 183 |
Supported keys are: |
| 184 |
|
| 185 |
=over |
| 186 |
|
| 187 |
=item endpoint => $string |
| 188 |
|
| 189 |
For remote connections, the endpoint to connect to (defaults to C<http://localhost:4444>). |
| 190 |
|
| 191 |
=item proxy => $proxyspec |
| 192 |
|
| 193 |
The proxy to use (same as the C<proxy> argument used by |
| 194 |
L<AnyEvent::HTTP>). The default is C<undef>, which disables proxies. To |
| 195 |
use the system-provided proxy (e.g. C<http_proxy> environment variable), |
| 196 |
specify the string C<default>. |
| 197 |
|
| 198 |
=item autodelete => $boolean |
| 199 |
|
| 200 |
If true (the default), then automatically execute C<delete_session> when |
| 201 |
the WebDriver object is destroyed with an active session. If set to a |
| 202 |
false value, then the session will continue to exist. |
| 203 |
|
| 204 |
Note that due to bugs in perl that are unlikely to get fixed, |
| 205 |
C<autodelete> is likely ineffective during global destruction and might |
| 206 |
even crash your process, so you should ensure objects go out of scope |
| 207 |
before that, or explicitly call C<delete_session>, if you want the session |
| 208 |
to be cleaned up. |
| 209 |
|
| 210 |
=item timeout => $seconds |
| 211 |
|
| 212 |
The HTTP timeout, in (fractional) seconds (default: C<300>). This timeout |
| 213 |
is reset on any activity, so it is not an overall request timeout. Also, |
| 214 |
individual requests might extend this timeout if they are known to take |
| 215 |
longer. |
| 216 |
|
| 217 |
=item persistent => C<1> | C<undef> |
| 218 |
|
| 219 |
If true (the default) then persistent connections will be used for all |
| 220 |
requests, which assumes you have a reasonably stable connection (such as |
| 221 |
to C<localhost> :) and that the WebDriver has a persistent timeout much |
| 222 |
higher than what L<AnyEvent::HTTP> uses. |
| 223 |
|
| 224 |
You can force connections to be closed for non-idempotent requests (the |
| 225 |
safe default of L<AnyEvent::HTTP>) by setting this to C<undef>. |
| 226 |
|
| 227 |
=back |
| 228 |
|
| 229 |
=cut |
| 230 |
|
| 231 |
sub new { |
| 232 |
my ($class, %kv) = @_; |
| 233 |
|
| 234 |
bless { |
| 235 |
endpoint => "http://localhost:4444", |
| 236 |
proxy => undef, |
| 237 |
persistent => 1, |
| 238 |
autodelete => 1, |
| 239 |
timeout => 300, |
| 240 |
%kv, |
| 241 |
}, $class |
| 242 |
} |
| 243 |
|
| 244 |
sub DESTROY { |
| 245 |
my ($self) = @_; |
| 246 |
|
| 247 |
$self->delete_session |
| 248 |
if exists $self->{sid} && $self->{autodelete}; |
| 249 |
} |
| 250 |
|
| 251 |
=item $al = $wd->actions |
| 252 |
|
| 253 |
Creates an action list associated with this WebDriver. See L<ACTION |
| 254 |
LISTS>, below, for full details. |
| 255 |
|
| 256 |
=cut |
| 257 |
|
| 258 |
sub actions { |
| 259 |
AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions->new (wd => $_[0]) |
| 260 |
} |
| 261 |
|
| 262 |
=item $sessionstring = $wd->save_session |
| 263 |
|
| 264 |
Save the current session in a string so it can be restored load with |
| 265 |
C<load_session>. Note that only the session data itself is stored |
| 266 |
(currently the session id and capabilities), not the endpoint information |
| 267 |
itself. |
| 268 |
|
| 269 |
The main use of this function is in conjunction with disabled |
| 270 |
C<autodelete>, to save a session to e.g., and restore it later. It could |
| 271 |
presumably used for other applications, such as using the same session |
| 272 |
from multiple processes and so on. |
| 273 |
|
| 274 |
=item $wd->load_session ($sessionstring) |
| 275 |
|
| 276 |
=item $wd->set_session ($sessionid, $capabilities) |
| 277 |
|
| 278 |
Starts using the given session, as identified by |
| 279 |
C<$sessionid>. C<$capabilities> should be the original session |
| 280 |
capabilities, although the current version of this module does not make |
| 281 |
any use of it. |
| 282 |
|
| 283 |
The C<$sessionid> is stored in C<< $wd->{sid} >> (and could be fetched |
| 284 |
form there for later use), while the capabilities are stored in C<< |
| 285 |
$wd->{capabilities} >>. |
| 286 |
|
| 287 |
=cut |
| 288 |
|
| 289 |
sub save_session { |
| 290 |
my ($self) = @_; |
| 291 |
|
| 292 |
$json->encode ([1, $self->{sid}, $self->{capabilities}]); |
| 293 |
} |
| 294 |
|
| 295 |
sub load_session { |
| 296 |
my ($self, $session) = @_; |
| 297 |
|
| 298 |
$session = $json->decode ($session); |
| 299 |
|
| 300 |
$session->[0] == 1 |
| 301 |
or Carp::croak "AnyEvent::WebDriver::load_session: session corrupted or from different version"; |
| 302 |
|
| 303 |
$self->set_session ($session->[1], $session->[2]); |
| 304 |
} |
| 305 |
|
| 306 |
sub set_session { |
| 307 |
my ($self, $sid, $caps) = @_; |
| 308 |
|
| 309 |
$self->{sid} = $sid; |
| 310 |
$self->{capabilities} = $caps; |
| 311 |
|
| 312 |
$self->{_ep} = "$self->{endpoint}/session/$self->{sid}/"; |
| 313 |
} |
| 314 |
|
| 315 |
=back |
| 316 |
|
| 317 |
=head2 SIMPLIFIED API |
| 318 |
|
| 319 |
This section documents the simplified API, which is really just a very |
| 320 |
thin wrapper around the WebDriver protocol commands. They all block the |
| 321 |
caller until the result is available (using L<AnyEvent> condvars), so must |
| 322 |
not be called from an event loop callback - see L<EVENT BASED API> for an |
| 323 |
alternative. |
| 324 |
|
| 325 |
The method names are pretty much taken directly from the W3C WebDriver |
| 326 |
specification, e.g. the request documented in the "Get All Cookies" |
| 327 |
section is implemented via the C<get_all_cookies> method. |
| 328 |
|
| 329 |
The order is the same as in the WebDriver draft at the time of this |
| 330 |
writing, and only minimal massaging is done to request parameters and |
| 331 |
results. |
| 332 |
|
| 333 |
=head3 SESSIONS |
| 334 |
|
| 335 |
=over |
| 336 |
|
| 337 |
=cut |
| 338 |
|
| 339 |
=item $wd->new_session ({ key => value... }) |
| 340 |
|
| 341 |
Try to connect to the WebDriver and initialize a new session with a |
| 342 |
"new session" command, passing the given key-value pairs as value |
| 343 |
(e.g. C<capabilities>). |
| 344 |
|
| 345 |
No session-dependent methods must be called before this function returns |
| 346 |
successfully, and only one session can be created per WebDriver object. |
| 347 |
|
| 348 |
On success, C<< $wd->{sid} >> is set to the session ID, and C<< |
| 349 |
$wd->{capabilities} >> is set to the returned capabilities. |
| 350 |
|
| 351 |
Simple example of creating a WebDriver object and a new session: |
| 352 |
|
| 353 |
my $wd = new AnyEvent::WebDriver endpoint => "http://localhost:4444"; |
| 354 |
$wd->new_session ({}); |
| 355 |
|
| 356 |
Real-world example with capability negotiation: |
| 357 |
|
| 358 |
$wd->new_session ({ |
| 359 |
capabilities => { |
| 360 |
alwaysMatch => { |
| 361 |
pageLoadStrategy => "eager", |
| 362 |
unhandledPromptBehavior => "dismiss", |
| 363 |
# proxy => { proxyType => "manual", httpProxy => "1.2.3.4:56", sslProxy => "1.2.3.4:56" }, |
| 364 |
}, |
| 365 |
firstMatch => [ |
| 366 |
{ |
| 367 |
browserName => "firefox", |
| 368 |
"moz:firefoxOptions" => { |
| 369 |
binary => "firefox/firefox", |
| 370 |
args => ["-devtools", "-headless"], |
| 371 |
prefs => { |
| 372 |
"dom.webnotifications.enabled" => \0, |
| 373 |
"dom.push.enabled" => \0, |
| 374 |
"dom.disable_beforeunload" => \1, |
| 375 |
"browser.link.open_newwindow" => 3, |
| 376 |
"browser.link.open_newwindow.restrictions" => 0, |
| 377 |
"dom.popup_allowed_events" => "", |
| 378 |
"dom.disable_open_during_load" => \1, |
| 379 |
}, |
| 380 |
}, |
| 381 |
}, |
| 382 |
{ |
| 383 |
browserName => "chrome", |
| 384 |
"goog:chromeOptions" => { |
| 385 |
binary => "/bin/chromium", |
| 386 |
args => ["--no-sandbox", "--disable-blink-features=AutomationControlled", "--headless"], |
| 387 |
excludeSwitches => ["enable-automation"], |
| 388 |
useAutomationExtension => \0, |
| 389 |
prefs => { |
| 390 |
# ... |
| 391 |
}, |
| 392 |
}, |
| 393 |
}, |
| 394 |
{ |
| 395 |
# generic fallback |
| 396 |
}, |
| 397 |
], |
| 398 |
|
| 399 |
}, |
| 400 |
}); |
| 401 |
|
| 402 |
Firefox-specific capability documentation can be found L<on |
| 403 |
MDN|https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/WebDriver/Capabilities>, |
| 404 |
Chrome-specific capability documentation might be found |
| 405 |
L<here|http://chromedriver.chromium.org/capabilities>, but the latest |
| 406 |
release at the time of this writing (chromedriver 77) has essentially |
| 407 |
no documentation about webdriver capabilities (even MDN has better |
| 408 |
documentation about chromwedriver!) |
| 409 |
|
| 410 |
If you have URLs for Safari/IE/Edge etc. capabilities, feel free to tell |
| 411 |
me about them. |
| 412 |
|
| 413 |
=cut |
| 414 |
|
| 415 |
sub new_session_ { |
| 416 |
my ($self, $kv, $cb) = @_; |
| 417 |
|
| 418 |
$kv->{capabilities} ||= {}; # required by protocol |
| 419 |
|
| 420 |
local $self->{_ep} = "$self->{endpoint}/"; |
| 421 |
$self->post_ (session => $kv, sub { |
| 422 |
my ($status, $res) = @_; |
| 423 |
|
| 424 |
exists $res->{capabilities} |
| 425 |
or $status = "500"; # blasted chromedriver |
| 426 |
|
| 427 |
$self->set_session ($res->{sessionId}, $res->{capabilities}) |
| 428 |
if $status eq "200"; |
| 429 |
|
| 430 |
$cb->($status, $res); |
| 431 |
}); |
| 432 |
} |
| 433 |
|
| 434 |
=item $wd->delete_session |
| 435 |
|
| 436 |
Deletes the session - the WebDriver object must not be used after this |
| 437 |
call (except for calling this method). |
| 438 |
|
| 439 |
This method is always safe to call and will not do anything if there is no |
| 440 |
active session. |
| 441 |
|
| 442 |
=cut |
| 443 |
|
| 444 |
sub delete_session_ { |
| 445 |
my ($self, $cb) = @_; |
| 446 |
|
| 447 |
my $sid = delete $self->{sid}; |
| 448 |
delete $self->{capoabilities}; |
| 449 |
|
| 450 |
return unless defined $sid; |
| 451 |
|
| 452 |
local $self->{_ep} = "$self->{endpoint}/session/$sid"; |
| 453 |
$self->delete_ ("" => $cb); |
| 454 |
} |
| 455 |
|
| 456 |
=item $timeouts = $wd->get_timeouts |
| 457 |
|
| 458 |
Get the current timeouts, e.g.: |
| 459 |
|
| 460 |
my $timeouts = $wd->get_timeouts; |
| 461 |
=> { implicit => 0, pageLoad => 300000, script => 30000 } |
| 462 |
|
| 463 |
=item $wd->set_timeouts ($timeouts) |
| 464 |
|
| 465 |
Sets one or more timeouts, e.g.: |
| 466 |
|
| 467 |
$wd->set_timeouts ({ script => 60000 }); |
| 468 |
|
| 469 |
=cut |
| 470 |
|
| 471 |
sub get_timeouts_ { |
| 472 |
$_[0]->get_ (timeouts => $_[1], $_[2]); |
| 473 |
} |
| 474 |
|
| 475 |
sub set_timeouts_ { |
| 476 |
$_[0]->post_ (timeouts => $_[1], $_[2], $_[3]); |
| 477 |
} |
| 478 |
|
| 479 |
=back |
| 480 |
|
| 481 |
=head3 NAVIGATION |
| 482 |
|
| 483 |
=over |
| 484 |
|
| 485 |
=cut |
| 486 |
|
| 487 |
=item $wd->navigate_to ($url) |
| 488 |
|
| 489 |
Navigates to the specified URL. |
| 490 |
|
| 491 |
=item $url = $wd->get_current_url |
| 492 |
|
| 493 |
Queries the current page URL as set by C<navigate_to>. |
| 494 |
|
| 495 |
=cut |
| 496 |
|
| 497 |
sub navigate_to_ { |
| 498 |
$_[0]->post_ (url => { url => "$_[1]" }, $_[2]); |
| 499 |
} |
| 500 |
|
| 501 |
sub get_current_url_ { |
| 502 |
$_[0]->get_ (url => $_[1]) |
| 503 |
} |
| 504 |
|
| 505 |
=item $wd->back |
| 506 |
|
| 507 |
The equivalent of pressing "back" in the browser. |
| 508 |
|
| 509 |
=item $wd->forward |
| 510 |
|
| 511 |
The equivalent of pressing "forward" in the browser. |
| 512 |
|
| 513 |
=item $wd->refresh |
| 514 |
|
| 515 |
The equivalent of pressing "refresh" in the browser. |
| 516 |
|
| 517 |
=cut |
| 518 |
|
| 519 |
sub back_ { |
| 520 |
$_[0]->post_ (back => undef, $_[1]); |
| 521 |
} |
| 522 |
|
| 523 |
sub forward_ { |
| 524 |
$_[0]->post_ (forward => undef, $_[1]); |
| 525 |
} |
| 526 |
|
| 527 |
sub refresh_ { |
| 528 |
$_[0]->post_ (refresh => undef, $_[1]); |
| 529 |
} |
| 530 |
|
| 531 |
=item $title = $wd->get_title |
| 532 |
|
| 533 |
Returns the current document title. |
| 534 |
|
| 535 |
=cut |
| 536 |
|
| 537 |
sub get_title_ { |
| 538 |
$_[0]->get_ (title => $_[1]); |
| 539 |
} |
| 540 |
|
| 541 |
=back |
| 542 |
|
| 543 |
=head3 COMMAND CONTEXTS |
| 544 |
|
| 545 |
=over |
| 546 |
|
| 547 |
=cut |
| 548 |
|
| 549 |
=item $handle = $wd->get_window_handle |
| 550 |
|
| 551 |
Returns the current window handle. |
| 552 |
|
| 553 |
=item $wd->close_window |
| 554 |
|
| 555 |
Closes the current browsing context. |
| 556 |
|
| 557 |
=item $wd->switch_to_window ($handle) |
| 558 |
|
| 559 |
Changes the current browsing context to the given window. |
| 560 |
|
| 561 |
=cut |
| 562 |
|
| 563 |
sub get_window_handle_ { |
| 564 |
$_[0]->get_ (window => $_[1]); |
| 565 |
} |
| 566 |
|
| 567 |
sub close_window_ { |
| 568 |
$_[0]->delete_ (window => $_[1]); |
| 569 |
} |
| 570 |
|
| 571 |
sub switch_to_window_ { |
| 572 |
$_[0]->post_ (window => { handle => "$_[1]" }, $_[2]); |
| 573 |
} |
| 574 |
|
| 575 |
=item $handles = $wd->get_window_handles |
| 576 |
|
| 577 |
Return the current window handles as an array-ref of handle IDs. |
| 578 |
|
| 579 |
=cut |
| 580 |
|
| 581 |
sub get_window_handles_ { |
| 582 |
$_[0]->get_ ("window/handles" => $_[1]); |
| 583 |
} |
| 584 |
|
| 585 |
=item $handles = $wd->switch_to_frame ($frame) |
| 586 |
|
| 587 |
Switch to the given frame identified by C<$frame>, which must be either |
| 588 |
C<undef> to go back to the top-level browsing context, an integer to |
| 589 |
select the nth subframe, or an element object. |
| 590 |
|
| 591 |
=cut |
| 592 |
|
| 593 |
sub switch_to_frame_ { |
| 594 |
$_[0]->post_ (frame => { id => "$_[1]" }, $_[2]); |
| 595 |
} |
| 596 |
|
| 597 |
=item $handles = $wd->switch_to_parent_frame |
| 598 |
|
| 599 |
Switch to the parent frame. |
| 600 |
|
| 601 |
=cut |
| 602 |
|
| 603 |
sub switch_to_parent_frame_ { |
| 604 |
$_[0]->post_ ("frame/parent" => undef, $_[1]); |
| 605 |
} |
| 606 |
|
| 607 |
=item $rect = $wd->get_window_rect |
| 608 |
|
| 609 |
Return the current window rect(angle), e.g.: |
| 610 |
|
| 611 |
$rect = $wd->get_window_rect |
| 612 |
=> { height => 1040, width => 540, x => 0, y => 0 } |
| 613 |
|
| 614 |
=item $wd->set_window_rect ($rect) |
| 615 |
|
| 616 |
Sets the window rect(angle), e.g.: |
| 617 |
|
| 618 |
$wd->set_window_rect ({ width => 780, height => 560 }); |
| 619 |
$wd->set_window_rect ({ x => 0, y => 0, width => 780, height => 560 }); |
| 620 |
|
| 621 |
=cut |
| 622 |
|
| 623 |
sub get_window_rect_ { |
| 624 |
$_[0]->get_ ("window/rect" => $_[1]); |
| 625 |
} |
| 626 |
|
| 627 |
sub set_window_rect_ { |
| 628 |
$_[0]->post_ ("window/rect" => $_[1], $_[2]); |
| 629 |
} |
| 630 |
|
| 631 |
=item $wd->maximize_window |
| 632 |
|
| 633 |
=item $wd->minimize_window |
| 634 |
|
| 635 |
=item $wd->fullscreen_window |
| 636 |
|
| 637 |
Changes the window size by either maximising, minimising or making it |
| 638 |
fullscreen. In my experience, this will timeout if no window manager is |
| 639 |
running. |
| 640 |
|
| 641 |
=cut |
| 642 |
|
| 643 |
sub maximize_window_ { |
| 644 |
$_[0]->post_ ("window/maximize" => undef, $_[1]); |
| 645 |
} |
| 646 |
|
| 647 |
sub minimize_window_ { |
| 648 |
$_[0]->post_ ("window/minimize" => undef, $_[1]); |
| 649 |
} |
| 650 |
|
| 651 |
sub fullscreen_window_ { |
| 652 |
$_[0]->post_ ("window/fullscreen" => undef, $_[1]); |
| 653 |
} |
| 654 |
|
| 655 |
=back |
| 656 |
|
| 657 |
=head3 ELEMENT RETRIEVAL |
| 658 |
|
| 659 |
To reduce typing and memory strain, the element finding functions accept |
| 660 |
some shorter and hopefully easier to remember aliases for the standard |
| 661 |
locator strategy values, as follows: |
| 662 |
|
| 663 |
Alias Locator Strategy |
| 664 |
css css selector |
| 665 |
link link text |
| 666 |
substr partial link text |
| 667 |
tag tag name |
| 668 |
|
| 669 |
=over |
| 670 |
|
| 671 |
=cut |
| 672 |
|
| 673 |
our %USING = ( |
| 674 |
css => "css selector", |
| 675 |
link => "link text", |
| 676 |
substr => "partial link text", |
| 677 |
tag => "tag name", |
| 678 |
); |
| 679 |
|
| 680 |
sub _using($) { |
| 681 |
using => $USING{$_[0]} // "$_[0]" |
| 682 |
} |
| 683 |
|
| 684 |
=item $element = $wd->find_element ($locator_strategy, $selector) |
| 685 |
|
| 686 |
Finds the first element specified by the given selector and returns its |
| 687 |
element object. Raises an error when no element was found. |
| 688 |
|
| 689 |
Examples showing all standard locator strategies: |
| 690 |
|
| 691 |
$element = $wd->find_element ("css selector" => "body a"); |
| 692 |
$element = $wd->find_element ("link text" => "Click Here For Porn"); |
| 693 |
$element = $wd->find_element ("partial link text" => "orn"); |
| 694 |
$element = $wd->find_element ("tag name" => "input"); |
| 695 |
$element = $wd->find_element ("xpath" => '//input[@type="text"]'); |
| 696 |
=> e.g. { "element-6066-11e4-a52e-4f735466cecf" => "decddca8-5986-4e1d-8c93-efe952505a5f" } |
| 697 |
|
| 698 |
Same examples using aliases provided by this module: |
| 699 |
|
| 700 |
$element = $wd->find_element (css => "body a"); |
| 701 |
$element = $wd->find_element (link => "Click Here For Porn"); |
| 702 |
$element = $wd->find_element (substr => "orn"); |
| 703 |
$element = $wd->find_element (tag => "input"); |
| 704 |
|
| 705 |
=item $elements = $wd->find_elements ($locator_strategy, $selector) |
| 706 |
|
| 707 |
As above, but returns an arrayref of all found element objects. |
| 708 |
|
| 709 |
=item $element = $wd->find_element_from_element ($element, $locator_strategy, $selector) |
| 710 |
|
| 711 |
Like C<find_element>, but looks only inside the specified C<$element>. |
| 712 |
|
| 713 |
=item $elements = $wd->find_elements_from_element ($element, $locator_strategy, $selector) |
| 714 |
|
| 715 |
Like C<find_elements>, but looks only inside the specified C<$element>. |
| 716 |
|
| 717 |
my $head = $wd->find_element ("tag name" => "head"); |
| 718 |
my $links = $wd->find_elements_from_element ($head, "tag name", "link"); |
| 719 |
|
| 720 |
=item $element = $wd->get_active_element |
| 721 |
|
| 722 |
Returns the active element. |
| 723 |
|
| 724 |
=cut |
| 725 |
|
| 726 |
sub find_element_ { |
| 727 |
$_[0]->post_ (element => { _using $_[1], value => "$_[2]" }, $_[3]); |
| 728 |
} |
| 729 |
|
| 730 |
sub find_elements_ { |
| 731 |
$_[0]->post_ (elements => { _using $_[1], value => "$_[2]" }, $_[3]); |
| 732 |
} |
| 733 |
|
| 734 |
sub find_element_from_element_ { |
| 735 |
$_[0]->post_ ("element/$_[1]/element" => { _using $_[2], value => "$_[3]" }, $_[4]); |
| 736 |
} |
| 737 |
|
| 738 |
sub find_elements_from_element_ { |
| 739 |
$_[0]->post_ ("element/$_[1]/elements" => { _using $_[2], value => "$_[3]" }, $_[4]); |
| 740 |
} |
| 741 |
|
| 742 |
sub get_active_element_ { |
| 743 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/active" => $_[1]); |
| 744 |
} |
| 745 |
|
| 746 |
=back |
| 747 |
|
| 748 |
=head3 ELEMENT STATE |
| 749 |
|
| 750 |
=over |
| 751 |
|
| 752 |
=cut |
| 753 |
|
| 754 |
=item $bool = $wd->is_element_selected |
| 755 |
|
| 756 |
Returns whether the given input or option element is selected or not. |
| 757 |
|
| 758 |
=item $string = $wd->get_element_attribute ($element, $name) |
| 759 |
|
| 760 |
Returns the value of the given attribute. |
| 761 |
|
| 762 |
=item $string = $wd->get_element_property ($element, $name) |
| 763 |
|
| 764 |
Returns the value of the given property. |
| 765 |
|
| 766 |
=item $string = $wd->get_element_css_value ($element, $name) |
| 767 |
|
| 768 |
Returns the value of the given CSS value. |
| 769 |
|
| 770 |
=item $string = $wd->get_element_text ($element) |
| 771 |
|
| 772 |
Returns the (rendered) text content of the given element. |
| 773 |
|
| 774 |
=item $string = $wd->get_element_tag_name ($element) |
| 775 |
|
| 776 |
Returns the tag of the given element. |
| 777 |
|
| 778 |
=item $rect = $wd->get_element_rect ($element) |
| 779 |
|
| 780 |
Returns the element rect(angle) of the given element. |
| 781 |
|
| 782 |
=item $bool = $wd->is_element_enabled |
| 783 |
|
| 784 |
Returns whether the element is enabled or not. |
| 785 |
|
| 786 |
=cut |
| 787 |
|
| 788 |
sub is_element_selected_ { |
| 789 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/selected" => $_[2]); |
| 790 |
} |
| 791 |
|
| 792 |
sub get_element_attribute_ { |
| 793 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/attribute/$_[2]" => $_[3]); |
| 794 |
} |
| 795 |
|
| 796 |
sub get_element_property_ { |
| 797 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/property/$_[2]" => $_[3]); |
| 798 |
} |
| 799 |
|
| 800 |
sub get_element_css_value_ { |
| 801 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/css/$_[2]" => $_[3]); |
| 802 |
} |
| 803 |
|
| 804 |
sub get_element_text_ { |
| 805 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/text" => $_[2]); |
| 806 |
} |
| 807 |
|
| 808 |
sub get_element_tag_name_ { |
| 809 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/name" => $_[2]); |
| 810 |
} |
| 811 |
|
| 812 |
sub get_element_rect_ { |
| 813 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/rect" => $_[2]); |
| 814 |
} |
| 815 |
|
| 816 |
sub is_element_enabled_ { |
| 817 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/enabled" => $_[2]); |
| 818 |
} |
| 819 |
|
| 820 |
=back |
| 821 |
|
| 822 |
=head3 ELEMENT INTERACTION |
| 823 |
|
| 824 |
=over |
| 825 |
|
| 826 |
=cut |
| 827 |
|
| 828 |
=item $wd->element_click ($element) |
| 829 |
|
| 830 |
Clicks the given element. |
| 831 |
|
| 832 |
=item $wd->element_clear ($element) |
| 833 |
|
| 834 |
Clear the contents of the given element. |
| 835 |
|
| 836 |
=item $wd->element_send_keys ($element, $text) |
| 837 |
|
| 838 |
Sends the given text as key events to the given element. Key input state |
| 839 |
can be cleared by embedding C<\x{e000}> in C<$text>. Presumably, you can |
| 840 |
embed modifiers using their unicode codepoints, but the specification is |
| 841 |
less than clear to mein this area. |
| 842 |
|
| 843 |
=cut |
| 844 |
|
| 845 |
sub element_click_ { |
| 846 |
$_[0]->post_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/click" => undef, $_[2]); |
| 847 |
} |
| 848 |
|
| 849 |
sub element_clear_ { |
| 850 |
$_[0]->post_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/clear" => undef, $_[2]); |
| 851 |
} |
| 852 |
|
| 853 |
sub element_send_keys_ { |
| 854 |
$_[0]->post_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/value" => { text => "$_[2]" }, $_[3]); |
| 855 |
} |
| 856 |
|
| 857 |
=back |
| 858 |
|
| 859 |
=head3 DOCUMENT HANDLING |
| 860 |
|
| 861 |
=over |
| 862 |
|
| 863 |
=cut |
| 864 |
|
| 865 |
=item $source = $wd->get_page_source |
| 866 |
|
| 867 |
Returns the (HTML/XML) page source of the current document. |
| 868 |
|
| 869 |
=item $results = $wd->execute_script ($javascript, $args) |
| 870 |
|
| 871 |
Synchronously execute the given script with given arguments and return its |
| 872 |
results (C<$args> can be C<undef> if no arguments are wanted/needed). |
| 873 |
|
| 874 |
$ten = $wd->execute_script ("return arguments[0]+arguments[1]", [3, 7]); |
| 875 |
|
| 876 |
=item $results = $wd->execute_async_script ($javascript, $args) |
| 877 |
|
| 878 |
Similar to C<execute_script>, but doesn't wait for script to return, but |
| 879 |
instead waits for the script to call its last argument, which is added to |
| 880 |
C<$args> automatically. |
| 881 |
|
| 882 |
$twenty = $wd->execute_async_script ("arguments[0](20)", undef); |
| 883 |
|
| 884 |
=cut |
| 885 |
|
| 886 |
sub get_page_source_ { |
| 887 |
$_[0]->get_ (source => $_[1]); |
| 888 |
} |
| 889 |
|
| 890 |
sub execute_script_ { |
| 891 |
$_[0]->post_ ("execute/sync" => { script => "$_[1]", args => $_[2] || [] }, $_[3]); |
| 892 |
} |
| 893 |
|
| 894 |
sub execute_async_script_ { |
| 895 |
$_[0]->post_ ("execute/async" => { script => "$_[1]", args => $_[2] || [] }, $_[3]); |
| 896 |
} |
| 897 |
|
| 898 |
=back |
| 899 |
|
| 900 |
=head3 COOKIES |
| 901 |
|
| 902 |
=over |
| 903 |
|
| 904 |
=cut |
| 905 |
|
| 906 |
=item $cookies = $wd->get_all_cookies |
| 907 |
|
| 908 |
Returns all cookies, as an arrayref of hashrefs. |
| 909 |
|
| 910 |
# google surely sets a lot of cookies without my consent |
| 911 |
$wd->navigate_to ("http://google.com"); |
| 912 |
use Data::Dump; |
| 913 |
ddx $wd->get_all_cookies; |
| 914 |
|
| 915 |
=item $cookie = $wd->get_named_cookie ($name) |
| 916 |
|
| 917 |
Returns a single cookie as a hashref. |
| 918 |
|
| 919 |
=item $wd->add_cookie ($cookie) |
| 920 |
|
| 921 |
Adds the given cookie hashref. |
| 922 |
|
| 923 |
=item $wd->delete_cookie ($name) |
| 924 |
|
| 925 |
Delete the named cookie. |
| 926 |
|
| 927 |
=item $wd->delete_all_cookies |
| 928 |
|
| 929 |
Delete all cookies. |
| 930 |
|
| 931 |
=cut |
| 932 |
|
| 933 |
sub get_all_cookies_ { |
| 934 |
$_[0]->get_ (cookie => $_[1]); |
| 935 |
} |
| 936 |
|
| 937 |
sub get_named_cookie_ { |
| 938 |
$_[0]->get_ ("cookie/$_[1]" => $_[2]); |
| 939 |
} |
| 940 |
|
| 941 |
sub add_cookie_ { |
| 942 |
$_[0]->post_ (cookie => { cookie => $_[1] }, $_[2]); |
| 943 |
} |
| 944 |
|
| 945 |
sub delete_cookie_ { |
| 946 |
$_[0]->delete_ ("cookie/$_[1]" => $_[2]); |
| 947 |
} |
| 948 |
|
| 949 |
sub delete_all_cookies_ { |
| 950 |
$_[0]->delete_ (cookie => $_[2]); |
| 951 |
} |
| 952 |
|
| 953 |
=back |
| 954 |
|
| 955 |
=head3 ACTIONS |
| 956 |
|
| 957 |
=over |
| 958 |
|
| 959 |
=cut |
| 960 |
|
| 961 |
=item $wd->perform_actions ($actions) |
| 962 |
|
| 963 |
Perform the given actions (an arrayref of action specifications simulating |
| 964 |
user activity, or an C<AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions> object). For further |
| 965 |
details, read the spec or the section L<ACTION LISTS>, below. |
| 966 |
|
| 967 |
An example to get you started (see the next example for a mostly |
| 968 |
equivalent example using the C<AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions> helper API): |
| 969 |
|
| 970 |
$wd->navigate_to ("https://duckduckgo.com/html"); |
| 971 |
my $input = $wd->find_element ("css selector", 'input[type="text"]'); |
| 972 |
$wd->perform_actions ([ |
| 973 |
{ |
| 974 |
id => "myfatfinger", |
| 975 |
type => "pointer", |
| 976 |
pointerType => "touch", |
| 977 |
actions => [ |
| 978 |
{ type => "pointerMove", duration => 100, origin => $input, x => 40, y => 5 }, |
| 979 |
{ type => "pointerDown", button => 0 }, |
| 980 |
{ type => "pause", duration => 40 }, |
| 981 |
{ type => "pointerUp", button => 0 }, |
| 982 |
], |
| 983 |
}, |
| 984 |
{ |
| 985 |
id => "mykeyboard", |
| 986 |
type => "key", |
| 987 |
actions => [ |
| 988 |
{ type => "pause" }, |
| 989 |
{ type => "pause" }, |
| 990 |
{ type => "pause" }, |
| 991 |
{ type => "pause" }, |
| 992 |
{ type => "keyDown", value => "a" }, |
| 993 |
{ type => "pause", duration => 100 }, |
| 994 |
{ type => "keyUp", value => "a" }, |
| 995 |
{ type => "pause", duration => 100 }, |
| 996 |
{ type => "keyDown", value => "b" }, |
| 997 |
{ type => "pause", duration => 100 }, |
| 998 |
{ type => "keyUp", value => "b" }, |
| 999 |
{ type => "pause", duration => 2000 }, |
| 1000 |
{ type => "keyDown", value => "\x{E007}" }, # enter |
| 1001 |
{ type => "pause", duration => 100 }, |
| 1002 |
{ type => "keyUp", value => "\x{E007}" }, # enter |
| 1003 |
{ type => "pause", duration => 5000 }, |
| 1004 |
], |
| 1005 |
}, |
| 1006 |
]); |
| 1007 |
|
| 1008 |
And here is essentially the same (except for fewer pauses) example as |
| 1009 |
above, using the much simpler C<AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions> API: |
| 1010 |
|
| 1011 |
$wd->navigate_to ("https://duckduckgo.com/html"); |
| 1012 |
my $input = $wd->find_element ("css selector", 'input[type="text"]'); |
| 1013 |
$wd->actions |
| 1014 |
->move ($input, 40, 5, "touch1") |
| 1015 |
->click |
| 1016 |
->key ("a") |
| 1017 |
->key ("b") |
| 1018 |
->pause (2000) # so you can watch leisurely |
| 1019 |
->key ("{Enter}") |
| 1020 |
->pause (5000) # so you can see the result |
| 1021 |
->perform; |
| 1022 |
|
| 1023 |
=item $wd->release_actions |
| 1024 |
|
| 1025 |
Release all keys and pointer buttons currently depressed. |
| 1026 |
|
| 1027 |
=cut |
| 1028 |
|
| 1029 |
sub perform_actions_ { |
| 1030 |
if (UNIVERSAL::isa $_[1], AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions::) { |
| 1031 |
my ($actions, $duration) = $_[1]->compile; |
| 1032 |
local $_[0]{timeout} = $_[0]{timeout} + $duration * 1e-3; |
| 1033 |
$_[0]->post_ (actions => { actions => $actions }, $_[2]); |
| 1034 |
} else { |
| 1035 |
$_[0]->post_ (actions => { actions => $_[1] }, $_[2]); |
| 1036 |
} |
| 1037 |
} |
| 1038 |
|
| 1039 |
sub release_actions_ { |
| 1040 |
$_[0]->delete_ (actions => $_[1]); |
| 1041 |
} |
| 1042 |
|
| 1043 |
=back |
| 1044 |
|
| 1045 |
=head3 USER PROMPTS |
| 1046 |
|
| 1047 |
=over |
| 1048 |
|
| 1049 |
=cut |
| 1050 |
|
| 1051 |
=item $wd->dismiss_alert |
| 1052 |
|
| 1053 |
Dismiss a simple dialog, if present. |
| 1054 |
|
| 1055 |
=item $wd->accept_alert |
| 1056 |
|
| 1057 |
Accept a simple dialog, if present. |
| 1058 |
|
| 1059 |
=item $text = $wd->get_alert_text |
| 1060 |
|
| 1061 |
Returns the text of any simple dialog. |
| 1062 |
|
| 1063 |
=item $text = $wd->send_alert_text |
| 1064 |
|
| 1065 |
Fills in the user prompt with the given text. |
| 1066 |
|
| 1067 |
|
| 1068 |
=cut |
| 1069 |
|
| 1070 |
sub dismiss_alert_ { |
| 1071 |
$_[0]->post_ ("alert/dismiss" => undef, $_[1]); |
| 1072 |
} |
| 1073 |
|
| 1074 |
sub accept_alert_ { |
| 1075 |
$_[0]->post_ ("alert/accept" => undef, $_[1]); |
| 1076 |
} |
| 1077 |
|
| 1078 |
sub get_alert_text_ { |
| 1079 |
$_[0]->get_ ("alert/text" => $_[1]); |
| 1080 |
} |
| 1081 |
|
| 1082 |
sub send_alert_text_ { |
| 1083 |
$_[0]->post_ ("alert/text" => { text => "$_[1]" }, $_[2]); |
| 1084 |
} |
| 1085 |
|
| 1086 |
=back |
| 1087 |
|
| 1088 |
=head3 SCREEN CAPTURE |
| 1089 |
|
| 1090 |
=over |
| 1091 |
|
| 1092 |
=cut |
| 1093 |
|
| 1094 |
=item $wd->take_screenshot |
| 1095 |
|
| 1096 |
Create a screenshot, returning it as a PNG image. To decode and save, you |
| 1097 |
could do something like: |
| 1098 |
|
| 1099 |
use MIME::Base64 (); |
| 1100 |
|
| 1101 |
my $screenshot = $wd->take_screenshot; |
| 1102 |
|
| 1103 |
open my $fh, ">", "screenshot.png" or die "screenshot.png: $!\n"; |
| 1104 |
|
| 1105 |
syswrite $fh, MIME::Base64::decode_base64 $screenshot; |
| 1106 |
|
| 1107 |
=item $wd->take_element_screenshot ($element) |
| 1108 |
|
| 1109 |
Similar to C<take_screenshot>, but only takes a screenshot of the bounding |
| 1110 |
box of a single element. |
| 1111 |
|
| 1112 |
Compatibility note: As of chrome version 80, I found that the screenshot |
| 1113 |
scaling is often wrong (the screenshot is much smaller than the element |
| 1114 |
normally displays) unless chrome runs in headless mode. The spec does |
| 1115 |
allow for any form of scaling, so this is not strictly a bug in chrome, |
| 1116 |
but of course it diminishes trhe screenshot functionality. |
| 1117 |
|
| 1118 |
=cut |
| 1119 |
|
| 1120 |
sub take_screenshot_ { |
| 1121 |
my $cb = pop; push @_, sub { $cb->($_[0], _decode_base64 $_[1]) }; |
| 1122 |
$_[0]->get_ (screenshot => $_[1]); |
| 1123 |
} |
| 1124 |
|
| 1125 |
sub take_element_screenshot_ { |
| 1126 |
my $cb = pop; push @_, sub { $cb->($_[0], _decode_base64 $_[1]) }; |
| 1127 |
$_[0]->get_ ("element/$_[1]{$WEB_ELEMENT_IDENTIFIER}/screenshot" => $_[2]); |
| 1128 |
} |
| 1129 |
|
| 1130 |
=back |
| 1131 |
|
| 1132 |
=head3 PRINT |
| 1133 |
|
| 1134 |
=over |
| 1135 |
|
| 1136 |
=cut |
| 1137 |
|
| 1138 |
=item $wd->print_page (key => value...) |
| 1139 |
|
| 1140 |
Create a printed version of the document, returning it as a PDF document |
| 1141 |
encoded as base64. See C<take_screenshot> for an example on how to decode |
| 1142 |
and save such a string. |
| 1143 |
|
| 1144 |
This command takes a lot of optional parameters, see L<the print |
| 1145 |
section|https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver2/#print> of the WebDriver |
| 1146 |
specification for details. |
| 1147 |
|
| 1148 |
This command is taken from a draft document, so it might change in the |
| 1149 |
future. |
| 1150 |
|
| 1151 |
=cut |
| 1152 |
|
| 1153 |
sub print_page { |
| 1154 |
my $cb = pop; push @_, sub { $cb->($_[0], _decode_base64 $_[1]) }; |
| 1155 |
$_[0]->post_ (print => { @_ }); |
| 1156 |
} |
| 1157 |
|
| 1158 |
=head2 ACTION LISTS |
| 1159 |
|
| 1160 |
Action lists can be quite complicated. Or at least it took a while for |
| 1161 |
me to twist my head around them. Basically, an action list consists of a |
| 1162 |
number of sources representing devices (such as a finger, a mouse, a pen |
| 1163 |
or a keyboard) and a list of actions for each source, in a timeline. |
| 1164 |
|
| 1165 |
An action can be a key press, a pointer move or a pause (time delay). |
| 1166 |
|
| 1167 |
While you can provide these action lists manually, it is (hopefully) less |
| 1168 |
cumbersome to use the API described in this section to create them. |
| 1169 |
|
| 1170 |
The basic process of creating and performing actions is to create a new |
| 1171 |
action list, adding action sources, followed by adding actions. Finally |
| 1172 |
you would C<perform> those actions on the WebDriver. |
| 1173 |
|
| 1174 |
Most methods here are designed to chain, i.e. they return the web actions |
| 1175 |
object, to simplify multiple calls. |
| 1176 |
|
| 1177 |
Also, while actions from different sources can happen "at the same time" |
| 1178 |
in the WebDriver protocol, this class by default ensures that actions will |
| 1179 |
execute in the order specified. |
| 1180 |
|
| 1181 |
For example, to simulate a mouse click to an input element, followed by |
| 1182 |
entering some text and pressing enter, you can use this: |
| 1183 |
|
| 1184 |
$wd->actions |
| 1185 |
->click (0, 100) |
| 1186 |
->type ("some text") |
| 1187 |
->key ("{Enter}") |
| 1188 |
->perform; |
| 1189 |
|
| 1190 |
By default, C<keyboard> and C<mouse> input sources are provided and |
| 1191 |
used. You can create your own sources and use them when adding events. The |
| 1192 |
above example could be more verbosely written like this: |
| 1193 |
|
| 1194 |
$wd->actions |
| 1195 |
->source ("mouse", "pointer", pointerType => "mouse") |
| 1196 |
->source ("kbd", "key") |
| 1197 |
->click (0, 100, "mouse") |
| 1198 |
->type ("some text", "kbd") |
| 1199 |
->key ("{Enter}", "kbd") |
| 1200 |
->perform; |
| 1201 |
|
| 1202 |
When you specify the event source explicitly it will switch the current |
| 1203 |
"focus" for this class of device (all keyboards are in one class, all |
| 1204 |
pointer-like devices such as mice/fingers/pens are in one class), so you |
| 1205 |
don't have to specify the source for subsequent actions that are on the |
| 1206 |
same class. |
| 1207 |
|
| 1208 |
When you use the sources C<keyboard>, C<mouse>, C<touch1>..C<touch3>, |
| 1209 |
C<pen> without defining them, then a suitable default source will be |
| 1210 |
created for them. |
| 1211 |
|
| 1212 |
=over 4 |
| 1213 |
|
| 1214 |
=cut |
| 1215 |
|
| 1216 |
package AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions; |
| 1217 |
|
| 1218 |
=item $al = new AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions |
| 1219 |
|
| 1220 |
Create a new empty action list object. More often you would use the C<< |
| 1221 |
$wd->action_list >> method to create one that is already associated with |
| 1222 |
a given web driver. |
| 1223 |
|
| 1224 |
=cut |
| 1225 |
|
| 1226 |
sub new { |
| 1227 |
my ($class, %kv) = @_; |
| 1228 |
|
| 1229 |
$kv{last_kbd} = "keyboard"; |
| 1230 |
$kv{last_ptr} = "mouse"; |
| 1231 |
|
| 1232 |
bless \%kv, $class |
| 1233 |
} |
| 1234 |
|
| 1235 |
=item $al = $al->source ($id, $type, key => value...) |
| 1236 |
|
| 1237 |
The first time you call this with a given ID, this defines the event |
| 1238 |
source using the extra parameters. Subsequent calls merely switch the |
| 1239 |
current source for its event class. |
| 1240 |
|
| 1241 |
It's not an error to define built-in sources (such as C<keyboard> or |
| 1242 |
C<touch1>) differently then the defaults. |
| 1243 |
|
| 1244 |
Example: define a new touch device called C<fatfinger>. |
| 1245 |
|
| 1246 |
$al->source (fatfinger => "pointer", pointerType => "touch"); |
| 1247 |
|
| 1248 |
Example: define a new touch device called C<fatfinger>. |
| 1249 |
|
| 1250 |
$al->source (fatfinger => "pointer", pointerType => "touch"); |
| 1251 |
|
| 1252 |
Example: switch default keyboard source to C<kbd1>, assuming it is of C<key> class. |
| 1253 |
|
| 1254 |
$al->source ("kbd1"); |
| 1255 |
|
| 1256 |
=cut |
| 1257 |
|
| 1258 |
sub _default_source($) { |
| 1259 |
my ($source) = @_; |
| 1260 |
|
| 1261 |
$source eq "keyboard" ? { actions => [], id => $source, type => "key" } |
| 1262 |
: $source eq "mouse" ? { actions => [], id => $source, type => "pointer", pointerType => "mouse" } |
| 1263 |
: $source eq "touch" ? { actions => [], id => $source, type => "pointer", pointerType => "touch" } |
| 1264 |
: $source eq "pen" ? { actions => [], id => $source, type => "pointer", pointerType => "pen" } |
| 1265 |
: Carp::croak "AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions: event source '$source' not defined" |
| 1266 |
} |
| 1267 |
|
| 1268 |
my %source_class = ( |
| 1269 |
key => "kbd", |
| 1270 |
pointer => "ptr", |
| 1271 |
); |
| 1272 |
|
| 1273 |
sub source { |
| 1274 |
my ($self, $id, $type, %kv) = @_; |
| 1275 |
|
| 1276 |
if (defined $type) { |
| 1277 |
!exists $self->{source}{$id} |
| 1278 |
or Carp::croak "AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions: source '$id' already defined"; |
| 1279 |
|
| 1280 |
$kv{id} = $id; |
| 1281 |
$kv{type} = $type; |
| 1282 |
$kv{actions} = []; |
| 1283 |
|
| 1284 |
$self->{source}{$id} = \%kv; |
| 1285 |
} |
| 1286 |
|
| 1287 |
my $source = $self->{source}{$id} ||= _default_source $id; |
| 1288 |
|
| 1289 |
my $last = $source_class{$source->{type}} // "xxx"; |
| 1290 |
|
| 1291 |
$self->{"last_$last"} = $id; |
| 1292 |
|
| 1293 |
$self |
| 1294 |
} |
| 1295 |
|
| 1296 |
sub _add { |
| 1297 |
my ($self, $source, $sourcetype, $type, %kv) = @_; |
| 1298 |
|
| 1299 |
my $last = \$self->{"last_$sourcetype"}; |
| 1300 |
|
| 1301 |
$source |
| 1302 |
? ($$last = $source) |
| 1303 |
: ($source = $$last); |
| 1304 |
|
| 1305 |
my $source = $self->{source}{$source} ||= _default_source $source; |
| 1306 |
|
| 1307 |
my $al = $source->{actions}; |
| 1308 |
|
| 1309 |
push @$al, { type => "pause" } |
| 1310 |
while @$al < $self->{tick}; # -1 == allow concurrent actions |
| 1311 |
|
| 1312 |
$kv{type} = $type; |
| 1313 |
|
| 1314 |
push @{ $source->{actions} }, \%kv; |
| 1315 |
|
| 1316 |
$self->{tick_duration} = $kv{duration} |
| 1317 |
if $kv{duration} > $self->{tick_duration}; |
| 1318 |
|
| 1319 |
if ($self->{tick} != @$al) { |
| 1320 |
$self->{tick} = @$al; |
| 1321 |
$self->{duration} += delete $self->{tick_duration}; |
| 1322 |
} |
| 1323 |
|
| 1324 |
$self |
| 1325 |
} |
| 1326 |
|
| 1327 |
=item $al = $al->pause ($duration) |
| 1328 |
|
| 1329 |
Creates a pause with the given duration. Makes sure that time progresses |
| 1330 |
in any case, even when C<$duration> is C<0>. |
| 1331 |
|
| 1332 |
=cut |
| 1333 |
|
| 1334 |
sub pause { |
| 1335 |
my ($self, $duration) = @_; |
| 1336 |
|
| 1337 |
$self->{tick_duration} = $duration |
| 1338 |
if $duration > $self->{tick_duration}; |
| 1339 |
|
| 1340 |
$self->{duration} += delete $self->{tick_duration}; |
| 1341 |
|
| 1342 |
# find the source with the longest list |
| 1343 |
|
| 1344 |
for my $source (values %{ $self->{source} }) { |
| 1345 |
if (@{ $source->{actions} } == $self->{tick}) { |
| 1346 |
# this source is one of the longest |
| 1347 |
|
| 1348 |
# create a pause event only if $duration is non-zero... |
| 1349 |
push @{ $source->{actions} }, { type => "pause", duration => $duration*1 } |
| 1350 |
if $duration; |
| 1351 |
|
| 1352 |
# ... but advance time in any case |
| 1353 |
++$self->{tick}; |
| 1354 |
|
| 1355 |
return $self; |
| 1356 |
} |
| 1357 |
} |
| 1358 |
|
| 1359 |
# no event sources are longest. so advance time in any case |
| 1360 |
++$self->{tick}; |
| 1361 |
|
| 1362 |
Carp::croak "AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions: multiple pause calls in a row not (yet) supported" |
| 1363 |
if $duration; |
| 1364 |
|
| 1365 |
$self |
| 1366 |
} |
| 1367 |
|
| 1368 |
=item $al = $al->pointer_down ($button, $source) |
| 1369 |
|
| 1370 |
=item $al = $al->pointer_up ($button, $source) |
| 1371 |
|
| 1372 |
Press or release the given button. C<$button> defaults to C<0>. |
| 1373 |
|
| 1374 |
=item $al = $al->click ($button, $source) |
| 1375 |
|
| 1376 |
Convenience function that creates a button press and release action |
| 1377 |
without any delay between them. C<$button> defaults to C<0>. |
| 1378 |
|
| 1379 |
=item $al = $al->doubleclick ($button, $source) |
| 1380 |
|
| 1381 |
Convenience function that creates two button press and release action |
| 1382 |
pairs in a row, with no unnecessary delay between them. C<$button> |
| 1383 |
defaults to C<0>. |
| 1384 |
|
| 1385 |
=cut |
| 1386 |
|
| 1387 |
sub pointer_down { |
| 1388 |
my ($self, $button, $source) = @_; |
| 1389 |
|
| 1390 |
$self->_add ($source, ptr => pointerDown => button => ($button // 0)*1) |
| 1391 |
} |
| 1392 |
|
| 1393 |
sub pointer_up { |
| 1394 |
my ($self, $button, $source) = @_; |
| 1395 |
|
| 1396 |
$self->_add ($source, ptr => pointerUp => button => ($button // 0)*1) |
| 1397 |
} |
| 1398 |
|
| 1399 |
sub click { |
| 1400 |
my ($self, $button, $source) = @_; |
| 1401 |
|
| 1402 |
$self |
| 1403 |
->pointer_down ($button, $source) |
| 1404 |
->pointer_up ($button) |
| 1405 |
} |
| 1406 |
|
| 1407 |
sub doubleclick { |
| 1408 |
my ($self, $button, $source) = @_; |
| 1409 |
|
| 1410 |
$self |
| 1411 |
->click ($button, $source) |
| 1412 |
->click ($button) |
| 1413 |
} |
| 1414 |
|
| 1415 |
=item $al = $al->move ($origin, $x, $y, $duration, $source) |
| 1416 |
|
| 1417 |
Moves a pointer to the given position, relative to origin (either |
| 1418 |
"viewport", "pointer" or an element object. The coordinates will be |
| 1419 |
truncated to integer values. |
| 1420 |
|
| 1421 |
=cut |
| 1422 |
|
| 1423 |
sub move { |
| 1424 |
my ($self, $origin, $x, $y, $duration, $source) = @_; |
| 1425 |
|
| 1426 |
$self->_add ($source, ptr => pointerMove => |
| 1427 |
origin => $origin, x => int $x*1, y => int $y*1, duration => $duration*1) |
| 1428 |
} |
| 1429 |
|
| 1430 |
=item $al = $al->cancel ($source) |
| 1431 |
|
| 1432 |
Executes a pointer cancel action. |
| 1433 |
|
| 1434 |
=cut |
| 1435 |
|
| 1436 |
sub cancel { |
| 1437 |
my ($self, $source) = @_; |
| 1438 |
|
| 1439 |
$self->_add ($source, ptr => "pointerCancel") |
| 1440 |
} |
| 1441 |
|
| 1442 |
=item $al = $al->key_down ($key, $source) |
| 1443 |
|
| 1444 |
=item $al = $al->key_up ($key, $source) |
| 1445 |
|
| 1446 |
Press or release the given key. |
| 1447 |
|
| 1448 |
=item $al = $al->key ($key, $source) |
| 1449 |
|
| 1450 |
Peess and release the given key in one go, without unnecessary delay. |
| 1451 |
|
| 1452 |
A special syntax, C<{keyname}> can be used for special keys - |
| 1453 |
all the special key names from L<the second table in section |
| 1454 |
17.4.2|https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/#keyboard-actions> of the |
| 1455 |
WebDriver recommendation can be used - prefix with C<Shift-Space>. to get |
| 1456 |
the shifted version, as in C<Shift- |
| 1457 |
|
| 1458 |
Example: press and release "a". |
| 1459 |
|
| 1460 |
$al->key ("a"); |
| 1461 |
|
| 1462 |
Example: press and release the "Enter" key: |
| 1463 |
|
| 1464 |
$al->key ("\x{e007}"); |
| 1465 |
|
| 1466 |
Example: press and release the "enter" key using the special key name syntax: |
| 1467 |
|
| 1468 |
$al->key ("{Enter}"); |
| 1469 |
|
| 1470 |
=item $al = $al->type ($string, $source) |
| 1471 |
|
| 1472 |
Convenience method to simulate a series of key press and release events |
| 1473 |
for the keys in C<$string>, one pair per extended unicode grapheme |
| 1474 |
cluster. There is no syntax for special keys, everything will be typed |
| 1475 |
"as-is" if possible. |
| 1476 |
|
| 1477 |
=cut |
| 1478 |
|
| 1479 |
# copy&paste from the spec via browser, with added MetaLeft/MetaRight aliases |
| 1480 |
our $SPECIAL_KEY = <<'EOF'; |
| 1481 |
"`" "~" "Backquote" |
| 1482 |
"\" "|" "Backslash" |
| 1483 |
"\uE003" "Backspace" |
| 1484 |
"[" "{" "BracketLeft" |
| 1485 |
"]" "}" "BracketRight" |
| 1486 |
"," "<" "Comma" |
| 1487 |
"0" ")" "Digit0" |
| 1488 |
"1" "!" "Digit1" |
| 1489 |
"2" "@" "Digit2" |
| 1490 |
"3" "#" "Digit3" |
| 1491 |
"4" "$" "Digit4" |
| 1492 |
"5" "%" "Digit5" |
| 1493 |
"6" "^" "Digit6" |
| 1494 |
"7" "&" "Digit7" |
| 1495 |
"8" "*" "Digit8" |
| 1496 |
"9" "(" "Digit9" |
| 1497 |
"=" "+" "Equal" |
| 1498 |
"<" ">" "IntlBackslash" |
| 1499 |
"a" "A" "KeyA" |
| 1500 |
"b" "B" "KeyB" |
| 1501 |
"c" "C" "KeyC" |
| 1502 |
"d" "D" "KeyD" |
| 1503 |
"e" "E" "KeyE" |
| 1504 |
"f" "F" "KeyF" |
| 1505 |
"g" "G" "KeyG" |
| 1506 |
"h" "H" "KeyH" |
| 1507 |
"i" "I" "KeyI" |
| 1508 |
"j" "J" "KeyJ" |
| 1509 |
"k" "K" "KeyK" |
| 1510 |
"l" "L" "KeyL" |
| 1511 |
"m" "M" "KeyM" |
| 1512 |
"n" "N" "KeyN" |
| 1513 |
"o" "O" "KeyO" |
| 1514 |
"p" "P" "KeyP" |
| 1515 |
"q" "Q" "KeyQ" |
| 1516 |
"r" "R" "KeyR" |
| 1517 |
"s" "S" "KeyS" |
| 1518 |
"t" "T" "KeyT" |
| 1519 |
"u" "U" "KeyU" |
| 1520 |
"v" "V" "KeyV" |
| 1521 |
"w" "W" "KeyW" |
| 1522 |
"x" "X" "KeyX" |
| 1523 |
"y" "Y" "KeyY" |
| 1524 |
"z" "Z" "KeyZ" |
| 1525 |
"-" "_" "Minus" |
| 1526 |
"." ">"." "Period" |
| 1527 |
"'" """ "Quote" |
| 1528 |
";" ":" "Semicolon" |
| 1529 |
"/" "?" "Slash" |
| 1530 |
"\uE00A" "AltLeft" |
| 1531 |
"\uE052" "AltRight" |
| 1532 |
"\uE009" "ControlLeft" |
| 1533 |
"\uE051" "ControlRight" |
| 1534 |
"\uE006" "Enter" |
| 1535 |
"\uE03D" "OSLeft" |
| 1536 |
"\uE053" "OSRight" |
| 1537 |
"\uE008" "ShiftLeft" |
| 1538 |
"\uE050" "ShiftRight" |
| 1539 |
" " "\uE00D" "Space" |
| 1540 |
"\uE004" "Tab" |
| 1541 |
"\uE017" "Delete" |
| 1542 |
"\uE010" "End" |
| 1543 |
"\uE002" "Help" |
| 1544 |
"\uE011" "Home" |
| 1545 |
"\uE016" "Insert" |
| 1546 |
"\uE00F" "PageDown" |
| 1547 |
"\uE00E" "PageUp" |
| 1548 |
"\uE015" "ArrowDown" |
| 1549 |
"\uE012" "ArrowLeft" |
| 1550 |
"\uE014" "ArrowRight" |
| 1551 |
"\uE013" "ArrowUp" |
| 1552 |
"\uE00C" "Escape" |
| 1553 |
"\uE031" "F1" |
| 1554 |
"\uE032" "F2" |
| 1555 |
"\uE033" "F3" |
| 1556 |
"\uE034" "F4" |
| 1557 |
"\uE035" "F5" |
| 1558 |
"\uE036" "F6" |
| 1559 |
"\uE037" "F7" |
| 1560 |
"\uE038" "F8" |
| 1561 |
"\uE039" "F9" |
| 1562 |
"\uE03A" "F10" |
| 1563 |
"\uE03B" "F11" |
| 1564 |
"\uE03C" "F12" |
| 1565 |
"\uE01A" "\uE05C" "Numpad0" |
| 1566 |
"\uE01B" "\uE056" "Numpad1" |
| 1567 |
"\uE01C" "\uE05B" "Numpad2" |
| 1568 |
"\uE01D" "\uE055" "Numpad3" |
| 1569 |
"\uE01E" "\uE058" "Numpad4" |
| 1570 |
"\uE01F" "Numpad5" |
| 1571 |
"\uE020" "\uE05A" "Numpad6" |
| 1572 |
"\uE021" "\uE057" "Numpad7" |
| 1573 |
"\uE022" "\uE059" "Numpad8" |
| 1574 |
"\uE023" "\uE054" "Numpad9" |
| 1575 |
"\uE025" "NumpadAdd" |
| 1576 |
"\uE026" "NumpadComma" |
| 1577 |
"\uE028" "\uE05D" "NumpadDecimal" |
| 1578 |
"\uE029" "NumpadDivide" |
| 1579 |
"\uE007" "NumpadEnter" |
| 1580 |
"\uE024" "NumpadMultiply" |
| 1581 |
"\uE027" "NumpadSubtract" |
| 1582 |
|
| 1583 |
"\uE03D" "MetaLeft" |
| 1584 |
"\uE053" "MetaRight" |
| 1585 |
EOF |
| 1586 |
|
| 1587 |
our %SPECIAL_KEY; |
| 1588 |
|
| 1589 |
sub _special_key($) { |
| 1590 |
# parse first time |
| 1591 |
%SPECIAL_KEY || do { |
| 1592 |
for (split /\n/, $SPECIAL_KEY) { |
| 1593 |
s/"//g or next; |
| 1594 |
my ($k, $s, $name) = split /\t/; |
| 1595 |
|
| 1596 |
# unescape \uXXXX, convert string to codepoint |
| 1597 |
$_ = /^\\u/ ? hex substr $_, 2 : ord |
| 1598 |
for $k, $s; |
| 1599 |
|
| 1600 |
$SPECIAL_KEY{$name} = $k; |
| 1601 |
$SPECIAL_KEY{"Shift-$name"} = $s if $s; |
| 1602 |
|
| 1603 |
} |
| 1604 |
|
| 1605 |
undef $SPECIAL_KEY; # save memory |
| 1606 |
}; |
| 1607 |
|
| 1608 |
exists $SPECIAL_KEY{$_[0]} |
| 1609 |
? chr $SPECIAL_KEY{$_[0]} |
| 1610 |
: Carp::croak "AnyEvent::WebDriver::Actions: special key '$1' not known" |
| 1611 |
} |
| 1612 |
|
| 1613 |
sub _kv($) { |
| 1614 |
$_[0] =~ /^\{(.*)\}$/s |
| 1615 |
? _special_key $1 |
| 1616 |
: $_[0] |
| 1617 |
} |
| 1618 |
|
| 1619 |
sub key_down { |
| 1620 |
my ($self, $key, $source) = @_; |
| 1621 |
|
| 1622 |
$self->_add ($source, kbd => keyDown => value => _kv $key) |
| 1623 |
} |
| 1624 |
|
| 1625 |
sub key_up { |
| 1626 |
my ($self, $key, $source) = @_; |
| 1627 |
|
| 1628 |
$self->_add ($source, kbd => keyUp => value => _kv $key) |
| 1629 |
} |
| 1630 |
|
| 1631 |
sub key { |
| 1632 |
my ($self, $key, $source) = @_; |
| 1633 |
|
| 1634 |
$self |
| 1635 |
->key_down ($key, $source) |
| 1636 |
->key_up ($key) |
| 1637 |
} |
| 1638 |
|
| 1639 |
sub type { |
| 1640 |
my ($self, $string, $source) = @_; |
| 1641 |
|
| 1642 |
$self->key ($_, $source) |
| 1643 |
for $string =~ /(\X)/g; |
| 1644 |
|
| 1645 |
$self |
| 1646 |
} |
| 1647 |
|
| 1648 |
=item $al->perform ($wd) |
| 1649 |
|
| 1650 |
Finalises and compiles the list, if not done yet, and calls C<< |
| 1651 |
$wd->perform >> with it. |
| 1652 |
|
| 1653 |
If C<$wd> is undef, and the action list was created using the C<< |
| 1654 |
$wd->actions >> method, then perform it against that WebDriver object. |
| 1655 |
|
| 1656 |
There is no underscore variant - call the C<perform_actions_> method with |
| 1657 |
the action object instead. |
| 1658 |
|
| 1659 |
=item $al->perform_release ($wd) |
| 1660 |
|
| 1661 |
Exactly like C<perform>, but additionally call C<release_actions> |
| 1662 |
afterwards. |
| 1663 |
|
| 1664 |
=cut |
| 1665 |
|
| 1666 |
sub perform { |
| 1667 |
my ($self, $wd) = @_; |
| 1668 |
|
| 1669 |
($wd //= $self->{wd})->perform_actions ($self) |
| 1670 |
} |
| 1671 |
|
| 1672 |
sub perform_release { |
| 1673 |
my ($self, $wd) = @_; |
| 1674 |
|
| 1675 |
($wd //= $self->{wd})->perform_actions ($self); |
| 1676 |
$wd->release_actions; |
| 1677 |
} |
| 1678 |
|
| 1679 |
=item ($actions, $duration) = $al->compile |
| 1680 |
|
| 1681 |
Finalises and compiles the list, if not done yet, and returns an actions |
| 1682 |
object suitable for calls to C<< $wd->perform_actions >>. When called in |
| 1683 |
list context, additionally returns the total duration of the action list. |
| 1684 |
|
| 1685 |
Since building large action lists can take nontrivial amounts of time, |
| 1686 |
it can make sense to build an action list only once and then perform it |
| 1687 |
multiple times. |
| 1688 |
|
| 1689 |
No additional actions must be added after compiling an action list. |
| 1690 |
|
| 1691 |
=cut |
| 1692 |
|
| 1693 |
sub compile { |
| 1694 |
my ($self) = @_; |
| 1695 |
|
| 1696 |
$self->{duration} += delete $self->{tick_duration}; |
| 1697 |
|
| 1698 |
delete $self->{tick}; |
| 1699 |
delete $self->{last_kbd}; |
| 1700 |
delete $self->{last_ptr}; |
| 1701 |
|
| 1702 |
$self->{actions} ||= [values %{ delete $self->{source} }]; |
| 1703 |
|
| 1704 |
wantarray |
| 1705 |
? ($self->{actions}, $self->{duration}) |
| 1706 |
: $self->{actions} |
| 1707 |
} |
| 1708 |
|
| 1709 |
=back |
| 1710 |
|
| 1711 |
=head2 EVENT BASED API |
| 1712 |
|
| 1713 |
This module wouldn't be a good AnyEvent citizen if it didn't have a true |
| 1714 |
event-based API. |
| 1715 |
|
| 1716 |
In fact, the simplified API, as documented above, is emulated via the |
| 1717 |
event-based API and an C<AUTOLOAD> function that automatically provides |
| 1718 |
blocking wrappers around the callback-based API. |
| 1719 |
|
| 1720 |
Every method documented in the L<SIMPLIFIED API> section has an equivalent |
| 1721 |
event-based method that is formed by appending a underscore (C<_>) to the |
| 1722 |
method name, and appending a callback to the argument list (mnemonic: the |
| 1723 |
underscore indicates the "the action is not yet finished" after the call |
| 1724 |
returns). |
| 1725 |
|
| 1726 |
For example, instead of a blocking calls to C<new_session>, C<navigate_to> |
| 1727 |
and C<back>, you can make a callback-based ones: |
| 1728 |
|
| 1729 |
my $cv = AE::cv; |
| 1730 |
|
| 1731 |
$wd->new_session_ ({}, sub { |
| 1732 |
my ($status, $value) = @_; |
| 1733 |
|
| 1734 |
die "error $value->{error}" if $status ne "200"; |
| 1735 |
|
| 1736 |
$wd->navigate_to_ ("http://www.nethype.de", sub { |
| 1737 |
|
| 1738 |
$wd->back_ (sub { |
| 1739 |
print "all done\n"; |
| 1740 |
$cv->send; |
| 1741 |
}); |
| 1742 |
|
| 1743 |
}); |
| 1744 |
}); |
| 1745 |
|
| 1746 |
$cv->recv; |
| 1747 |
|
| 1748 |
While the blocking methods C<croak> on errors, the callback-based ones all |
| 1749 |
pass two values to the callback, C<$status> and C<$res>, where C<$status> |
| 1750 |
is the HTTP status code (200 for successful requests, typically 4xx or |
| 1751 |
5xx for errors), and C<$res> is the value of the C<value> key in the JSON |
| 1752 |
response object. |
| 1753 |
|
| 1754 |
Other than that, the underscore variants and the blocking variants are |
| 1755 |
identical. |
| 1756 |
|
| 1757 |
=head2 LOW LEVEL API |
| 1758 |
|
| 1759 |
All the simplified API methods are very thin wrappers around WebDriver |
| 1760 |
commands of the same name. They are all implemented in terms of the |
| 1761 |
low-level methods (C<req>, C<get>, C<post> and C<delete>), which exist |
| 1762 |
in blocking and callback-based variants (C<req_>, C<get_>, C<post_> and |
| 1763 |
C<delete_>). |
| 1764 |
|
| 1765 |
Examples are after the function descriptions. |
| 1766 |
|
| 1767 |
=over |
| 1768 |
|
| 1769 |
=item $wd->req_ ($method, $uri, $body, $cb->($status, $value)) |
| 1770 |
|
| 1771 |
=item $value = $wd->req ($method, $uri, $body) |
| 1772 |
|
| 1773 |
Appends the C<$uri> to the C<endpoint/session/{sessionid}/> URL and makes |
| 1774 |
a HTTP C<$method> request (C<GET>, C<POST> etc.). C<POST> requests can |
| 1775 |
provide a UTF-8-encoded JSON text as HTTP request body, or the empty |
| 1776 |
string to indicate no body is used. |
| 1777 |
|
| 1778 |
For the callback version, the callback gets passed the HTTP status code |
| 1779 |
(200 for every successful request), and the value of the C<value> key in |
| 1780 |
the JSON response object as second argument. |
| 1781 |
|
| 1782 |
=item $wd->get_ ($uri, $cb->($status, $value)) |
| 1783 |
|
| 1784 |
=item $value = $wd->get ($uri) |
| 1785 |
|
| 1786 |
Simply a call to C<req_> with C<$method> set to C<GET> and an empty body. |
| 1787 |
|
| 1788 |
=item $wd->post_ ($uri, $data, $cb->($status, $value)) |
| 1789 |
|
| 1790 |
=item $value = $wd->post ($uri, $data) |
| 1791 |
|
| 1792 |
Simply a call to C<req_> with C<$method> set to C<POST> - if C<$body> is |
| 1793 |
C<undef>, then an empty object is send, otherwise, C<$data> must be a |
| 1794 |
valid request object, which gets encoded into JSON for you. |
| 1795 |
|
| 1796 |
=item $wd->delete_ ($uri, $cb->($status, $value)) |
| 1797 |
|
| 1798 |
=item $value = $wd->delete ($uri) |
| 1799 |
|
| 1800 |
Simply a call to C<req_> with C<$method> set to C<DELETE> and an empty body. |
| 1801 |
|
| 1802 |
=cut |
| 1803 |
|
| 1804 |
=back |
| 1805 |
|
| 1806 |
Example: implement C<get_all_cookies>, which is a simple C<GET> request |
| 1807 |
without any parameters: |
| 1808 |
|
| 1809 |
$cookies = $wd->get ("cookie"); |
| 1810 |
|
| 1811 |
Example: implement C<execute_script>, which needs some parameters: |
| 1812 |
|
| 1813 |
$results = $wd->post ("execute/sync" => { script => "$javascript", args => [] }); |
| 1814 |
|
| 1815 |
Example: call C<find_elements> to find all C<IMG> elements: |
| 1816 |
|
| 1817 |
$elems = $wd->post (elements => { using => "css selector", value => "img" }); |
| 1818 |
|
| 1819 |
=cut |
| 1820 |
|
| 1821 |
=head1 HISTORY |
| 1822 |
|
| 1823 |
This module was unintentionally created (it started inside some quickly |
| 1824 |
hacked-together script) simply because I couldn't get the existing |
| 1825 |
C<Selenium::Remote::Driver> module to work reliably, ever, despite |
| 1826 |
multiple attempts over the years and trying to report multiple bugs, which |
| 1827 |
have been completely ignored. It's also not event-based, so, yeah... |
| 1828 |
|
| 1829 |
=head1 AUTHOR |
| 1830 |
|
| 1831 |
Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> |
| 1832 |
http://anyevent.schmorp.de |
| 1833 |
|
| 1834 |
=cut |
| 1835 |
|
| 1836 |
1 |
| 1837 |
|