This library is not actively maintained. Check https://github.com/rubycdp/ferrum for a replacement.
ChromeRemote is a client implementation of the Chrome DevTools Protocol in Ruby. It lets you remotely control, instrument, inspect, debug and profile instances of Chrome/Chromium based browsers from your Ruby code.
The following snippet navigates to https://github.com
, dumps any request made while loading the page, and takes a screenshot once the page is loaded:
require 'chrome_remote'
require 'base64'
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
# Enable events
chrome.send_cmd "Network.enable"
chrome.send_cmd "Page.enable"
# Setup handler to log network requests
chrome.on "Network.requestWillBeSent" do |params|
puts params["request"]["url"]
end
# Navigate to github.com and wait for the page to load
chrome.send_cmd "Page.navigate", url: "https://github.com"
chrome.wait_for "Page.loadEventFired"
# Take page screenshot
response = chrome.send_cmd "Page.captureScreenshot"
File.write "screenshot.png", Base64.decode64(response["data"])
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'chrome_remote'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install chrome_remote
To use ChromeRemote, you'll need a Chrome instance running on a known port (localhost:9222
is the default), using the --remote-debugging-port
flag.
In Linux:
$ google-chrome --remote-debugging-port=9222
In macOS:
$ /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome --remote-debugging-port=9222
In Windows 7 or above:
> "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --remote-debugging-port=9222
Additionally, since version 59, you can use the --headless
flag to start Chrome in headless mode
The Chrome DevTools Protocol is divided into a number of domains (Page, DOM, Debugger, Network, etc.). Each domain defines a number of commands it supports and events it generates.
ChromeRemote provides a simple API that lets you send commands, and handle events of any of the domains in the protocol.
To start with, you need an instance of the ChromeRemote
class.
chrome = ChromeRemote.client(
host: 'localhost', # optional (default: localhost). Host of the Chrome remote server
port: 9222, # optional (default: 9222). Port of the Chrome remote server
new_tab: false # optional (default: false). Whether to use the browser's current tab or a new one
)
Now, to send commands, ChromeRemote provides the ChromeRemote#send_cmd
method. For example, this is how you make Chrome navigate to a url by sending the Page.navigate command:
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
chrome.send_cmd "Page.navigate", url: "https://github.com"
# => {:frameId=>1234}
To tackle events, you have several options but, first of all, you need to enable events for any domain you're interested in. You only need to do this once per domain:
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
chrome.send_cmd "Network.enable"
Now, you can use the ChromeRemote#on
method to subscribe to an event. For instance, this is how you subscribe to the Network.requestWillBeSent event:
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
chrome.send_cmd "Network.enable"
chrome.on "Network.requestWillBeSent" do |params|
puts params["request"]["url"]
end
With the ChromeRemote#wait_for
method, you can wait until the next time a given event is triggered. For example, the following snippet navigates to a page and waits for the Page.loadEventFired event to happen:
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
chrome.send_cmd "Page.navigate", url: "https://github.com"
chrome.wait_for "Page.loadEventFired"
# => {:timestamp=>34}
You can also use wait_for
with a block to implement a custom matcher on the event names and params you're waiting for:
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
chrome.send_cmd "Page.navigate", url: "https://github.com"
client.wait_for do |event_name, event_params|
event_name == "Page.lifecycleEvent" && event_params["name"] == "load"
end
In certain occasions, after you have subscribed to one or several events, you may just want to process messages indefinitely, and let the event handlers process any event that may happen until you kill your script. For those cases, ChromeRemote provides the ChromeRemote#listen
method:
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
chrome.send_cmd "Network.enable"
chrome.on "Network.requestWillBeSent" do |params|
puts params["request"]["url"]
end
chrome.listen # will process incoming messages indefinitely
Finally, you have ChromeRemote#listen_until
that will listen and process incoming messages but only until a certain condition is met. For instance, the following snippet waits until 5 requests are received and then continues:
chrome = ChromeRemote.client
chrome.send_cmd "Network.enable"
requests = 0
chrome.on "Network.requestWillBeSent" do |params|
requests += 1
end
chrome.listen_until { requests == 5 }
# do other stuff
To log all incoming and outgoing messages you can pass Logger compatible instance to client.
client = ChromeRemote.client(logger: Logger.new($stdout))
client.send_cmd('Page.enable')
# I, [2019-03-06T22:32:28.433643 #5070] INFO -- : SEND ► {"method":"Page.enable","params":{},"id":1}
# I, [2019-03-06T22:32:28.440294 #5070] INFO -- : ◀ RECV {"id":1,"result":{}}
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment or any of the scripts in the /examples
directory (e.g. bundle exec ruby examples/network_dump_and_screenshot.rb
).
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
To release a new version (if you're a maintainer), update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/cavalle/chrome_remote.
This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to follow the code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.