Metadata-Version: 2.4 Name: choreographer Version: 1.2.1 Summary: Devtools Protocol implementation for chrome. Author-email: Andrew Pikul , Neyberson Atencio Maintainer-email: Andrew Pikul License: # MIT License Copyright (c) Plotly, Inc. 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. Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/plotly/choreographer Project-URL: Repository, https://github.com/plotly/choreographer Requires-Python: >=3.8 Description-Content-Type: text/markdown License-File: LICENSE.md Requires-Dist: logistro>=2.0.1 Requires-Dist: simplejson>=3.19.3 Dynamic: license-file # Choreographer choreographer allows remote control of browsers from Python. It was created to support image generation from browser-based charting tools, but can be used for other purposes as well. choreographer is available [PyPI](https://pypi.org/project/choreographer) and [github](https://github.com/plotly/choreographer). ## Wait—I Thought This Was Kaleido? [Kaleido][kaleido] is a cross-platform library for generating static images of plots. The original implementation included a custom build of Chrome, which has proven very difficult to maintain. In contrast, this package uses the Chrome binary on the user's machine in the same way as testing tools like [Puppeteer][puppeteer]; the next step is to re-implement Kaleido as a layer on top of it. ## Status choreographer is a work in progress: only Chrome-ish browsers are supported at the moment, though we hope to add others. (Pull requests are greatly appreciated.) Note that we strongly recommend using async/await with this package, but it is not absolutely required. The synchronous functions in this package are intended as building blocks for other asynchronous strategies that Python may favor over async/await in the future. ## Testing ### Process Control Tests - Verbose: `pytest -W error -vvv tests/test_process.py` - Quiet:`pytest -W error -v tests/test_process.py` ### Browser Interaction Tests - Verbose: `pytest --debug -W error -vvv --ignore=tests/test_process.py` - Quiet :`pytest -W error -v --ignore=tests/test_process.py` You can also add "--no-headless" if you want to see the browser pop up. ### Writing Tests - Separate async and sync test files. Add `_sync.py` to synchronous tests. - For process tests, copy the fixtures in `test_process.py` file. - For API tests, use `test_placeholder.py` as the minimum template. ## Help Wanted We need your help to test this package on different platforms and for different use cases. To get started: 1. Clone this repository. 1. Create and activate a Python virtual environment. 1. Install this repository using `pip install .` or the equivalent. 1. Run `dtdoctor` and paste the output into an issue in this repository. ## Quickstart with `asyncio` Save the following code to `example.py` and run with Python. ```python import asyncio import choreographer as choreo async def example(): browser = await choreo.Browser(headless=False) tab = await browser.create_tab("https://google.com") await asyncio.sleep(3) await tab.send_command("Page.navigate", params={"url": "https://github.com"}) await asyncio.sleep(3) if __name__ == "__main__": asyncio.run(example()) ``` Step by step, this example: 1. Imports the required libraries. 1. Defines an `async` function (because `await` can only be used inside `async` functions). 1. Asks choreographer to create a browser. `headless=False` tells it to display the browser on the screen; the default is no display. 1. Wait three seconds for the browser to be created. 1. Create another tab. (Note that users can't rearrange programmatically-generated tabs using the mouse, but that's OK: we're not trying to replace testing tools like [Puppeteer][puppeteer].) 1. Sleep again. 1. Runs the example function. See [the devtools reference][devtools-ref] for a list of possible commands. ### Subscribing to Events Try adding the following to the example shown above: ```python # Callback for printing result async def dump_event(response): print(str(response)) # Callback for raising result as error async def error_event(response): raise Exception(str(response)) browser.subscribe("Target.targetCrashed", error_event) new_tab.subscribe("Page.loadEventFired", dump_event) browser.subscribe("Target.*", dump_event) # dumps all "Target" events response = await new_tab.subscribe_once("Page.lifecycleEvent") # do something with response browser.unsubscribe("Target.*") # events are always sent to a browser or tab, # but the documentation isn't always clear which. # Dumping all: `browser.subscribe("*", dump_event)` (on tab too) # can be useful (but verbose) for debugging. ``` ## Synchronous Use You can use this library without `asyncio`, ```python my_browser = choreo.Browser() # blocking until open ``` However, you must call `browser.pipe.read_jsons(blocking=True|False)` manually, and organizing the results. `browser.run_output_thread()` starts another thread constantly printing messages received from the browser but it can't be used with `asyncio` nor will it play nice with any other read. In other words, unless you're really, really sure you know what you're doing, use `asyncio`. ## Low-Level Use We provide a `Browser` and `Tab` interface, but there are lower-level `Target` and `Session` interfaces if needed. [devtools-ref]: https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/ [kaleido]: https://pypi.org/project/kaleido/ [puppeteer]: https://pptr.dev/