You can launch browsers! With NodeJS!
- Local browsers for MacOS, Windows and Linux (like) operating systems
- BrowserStack browsers using the BrowserStack API
- Remote browsers using the launchpad server
The general API for any launcher (<type>
) looks like this:
var launch = require('launchpad');
launch.<type>(configuration, function(error, launcher) {
launcher.browsers(function(error, browsers) {
// -> List of available browsers with version
});
launcher(url, configuration, function(error, instance) {
instance // -> A browser instance
instance.id // -> unique instance id
instance.stop(callback) // -> Stop the instance
instance.status(callback) // -> Get status information about the instance
});
launcher.<browsername>(url, function(error, instance) {
// Same as above
});
});
Local launchers look up all currently installed browsers (unless limited by LAUNCHPAD_BROWSERS - see below for details) and allow you to start new browser processes.
// Launch a local browser
launch.local(function(err, local) {
launcher.browsers(function(error, browsers) {
// -> List of all browsers found locally with version
});
local.firefox('http://url', function(err, instance) {
// An instance is an event emitter
instance.on('stop', function() {
console.log('Terminated local firefox');
});
});
});
By default Launchpad looks up all installed browsers. To speed-up this process you can define the following env variables:
LAUNCHPAD_BROWSERS
- comma delimited list of browsers you want to use, e.g.LAUNCHPAD_BROWSERS=chrome,firefox,opera
. Other browsers will not be detected even if they are installed.LAUNCHPAD_<browser>
- specifies where given browser is installed so that Launchpad does not need to look for it, e.g.LAUNCHPAD_CHROME=/usr/bin/chromium
The following browser names are recognized: chrome
, firefox
, safari
, ie
, opera
, canary
, aurora
, phantom
, nodeWebKit
.
Not all platforms support all browsers - see platform for details.
BrowserStack is a great cross-browser testing tool and offers API access to any account that is on a monthly plan. Launchpad allows you to start BrowserStack workers through its API like this:
launch.browserstack({
username : 'user',
password : 'password'
},
function(err, browserstack) {
launcher.browsers(function(error, browsers) {
// -> List of all Browserstack browsers
});
browserstack.ie('http://url', function(err, instance) {
// Shut the instance down after 5 seconds
setTimeout(function() {
instance.stop(function (err) {
if(err) {
console.log(err);
}
console.log('Browser instance has stopped');
});
}, 5000);
});
});
Behind the scenes we have the node-browserstack module do all the work (API calls) for us.
Launchpad also allows you to start browsers on other systems that are running the Launchpad server.
The launchpad server is a simple implementation of the BrowserStack API (Version 1) which provides a RESTful interface to start and stop browsers. You can set up a Launchpad server like this:
launch.server({
username : 'launcher',
password : 'testing'
}).listen(8080, function () {
console.log('Listeining...');
});
Because the Launchpad server is compatible with the BrowserStack API (Version 1), you could basically use any BrowserStack API client, connect to the server and start browsers.
The included remote launcher does exactly that by wrapping BrowserStack launcher and pointing it to the given host:
launch.remote({
host : 'ie7machine',
username : 'launcher',
password : 'testing'
}, function(err, api) {
launcher.browsers(function(error, browsers) {
// -> List of all browsers found on ie7machine
});
api('http://github.com', {
browser : 'safari',
version : 'latest'
}, function(err, instance) {
});
});
0.5.0
- Added
LAUNCHPAD_BROWSERS
andLAUNCHPAD_<browser>
env vars support (#52)
0.4.0
- Output PhantomJS errors and console.logs (#35)
- Node Webkit support for MacOS and Windows (#30, #34)
- Allow browsers to start multiple times even if they are already running (#33)
- Fix Windows path and add JSHint (#32)
- Expose
path
andbinPath
for detected browsers (#31)
0.3.0
- Major internal refactoring (#25)