import undetected_chromedriver.v2 as uc
from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import WebDriverWait
from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC
def main(url):
options = uc.ChromeOptions()
options.headless = True
driver = uc.Chrome(options=options)
driver.get(url)
try:
WebDriverWait(driver, 10).until(
EC.title_contains(('Reservations'))
)
print(driver.title)
except Exception as e:
print(type(e).__name__)
finally:
driver.quit()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main('https://www.example.com/')
if headless = True
the site isn't responsive. How can i solve that?
P.S am seeking solution for selenium only.
CodePudding user response:
Use a virtual display such as Xvfb so that you don't need to use headless mode on a headless machine such as Linux servers.
There's a Selenium Python framework, https://github.com/seleniumbase/SeleniumBase, with built-in integration to undetected-chromedriver for that exact thing. When running your tests, add --uc
as a pytest command-line option for your SeleniumBase tests. Eg:
pytest --uc --xvfb
That lets you successfully run Selenium Python tests on a Linux headless machine in undetected-chromedriver mode. (With SeleniumBase)
You can use the following for your test, example.py
:
from seleniumbase import BaseCase
class MyTestClass(BaseCase):
def test_hyatt(self):
self.open("https://www.example.com/")
self.assert_in("Reservations", self.get_title())
print(self.get_title())
Then when running it:
pytest example.py --uc --xvfb
==================== test session starts ====================
platform darwin -- Python 3.10.5, pytest-7.1.3, pluggy-1.0.0
rootdir: /Users/michael/github/SeleniumBase/examples, configfile: pytest.ini
plugins: html-2.0.1, xdist-2.5.0, forked-1.4.0, rerunfailures-10.2, ordering-0.6, cov-3.0.0, metadata-2.0.2, seleniumbase-4.3.8
collected 1 item
example.py Example Domain
.
==================== 1 passed in 8.68s