"It sure would be neat if PhantomJS was a NodeJS module", I hear you say. Well, wait no longer! This node module implements a nauseously clever bridge between Phantom and Node, so that you can use all your favourite PhantomJS functions without leaving NPM behind and living in a cave.
First, make sure PhantomJS is installed. This module expects the phantomjs
binary to be in PATH somewhere. In other words, type this:
$ phantomjs
If that works, so will phantomjs-node. It's only been tested with PhantomJS 1.3, and almost certainly doesn't work with anything older.
Install it like this:
npm install phantom
Use it like this in Coffeescript:
phantom = require 'phantom'
phantom.create (ph) ->
ph.createPage (page) ->
page.open "http://www.google.com", (status) ->
console.log "opened google? ", status
page.evaluate (-> document.title), (result) ->
console.log 'Page title is ' + result
ph.exit()
In Javascript, do the same but add parentheses and curly braces everywhere.
You can use all the methods listed on the PhantomJS API page
Due to the async nature of the bridge, some things have changed, though:
- Return values (ie, of
page.evaluate
) are returned in a callback instead - Properties can't be get/set directly, instead use
p.get('version', callback)
orp.page.set('viewportSize', {width:640,height:480})
, etc
ph.createPage()
makes new PhantomJS WebPage objects, so use that if you want to open lots of webpages. You can also make multiple phantomjs processes by calling phantom.create()
multiple times, so if you need that for some crazy reason, knock yourself out!
Don't ask. The things these eyes have seen.
I will answer that question with a question. How do you communicate with a process that doesn't support shared memory, sockets, FIFOs, or standard input?
Well, there's one thing PhantomJS does support, and that's opening webpages. In fact, it's really good at opening web pages. So we communicate with PhantomJS by spinning up an instance of ExpressJS, opening Phantom in a subprocess, and pointing it at a special webpage that turns socket.io messages into alert()
calls. Those alert()
calls are picked up by Phantom and there you go!
The communication itself happens via James Halliday's fantastic dnode library, which fortunately works well enough when combined with browserify to run straight out of PhantomJS's pidgin Javascript environment.