The easiest way of running code in a browser environment.
Bundles electronjs
by default!
$ echo "console.log('Hey from ' + location); window.close()" | browser-run
Hey from http://localhost:53227/
$
Or use browser-run
programmatically:
var run = require('browser-run');
var browser = run();
browser.pipe(process.stdout);
browser.end('console.log(location); window.close()');
$ browserify main.js | browser-run
or
var browserify = require('browserify');
var browser = require('browser-run');
browserify('main.js').bundle().pipe(browser()).pipe(process.stdout);
$ browser-run --help
Run JavaScript in a browser.
Write code to stdin and receive console output on stdout.
Usage: browser-run [OPTIONS]
Options:
--browser, -b Browser to use. Always available: electron. Available if installed: chrome, firefox, ie, phantom, safari [default: "electron"]
--port Starts listening on that port and waits for you to open a browser
--static Serve static assets from this directory
--mock Path to code to handle requests for mocking a dynamic back-end
--input Input type. Defaults to 'javascript', can be set to 'html'.
--node Enable nodejs apis in electron
--show Show browser window if browser is electron
--basedir Set this if you need to require node modules in node mode
--help Print help
By using --input html
or { input: 'html' }
you can provide a custom html file for browser-run to use. Keep in mind though that it always needs to have <script src="/reporter.js"></script>
above other script tags so browser-run is able to properly forward your console.log
s etc to the terminal.
By using --mock mock.js
or { mock: 'mock.js'}
you can provide a custom server-side implementation and handle all requests that are sent to paths beginning with /mock
mock.js needs to export a function that accepts req
and res
arguments for handling requests.
Example:
module.exports = function(req,res){
if (req.url === '/mock/echo') {
req.pipe(res)
}
}
Returns a duplex stream and starts a webserver.
opts
can be:
port
: If speficied, no browser will be started, so you can point one yourself tohttp://localhost/<port>
browser
: Browser to use. Defaults toelectron
. Available if installed:chrome
firefox
ie
phantom
safari
static
: Serve static files from this directorymock
: Path to code to handle requests for mocking a dynamic back-endinput
: Input type. Defaults tojavascript
, can be set tohtml
.node
: Enable nodejs integration in electronshow
: Show browser window if browser is electronbasedir
: Set this if you need to require node modules innode
mode
If only an empty string is written to it, an error will be thrown as there is nothing to execute.
If you call window.close()
inside the script, the browser will exit.
Stop the underlying webserver.
In environments without a screen, you can use Xvfb
to simulate one.
This is a full example to run npm test
. Refer to the last 2 lines in the YAML config:
on:
- pull_request
- push
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v1
- run: npm install
- run: sudo apt-get install xvfb
- run: xvfb-run --auto-servernum npm test
Add this to your travis.yml:
addons:
apt:
packages:
- xvfb
install:
- export DISPLAY=':99.0'
- Xvfb :99 -screen 0 1024x768x24 > /dev/null 2>&1 &
- npm install
$ sudo apt-get install xvfb # or equivalent
$ export DISPLAY=':99.0'
$ Xvfb :99 -screen 0 1024x768x24 > /dev/null 2>&1 &
$ browser-run ...
There is also an example Docker image. Source
With npm do
$ npm install browser-run # for library
$ npm install -g browser-run # for cli
This module is proudly supported by my Sponsors!
Do you want to support modules like this to improve their quality, stability and weigh in on new features? Then please consider donating to my Patreon. Not sure how much of my modules you're using? Try feross/thanks!
(MIT)