This is the first time I use selenium and headless browser as I want to crawl some web page using ajax tech.
The effect is great, but for some case it takes too much time to load the whole page(especially when some resource is unavailable),so I have to set a time out for the selenium.
First of all I tried set_page_load_timeout()
and set_script_timeout()
,but when I set these timeouts, I won't get any page source if the page doesn't load completely, as the codes below:
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chrome_options=options)
driver.set_page_load_timeout(5)
driver.set_script_timeout(5)
try:
driver.get(url)
except Exception:
driver.execute_script('window.stop()')
print driver.page_source.encode('utf-8') # raise TimeoutException this line.
so I try to using Implicitly Wait and Conditional Wait, like this:
driver = webdriver.Firefox(firefox_options=options, executable_path=path)
print("Firefox Headless Browser Invoked")
wait = WebDriverWait(driver, timeout=10)
driver.implicitly_wait(2)
start = time.time()
driver.get(url)
end = time.time()
print 'time used: %s s' % str(end - start)
try:
WebDriverWait(driver, 2, 0.5).until(expected.presence_of_element_located((By.TAG_NAME, 'body')))
print driver.find_element_by_tag_name('body').text
except Exception:
driver.execute_script('window.stop()')
This time I got the content that I want.However,it takes a very long time(40+ seconds),that means the timeout I set for 2 seconds doesn't work at all.
In my view, it seems like the driver.get()
call ends until the browser stop loading the page, only after that the codes below can work, and you can not kill the get()
call or you'll get nothing.
But this is very different from the selenium docs, I REALLY wonder where is the mistake.
environment: OSX 10.12, selenium 3.0.9 with FireFox & GoogleChrome Headless(both latest version.)
--- update ----
Thanks for help.I change the code as below, using WebDriverWait()
alone, but there still exist cases that the call last for a very long time, far more than the timeout that I set.
Wonder if I can stop the page load immediately as the time is out?
driver = webdriver.Firefox(firefox_options=options, executable_path=path)
print("Firefox Headless Browser Invoked")
start = time.time()
driver.get('url')
end = time.time()
print 'time used: %s s' % str(end - start)
try:
WebDriverWait(driver, 2, 0.5).until(expected.presence_of_element_located((By.TAG_NAME, 'body')))
print driver.find_element_by_tag_name('body').text
except Exception:
driver.execute_script('window.stop()')
driver.quit()
Here is a terminal output in test:
Firefox Headless Browser Invoked
time used: 44.6049938202 s
according to the code this means the driver.get()
call takes 44 seconds to finish call, which is unexpected,I wonder if I misunderstood the behavior of the headless browsers?
As you mentioned in your question it takes too much time to load the whole page(especially when some resource is unavailable) is pretty much possible if the Application Under Test (AUT) uses JavaScript or AJAX Calls.
set_page_load_timeout(5)
andset_script_timeout(5)
set_page_load_timeout(time_to_wait)
: Sets the amount of time to wait for a page load to complete before throwing an exception.set_script_timeout(time_to_wait)
: Sets the amount of time that the script should wait during anexecute_async_script
call before throwing an exception.Hence the Application Under Test being dependent on JavaScript or AJAX Calls in presence of both the conditions raises TimeoutException.
In your second scenario you have induced both
implicitly_wait(2)
andWebDriverWait(driver, 2, 0.5)
.implicitly_wait(time_to_wait)
: Sets the timeout to implicitly wait for an element to be found or a command to complete.WebDriverWait(driver, timeout, poll_frequency=0.5, ignored_exceptions=None)
: Sets the timeout in-conjunction with differentexpected_conditions
Solution :
The best solution would be to remove all the instance of
implicitly_wait(time_to_wait)
and replace withWebDriverWait()
for a stable behavior of the Application Under Test (AUT).Update
As per your counter question, the current code block looks perfect. The measurement of time which you are seeing as
time used: 44.6049938202 s
is the time required for the Web Page to load completely and functionally that is the time required for the Client (i.e. the Web Browser) to return back the control to the WebDriver instance once 'document.readyState' equals to "complete" is achieved. Selenium or as an user you have no control on this rendering process. However for a better performance you may follow the best practices as follows :