This package requires Node 22.0 (LTS) or higher and the Puppeteer Node library (v23.0 or higher).
##Installing puppeteer on MacOS
On MacOS you can install Puppeteer in your project via NPM:
npm install puppeteer
Or you could opt to just install it globally
npm install puppeteer --location=global
##Installing puppeteer on a Forge provisioned server
On a Forge provisioned Ubuntu v24.04 server you can install the latest stable version of Chrome like this:
# Check if node and npm are installed
node -v && npm -v
# Install puppeteer
sudo npm install -g puppeteer
# Install chromium
npx puppeteer browsers install chrome
# Install dependencies
sudo apt update
sudo apt install libx11-xcb1 libxcomposite1 libasound2t64 libatk1.0-0 libatk-bridge2.0-0 libcairo2 libcups2 libdbus-1-3 libexpat1 libfontconfig1 libgbm1 libgcc1 libglib2.0-0 libgtk-3-0 libnspr4 libpango-1.0-0 libpangocairo-1.0-0 libstdc++6 libx11-6 libx11-xcb1 libxcb1 libxcomposite1 libxcursor1 libxdamage1 libxext6 libxfixes3 libxi6 libxrandr2 libxrender1 libxss1 libxtst6
##Custom node and npm binaries
Depending on your setup, node or npm might be not directly available to Browsershot.
If you need to manually set these binary paths, you can do this by calling the setNodeBinary
and setNpmBinary
method.
Browsershot::html('Foo')
->setNodeBinary('/usr/local/bin/node')
->setNpmBinary('/usr/local/bin/npm');
By default, Browsershot will use node
and npm
to execute commands.
##Custom include path
If you don't want to manually specify binary paths, but rather modify the include path in general,
you can set it using the setIncludePath
method.
Browsershot::html('Foo')
->setIncludePath('$PATH:/usr/local/bin')
Setting the include path can be useful in cases where node
and npm
can not be found automatically.
##Custom node module path
If you want to use an alternative node_modules
source you can set it using the setNodeModulePath
method.
Browsershot::html('Foo')
->setNodeModulePath("/path/to/my/project/node_modules/")
##Custom binary path
If you want to use an alternative script source you can set it using the setBinPath
method.
Browsershot::html('Foo')
->setBinPath("/path/to/my/project/my_script.js")
##Custom chrome/chromium executable path
If you want to use an alternative chrome or chromium executable from what is installed by puppeteer you can set it using the setChromePath
method.
Browsershot::html('Foo')
->setChromePath("/path/to/my/chrome")
##Pass custom arguments to Chromium
If you need to pass custom arguments to Chromium, use the addChromiumArguments
method.
The method accepts an array
of key/value pairs, or simply values. All of these arguments will automatically be prefixed with --
.
Browsershot::html('Foo')
->addChromiumArguments([
'some-argument-without-a-value',
'keyed-argument' => 'argument-value',
]);
If no key is provided, then the argument is passed through as-is.
Example array |
Flags that will be passed to Chromium |
['foo'] |
--foo |
['foo', 'bar'] |
--foo --bar |
['foo', 'bar' => 'baz' ] |
--foo --bar=baz |
This method can be useful in order to pass a flag to fix font rendering issues on some Linux distributions (e.g. CentOS).
Browsershot::html('Foo')
->addChromiumArguments([
'font-render-hinting' => 'none',
]);