A Scrapy Download Handler which performs requests using Playwright for Python. It can be used to handle pages that require JavaScript (among other things), while adhering to the regular Scrapy workflow (i.e. without interfering with request scheduling, item processing, etc).
After the release of version 2.0,
which includes coroutine syntax support
and asyncio support, Scrapy allows
to integrate asyncio
-based projects such as Playwright
.
- Python >= 3.8
- Scrapy >= 2.0 (!= 2.4.0)
- Playwright >= 1.15
scrapy-playwright
is available on PyPI and can be installed with pip
:
pip install scrapy-playwright
playwright
is defined as a dependency so it gets installed automatically,
however it might be necessary to install the specific browser(s) that will be
used:
playwright install
It's also possible to install only a subset of the available browsers:
playwright install firefox chromium
See the changelog document.
Replace the default http
and/or https
Download Handlers through
DOWNLOAD_HANDLERS
:
# settings.py
DOWNLOAD_HANDLERS = {
"http": "scrapy_playwright.handler.ScrapyPlaywrightDownloadHandler",
"https": "scrapy_playwright.handler.ScrapyPlaywrightDownloadHandler",
}
Note that the ScrapyPlaywrightDownloadHandler
class inherits from the default
http/https
handler. Unless explicitly marked (see Basic usage),
requests will be processed by the regular Scrapy download handler.
Install the asyncio
-based Twisted reactor:
# settings.py
TWISTED_REACTOR = "twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor"
This is the default in new projects since Scrapy 2.7.
Set the playwright
Request.meta
key to download a request using Playwright:
import scrapy
class AwesomeSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = "awesome"
def start_requests(self):
# GET request
yield scrapy.Request("https://httpbin.org/get", meta={"playwright": True})
# POST request
yield scrapy.FormRequest(
url="https://httpbin.org/post",
formdata={"foo": "bar"},
meta={"playwright": True},
)
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
# 'response' contains the page as seen by the browser
return {"url": response.url}
By default, outgoing requests include the User-Agent
set by Scrapy (either with the
USER_AGENT
or DEFAULT_REQUEST_HEADERS
settings or via the Request.headers
attribute).
This could cause some sites to react in unexpected ways, for instance if the user agent
does not match the running Browser. If you prefer the User-Agent
sent by
default by the specific browser you're using, set the Scrapy user agent to None
.
Windows support is possible by running Playwright in a ProactorEventLoop
in a separate thread.
This is necessary because it's not possible to run Playwright in the same
asyncio event loop as the Scrapy crawler:
- Playwright runs the driver in a subprocess. Source: Playwright repository.
- "On Windows, the default event loop
ProactorEventLoop
supports subprocesses, whereasSelectorEventLoop
does not". Source: Python docs. - Twisted's
asyncio
reactor requires theSelectorEventLoop
. Source: Twisted repository
Supported settings
Type str
, default "chromium"
.
The browser type to be launched, e.g. chromium
, firefox
, webkit
.
PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSER_TYPE = "firefox"
Type dict
, default {}
A dictionary with options to be passed as keyword arguments when launching the
Browser. See the docs for
BrowserType.launch
for a list of supported keyword arguments.
PLAYWRIGHT_LAUNCH_OPTIONS = {
"headless": False,
"timeout": 20 * 1000, # 20 seconds
}
Type Optional[str]
, default None
The endpoint of a remote Chromium browser to connect using the
Chrome DevTools Protocol,
via BrowserType.connect_over_cdp
.
PLAYWRIGHT_CDP_URL = "http://localhost:9222"
If this setting is used:
- all non-persistent contexts will be created on the connected remote browser
- the
PLAYWRIGHT_LAUNCH_OPTIONS
setting is ignored - the
PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSER_TYPE
setting must not be set to a value different than "chromium"
This settings CANNOT be used at the same time as PLAYWRIGHT_CONNECT_URL
Type dict[str, Any]
, default {}
Additional keyword arguments to be passed to
BrowserType.connect_over_cdp
when using PLAYWRIGHT_CDP_URL
. The endpoint_url
key is always ignored,
PLAYWRIGHT_CDP_URL
is used instead.
PLAYWRIGHT_CDP_KWARGS = {
"slow_mo": 1000,
"timeout": 10 * 1000
}
Type Optional[str]
, default None
URL of a remote Playwright browser instance to connect using
BrowserType.connect
.
From the upstream Playwright docs:
When connecting to another browser launched via
BrowserType.launchServer
in Node.js, the major and minor version needs to match the client version (1.2.3 → is compatible with 1.2.x).
PLAYWRIGHT_CONNECT_URL = "ws://localhost:35477/ae1fa0bc325adcfd9600d9f712e9c733"
If this setting is used:
- all non-persistent contexts will be created on the connected remote browser
- the
PLAYWRIGHT_LAUNCH_OPTIONS
setting is ignored
This settings CANNOT be used at the same time as PLAYWRIGHT_CDP_URL
Type dict[str, Any]
, default {}
Additional keyword arguments to be passed to
BrowserType.connect
when using PLAYWRIGHT_CONNECT_URL
. The ws_endpoint
key is always ignored,
PLAYWRIGHT_CONNECT_URL
is used instead.
PLAYWRIGHT_CONNECT_KWARGS = {
"slow_mo": 1000,
"timeout": 10 * 1000
}
Type dict[str, dict]
, default {}
A dictionary which defines Browser contexts to be created on startup. It should be a mapping of (name, keyword arguments).
PLAYWRIGHT_CONTEXTS = {
"foobar": {
"context_arg1": "value",
"context_arg2": "value",
},
"default": {
"context_arg1": "value",
"context_arg2": "value",
},
"persistent": {
"user_data_dir": "/path/to/dir", # will be a persistent context
"context_arg1": "value",
},
}
See the section on browser contexts for more information.
See also the docs for Browser.new_context
.
Type Optional[int]
, default None
Maximum amount of allowed concurrent Playwright contexts. If unset or None
,
no limit is enforced. See the Maximum concurrent context count
section for more information.
PLAYWRIGHT_MAX_CONTEXTS = 8
Type Optional[float]
, default None
Timeout to be used when requesting pages by Playwright, in milliseconds. If
None
or unset, the default value will be used (30000 ms at the time of writing).
See the docs for BrowserContext.set_default_navigation_timeout.
PLAYWRIGHT_DEFAULT_NAVIGATION_TIMEOUT = 10 * 1000 # 10 seconds
Type Optional[Union[Callable, str]]
, default scrapy_playwright.headers.use_scrapy_headers
A function (or the path to a function) that processes a Playwright request and returns a
dictionary with headers to be overridden (note that, depending on the browser, additional
default headers could be sent as well). Coroutine functions (async def
) are supported.
This will be called at least once for each Scrapy request, but it could be called additional times if Playwright generates more requests (e.g. to retrieve assets like images or scripts).
The function must return a Dict[str, str]
object, and receives the following three keyword arguments:
- browser_type_name: str
- playwright_request: playwright.async_api.Request
- scrapy_request_data: dict
* method: str
* url: str
* headers: scrapy.http.headers.Headers
* body: Optional[bytes]
* encoding: str
The default function (scrapy_playwright.headers.use_scrapy_headers
) tries to
emulate Scrapy's behaviour for navigation requests, i.e. overriding headers
with their values from the Scrapy request. For non-navigation requests (e.g.
images, stylesheets, scripts, etc), only the User-Agent
header is overriden,
for consistency.
Setting PLAYWRIGHT_PROCESS_REQUEST_HEADERS=None
will give complete control to
Playwright, i.e. headers from Scrapy requests will be ignored and only headers
set by Playwright will be sent. Keep in mind that in this case, headers passed
via the Request.headers
attribute or set by Scrapy components are ignored
(including cookies set via the Request.cookies
attribute).
Example:
async def custom_headers(
*,
browser_type_name: str,
playwright_request: playwright.async_api.Request,
scrapy_request_data: dict,
) -> Dict[str, str]:
headers = await playwright_request.all_headers()
scrapy_headers = scrapy_request_data["headers"].to_unicode_dict()
headers["Cookie"] = scrapy_headers.get("Cookie")
return headers
PLAYWRIGHT_PROCESS_REQUEST_HEADERS = custom_headers
In version 0.0.40 and earlier, arguments were passed to the function positionally, and only the Scrapy headers were passed instead of a dictionary with data about the Scrapy request. This is deprecated since version 0.0.41, and support for this way of handling arguments will eventually be removed in accordance with the Deprecation policy.
Passed arguments:
- browser_type: str
- playwright_request: playwright.async_api.Request
- scrapy_headers: scrapy.http.headers.Headers
Example:
def custom_headers(
browser_type: str,
playwright_request: playwright.async_api.Request,
scrapy_headers: scrapy.http.headers.Headers,
) -> dict:
if browser_type == "firefox":
return {"User-Agent": "foo"}
return {"User-Agent": "bar"}
PLAYWRIGHT_PROCESS_REQUEST_HEADERS = custom_headers
Type bool
, default True
Whether the browser will be restarted if it gets disconnected, for instance if the local
browser crashes or a remote connection times out.
Implemented by listening to the
disconnected
Browser event,
for this reason it does not apply to persistent contexts since
BrowserType.launch_persistent_context
returns the context directly.
Type int
, defaults to the value of Scrapy's CONCURRENT_REQUESTS
setting
Maximum amount of allowed concurrent Playwright pages for each context. See the notes about leaving unclosed pages.
PLAYWRIGHT_MAX_PAGES_PER_CONTEXT = 4
Type Optional[Union[Callable, str]]
, default None
A predicate function (or the path to a function) that receives a
playwright.async_api.Request
object and must return True
if the request should be aborted, False
otherwise.
Coroutine functions (async def
) are supported.
Note that all requests will appear in the DEBUG level logs, however there will
be no corresponding response log lines for aborted requests. Aborted requests
are counted in the playwright/request_count/aborted
job stats item.
def should_abort_request(request):
return (
request.resource_type == "image"
or ".jpg" in request.url
)
PLAYWRIGHT_ABORT_REQUEST = should_abort_request
For settings that accept object paths as strings, passing callable objects is only supported when using Scrapy>=2.4. With prior versions, only strings are supported.
Supported Request.meta
keys
Type bool
, default False
If set to a value that evaluates to True
the request will be processed by Playwright.
return scrapy.Request("https://example.org", meta={"playwright": True})
Type str
, default "default"
Name of the context to be used to download the request. See the section on browser contexts for more information.
return scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_context": "awesome_context",
},
)
Type dict
, default {}
A dictionary with keyword arguments to be used when creating a new context, if a context
with the name specified in the playwright_context
meta key does not exist already.
See the section on browser contexts for more information.
return scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_context": "awesome_context",
"playwright_context_kwargs": {
"ignore_https_errors": True,
},
},
)
Type bool
, default False
If True
, the Playwright page
that was used to download the request will be available in the callback at
response.meta['playwright_page']
. If False
(or unset) the page will be
closed immediately after processing the request.
Important!
This meta key is entirely optional, it's NOT necessary for the page to load or for any
asynchronous operation to be performed (specifically, it's NOT necessary for PageMethod
objects to be applied). Use it only if you need access to the Page object in the callback
that handles the response.
For more information and important notes see Receiving Page objects in callbacks.
return scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={"playwright": True, "playwright_include_page": True},
)
Type Dict[Str, Callable]
, default {}
A dictionary of handlers to be attached to page events. See Handling page events.
Type Optional[Union[Callable, str]]
, default None
A coroutine function (async def
) to be invoked for newly created pages.
Called after attaching page event handlers & setting up internal route
handling, before making any request. It receives the Playwright page and the
Scrapy request as positional arguments. Useful for initialization code.
Ignored if the page for the request already exists (e.g. by passing
playwright_page
).
async def init_page(page, request):
await page.add_init_script(path="./custom_script.js")
class AwesomeSpider(scrapy.Spider):
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://httpbin.org/headers",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_page_init_callback": init_page,
},
)
Important!
scrapy-playwright
uses Page.route
& Page.unroute
internally, avoid using
these methods unless you know exactly what you're doing.
Type Iterable[PageMethod]
, default ()
An iterable of scrapy_playwright.page.PageMethod
objects to indicate actions to be performed on the page before returning the
final response. See Executing actions on pages.
Type Optional[playwright.async_api.Page]
, default None
A Playwright page to be used to
download the request. If unspecified, a new page is created for each request.
This key could be used in conjunction with playwright_include_page
to make a chain of
requests using the same page. For instance:
from playwright.async_api import Page
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://httpbin.org/get",
meta={"playwright": True, "playwright_include_page": True},
)
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
page: Page = response.meta["playwright_page"]
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://httpbin.org/headers",
callback=self.parse_headers,
meta={"playwright": True, "playwright_page": page},
)
Type dict
, default {}
A dictionary with keyword arguments to be passed to the page's
goto
method
when navigating to an URL. The url
key is ignored if present, the request
URL is used instead.
return scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_page_goto_kwargs": {
"wait_until": "networkidle",
},
},
)
Type Optional[dict]
, read only
A dictionary with security information
about the give response. Only available for HTTPS requests. Could be accessed
in the callback via response.meta['playwright_security_details']
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
print(response.meta["playwright_security_details"])
# {'issuer': 'DigiCert TLS RSA SHA256 2020 CA1', 'protocol': 'TLS 1.3', 'subjectName': 'www.example.org', 'validFrom': 1647216000, 'validTo': 1678838399}
Type Optional[str]
, read only
The value of the Download.suggested_filename
attribute when the response is the binary contents of a
download (e.g. a PDF file).
Only available for responses that only caused a download. Can be accessed
in the callback via response.meta['playwright_suggested_filename']
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
print(response.meta["playwright_suggested_filename"])
# 'sample_file.pdf'
Specifying a value that evaluates to True
in the
playwright_include_page
meta key for a
request will result in the corresponding playwright.async_api.Page
object
being available in the playwright_page
meta key in the request callback.
In order to be able to await
coroutines on the provided Page
object,
the callback needs to be defined as a coroutine function (async def
).
Caution
Use this carefully, and only if you really need to do things with the Page
object in the callback. If pages are not properly closed after they are no longer
necessary the spider job could get stuck because of the limit set by the
PLAYWRIGHT_MAX_PAGES_PER_CONTEXT
setting.
from playwright.async_api import Page
import scrapy
class AwesomeSpiderWithPage(scrapy.Spider):
name = "page_spider"
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
callback=self.parse_first,
meta={"playwright": True, "playwright_include_page": True},
errback=self.errback_close_page,
)
def parse_first(self, response):
page: Page = response.meta["playwright_page"]
return scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.com",
callback=self.parse_second,
meta={"playwright": True, "playwright_include_page": True, "playwright_page": page},
errback=self.errback_close_page,
)
async def parse_second(self, response):
page: Page = response.meta["playwright_page"]
title = await page.title() # "Example Domain"
await page.close()
return {"title": title}
async def errback_close_page(self, failure):
page: Page = failure.request.meta["playwright_page"]
await page.close()
Notes:
- When passing
playwright_include_page=True
, make sure pages are always closed when they are no longer used. It's recommended to set a Request errback to make sure pages are closed even if a request fails (ifplaywright_include_page=False
pages are automatically closed upon encountering an exception). This is important, as open pages count towards the limit set byPLAYWRIGHT_MAX_PAGES_PER_CONTEXT
and crawls could freeze if the limit is reached and pages remain open indefinitely. - Defining callbacks as
async def
is only necessary if you need toawait
things, it's NOT necessary if you just need to pass over the Page object from one callback to another (see the example above). - Any network operations resulting from awaiting a coroutine on a Page object
(
goto
,go_back
, etc) will be executed directly by Playwright, bypassing the Scrapy request workflow (Scheduler, Middlewares, etc).
Multiple browser contexts
to be launched at startup can be defined via the
PLAYWRIGHT_CONTEXTS
setting.
Pass the name of the desired context in the playwright_context
meta key:
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={"playwright": True, "playwright_context": "first"},
)
If a request does not explicitly indicate a context via the playwright_context
meta key, it falls back to using a general context called default
. This default
context can also be customized on startup via the PLAYWRIGHT_CONTEXTS
setting.
Pass a value for the user_data_dir
keyword argument to launch a context as
persistent. See also BrowserType.launch_persistent_context
.
Note that persistent contexts are launched independently from the main browser
instance, hence keyword arguments passed in the
PLAYWRIGHT_LAUNCH_OPTIONS
setting do not apply.
If the context specified in the playwright_context
meta key does not exist, it will be created.
You can specify keyword arguments to be passed to
Browser.new_context
in the playwright_context_kwargs
meta key:
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_context": "new",
"playwright_context_kwargs": {
"java_script_enabled": False,
"ignore_https_errors": True,
"proxy": {
"server": "http://myproxy.com:3128",
"username": "user",
"password": "pass",
},
},
},
)
Please note that if a context with the specified name already exists,
that context is used and playwright_context_kwargs
are ignored.
After receiving the Page object in your callback,
you can access a context though the corresponding Page.context
attribute, and await close
on it.
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
callback=self.parse_in_new_context,
errback=self.close_context_on_error,
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_context": "awesome_context",
"playwright_include_page": True,
},
)
async def parse_in_new_context(self, response):
page = response.meta["playwright_page"]
title = await page.title()
await page.close()
await page.context.close()
return {"title": title}
async def close_context_on_error(self, failure):
page = failure.request.meta["playwright_page"]
await page.close()
await page.context.close()
Make sure to close the page before closing the context. See this comment in #191 for more information.
Specify a value for the PLAYWRIGHT_MAX_CONTEXTS
setting to limit the amount
of concurent contexts. Use with caution: it's possible to block the whole crawl
if contexts are not closed after they are no longer used (refer to
this section to dinamically close contexts).
Make sure to define an errback to still close contexts even if there are errors.
Proxies are supported at the Browser level by specifying the proxy
key in
the PLAYWRIGHT_LAUNCH_OPTIONS
setting:
from scrapy import Spider, Request
class ProxySpider(Spider):
name = "proxy"
custom_settings = {
"PLAYWRIGHT_LAUNCH_OPTIONS": {
"proxy": {
"server": "http://myproxy.com:3128",
"username": "user",
"password": "pass",
},
}
}
def start_requests(self):
yield Request("http://httpbin.org/get", meta={"playwright": True})
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
print(response.text)
Proxies can also be set at the context level with the PLAYWRIGHT_CONTEXTS
setting:
PLAYWRIGHT_CONTEXTS = {
"default": {
"proxy": {
"server": "http://default-proxy.com:3128",
"username": "user1",
"password": "pass1",
},
},
"alternative": {
"proxy": {
"server": "http://alternative-proxy.com:3128",
"username": "user2",
"password": "pass2",
},
},
}
Or passing a proxy
key when creating contexts while crawling.
See also:
zyte-smartproxy-playwright
: seamless support for Zyte Smart Proxy Manager in the Node.js version of Playwright.- the upstream Playwright for Python section on HTTP Proxies.
A sorted iterable (e.g. list
, tuple
, dict
) of PageMethod
objects
could be passed in the playwright_page_methods
Request.meta
key to request methods to be invoked on the Page
object before returning the final
Response
to the callback.
This is useful when you need to perform certain actions on a page (like scrolling down or clicking links) and you want to handle only the final result in your callback.
Represents a method to be called (and awaited if necessary) on a
playwright.page.Page
object (e.g. "click", "screenshot", "evaluate", etc).
It's also possible to pass callable objects that will be invoked as callbacks
and receive Playwright Page as argument.
method
is the name of the method, *args
and **kwargs
are passed when calling such method. The return value
will be stored in the PageMethod.result
attribute.
For instance:
def start_requests(self):
yield Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_page_methods": [
PageMethod("screenshot", path="example.png", full_page=True),
],
},
)
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
screenshot = response.meta["playwright_page_methods"][0]
# screenshot.result contains the image's bytes
produces the same effect as:
def start_requests(self):
yield Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={"playwright": True, "playwright_include_page": True},
)
async def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
page = response.meta["playwright_page"]
screenshot = await page.screenshot(path="example.png", full_page=True)
# screenshot contains the image's bytes
await page.close()
If a PageMethod
receives a callable object as its first argument, it will be
called with the page as its first argument. Any additional arguments are passed
to the callable after the page.
async def scroll_page(page: Page) -> str:
await page.wait_for_selector(selector="div.quote")
await page.evaluate("window.scrollBy(0, document.body.scrollHeight)")
await page.wait_for_selector(selector="div.quote:nth-child(11)")
return page.url
class MySpyder(scrapy.Spider):
name = "scroll"
def start_requests(self):
yield Request(
url="https://quotes.toscrape.com/scroll",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_page_methods": [PageMethod(scroll_page)],
},
)
Refer to the upstream docs for the Page
class
to see available methods.
Certain Response
attributes (e.g. url
, ip_address
) reflect the state after the last
action performed on a page. If you issue a PageMethod
with an action that results in
a navigation (e.g. a click
on a link), the Response.url
attribute will point to the
new URL, which might be different from the request's URL.
A dictionary of Page event handlers can be specified in the playwright_page_event_handlers
Request.meta key.
Keys are the name of the event to be handled (e.g. dialog
, download
, etc).
Values can be either callables or strings (in which case a spider method with the name will be looked up).
Example:
from playwright.async_api import Dialog
async def handle_dialog(dialog: Dialog) -> None:
logging.info(f"Handled dialog with message: {dialog.message}")
await dialog.dismiss()
class EventSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = "event"
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={
"playwright": True,
"playwright_page_event_handlers": {
"dialog": handle_dialog,
"response": "handle_response",
},
},
)
async def handle_response(self, response: PlaywrightResponse) -> None:
logging.info(f"Received response with URL {response.url}")
See the upstream Page
docs
for a list of the accepted events and the arguments passed to their handlers.
- Event handlers will remain attached to the page and will be called for subsequent downloads using the same page unless they are removed later. This is usually not a problem, since by default requests are performed in single-use pages.
- Event handlers will process Playwright objects, not Scrapy ones. For example, for each Scrapy request/response there will be a matching Playwright request/response, but not the other way: background requests/responses to get images, scripts, stylesheets, etc are not seen by Scrapy.
The default Scrapy memory usage extension
(scrapy.extensions.memusage.MemoryUsage
) does not include the memory used by
Playwright because the browser is launched as a separate process. The
scrapy-playwright package provides a replacement extension which also considers
the memory used by Playwright. This extension needs the
psutil
package to work.
Update the EXTENSIONS setting to disable the built-in Scrapy extension and replace it with the one from the scrapy-playwright package:
# settings.py
EXTENSIONS = {
"scrapy.extensions.memusage.MemoryUsage": None,
"scrapy_playwright.memusage.ScrapyPlaywrightMemoryUsageExtension": 0,
}
Refer to the upstream docs for more information about supported settings.
Just like the upstream Scrapy extension, this custom memory extension does not work
on Windows. This is because the stdlib resource
module is not available.
Click on a link, save the resulting page as PDF
class ClickAndSavePdfSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = "pdf"
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta=dict(
playwright=True,
playwright_page_methods={
"click": PageMethod("click", selector="a"),
"pdf": PageMethod("pdf", path="/tmp/file.pdf"),
},
),
)
def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
pdf_bytes = response.meta["playwright_page_methods"]["pdf"].result
with open("iana.pdf", "wb") as fp:
fp.write(pdf_bytes)
yield {"url": response.url} # response.url is "https://www.iana.org/domains/reserved"
Scroll down on an infinite scroll page, take a screenshot of the full page
class ScrollSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = "scroll"
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="http://quotes.toscrape.com/scroll",
meta=dict(
playwright=True,
playwright_include_page=True,
playwright_page_methods=[
PageMethod("wait_for_selector", "div.quote"),
PageMethod("evaluate", "window.scrollBy(0, document.body.scrollHeight)"),
PageMethod("wait_for_selector", "div.quote:nth-child(11)"), # 10 per page
],
),
)
async def parse(self, response, **kwargs):
page = response.meta["playwright_page"]
await page.screenshot(path="quotes.png", full_page=True)
await page.close()
return {"quote_count": len(response.css("div.quote"))} # quotes from several pages
See the examples directory for more.
Specifying a proxy via the proxy
Request meta key is not supported.
Refer to the Proxy support section for more information.
The headers_received
and bytes_received
signals are not fired by the
scrapy-playwright download handler.
Before opening an issue please make sure the unexpected behavior can only be observed by using this package and not with standalone Playwright. To do this, translate your spider code to a reasonably close Playwright script: if the issue also occurs this way, you should instead report it upstream. For instance:
import scrapy
class ExampleSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = "example"
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta=dict(
playwright=True,
playwright_page_methods=[
PageMethod("screenshot", path="example.png", full_page=True),
],
),
)
translates roughly to:
import asyncio
from playwright.async_api import async_playwright
async def main():
async with async_playwright() as pw:
browser = await pw.chromium.launch()
page = await browser.new_page()
await page.goto("https://example.org")
await page.screenshot(path="example.png", full_page=True)
await browser.close()
asyncio.run(main())
Be sure to include which versions of Scrapy, Playwright and scrapy-playwright you are using:
$ playwright --version
Version 1.44.0
$ python -c "import scrapy_playwright; print(scrapy_playwright.__version__)"
0.0.34
$ scrapy version -v
Scrapy : 2.11.1
lxml : 5.1.0.0
libxml2 : 2.12.3
cssselect : 1.2.0
parsel : 1.8.1
w3lib : 2.1.2
Twisted : 23.10.0
Python : 3.10.12 (main, Nov 20 2023, 15:14:05) [GCC 11.4.0]
pyOpenSSL : 24.0.0 (OpenSSL 3.2.1 30 Jan 2024)
cryptography : 42.0.5
Platform : Linux-6.5.0-35-generic-x86_64-with-glibc2.35
When opening an issue please include a
Minimal, Reproducible Example
that shows the reported behavior. In addition, please make the code as self-contained as possible
so an active Scrapy project is not required and the spider can be executed directly from a file with
scrapy runspider
.
This usually means including the relevant settings in the spider's
custom_settings
attribute:
import scrapy
class ExampleSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = "example"
custom_settings = {
"TWISTED_REACTOR": "twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor",
"DOWNLOAD_HANDLERS": {
"https": "scrapy_playwright.handler.ScrapyPlaywrightDownloadHandler",
"http": "scrapy_playwright.handler.ScrapyPlaywrightDownloadHandler",
},
}
def start_requests(self):
yield scrapy.Request(
url="https://example.org",
meta={"playwright": True},
)
Please make the effort to reduce the code to the minimum that still displays the issue. It is very rare that a complete project (including middlewares, pipelines, item processing, etc) is really needed to reproduce an issue. Reports that do not show an actual debugging attempt will not be considered.
Logs for spider jobs displaying the issue in detail are extremely useful for understanding possible bugs. Include lines before and after the problem, not just isolated tracebacks. Job stats displayed at the end of the job are also important.
See the FAQ document.
Deprecated features will be supported for at least six months following the release that deprecated them. After that, they may be removed at any time. See the changelog for more information about deprecations and removals.