$ npm install grunt-lib-phantomjs
Grunt and PhantomJS, sitting in a tree.
The best way to understand how this lib should be used is by looking at the grunt-contrib-qunit plugin. Mainly, look at how the lib is required, how event handlers are bound and how PhantomJS is actually spawned.
Also, in the case of the grunt-contrib-qunit plugin, it's important to know that the page being loaded into PhantomJS doesn't know it will be loaded into PhantomJS, and as such doesn't have any PhantomJS->Grunt code in it. That communication code, aka. the "bridge", is dynamically injected into the html page.
If a Grunt task looked something like this:
grunt.registerTask('mytask', 'Integrate with phantomjs.', function() {
var phantomjs = require('grunt-lib-phantomjs').init(grunt);
var errorCount = 0;
// Handle any number of namespaced events like so.
phantomjs.on('mytask.ok', function(msg) {
grunt.log.writeln(msg);
});
phantomjs.on('mytask.error', function(msg) {
errorCount++;
grunt.log.error(msg);
});
// Create some kind of "all done" event.
phantomjs.on('mytask.done', function() {
phantomjs.halt();
});
// Built-in error handlers.
phantomjs.on('fail.load', function(url) {
phantomjs.halt();
grunt.warn('PhantomJS unable to load URL.');
});
phantomjs.on('fail.timeout', function() {
phantomjs.halt();
grunt.warn('PhantomJS timed out.');
});
// This task is async.
var done = this.async();
// Spawn phantomjs
phantomjs.spawn('test.html', {
// Additional PhantomJS options.
options: {},
// Complete the task when done.
done: function(err) {
done(err || errorCount === 0);
}
});
});
And test.html
looked something like this (note the "bridge" is hard-coded into this page and not injected):
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<script>
// Send messages to the parent PhantomJS process via alert! Good times!!
function sendMessage() {
var args = [].slice.call(arguments);
alert(JSON.stringify(args));
}
sendMessage('mytask.ok', 'Something worked.');
sendMessage('mytask.error', 'Something failed.');
sendMessage('mytask.done');
</script>
</head>
<body>
</body>
</html>
Then running Grunt would behave something like this:
$ grunt mytask
Running "mytask" task
Something worked.
>> Something failed.
Warning: Task "mytask" failed. Use --force to continue.
Aborted due to warnings.
Call this when everything has finished successfully, or when something horrible happens, and you need to clean up and abort.
Spawn a PhantomJS
process. The method returns a reference to the spawned process.
This method has the following arguments:
Type: string
Default: no default value, the user has to set it explicitly.
URL or path to the page .html test file to run.
Type: object
The options object has these possible properties:
Type: function
Default: no default value, the user has to set it explicitly.
The callback to call when the task is done.
Type: number
Default: 0
The error code to exit with when an Error occurs.
Type: number
Default: 1000
ms
The timeout in milliseconds after which the PhantomJS process will be killed.
Type: object
Default: {}
Additional options to passe to PhantomJS
. This object has the following properties:
Type: number
Default: undefined
PhantomJS' timeout, in milliseconds.
Type: string|array
Default: undefined
One or multiple (array) JavaScript file names to inject into the page.
Type: object
Default: undefined
An object of options for the PhantomJS page
object.
Type: boolean
Default: undefined
Saves a screenshot on failure
PhantomJS requires these dependencies on Ubuntu/Debian:
apt-get install libfontconfig1 fontconfig libfontconfig1-dev libfreetype6-dev
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