This PR is a fix proposal for a bug when trying to record a omnibox
navigation after a recorded action (e.g., `fill`).
The following test, included in this PR, reproduces the problem:
```ts
test('should record omnibox navigations after recordAction', async ({ page, openRecorder, server }) => {
const recorder = await openRecorder();
await recorder.setContentAndWait(`<textarea></textarea>`);
await Promise.all([
recorder.waitForOutput('JavaScript', 'fill'),
page.locator('textarea').fill('Hello world'),
]);
// for performed actions, 5 seconds is the time needed to ensure they are committed
await page.waitForTimeout(5000);
await page.goto(server.PREFIX + `/empty.html`);
await recorder.waitForOutput('JavaScript', `await page.goto('${server.PREFIX}/empty.html');`);
});
```
After performed actions (e.g., `click`), it successfully records the
navigation as long as there's at least a 5 sec. gap between both
actions. That happens because after that 5 sec. interval the performed
action is automatically commited and therefore the navigation is not
stored as a signal of that action.
The proposed fix for recorded actions also forces that action to be
automatically commited after 5 sec (for testing, I'm using 500ms to
speed up the test execution).
It was already handling worker sessions, but not OOPIFs. As a result,
some functionality was properly implemented only for OOPIFs and not for
workers.
This change removes OOPIFs fanout for network-related calls from CRPage
and moves that to the CRNetworkManager, now also covering workers.
The metadata.error change was brought back in
https://github.com/microsoft/playwright/pull/29271and it broke java port
as we could have error and result set simulteniously. This PR moves the
logic to the trace recorder instead and keeps the protocol contract
clear that either error or result is present, but not both.
We stopped catching all exceptions in
https://github.com/microsoft/playwright/pull/28539 in hope that we'll
get loadingFailed even before Fetch.continue/fulfill command's error.
Turns out this is racy and may fail if the test cancels the request
while we are continuing it. The following test could in theory reproduce
it if stars align and the timing is good:
```js
it('page.continue on canceled request', async ({ page }) => {
let resolveRoute;
const routePromise = new Promise<Route>(f => resolveRoute = f);
await page.route('http://test.com/x', resolveRoute);
const evalPromise = page.evaluate(async () => {
const abortController = new AbortController();
(window as any).abortController = abortController;
return fetch('http://test.com/x', { signal: abortController.signal }).catch(e => 'cancelled');
});
const route = await routePromise;
void page.evaluate(() => (window as any).abortController.abort());
await new Promise(f => setTimeout(f, 10));
await route.continue();
const req = await evalPromise;
expect(req).toBe('cancelled');
});
```
Fixes https://github.com/microsoft/playwright/issues/29123
Motivation: On Windows we call around 50 times `PrintDeps.exe` which
takes on a very fast machine 500+ms. On Linux we do it around 120 times
(`ldd`) which takes around 150ms.
This change validates the dependencies once on browser install (`npx
playwright install`). In case its failing, it will emit a warning, in
case of a success, it will create a marker file that the binary has been
validated. For future `launch()` calls, we'll read this file and if
exists, we'll not validate again. Otherwise we'll validate again.
Note: If the marker file is older than 30 days, the browser will be
validated again.