Skip to main content
Version: v2

Playwright

Playwright is a cross-browser library written by Microsoft to aide in cross-browser testing and development. This page helps you get started quickly connecting remotely to browserless instead of launching browsers locally. You can find more detailed documentation on playwright's documentation site.

We (officially) support playwright in several languages:

warning

To avoid errors with no apparent reason, please make sure your playwright version is compatible with one of these versions.

Javascript playwright

We support playwright for Javascript out of the box for all their supported browsers.

Using the Playwright protocol

The standard connect method uses Playwright's built-in browser-server protocol to handle the connection. This, generally, is a faster and more fully-featured method since it supports most of the Playwright parameters (such as using a proxy and more). However, since this requires the usage of Playwright in our servers, your client's Playwright version should match ours.

Take a screenshot in Playwright with Firefox

import playwright from "playwright-core";

const pwEndpoint = `wss://production-sfo.browserless.io/firefox/playwright?token=GOES-HERE`;
const browser = await playwright.firefox.connect(pwEndpoint);
const context = await browser.newContext();
const page = await context.newPage();

await page.goto("https://www.nexcess.net/web-tools/browser-information/");
await sleep(50000);
await page.screenshot({
path: `firefox.png`,
});

await browser.close();

Similarly, if you need to use another browser, just make sure the Playwright Browser object matches the endpoint.

Using the Chrome DevTools Protocol

The connectOverCDP method allows Playwright to connect through Chrome's DevTools Protocol. While this is more functionally similar to how puppeteer operates, it does come with a slight performance hit since sessions are more "chatty" over the network versus Playwright's connect. Furthermore, you can only use the Chrome for these connections.

Take a screenshot in Playwright

import playwright from "playwright";

const browser = await playwright.chromium.connectOverCDP(
"wss://production-sfo.browserless.io?token=GOES-HERE",
);
const context = await browser.newContext();
const page = await context.newPage();

await page.goto("https://www.example.com/");
await page.screenshot({ path: "cdp.png" });

await browser.close();

Java playwright

We support playwright for Java out of the box, and just as with JavaScript, we can use either connect() or connectOverCDP().

Here's a simple snippet of its implementation.

Scrape a site title with playwright

package org.example;

import com.microsoft.playwright.Browser;
import com.microsoft.playwright.Page;
import com.microsoft.playwright.Playwright;

import java.nio.file.Paths;

public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
try (Playwright playwright = Playwright.create()) {
String wsEndpoint = "ws://production-sfo.browserless.io/webkit/playwright?token=GOES-HERE";
Browser browser = playwright.webkit().connect(wsEndpoint);

Page page = browser.newPage();
page.navigate("https://www.whatismybrowser.com/");
page.screenshot(new Page.ScreenshotOptions().setPath(Paths.get("webkit.png")));

browser.close();
} catch (Exception exception) {
exception.printStackTrace();
}
}
}

C#.NET Playwright

We support playwright for C# out of the box, and just as with JavaScript, we can use either connect() or connectOverCDP().

Take a screenshot in playwright

using Microsoft.Playwright;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System;

class Program
{
public static async Task Main()
{
try{
using var playwright = await Playwright.CreateAsync();
await using var browser = await playwright.Chromium.ConnectOverCDPAsync("wss://production-sfo.browserless.io?token=YOUR-API-TOKEN");
var page = await browser.NewPageAsync();
await page.GotoAsync("https://example.com/", new PageGotoOptions { WaitUntil = WaitUntilState.NetworkIdle });
await page.ScreenshotAsync(new PageScreenshotOptions { Path = "example.png" });
}
catch (Exception e){
Debug.WriteLine(e.ToString());
}
}
}

Python Playwright

We support Playwright for Python out of the box via their playwright.browser().connect method.

Here's a simple snippet of its implementation, we can add additional features through the context, such as a proxy if necessary.

Print page content

from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright

with sync_playwright() as p:
browser = p.firefox.connect('wss://production-sfo.browserless.io/firefox/playwright?token=GOES-HERE')
context = browser.new_context()
page = context.new_page()
page.goto('http://www.example.com', wait_until='domcontentloaded')
print(page.content())
context.close()