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Selenium Requests

Extends Selenium WebDriver classes to include the request function from the Requests library, while doing all the needed cookie and request headers handling.

Before the actual request is made, a local HTTP server is started that serves a single request made by the webdriver instance to get the "standard" HTTP request headers sent by this webdriver; these are cached (only happens once during its lifetime) and later used in conjunction with the Requests library to make the requests look identical to those that would have been sent by the webdriver. Cookies held by the webdriver instance are added to the request headers and those returned in a response automatically set for the webdriver instance.

Features

Usage

# Import any WebDriver class that you would usually import from
# selenium.webdriver from the seleniumrequests module
from seleniumrequests import Firefox

# Simple usage with built-in WebDrivers:
webdriver = Firefox()
response = webdriver.request('GET', 'https://www.google.com/')
print(response)


# More complex usage, using a WebDriver from another Selenium-related module:
from seleniumrequests.request import RequestsSessionMixin
from someothermodule import CustomWebDriver


class MyCustomWebDriver(RequestsSessionMixin, CustomWebDriver):
    pass


custom_webdriver = MyCustomWebDriver()
response = custom_webdriver.request('GET', 'https://www.google.com/')
print(response)

Installation

pip install selenium-requests

Remote WebDriver

When using webdriver.Remote it is very likely that the HTTP proxy server spawned by selenium-requests does not run on the same machine. By default, the webdriver tries to access the proxy server under 127.0.0.1. This can be changed by passing the proxy_host= argument with the correct IP or hostname to the webdriver.

driver = seleniumrequests.Remote(
    'http://192.168.101.1:4444/wd/hub',
    options=chrome_options,
    proxy_host='192.168.101.2'
)