Files
puppeteer/utils/doclint
Andrey Lushnikov 13e8580a34 Use puppeteer.launch instead of browser constructor (#255)
This patch:
- split browser launching logic from Browser into `lib/Launcher.js`
- introduce `puppeteer` namespace which currently has a single `launch`
  method to start a browser

With this patch, the browser is no longer created with the `new
Browser(..)` command. Instead, it should be "launched" via the
`puppeteer.launch` method:

```js
const puppeteer = require('puppeteer');
puppeteer.launch().then(async browser => {
  ...
});
```

With this approach browser instance lifetime matches the lifetime of
actual browser process. This helps us:
- remove proxy streams, e.g. browser.stderr and browser.stdout
- cleanup browser class and make it possible to connect to remote
  browser
- introduce events on the browser instance, e.g. 'page' event. In case
  of lazy-launching browser, we should've launch browser when an event
  listener is added, which is unneded comlpexity.
2017-08-14 18:08:06 -07:00
..

DocLint

Doclint is a small program that lints Puppeteer's documentation against Puppeteer's source code.

Doclint works in a few steps:

  1. Read sources in lib/ folder, parse AST trees and extract public API
  2. Read sources in docs/ folder, render markdown to HTML, use puppeteer to traverse the HTML and extract described API
  3. Compare one API to another

Doclint is also responsible for general markdown checks, most notably for the table of contents relevancy.

Running

npm run doc

Tests

Doclint has its own set of jasmine tests, located at utils/doclint/test folder.

To execute tests, run:

npm run test-doclint