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A javascript implementation of the DOM, for use with node.js.

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jsdom

A JavaScript implementation of the W3C DOM.

Install

$ npm install jsdom

If this gives you trouble with errors about installing Contextify, especially on Windows, see below.

Human contact

see: mailing list

Easymode

Bootstrapping a DOM is generally a difficult process involving many error prone steps. We didn't want jsdom to fall into the same trap and that is why a new method, jsdom.env(), has been added in jsdom 0.2.0 which should make everyone's lives easier.

You can use it with a URL

// Count all of the links from the Node.js build page
var jsdom = require("jsdom");

jsdom.env(
  "http://nodejs.org/dist/",
  ["http://code.jquery.com/jquery.js"],
  function (errors, window) {
    console.log("there have been", window.$("a").length, "nodejs releases!");
  }
);

or with raw HTML

// Run some jQuery on a html fragment
var jsdom = require("jsdom");

jsdom.env(
  '<p><a class="the-link" href="https://github.com/tmpvar/jsdom">jsdom\'s Homepage</a></p>',
  ["http://code.jquery.com/jquery.js"],
  function (errors, window) {
    console.log("contents of a.the-link:", window.$("a.the-link").text());
  }
);

or with a configuration object

// Print all of the news items on hackernews
var jsdom = require("jsdom");

jsdom.env({
  url: "http://news.ycombinator.com/",
  scripts: ["http://code.jquery.com/jquery.js"],
  done: function (errors, window) {
    var $ = window.$;
    console.log("HN Links");
    $("td.title:not(:last) a").each(function() {
      console.log(" -", $(this).text());
    });
  }
});

or with raw JavaScript source

// Print all of the news items on hackernews
var jsdom = require("jsdom");
var fs = require("fs");
var jquery = fs.readFileSync("./jquery.js", "utf-8");

jsdom.env({
  url: "http://news.ycombinator.com/",
  src: [jquery],
  done: function (errors, window) {
    var $ = window.$;
    console.log("HN Links");
    $("td.title:not(:last) a").each(function () {
      console.log(" -", $(this).text());
    });
  }
});

How it works

jsdom.env is built for ease of use, which is rare in the world of the DOM! Since the web has some absolutely horrible JavaScript on it, as of jsdom 0.2.0 jsdom.env will not process external resources (scripts, images, etc). If you want to process the JavaScript use one of the methods below (jsdom.jsdom or jsdom.jQueryify)

jsdom.env(string, [scripts], [config], callback);

The arguments are:

  • string: may be a URL, file name, or HTML fragment
  • scripts: a string or array of strings, containing file names or URLs that will be inserted as <script> tags
  • config: see below
  • callback: takes two arguments
    • error: either an Error object if something failed initializing the window, or an array of error messages from the DOM if there were script errors
    • window: a brand new window

Example:

jsdom.env(html, function (errors, window) {
  // free memory associated with the window
  window.close();
});

If you would like to specify a configuration object only:

jsdom.env(config);
  • config.html: a HTML fragment
  • config.file: a file which jsdom will load HTML from; the resulting window's location.href will be a file:// URL.
  • config.url: sets the resulting window's location.href; if config.html and config.file are not provided, jsdom will load HTML from this URL.
  • config.scripts: see scripts above.
  • config.src: an array of JavaScript strings that will be evaluated against the resulting document. Similar to scripts, but it accepts JavaScript instead of paths/URLs.
  • config.jar: a custom cookie jar, if desired; see mikeal/request documentation.
  • config.done: see callback above.
  • config.document:
    • referer: the new document will have this referer.
    • cookie: manually set a cookie value, e.g. 'key=value; expires=Wed, Sep 21 2011 12:00:00 GMT; path=/'.
    • cookieDomain: a cookie domain for the manually set cookie; defaults to 127.0.0.1.
  • config.features : see Flexibility section below. Note: the default feature set for jsdom.env does not include fetching remote JavaScript and executing it. This is something that you will need to carefully enable yourself.

Note that config.done is required, as is one of config.html, config.file, or config.url.

For the hardcore

If you want to spawn a document/window and specify all sorts of options this is the section for you. This section covers the jsdom.jsdom method:

var jsdom = require("jsdom").jsdom;
var doc = jsdom(markup, level, options);
var window = doc.parentWindow;
  • markup is an HTML/XML document to be parsed. You can also pass null or an undefined value to get a basic document with empty <head> and <body> tags. Document fragments are also supported (including ""), and will behave as sanely as possible (e.g. the resulting document will lack the head, body and documentElement properties if the corresponding elements aren't included).

  • level is null (which means level3) by default, but you can pass another level if you'd like.

    var jsdom = require("jsdom");
    var doc = jsdom.jsdom("<html><body></body></html>", jsdom.level(1, "core"));
  • options See the explanation of the config object above.

Flexibility

One of the goals of jsdom is to be as minimal and light as possible. This section details how someone can change the behavior of Documents on the fly. These features are baked into the DOMImplementation that every Document has, and may be tweaked in two ways:

  1. When you create a new Document using the jsdom builder (require("jsdom").jsdom())
var jsdom = require("jsdom").jsdom;
var doc = jsdom("<html><body></body></html>", null, {
    features: {
      FetchExternalResources : ["img"]
    }
});

Do note, that this will only affect the document that is currently being created. All other documents will use the defaults specified below (see: Default Features).

  1. Before creating any documents, you can modify the defaults for all future documents:
require("jsdom").defaultDocumentFeatures = {
    FetchExternalResources: ["script"],
    ProcessExternalResources: false
};

Default Features

Default features are extremely important for jsdom as they lower the configuration requirement and present developers a set of consistent default behaviors. The following sections detail the available features, their defaults, and the values that jsdom uses.

FetchExternalResources

  • Default: ["script"]
  • Allowed: ["script", "img", "css", "frame", "iframe", "link"] or false

Enables/disables fetching files over the file system/HTTP.

ProcessExternalResources

  • Default: ["script"]
  • Allowed: ["script"] or false

Disabling this will disable script execution (currently only JavaScript).

SkipExternalResources

  • Default: false
  • Allowed: /url to be skipped/ or false
  • Example: /http:\/\/example.org/js/bad\.js/

Do not download and process resources with url matching a regular expression.

Canvas

jsdom includes support for using the canvas package to extend any <canvas> elements with the canvas API. To make this work, you need to include canvas as a dependency in your project, as a peer of jsdom. If jsdom can find the canvas package, it will use it, but if it's not present, then <canvas> elements will behave like <div>s.

More Examples

Creating a document

var jsdom = require("jsdom");
var doc = new (jsdom.level(1, "core").Document)();

console.log(doc.nodeName); // outputs: #document

Creating a browser-like BOM/DOM/Window

var jsdom = require("jsdom").jsdom;
var document = jsdom("<html><head></head><body>hello world</body></html>");
var window = document.parentWindow;

console.log(window.document.innerHTML);
// output: "<html><head></head><body>hello world</body></html>"

console.log(window.innerWidth);
// output: 1024

console.log(typeof window.document.getElementsByClassName);
// outputs: function

jQueryify

var jsdom = require("jsdom");
var window = jsdom.jsdom().parentWindow;

jsdom.jQueryify(window, "http://code.jquery.com/jquery.js", function () {
  window.$("body").append('<div class="testing">Hello World, It works</div>');

  console.log(window.$(".testing").text());
});

Passing objects to scripts inside the page

var jsdom = require("jsdom").jsdom;
var window = jsdom().parentWindow;

window.__myObject = { foo: "bar" };

var scriptEl = window.document.createElement("script");
scriptEl.src = "anotherScript.js";
window.document.body.appendChild(scriptEl);

// anotherScript.js will have the ability to read `window.__myObject`, even
// though it originated in Node!

Test Compliance:

 level1/core         535/535      100%
 level1/html         238/238      100%
 level1/svg          527/527      100%
 level2/core         284/284      100%
 level2/html         708/708      100%
 level2/style          15/15      100%
 level2/extra            4/4      100%
 level2/events         24/24      100%
 level3/xpath          93/93      100%
 window/index            7/7      100%
 window/history          5/5      100%
 window/script         10/10      100%
 window/console          2/2      100%
 window/frame          16/16      100%
 sizzle/index          14/14      100%
 jsdom/index           77/77      100%
 jsdom/parsing         11/11      100%
 jsdom/env             25/25      100%
 jsdom/utils           11/11      100%
 jsonp/jsonp             1/1      100%
 browser/css             1/1      100%
 browser/index         34/34      100%
---------------------------------------
TOTALS: 0/2642 failed; 100% success

Running the tests

First you'll want to npm install. To run all the tests, use npm test, which just calls node test/runner.

Using test/runner directly, you can slice and dice which tests your want to run from different levels. Usage is as follows:

test/runner --help
Run the jsdom test suite

Options:
-s, --suites     suites that you want to run. ie: -s level1/core,1/html,html [string]
-f, --fail-fast  stop on the first failed test
-h, --help       show the help
-t, --tests      choose the test cases to run. ie: -t jquery

Contextify

Contextify is a dependency of jsdom, used for running <script> tags within the page. In other words, it allows jsdom, which is run in Node.js, to run strings of JavaScript in an isolated environment that pretends to be a browser environment instead of a server. You can see how this is an important feature.

Unfortunately, doing this kind of magic requires C++. And in Node.js, using C++ from JavaScript means using "native modules." Native modules are compiled at installation time so that they work precisely for your machine; that is, you don't download a contextify binary from npm, but instead build one locally after downloading the source from npm.

Unfortunately, getting C++ compiled within npm's installation system can be tricky, especially for Windows users. Thus, one of the most common problems with jsdom is trying to use it without the proper compilation tools installed. Here's what you need to compile Contextify, and thus to install jsdom:

Windows

There are some slight modifications to this that can work; for example full versions of Visual Studio usually work, and sometimes you can even get an x64 version of Node.js working too. But it's tricky, so start with the basics!

Mac

  • XCode needs to be installed
  • "Command line tools for XCode" need to be installed
  • Launch XCode once to accept the license, etc. and ensure it's properly installed

Linux

You'll need various build tools installed, like make, Python 2.7, and a compiler toolchain. How to install these will be specific to your distro, if you don't already have them.

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