Web Scraping in a Google Chrome Extension (JavaScript + Chrome APIs)

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独厮守ぢ
独厮守ぢ 2020-12-12 09:31

What are the best options for performing Web Scraping of a not currently open tab from within a Google Chrome Extension with JavaScript and whatever more te

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  • 2020-12-12 10:11

    A lot of tools have been released since this question was asked.

    artoo.js is one of them. It's a piece of JavaScript code meant to be run in your browser's console to provide you with some scraping utilities. It can also be used as a chrome extension.

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  • 2020-12-12 10:14

    If you are fine looking at something beyond a Google Chrome Plugin, look at phantomjs which uses Qt-Webkit in background and runs just like a browser incuding making ajax requests. You can call it a headless browser as it doesn't display the output on a screen and can quitely work in background while you are doing other stuff. If you want, you can export out images, pdf out of the pages it fetches. It provides JS interface to load pages, clicking on buttons etc much like you have in a browser. You can also inject custom JS for example jQuery on any of the pages you want to scrape and use it to access the dom and export out desired data. As its using Webkit its rendering behaviour is exactly like Google Chrome.

    Another option would be to use Aptana Jaxer which is based on Mozilla Engine and is very good concept in itself. It can be used as a simple scraping tool as well.

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  • 2020-12-12 10:22

    I'm not sure it's entirely possible with just JavaScript, but if you can set up a dedicated PHP script for your extension that uses cURL to fetch the HTML for a page, the PHP script could scrape the page for you and your extension could read it in through an AJAX request.

    The actual page being scraped wouldn't know it's an AJAX request, however, because it is being accessed through cURL.

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  • 2020-12-12 10:24

    Web scraping is kind of convoluted in a Chrome Extension. Some points:

    • You run content scripts for access to the DOM.
    • Background pages (one per browser) can send and receive messages to content scripts. That is, you can run a content script that sets up an RPC endpoint and fires a specified callback in the context of the background page as a response.
    • You can execute content scripts in all frames of a webpage, then stitch the document tree (composed of the 1..N frames that the page contains) together.
    • As S.K. suggested, your background page can send the data as an XMLHttpRequest to some kind of lightweight HTTP server that listens locally.
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  • 2020-12-12 10:28

    Attempt to use XHR2 responseType = "document" and fall back on (new DOMParser).parseFromString(responseText, getResponseHeader("Content-Type")) with my text/html patch. See https://gist.github.com/1138724 for an example of how I detect responseType = "document support (synchronously checking response === null on an object URL created from a text/html blob).

    Use the Chrome WebRequest API to hide X-Requested-With, etc. headers.

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  • 2020-12-12 10:28

    I think you can start from this example.

    So basically you can try using Extension + Plugin combination. Extension would have access to DOM (including plugin) and drive the process. And Plugin would send actual HTTP requests.

    I can recommend using Firebreath as a crossplatform Chrome/Firefox plugin platform, in particular take a look at this example: Firebreath - Making+HTTP+Requests+with+SimpleStreamsHelper

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