Since version 1.0.9, selenium-wire has gained the functionality to modify responses to requests. Below is an example of this functionality to inject a script into a page before it reaches a webbrowser.
import os
from seleniumwire import webdriver
from gzip import compress, decompress
from urllib.parse import urlparse
from lxml import html
from lxml.etree import ParserError
from lxml.html import builder
script_elem_to_inject = builder.SCRIPT('alert("injected")')
def inject(req, req_body, res, res_body):
# various checks to make sure we're only injecting the script on appropriate responses
# we check that the content type is HTML, that the status code is 200, and that the encoding is gzip
if res.headers.get_content_subtype() != 'html' or res.status != 200 or res.getheader('Content-Encoding') != 'gzip':
return None
try:
parsed_html = html.fromstring(decompress(res_body))
except ParserError:
return None
try:
parsed_html.head.insert(0, script_elem_to_inject)
except IndexError: # no head element
return None
return compress(html.tostring(parsed_html))
drv = webdriver.Firefox(seleniumwire_options={'custom_response_handler': inject})
drv.header_overrides = {'Accept-Encoding': 'gzip'} # ensure we only get gzip encoded responses
Another way in general to control a browser remotely and be able to inject a script before the pages content loads would be to use a library based on a separate protocol entirely, eg: DevTools Protocol. A Python implementation is available here: https://github.com/pyppeteer/pyppeteer2 (Disclaimer: I'm one of the main authors)
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