The BrowserKit Component
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The BrowserKit component simulates the behavior of a web browser, allowing you to make requests, click on links and submit forms programmatically.
Note
In Symfony versions prior to 4.3, the BrowserKit component could only make internal requests to your application. Starting from Symfony 4.3, this component can also make HTTP requests to any public site when using it in combination with the HttpClient component.
Installation
1
$ composer require symfony/browser-kit
Note
If you install this component outside of a Symfony application, you must
require the vendor/autoload.php
file in your code to enable the class
autoloading mechanism provided by Composer. Read
this article for more details.
Basic Usage
See also
This article explains how to use the BrowserKit features as an independent component in any PHP application. Read the Symfony Functional Tests article to learn about how to use it in Symfony applications.
Creating a Client
The component only provides an abstract client and does not provide any backend
ready to use for the HTTP layer. To create your own client, you must extend the
AbstractBrowser
class and implement the
doRequest() method.
4.3
In Symfony 4.3 and earlier versions, the AbstractBrowser
class was called
Client
(which is now deprecated).
The doRequest()
method accepts a request and should return a response:
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namespace Acme;
use Symfony\Component\BrowserKit\AbstractBrowser;
use Symfony\Component\BrowserKit\Response;
class Client extends AbstractBrowser
{
protected function doRequest($request)
{
// ... convert request into a response
return new Response($content, $status, $headers);
}
}
For a simple implementation of a browser based on the HTTP layer, have a look
at the HttpBrowser provided by
this component. For an implementation based
on HttpKernelInterface
, have a look at the Client
provided by the HttpKernel component.
Making Requests
Use the request() method to make HTTP requests. The first two arguments are the HTTP method and the requested URL:
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use Acme\Client;
$client = new Client();
$crawler = $client->request('GET', '/');
The value returned by the request()
method is an instance of the
Crawler class, provided by the
DomCrawler component, which allows accessing
and traversing HTML elements programmatically.
The xmlHttpRequest() method,
which defines the same arguments as the request()
method, is a shortcut to
make AJAX requests:
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use Acme\Client;
$client = new Client();
// the required HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH header is added automatically
$crawler = $client->xmlHttpRequest('GET', '/');
Clicking Links
The AbstractBrowser
is capable of simulating link clicks. Pass the text
content of the link and the client will perform the needed HTTP GET request to
simulate the link click:
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use Acme\Client;
$client = new Client();
$client->request('GET', '/product/123');
$crawler = $client->clickLink('Go elsewhere...');
If you need the Link object that
provides access to the link properties (e.g. $link->getMethod()
,
$link->getUri()
), use this other method:
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// ...
$crawler = $client->request('GET', '/product/123');
$link = $crawler->selectLink('Go elsewhere...')->link();
$client->click($link);
Submitting Forms
The AbstractBrowser
is also capable of submitting forms. First, select the
form using any of its buttons and then override any of its properties (method,
field values, etc.) before submitting it:
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use Acme\Client;
$client = new Client();
$crawler = $client->request('GET', 'https://github.com/login');
// find the form with the 'Log in' button and submit it
// 'Log in' can be the text content, id, value or name of a <button> or <input type="submit">
$client->submitForm('Log in');
// the second optional argument lets you override the default form field values
$client->submitForm('Log in', [
'login' => 'my_user',
'password' => 'my_pass',
// to upload a file, the value must be the absolute file path
'file' => __FILE__,
]);
// you can override other form options too
$client->submitForm(
'Log in',
['login' => 'my_user', 'password' => 'my_pass'],
// override the default form HTTP method
'PUT',
// override some $_SERVER parameters (e.g. HTTP headers)
['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE' => 'es']
);
If you need the Form object that
provides access to the form properties (e.g. $form->getUri()
,
$form->getValues()
, $form->getFields()
), use this other method:
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// ...
// select the form and fill in some values
$form = $crawler->selectButton('Log in')->form();
$form['login'] = 'symfonyfan';
$form['password'] = 'anypass';
// submit that form
$crawler = $client->submit($form);
Cookies
Retrieving Cookies
The AbstractBrowser
implementation exposes cookies (if any) through a
CookieJar, which allows you to store and
retrieve any cookie while making requests with the client:
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use Acme\Client;
// Make a request
$client = new Client();
$crawler = $client->request('GET', '/');
// Get the cookie Jar
$cookieJar = $client->getCookieJar();
// Get a cookie by name
$cookie = $cookieJar->get('name_of_the_cookie');
// Get cookie data
$name = $cookie->getName();
$value = $cookie->getValue();
$rawValue = $cookie->getRawValue();
$isSecure = $cookie->isSecure();
$isHttpOnly = $cookie->isHttpOnly();
$isExpired = $cookie->isExpired();
$expires = $cookie->getExpiresTime();
$path = $cookie->getPath();
$domain = $cookie->getDomain();
$sameSite = $cookie->getSameSite();
Note
These methods only return cookies that have not expired.
Looping Through Cookies
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use Acme\Client;
// Make a request
$client = new Client();
$crawler = $client->request('GET', '/');
// Get the cookie Jar
$cookieJar = $client->getCookieJar();
// Get array with all cookies
$cookies = $cookieJar->all();
foreach ($cookies as $cookie) {
// ...
}
// Get all values
$values = $cookieJar->allValues('http://symfony.com');
foreach ($values as $value) {
// ...
}
// Get all raw values
$rawValues = $cookieJar->allRawValues('http://symfony.com');
foreach ($rawValues as $rawValue) {
// ...
}
Setting Cookies
You can also create cookies and add them to a cookie jar that can be injected into the client constructor:
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use Acme\Client;
// create cookies and add to cookie jar
$cookie = new Cookie('flavor', 'chocolate', strtotime('+1 day'));
$cookieJar = new CookieJar();
$cookieJar->set($cookie);
// create a client and set the cookies
$client = new Client([], null, $cookieJar);
// ...
History
The client stores all your requests allowing you to go back and forward in your history:
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use Acme\Client;
$client = new Client();
$client->request('GET', '/');
// select and click on a link
$link = $crawler->selectLink('Documentation')->link();
$client->click($link);
// go back to home page
$crawler = $client->back();
// go forward to documentation page
$crawler = $client->forward();
You can delete the client's history with the restart()
method. This will
also delete all the cookies:
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use Acme\Client;
$client = new Client();
$client->request('GET', '/');
// reset the client (history and cookies are cleared too)
$client->restart();
Making External HTTP Requests
So far, all the examples in this article have assumed that you are making internal requests to your own application. However, you can run the exact same examples when making HTTP requests to external web sites and applications.
First, install and configure the HttpClient component. Then, use the HttpBrowser to create the client that will make the external HTTP requests:
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use Symfony\Component\BrowserKit\HttpBrowser;
use Symfony\Component\HttpClient\HttpClient;
$browser = new HttpBrowser(HttpClient::create());
You can now use any of the methods shown in this article to extract information, click links, submit forms, etc. This means that you no longer need to use a dedicated web crawler or scraper such as Goutte:
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$browser = new HttpBrowser(HttpClient::create());
$browser->request('GET', 'https://github.com');
$browser->clickLink('Sign in');
$browser->submitForm('Sign in', ['login' => '...', 'password' => '...']);
$openPullRequests = trim($browser->clickLink('Pull requests')->filter(
'.table-list-header-toggle a:nth-child(1)'
)->text());
Tip
You can also use HTTP client options like ciphers
, auth_basic
and
query
. They have to be passed as the default options argument to the
client which is used by the HTTP browser.
4.3
The feature to make external HTTP requests was introduced in Symfony 4.3.
Dealing with HTTP responses
When using the BrowserKit component, you may need to deal with responses of
the requests you made. To do so, call the getResponse()
method of the
HttpBrowser
object. This method returns the last response the browser received:
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$browser = new HttpBrowser(HttpClient::create());
$browser->request('GET', 'https://foo.com');
$response = $browser->getResponse();