I'm trying running code (in Python) that can identify suspected phishing sites. I'm using Selenium's chromedriver. This is my code:
import os, os.path, sys
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_experimental_option( "prefs", {'safebrowsing.enabled':1})
chromedriver = "my chromedriver path"
os.environ["webdriver.chrome.driver"] = chromedriver
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chromedriver, chrome_options=chrome_options)
driver.get('site url I want to check')
My code checks 'V' on "enable phishing and malware protection" in the privacy settings, but for some reason while using Chrome (not the window one opened by Python) the site I check is suspected as phishing and the Chrome window opened by my Python code is not showing anything related to phishing.
Any ideas?
Instead of using selenium, use Google Safe Browsing API directly (python wrapper):
>>> key = 'your own key'
>>> from safebrowsinglookup import SafebrowsinglookupClient
>>> client = SafebrowsinglookupClient(key)
>>> client.lookup('http://addonrock.ru/Debugger.js')
{'http://addonrock.ru/Debugger.js': 'malware'}
>>> client.lookup('http://google.com')
{'http://google.com': 'ok'}
Related
I would like to use an existing installation of chrome (or firefox or brave browser) with selenium. Like that I could set prespecified settings / extensions (e.g. start nord-vpn when opening a new instance) that are active when the browser is opened with selenium.
I know there is selenium.webdriver.service with the "executeable-path" option, but it doesn't seem to work when you specify a specific chrome.exe, the usage seems to be for the chrome-driver only and then it still opens a "fresh" installation of chrome.
Starting selenium with extension-file I think is also not an option to use with the nord-vpn extension, as I have two-factor authentication active and login every single time would take too much time and effort, if possible at all.
Firefox profile
To use the existing installation of firefox you have to pass the profile path through set_preference() method using an instance of Option from selenium.webdriver.common.options as follows:
from selenium.webdriver import Firefox
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.service import Service
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.options import Options
profile_path = r'C:\Users\Admin\AppData\Roaming\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\s8543x41.default-release'
options=Options()
options.set_preference('profile', profile_path)
service = Service('C:\\BrowserDrivers\\geckodriver.exe')
driver = Firefox(service=service, options=options)
driver.get("https://www.google.com")
You can find a relevant detailed discussion in Error update preferences in Firefox profile: 'Options' object has no attribute 'update_preferences'
Chrome profile
Where as to use an existing installation of google-chrome you have to pass the user profile path through add_argument() using the user-data-dir key through an instance of Option from selenium.webdriver.common.options as follows:
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.service import Service
options = Options()
options.add_argument("user-data-dir=C:\\Users\\username\\AppData\\Local\\Google\\Chrome\\User Data\\Default")
s = Service('C:\\BrowserDrivers\\chromedriver.exe')
driver = webdriver.Chrome(service=s, options=options)
driver.get("https://www.google.com/")
You can find a relevant detailed discussion in How to open a Chrome Profile through Python
I want to scrap some data with selenium python. I have this type of screen sometimes :
Do you know to proceed in order to remove this type of verification ? Here my code :
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.service import Service
from webdriver_manager.chrome import ChromeDriverManager
options = Options()
options.add_argument("start-maximized")
options.add_argument("--disable-web-security")
options.add_argument("--disable-site-isolation-trials")
options.add_argument("--allow-running-insecure-content")
driver = webdriver.Chrome(service=Service(ChromeDriverManager().install()), options=options)
driver.get('THE_WEBSITE_COM')
Selenium specifically and other automation tools have certain user agents and other identifiers which indicate that it's automated. So maybe have a play around with things like that. Some websites use anti bot tools to analyze browsing behaviours and patterns so try to slow it and randomize it eg. random time between page requests
Another trick is to look at the website and try to find if there are any alternative routes to get the information. For example: is there a public API you can use to bypass it? Is there a mobile version of the website? Sometimes mobile versions have less aggressive Captcha enforcement.
What I do most of the time is to launch the browser separately and connect to it using Dev port which is beautifully explained in this article.
To enable Chrome to open a port for remote debugging, we need to launch it with a custom flag –
chrome.exe --remote-debugging-port=9222 --user-data-dir="C:\selenum\ChromeProfile"
Then connect to the browser using this
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_experimental_option("debuggerAddress", "127.0.0.1:9222")
#Change chrome driver path accordingly
chrome_driver = "C:\chromedriver.exe"
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chrome_driver, chrome_options=chrome_options)
print driver.title
I'm using Selenium to access a site, but I constantly get Warning: Potential Security Risk Ahead. I searched all over the Internet for a solution to my problem, but the message to accept the certificate manually continues to appear.
I'm using:
Firefox: 85.0.1 (64-bit)
Geckodriver
Python language
I tested several solutions such as:
from selenium import webdriver
capabilities = webdriver.DesiredCapabilities().FIREFOX
capabilities['acceptSslCerts'] = True
#capabilities['acceptInsecureCerts'] = True
driver = webdriver.Firefox(capabilities=capabilities)
driver.get('xxxxxxxxx')
And,
from selenium import webdriver
profile = webdriver.FirefoxProfile()
profile.accept_untrusted_certs = True
driver = webdriver.Firefox(firefox_profile=profile)
driver.get('xxxxxxxxx')
I also tried solutions based on creating a new profile in Firefox.
The question is: How can I automate the acceptance of a website's certificate when I launch Firefox with Selenium (Python programming language)?
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/WebDriver/Capabilities/acceptInsecureCerts
from selenium import webdriver
capabilities = webdriver.DesiredCapabilities().FIREFOX
capabilities['acceptInsecureCerts'] = True
capabilities['marionette'] = True
driver = webdriver.Firefox(desired_capabilities=capabilities)
driver.get("https://self-signed.badssl.com/")
I solved my problem creating a new Firefox Profile and executing:
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.options import Options
options = Options()
#Path to the Firefox Profile directory
options.profile = r'C:\Users\x\AppData\Roaming\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\x.x'
driver = webdriver.Firefox(options=options)
driver.get('https://xxxxx')
I am working on downloading HAR from Chrome for YouTube through Selenium Python Script.
Code Snippet:
chrome_options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
chrome_options.add_argument("--proxy-server={0}".format(url))
chrome_options.add_argument("--enable-quic")
self.driver = webdriver.Chrome(chromedriver,chrome_options = chrome_options)
self.proxy.new_har(args['url'], options={'captureHeaders': True})
self.driver.get(args['url'])
result = json.dumps(self.proxy.har, ensure_ascii=False)
I want QUIC to be used whenever I download HAR but when I look at the packets through Wireshark Selenium driver is using TCP only. Is there a way to force Chrome Driver to use QUIC? Or Is there an alternate to BMP?
A similar thing has been asked for Firefox in this question How to capture all requests made by page in webdriver? Is there any alternative to Browsermob? and there was a solution with Selenium alone without need of any BMP. So is it possible for Chrome?
Workaround for this problem could be: start Chrome normally (with your default profile or create another profile) and enable quic manually. Then start chromedriver with your profile loaded.
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
options.add_argument("user-data-dir=/home/user/.config/google-chrome")
driver = webdriver.Chrome(executable_path="/home/user/Downloads/chromedriver", chrome_options=options)
I am trying to submit information in a webpage, but selenium throws this error:
UnexpectedAlertPresentException: Alert Text: This page is asking you
to confirm that you want to leave - data you have entered may not be
saved. ,
>
It's not a leave notification; here is a pic of the notification -
.
If I click in never show this notification again, my action doesn't get saved; is there a way to save it or disable all notifications?
edit: I'm using firefox.
You can disable the browser notifications, using chrome options. Sample code below:
chrome_options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
prefs = {"profile.default_content_setting_values.notifications" : 2}
chrome_options.add_experimental_option("prefs",prefs)
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chrome_options=chrome_options)
With the latest version of Firefox the above preferences didn't work.
Below is the solution which disable notifications using Firefox object
_browser_profile = webdriver.FirefoxProfile()
_browser_profile.set_preference("dom.webnotifications.enabled", False)
webdriver.Firefox(firefox_profile=_browser_profile)
Disable notifications when using Remote Object:
webdriver.Remote(desired_capabilities=_desired_caps, command_executor=_url, options=_custom_options, browser_profile=_browser_profile)
selenium==3.11.0
Usually with browser settings like this, any changes you make are going to get throws away the next time Selenium starts up a new browser instance.
Are you using a dedicated Firefox profile to run your selenium tests? If so, in that Firefox profile, set this setting to what you want and then close the browser. That should properly save it for its next use. You will need to tell Selenium to use this profile though, thats done by SetCapabilities when you start the driver session.
This will do it:
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.options import Options
options = Options()
options.set_preference("dom.webnotifications.enabled", False)
browser = webdriver.Firefox(firefox_options=options)
For Google Chrome and v3 of Selenium you may receive "DeprecationWarning: use options instead of chrome_options", so you will want to do the following:
from selenium import webdriver
from webdriver_manager.chrome import ChromeDriverManager
options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
options.add_argument('--disable-notifications')
driver = webdriver.Chrome(ChromeDriverManager().install(), options=options)
Note: I am using webdriver-manager, but this also works with specifying the executable_path.
This answer is an improvement on TH Todorov code snippet, based on what is working as of Chrome (Version 80.0.3987.163).
lk = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "chromedriver",) --> in this line you provide the link to the chromedriver, which you can download from chromedrive link
import os
from selenium import webdriver
lk = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "chromedriver",)
chrome_options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
prefs = {"profile.default_content_setting_values.notifications" : 2}
chrome_options.add_experimental_option("prefs",prefs)
driver = webdriver.Chrome(lk, options=chrome_options)