I want to ask is there ANY way or extension that can pre-highlight text within the iframe whenever a new window is opened containing iframe? I have tried many extension but none of them works.
I need to filter out content based on certain keywords and the content is within iframe. I can do it with CTRL+F but there are many keywords like 10-15 within each article to be found. So it makes my job very tough and time consuming. Few extensions that I have tried from chrome are multi highlighter, pearls, FF but none of them seems to work.
I also know the reason why these extension can't access content within the iframe i.e. due to cross origin policies.
But I also remember around an year ago I worked with chrome extension named 'Autofill' that could pre-select form elements whenever I opened new chrome window containing iframe.
So is there any work around?
You can set your extension permission to run content scripts in all frames as document at http://developer.chrome.com/extensions/content_scripts.html#registration by setting all_frames to true in the content scripts section of your manifest file. Adding to Google's example from that page, part of your manifest file might look like
{
"name": "My extension",
...
"content_scripts": [
{
"matches": ["http://www.google.com/*"],
"css": ["mystyles.css"],
"js": ["jquery.js", "myscript.js"],
"all_frames": true
}
],
...
}
You'll need to be careful since your content scripts are going to be inject into the page once for the parent page and one for each iFrame on the page. Once your content script is injected into all frames on the page you can work your magic with finding and highlighting text.
if (window === top) {
console.log('Running inside the main document', location.href);
} else {
console.log('Running inside the frame document', location.href,
[...document.querySelectorAll('*')]);
}
Related
I am building a chrome extension that is also supposed to remove parts of HTML.Thing is, I need to do that when I receive the html from the server BUT before it is displayed.If I use run at for document end and try to modify the HTML it'll look ugly because the page will load and then change, and I want to remove html parts and edit them before it is displayed.
For example, if my extension will need to clear the whole body tag I will need a script like that in runbefore.js:
document.body.innerHTML = "";
But when I use content scripts -
"content_scripts": [
{
"matches": ["https://www.website.com/*"],
"js": ["runbefore.js"],
"run_at": "document_end"
}
It loads the page and only then clears the whole page, and I want to clear the body tag and only then display it.If I use document_start it won't even do anything.
How do I resolve that issue ?
You can change run_at property in your manifest to document_start in your manifest.
You can get more information about this property here.
What I have so far:
manifest.json
{
"name": "Append Test Text",
"description": "Add test123 to body",
"version": "1.0",
"permissions": [
"activeTab"
],
"background": {
"scripts": ["background.js"],
"persistent": false
},
"browser_action": {
"default_title": "Append Test Text"
},
"manifest_version": 2,
"permissions": [
"https://*/*",
"http://*/*",
"tabs"
]
}
background.js
chrome.browserAction.onClicked.addListener(function(tab) {
chrome.tabs.executeScript({
code: 'var div=document.createElement("div"); document.body.appendChild(div); div.innerText="test123";'
});
});
What it does:
Upon clicking the chrome extension icon, it adds <div>test123</div> to the <body></body> of any given page.
What I Would Like To Achieve:
Alike the bit.ly Chrome extension, I would like to append a lot of content to the DOM. Upon clicking on the extension icon, I would like an overlay element to be added tot he <body></body> along with a sidebar where I can add jQuery tab switches.
As you can see, I've just taken this picture whilst creating this question for StackOverflow.
Questions:
Regarding my current progress and/or any scripts you may submit with your answer; How can I give this appended element an ID and/or class name and check whether this is already present on the DOM before adding it over and over again upon clicking the icon.
How can I append a lot of content to the page to reside within my sidebar. jQuery is present within the site I am creating this extension to be used on. Am I able to create a standard HTML file which is then fetched and then programmatic injected into the DOM which I can use jQuery scripts on for the likes of switching tabs (not Chrome tabs, tabs within the injected content).
Why not take a look at how bit.ly extension does it?
Looking at the code, bit.ly appends a fixed position, 100% width/height iframe to the page that contains an "app" page from the package. Clicking again removes the iframe. There's a bit of special code to work with frameset pages (which I won't comment on here), but other than that that's the general idea.
Part of the page is half-transparent, which gives the illusion of a sidebar, but it does indeed cover the whole page. This is the easiest way to do it, since otherwise you risk breaking the page's layout and there is no general "magic" solution that works everywhere to have your content side by side.
// Injection
var iframe = document.createElement("iframe");
iframe.id = "my-awesome-extension-iframe";
iframe.style.width = "100%";
/* ..more styling like that.. */
iframe.src = chrome.runtime.getURL('my_ui.html');
document.body.appendChild(iframe);
// Removal
var iframe = document.getElementById("my-awesome-extension-iframe");
if (iframe) {
iframe.parentNode.removeChild(iframe);
}
To have full control over the looks of your UI, injecting a frame is preferable, as the page's own CSS and scripts won't "bleed" into your context. Whatever libraries you want, you can include there as you would in a normal page.
If you vehemently object to the idea of using a frame, you can try and inject your UI directly into the page - but beware interfering/incompatible code, restrictive CSP and CSS that bleeds through. This question is relevant: How to really isolate stylesheets in the Google Chrome extension?
You could make the above snippets as separate files, and use executeScript with the file attribute to inject them. They do not require any libraries like jQuery.
Note that code in that frame will have the same level of privilege as content script code - if you need APIs unavailable in content scripts, you'll need to message the background to do it. You'll also need to list the page itself, and all of its resources, in web_accessible_resources.
Dynamic DOM elements may be the way to go if you are adding simple user controls inside a layout. However, if you want to inject a full layout it can be a pain. jQuery may come handy with its function load.
You could have the layout of your sidebar in a static HTML file and have it loaded with jQuery in a given container. Something like this should do it, assuming an id="myContainer":
jQuery
$('#myContainer').load('layout.html')
To answer the first question, to give a specific ID to a dynamically created element, you only have to treat it like a DOM element and set an id to it.
JavaScript
var myElement = document.createElement('div');
myElement.id = 'myContainer';
myElement.className = 'kitten-background jumbo button';
// ...
// other properties you may need
// ...
document.body.appendChild(myElement);
For the second question, to check if an element exists you may as well use jQuery again. If a selector matches something, its length attribute will be greater than zero so that's a clean validation to check that $('#myContainer').length == 0 before inserting.
Good luck in what you are trying to achieve and have fun!
I have a chrome extension that opens a webpage via an iframe inside it's popup.html
What I need to do is detect when the user browses to certain URLs in the iframe, and then open those URLs as a new tab.
I was trying to access the .location of the iframe, but unfortunately was getting the policy issues between "chrome-extensions" and "http"
I've been researching, and I'm seeing a lot of notes on using content scripts, but I'm really not understanding how they work fully. Most examples are trying to inject code into current pages in the browser itself so I don't think they apply. Is a content script what I need?
Any help would be most helpful.
No this is not possible as chrome-extension popup is different domain site you cannot access it within your site.
I've been trying to do the same thing and i found this answer on SO. This worked for me and may be can work in our case as well. Just in case if the link may stop working in future, i'm copying his answer here:
"content_scripts": [{
"matches": ["http://*/*", "https://*/*"],
"js": ["content_frame.js"],
"all_frames": true
}],
By setting all_frames to true you will inject/include content_frame.js javascript file into top document and all iframes. In case you just need javascript injected in iframe but not in top document you can check inside your content_frame.js file like this:
if (parent === top) {
// here you can put your code that will run only inside iframe
}
I need to be able to inject a content script into an iframe that is within an action's popup.html of another extension.
Previously, before an update to this extension in question, the extension injected the iframe into the active tab. I was able to configure my manifest like this:
"content_scripts": [{
"matches": ["https://*.domain.com/*"],
"js": ["content.js"],
"all_frames": true
}],
It worked fine, the content script was injected into the iframe. Now this extension has the iframe in the action's popup.html and I can't get this to work.
Is there any way to accomplish this?
In general, you can't do this because chrome-extension: is not/no-longer a valid scheme.
However, if you can target the popup.html without using wildcards, you might be able to get to work by setting a "bad flag" in the Chrome://flags page.
Obviously, this will only work for your own personal browser.
How should I connect my pages to search and highlight text on current tab?
Currently I have:
manifest.json does defining content/backgr/event page do significant things,auto inject code etc?
popup.html essentially a shell for the search input which is used by search.js
search.js should this be in background/event/content/popup.html page?
What I still don't understand after reading:
What is a content page vs. background/event page?
I know one is constantly running vs injected, but that's as much as I got from the chrome extension manual, I still don't quite understand if the content script/page is seperate from the popup.html for example and what the difference between a script in the popup.html vs content page/script is.
What I know:
I know how to search for text on a page, and replace it or change its style etc. using JS.
I need to read up on the messaging API for Chrome Extensions.
I know I need to know how to use the messaging API, is it going to be required for page search and highlighting?
Summary:
I don't need a walk through or full answer, just a little help visualizing how Chrome extensions work, or at minimum how I should set mine up in relation to page interaction IE:
search.js content page injected >>>>> popup.html
and maybe a short bit about how injection works in chrome extensions(IE, do I only need to specify that it is content page in manifest.json to have it injected or is there more work to it)/expected behavior?
Apologies for the jumbled thoughts/question/possibly missing the things relevant to my questions while reading the manual.
I will start with making the purpose of each kind of page/script more clear.
First is the background page/script. The background script is where your extension lives. It isn't required, but in order to do most extension things, you need one. In it you can set up various event listeners and such depending on what you want it to do. It lives in its own little world and can only interact with other pages and scripts using the chrome.* apis. If you set it up as an event page it works exactly the same except that it unloads when not in use and loads back into memory when it has something to do.
Content scripts refer to injected Javascript and/or css. They are the primary tool used for interacting with web pages. They have very limited access to chrome.* apis, but they have full access to the DOM of the page they are injected into. We will come back to using them in a minute.
Now for Popup pages. Unlike the background script and content script, popups have both a HTML and JS portion. The HTML part is just like any other page, just small and as a overlay popup coming out from the icon. The script portion of it, however, can do all the things the background page does, except that it unloads whenever the popup is closed.
Now that the distinctions are more clear let's move on to what you want to do. It sounds like you want to open the popup, have the user enter text to search for in the current tab, then highlight that text on the page. Since you said that you already know how you plan on highlighting the text, I will leave that part to you.
First to set up our manifest file. For this particular action, we don't need a background script. What we do need is both the "tabs" and "activeTab" permissions. These will enable us to inject our script later. We also need to define the browser action with it's popup. Altogether it would look something like this:
"browser_action": {
"default_icon": "icon.png",
"default_popup": "popup.html"
},
"permissions": [
"tabs", "activeTab"
]
Now in our popup.html file, we can only have markup and css, no inline code at all. We will put it all in our js file and include it. Something like this should work:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script src="popup.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="text" id="searchText">
<button id="searchButton">Search</button>
</body>
</html>
This is where we come back to the content script stuff. There are two ways to inject a content script, first is to define it in the manifest. This works best when you always want to inject it for a particular set of url's. Second, to use the chrome.tabs.executeScript method to inject it when we need to. That is what we will use.
window.onload = function(){
document.getElementById('searchButton').onclick = searchText;
};
function searchText(){
var search = document.getElementById('searchText').value;
if(search){
chrome.tabs.query({active:true,currentWindow:true},function(tabs){
chrome.tabs.executeScript(tabs[0].id,{file:search.js});
chrome.tabs.sendMessage(tabs[0].id,{method:'search',searchText:search});
});
}
}
With this, we have successfully injected our script and then send the search text to that script. Just make sure that the script is wrapped in a onMessage listener like this:
chrome.runtime.onMessage.addListener(function(message,sender,sendResponse){
// message.searchText is the text that was captured in the popup
// Search/Highlight code goes here
});
And that pretty much sums it up. With that, you should be able to get it working. If something is still not clear let me know and I will fix it.
I think what's confusing you is the non-existant concept of a "content page". There is no such thing. What you're likely referring to is a "content script". Let me explain the three main components of an extension:
Background Page
As you said, this is the persistent aspect of a Chrome Extension. Even though it can be HTML page it is never rendered. You simply use it to run JavaScript and other content that stays persistent. The only way to "refresh" the background page is to refresh the extension in the extension manager, or to re-install the extension.
This is most useful for saving information that should remain persistent, such as authentication credentials, or counters that should build up over time. Only use the background page when absolutely necessary, though, because it consumes resources as long as the user is running your extension.
You can add a background script like to manafest file like this:
"background": {
"scripts": [
"background.js"
]
},
Or like this:
"background": {
"page": "background.html"
},
Then simply add background.js to background.html via a typical tag.
Popup
This is what you see when you click the icon on the toolbar. It's simply a popup window with some HTML. It can contain HTML, JavaScript, CSS, and whatever you would put in a normal web page.
Not all extension need a popup window, but many do. For example, your highlight extension may not need a popup if all it's doing is highlighting text on a page. However, if you need to collect a search result (which seems likely) or provide the user with some settings or other UI then a popup is a good way to go about this.
You can add a popup to the manifest file like this:
"browser_action": {
"default_popup": "popup.html"
},
Content script
As I mentioned, this is not a "page" per se -- it a script, or set of scripts. A content script is what you use to infuse JavaScript into pages the user is browser. For example, a user goes to Facebook and a content script could change the background to red. This is almost certainly what you'll need to use to highlight text on a page. Simply infuse some JavaScript and any necessarily libraries to search the page or crawl the dom, and render changes to that page.
You can inject content scripts every time a user opens any URL like this:
"content_scripts": [
{
"matches" : [
"<all_urls>"
],
"js" : [
"content.js"
]
}
],
The above injects "content.js" into "all urls".
You'll also need to add this to the permissions:
"permissions": [
"<all_urls>",
]
You can even add JQuery to the list of content scripts. The nice thing about extensions is that the content scripts are sandboxed, so the version of JQuery you inject will not collide with JQuery on pages the user visits.