Reputation: 229391
I want to use selenium with a proxy which is password protected. The proxy is not fixed, but a variable. So this has to be done in the code (just setting up firefox on this particular machine to work with the proxy is less-than-ideal). So far I have the following code:
fp = webdriver.FirefoxProfile()
# Direct = 0, Manual = 1, PAC = 2, AUTODETECT = 4, SYSTEM = 5
fp.set_preference("network.proxy.type", 1)
fp.set_preference("network.proxy.http", PROXY_HOST)
fp.set_preference("network.proxy.http_port", PROXY_PORT)
driver = webdriver.Firefox(firefox_profile=fp)
driver.get("http://whatismyip.com")
At this point, the dialog pops up requesting the proxy user/pass.
Is there an easy way to either:
Upvotes: 22
Views: 29218
Reputation: 1
Selenium 4 has a built-in solution for Basic Auth
// This "HasAuthentication" interface is the key!
HasAuthentication authentication (HasAuthentication) driver;
// You can either register something for all sites
authentication.register(() -> new UsernameAndPassword("admin", "admin"));
// Or use something different for specific sites
authentication.register(
uri -> uri.getHost().contains("mysite.com"),
new UsernameAndPassword("AzureDiamond", "hunter2"));
https://www.selenium.dev/blog/2021/a-tour-of-4-authentication/
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 41
Code worked for me
from selenium import webdriver
browser=webdriver.Firefox()
def login(browser):
alert=browser.switch_to_alert()
alert.send_keys("username"+webdriver.common.keys.Keys.TAB+"password")
alert.accept()
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 2153
Selenium can't do that by itself. The only way I found helpful is described here. To be short, you need to add a browser extension on fly that does the authentication. It's much simpler than may seem to be.
Here is how it works for Chrome (in my case):
background.js
var config = {
mode: "fixed_servers",
rules: {
singleProxy: {
scheme: "http",
host: "YOU_PROXY_ADDRESS",
port: parseInt(YOUR_PROXY_PORT)
},
bypassList: ["foobar.com"]
}
};
chrome.proxy.settings.set({value: config, scope: "regular"}, function() {});
function callbackFn(details) {
return {
authCredentials: {
username: "YOUR_PROXY_USERNAME",
password: "YOUR_PROXY_PASSWORD"
}
};
}
chrome.webRequest.onAuthRequired.addListener(
callbackFn,
{urls: ["<all_urls>"]},
['blocking']
);
Don't forget to replace YOUR_PROXY_* to your settings.
manifest.json
{
"version": "1.0.0",
"manifest_version": 2,
"name": "Chrome Proxy",
"permissions": [
"proxy",
"tabs",
"unlimitedStorage",
"storage",
"<all_urls>",
"webRequest",
"webRequestBlocking"
],
"background": {
"scripts": ["background.js"]
},
"minimum_chrome_version":"22.0.0"
}
Add the created proxy.zip as an extension
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_extension("proxy.zip")
driver = webdriver.Chrome(executable_path='chromedriver.exe', chrome_options=chrome_options)
driver.get("http://google.com")
driver.close()
That's it. For me that worked like a charm. If you need to create proxy.zip dynamically or need PHP example then go to the original post
Upvotes: 29
Reputation: 1825
Did you try PROXY_HOST = "http://username:[email protected]"
?
Also:
Starting with Selenium 2.0 beta 1, there is built in support for handling popup dialog boxes.
Upvotes: -8