Proxy for using W3C WebDriver-compatible clients to interact with Gecko-based browsers.
This program provides the HTTP API described by the WebDriver protocol to communicate with Gecko browsers, such as Firefox. It translates calls into the Marionette automation protocol by acting as a proxy between the local- and remote ends.
You can consult the change log for a record of all notable changes to the program. Releases are made available on GitHub on supported platforms.
Selenium users must update to version 3.3 or later to use geckodriver.
Other clients that follow the W3C WebDriver specification are also supported.
Marionette and geckodriver are not yet feature complete. This means that they do not yet offer full conformance with the WebDriver standard or complete compatibility with Selenium. You can track the implementation status of the latest Firefox Nightly on MDN. We also keep track of known Marionette, Selenium, and specification problems in our issue tracker.
Support is best in Firefox 48 and onwards, although generally the more recent the Firefox version, the better the experience as they have more bug fixes and features. We strongly advise using the latest Firefox Nightly with geckodriver, and want to make it clear that Firefox 47 and earlier is explicitly not supported. Since Windows XP support in Firefox will be dropped with Firefox 53, we do not support this platform.
geckodriver supports a number of WebDriver capabilities:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
proxy
| proxy object
| Sets browser proxy settings. |
acceptInsecureCerts
| boolean | Boolean initially set to false, indicating the session will not implicitly trust untrusted or self-signed TLS certificates on navigation. |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
proxyType
| string | Indicates the type of proxy configuration.
This value must be one of
pac ,
noproxy ,
autodetect ,
system ,
or manual .
|
proxyAutoconfigUrl
| string | Defines the URL for a proxy auto-config file.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is pac .
|
ftpProxy
| string | Defines the proxy hostname for FTP traffic.
Should only be set then the proxyType
is set to manual .
|
ftpProxyPort
| number | Defines the proxy port for FTP traffic.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
httpProxy
| string | Defines the hostname for HTTP traffic.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
httpProxyPort
| number | Defines the proxy port for HTTP traffic.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
sslProxy
| string | Defines the proxy hostname
for encrypted TLS traffic.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
sslProxyPort
| number | Defines the proxy port for SSL traffic.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
socksProxy
| string | Defines the proxy hostname for a SOCKS proxy.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
socksProxyPort
| number | Defines the proxy port for a SOCKS proxy.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
socksVersion
| number | Defines the SOCKS proxy version.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
socksUsername
| string | Defines the username used
when authenticating with a SOCKS proxy.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
socksPassword
| string | Defines the password used
when authenticating with a SOCKS proxy.
This property should only be set
when proxyType is manual .
|
geckodriver also supports a capability named moz:firefoxOptions
which takes Firefox-specific options.
This must be a dictionary
and may contain any of the following fields:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
binary
| string | Absolute path of the Firefox binary,
e.g. /usr/bin/firefox
or /Applications/Firefox.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox ,
to select which custom browser binary to use.
If left undefined geckodriver will attempt
to deduce the default location of Firefox
on the current system.
|
args
| array of strings | Command line arguments to pass to the Firefox binary.
These must include the leading -- where required
e.g. ["--devtools"] .
|
profile
| string | Base64-encoded zip of a profile directory to use as the profile for the Firefox instance. This may be used to e.g. install extensions or custom certificates. |
log
| log object
| Logging options for Gecko. |
prefs
| prefs object
| Map of preference name to preference value, which can be a string, a boolean or an integer. |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
level
| string | Set the level of verbosity in Gecko.
Available levels are trace ,
debug , config ,
info , warn ,
error , and fatal .
If left undefined the default is info .
|
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
preference name | string, number, boolean | One entry per preference to override. |
To select a specific Firefox binary and run it with a specific command-line flag, set a preference, and enable verbose logging:
{
"moz:firefoxOptions": {
"binary": "/usr/local/firefox/bin/firefox",
"args": ["--no-remote"],
"prefs": {
"dom.ipc.processCount": 8
},
"log": {
"level": "trace"
}
}
}
Usage steps are documented on MDN, but the gist of it is this:
% geckodriver -b /usr/bin/firefox
Or if you’re on Mac:
% geckodriver -b /Applications/FirefoxNightly.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox-bin
You may also see all flags and options available in geckodriver by viewing the help message:
% geckodriver -h
geckodriver 0.11.1
WebDriver implementation for Firefox.
USAGE:
geckodriver [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
--connect-existing Connect to an existing Firefox instance
-h, --help Prints help information
-v Log level verbosity (-v for debug and -vv for
trace level)
-V, --version Prints version and copying information
OPTIONS:
-b, --binary <BINARY> Path to the Firefox binary
--log <LEVEL>
Set Gecko log level [values: fatal, error, warn, info, config,
debug, trace]
--marionette-port <PORT>
Port to use to connect to Gecko (default: random free port)
--host <HOST>
Host ip to use for WebDriver server (default: 127.0.0.1)
-p, --port <PORT>
Port to use for WebDriver server (default: 4444)
geckodriver is written in Rust and you need the Rust toolchain to compile it.
To build the project for release, ensure you do a compilation with optimisations:
% cargo build --release
Or if you want a non-optimised binary for debugging:
% cargo build