I want to do a script that opens a web page and that web page should have information of other opened tabs in the browser.
means that nodejs server should have the information of currently all the open tabs. is it possible?
chrome.tabs
Puppeteer has Browser.pages to list all the tabs.
I'm working on rebranding chromium browser, and I'm having some trouble to setup default new tab page to the one remotely hosted, something that new Edge browser is already doing. but without using page redirect so when you open new tab, you'll get page loaded from URL like
https://ntp.msn.com/edge/ntp?locale=en&title=New%20tab&dsp=1&sp=Bing&startpage=1&PC=U531
but address bar won't be updated with that URL, it stays empty and ready for search. Does anyone know what are the steps to do this in chromium, what needs to be changed, I would really appreciate it.
Thanks!
My expressJS application is showing some weird behaviour and its doing every time I repeat the following steps.
Open the link in the browser.
Go to some other tab and close the tab with my website link previously opened.
Open another tab and open exact same link of my website.
It shows the content of the image, no matter how long you wait.
Reload and it works well.
Same behaviour in Chrome, Firefox and Safari.
I have tried disabling etag and disabling cache but doesnt seem to help. Any idea?
One more update :
Might be because of apache , local env do not do this , only deployed
one does .
There seemed to be a problem with the redirect , I removed the redirect and rendered the page expected .
Its a work around , the reason of the problem persists , if someone else gets struck at similar problem , this might be one solution .
I'm working on a chrome extension. The content has a stylesheet content.css. When I run the extension on an external site, it applies the style sheet. When I open a page on my "hello world" page on localhost, it applies the content.css styles initially but the styles go away if I refresh the page and I cannot get them back unless I refresh the extenstion.
Can't figure out why this is but I need to get this resolved.
Thanks,
Ken
When I go to our web site through HTTPS mode, Chome is reporting an error saying that the page contains secure and not secure items. However, I used Firebug, Fiddler, and HttpDebuggerPro, all which are telling me that everything is going through HTTPS. Is this a bug in Chrome?
Sorry but I'm unable to give out the actual URL.
A bit late to the party here but I've been having issues recently and once I had found a http resource and changed it was still getting the red padlock symbol. When I closed the tab and opened a new one it changed to a green padlock so I guess Chrome caches this information for the lifetime of the tab
Current versions of Chrome will show the mixed content's URL in the error console. Hit CTRL+Shift+J and you'll see text like:
"The page at https://www.fiddler2.com/test/securepageinsecureimage.htm contains insecure content from http://www.fiddler2.com/Eric/images/me.jpg."
I was having the same issue: Chromium showing the non-secure static files, but when everything was http://.
Just closing the current tab and re-opening the page in another new tab worked, so I think this is a Chromium/Chrome bug.
Cheers,
Diogo
Using Chrome, if you open up the Developer Tools (View > Developer > Developer Tools) and bring up the Console and choose to filter to warnings, you'll see a list of offending URLs.
You'll see something like the following if you do have insecure content
The page at https://mysite/ displayed insecure content from http://insecureurl.
For the best experience in finding the culprit, you'll want to start your investigation in a new tab.
It is possible that a non-secure URL is referenced but not accessed (e.g. the codebase for a Flash <object>).
I ran into this problem when Jquery was being executing a a few seconds after page load which added a class containing a non-secure image background. Chrome must continually to check for any non-secure resources to be loaded.
See the code example below. If you had code like this, the green padlock is shown in Chrome for about 5 seconds until the deferred class is applied to the div.
setTimeout(function() {
$("#some-div").addClass("deferred")
}, 5000);
.deferred
{
background: url(http://not-secure.com/not-secure.jpg"
}
Check the source of the page for any external objects (scripts, stylesheets, images, objects) linked using http://... rather than https://... or a relative path. Change the links to use relative paths, or absolute paths without protocol, i.e. href="/path/to/file".
If all that if fine, it could be something included from Javascript. For example, the Google Analytics code uses document.write to add a new script to the page, but it has code to check for HTTPS in case the calling page is secure:
<script type="text/javascript">
var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www.");
document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));
</script>
On the release of Chrome version 53 on Windows, Google has changed the trust indications to initiate the circle-i. Afterward, Google has announced a new warning message will be issued when a website is not using HTTPS.
From 2017 January Start, Popular web browser Chrome will begin
labeling HTTP sites as “Not Secure” [Which transmit passwords / ask
for credit card details]
If all your resources are indeed secure, then it is a bug. http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=72015 . Luckily it was fixed.