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I'm trying to download am xml file with selenium chrome driver, but getting but prompted for:

"this type of file can harm your computer.Do you want to keep the file anyway?".

Using Google Version 80.0.3987.122 (Official Build) (32-bit) and ChromeDriver 80.0.3987.106. The powershell chrome option I am using is below:

$ChromeOptions = New-Object OpenQA.Selenium.Chrome.ChromeOptions
$ChromeOptions.AddArguments(@(
    "--disable-extensions",
    "--ignore-certificate-errors"))

$download = "C:\temp\download"
$ChromeOptions.AddUserProfilePreference("safebrowsing.enabled", "true");
$ChromeOptions.AddUserProfilePreference("download.default_directory", $download);
$ChromeOptions.AddUserProfilePreference("download.prompt_for_download", "false");
$ChromeOptions.AddUserProfilePreference("download.directory_upgrade", "true");

$ChromeDriver = New-Object OpenQA.Selenium.Chrome.ChromeDriver($chromeOptions)

I'd appreciate the correct option to remove the prompt.

2 Answers 2

1

Download .xml file with selenium Edge driver using sendkeys :-

SendKeys.Send("^j"); Thread.Sleep(3000);

SendKeys.Send("^j"); Thread.Sleep(3000);

SendKeys.Send("{TAB}"); Thread.Sleep(3000);

SendKeys.Send("{Enter}");

1
  • 1
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    Mar 14 at 18:30
0

Why? Just use the built-in PowerShell cmdlets to do this. Invoke-WebRequest, Start-BitTransfer, or the .Net namespace.

You don't need a browser to scrape a web site or download a file. Point of note: Some site blocks any automated effort, regardless of the tool you try to use.

3 ways to download files with PowerShell

# 1. Invoke-WebRequest

$url = "http://mirror.internode.on.net/pub/test/10meg.test"
$output = "$PSScriptRoot\10meg.test"
$start_time = Get-Date

Invoke-WebRequest -Uri $url -OutFile $output
Write-Output "Time taken: $((Get-Date).Subtract($start_time).Seconds) second(s)"


# 2. System.Net.WebClient

$url = "http://mirror.internode.on.net/pub/test/10meg.test"
$output = "$PSScriptRoot\10meg.test"
$start_time = Get-Date

$wc = New-Object System.Net.WebClient
$wc.DownloadFile($url, $output)
#OR
(New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadFile($url, $output)

Write-Output "Time taken: $((Get-Date).Subtract($start_time).Seconds) second(s)"


# 3. Start-BitsTransfer

$url = "http://mirror.internode.on.net/pub/test/10meg.test"
$output = "$PSScriptRoot\10meg.test"
$start_time = Get-Date

Import-Module BitsTransfer
Start-BitsTransfer -Source $url -Destination $output

#OR
Start-BitsTransfer -Source $url -Destination $output -Asynchronous

Write-Output "Time taken: $((Get-Date).Subtract($start_time).Seconds) second(s)"


# Get specifics for a module, cmdlet, or function
(Get-Command -Name Invoke-WebRequest).Parameters
(Get-Command -Name Invoke-WebRequest).Parameters.Keys
Get-help -Name Invoke-WebRequest -Examples
<#
# Built-In Examples

$R = Invoke-WebRequest -URI http://www.bing.com?q=how+many+feet+in+a+mile
$R.AllElements | where {$_.innerhtml -like "*=*"} | Sort { $_.InnerHtml.Length } | Select InnerText -First 5
shortest HTML value often helps you find the most specific element that matches that text.
$R=Invoke-WebRequest http://www.facebook.com/login.php -SessionVariable fb
$FB
$Form = $R.Forms[0]
$Form | Format-List
$Form.fields
$Form.Fields["email"]="[email protected]"
$R=Invoke-WebRequest -Uri ("https://www.facebook.com" + $Form.Action) -WebSession $FB -Method POST -Body $Form.Fields
# Sends a sign-in request by running the Invoke-WebRequest cmdlet. The command specifies a value of "fb" for the SessionVariable parameter, and saves the 
$R.StatusDescription
(Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa973757(v=vs.85).aspx").Links.Href
#>
Get-help -Name Invoke-WebRequest -Full
Get-help -Name Invoke-WebRequest -Online



(Get-Command -Name Start-BitsTransfer).Parameters
(Get-Command -Name Start-BitsTransfer).Parameters.Keys
Get-help -Name Start-BitsTransfer -Examples
<#
# Built-In Examples

Start-BitsTransfer -Source "http://server01/servertestdir/testfile1.txt" -Destination "c:\clienttestdir\testfile1.txt"
Import-CSV filelist.txt | Start-BitsTransfer
Start-BitsTransfer -Source "c:\clienttestdir\testfile1.txt" -Destination "http://server01/servertestdir/testfile1.txt" -TransferType Upload
Start-BitsTransfer -Source "http://server01/servertestdir/testfile1.txt", "http://server01/servertestdir/testfile2.txt" -Destination 
$Cred = Get-Credential
 Start-BitsTransfer -DisplayName MyJob -Credential $Cred -Source "http://server01/servertestdir/testfile1.txt" -Destination "c:\clienttestdir\testfile1.txt"
Import-CSV filelist.txt | Start-BitsTransfer -Asynchronous -Priority Normal
Start-BitsTransfer -Source "http://server01/servertestdir/*.*" -Destination "c:\clienttestdir\"
Import-CSV filelist.txt | Start-BitsTransfer -TransferType Upload
Start-BitsTransfer -Source .\Patch0416.msu -Destination $env:temp\Patch0416.msu -ProxyUsage Override -ProxyList BitsProxy:8080 -ProxyCredential 
#>
Get-help -Name Start-BitsTransfer -Full
Get-help -Name Start-BitsTransfer -Online


<#
WebClient Class

Definition 
Namespace: System.Net
Assembly:  System.Net.WebClient.dll

Provides common methods for sending data to and receiving data from a resource identified by a URI.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.net.webclient?view=netcore-3.1



WebClient.DownloadFile Method

Namespace: System.Net
Assembly:  System.Net.WebClient.dll

Downloads the resource with the specified URI to a local file.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.net.webclient.downloadfile?view=netcore-3.1
#>

Though if you truly want to do this with Selenium via Chrome, then this similar SO thread should be of help.

How to control the download of files with Selenium + Python bindings in Chrome

As well as this article and sample:

PowerShell & Selenium: Automate Web Browser Interactions – Part II

As for this warning ...

> "this type of file can harm your computer. Do you want to keep the file anyway?".

... this is not PowerShell or a PowerShell warning, this is the Windows and the Browser (IE, Edge, Chrome, et all) alerting you to a potential threat.

Working around the Google Chrome "This type of file can harm your computer" problem

Google announced recently that it made the decision to improve protection against unwanted software downloads in the Chrome browser and Google search.

See these SO thread as well on this topic.

How to disable 'This type of file can harm your computer' pop up

This type of file can harm your computer, trying to download an .ini file in Chrome using c# and selenium

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  • Thanks and much helpful. Appreciate it.
    – Enigma
    Jun 3, 2020 at 19:49
  • No worries, always various ways to do X or Y.
    – postanote
    Jun 3, 2020 at 20:06

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