6

I'd like to either remove an HTML element or simply remove first N characters of a webpage before evaluating/rendering it.

Is there any way to do that?

2
  • Just out of curiosity, what stops you from processing the page as it is? Jul 18, 2014 at 22:32
  • 1
    The page wants to be called from an iframe, so I need to remove that piece of JS.
    – user965748
    Jul 19, 2014 at 0:01

1 Answer 1

11

It depends on multiple scenarios. I will only outline the steps for each combination of the answers to the following questions.

  1. Is the piece of JS called onload (ol) or is the script block immediately evaluated (ie)?
  2. Is it an inline script (is) or is the script loaded separately (src attribute) (ls)?
  3. Does the script block also contain some code that should not be removed (nr) or can it be removed completely (rc)?

1. Script is loaded separately (ls) & code can be removed completely (rc)

Register to the onResourceRequested listener and request.abort() depending on the matched url.

2. Script is loaded separately (ls) & contains other code too (nr)

This can only be done when the following code blocks do not depend on the code that should not be removed (which is unlikely). This is most likely necessary for click events that are registered in the DOM.

In this case cancel the request like in 1., download the script through an XHR, remove the unwanted code parts and add code block to the DOM. For this to work, you would need to disable web security, because otherwise no resource can be requested if it is not on the same domain: --web-security=false.

3. Script is loaded with the DOM (is) & JS executed through onload (ol) & can be removed completely (rc)

This is probably very error prone. You would begin an Interval with setInterval(function(){}, 5) from a page.onInitialized callback. Inside the interval you would need to check if window.onload (or something else you can get your hands on) is set in the page context. You remove it, if it is indeed the function that you wanted to remove by checking window.onload.toString().match(/something/).

This can be done directly and completely inside the page context (inside page.evaluate).

4. Script is loaded with the DOM (is) & JS executed through onload (ol) & contains other code too (nr)

Begin like in 3., but instead of removing window.onload, you can do

eval("window.onload = " + window.onload.toString().replace(/something/,''))

5. Script is loaded with the DOM (is) & the script block immediately evaluated (ie)

You can load the page as an XHR, replace the text and apply the adjusted content to the page. This will essentially be a filled about:blank page. For this to work, you would need to disable web security, because otherwise no resource can be requested if it is not on the same domain: --web-security=false or --local-to-remote-url-access=true. This would also work for 3. and 4..

There is still one problem though. Pages don't use full URLs most of the time. So when a script or element refers to stuff.php PhantomJS cannot request it. When the page.content is set then the page URL is essentially about:blank and all requests with incomplete URLs point to file:///.... Obviously there are no such files. Those resources must be replaced with their full URL counterparts.
There are three types of such URLs:

  • //example.com/resource.php variable protocol
  • /resource.php variable protocol and domain
  • resource.php variable protocol, domain and path to resource

Complete example:

var page = require('webpage').create(),
    url = 'http://www.example.com';

page.open(url, function(status) {
    if (status !== 'success') {
        console.log('Unable to access network');
    } else {
        var content = page.evaluate(function(url){
            var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
            xhr.open("GET", url, false);
            xhr.send();
            return xhr.responseText;
        }, url);
        page.render("test_example.png");
        page.content = content.replace(/xample/g,"asy");
        page.render("test_easy.png");
        console.log("url "+page.url); // about:blank
        phantom.exit();
    }
});

You might want to look into proper manipulation techniques apart from the simple string replace.

12
  • Great answer, thanks. It's an inline script located in the header, therefor it's unfortunately option 5. What do you mean by "script specific things"? The code there is if (top === self) { document.location.href = ""; }
    – user965748
    Jul 19, 2014 at 10:22
  • Ok, 5. is possible even without script specific knowledge. I will edit as soon as possible.
    – Artjom B.
    Jul 19, 2014 at 14:50
  • Very original solution. When you ran the code, didn't you get "ReferenceError: Can't find variable: jQuery" error? I also tried page.injectJs('jquery.min.js'); and put the file in the script folder, but it didn't help either.
    – user965748
    Jul 23, 2014 at 9:35
  • 1
    If you use jQuery in the page context, then you need to inject it first. The snippet is just an sample script running on example.com. See what it does without modification first and then modify to your case.
    – Artjom B.
    Jul 23, 2014 at 10:35
  • +1 Thank you for great answer. And to add something perhaps obvious: For 5., if it's not online critical, xhr part and web security can be made away with var repl_content = page.content.replace("say","asy"); then printing/showing/rendering repl_content instead.
    – Efreeto
    Feb 18, 2015 at 22:08

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.