Here is an example of running Selenium/Firefox on linux, in headless mode. You can see various imports as well - gonna leave them there. Browser will start in headless mode, will go to ddg page and print out the page source, then quit.
from selenium.common.exceptions import NoSuchElementException, TimeoutException
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.service import Service
from selenium.webdriver.common.keys import Keys
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.options import Options as Firefox_Options
from selenium.webdriver.common.by import By
from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import WebDriverWait
from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import Select
from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC
firefox_options = Firefox_Options()
firefox_options.add_argument("--width=1280")
firefox_options.add_argument("--height=720")
firefox_options.headless = True
driverService = Service('chromedriver/geckodriver') ## path where geckodriver is
browser = webdriver.Firefox(service=driverService, options=firefox_options)
wait = WebDriverWait(browser, 20)
browser.get('https://duckduckgo.com')
print(browser.page_source)
browser.quit()
Browser can also take screenshots while in headless mode, if any unit test requires it.
A reasonably well structured documentation for Selenium can be found at https://www.selenium.dev/documentation/ (with some gaps, of course, but generally decent).
start_minimized()
method for Selenium. You could run it headless tho, and that won't steal focus.driver.minimize_window()
no success.driver.start_minimized()
also does not exist. If can minimize, that will be even better so if it fails, I can see where the problem shows up.