cookie-connoisseur
v0.3.1
Published
Package for testing Cookie Clicker mods
Downloads
7
Readme
Cookie Connoisseur
Changelog | API | Configuration file | CCSave
Cookie Connoisseur is a Node.js library to automate the testing of Cookie Clicker mods.
Upon installation,
Cookie Connoisseur downloads a local copy of https://orteil.dashnet.org/cookieclicker/.
Then,
the function openCookieClickerPage
constructs a Playwright Page
which runs an instance of Cookie Clicker using the local copy.
The library can
- Set up a save game, so that you can test that your mod properly loads its save game
- Mock the date, so that you can choose to run the tests e.g. during Christmas
- Download copies of third-party mods, to aid integration with other mods
- Parse Cookie Clicker's native save format into a JSON format and back
- Block ads.
See the section API below for a full list of features.
Installation
npm --foreground-scripts install --save-dev --save-exact cookie-connoisseur
This istalls the library,
the cookie-connoisseur
binary,
and downloads a copy of https://orteil.dashnet.org/cookieclicker.
(The files will be stored to .cookie-connoisseur
.)
By default,
NPM gobbles the output
from install scripts.
If you forget the --foregound-scripts
flag,
npm install
will look like it is frozen for a minute.
The download will still happen, though.
The library comes with TypeScript typings.
As the API is still unstable, --save-exact
is recommended to minimize breakage.
Example Script
import { chromium } from 'playwright'; // Choose a browser
import { openCookieClickerPage } from 'cookie-connoisseur';
setTimeout(async () => {
/* Launch the browser.
* This explicitly launches a headed browser,
* but for automated testing you will want to launch a headless instance.
*/
let browser = await chromium.launch({headless: false});
/* Opens a Cookie Clicker page in a brand new context using the given browser.
* The second argument is a list of options for configuring the page.
* For example, the line below sets the date to December 21st, 2012,
* so you should see the Christmas theme, regardless of the real date!
* We also choose the save game so that we start with a 6x6 garden.
*/
let page = await openCookieClickerPage(browser, {
mockedDate: Date.UTC(2012, 11, 21),
saveGame: {
buildings: {
'Farm': {
amount: 1,
level: 9,
},
},
},
});
/* You can run any Playwright command in the page.
*/
await page.setViewportSize({ width: 1920, height: 900 });
/* The lines below load the mod Choose Your Own Lump (CYOL) and waits for it to load.
* By default, Cookie Connoisseur only downloads files from vanilla Cookie Clicker,
* so the following command would have to access the internet.
* It is possible to configure it to also download other files;
* see the configuration file below.
*/
await page.evaluate("Game.LoadMod('https://staticvariablejames.github.io/ChooseYourOwnLump/ChooseYourOwnLump.js')");
await page.waitForFunction("typeof CYOL == 'object' && CYOL.isLoaded"); // This line is CYOL-specific
/* Finally, we halt the script, so that the page can be inspected and interacted with,
* and then we close the browser (which also closes the page).
* Running page.pause() should not be used for automated testing,
* but browser.close() should always be executed.
*
* Protip: https://playwright.dev/docs/inspector#recording-scripts
*/
await page.pause();
await browser.close();
});
You can find examples of how Cookie Connoisseur is used for testing in the test directory of Choose Your Own Lump.
Executables
Cookie Connoiseur has a command-line interface with a few commands.
npx cookie-connoisseur fetch
This downloads the files needed to run a Cookie Clicker instance
(index.html
, main.js
, minigame scripts, assets, Google fonts)
and stores it to the directory .cookie-connoisseur
,
in the project's root.
It also downloads the custom URLs listed in the configuration file; see below for details.
Strictly speaking it is not necessary to run this command manually,
as it is run on npx install
,
and openCookieClickerPage
downloads any missing files on-the-fly.
However this means that the very first test to be run after changing the configuration file
will need extra time to download the missing files,
so it is useful to run it manually in this case
to make sure that network latency does not interfere with your tests.
Note that some unused assets available in https://orteil.dashnet.org/cookieclicker/ are not downloaded by this script.
npx cookie-connoisseur launch
This is a simple script that launches a Cookie Clicker instance using Firefox. It exists mainly to provide a simple test that the installation worked.
npx cookie-connoisseur native-to-json
npx cookie-connoisseur json-to-native
These commands read Cookie Clicker's native save format from stdin and write a corresponding JSON to stdout, and vice-versa, respectively. They are documented in more details here.
API
openCookieClickerPage | Browser Utilities
The main function is
function openCookieClickerPage(browser: Browser, options: CCPageOptions = {}): Promise<Page>
It uses the given browser to open a page,
which already navigated to https://orteil.dashnet.org/cookieclicker/index.html
and waited for Game.ready
to be true.
More details here,
including related functions and a breakdown of the options.
Additionally,
Cookie Connoisseur injects in the page's global scope the object CConnoisseur
,
whose documentation can be found here.
Configuration File
The configuration file is cookie-connoisseur.config.json
,
located in the root folder.
The following example is from Insugar Trading.
{
"customURLs": [
{"url": "https://klattmose.github.io/CookieClicker/CCSE.js"},
{"url": "https://klattmose.github.io/CookieClicker/img/CCSEicon.png"}
],
"localFiles": [
{"url": "https://staticvariablejames.github.io/InsugarTrading/InsugarTrading.js",
"path": "./InsugarTrading.js"},
{"url": "https://staticvariablejames.github.io/InsugarTrading/dist/main.js",
"path": "./dist/main.js"}
],
"localDirectories": [
{"url": "https://staticvariablejames.github.io/InsugarTrading/data/",
"path": "./data/"}
]
}
Available options:
customURLs
:{url: string, sha1sum: string}[]
List of URLs that are handled in the same way as Cookie Clicker files. If they are missing, these files are downloaded to.cookie-connoisseur
in the first time they are needed, and the local copy is used used afterwards whenever that URL is requested. Alternatively, you can download all these files at once by runningnpx cookie-connoisseur fetch
.When downloading,
cookie-connoisseur fetch
will verify the sha1sum if available. The intention is to better document mod compatibilities; the checksum indirectly specifies which version of the third-party mod we're compatible with, and we can record in the repo's history that the updated version of a third-party mod is compatible with ours without changes. Effectively, this implements a rudimentar analogue topackage-lock.json
.The sha1sum of Cookie Clicker files is also checked, to make sure the version of Cookie Connoisseur is compatible with the cached version of Cookie Clicker.
localFiles
:{url: string, path: string}[]
List of URLs that are redirected to local files. Whenever a URL from this list is requested, the local file located inpath
is provided instead.localDirectories
:{url: string, path: string}[]
List of URL prefixes that are redirected to local directories. Whenever a URL starting withurl
is requested, that prefix is replaced withpath
, and the resulting path is provided instead.verbose
:number
The verbosity level foropenCookieClickerPage
. Defaults to 1. Set to 2 to add some additional debug messages, and to 0 to disable all warning messages.Note that this does not disable messages from the command line interface.
It is advised to re-run npx cookie-connoisseur fetch
whenever the customURLs
list is changed.
Known Issues
The core functionality is still somewhat unstable, so some tests might fail due to crashes inside Cookie Connoisseur.
Favicons are not downloaded.
npx cookie-connoisseur fetch
simply uses Playwright to download files,
and favicon requests
are explicitly filtered out.
I did not implement a fallback yet.
Files which are downloaded to .cookie-connoisseur
are not automatically removed if they are not needed anymore.
Cookie Connoisseur does not work very well with WebKit. In particular, clicks that trigger sounds (like clicking the big cookie) crash the WebKit browser on Linux.