browsh

A fully-modern text-based browser, rendering to TTY and browsers

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A fully interactive, realtime, and modern text-based browser rendered to TTYs and browsers

Browsh Gif

Why use Browsh?

Not all the world has good Internet.

If you only have a 3kbps internet connection tethered from a phone,
then it's good to SSH into a server and browse the web through, say,
elinks. That way the
server downloads the web pages and uses the limited bandwidth of an
SSH connection to display the result. However, traditional text-based browsers
lack JS and all other modern HTML5 support. Browsh is different
in that it's backed by a real browser, namely headless Firefox,
to create a purely text-based version of web pages and web apps. These can be easily
rendered in a terminal or indeed, ironically, in another browser. Do note that currently the browser client doesn't have feature parity with the terminal client.

Why not VNC? Well VNC is certainly one solution but it doesn't quite
have the same ability to deal with extremely bad Internet. Terminal
Browsh can also use MoSH to further reduce bandwidth and increase stability
of the connection. Mosh offers features like automatic
reconnection of dropped or roamed connections and diff-only screen updates.
Furthermore, other than SSH or MoSH, terminal Browsh doesn't require a client
like VNC.

One final reason to use terminal Browsh could be to offload the battery-drain of a modern
browser from your laptop or low-powered device like a Raspberry Pi. If you're a CLI-native,
then you could potentially get a few more hours of life if your CPU-hungry browser
is running somewhere else on mains electricity.

Installation

Download a binary from the releases (~7MB).
You will need to have Firefox 63 (or higher) aleady installed.

Or download and run the Docker image (~230MB) with:
docker run --rm -it browsh/browsh

Usage

Most keys and mouse gestures should work as you'd expect on a desktop
browser.

For full documentation click here.

Contributing

To setup a dev env you will need NodeJS and Golang installed. If you get stuck
setting up your env, take a look in .travis.yml, it has to setup everything
from scratch for every push to Github.

I'd recommend nvm for NodeJS - note that
nvm install will automatically parse the .nvmrc version in this repo to get
the correct NodeJS version. For Golang it's probably best to just use your OS's
package manager. The current Golang version being used is stored in .travis.yml.

You'll then need to install the project dependencies. For the webextension, just
run: npm install inside the webext/ folder. For the CLI client you will first
need to install dep, there is a script for this in interfacer/contrib/setup_dep.sh.
I don't fully understand Golang's best practices, but it seems you are forced to
keep your Go project's code under $GOPATH/src, you might be able to get away
with symlinks. Anyway, to install the dependencies use: dep ensure inside the
interfacer/ folder.

Then the ideal setup for development is:

  • have Webpack watch the JS code so that it rebuilds automatically:
    webpack --watch
  • run the CLI client without giving it the responsibility to launch Firefox:
    go run ./interfacer/src/main.go --firefox.use-existing --debug
  • have Mozilla's handy web-ext tool run Firefox and reinstall the
    webextension everytime webpack rebuilds it: (in webext/dist)
    web-ext run --verbose

For generic Linux systems you can follow this guide on how to setup a build environment, that you may be able to adapt for other systems as well.

Windows users can follow this guide in order to set up a build environment.

Mac users may follow this guide that goes through the steps of setting up a build environment.

Communication

Questions about Brow.sh? Stuck trying to resolve a tricky issue? Connect with the Brow.sh community on Gitter!

Building a Browsh release

If you'd like to build Browsh for a new package manager, or for any other reason,
you can use the script at interfacer/contrib/build_browsh.sh as a guide. Note
you won't be able to build the web extension as Mozilla only allows one canonical
version of web extensions per version number. So the build script downloads the
official web extension .xpi file from the Mozilla archives.

Tests

For the webextension: in webext/ folder, npm test
For CLI unit tests: in /interfacer run go test src/browsh/*.go
For CLI E2E tests: in /interfacer run go test test/tty/*.go
For HTTP Service tests: in /interfacer run go test test/http-server/*.go

Special Thanks

License

GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownerbrowsh-org/browsh
Primary LanguageJavaScript
Program languageShell (Language Count: 7)
Platform
License:GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1
所有者活动
Created At2016-05-08 19:34:15
Pushed At2024-06-17 23:09:52
Last Commit At2024-01-29 15:49:43
Release Count55
Last Release Namev1.8.3 (Posted on )
First Release Namev1.0.2 (Posted on )
用户参与
Stargazers Count17.4k
Watchers Count184
Fork Count431
Commits Count427
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count419
Issue Open Count224
Pull Requests Count61
Pull Requests Open Count17
Pull Requests Close Count24
项目设置
Has Wiki Enabled
Is Archived
Is Fork
Is Locked
Is Mirror
Is Private