I want to change a cookie outside the site I'm visiting with python selenium like this (this is my chrome tab not selenium browser)
The site I entered: https://2captcha.com/tr/demo/hcaptcha?difficulty=difficult
Cookie site I use from frame:
newassets.hcaptcha.com
At first I tried to do something like:
import time
from selenium import webdriver
driver = webdriver.Chrome()
driver.get('https://newassets.hcaptcha.com')
cookie = {"name":"hc_accessibility","value":""}
driver.add_cookie(cookie)
driver.refresh()
time.sleep(2)
driver.get("https://2captcha.com/tr/demo/hcaptcha?difficulty=difficult")
time.sleep(2)
but when I entered the site, the hcaptcha_accecibilty cookies were not there (this is my selenium browser tab)
I'm getting to use the cookie that is already in the browser and use it in Selenium, I know you can't use it using Selenium only, but is there any library I can use to save cookies in json in a variable and use it in Selenium? How can I extract the cookie saved in the browser with python? not only Chrome but others also preferably.
This is my code currently:
option = Options()
option.add_argument("--no-sandbox")
driver = webdriver.Chrome(options=option)
driver.get("https://google.com")
wait = WebDriverWait(driver, 5)
How can I get the cookie from the browser, save it in json format and use it with Selenium?
import pickle
import os
from selenium import webdriver
import time
option = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
option.add_argument("--no-sandbox")
driver = webdriver.Chrome(options=option)
driver.get("https://google.com")
time.sleep(5)
if os.path.exists('cookies.pkl'):
cookies = pickle.load(open("cookies.pkl", "rb"))
for cookie in cookies:
driver.add_cookie(cookie)
driver.refresh()
sleep(5)
pickle.dump(driver.get_cookies(), open("cookies.pkl", "wb"))
pickle will help you save and add cookies. But, be sure to add them to the correct domain otherwise you might get errors.
I'm trying to delete all cookies from browser and then checking that no cookies remained. after that I ran my code I saw that still, some cookies remained... what's the problem? thanks
from selenium import webdriver
driver = webdriver.Chrome(executable_path=
"C:\\Chrome\\chromedriver.exe")
driver.get("http://www.walla.co.il")
driver.delete_all_cookies()
lst = driver.get_cookies()
for cookie in lst:
print(cookie)
I think this problem is more related to the load time from the website.
I just try your code adding a time.sleep(5) and the cookies are deleted correctly.
Probably when you are trying to delete the cookies the page hasn't finished loading
I'm trying to login to http://login.live.com, and stay logged in after closing the browser using pickle and cookies.
import pickle
from selenium import webdriver
browser = webdriver.Chrome()
browser.get('https://login.live.com')
# i do my login here
pickle.dump(driver.get_cookies() , open("login_live.pkl","wb"))
browser.quit()
browser = webdriver.Chrome()
browser.get('https://google.com')
for cookie in pickle.load(open("login_live.pkl", "rb")):
driver.add_cookie(cookie)
browser.get('https://login.live.com')
The problem is that after directing to live.com, I don't remain logged into my account. I perform the same flow manually (obviously without loading cookies). Can't seem to figure out what is wrong, any help would be appreciated.
login.live.com is a redirection page and cookies are not associated with it. Use the page of cookies i.e. https://account.microsoft.com
So while re-loading the session, load the page and then load cookies -
import pickle
from selenium import webdriver
browser = webdriver.Chrome("./chromedriver")
browser.get('https://login.live.com')
pickle.dump(browser.get_cookies() , open("login_live.pkl","wb"))
browser.quit()
browser = webdriver.Chrome("./chromedriver")
browser.get('https://account.microsoft.com')
for cookie in pickle.load(open("login_live.pkl", "rb")):
browser.add_cookie(cookie)
How can I save all cookies in Python's Selenium WebDriver to a .txt file, and then load them later?
The documentation doesn't say much of anything about the getCookies function.
You can save the current cookies as a Python object using pickle. For example:
import pickle
import selenium.webdriver
driver = selenium.webdriver.Firefox()
driver.get("http://www.google.com")
pickle.dump(driver.get_cookies(), open("cookies.pkl", "wb"))
And later to add them back:
import pickle
import selenium.webdriver
driver = selenium.webdriver.Firefox()
driver.get("http://www.google.com")
cookies = pickle.load(open("cookies.pkl", "rb"))
for cookie in cookies:
driver.add_cookie(cookie)
When you need cookies from session to session, there is another way to do it. Use the Chrome options user-data-dir in order to use folders as profiles. I run:
# You need to: from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_argument("user-data-dir=selenium")
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chrome_options=chrome_options)
driver.get("www.google.com")
Here you can do the logins that check for human interaction. I do this and then the cookies I need now every time I start the Webdriver with that folder everything is in there. You can also manually install the Extensions and have them in every session.
The second time I run, all the cookies are there:
# You need to: from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_argument("user-data-dir=selenium")
driver = webdriver.Chrome(chrome_options=chrome_options)
driver.get("www.google.com") # Now you can see the cookies, the settings, extensions, etc., and the logins done in the previous session are present here.
The advantage is you can use multiple folders with different settings and cookies, Extensions without the need to load, unload cookies, install and uninstall Extensions, change settings, change logins via code, and thus no way to have the logic of the program break, etc.
Also, this is faster than having to do it all by code.
Remember, you can only add a cookie for the current domain.
If you want to add a cookie for your Google account, do
browser.get('http://google.com')
for cookie in cookies:
browser.add_cookie(cookie)
Just a slight modification for the code written by Roel Van de Paar, as all credit goes to him. I am using this in Windows and it is working perfectly, both for setting and adding cookies:
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_argument("--user-data-dir=chrome-data")
driver = webdriver.Chrome('chromedriver.exe',options=chrome_options)
driver.get('https://web.whatsapp.com') # Already authenticated
time.sleep(30)
Based on the answer by Eduard Florinescu, but with newer code and the missing imports added:
$ cat work-auth.py
#!/usr/bin/python3
# Setup:
# sudo apt-get install chromium-chromedriver
# sudo -H python3 -m pip install selenium
import time
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_argument("--user-data-dir=chrome-data")
driver = webdriver.Chrome('/usr/bin/chromedriver',options=chrome_options)
chrome_options.add_argument("user-data-dir=chrome-data")
driver.get('https://www.somedomainthatrequireslogin.com')
time.sleep(30) # Time to enter credentials
driver.quit()
$ cat work.py
#!/usr/bin/python3
import time
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
chrome_options = Options()
chrome_options.add_argument("--user-data-dir=chrome-data")
driver = webdriver.Chrome('/usr/bin/chromedriver',options=chrome_options)
driver.get('https://www.somedomainthatrequireslogin.com') # Already authenticated
time.sleep(10)
driver.quit()
Ideally it would be better to not copy the directory in the first place, but this is very hard, see
How to Prevent Selenium 3.0 (Geckodriver) from Creating Temporary Firefox Profiles?
how do I use an existing profile in-place with Selenium Webdriver?
Also
Can't use existing Firefox profile in Selenium WebDriver using C# (similar solution to the solution below)
This is a solution that saves the profile directory for Firefox (similar to the user-data-dir (user data directory) in Chrome) (it involves manually copying the directory around. I haven't been able to find another way):
It was tested on Linux.
Short version:
To save the profile
driver.execute_script("window.close()")
time.sleep(0.5)
currentProfilePath = driver.capabilities["moz:profile"]
profileStoragePath = "/tmp/abc"
shutil.copytree(currentProfilePath, profileStoragePath,
ignore_dangling_symlinks=True
)
To load the profile
driver = Firefox(executable_path="geckodriver-v0.28.0-linux64",
firefox_profile=FirefoxProfile(profileStoragePath)
)
Long version (with demonstration that it works and a lot of explanation -- see comments in the code)
The code uses localStorage for demonstration, but it works with cookies as well.
#initial imports
from selenium.webdriver import Firefox, FirefoxProfile
import shutil
import os.path
import time
# Create a new profile
driver = Firefox(executable_path="geckodriver-v0.28.0-linux64",
# * I'm using this particular version. If yours is
# named "geckodriver" and placed in system PATH
# then this is not necessary
)
# Navigate to an arbitrary page and set some local storage
driver.get("https://DuckDuckGo.com")
assert driver.execute_script(r"""{
const tmp = localStorage.a; localStorage.a="1";
return [tmp, localStorage.a]
}""") == [None, "1"]
# Make sure that the browser writes the data to profile directory.
# Choose one of the below methods
if 0:
# Wait for some time for Firefox to flush the local storage to disk.
# It's a long time. I tried 3 seconds and it doesn't work.
time.sleep(10)
elif 1:
# Alternatively:
driver.execute_script("window.close()")
# NOTE: It might not work if there are multiple windows!
# Wait for a bit for the browser to clean up
# (shutil.copytree might throw some weird error if the source directory changes while copying)
time.sleep(0.5)
else:
pass
# I haven't been able to find any other, more elegant way.
#`close()` and `quit()` both delete the profile directory
# Copy the profile directory (must be done BEFORE driver.quit()!)
currentProfilePath = driver.capabilities["moz:profile"]
assert os.path.isdir(currentProfilePath)
profileStoragePath = "/tmp/abc"
try:
shutil.rmtree(profileStoragePath)
except FileNotFoundError:
pass
shutil.copytree(currentProfilePath, profileStoragePath,
ignore_dangling_symlinks=True # There's a lock file in the
# profile directory that symlinks
# to some IP address + port
)
driver.quit()
assert not os.path.isdir(currentProfilePath)
# Selenium cleans up properly if driver.quit() is called,
# but not necessarily if the object is destructed
# Now reopen it with the old profile
driver=Firefox(executable_path="geckodriver-v0.28.0-linux64",
firefox_profile=FirefoxProfile(profileStoragePath)
)
# Note that the profile directory is **copied** -- see FirefoxProfile documentation
assert driver.profile.path!=profileStoragePath
assert driver.capabilities["moz:profile"]!=profileStoragePath
# Confusingly...
assert driver.profile.path!=driver.capabilities["moz:profile"]
# And only the latter is updated.
# To save it again, use the same method as previously mentioned
# Check the data is still there
driver.get("https://DuckDuckGo.com")
data = driver.execute_script(r"""return localStorage.a""")
assert data=="1", data
driver.quit()
assert not os.path.isdir(driver.capabilities["moz:profile"])
assert not os.path.isdir(driver.profile.path)
What doesn't work:
Initialize Firefox(capabilities={"moz:profile": "/path/to/directory"}) -- the driver will not be able to connect.
options=Options(); options.add_argument("profile"); options.add_argument("/path/to/directory"); Firefox(options=options) -- same as above.
Try this method:
import pickle
from selenium import webdriver
driver = webdriver.Chrome(executable_path="chromedriver.exe")
URL = "SITE URL"
driver.get(URL)
sleep(10)
if os.path.exists('cookies.pkl'):
cookies = pickle.load(open("cookies.pkl", "rb"))
for cookie in cookies:
driver.add_cookie(cookie)
driver.refresh()
sleep(5)
# check if still need login
# if yes:
# write login code
# when login success save cookies using
pickle.dump(driver.get_cookies(), open("cookies.pkl", "wb"))
This is code I used in Windows. It works.
for item in COOKIES.split(';'):
name,value = item.split('=', 1)
name=name.replace(' ', '').replace('\r', '').replace('\n', '')
value = value.replace(' ', '').replace('\r', '').replace('\n', '')
cookie_dict={
'name':name,
'value':value,
"domain": "", # Google Chrome
"expires": "",
'path': '/',
'httpOnly': False,
'HostOnly': False,
'Secure': False
}
self.driver_.add_cookie(cookie_dict)
Use this code to store the login session of any website like google facebook etc
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
import undetected_chromedriver as uc
options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()
options.add_argument("user-data-dir=C:/Users/salee/AppData/Local/Google/Chrome/User Data/Profile 1")
browser = uc.Chrome(use_subprocess=True,Options=options)
For my case, the accepted answer is almost there.
For people that have no luck with the answers above, you are welcome to try my way.
Before you start coding, make sure that the website is using cookies for authentication.
Step:
Open your browser (I am using chrome here), login to your website.
Go to this website in order to know how to check the value of the cookies
Open another browser in incognito mode and go to your website (at this stage, your website should still prompt you the login page)
Try to modify the cookies value with the first browser cookies's value accordingly (your first browser must authenticated to your website)
Refresh your incognito mode browser, it should by pass the login page
The steps above is how I used to make sure adding cookies can authenticate to my website.
Now is the coding part, it is almost the same as the accepted answer. The only problem for me with the accepted answer is that I ended up having double the numbers of my cookies.
The pickle.dump part has no issue for me, so I would straight to the add cookie part.
import pickle
import selenium.webdriver
driver = selenium.webdriver.Chrome()
driver.get("http://your.website.com")
cookies = pickle.load(open("cookies.pkl", "rb"))
# the reason that I delete the cookies is because I found duplicated cookies by inspect the cookies with browser like step 2
driver.delete_all_cookies()
for cookie in cookies:
driver.add_cookie(cookie)
driver.refresh()
You are able to use step 2 to check if the cookies you add with the code is working correctly.
Hope it helps.