Hi,

thank you for your message, probably saved my a lot of time.  Just an
update from the future.

Maxim Cournoyer <[email protected]> writes:

> I'm sharing this bit of knowledge as it was not obvious at all.
> Selenium is hard-coded to look for 'firefox' in a couple places, even in
> the serialized settings it sends to the browser instance controlled by
> geckodriver.
>
> Here's the initialization that worked using Guix on the
> core-updates-frozen-batched-changes branch (where 'geckodriver' was
> recently added to IceCat):
>
> from selenium.webdriver import Firefox, FirefoxOptions
> # Monkey patch the KEY string for IceCat.
> FirefoxOptions.KEY = "moz:icecatOptions"
> options = FirefoxOptions()
> options.headless = False
> options.binary = 'icecat'
> options.set_capability('browserName', 'icecat')
> self.driver = Firefox(options=options)# TODO:
>
>
> The non-obvious was monkey patching the 'moz:icecatOptions' string of
> the FirefoxOptions object, and having to set the 'browserName'
> capability; otherwise a capability/invalid argument execption would be
> raised.

In the year 2026 there seems to be something called selenium-manager
which selenium uses by default, and it does not know icecat.  So the
invocation changes a bit into:

--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
import selenium
import shutil
from selenium.webdriver import Firefox, FirefoxOptions

service = selenium.webdriver.firefox.service.Service(
    executable_path=shutil.which("geckodriver"))
FirefoxOptions.KEY = "moz:icecatOptions"
options = FirefoxOptions()
options.set_capability('browserName', 'icecat')
driver = Firefox(options=options, service=service)
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

> If you use chromedriver (included with) our ungoogled-chromium instead,
> it is more straightforward as there is nothing to rename/monkey patch:
>
> options = ChromeOptions()
> options.headless = False
> self.driver = Chrome(options=options)

ungoogled-chromium does not build for some time now, so no update here.

> I hope that helps someone else :-).

It definitely did!

Tomas

-- 
There are only two hard things in Computer Science:
cache invalidation, naming things and off-by-one errors.

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