Skip to content

Sparticuz/chromium

Repository files navigation

@sparticuz/chromium

@sparticuz/chromium Package size npm npm GitHub Downloads GitHub Sponsors

Chromium for Serverless Platforms

sparticuz/chrome-aws-lambda was originally forked from alixaxel/chrome-aws-lambda#264.

The main difference, aside from the Chromium version, is the inclusion of some code from https://github.com/alixaxel/lambdafs, while removing it as a dependency. Due to changes in WebGL, the files in bin/swiftshader.tar.br must now be extracted to /tmp instead of /tmp/swiftshader. This required changes in lambdafs.

However, maintaining the package became difficult due to the rapid pace of puppeteer updates. @sparticuz/chromium is not tied to specific puppeteer versions and does not include the overrides and hooks found in the original package. It provides only Chromium, the code required to decompress the Brotli package, and a set of predefined arguments tailored for serverless environments.

Install

puppeteer ships with a preferred version of chromium. To determine which version of @sparticuz/chromium you need, visit the Puppeteer Chromium Support page.

For example, as of today, the latest version of puppeteer is 18.0.5, and the latest supported version of Chromium is 106.0.5249.0. Therefore, you should install @sparticuz/chromium@106.

# Puppeteer or Playwright is a production dependency
npm install --save puppeteer-core@$PUPPETEER_VERSION
# @sparticuz/chromium can be a DEV dependency IF YOU ARE USING A LAYER. If you are not using a layer, use it as a production dependency!
npm install --save-dev @sparticuz/chromium@$CHROMIUM_VERSION

If your vendor does not allow large deployments (since chromium.br is over 50 MB), you will need to host the chromium-v#-pack.tar separately and use the @sparticuz/chromium-min package.

npm install --save @sparticuz/chromium-min@$CHROMIUM_VERSION

If you need to install an older version of Chromium, see @sparticuz/chrome-aws-lambda or @alixaxel/chrome-aws-lambda.

Versioning

The @sparticuz/chromium version schema is as follows: MajorChromiumVersion.MinorChromiumIncrement.@Sparticuz/chromiumPatchLevel

Because this package follows Chromium's release cycle, it does NOT follow semantic versioning. Breaking changes may occur at the 'patch' level. Please check the release notes for details on breaking changes.

Usage

This package works with all currently supported AWS Lambda Node.js runtimes out of the box.

const test = require("node:test");
const puppeteer = require("puppeteer-core");
const chromium = require("@sparticuz/chromium");

// Optional: If you'd like to disable webgl, true is the default.
chromium.setGraphicsMode = false;

test("Check the page title of example.com", async (t) => {
  const viewport = {
    deviceScaleFactor: 1,
    hasTouch: false,
    height: 1080,
    isLandscape: true,
    isMobile: false,
    width: 1920,
  };
  const browser = await puppeteer.launch({
    args: puppeteer.defaultArgs({ args: chromium.args, headless: "shell" }),
    defaultViewport: viewport,
    executablePath: await chromium.executablePath(),
    headless: "shell",
  });

  const page = await browser.newPage();
  await page.goto("https://example.com");
  const pageTitle = await page.title();
  await browser.close();

  t.assert.strictEqual(pageTitle, "Example Domain");
});

Usage with Playwright

const test = require("node:test");
// Need to rename playwright's chromium object to something else
const { chromium: playwright } = require("playwright-core");
const chromium = require("@sparticuz/chromium");

test("Check the page title of example.com", async (t) => {
  const browser = await playwright.launch({
    args: chromium.args, // Playwright merges the args
    executablePath: await chromium.executablePath(),
    // headless: true, /* true is the default */
  });

  const context = await browser.newContext();
  const page = await context.newPage();
  await page.goto("https://example.com");
  const pageTitle = await page.title();
  await browser.close();

  t.assert.strictEqual(pageTitle, "Example Domain");
});

You should allocate at least 512 MB of RAM to your instance; however, 1600 MB (or more) is recommended.

-min Package

The -min package does NOT include the Chromium Brotli files. This is useful when your host has file size limits.

To use the -min package, install the @sparticuz/chromium-min package instead of @sparticuz/chromium

When using the -min package, you must specify the location of the Brotli files.

In this example, /opt/chromium contains all the Brotli files:

/opt
  /chromium
    /al2023.tar.br
    /chromium.br
    /fonts.tar.br
    /swiftshader.tar.br
const viewport = {
  deviceScaleFactor: 1,
  hasTouch: false,
  height: 1080,
  isLandscape: true,
  isMobile: false,
  width: 1920,
};
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({
  args: puppeteer.defaultArgs({ args: chromium.args, headless: "shell" }),
  defaultViewport: viewport,
  executablePath: await chromium.executablePath("/opt/chromium"),
  headless: "shell",
});

In the following example, https://www.example.com/chromiumPack.tar contains all the Brotli files. Generally, this would be a location on S3 or another very fast downloadable location that is close to your function's execution environment.

On the first run, @sparticuz/chromium will download the pack tar file, untar the files to /tmp/chromium-pack, and then decompress the chromium binary to /tmp/chromium. Subsequent runs (during a warm start) will detect that /tmp/chromium exists and use the already downloaded files.

The latest chromium-pack.arch.tar file is available in the latest release.

const viewport = {
  deviceScaleFactor: 1,
  hasTouch: false,
  height: 1080,
  isLandscape: true,
  isMobile: false,
  width: 1920,
};
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({
  args: puppeteer.defaultArgs({ args: chromium.args, headless: "shell" }),
  defaultViewport: viewport,
  executablePath: await chromium.executablePath(
    "https://www.example.com/chromiumPack.tar",
  ),
  headless: "shell",
});

Examples

Here are some example projects and guides for other services:

Running Locally & Headless/Headful Mode

This version of Chromium is built using the headless.gn build variables, which do not include a GUI. If you need to test your code using a headful instance, use your locally installed version of Chromium/Chrome, or the version provided by Puppeteer.

npx @puppeteer/browsers install chromium@latest --path /tmp/localChromium

For more information on installing a specific version of chromium, check out @puppeteer/browsers.

For example, you can set your code to use an environment variable such as IS_LOCAL, then use if/else statements to direct Puppeteer to the correct environment.

const viewport = {
  deviceScaleFactor: 1,
  hasTouch: false,
  height: 1080,
  isLandscape: true,
  isMobile: false,
  width: 1920,
};
const headlessType = process.env.IS_LOCAL ? false : "shell";
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({
  args:
    process.env.IS_LOCAL ?
      puppeteer.defaultArgs()
    : puppeteer.defaultArgs({ args: chromium.args, headless: headlessType }),
  defaultViewport: viewport,
  executablePath:
    process.env.IS_LOCAL ?
      "/tmp/localChromium/chromium/linux-1122391/chrome-linux/chrome"
    : await chromium.executablePath(),
  headless: headlessType,
});

macOS and Playwright

The Chromium binary included in this package is compiled for Linux only and will not work on macOS or Windows. For local development:

With Puppeteer: Set the IS_LOCAL environment variable and install Chrome or Chromium locally. The code example above demonstrates this pattern.

With Playwright: Install a local Chromium using Playwright's CLI, then configure your code to use it in local development:

import chromium from "@sparticuz/chromium";
import { chromium as playwright } from "playwright-core";

const isLocal = process.env.IS_LOCAL;

const browser = await playwright.launch({
  args: isLocal ? [] : chromium.args,
  executablePath:
    isLocal ?
      "/path/to/local/chromium" // e.g., from `npx playwright install chromium`
    : await chromium.executablePath(),
  headless: true,
});

To install Chromium locally via Playwright:

npx playwright install chromium

Bundler Configuration

When using a bundler (esbuild, webpack, rollup, etc.), @sparticuz/chromium must be marked as external. The package relies on relative path resolution to locate its binary files, which breaks when bundled.

esbuild
esbuild --bundle --external:@sparticuz/chromium index.js

Or if you want to externalize all packages:

esbuild --bundle --packages=external index.js
webpack
// webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
  externals: ["@sparticuz/chromium"],
  // ... rest of config
};
Serverless Framework (with serverless-esbuild)
# serverless.yml
custom:
  esbuild:
    external:
      - "@sparticuz/chromium"

If you see the error The input directory "/var/task/bin" does not exist, this almost certainly means the package was not externalized in your bundler configuration.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use ARM or Graviton instances?

YES! Starting at Chromium v135, arm64 binaries are available as a Lambda layer zip and a pack tar in each GitHub release.

Note: The npm package (@sparticuz/chromium) includes only x64 binaries. For arm64, use the @sparticuz/chromium-min package and then use one of these options:

  • Lambda layer — download chromium-VERSION-layer.arm64.zip from the release and upload it as a Lambda layer
  • Remote pack — host chromium-VERSION-pack.arm64.tar at an HTTPS URL and pass it to chromium.executablePath("https://example.com/chromium-pack.arm64.tar")

Can I use Google Chrome or Chrome for Testing? What is chrome-headless-shell?

headless_shell is a purpose-built version of Chromium specifically for headless purposes. It does not include a GUI and only works via remote debugging connection. This is what this package is built on.

Can I use the "new" Headless mode?

From what I can tell, headless_shell does not seem to include support for the "new" headless mode.

It doesn't work with Webpack!?

Try marking this package as an external dependency.

I'm experiencing timeouts or failures closing Chromium

This is a common issue. Chromium sometimes opens more pages than you expect. You can try the following:

for (const page of await browser.pages()) {
  await page.close();
}
await browser.close();

You can also try the following if one of the calls is hanging for some reason:

await Promise.race([browser.close(), browser.close(), browser.close()]);

Always await browser.close(), even if your script is returning an error.

BrowserContext isn't working properly (Target.closed)

You may not be able to create a new context. You can try to use the default context as seen in this patch: #298

Do I need to use @sparticuz/chromium?

This package is designed to be run on a vanilla Lambda instance. If you are using a Dockerfile to publish your code to Lambda, it may be better to install Chromium and its dependencies from the distribution's repositories.

I need accessible PDF files

This is due to the way @sparticuz/chromium is built. If you require accessible PDFs, you'll need to recompile Chromium yourself with the following patch. You can then use that binary with @sparticuz/chromium-min.

Note: This will increase the time required to generate a PDF.

diff --git a/_/ec2/args-x64.gn b/_/ec2/args-x64.gn
--- a/_/ec2/args-x64.gn
+++ b/_/ec2/args-x64.gn
@@ -6,7 +6,9 @@
 disable_histogram_support = false
-enable_basic_print_dialog = false
 enable_basic_printing = true
+enable_pdf = true
+enable_tagged_pdf = true
 enable_keystone_registration_framework = false

Can I use a language other than Javascript (NodeJS)?

Yes, you will need to write your own Brotli extraction algorithm and args inclusion. (Basically, rewrite the typescript files). The binaries, once extracted, will work with any language.

Playwright: Lambda /tmp fills up after repeated invocations

Playwright does not automatically clean up its user data directory between invocations on a warm Lambda. Over time, /tmp fills up and you'll see ERR_INSUFFICIENT_RESOURCES errors.

Workaround: Set a unique --user-data-dir for each invocation and clean it up afterward:

import { randomUUID } from "node:crypto";
import { rm } from "node:fs/promises";

const userDataDir = `/tmp/pw-${randomUUID()}`;

const browser = await playwright.launch({
  args: [...chromium.args, `--user-data-dir=${userDataDir}`],
  executablePath: await chromium.executablePath(),
  headless: true,
});

try {
  // ... your code ...
} finally {
  await browser.close();
  await rm(userDataDir, { recursive: true, force: true });
}

This issue does not affect Puppeteer, which manages user data directories differently.

Fonts

The AWS Lambda runtime is not provisioned with any font faces.

Because of this, this package ships with Open Sans, which supports the following scripts:

  • Latin
  • Greek
  • Cyrillic

You can provision additional fonts via AWS Lambda Layers.

Create a directory named .fonts or fonts and place any font faces you want there:

.fonts
├── NotoColorEmoji.ttf
└── Roboto.ttf

Afterwards, zip the directory and upload it as an AWS Lambda Layer:

zip -9 --filesync --move --recurse-paths fonts.zip fonts/

Font directories are specified inside the fonts.conf file found inside the bin/fonts.tar.br file. These are the default folders:

  • /var/task/.fonts
  • /var/task/fonts
  • /opt/fonts
  • /tmp/fonts

Graphics

By default, this package uses swiftshader/angle to do CPU acceleration for WebGL. This is the only known way to enable WebGL on a serverless platform. You can disable WebGL by setting chromium.setGraphicsMode = false; before launching Chromium. Chromium still requires extracting the bin/swiftshader.tar.br file in order to launch. Testing is needed to determine if there is any positive speed impact from disabling WebGL.

API

Method / Property Returns Description
args Array<string> Provides a list of recommended additional Chromium flags.
executablePath(location?: string) Promise<string> Returns the path where the Chromium binary was extracted.
setGraphicsMode void Sets the graphics mode to either true or false.
graphics boolean Returns a boolean indicating whether WebGL is enabled or disabled.

Extra Args documentation

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md for the full guide, including AWS setup, SSH key generation, GitHub configuration, and the build/release process.

Quick start for code changes:

  1. Edit source files in source/.
  2. Create or update tests in tests/.
  3. Lint: npm run lint
  4. Build: npm run build
  5. Test: npm run test:source (unit) and npm run test:integration (requires AWS SAM CLI + Docker).

Updating Chromium binaries:

  1. Run npm run update to fetch the latest revision into _/ec2/revision.txt.
  2. Open a PR — the binaries:needed label is added automatically.
  3. Add the binaries:build label to start the EC2 build (~5 hours).
  4. After binaries:available appears, add the binaries:test label to run tests.
  5. See CONTRIBUTING.md for build options and monitoring.

Note: PRs with binary files are not accepted. Binaries are built by EC2 and stored in S3.

AWS Lambda Layer

Lambda Layers are a convenient way to manage common dependencies between different Lambda Functions.

The following set of (Linux) commands will create a layer of this package:

archType="x64" && \
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/sparticuz/chromium.git && \
cd chromium && \
make chromium.${archType}$.zip

The above will create a chromium.x64.zip file, which can be uploaded to your Layers console. If you are using arm64, replace the value accordingly. You can and should upload using the aws cli. (Replace the variables with your own values.)

bucketName="chromiumUploadBucket" && archType="x64" && versionNumber="v135.0.0" && \
aws s3 cp chromium.${archType}.zip "s3://${bucketName}/chromiumLayers/chromium-${versionNumber}-layer.${archType}.zip" && \
aws lambda publish-layer-version --layer-name chromium --description "Chromium v${versionNumber} for ${archType}" --content "S3Bucket=${bucketName},S3Key=chromiumLayers/chromium-${versionNumber}-layer.${archType}.zip" --compatible-runtimes "nodejs20.x" "nodejs22.x" --compatible-architectures $(if [ "$archType" = "x64" ]; then echo "x86_64"; else echo "$archType"; fi)

Alternatively, you can also download the layer artifact from one of our releases.

Compression

The Chromium binary is compressed using the Brotli algorithm.

This provides the best compression ratio and faster decompression times.

File Algorithm Level Bytes MiB % Inflation
chromium - - 136964856 130.62 - -
chromium.gz Gzip 1 51662087 49.27 62.28% 1.035s
chromium.gz Gzip 2 50438352 48.10 63.17% 1.016s
chromium.gz Gzip 3 49428459 47.14 63.91% 0.968s
chromium.gz Gzip 4 47873978 45.66 65.05% 0.950s
chromium.gz Gzip 5 46929422 44.76 65.74% 0.938s
chromium.gz Gzip 6 46522529 44.37 66.03% 0.919s
chromium.gz Gzip 7 46406406 44.26 66.12% 0.917s
chromium.gz Gzip 8 46297917 44.15 66.20% 0.916s
chromium.gz Gzip 9 46270972 44.13 66.22% 0.968s
chromium.gz Zopfli 10 45089161 43.00 67.08% 0.919s
chromium.gz Zopfli 20 45085868 43.00 67.08% 0.919s
chromium.gz Zopfli 30 45085003 43.00 67.08% 0.925s
chromium.gz Zopfli 40 45084328 43.00 67.08% 0.921s
chromium.gz Zopfli 50 45084098 43.00 67.08% 0.935s
chromium.br Brotli 0 55401211 52.83 59.55% 0.778s
chromium.br Brotli 1 54429523 51.91 60.26% 0.757s
chromium.br Brotli 2 46436126 44.28 66.10% 0.659s
chromium.br Brotli 3 46122033 43.99 66.33% 0.616s
chromium.br Brotli 4 45050239 42.96 67.11% 0.692s
chromium.br Brotli 5 40813510 38.92 70.20% 0.598s
chromium.br Brotli 6 40116951 38.26 70.71% 0.601s
chromium.br Brotli 7 39302281 37.48 71.30% 0.615s
chromium.br Brotli 8 39038303 37.23 71.50% 0.668s
chromium.br Brotli 9 38853994 37.05 71.63% 0.673s
chromium.br Brotli 10 36090087 34.42 73.65% 0.765s
chromium.br Brotli 11 34820408 33.21 74.58% 0.712s

Backers

If you or your organization have benefited financially from this package, please consider supporting.

Thank you to the following users and companies for your support!

Sponsors

License

MIT

About

Chromium for Serverless Platforms

Topics

Resources

License

Contributing

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Sponsor this project

 

Packages

 
 
 

Contributors