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Harden Vanilla Puppeteer

A patch to modify some core Puppeteer files to decrease detection rates by switching execution to an isolated world.

More about isolated worlds here: https://developer.chrome.com/extensions/content_scripts

Current Patches

Universal srcdoc patch

There is a more flexible patch for the srcdoc leak issue located in ./src.

Linux / Mac

$ ./src/bin/run

Windows

PS > ./src/bin/run

*package.json

{
  "scripts": {
    "patch-puppeteer": "./patch/bin/run"
  }
}

Note: Other versions can apply manually, following the changes in the patch diff files.

Puppeteer

  • 1.19.0
  • 2.1.1
  • 5.2.1
  • 5.3.1
  • 7.0.1

Puppeteer Core

  • 5.3.1
  • 7.0.1

Patching with Patch-Package

  1. Install Patch-Package https://github.com/ds300/patch-package
  2. Copy the patches folder to your project directory
  3. Run npx patch-package to apply the changes
  4. Run npx patch-package --reverse to remove

What it does

To avoid maintaining a fork of vanilla Puppeteer, the patch makes a few edits to core Puppeteer files within your node_modules folder.

The goal is to strip strings that reference Puppeteer which are exposed via throwing a new Error() and checking the trace and switch pretty much every call to run in an isolated world (apart from waitForFunction).

The patch modifies Puppeteer's FrameManager class to automatically create a new Isolated World and use this as the context rather than the default one.

What files are modified?

ExecutionContext.js
  • Removes sourceURL from Error stack inspection.
  • There is an evasion in puppeteer-extra for this which is worth implementing as well as it is likely more robust.
FrameManager.js
  • Remove the reference to puppeteer in the utility world name.
  • Overwrite basically every call to the unprotected _mainWorld with _secondaryWorld except for evaluate(), $eval(), waitForFunction().
Launcher.js
  • Remove reference to puppeteer in the Chrome profile name.
  • Remove reference to puppeteer in the Firefox profile name.

How to reverse

If using Patch-Package running patch-package --reverse should work.

$ npx patch-package --reverse;

If manually editing your files, just delete your node_modules folder and run npm install again.

$ rm -rf ./node_modules; npm install;

Test

If you'd like to create a test to check if your code is detectable, there is a basic starting point here:

Here's the differences between unpatched and patched:

Unpatched:

Unpatched

Patched:

Patched

The patched version still runs any scripts injected via page.evaluateOnNewDocument() in the _mainWorld so watch for that.

However, everything else is running in the _isolatedWorld and outside the security scope of detection scripts monitoring execution.

The existing page scripts will continue to run as normal in the Main World and will appear to function as normal (which is good), but you will no longer be able to interact with on-page scripts (which might be bad, depending on your use-case).

Naturally, they would be able to observe changes you make to the DOM, but only the outcome, not how the execution is occurring. Consider the implications of this before using.