How can I dump the entire Web DOM in its current state in Chrome?
Solution 1
Using the Web Inspector (F12), go to the Elements tab, right click on the <html>
tag in your code and select Copy
->Copy outerHTML
. Then paste that into a new file and save.
Solution 2
Command line solution
This is easy to do with newer releases of Chrome:
google-chrome --headless --dump-dom 'http://www.yahoo.com'
(The OP may not have been looking for a command line solution but this search result appears high when searching so others might find it useful)
Original answer 2017
My favorite way to do this is:
docker run -it --rm --name chrome --shm-size=1024m --cap-add=SYS_ADMIN --entrypoint=/usr/bin/google-chrome-unstable yukinying/chrome-headless-browser --headless --disable-gpu --dump-dom https://www.facebook.com
If you're not familiar with how Docker works, be patient - the first time will be slow but subsequent invocations will be quick.
Other information
Tested on
Ubuntu 16
Linux intel-nuc 4.4.0-21-generic #37-Ubuntu SMP Mon Apr 18 18:33:37 UTC 2016 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
Docker version:
Docker version 1.10.3, build 20f81dd
Mac OS X Sierra
Darwin MacBook-Pro.local 16.7.0 Darwin Kernel Version 16.7.0: Thu Jun 15 17:36:27 PDT 2017; root:xnu-3789.70.16~2/RELEASE_X86_64 x86_64 i386 MacBookPro14,3 Darwin
Docker version:
Docker version 17.06.1-ce, build 874a737
If you install tidy
you can indent the HTML too.
Solution 3
In Chrome Dev Tools Console, type document.documentElement.outerHTML
(use the tab button for autocomplete to save keystrokes) and hit Enter to see the DOM text displayed. To copy it to your clipboard and paste it elsewhere, use copy(document.documentElement.outerHTML)
instead.
Damon's answer is also good (in Dev Tools, click Elements, right click <html>
, click Copy > Copy outerHTML), but I find the Console command easier.
Solution 4
I am currently using version 53.0.2785.113 m of Chrome. The other answers no longer appear to be valid. To properly copy all child/descendant elements the user now has to right click on <html>
then click "Expand All" before copying. Other wise you will not recursively copy all elements. A normal Ctrl+C will copy everything one <html>
has been expanded.
Comments
-
styfle about 4 years
I want to dump the current DOM to a file and be able to view it offline. Essentially, I have an outdated version of a page that I would like to keep around for comparison. As soon as I close my browser, I'm going to lose it so I would like to save the DOM exactly as it is.
There is already an answer for doing this in Firefox but how do I do it in Chrome?
-
styfle over 11 yearsI did this at the time of posting but I think there was a reason this is not the perfect solution. I think I wanted to save event handlers on the DOM which the HTML dump does not do.
-
Timothy Harding about 9 years@styfle Not sure I understand this. When you hit F12 it is the rendered (correct wording?) HTML I see, not the base dump that 'View Page Source' will give you. I followed Damon's advice and got everything I needed (a select box populated by jquery). It is still a very clumsy approach, a simple Select All from the elements page would be much more intuitive.
-
Karlth almost 9 yearsJust "Copy" instead of "Copy as HTML" does the trick. Then just paste into Notepad.
-
Sridhar Sarnobat over 6 yearsI don’t see anything wrong with that. Do you know what docker is?
-
Sridhar Sarnobat about 6 yearsThis will indeed give you the GENERATED HTML, unlike the "save page as" menu entry which just gives you the SOURCE HTML, which doesn't help you in sites that use Ajax for content.
-
Basil Musa almost 5 yearsOutdated, no longer valid.
-
Mike 'Pomax' Kamermans over 4 yearsThe problem with the
--dump-dom
is that the question was how to save the current DOM, not the DOM you get on initial page load, which on modern websites is almost guaranteed completely different thanks to JS injecting a million things that are missing from the initial page load. -
Marcus about 4 yearsOf course, as styfle mentioned, this will not save the event handlers on the DOM.