'Chrome Extension: Get Page Variables in Content Script

Is there any way to retrieve a page's javascript variables from a Google Chrome Content Script?



Solution 1:[1]

I created a little helper method, have fun :)

to retrieve the window's variables "lannister", "always", "pays", "his", "debts", you execute the following:

var windowVariables = retrieveWindowVariables(["lannister", "always", "pays", "his", "debts"]);
console.log(windowVariables.lannister);
console.log(windowVariables.always);

my code:

function retrieveWindowVariables(variables) {
    var ret = {};

    var scriptContent = "";
    for (var i = 0; i < variables.length; i++) {
        var currVariable = variables[i];
        scriptContent += "if (typeof " + currVariable + " !== 'undefined') $('body').attr('tmp_" + currVariable + "', " + currVariable + ");\n"
    }

    var script = document.createElement('script');
    script.id = 'tmpScript';
    script.appendChild(document.createTextNode(scriptContent));
    (document.body || document.head || document.documentElement).appendChild(script);

    for (var i = 0; i < variables.length; i++) {
        var currVariable = variables[i];
        ret[currVariable] = $("body").attr("tmp_" + currVariable);
        $("body").removeAttr("tmp_" + currVariable);
    }

    $("#tmpScript").remove();

    return ret;
}

please note that i used jQuery.. you can easily use the native js "removeAttribute" and "removeChild" instead.

Solution 2:[2]

Using Liran's solution, I'm adding some fix for Objects, here's correct solution:

function retrieveWindowVariables(variables) {
    var ret = {};

    var scriptContent = "";
    for (var i = 0; i < variables.length; i++) {
        var currVariable = variables[i];
        scriptContent += "if (typeof " + currVariable + " !== 'undefined') $('body').attr('tmp_" + currVariable + "', JSON.stringify(" + currVariable + "));\n"
    }

    var script = document.createElement('script');
    script.id = 'tmpScript';
    script.appendChild(document.createTextNode(scriptContent));
    (document.body || document.head || document.documentElement).appendChild(script);

    for (var i = 0; i < variables.length; i++) {
        var currVariable = variables[i];
        ret[currVariable] = $.parseJSON($("body").attr("tmp_" + currVariable));
        $("body").removeAttr("tmp_" + currVariable);
    }

     $("#tmpScript").remove();

    return ret;
}

Solution 3:[3]

Chrome's documentation gives you a good starting point: https://developer.chrome.com/extensions/content_scripts#host-page-communication

This method allows you to extract a global page variable to your content script. It also uses an idea to only accept incoming messages that you recognize given your handshake. You can also just use Math.random() for the handshake but I was having some fun.

Explanation

  1. This method creates a script tag
  2. It stringifies the function propagateVariable and passes the current handShake and targeted variable name into the string for preservation since the function will not have access to our content script scope.
  3. Then it injects that script tag to the page.
  4. We then create a listener in our content script waiting to hear back from the page to pass back the variable we're after.
  5. By now the injected script has hit the page.
  6. The injected code was wrapped in an IIFE so it runs itself pushing the data to the listener.
  7. Optional: The listener makes sure that it had the correct handshake and voila we can trust the source of the data (It's not actually secure, but it helps create an identifier in this case, that gives us some level of trust).

Round 1

v1.0

const globalToExtract = 'someVariableName';
const array = new Uint32Array(5);
const handShake = window.crypto.getRandomValues(array).toString();

function propagateVariable(handShake, variableName) {
  const message = { handShake };
  message[variableName] = window[variableName];
  window.postMessage(message, "*");
}

(function injectPropagator() {
  const script = `( ${propagateVariable.toString()} )('${handShake}', '${globalToExtract}');`
  const scriptTag = document.createElement('script');
  const scriptBody = document.createTextNode(script);
  
  scriptTag.id = 'chromeExtensionDataPropagator';
  scriptTag.appendChild(scriptBody);
  document.body.append(scriptTag);
})();

window.addEventListener("message", function({data}) {
  console.log("INCOMINGGGG!", data);
  // We only accept messages from ourselves
  if (data.handShake != handShake) return;

  console.log("Content script received: ", data);
}, false);

v1.1 With Promise!

function extractGlobal(variableName) {

  const array = new Uint32Array(5);
  const handShake = window.crypto.getRandomValues(array).toString();

  function propagateVariable(handShake, variableName) {
    const message = { handShake };
    message[variableName] = window[variableName];
    window.postMessage(message, "*");
  }

  (function injectPropagator() {
    const script = `( ${propagateVariable.toString()} )('${handShake}', '${variableName}');`
    const scriptTag = document.createElement('script');
    const scriptBody = document.createTextNode(script);

    scriptTag.id = 'chromeExtensionDataPropagator';
    scriptTag.appendChild(scriptBody);
    document.body.append(scriptTag);
  })();

  return new Promise(resolve => {
    window.addEventListener("message", function({data}) {
      // We only accept messages from ourselves
      if (data.handShake != handShake) return;
      resolve(data);
    }, false);
  });
}

extractGlobal('someVariableName').then(data => {
  // Do Work Here
});

Round 2 - Class & Promises

v2.0

I would recommend tossing the class into its own file and exporting it as a default if using es modules. Then it simply becomes:

ExtractPageVariable('someGlobalPageVariable').data.then(pageVar => {
  // Do work here ?
});

class ExtractPageVariable {
  constructor(variableName) {
    this._variableName = variableName;
    this._handShake = this._generateHandshake();
    this._inject();
    this._data = this._listen();
  }

  get data() {
    return this._data;
  }

  // Private

  _generateHandshake() {
    const array = new Uint32Array(5);
    return window.crypto.getRandomValues(array).toString();
  }

  _inject() {
    function propagateVariable(handShake, variableName) {
      const message = { handShake };
      message[variableName] = window[variableName];
      window.postMessage(message, "*");
    }

    const script = `( ${propagateVariable.toString()} )('${this._handShake}', '${this._variableName}');`
    const scriptTag = document.createElement('script');
    const scriptBody = document.createTextNode(script);

    scriptTag.id = 'chromeExtensionDataPropagator';
    scriptTag.appendChild(scriptBody);
    document.body.append(scriptTag);
  }

  _listen() {
    return new Promise(resolve => {
      window.addEventListener("message", ({data}) => {
        // We only accept messages from ourselves
        if (data.handShake != this._handShake) return;
        resolve(data);
      }, false);
    })
  }
}

const windowData = new ExtractPageVariable('somePageVariable').data;
windowData.then(console.log);
windowData.then(data => {
   // Do work here
});

Solution 4:[4]

As explained partially in other answers, the JS variables from the page are isolated from your Chrome extension content script. Normally, there's no way to access them.

But if you inject a JavaScript tag in the page, you will have access to whichever variables are defined there.

I use a utility function to inject my script in the page:

/**
 * inject - Inject some javascript in order to expose JS variables to our content JavaScript
 * @param {string} source - the JS source code to execute
 * Example: inject('(' + myFunction.toString() + ')()');
 */
function inject(source) {
  const j = document.createElement('script'),
    f = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];
  j.textContent = source;
  f.parentNode.insertBefore(j, f);
  f.parentNode.removeChild(j);
}

Then you can do:

function getJSvar(whichVar) {
   document.body.setAttribute('data-'+whichVar,whichVar);
}
inject('(' + getJSvar.toString() + ')("somePageVariable")');

var pageVar = document.body.getAttribute('data-somePageVariable');

Note that if the variable is a complex data type (object, array...), you will need to store the value as a JSON string in getJSvar(), and JSON.parse it back in your content script.

Solution 5:[5]

This is way late but I just had the same requirement & created a simple standalone class to make getting variable values (or calling functions on objects in the page) really really easy. I used pieces from other answers on this page, which were very useful.

The way it works is to inject a script tag into the page which accesses the variable you want, then it creates a div to hold the serialised version of the value as innerText. It then reads & deserialises this value, deletes the div and script elements it injected, so the dom is back to exactly what it was before.

    var objNativeGetter = {

        divsToTidyup: [],
        DIVID: 'someUniqueDivId',
        _tidyUp: function () {
            console.log(['going to tidy up ', this.divsToTidyup]);
            var el;
            while(el = this.divsToTidyup.shift()) {
                console.log('removing element with ID : ' + el.getAttribute('id'));
                el.parentNode.removeChild(el);
            }
        },

        // create a div to hold the serialised version of what we want to get at
        _createTheDiv: function () {
            var div = document.createElement('div');
            div.setAttribute('id', this.DIVID);
            div.innerText = '';
            document.body.appendChild(div);
            this.divsToTidyup.push(div);
        },

        _getTheValue: function () {
            return JSON.parse(document.getElementById(this.DIVID).innerText);
        },

        // find the page variable from the stringified version of what you would normally use to look in the symbol table
        // eg. pbjs.adUnits would be sent as the string: 'pbjs.adUnits'
        _findTheVar: function (strIdentifier) {
            var script = document.createElement('script');
            script.setAttribute('id', 'scrUnique');
            script.textContent = "\nconsole.log(['going to stringify the data into a div...', JSON.stringify(" + strIdentifier + ")]);\ndocument.getElementById('" + this.DIVID + "').innerText = JSON.stringify(" + strIdentifier + ");\n";
            (document.head||document.documentElement).appendChild(script);
            this.divsToTidyup.push(script);
        },

        // this is the only call you need to make eg.:
        // var val = objNativeGetter.find('someObject.someValue');
        // sendResponse({theValueYouWant: val});
        find: function(strIdentifier) {
            this._createTheDiv();
            this._findTheVar(strIdentifier);
            var ret = this._getTheValue();
            this._tidyUp();
            return ret;
        }
    };

You use it like this:

chrome.runtime.onMessage.addListener(
    function(request, sender, sendResponse) {

        var objNativeGetter = {
        .... the object code, above
        }

        // do some validation, then carefully call objNativeGetter.find(...) with a known string (don't use any user generated or dynamic string - keep tight control over this)
        var val = objNativeGetter.find('somePageObj.someMethod()');
        sendResponse({theValueYouWant: val});
    }
);

Solution 6:[6]

No.

Content scripts execute in a special environment called an isolated world. They have access to the DOM of the page they are injected into, but not to any JavaScript variables or functions created by the page. It looks to each content script as if there is no other JavaScript executing on the page it is running on. The same is true in reverse: JavaScript running on the page cannot call any functions or access any variables defined by content scripts.

Isolated worlds allow each content script to make changes to its JavaScript environment without worrying about conflicting with the page or with other content scripts. For example, a content script could include JQuery v1 and the page could include JQuery v2, and they wouldn't conflict with each other.

Another important benefit of isolated worlds is that they completely separate the JavaScript on the page from the JavaScript in extensions. This allows us to offer extra functionality to content scripts that should not be accessible from web pages without worrying about web pages accessing it.

Solution 7:[7]

I actually worked around it using the localStorge API. Note: to use this, our contentscript should be able to read the localStorage. In the manifest.json file, just add the "storage" string:

"permissions": [...,"storage"]

The hijack function lives in the content script:

function hijack(callback) {
    "use strict";
    var code = function() {
      //We have access to topframe - no longer a contentscript          
      var ourLocalStorageObject = {
        globalVar: window.globalVar,
        globalVar2: window.globalVar2
      };
      var dataString = JSON.stringify(ourLocalStorageObject);
      localStorage.setItem("ourLocalStorageObject", dataString);
    };
    var script = document.createElement('script');
    script.textContent = '(' + code + ')()';
    (document.head||document.documentElement).appendChild(script);
    script.parentNode.removeChild(script);
    callback();
  }

Now we can call from the contentscript

document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function(event) { 
    hijack(callback);
});

or if you use jQuery in your contentscript, like I do:

$(document).ready(function() { 
    hijack(callback);
});

to extract the content:

function callback() {
    var localStorageString = localStorage.getItem("ourLocalStorageObject");
    var ourLocalStorageObject= JSON.parse(localStorageString);

    console.log("I can see now on content script", ourLocalStorageObject);
    //(optional cleanup):
    localStorage.removeItem("ourLocalStorageObject");
}

This can be called multiple times, so if your page changes elements or internal code, you can add event listeners to update your extension with the new data.

Edit: I've added callbacks so you can be sure your data won't be invalid (had this issue myself)

Solution 8:[8]

If you know which variables you want to access, you can make a quick custom content-script to retrieve their values.

In popup.js :

chrome.tabs.executeScript(null, {code: 'var name = "property"'}, function() {
    chrome.tabs.executeScript(null, {file: "retrieveValue.js"}, function(ret) {
        for (var i = 0; i < ret.length; i++) {
            console.log(ret[i]); //prints out each returned element in the array
        }
    });
});

In retrieveValue.js :

function returnValues() {
    return document.getElementById("element")[name];
    //return any variables you need to retrieve
}
returnValues();

You can modify the code to return arrays or other objects.

Solution 9:[9]

Works with any data type. Date need to be parsed after retrieving.

/**
 * Retrieves page variable or page function value in content script.
 * 
 * Example 1:
 * var x = 'Hello, World!';
 * var y = getPageValue('x'); // Hello, World!
 * 
 * Example 2:
 * function x() = { return 'Hello, World!' }
 * var y = getPageValue('x()'); // Hello, World!
 * 
 * Example 3:
 * function x(a, b) = { return a + b }
 * var y = getPageValue('x("Hello,", " World!")'); // Hello, World!
 */
 function getPageValue(code) {
    const dataname = (new Date()).getTime(); 
    const content = `(()=>{document.body.setAttribute('data-${dataname}', JSON.stringify(${code}));})();`;
    const script = document.createElement('script');
    
    script.textContent = content;
    document.body.appendChild(script);
    script.remove();

    const result = JSON.parse(document.body.getAttribute(`data-${dataname}`));
    document.body.removeAttribute(`data-${dataname}`);
   
    return result;
}

Sources

This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 Liran Brimer
Solution 2 Dovydas Å opa
Solution 3
Solution 4 SHamel
Solution 5 Mark B
Solution 6 Community
Solution 7
Solution 8
Solution 9