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Example Puppeteer

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Example Puppeteer

Example Puppeteer

Developed by

Apify

Apify

Maintained by Apify

Example showing how to use headless Chromium with Puppeteer to open a web page, determine its dimensions, save a screenshot, and print the page to PDF. This actor must use images with Puppeteer (Node.js 8 + Puppeteer on Debian).

4.6 (5)

Pricing

Pay per usage

7

Total users

395

Monthly users

12

Runs succeeded

>99%

Last modified

a year ago

You can access the Example Puppeteer programmatically from your own applications by using the Apify API. You can also choose the language preference from below. To use the Apify API, you’ll need an Apify account and your API token, found in Integrations settings in Apify Console.

{
"mcpServers": {
"apify": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"mcp-remote",
"https://mcp.apify.com/sse?actors=apify/example-puppeteer",
"--header",
"Authorization: Bearer <YOUR_API_TOKEN>"
]
}
}
}

Configure MCP server with Example Puppeteer

You have a few options for interacting with the MCP server:

  • Use mcp.apify.com via mcp-remote from your local machine to connect and authenticate using OAuth or an API token (as shown in the JSON configuration above).

  • Set up the connection directly in your MCP client UI by providing the URL https://mcp.apify.com/sse?actors=apify/example-puppeteer along with an API token (or use OAuth).

  • Connect to mcp.apify.com via Server-Sent Events (SSE), as shown below:

{
"mcpServers": {
"apify": {
"type": "sse",
"url": "https://mcp.apify.com/sse?actors=apify/example-puppeteer",
"headers": {
"Authorization": "Bearer <YOUR_API_TOKEN>"
}
}
}
}

You can connect to the Apify MCP Server using clients like Tester MCP Client, or any other MCP client of your choice.

If you want to learn more about our Apify MCP implementation, check out our MCP documentation. To learn more about the Model Context Protocol in general, refer to the official MCP documentation or read our blog post.