157
votes

I have recently upgraded my mac machine to OS Catalina(v 10.15.3). After this upgrade I am unable to launch the chrome driver using selenium.

I am facing the below error when I run the selenium code to launch the chrome browser.

"“chromedriver” cannot be opened because the developer cannot be verified". "macOS cannot verify that this app is free from malware."

Please help me!

10

10 Answers

282
votes

I found the work around as below

  1. Open terminal
  2. Navigate to path where your chromedriver file is located
  3. Execute any one of the below commands

Command1: xattr -d com.apple.quarantine <name-of-executable>

Example

/usr/local/Caskroom/chromedriver 
$ xattr -d com.apple.quarantine chromedriver 

(or)

Command2: spctl --add --label 'Approved' <name-of-executable>

Source: https://docwhat.org/upgrading-to-catalina

Note: This will work only with the file(s) where the above command is executed. If a new chromedriver is downloaded then the command has to be executed again on the newly downloaded file

136
votes

In macOS Catalina and macOS Mojave, when an app fails to install because it hasn’t been notarized or is from an unidentified developer, it will appear in System Preferences > Security & Privacy, under the General tab. Click Open Anyway to confirm your intent to open or install the app.

enter image description here

The warning prompt reappears, and you can click Open.*

enter image description here

The app is now saved as an exception to your security settings, and you can open it in the future by double-clicking it, just as you can any authorized app.

*If you're prompted to open Finder: control-click the app in Finder, choose Open from the menu, and then click Open in the dialog that appears. Enter your admin name and password to open the app.

49
votes

Existing answers are great, and they work.

But an easier solution is to open the terminal and run this:

xattr -d com.apple.quarantine $(which chromedriver)
22
votes

Quick solution

  1. Open Finder
  2. Navigate to where the chromedriver file is located
  3. Right-click on the chromedriver file and select open

After this the script should work fine.

11
votes

Two steps to solve this:

  1. Navigate to the path using command- cd /usr/local/bin . This is where you will see your chromedriver installed.
  2. When inside the bin directory, run this command- xattr -d com.apple.quarantine chromedriver .

And that's all. It worked for me like that.

10
votes

Open terminal and navigate to path where chromedriver is downloaded. Execute xattr -d com.apple.quarantine chromedriver

7
votes

What worked for me on macOS Catalina Version 10.15.6 (19G73) was

  1. Install chromedriver via Homebrew:

    brew install chromedriver

  2. Then, in Finder click on Go menu and the click Go to folder option, and enter this route:

    /usr/local/Caskroom/chromedriver/

  3. There you should see a folder with the chromedriver version you have installed, something like this:

    88.0.4324.96

  4. Enter the folder and you should see the chromedriver binary file.

  5. Right click on it, and click on Open

Now, you should get a terminal window popping up with the output:

Last login: Sun Jan 31 12:29:15 on ttys001
/usr/local/Caskroom/chromedriver/88.0.4324.96/chromedriver ; exit;
   ~  /usr/local/Caskroom/chromedriver/88.0.4324.96/chromedriver ; exit;
Starting ChromeDriver 88.0.4324.96 (68dba2d8a0b149a1d3afac56fa74648032bcf46b-refs/branch-heads/4324@{#1784}) on port 9515
Only local connections are allowed.
Please see https://chromedriver.chromium.org/security-considerations for suggestions on keeping ChromeDriver safe.
ChromeDriver was started successfully.

Finally, press Ctrl+C to stop the execution and quit the terminal window.

Now, you should be able to run capybara tests.

3
votes

(What worked for me, hopefully works for you too)

Update for all the macOS Big Sur 11.0 users:

  1. use homebrew to install chromedriver

    brew install chromedriver

  2. navigate to chromedriver that is in the Caskroom folder specifically

    /usr/local/bin/Caskroom/chromedriver ... keep going until you see the Unix Executable File called "chromedriver"

  3. following Apple's recommendation for opening Mac apps from unidentified developer, double-click chromedriver, and then click "Open"

For me, this resulted in a terminal window popping up with the output:


Starting ChromeDriver ...
Only local connections are allowed.
Please see https://chromedriver.chromium.org/security-considerations for suggestions on keeping ChromeDriver safe.
ChromeDriver was started successfully.

I can now run scrapy-selenium no problem, you can close the terminal window (yes, terminate the process is OK) and it should still work without stopping you now.

Let me know if this works for you

2
votes

The above answers were helpful. I would just add that if you're running Selenium from a development environment, in my case a Jupyter Notebook, and this is the issue, you're likely to see a PermissionError: [Errno 13] Permission denied error. There are other causes for this error, but it can be that macOS Catalina is blocking chromedriver from running for security reasons. Following the approaches above, I ran it from the command line and then was able to open it from Jupyter using driver = webdriver.Chrome('path/to/chromedriver).

1
votes

xattr -d com.apple.quarantine $(which chromedriver) alone is not enough.

with the lastest version of chromedriver, it seem like they are dividing into version folders.
for me on 9/30/20. what worked for me is xattr -d com.apple.quarantine 85.0.4183.87/chromedriver