In recent years, Graph Contrastive Learning (GCL) has shown remarkable effectiveness in learning representations on graphs. As a component of GCL, good augmentation views are supposed to be invariant to the important information while discarding the unimportant part. Existing augmentation views with perturbed graph structures are usually based on random topology corruption in the spatial domain; however, from perspectives of the spectral domain, this approach may be ineffective as it fails to pose tailored impacts on the information of different frequencies, thus weakening the agreement between the augmentation views. By a preliminary experiment, we show that the impacts caused by spatial random perturbation are approximately evenly distributed among frequency bands, which may harm the invariance of augmentations required by contrastive learning frameworks. To address this issue, we argue that the perturbation should be selectively posed on the information concerning different frequencies. In this paper, we propose GASSER which poses tailored perturbation on the specific frequencies of graph structures in spectral domain, and the edge perturbation is selectively guided by the spectral hints. As shown by extensive experiments and theoretical analysis, the augmentation views are adaptive and controllable, as well as heuristically fitting the homophily ratios and spectrum of graph structures.