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gstack/connect-chrome/SKILL.md.tmpl
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Garry Tan 84b6f354be feat: connect-chrome pre-flight cleanup + improved onboarding docs
Adds Step 0 pre-flight cleanup that kills stale browse servers and cleans
Chromium profile locks before connecting. Improves the onboarding flow with
clearer instructions for finding the extension, opening the Side Panel, and
troubleshooting connection issues. Fixes Mode check from cdp to headed.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-26 18:46:09 -06:00

203 lines
7.3 KiB
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---
name: connect-chrome
version: 0.1.0
description: |
Launch real Chrome controlled by gstack with the Side Panel extension auto-loaded.
One command: connects Claude to a visible Chrome window where you can watch every
action in real time. The extension shows a live activity feed in the Side Panel.
Use when asked to "connect chrome", "open chrome", "real browser", "launch chrome",
"side panel", or "control my browser".
allowed-tools:
- Bash
- Read
- AskUserQuestion
---
{{PREAMBLE}}
# /connect-chrome — Launch Real Chrome with Side Panel
Connect Claude to a visible Chrome window with the gstack extension auto-loaded.
You see every click, every navigation, every action in real time.
{{BROWSE_SETUP}}
## Step 0: Pre-flight cleanup
Before connecting, kill any stale browse servers and clean up lock files that
may have persisted from a crash. This prevents "already connected" false
positives and Chromium profile lock conflicts.
```bash
# Kill any existing browse server
if [ -f "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel 2>/dev/null)/.gstack/browse.json" ]; then
_OLD_PID=$(cat "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/.gstack/browse.json" 2>/dev/null | grep -o '"pid":[0-9]*' | grep -o '[0-9]*')
[ -n "$_OLD_PID" ] && kill "$_OLD_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
sleep 1
[ -n "$_OLD_PID" ] && kill -9 "$_OLD_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
rm -f "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/.gstack/browse.json"
fi
# Clean Chromium profile locks (can persist after crashes)
_PROFILE_DIR="$HOME/.gstack/chromium-profile"
for _LF in SingletonLock SingletonSocket SingletonCookie; do
rm -f "$_PROFILE_DIR/$_LF" 2>/dev/null || true
done
echo "Pre-flight cleanup done"
```
## Step 1: Connect
```bash
$B connect
```
This launches Playwright's bundled Chromium in headed mode with:
- A visible window you can watch (not your regular Chrome — it stays untouched)
- The gstack Chrome extension auto-loaded via `launchPersistentContext`
- A golden shimmer line at the top of every page so you know which window is controlled
- A sidebar agent process for chat commands
The `connect` command auto-discovers the extension from the gstack install
directory. It always uses port **34567** so the extension can auto-connect.
After connecting, print the full output to the user. Confirm you see
`Mode: headed` in the output.
If the output shows an error or the mode is not `headed`, run `$B status` and
share the output with the user before proceeding.
## Step 2: Verify
```bash
$B status
```
Confirm the output shows `Mode: headed`. Read the port from the state file:
```bash
cat "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel 2>/dev/null)/.gstack/browse.json" 2>/dev/null | grep -o '"port":[0-9]*' | grep -o '[0-9]*'
```
The port should be **34567**. If it's different, note it — the user may need it
for the Side Panel.
Also find the extension path so you can help the user if they need to load it manually:
```bash
_EXT_PATH=""
_ROOT=$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel 2>/dev/null)
[ -n "$_ROOT" ] && [ -f "$_ROOT/.claude/skills/gstack/extension/manifest.json" ] && _EXT_PATH="$_ROOT/.claude/skills/gstack/extension"
[ -z "$_EXT_PATH" ] && [ -f "$HOME/.claude/skills/gstack/extension/manifest.json" ] && _EXT_PATH="$HOME/.claude/skills/gstack/extension"
echo "EXTENSION_PATH: ${_EXT_PATH:-NOT FOUND}"
```
## Step 3: Guide the user to the Side Panel
Use AskUserQuestion:
> Chrome is launched with gstack control. You should see Playwright's Chromium
> (not your regular Chrome) with a golden shimmer line at the top of the page.
>
> The Side Panel extension should be auto-loaded. To open it:
> 1. Look for the **puzzle piece icon** (Extensions) in the toolbar — it may
> already show the gstack icon if the extension loaded successfully
> 2. Click the **puzzle piece** → find **gstack browse** → click the **pin icon**
> 3. Click the pinned **gstack icon** in the toolbar
> 4. The Side Panel should open on the right showing a live activity feed
>
> **Port:** 34567 (auto-detected — the extension connects automatically in the
> Playwright-controlled Chrome).
Options:
- A) I can see the Side Panel — let's go!
- B) I can see Chrome but can't find the extension
- C) Something went wrong
If B: Tell the user:
> The extension is loaded into Playwright's Chromium at launch time, but
> sometimes it doesn't appear immediately. Try these steps:
>
> 1. Type `chrome://extensions` in the address bar
> 2. Look for **"gstack browse"** — it should be listed and enabled
> 3. If it's there but not pinned, go back to any page, click the puzzle piece
> icon, and pin it
> 4. If it's NOT listed at all, click **"Load unpacked"** and navigate to:
> - Press **Cmd+Shift+G** in the file picker dialog
> - Paste this path: `{EXTENSION_PATH}` (use the path from Step 2)
> - Click **Select**
>
> After loading, pin it and click the icon to open the Side Panel.
>
> If the Side Panel badge stays gray (disconnected), click the gstack icon
> and enter port **34567** manually.
If C:
1. Run `$B status` and show the output
2. If the server is not healthy, re-run Step 0 cleanup + Step 1 connect
3. If the server IS healthy but the browser isn't visible, try `$B focus`
4. If that fails, ask the user what they see (error message, blank screen, etc.)
## Step 4: Demo
After the user confirms the Side Panel is working, run a quick demo:
```bash
$B goto https://news.ycombinator.com
```
Wait 2 seconds, then:
```bash
$B snapshot -i
```
Tell the user: "Check the Side Panel — you should see the `goto` and `snapshot`
commands appear in the activity feed. Every command Claude runs shows up here
in real time."
## Step 5: Sidebar chat
After the activity feed demo, tell the user about the sidebar chat:
> The Side Panel also has a **chat tab**. Try typing a message like "take a
> snapshot and describe this page." A sidebar agent (a child Claude instance)
> executes your request in the browser — you'll see the commands appear in
> the activity feed as they happen.
>
> The sidebar agent can navigate pages, click buttons, fill forms, and read
> content. Each task gets up to 5 minutes. It runs in an isolated session, so
> it won't interfere with this Claude Code window.
## Step 6: What's next
Tell the user:
> You're all set! Here's what you can do with the connected Chrome:
>
> **Watch Claude work in real time:**
> - Run any gstack skill (`/qa`, `/design-review`, `/benchmark`) and watch
> every action happen in the visible Chrome window + Side Panel feed
> - No cookie import needed — the Playwright browser shares its own session
>
> **Control the browser directly:**
> - **Sidebar chat** — type natural language in the Side Panel and the sidebar
> agent executes it (e.g., "fill in the login form and submit")
> - **Browse commands** — `$B goto <url>`, `$B click <sel>`, `$B fill <sel> <val>`,
> `$B snapshot -i` — all visible in Chrome + Side Panel
>
> **Window management:**
> - `$B focus` — bring Chrome to the foreground anytime
> - `$B disconnect` — close headed Chrome and return to headless mode
>
> **What skills look like in headed mode:**
> - `/qa` runs its full test suite in the visible browser — you see every page
> load, every click, every assertion
> - `/design-review` takes screenshots in the real browser — same pixels you see
> - `/benchmark` measures performance in the headed browser
Then proceed with whatever the user asked to do. If they didn't specify a task,
ask what they'd like to test or browse.