Files
gstack/BROWSER.md
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Garry Tan 7665adf4fe feat: headed mode + sidebar agent + Chrome extension (v0.12.0) (#517)
* feat: CDP connect — control real Chrome/Comet via Playwright

Add `connectCDP()` to BrowserManager: connects to a running browser via
Chrome DevTools Protocol. All existing browse commands work unchanged
through Playwright's abstraction layer.

- chrome-launcher.ts: browser discovery, CDP probe, auto-relaunch with rollback
- browser-manager.ts: connectCDP(), mode guards (close/closeTab/recreateContext/handoff),
  auto-reconnect on browser restart, getRefMap() for extension API
- server.ts: CDP branch in start(), /health gains mode field, /refs endpoint,
  idle timer only resets on /command (not passive endpoints)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: browse connect/disconnect/focus CLI commands

- connect: pre-server command that discovers browser, starts server in CDP mode
- disconnect: drops CDP connection, restarts in headless mode
- focus: brings browser window to foreground via osascript (macOS)
- status: now shows Mode: cdp | launched | headed
- startServer() accepts extra env vars for CDP URL/port passthrough

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: CDP-aware skill templates — skip cookie import in real browser mode

Skills now check `$B status` for CDP mode and skip:
- /qa: cookie import prompt, user-agent override, headless workarounds
- /design-review: cookie import for authenticated pages
- /setup-browser-cookies: returns "not needed" in CDP mode

Regenerated SKILL.md files from updated templates.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: activity streaming — SSE endpoint for Chrome extension Side Panel

Real-time browse command feed via Server-Sent Events:
- activity.ts: ActivityEntry type, CircularBuffer (capacity 1000), privacy
  filtering (redacts passwords, auth tokens, sensitive URL params),
  cursor-based gap detection, async subscriber notification
- server.ts: /activity/stream SSE, /activity/history REST, handleCommand
  instrumented with command_start/command_end events
- 18 unit tests for filterArgs privacy, emitActivity, subscribe lifecycle

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: Chrome extension Side Panel + Conductor API proposal

Chrome extension (Manifest V3, sideload):
- Side Panel with live activity feed, @ref overlays, dark terminal aesthetic
- Background worker: health polling, SSE relay, ref fetching
- Popup: port config, connection status, side panel launcher
- Content script: floating ref panel with @ref badges

Conductor API proposal (docs/designs/CONDUCTOR_SESSION_API.md):
- SSE endpoint for full Claude Code session mirroring in Side Panel
- Discovery via HTTP endpoint (not filesystem — extensions can't read files)

TODOS.md: add $B watch, multi-agent tabs, cross-platform CDP, Web Store publishing.
Mark CDP mode as shipped.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: detect Conductor runtime, skip osascript quit for sandboxed apps

macOS App Management blocks Electron apps (Conductor) from quitting
other apps via osascript. Now detects the runtime environment:
- terminal/claude-code/codex: can manage apps freely
- conductor: prints manual restart instructions + polls for 60s

detectRuntime() checks env vars and parent process. When Chrome needs
restart but we can't quit it, prints step-by-step instructions and
waits for the user to restart Chrome with --remote-debugging-port.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: detect Conductor via actual env vars (CONDUCTOR_WORKSPACE_NAME)

Previous detection checked CONDUCTOR_WORKSPACE_ID which doesn't exist.
Conductor sets CONDUCTOR_WORKSPACE_NAME, CONDUCTOR_BIN_DIR, CONDUCTOR_PORT,
and __CFBundleIdentifier=com.conductor.app. Check these FIRST because
Conductor sessions also have ANTHROPIC_API_KEY (which was matching claude-code).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: connection status pill — floating indicator when gstack controls Chrome

Small pill in bottom-right corner of every page: "● gstack · 3 refs"
Shows when connected via CDP, fades to 30% opacity after 3s, full on hover.
Disappears entirely when disconnected.

Background worker now notifies content scripts on connect/disconnect state
changes so the pill appears/disappears without polling.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Chrome requires --user-data-dir for remote debugging

Chrome refuses --remote-debugging-port without an explicit --user-data-dir.
Add userDataDir to BrowserBinary registry (macOS Application Support paths)
and pass it in both auto-launch and manual restart instructions.

Fix double-quoting in CLI manual restart instructions.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Chrome must be fully quit before launching with --remote-debugging-port

Chrome refuses to enable CDP on its default profile when another instance
is running (even with explicit --user-data-dir). The only reliable path:
fully quit Chrome first, then relaunch with the flag.

Updated instructions to emphasize this clearly with verification step.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: bin/chrome-cdp — quit Chrome and relaunch with CDP in one command

Quits Chrome gracefully, waits for full exit, relaunches with
--remote-debugging-port, polls until CDP is ready. Usage: chrome-cdp [port]

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: use Playwright channel:chrome instead of broken connectOverCDP

Playwright's connectOverCDP hangs with Chrome 146 due to CDP protocol
version mismatch. Switch to channel:'chrome' which uses Playwright's
native pipe protocol to launch the system Chrome binary directly.

This is simpler and more reliable:
- No CDP port discovery needed
- No --remote-debugging-port or --user-data-dir hassles
- $B connect just works — launches real Chrome headed window
- All Playwright APIs (snapshot, click, fill) work unchanged

bin/chrome-cdp updated with symlinked profile approach (kept for
manual CDP use cases, but $B connect no longer needs it).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: green border + gstack label on controlled Chrome window

Injects a 2px green border and small "gstack" label on every page
loaded in the controlled Chrome window via context.addInitScript().
Users can instantly tell which Chrome window Claude controls.

Also fixes close() for channel:chrome mode (uses browser.close()
not browser.disconnect() which doesn't exist).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: cleanup chrome-launcher runtime detection, remove puppeteer-core dep

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* style(design): redesign controlled Chrome indicator

Replace crude green border + label with polished indicator:
- 2px shimmer gradient at top edge (green→cyan→green, 3s loop)
- Floating pill bottom-right with frosted glass bg, fades to 25%
  opacity after 4s so it doesn't compete with page content
- prefers-reduced-motion disables shimmer animation
- Much more subtle — looks like a developer tool, not broken CSS

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: document real browser mode + Chrome extension in BROWSER.md and README.md

BROWSER.md: new sections for connect/disconnect/focus commands,
Chrome extension Side Panel install, CDP-aware skills, activity streaming.
Updated command reference table, key components, env vars, source map.

README.md: updated /browse description, added "Real browser mode" to
What's New section.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: step-by-step Chrome extension install guide in BROWSER.md

Replace terse bullet points with numbered walkthrough covering:
developer mode toggle, load unpacked, macOS file picker tip (Cmd+Shift+G),
pin extension, configure port, open side panel. Added troubleshooting section.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: add Cmd+Shift+. tip for hidden folders in macOS file picker

macOS hides folders starting with . by default. Added both shortcuts:
Cmd+Shift+G (paste path directly) and Cmd+Shift+. (show hidden files).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: integrate hidden folder tips into the install flow naturally

Move Cmd+Shift+G and Cmd+Shift+. tips inline with the file picker
step instead of as a separate tip block after it.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: auto-load Chrome extension when $B connect launches Chrome

Extension auto-loads via --load-extension flag — no manual chrome://extensions
install needed. findExtensionPath() checks repo root, global install, and dev
paths. Also adds bin/gstack-extension helper for manual install in regular
Chrome, and rewrites BROWSER.md install docs with auto-load as primary path.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: /connect-chrome skill — one command to launch Chrome with Side Panel

New skill that runs $B connect, verifies the connection, guides the user
to open the Side Panel, and demos the live activity feed. Extension auto-loads
via --load-extension so no manual chrome://extensions install needed.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: use launchPersistentContext for Chrome extension loading

Playwright's chromium.launch() silently ignores --load-extension.
Switch to launchPersistentContext with ignoreDefaultArgs to remove
--disable-extensions flag. Use bundled Chromium (real Chrome blocks
unpacked extensions). Fixed port 34567 for CDP mode so the extension
auto-connects.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: sync extension to DESIGN.md — amber accent, zinc neutrals, grain texture

Import design system from gstack-website. Update all extension colors:
green (#4ade80) → amber (#F59E0B/#FBBF24), zinc gray neutrals, grain
texture overlay. Regenerate icons as amber "G" monogram on dark background.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: sidebar chat with Claude Code — icon opens side panel directly

Replace popup flyout with direct side panel open on icon click. Primary
UI is now a chat interface that sends messages to Claude Code via file
queue. Activity/Refs tabs moved behind a debug toggle in the footer.
Command bar with history, auto-poll for responses, amber design system.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: sidebar agent — Claude-powered chat backend via file queue

Add /sidebar-command, /sidebar-response, and /sidebar-chat endpoints
to the browse server. sidebar-agent.ts watches the command queue file,
spawns claude -p with browse context for each message, and streams
responses back to the sidebar chat.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: remove duplicate gstack pill overlay, hide crash restore bubble

The addInitScript indicator and the extension's content script were both
injecting bottom-right pills, causing duplicates. Remove the pill from
addInitScript (extension handles it). Replace --restore-last-session with
--hide-crash-restore-bubble to suppress the "Chromium didn't shut down
correctly" dialog.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: state file authority — CDP server cannot be silently replaced

Hardens the connect/disconnect lifecycle:
- ensureServer() refuses to auto-start headless when CDP server is alive
- $B connect does full cleanup: SIGTERM → 2s → SIGKILL, profile locks, state
- shutdown() cleans Chromium SingletonLock/Socket/Cookie files
- uncaughtException/unhandledRejection handlers do emergency cleanup

This prevents the bug where a headless server overwrites the CDP server's
state file, causing $B commands to hit the wrong browser.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: sidebar agent streaming events + session state management

Enhance sidebar-agent.ts with:
- Live streaming of claude -p events (tool_use, text, result) to sidebar
- Session state file for BROWSE_STATE_FILE propagation to claude subprocess
- Improved logging (stderr, exit codes, event types)
- stdin.end() to prevent claude waiting for input
- summarizeToolInput() with path shortening for compact sidebar display

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: sidebar chat UI — streaming events, agent status, reconnect retry

Sidebar panel improvements:
- Chat tab renders streaming agent events (tool_use, text, result)
- Thinking dots animation while agent processes
- Agent error display with styled error blocks
- tryConnect() with 2s retry loop for initial connection
- Debug tabs (Activity/Refs) hidden behind gear toggle
- Clear chat button
- Compact tool call display with path shortening

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: server-integrated sidebar agent with sessions and message queue

Move the sidebar agent from a separate bun process into server.ts:
- Agent spawns claude -p directly when messages arrive via /sidebar-command
- In-memory chat buffer backed by per-session chat.jsonl on disk
- Session manager: create, load, persist, list sessions
- Message queue (cap 5) with agent status tracking (idle/processing/hung)
- Stop/kill endpoints with queue dismiss support
- /health now returns agent status + session info
- All sidebar endpoints require Bearer auth
- Agent killed on server shutdown
- 120s timeout detects hung claude processes

Eliminates: file-queue polling, separate sidebar-agent.ts process,
stale auth tokens, state file conflicts between processes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: extension auth + token flow for server-integrated agent

Update Chrome extension to use Bearer auth on all sidebar endpoints:
- background.js captures auth token from /health, exposes via getToken msg
- background.js sets openPanelOnActionClick for direct side panel access
- sidepanel.js gets token from background, sends in all fetch headers
- Health broadcasts include token so sidebar auto-authenticates
- Removes popup from manifest — icon click opens side panel directly

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: self-healing sidebar — reconnect banner, state machine, copy button

Sidebar UI now handles disconnection gracefully:
- Connection state machine: connected → reconnecting → dead
- Amber pulsing banner during reconnect (2s retry, 30 attempts)
- Red "Server offline" banner with Reconnect + Copy /connect-chrome buttons
- Green "Reconnected" toast that fades after 3s on successful reconnect
- Copy button lets user paste /connect-chrome into any Claude Code session

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: crash handling — save session, kill agent, distinct exit codes

Hardened shutdown/crash behavior:
- Browser disconnect exits with code 2 (distinct from crash code 1)
- emergencyCleanup kills agent subprocess and saves session state
- Clean shutdown saves session before exit (chat history persists)
- Clear user message on browser disconnect: "Run $B connect to reconnect"

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: worktree-per-session isolation for sidebar agent

Each sidebar session gets an isolated git worktree so the agent's file
operations don't conflict with the user's working directory:
- createWorktree() creates detached HEAD worktree in ~/.gstack/worktrees/
- Falls back to main cwd for non-git repos or on creation failure
- Handles collision cleanup from prior crashes
- removeWorktree() cleans up on session switch and shutdown
- worktreePath persisted in session.json

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(qa): ISSUE-001 — disconnect blocked by CDP guard in ensureServer

$B disconnect was routed through ensureServer() which refused to start a
headless server when a CDP state file existed. Disconnect is now handled
before ensureServer() (like connect), with force-kill + cleanup fallback
when the CDP server is unresponsive.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: resolve claude binary path for daemon-spawned agent

The browse server runs as a daemon and may not inherit the user's shell
PATH. Add findClaudeBin() that checks ~/.local/bin/claude (standard
install location), which claude, and common system paths. Shows a clear
error in the sidebar chat if claude CLI is not found.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: resolve claude symlinks + check Conductor bundled binary

posix_spawn fails on symlinks in compiled bun binaries. Now:
- Checks Conductor app's bundled binary first (not a symlink)
- Scans ~/.local/share/claude/versions/ for direct versioned binaries
- Uses fs.realpathSync() to resolve symlinks before spawning

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: compiled bun binary cannot posix_spawn — use external agent process

Compiled bun binaries fail posix_spawn on ALL executables (even /bin/bash).
The server now writes to an agent queue file, and a separate non-compiled
bun process (sidebar-agent.ts) reads the queue, spawns claude, and POSTs
events back via /sidebar-agent/event.

Changes:
- server.ts: spawnClaude writes to queue file instead of spawning directly
- server.ts: new /sidebar-agent/event endpoint for agent → server relay
- server.ts: fix result event field name (event.text vs event.result)
- sidebar-agent.ts: rewritten to poll queue file, relay events via HTTP
- cli.ts: $B connect auto-starts sidebar-agent as non-compiled bun process

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: loading spinner on sidebar open while connecting to server

Shows an amber spinner with "Connecting..." when the sidebar first opens,
replacing the empty state. After the first successful /sidebar-chat poll:
- If chat history exists: renders it immediately
- If no history: shows the welcome message

Prevents the jarring empty-then-populated flash on sidebar open.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: zero-friction side panel — auto-open on install, pill is clickable

Three changes to eliminate manual side panel setup:
- Auto-open side panel on extension install/update (onInstalled listener)
- gstack pill (bottom-right) is now clickable — opens the side panel
- Pill has pointer-events: auto so clicks always register (was: none)

User no longer needs to find the puzzle piece icon, pin the extension,
or know the side panel exists. It opens automatically on first launch
and can be re-opened by clicking the floating gstack pill.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor: kill CDP naming, delete chrome-launcher.ts dead code

The connectCDP() method and connectionMode: 'cdp' naming was a legacy
artifact — real Chrome was tried but failed (silently blocks
--load-extension), so the implementation already used Playwright's
bundled Chromium via launchPersistentContext(). The naming was
misleading.

Changes:
- Delete chrome-launcher.ts (361 LOC) — only import was in unreachable
  attemptReconnect() method
- Delete dead attemptReconnect() and reconnecting field
- Delete preExistingTabIds (was for protecting real Chrome tabs we
  never connect to)
- Rename connectCDP() → launchHeaded()
- Rename connectionMode: 'cdp' → 'headed' across all files
- Replace BROWSE_CDP_URL/BROWSE_CDP_PORT env vars with BROWSE_HEADED=1
- Regenerate SKILL.md files for updated command descriptions
- Move BrowserManager unit tests to browser-manager-unit.test.ts

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: converge handoff into connect — extension loads on handoff

Handoff now uses launchPersistentContext() with extension auto-loading,
same as the connect/launchHeaded() path. This means when the agent
gets stuck (2FA, CAPTCHA) and hands off to the user, the Chrome
extension + side panel are available automatically.

Before: handoff used chromium.launch() + newContext() — no extension
After: handoff uses chromium.launchPersistentContext() — extension loads

Also sets connectionMode to 'headed' and disables dialog auto-accept
on handoff, matching connect behavior.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: gate sidebar chat behind --chat flag

$B connect (default): headed Chromium + extension with Activity + Refs
tabs only. No separate agent spawned. Clean, no confusion.

$B connect --chat: same + Chat tab with standalone claude -p agent.
Shows experimental banner: "Standalone mode — this is a separate
agent from your workspace."

Implementation:
- cli.ts: parse --chat, set BROWSE_SIDEBAR_CHAT env, conditionally
  spawn sidebar-agent
- server.ts: gate /sidebar-* routes behind chatEnabled, return 403
  when disabled, include chatEnabled in /health response
- sidepanel.js: applyChatEnabled() hides/shows Chat tab + banner
- background.js: forward chatEnabled from health response
- sidepanel.html/css: experimental banner with amber styling

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: file drop relay + $B inbox command

Sidebar agent now writes structured messages to .context/sidebar-inbox/
when processing user input. The workspace agent can read these via
$B inbox to see what the user reported from the browser.

File drop format:
  .context/sidebar-inbox/{timestamp}-observation.json
  { type, timestamp, page: {url}, userMessage, sidebarSessionId }

Atomic writes (tmp + rename) prevent partial reads. $B inbox --clear
removes messages after display.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: $B watch — passive observation mode

Claude enters read-only mode and captures periodic snapshots (every 5s)
while the user browses. Mutation commands (click, fill, etc.) are
blocked during watch. $B watch stop exits and returns a summary with
the last snapshot.

Requires headed mode ($B connect). This is the inverse of the scout
pattern — the workspace agent watches through the browser instead of
the sidebar relaying to it.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* test: add coverage for sidebar-agent, file-drop, and watch mode

33 new tests covering:
- Sidebar agent queue parsing (valid/malformed/empty JSONL)
- writeToInbox file drop (directory creation, atomic writes, JSON format)
- Inbox command (display, sorting, --clear, malformed file handling)
- Watch mode state machine (start/stop cycles, snapshots, duration)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: TODOS cleanup + Chrome vs Chromium exploration doc

- Update TODOS.md: mark CDP mode, $B watch, sidebar scout as SHIPPED
- Delete dead "cross-platform CDP browser discovery" TODO
- Rename dependencies from "CDP connect" to "headed mode"
- Add docs/designs/CHROME_VS_CHROMIUM_EXPLORATION.md memorializing
  the architecture exploration and decision to use Playwright Chromium

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: add Conductor Chrome sidebar integration design doc

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: sidebar-agent validates cwd before spawning claude

The queue entry may reference a worktree that was cleaned up between
sessions. Now falls back to process.cwd() if the path doesn't exist,
preventing silent spawn failures.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: gen-skill-docs resolver merge + preamble tier gate + plan file discovery

The local RESOLVERS record in gen-skill-docs.ts was shadowing the imported
canonical resolvers, causing stale test coverage and preamble generators
to be used instead of the authoritative versions in resolvers/.

Changes:
- Merge imported RESOLVERS with local overrides (spread + override pattern)
- Fix preamble tier gate: tier 1 skills no longer get AskUserQuestion format
- Make plan file discovery host-agnostic (search multiple plan dirs)
- Add missing E2E tier entries for ship/review plan completion tests

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: ungate sidebar agent + raise timeout to 5 minutes (v0.12.0)

Sidebar chat is now always available in headed mode — no --chat flag needed.
Agent tasks get 5 minutes instead of 2, enabling multi-page workflows like
navigating directories and filling forms across pages.

Changes:
- cli.ts: remove --chat flag, always set BROWSE_SIDEBAR_CHAT=1, always spawn agent
- server.ts: remove chatEnabled gate (403 response), raise AGENT_TIMEOUT_MS to 300s
- sidebar-agent.ts: raise child process timeout from 120s to 300s

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: headed mode + sidebar agent documentation (v0.12.0)

- README: sidebar agent section, personal automation example (school parent
  portal), two auth paths (manual login + cookie import), DevTools MCP mention
- BROWSER.md: sidebar agent section with usage, timeout, session isolation,
  authentication, and random delay documentation
- connect-chrome template: add sidebar chat onboarding step
- CHANGELOG: v0.12.0 entry covering headed mode, sidebar agent, extension
- VERSION: bump to 0.12.0.0
- TODOS: Chrome DevTools MCP integration as P0

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: regenerate SKILL.md files

Generated from updated templates + resolver merge. Key changes:
- Tier 1 skills no longer include AskUserQuestion format section
- Ship/review skills now include coverage gate with thresholds
- Connect-chrome skill includes sidebar chat onboarding step
- Plan file discovery uses host-agnostic paths

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: regenerate Codex connect-chrome skill

Updated preamble with proactive prompt and sidebar chat onboarding step.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: network idle, state persistence, iframe support, chain pipe format (v0.12.1.0) (#516)

* feat: network idle detection + chain pipe format

- Upgrade click/fill/select from domcontentloaded to networkidle wait
  (2s timeout, best-effort). Catches XHR/fetch triggered by interactions.
- Add pipe-delimited format to chain as JSON fallback:
  $B chain 'goto url | click @e5 | snapshot -ic'
- Add post-loop networkidle wait in chain when last command was a write.
- Frame-aware: commands use target (getActiveFrameOrPage) for locator ops,
  page-only ops (goto/back/forward/reload) guard against frame context.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: $B state save/load + $B frame — new browse commands

- state save/load: persist cookies + URLs to .gstack/browse-states/{name}.json
  File perms 0o600, name sanitized to [a-zA-Z0-9_-]. V1 skips localStorage
  (breaks on load-before-navigate). Load replaces session via closeAllPages().
- frame: switch command context to iframe via CSS selector, @ref, --name, or
  --url. 'frame main' returns to main frame. Execution target abstraction
  (getActiveFrameOrPage) across read-commands, snapshot, and write-commands.
- Frame context cleared on tab switch, navigation, resume, and handoff.
- Snapshot shows [Context: iframe src="..."] header when in frame.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* test: add tests for network idle, chain pipe format, state, and frame

- Network idle: click on fetch button waits for XHR, static click is fast
- Chain pipe: pipe-delimited commands, quoted args, JSON still works
- State: save/load round-trip, name sanitization, missing state error
- Frame: switch to iframe + back, snapshot context header, fill in frame,
  goto-in-frame guard, usage error

New fixtures: network-idle.html (fetch + static buttons), iframe.html (srcdoc)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: review fixes — iframe ref scoping, detached frame recovery, state validation

- snapshot.ts: ref locators, cursor-interactive scan, and cursor locator
  now use target (frame-aware) instead of page — fixes @ref clicking in iframes
- browser-manager.ts: getActiveFrameOrPage auto-recovers from detached frames
  via isDetached() check
- meta-commands.ts: state load resets activeFrame, elementHandle disposed after
  contentFrame(), state file schema validation (cookies + pages arrays),
  filter empty pipe segments in chain tokenizer
- write-commands.ts: upload command uses target.locator() for frame support

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: regenerate SKILL.md files + rebuild binary

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: bump version and changelog (v0.12.1.0)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-26 11:15:24 -06:00

23 KiB

Browser — technical details

This document covers the command reference and internals of gstack's headless browser.

Command reference

Category Commands What for
Navigate goto, back, forward, reload, url Get to a page
Read text, html, links, forms, accessibility Extract content
Snapshot snapshot [-i] [-c] [-d N] [-s sel] [-D] [-a] [-o] [-C] Get refs, diff, annotate
Interact click, fill, select, hover, type, press, scroll, wait, viewport, upload Use the page
Inspect js, eval, css, attrs, is, console, network, dialog, cookies, storage, perf Debug and verify
Visual screenshot [--viewport] [--clip x,y,w,h] [sel|@ref] [path], pdf, responsive See what Claude sees
Compare diff <url1> <url2> Spot differences between environments
Dialogs dialog-accept [text], dialog-dismiss Control alert/confirm/prompt handling
Tabs tabs, tab, newtab, closetab Multi-page workflows
Cookies cookie-import, cookie-import-browser Import cookies from file or real browser
Multi-step chain (JSON from stdin) Batch commands in one call
Handoff handoff [reason], resume Switch to visible Chrome for user takeover
Real browser connect, disconnect, focus Control real Chrome, visible window

All selector arguments accept CSS selectors, @e refs after snapshot, or @c refs after snapshot -C. 50+ commands total plus cookie import.

How it works

gstack's browser is a compiled CLI binary that talks to a persistent local Chromium daemon over HTTP. The CLI is a thin client — it reads a state file, sends a command, and prints the response to stdout. The server does the real work via Playwright.

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  Claude Code                                                    │
│                                                                 │
│  "browse goto https://staging.myapp.com"                        │
│       │                                                         │
│       ▼                                                         │
│  ┌──────────┐    HTTP POST     ┌──────────────┐                 │
│  │ browse   │ ──────────────── │ Bun HTTP     │                 │
│  │ CLI      │  localhost:rand  │ server       │                 │
│  │          │  Bearer token    │              │                 │
│  │ compiled │ ◄──────────────  │  Playwright  │──── Chromium    │
│  │ binary   │  plain text      │  API calls   │    (headless)   │
│  └──────────┘                  └──────────────┘                 │
│   ~1ms startup                  persistent daemon               │
│                                 auto-starts on first call       │
│                                 auto-stops after 30 min idle    │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Lifecycle

  1. First call: CLI checks .gstack/browse.json (in the project root) for a running server. None found — it spawns bun run browse/src/server.ts in the background. The server launches headless Chromium via Playwright, picks a random port (10000-60000), generates a bearer token, writes the state file, and starts accepting HTTP requests. This takes ~3 seconds.

  2. Subsequent calls: CLI reads the state file, sends an HTTP POST with the bearer token, prints the response. ~100-200ms round trip.

  3. Idle shutdown: After 30 minutes with no commands, the server shuts down and cleans up the state file. Next call restarts it automatically.

  4. Crash recovery: If Chromium crashes, the server exits immediately (no self-healing — don't hide failure). The CLI detects the dead server on the next call and starts a fresh one.

Key components

browse/
├── src/
│   ├── cli.ts              # Thin client — reads state file, sends HTTP, prints response
│   ├── server.ts           # Bun.serve HTTP server — routes commands to Playwright
│   ├── browser-manager.ts  # Chromium lifecycle — launch, tabs, ref map, crash handling
│   ├── snapshot.ts         # Accessibility tree → @ref assignment → Locator map + diff/annotate/-C
│   ├── read-commands.ts    # Non-mutating commands (text, html, links, js, css, is, dialog, etc.)
│   ├── write-commands.ts   # Mutating commands (click, fill, select, upload, dialog-accept, etc.)
│   ├── meta-commands.ts    # Server management, chain, diff, snapshot routing
│   ├── cookie-import-browser.ts  # Decrypt + import cookies from real Chromium browsers
│   ├── cookie-picker-routes.ts   # HTTP routes for interactive cookie picker UI
│   ├── cookie-picker-ui.ts       # Self-contained HTML/CSS/JS for cookie picker
│   ├── activity.ts         # Activity streaming (SSE) for Chrome extension
│   └── buffers.ts          # CircularBuffer<T> + console/network/dialog capture
├── test/                   # Integration tests + HTML fixtures
└── dist/
    └── browse              # Compiled binary (~58MB, Bun --compile)

The snapshot system

The browser's key innovation is ref-based element selection, built on Playwright's accessibility tree API:

  1. page.locator(scope).ariaSnapshot() returns a YAML-like accessibility tree
  2. The snapshot parser assigns refs (@e1, @e2, ...) to each element
  3. For each ref, it builds a Playwright Locator (using getByRole + nth-child)
  4. The ref-to-Locator map is stored on BrowserManager
  5. Later commands like click @e3 look up the Locator and call locator.click()

No DOM mutation. No injected scripts. Just Playwright's native accessibility API.

Ref staleness detection: SPAs can mutate the DOM without navigation (React router, tab switches, modals). When this happens, refs collected from a previous snapshot may point to elements that no longer exist. To handle this, resolveRef() runs an async count() check before using any ref — if the element count is 0, it throws immediately with a message telling the agent to re-run snapshot. This fails fast (~5ms) instead of waiting for Playwright's 30-second action timeout.

Extended snapshot features:

  • --diff (-D): Stores each snapshot as a baseline. On the next -D call, returns a unified diff showing what changed. Use this to verify that an action (click, fill, etc.) actually worked.
  • --annotate (-a): Injects temporary overlay divs at each ref's bounding box, takes a screenshot with ref labels visible, then removes the overlays. Use -o <path> to control the output path.
  • --cursor-interactive (-C): Scans for non-ARIA interactive elements (divs with cursor:pointer, onclick, tabindex>=0) using page.evaluate. Assigns @c1, @c2... refs with deterministic nth-child CSS selectors. These are elements the ARIA tree misses but users can still click.

Screenshot modes

The screenshot command supports four modes:

Mode Syntax Playwright API
Full page (default) screenshot [path] page.screenshot({ fullPage: true })
Viewport only screenshot --viewport [path] page.screenshot({ fullPage: false })
Element crop screenshot "#sel" [path] or screenshot @e3 [path] locator.screenshot()
Region clip screenshot --clip x,y,w,h [path] page.screenshot({ clip })

Element crop accepts CSS selectors (.class, #id, [attr]) or @e/@c refs from snapshot. Auto-detection: @e/@c prefix = ref, ./#/[ prefix = CSS selector, -- prefix = flag, everything else = output path.

Mutual exclusion: --clip + selector and --viewport + --clip both throw errors. Unknown flags (e.g. --bogus) also throw.

Authentication

Each server session generates a random UUID as a bearer token. The token is written to the state file (.gstack/browse.json) with chmod 600. Every HTTP request must include Authorization: Bearer <token>. This prevents other processes on the machine from controlling the browser.

Console, network, and dialog capture

The server hooks into Playwright's page.on('console'), page.on('response'), and page.on('dialog') events. All entries are kept in O(1) circular buffers (50,000 capacity each) and flushed to disk asynchronously via Bun.write():

  • Console: .gstack/browse-console.log
  • Network: .gstack/browse-network.log
  • Dialog: .gstack/browse-dialog.log

The console, network, and dialog commands read from the in-memory buffers, not disk.

Real browser mode (connect)

Instead of headless Chromium, connect launches your real Chrome as a headed window controlled by Playwright. You see everything Claude does in real time.

$B connect              # launch real Chrome, headed
$B goto https://app.com # navigates in the visible window
$B snapshot -i          # refs from the real page
$B click @e3            # clicks in the real window
$B focus                # bring Chrome window to foreground (macOS)
$B status               # shows Mode: cdp
$B disconnect           # back to headless mode

The window has a subtle green shimmer line at the top edge and a floating "gstack" pill in the bottom-right corner so you always know which Chrome window is being controlled.

How it works: Playwright's channel: 'chrome' launches your system Chrome binary via a native pipe protocol — not CDP WebSocket. All existing browse commands work unchanged because they go through Playwright's abstraction layer.

When to use it:

  • QA testing where you want to watch Claude click through your app
  • Design review where you need to see exactly what Claude sees
  • Debugging where headless behavior differs from real Chrome
  • Demos where you're sharing your screen

Commands:

Command What it does
connect Launch real Chrome, restart server in headed mode
disconnect Close real Chrome, restart in headless mode
focus Bring Chrome to foreground (macOS). focus @e3 also scrolls element into view
status Shows Mode: cdp when connected, Mode: launched when headless

CDP-aware skills: When in real-browser mode, /qa and /design-review automatically skip cookie import prompts and headless workarounds.

Chrome extension (Side Panel)

A Chrome extension that shows a live activity feed of browse commands in a Side Panel, plus @ref overlays on the page.

When you run $B connect, the extension auto-loads into the Playwright-controlled Chrome window. No manual steps needed — the Side Panel is immediately available.

$B connect              # launches Chrome with extension pre-loaded
# Click the gstack icon in toolbar → Open Side Panel

The port is auto-configured. You're done.

Manual install (for your regular Chrome)

If you want the extension in your everyday Chrome (not the Playwright-controlled one), run:

bin/gstack-extension    # opens chrome://extensions, copies path to clipboard

Or do it manually:

  1. Go to chrome://extensions in Chrome's address bar

  2. Toggle "Developer mode" ON (top-right corner)

  3. Click "Load unpacked" — a file picker opens

  4. Navigate to the extension folder: Press Cmd+Shift+G in the file picker to open "Go to folder", then paste one of these paths:

    • Global install: ~/.claude/skills/gstack/extension
    • Dev/source: <gstack-repo>/extension

    Press Enter, then click Select.

    (Tip: macOS hides folders starting with . — press Cmd+Shift+. in the file picker to reveal them if you prefer to navigate manually.)

  5. Pin it: Click the puzzle piece icon (Extensions) in the toolbar → pin "gstack browse"

  6. Set the port: Click the gstack icon → enter the port from $B status or .gstack/browse.json

  7. Open Side Panel: Click the gstack icon → "Open Side Panel"

What you get

Feature What it does
Toolbar badge Green dot when the browse server is reachable, gray when not
Side Panel Live scrolling feed of every browse command — shows command name, args, duration, status (success/error)
Refs tab After $B snapshot, shows the current @ref list (role + name)
@ref overlays Floating panel on the page showing current refs
Connection pill Small "gstack" pill in the bottom-right corner of every page when connected

Troubleshooting

  • Badge stays gray: Check that the port is correct. The browse server may have restarted on a different port — re-run $B status and update the port in the popup.
  • Side Panel is empty: The feed only shows activity after the extension connects. Run a browse command ($B snapshot) to see it appear.
  • Extension disappeared after Chrome update: Sideloaded extensions persist across updates. If it's gone, reload it from Step 3.

Sidebar agent

The Chrome side panel includes a chat interface. Type a message and a child Claude instance executes it in the browser. The sidebar agent has access to Bash, Read, Glob, and Grep tools (same as Claude Code, minus Edit and Write ... read-only by design).

How it works:

  1. You type a message in the side panel chat
  2. The extension POSTs to the local browse server (/sidebar-command)
  3. The server queues the message and the sidebar-agent process spawns claude -p with your message + the current page context
  4. Claude executes browse commands via Bash ($B snapshot, $B click @e3, etc.)
  5. Progress streams back to the side panel in real time

What you can do:

  • "Take a snapshot and describe what you see"
  • "Click the Login button, fill in test@example.com / password123, and submit"
  • "Go through every row in this table and extract the names and emails"
  • "Navigate to Settings > Account and screenshot it"

Timeout: Each task gets up to 5 minutes. Multi-page workflows (navigating a directory, filling forms across pages) work within this window. If a task times out, the side panel shows an error and you can retry or break it into smaller steps.

Session isolation: Each sidebar session runs in its own git worktree. The sidebar agent won't interfere with your main Claude Code session.

Authentication: The sidebar agent uses the same browser session as headed mode. Two options:

  1. Log in manually in the headed browser ... your session persists for the sidebar agent
  2. Import cookies from your real Chrome via /setup-browser-cookies

Random delays: If you need the agent to pause between actions (e.g., to avoid rate limits), use sleep in bash or $B wait <milliseconds>.

User handoff

When the headless browser can't proceed (CAPTCHA, MFA, complex auth), handoff opens a visible Chrome window at the exact same page with all cookies, localStorage, and tabs preserved. The user solves the problem manually, then resume returns control to the agent with a fresh snapshot.

$B handoff "Stuck on CAPTCHA at login page"   # opens visible Chrome
# User solves CAPTCHA...
$B resume                                       # returns to headless with fresh snapshot

The browser auto-suggests handoff after 3 consecutive failures. State is fully preserved across the switch — no re-login needed.

Dialog handling

Dialogs (alert, confirm, prompt) are auto-accepted by default to prevent browser lockup. The dialog-accept and dialog-dismiss commands control this behavior. For prompts, dialog-accept <text> provides the response text. All dialogs are logged to the dialog buffer with type, message, and action taken.

JavaScript execution (js and eval)

js runs a single expression, eval runs a JS file. Both support await — expressions containing await are automatically wrapped in an async context:

$B js "await fetch('/api/data').then(r => r.json())"  # works
$B js "document.title"                                  # also works (no wrapping needed)
$B eval my-script.js                                    # file with await works too

For eval files, single-line files return the expression value directly. Multi-line files need explicit return when using await. Comments containing "await" don't trigger wrapping.

Multi-workspace support

Each workspace gets its own isolated browser instance with its own Chromium process, tabs, cookies, and logs. State is stored in .gstack/ inside the project root (detected via git rev-parse --show-toplevel).

Workspace State file Port
/code/project-a /code/project-a/.gstack/browse.json random (10000-60000)
/code/project-b /code/project-b/.gstack/browse.json random (10000-60000)

No port collisions. No shared state. Each project is fully isolated.

Environment variables

Variable Default Description
BROWSE_PORT 0 (random 10000-60000) Fixed port for the HTTP server (debug override)
BROWSE_IDLE_TIMEOUT 1800000 (30 min) Idle shutdown timeout in ms
BROWSE_STATE_FILE .gstack/browse.json Path to state file (CLI passes to server)
BROWSE_SERVER_SCRIPT auto-detected Path to server.ts
BROWSE_CDP_URL (none) Set to channel:chrome for real browser mode
BROWSE_CDP_PORT 0 CDP port (used internally)

Performance

Tool First call Subsequent calls Context overhead per call
Chrome MCP ~5s ~2-5s ~2000 tokens (schema + protocol)
Playwright MCP ~3s ~1-3s ~1500 tokens (schema + protocol)
gstack browse ~3s ~100-200ms 0 tokens (plain text stdout)

The context overhead difference compounds fast. In a 20-command browser session, MCP tools burn 30,000-40,000 tokens on protocol framing alone. gstack burns zero.

Why CLI over MCP?

MCP (Model Context Protocol) works well for remote services, but for local browser automation it adds pure overhead:

  • Context bloat: every MCP call includes full JSON schemas and protocol framing. A simple "get the page text" costs 10x more context tokens than it should.
  • Connection fragility: persistent WebSocket/stdio connections drop and fail to reconnect.
  • Unnecessary abstraction: Claude Code already has a Bash tool. A CLI that prints to stdout is the simplest possible interface.

gstack skips all of this. Compiled binary. Plain text in, plain text out. No protocol. No schema. No connection management.

Acknowledgments

The browser automation layer is built on Playwright by Microsoft. Playwright's accessibility tree API, locator system, and headless Chromium management are what make ref-based interaction possible. The snapshot system — assigning @ref labels to accessibility tree nodes and mapping them back to Playwright Locators — is built entirely on top of Playwright's primitives. Thank you to the Playwright team for building such a solid foundation.

Development

Prerequisites

  • Bun v1.0+
  • Playwright's Chromium (installed automatically by bun install)

Quick start

bun install              # install dependencies + Playwright Chromium
bun test                 # run integration tests (~3s)
bun run dev <cmd>        # run CLI from source (no compile)
bun run build            # compile to browse/dist/browse

Dev mode vs compiled binary

During development, use bun run dev instead of the compiled binary. It runs browse/src/cli.ts directly with Bun, so you get instant feedback without a compile step:

bun run dev goto https://example.com
bun run dev text
bun run dev snapshot -i
bun run dev click @e3

The compiled binary (bun run build) is only needed for distribution. It produces a single ~58MB executable at browse/dist/browse using Bun's --compile flag.

Running tests

bun test                         # run all tests
bun test browse/test/commands              # run command integration tests only
bun test browse/test/snapshot              # run snapshot tests only
bun test browse/test/cookie-import-browser # run cookie import unit tests only

Tests spin up a local HTTP server (browse/test/test-server.ts) serving HTML fixtures from browse/test/fixtures/, then exercise the CLI commands against those pages. 203 tests across 3 files, ~15 seconds total.

Source map

File Role
browse/src/cli.ts Entry point. Reads .gstack/browse.json, sends HTTP to the server, prints response.
browse/src/server.ts Bun HTTP server. Routes commands to the right handler. Manages idle timeout.
browse/src/browser-manager.ts Chromium lifecycle — launch, tab management, ref map, crash detection.
browse/src/snapshot.ts Parses accessibility tree, assigns @e/@c refs, builds Locator map. Handles --diff, --annotate, -C.
browse/src/read-commands.ts Non-mutating commands: text, html, links, js, css, is, dialog, forms, etc. Exports getCleanText().
browse/src/write-commands.ts Mutating commands: goto, click, fill, upload, dialog-accept, useragent (with context recreation), etc.
browse/src/meta-commands.ts Server management, chain routing, diff (DRY via getCleanText), snapshot delegation.
browse/src/cookie-import-browser.ts Decrypt Chromium cookies from macOS and Linux browser profiles using platform-specific safe-storage key lookup. Auto-detects installed browsers.
browse/src/cookie-picker-routes.ts HTTP routes for /cookie-picker/* — browser list, domain search, import, remove.
browse/src/cookie-picker-ui.ts Self-contained HTML generator for the interactive cookie picker (dark theme, no frameworks).
browse/src/activity.ts Activity streaming — ActivityEntry type, CircularBuffer, privacy filtering, SSE subscriber management.
browse/src/buffers.ts CircularBuffer<T> (O(1) ring buffer) + console/network/dialog capture with async disk flush.

Deploying to the active skill

The active skill lives at ~/.claude/skills/gstack/. After making changes:

  1. Push your branch
  2. Pull in the skill directory: cd ~/.claude/skills/gstack && git pull
  3. Rebuild: cd ~/.claude/skills/gstack && bun run build

Or copy the binary directly: cp browse/dist/browse ~/.claude/skills/gstack/browse/dist/browse

Adding a new command

  1. Add the handler in read-commands.ts (non-mutating) or write-commands.ts (mutating)
  2. Register the route in server.ts
  3. Add a test case in browse/test/commands.test.ts with an HTML fixture if needed
  4. Run bun test to verify
  5. Run bun run build to compile