| name | next-dev-loop |
| description | Verify Next.js runtime behavior after editing app code. Use this skill to confirm a change actually works in a running app — not just that it compiles or type-checks. Combines /_next/mcp (Next.js's view) with agent-browser (the browser's view). Requires a running `next dev`.
|
next-dev-loop
The edit/verify rhythm during next dev — make a change, then
confirm it actually works at runtime, not only that the types or
the build are happy.
You verify through two views of the same running app:
/_next/mcp — an HTTP endpoint Next.js exposes about itself.
Knows framework-specific things: routes, segments, RSC, server
actions, server logs, and errors as Next.js saw them. Call
tools/list for the current surface.
agent-browser — a CLI that drives a real Chrome. Knows
framework-agnostic browser things: DOM, console, network, React
fiber, vitals. Before driving it, run agent-browser skills get core
once for the version-matched usage guide — don't guess subcommands
from memory.
The two views cross-check each other.
requires
- Next.js 16.3+ with Turbopack —
/_next/mcp plus the
proactive compile check via get_compilation_issues.
agent-browser >= 0.31.1 — React introspection, worktree-scoped
session id, idempotent --restore, and launch flag reconciliation.
These are hard floors, not soft preferences. If anything is missing,
tell the user how to upgrade and stop. Don't fall back to grepping
source or to a weaker probe — this skill assumes both views are live
at the versions above.
preflight
Once per session, confirm both views are live.
-
Open agent-browser at the target URL, restoring saved
login state when present. First derive one stable session id for
this checkout and use it for every agent-browser command:
SESSION="$(agent-browser session id --scope worktree --prefix next-dev-loop)"
export AGENT_BROWSER_SESSION="$SESSION"
export AGENT_BROWSER_RESTORE="$SESSION"
Then open the target URL:
agent-browser --session "$SESSION" --restore --headed --enable react-devtools open <url>
--scope worktree keeps parallel worktrees and copied checkouts
from colliding. Bare --restore uses the session id as the
persistence key, loads saved cookies/localStorage before navigation
when present, and auto-saves state on close. Always pass the desired
launch flags on open; agent-browser will reuse, relaunch, or restart
its scoped background state as needed.
The browser is the user's. If state was not restored (first run,
expired session) and the page is gated, the user drives the login —
pause until they confirm. After login, continue using the same session
and restore context; agent-browser close saves the cookie state so
the next open restores it.
-
Probe /_next/mcp (tools/list) — confirm it's reachable and
lists get_compilation_issues:
- Unreachable → either
next dev isn't running, or Next.js is
below 16.3. Check package.json to disambiguate, then refuse.
get_compilation_issues not in the list → Next.js below 16.3.
Refuse and tell the user to upgrade.
-
get_compilation_issues doubles as a Turbopack probe. An error
response of "Turbopack project is not available..." means the
user is on webpack. Refuse — Turbopack is required.
-
get_routes → your route map for the rest of the session.
loop
before the edit — narrow the scope
Ask the running app, not the codebase. /_next/mcp knows which
files rendered the current route; use those as your search scope.
Runtime introspection stays cheap as the codebase grows; agentic
search doesn't.
after the edit — verify
Four failure modes. Check each:
- Compiles —
get_compilation_issues.
- Runs without errors —
/_next/mcp (server and bubbled-up
browser errors both surface here).
- Behaves as intended —
agent-browser drives the page; assert
what the user actually sees.
- React-level behavior —
agent-browser with react-devtools
enabled exposes the component tree, props, state, and render
counts. Anchor framework-level checks here (extra renders,
server/client boundary shifts, suspense fallbacks) — DOM asserts
alone miss them.
Pick the specific tool from tools/list or the agent-browser
manual rather than from memory.
gotchas
- Every
agent-browser command must know your session and restore
key, or it may use an empty default browser or fail to save login
state. Easiest: export both AGENT_BROWSER_SESSION="$SESSION" and
AGENT_BROWSER_RESTORE="$SESSION" at the top of each shell you run
agent-browser in. If you do not export them, pass
--session "$SESSION" --restore on every command.
- When the two views disagree, suspect the tooling first. If
agent-browser says a route is broken but /_next/mcp and the
server say it rendered cleanly, a stale or misdirected browser
session is the likelier cause than a real bug — reconcile the views
before debugging the app.
- Confirming a click or navigation: the page settles a beat later, so
wait with
wait --load networkidle (no path to get wrong), then
snapshot/read to confirm the page. Avoid wait --url unless you pass
the link's exact href — a guessed or placeholder path won't match the
real URL and times out after 25s.
- A blank read, empty snapshot,
about:blank, or a "no browser
session" error — right after open or after a click (even if open
reported the page) — is the browser dropping the page (a stale
session), not a broken route. Reopen your session at the URL with
--session "$SESSION" --restore and re-snapshot; if still blank,
run agent-browser --session "$SESSION" --restore close, then open
again. Don't fall back to curl; it bypasses the browser you're
testing.
- React introspection output is stale after navigation. Re-run.
/_next/mcp replies are SSE — read the JSON off the data: line
with sed -n 's/^data: //p' (a plain sed 's/^data: //' leaves the
event: line and the parse fails).
- Non-3000 dev server: read the
next dev banner; set
NEXT_MCP_URL=http://localhost:<port>/_next/mcp.
get_errors and get_page_metadata need at least one navigation
to populate.
reference
All tools below are present once preflight passes. If tools/list
is missing any of them, preflight should have refused — re-check.
# /_next/mcp notes
get_project_metadata projectPath, devServerUrl, bundler
get_routes fs-scan; no browser session needed
get_errors runtime + build; needs a browser session;
includes browser-side errors caught by the
dev server
get_page_metadata segment trie + routerType; needs a browser
session; use as a discovery shortcut for
which files power a route
get_logs returns logFilePath
get_server_action_by_id hashed id → file + functionName
get_compilation_issues Turbopack only; errors on webpack
("Turbopack project is not available")
teardown
Close the session with the same session and restore context:
agent-browser --session "$SESSION" --restore close. close saves
that session's cookies and storage so the next loop's --restore open
keeps the user logged in. Leave next dev up for the next loop.
next-dev-loop-<topic> siblings (e.g. next-dev-loop-rsc, next-dev-loop-debug)
assume this preflight already ran; they pick up at the loop.