| name | browser-trace |
| description | Capture a full DevTools-protocol trace of any browser automation — CDP firehose, screenshots, and DOM dumps — then bisect the stream into per-page searchable buckets. Use when the user wants to debug a failed run, audit network/console/DOM activity, attach a trace to an in-progress session, or feed structured per-page summaries back into an agent loop so its next iteration learns from the last one. |
| compatibility | Requires Node 18+, the browse CLI (`npm install -g browse`) with `browse cdp`, and optionally `jq` for ad-hoc querying of the bisected JSONL files. For remote Browserbase sessions, also requires `BROWSERBASE_API_KEY`. The skill scripts themselves use only the Node standard library — no `npm install` step. |
| license | MIT |
| allowed-tools | Bash, Read, Grep |
Browser Trace
Attach a second, read-only CDP client to a browser session that is already being driven by your main automation. The trace records the full DevTools firehose to NDJSON, polls for screenshots and DOM dumps in parallel, and slices everything into a directory tree that bash tools can search.
This skill does not drive pages — it only listens. Pair it with the browser skill, browse, Stagehand, Playwright, or anything else that speaks CDP.
When to use
- The user wants to debug a browser-automation run (failing form, missing element, hung navigation, JS exception).
- The user has a running automation and wants to attach a trace mid-flight without restarting it.
- The user wants to split a CDP firehose into network / console / DOM / page buckets.
- The user wants screenshots + DOM snapshots over time, joined to CDP events by timestamp.
If the user just wants to drive the browser, use the browser skill instead.
Setup check
node --version
which browse || npm install -g browse
which jq || true
Verify browse cdp exists:
browse --help | grep -q "^\s*cdp " || echo "browse cdp not available — update browse"
How it works
Every Chrome DevTools target accepts multiple concurrent CDP clients. Your main automation is one client; this skill adds a second one that only enables observation domains (Network, Console, Runtime, Log, Page) and never sends action commands.
The tracer has three pieces:
- Firehose:
browse cdp <target> streams every CDP event as one JSON object per line to cdp/raw.ndjson.
- Sampler: a polling loop calls
browse screenshot --cdp <target> --path <file> and browse get html body --cdp <target> on an interval (default 2s). The helper passes --cdp when it samples so it can attach to the traced target from its own process; once a browse daemon session is attached to a CDP target, follow-up commands in that session do not need to repeat --cdp.
- Bisector: after the run,
bisect-cdp.mjs walks raw.ndjson once, slices it into per-bucket JSONL files keyed by CDP method, and additionally bisects per page using top-level Page.frameNavigated events as boundaries.
Quickstart
Local Chrome
"/Applications/Google Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google Chrome" \
--remote-debugging-port=9222 \
--user-data-dir=/tmp/chrome-o11y \
about:blank &
node scripts/start-capture.mjs 9222 my-run
browse open https://example.com --cdp 9222
node scripts/stop-capture.mjs my-run
node scripts/bisect-cdp.mjs my-run
Browserbase remote
Two helpers wrap the platform-side bookkeeping: bb-capture.mjs creates or attaches to a session and starts the tracer; bb-finalize.mjs pulls platform artifacts (final session metadata, server logs, downloads) into the run dir at the end.
Browserbase ends a session as soon as its last CDP client disconnects. Create with --keep-alive, then attach automation to the session's connectUrl before or together with the tracer. bb-capture.mjs --new handles the keep-alive session and tracer setup; your automation still needs to attach.
export BROWSERBASE_API_KEY=...
node scripts/bb-capture.mjs --new my-run
SID=$(jq -r .browserbase.session_id .o11y/my-run/manifest.json)
CONNECT_URL="$(browse cloud sessions get "$SID" | jq -r .connectUrl)"
BROWSE_NAME=my-run-browser
browse open https://example.com --cdp "$CONNECT_URL" --session "$BROWSE_NAME"
browse open https://news.ycombinator.com --session "$BROWSE_NAME"
node scripts/stop-capture.mjs my-run
node scripts/bisect-cdp.mjs my-run
node scripts/bb-finalize.mjs my-run --release
Attaching to a session that's already running (e.g. one your production worker created) — bb-capture.mjs accepts a session id instead of --new:
browse cloud sessions list | jq -r '.[] | select(.status == "RUNNING") | .id'
node scripts/bb-capture.mjs <session-id> mid-flight-debug
node scripts/stop-capture.mjs mid-flight-debug
node scripts/bisect-cdp.mjs mid-flight-debug
node scripts/bb-finalize.mjs mid-flight-debug
What you get from the Browserbase platform
bb-capture.mjs adds a browserbase block to manifest.json (session id, project, region, started_at, expires_at, debugger URL). bb-finalize.mjs writes:
<run>/browserbase/session.json — final browse cloud sessions get snapshot (proxyBytes, status, ended_at, viewport, …)
<run>/browserbase/logs.json — browse cloud sessions logs output. Often empty. The CDP firehose in cdp/raw.ndjson is the source of truth; this is a side channel.
<run>/browserbase/downloads.zip — files the session downloaded, if any (the script discards the empty 22-byte zip you get when there are none)
Session replay artifact fetching is deprecated and isn't fetched. Use the screenshots + DOM dumps in screenshots/ and dom/ for visual ground truth.
The live debugger_url in the manifest opens an interactive Chrome DevTools view served by Browserbase — handy for watching a long-running automation while the tracer captures the firehose to disk.
Filesystem layout
.o11y/<run-id>/
manifest.json run metadata: target, domains, started_at, stopped_at
index.jsonl one line per sample: {ts, screenshot, dom, url}
cdp/
raw.ndjson full CDP firehose (one JSON object per line)
summary.json {sessionId, duration, totalEvents, pages[]} — see shape below
network/{requests,responses,finished,failed,websocket}.jsonl session-wide buckets (always written)
console/{logs,exceptions}.jsonl
runtime/all.jsonl
log/entries.jsonl
page/{navigations,lifecycle,frames,dialogs,all}.jsonl
dom/all.jsonl (only if O11Y_DOMAINS includes DOM)
target/{attached,detached}.jsonl
pages/ per-page slices, indexed by top-level frameNavigated boundaries
000/ first concrete page
url.txt the URL for this page
summary.json this page's domains/network/timing block (same shape as a pages[] entry)
raw.jsonl firehose scoped to this page
network/, console/, page/, runtime/, log/, target/, dom/ same buckets, only non-empty files
screenshots/<iso-ts>.png one PNG per sample interval
dom/<iso-ts>.html one HTML dump per sample interval
browserbase/ added by bb-finalize.mjs (Browserbase runs only)
session.json final `browse cloud sessions get` snapshot (proxyBytes, status, ended_at, …)
logs.json `browse cloud sessions logs` output (often [])
downloads.zip `browse cloud sessions downloads get` output (only if the session downloaded files)
When a run was started via bb-capture.mjs, manifest.json also carries a top-level browserbase block: session_id, project_id, region, started_at, expires_at, keep_alive, debugger_url.
Summary shape
cdp/summary.json is the entry point for any analysis: it has session-level totals and a pages[] array indexed by top-level Page.frameNavigated. Per-page entries are emitted in navigation order (page 0 = first concrete URL).
{
"sessionId": "45f28023-…",
"duration": { "startMs": 1777312533000, "endMs": 1777312609000, "totalMs": 76000 },
"totalEvents": 420,
"pages": [
{
"pageId": 0,
"url": "https://example.com/",
"startMs": 1777312533000, "endMs": 1777312538886, "durationMs": 5886,
"eventCount": 60,
"domains": {
"Network": { "count": 18, "errors": 1 },
"Console": { "count": 2 },
"Page": { "count": 24 },
"Runtime": { "count": 13 }
},
"network": { "requests": 4, "failed": 1, "byType": { "Document": 2, "Script": 1, "Other": 1 } }
}
]
}
startMs / endMs / durationMs are wall-clock ms, derived from manifest.started_at plus the offset of each event's CDP monotonic timestamp. domains[*] only includes errors/warnings keys when non-zero.
Drilling in with query.mjs
For interactive exploration, use scripts/query.mjs <run-id> <command> instead of remembering paths:
node scripts/query.mjs my-run list
node scripts/query.mjs my-run page 1
node scripts/query.mjs my-run page 1 network/failed
node scripts/query.mjs my-run errors
node scripts/query.mjs my-run errors 2
node scripts/query.mjs my-run hosts
node scripts/query.mjs my-run host api.example.com
node scripts/query.mjs my-run summary
Behind the scenes it just reads cdp/summary.json and the cdp/pages/<pid>/ tree — feel free to bypass it with raw jq/rg once you know the shape.
Top traversal recipes
jq -c '.params' .o11y/<run>/cdp/network/failed.jsonl
jq -c 'select(.params.request.url | test("api\\.example\\.com"))' \
.o11y/<run>/cdp/network/requests.jsonl
jq -c 'select(.params.response.status >= 400)
| {status: .params.response.status, url: .params.response.url}' \
.o11y/<run>/cdp/network/responses.jsonl
jq -c 'select(.params.type == "error")' .o11y/<run>/cdp/console/logs.jsonl
jq -r '.params.frame.url' .o11y/<run>/cdp/page/navigations.jsonl
ls .o11y/<run>/screenshots/ | sort | awk -v t=20260427T1714123NZ '
$0 >= t { print; exit }'
See REFERENCE.md for the full jq recipe library and a method-by-method bisect map. See EXAMPLES.md for end-to-end debug scenarios.
Best practices
- Use
bb-capture.mjs on Browserbase: it enforces --keep-alive, fetches the connectUrl, captures the debugger URL, and stamps the manifest. Doing it manually invites mistakes.
- Don't
--release a session you don't own: bb-finalize.mjs --release is for sessions you created with --new. When attaching to a production session via bb-capture.mjs <session-id>, run bb-finalize.mjs without --release so the original automation keeps running.
- Order matters for remote: on Browserbase, attach the main automation client before (or together with) the tracer, and create the session with
--keep-alive. Otherwise the session ends as soon as the tracer's WS closes.
- Don't poll faster than ~1s: each sample runs browser CLI read commands and screenshots Chrome. 2s is a good default.
- Pick domains deliberately: defaults (
Network Console Runtime Log Page) cover most debugging. Add DOM for DOM-tree mutations (very noisy) via O11Y_DOMAINS="$O11Y_DOMAINS DOM".
- Reuse one Browserbase session for the automation client on remote by attaching to that session's
connectUrl with browse open ... --cdp "$CONNECT_URL" --session <name>. The --session flag names the local browse daemon; it is not a Browserbase session attach flag.
- Always run
stop-capture.mjs, even after a crash, so background processes don't linger and the manifest gets stopped_at.
- Bisect once per run:
bisect-cdp.mjs is idempotent — it overwrites the per-bucket files from raw.ndjson each time.
Troubleshooting
browse cdp exited immediately: usually means the target is unreachable (wrong port) or the Browserbase session has already ended. For remote, verify with browse cloud sessions get <id> — if status is COMPLETED, recreate with --keep-alive and attach automation first.
- Empty
raw.ndjson even though processes are running: confirm a CDP client is actually driving the page. The tracer only emits events that the browser generates, so an idle browser produces ~5 lines of attach/discover messages and nothing else.
- Screenshots all look identical: check
index.jsonl — if url doesn't change, the page hasn't navigated yet. The polling loop runs independently of the main automation's pace.
- Browserbase session ends mid-run: it likely hit
--timeout. Recreate with a higher timeout (BB_SESSION_TIMEOUT=1800 node scripts/bb-capture.mjs --new ...) or remove the timeout flag.
bb-capture.mjs <id> says "not RUNNING": the session you tried to attach to ended. List candidates with browse cloud sessions list | jq '.[] | select(.status == "RUNNING")' and try again.
browserbase/logs.json is empty []: expected — browse cloud sessions logs is sparse in practice. The CDP firehose in cdp/raw.ndjson is the source of truth.
- Where's the session recording (rrweb)?: session replay artifact fetching is deprecated; this skill doesn't fetch it. Use the screenshot stream in
screenshots/ and DOM dumps in dom/.
For full reference, see REFERENCE.md.
For example debug runs, see EXAMPLES.md.