| name | ce-test-browser |
| description | Run browser tests for pages affected by the current branch or PR. |
| argument-hint | [PR number, branch name, 'current', or --port PORT] |
Browser Test Skill
Run end-to-end browser tests on pages affected by a PR or branch using the best approved browser driver available in the active harness.
Modes
- Manual (default): the user controls the dev server. When the fallback driver is
agent-browser, ask whether to run headed or headless.
- Pipeline (
mode:pipeline): invoked by LFG or another automated runner. The run is unattended — never block on a question. Read references/pipeline-orchestration.md from this skill's directory and follow it; it overrides the free-port scan (step 4), dev-server startup (step 5), and visibility prompts (step 6). It still uses the preferred port that step 4 computes.
Browser Driver Policy
Select the driver before the first browser action:
- Prefer a host-native integrated browser. Use a browser-control surface embedded in or directly owned by the active harness when it can navigate local URLs, inspect rendered and interactive state, click/fill/press, capture screenshots, and inspect console errors. A separately configured browser extension or integration is not host-native. Load and follow the selected capability's own instructions before browser work.
- Otherwise fall back to
agent-browser. Read references/agent-browser-driver.md before running any command.
- Do not introduce a third browser stack. Never install or substitute standalone Playwright, Puppeteer, a separately configured browser extension or MCP, or other ad hoc browser automation. A Playwright API exposed inside the selected host-native browser remains host-native; it is not standalone Playwright.
Use one driver for the entire run. A selected host-native driver may fall back to agent-browser only if initialization fails before the first route is tested. After testing begins, do not mix driver sessions, element references, screenshots, or authentication state.
Workflow
1. Select the Browser Driver
Apply the Browser Driver Policy above and record the selected driver. This also requires a git repository with changes to test.
2. Determine Test Scope
If PR number provided:
gh pr view [number] --json files -q '.files[].path'
If 'current' or empty:
git diff --name-only main...HEAD
If branch name provided:
git diff --name-only main...[branch]
3. Map Changed Files to Routes
Map each changed file to the route(s) that render it, then build the list of URLs to test. The table below is a starting point of common patterns, not an exhaustive rule set — apply judgment for the project's actual layout:
| File Pattern | Route(s) |
|---|
app/views/users/* | /users, /users/:id, /users/new |
app/controllers/settings_controller.rb | /settings |
app/javascript/controllers/*_controller.js | Pages using that Stimulus controller |
app/components/*_component.rb | Pages rendering that component |
app/views/layouts/* | All pages (test homepage at minimum) |
app/assets/stylesheets/* | Visual regression on key pages |
app/helpers/*_helper.rb | Pages using that helper |
src/app/* (Next.js) | Corresponding routes |
src/components/* | Pages using those components |
4. Determine the Dev Server Port
Determine the preferred port using this priority:
- Explicit argument — if the user passed
--port 5000, use that directly.
- In-context project instructions — if your active project instructions already in context explicitly state the dev-server port, use it. Don't grep instruction files for a port: prose mentions (docs, examples, troubleshooting) are unreliable and false-positive-prone — config files and
.env are the trustworthy sources.
- package.json — check dev/start scripts for
--port flags.
- Environment files — check
.env, .env.local, .env.development for PORT=.
- Default — fall back to
3000.
PORT="${EXPLICIT_PORT:-}"
if [ -z "$PORT" ]; then
PORT=$(grep -Eo '\-\-port[= ]+[0-9]{4,5}' package.json 2>/dev/null | grep -Eo '[0-9]{4,5}' | head -1)
fi
if [ -z "$PORT" ]; then
PORT=$(grep -h '^PORT=' .env .env.local .env.development 2>/dev/null | tail -1 | cut -d= -f2)
fi
PORT="${PORT:-3000}"
echo "Preferred dev server port: $PORT"
Manual mode uses this preferred port as-is — the user controls their own server, so do not scan for alternatives. In pipeline mode, references/pipeline-orchestration.md takes the preferred port value printed here and scans upward to a genuinely free port.
5. Verify the Dev Server Is Running
Confirm the server is up before asking the headed/headless question — a manual run with no server stops here, so asking first would waste the question.
if lsof -i ":${PORT}" -sTCP:LISTEN -t >/dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "Server running on port ${PORT}";
else
echo "Server not running on port ${PORT}";
echo "Start your dev server, then re-run:";
echo " Rails: bin/dev or rails server -p ${PORT}";
echo " Node/Next.js: npm run dev";
echo " Custom port: run this skill again with --port <your-port>";
exit 0;
fi
In pipeline mode, do not stop here — references/pipeline-orchestration.md auto-starts the server in the background instead.
6. Set Browser Visibility and Verify the Root
Visibility is independent from unattended execution:
-
Host-native integrated browser: keep its normal integrated surface visible and non-blocking so the user can watch progress when useful. Do not repeatedly steal focus as routes change. This applies in both manual and pipeline modes.
-
agent-browser fallback, pipeline mode: run headless without asking.
-
agent-browser fallback, manual mode: ask the user whether to run headed or headless using the platform's blocking question tool: AskUserQuestion in Claude Code (call ToolSearch with select:AskUserQuestion first if its schema isn't loaded), request_user_input in Codex, ask_question in Antigravity CLI (agy), ask_user in Pi (requires the pi-ask-user extension). Fall back to presenting options in chat only when no blocking tool exists in the harness or the call errors. Never silently skip the question:
Do you want to watch the browser tests run?
1. Headed (watch) - Opens a visible browser window
2. Headless (faster) - Runs without a visible window
Then use the selected driver to navigate to http://localhost:<port>, capture its rendered or interactive state, and confirm the root is served before iterating.
7. Test Each Affected Page
For each affected route, use the selected driver to navigate and capture fresh rendered or interactive state.
Verify key elements:
- Page title/heading present
- Primary content rendered
- No error messages visible
- Forms have expected fields
- No new console errors attributable to the tested flow
Test critical interactions: derive locators or element references from the selected driver's latest inspected state, perform the click/fill/press action, then inspect the resulting state. Do not guess selectors or reuse stale references.
Take screenshots: capture viewport and full-page evidence when the selected driver supports it. Materialize screenshots as local artifacts when a later workflow or report needs file paths; otherwise in-app evidence is sufficient.
8. Human Verification (When Required)
Pause for human input when testing touches flows that require external interaction. Pipeline mode: do not pause — log each such flow as Skip with the reason and continue.
| Flow Type | What to Ask |
|---|
| OAuth | "Please sign in with [provider] and confirm it works" |
| Email | "Check your inbox for the test email and confirm receipt" |
| Payments | "Complete a test purchase in sandbox mode" |
| SMS | "Verify you received the SMS code" |
| External APIs | "Confirm the [service] integration is working" |
Ask the user (using the platform's question tool, or present numbered options and wait):
Human Verification Needed
This test touches [flow type]. Please:
1. [Action to take]
2. [What to verify]
Did it work correctly?
1. Yes - continue testing
2. No - describe the issue
9. Handle Failures
When a test fails (pipeline mode: do not ask how to proceed — capture the error screenshot and repro steps, log the failure, and continue):
-
Document the failure:
- Capture a screenshot of the error state with the selected driver
- Note the exact reproduction steps
-
Ask the user how to proceed:
Test Failed: [route]
Issue: [description]
Console errors: [if any]
How to proceed?
1. Fix now - debug and fix the failing test
2. Skip - continue testing other pages
-
If "Fix now": investigate, propose a fix, apply, re-run the failing test
-
If "Skip": log as skipped, continue
10. Test Summary
After all tests complete, present a summary:
## Browser Test Results
**Test Scope:** PR #[number] / [branch name]
**Server:** http://localhost:${PORT}
### Pages Tested: [count]
| Route | Status | Notes |
|-------|--------|-------|
| `/users` | Pass | |
| `/settings` | Pass | |
| `/dashboard` | Fail | Console error: [msg] |
| `/checkout` | Skip | Requires payment credentials |
### Console Errors: [count]
- [List any errors found]
### Human Verifications: [count]
- OAuth flow: Confirmed
- Email delivery: Confirmed
### Failures: [count]
- `/dashboard` - [issue description]
### Result: [PASS / FAIL / PARTIAL]
Quick Usage Examples
/ce-test-browser
/ce-test-browser 847
/ce-test-browser feature/new-dashboard
/ce-test-browser --port 5000
Driver Reference
When agent-browser is selected as the fallback, read references/agent-browser-driver.md from this skill's directory before running its commands. Host-native drivers follow their harness-provided instructions instead.