| name | scan-and-fix-accessibility |
| description | Scan webpages for accessibility issues using getAccessibilityReport, analyzeAppViaTunnel, and buildLocalAppForAnalysis MCP tools. Use for WCAG compliance testing, identifying violations, and fixing accessibility bugs. |
Scan and Fix Accessibility
When to Use
- Scanning a website or web app for WCAG 2.1 accessibility violations
- Testing a localhost app for accessibility issues
- Fixing specific accessibility bugs in your code
- Ensuring WCAG compliance before deployment
MCP Tools Used
getAccessibilityReport - Scan a public URL for WCAG 2.1 accessibility issues
analyzeAppViaTunnel - Scan a localhost app via TestMu AI tunnel
buildLocalAppForAnalysis - Get setup instructions for local accessibility testing
Steps
1. Scan a Public URL
Use getAccessibilityReport to scan any publicly accessible webpage:
"Run accessibility scan for 'https://www.example.com'"
"Scan accessibility issues on https://mysite.com/checkout"
"Check WCAG compliance for https://staging.myapp.com"
What the tool does:
- Runs comprehensive WCAG 2.1 scan using axe-core engine
- Supports scanning multiple URLs at once
- Returns violations categorized by impact (Critical/Serious/Moderate/Minor)
- Provides remediation guidance for each violation
2. Scan a Localhost App
Use analyzeAppViaTunnel to scan apps running locally:
"Scan accessibility issues on my app running at port 3000"
"Run accessibility test on localhost:8080 via TestMu AI tunnel"
Prerequisites: TestMu AI tunnel must be running. Use buildLocalAppForAnalysis to get setup instructions.
3. Setup Local Testing
Use buildLocalAppForAnalysis for step-by-step setup:
"How do I set up accessibility testing for my local app?"
"Help me configure TestMu AI tunnel for accessibility scanning"
What the tool provides:
- Step-by-step tunnel setup instructions
- Cross-platform support (Mac Intel/Apple Silicon, Linux, Windows)
- Build and serve commands for your project
4. Analyze Results
Review the scan results and categorize issues:
- Critical: Blocks users entirely (missing form labels, keyboard traps)
- Serious: Major barriers (poor color contrast, missing alt text)
- Moderate: Best practice violations (heading hierarchy, landmark regions)
- Minor: Cosmetic or enhancement issues
5. Fix Issues in Code
For each violation, provide specific code fixes:
Missing Alt Text:
<img src="logo.png">
<img src="logo.png" alt="Company Logo">
Poor Color Contrast:
color: #999;
background: #fff;
color: #666;
background: #fff;
Missing Form Label:
<input type="email" placeholder="Email">
<label for="email">Email Address</label>
<input type="email" id="email" aria-required="true">
6. Verify Fixes
Re-scan after implementing fixes:
"Re-scan https://www.example.com to verify accessibility fixes"
"Run accessibility scan again on port 3000"
Common Scenarios
Scan and Fix Workflow:
"Scan accessibility issues on https://mysite.com"
ā Returns violations with severity and remediation guidance
ā Fix issues in code
"Re-scan https://mysite.com to verify fixes"
Local Development Workflow:
"Help me set up accessibility testing locally"
ā Returns tunnel setup instructions
"Scan my app running at port 3000"
ā Returns WCAG violations
ā Fix and re-scan
Example Workflow
User: "Fix accessibility issues on my checkout page at https://staging.myapp.com/checkout"
Steps:
- Scan:
"Run accessibility scan for 'https://staging.myapp.com/checkout'"
- Results: Scan returns violations ā 5 critical, 3 serious issues
- Fix critical issues first (form labels, keyboard navigation)
- Fix serious issues (color contrast, alt text)
- Verify:
"Re-scan https://staging.myapp.com/checkout"
- Confirm: All critical and serious issues resolved
Quick Reference
Common WCAG Requirements:
- Images need alt text (WCAG 1.1.1)
- Color contrast ā„ 4.5:1 for text (WCAG 1.4.3)
- All interactive elements keyboard accessible (WCAG 2.1.1)
- Forms have labels (WCAG 3.3.2)
- Proper heading hierarchy (WCAG 1.3.1)
- Focus visible on all interactive elements (WCAG 2.4.7)