> chrome-devtools

Expert-level browser automation, debugging, and performance analysis using Chrome DevTools MCP. Use for interacting with web pages, capturing screenshots, analyzing network traffic, and profiling performance.

fetch
$curl "https://skillshub.wtf/github/awesome-copilot/chrome-devtools?format=md"
SKILL.mdchrome-devtools

Chrome DevTools Agent

Overview

A specialized skill for controlling and inspecting a live Chrome browser. This skill leverages the chrome-devtools MCP server to perform a wide range of browser-related tasks, from simple navigation to complex performance profiling.

When to Use

Use this skill when:

  • Browser Automation: Navigating pages, clicking elements, filling forms, and handling dialogs.
  • Visual Inspection: Taking screenshots or text snapshots of web pages.
  • Debugging: Inspecting console messages, evaluating JavaScript in the page context, and analyzing network requests.
  • Performance Analysis: Recording and analyzing performance traces to identify bottlenecks and Core Web Vital issues.
  • Emulation: Resizing the viewport or emulating network/CPU conditions.

Tool Categories

1. Navigation & Page Management

  • new_page: Open a new tab/page.
  • navigate_page: Go to a specific URL, reload, or navigate history.
  • select_page: Switch context between open pages.
  • list_pages: See all open pages and their IDs.
  • close_page: Close a specific page.
  • wait_for: Wait for specific text to appear on the page.

2. Input & Interaction

  • click: Click on an element (use uid from snapshot).
  • fill / fill_form: Type text into inputs or fill multiple fields at once.
  • hover: Move the mouse over an element.
  • press_key: Send keyboard shortcuts or special keys (e.g., "Enter", "Control+C").
  • drag: Drag and drop elements.
  • handle_dialog: Accept or dismiss browser alerts/prompts.
  • upload_file: Upload a file through a file input.

3. Debugging & Inspection

  • take_snapshot: Get a text-based accessibility tree (best for identifying elements).
  • take_screenshot: Capture a visual representation of the page or a specific element.
  • list_console_messages / get_console_message: Inspect the page's console output.
  • evaluate_script: Run custom JavaScript in the page context.
  • list_network_requests / get_network_request: Analyze network traffic and request details.

4. Emulation & Performance

  • resize_page: Change the viewport dimensions.
  • emulate: Throttling CPU/Network or emulating geolocation.
  • performance_start_trace: Start recording a performance profile.
  • performance_stop_trace: Stop recording and save the trace.
  • performance_analyze_insight: Get detailed analysis from recorded performance data.

Workflow Patterns

Pattern A: Identifying Elements (Snapshot-First)

Always prefer take_snapshot over take_screenshot for finding elements. The snapshot provides uid values which are required by interaction tools.

1. `take_snapshot` to get the current page structure.
2. Find the `uid` of the target element.
3. Use `click(uid=...)` or `fill(uid=..., value=...)`.

Pattern B: Troubleshooting Errors

When a page is failing, check both console logs and network requests.

1. `list_console_messages` to check for JavaScript errors.
2. `list_network_requests` to identify failed (4xx/5xx) resources.
3. `evaluate_script` to check the value of specific DOM elements or global variables.

Pattern C: Performance Profiling

Identify why a page is slow.

1. `performance_start_trace(reload=true, autoStop=true)`
2. Wait for the page to load/trace to finish.
3. `performance_analyze_insight` to find LCP issues or layout shifts.

Best Practices

  • Context Awareness: Always run list_pages and select_page if you are unsure which tab is currently active.
  • Snapshots: Take a new snapshot after any major navigation or DOM change, as uid values may change.
  • Timeouts: Use reasonable timeouts for wait_for to avoid hanging on slow-loading elements.
  • Screenshots: Use take_screenshot sparingly for visual verification, but rely on take_snapshot for logic.

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github stars25.7K
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first seenMar 18, 2026
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┌ repo

github/awesome-copilot
by github
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┌ tags

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