537 lines
21 KiB
Markdown
537 lines
21 KiB
Markdown
---
|
||
summary: "Integrated browser control service + action commands"
|
||
read_when:
|
||
- Adding agent-controlled browser automation
|
||
- Debugging why clawd is interfering with your own Chrome
|
||
- Implementing browser settings + lifecycle in the macOS app
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
# Browser (clawd-managed)
|
||
|
||
Moltbot can run a **dedicated Chrome/Brave/Edge/Chromium profile** that the agent controls.
|
||
It is isolated from your personal browser and is managed through a small local
|
||
control service inside the Gateway (loopback only).
|
||
|
||
Beginner view:
|
||
- Think of it as a **separate, agent-only browser**.
|
||
- The `clawd` profile does **not** touch your personal browser profile.
|
||
- The agent can **open tabs, read pages, click, and type** in a safe lane.
|
||
- The default `chrome` profile uses the **system default Chromium browser** via the
|
||
extension relay; switch to `clawd` for the isolated managed browser.
|
||
|
||
## What you get
|
||
|
||
- A separate browser profile named **clawd** (orange accent by default).
|
||
- Deterministic tab control (list/open/focus/close).
|
||
- Agent actions (click/type/drag/select), snapshots, screenshots, PDFs.
|
||
- Optional multi-profile support (`clawd`, `work`, `remote`, ...).
|
||
|
||
This browser is **not** your daily driver. It is a safe, isolated surface for
|
||
agent automation and verification.
|
||
|
||
## Quick start
|
||
|
||
```bash
|
||
moltbot browser --browser-profile clawd status
|
||
moltbot browser --browser-profile clawd start
|
||
moltbot browser --browser-profile clawd open https://example.com
|
||
moltbot browser --browser-profile clawd snapshot
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
If you get “Browser disabled”, enable it in config (see below) and restart the
|
||
Gateway.
|
||
|
||
## Profiles: `clawd` vs `chrome`
|
||
|
||
- `clawd`: managed, isolated browser (no extension required).
|
||
- `chrome`: extension relay to your **system browser** (requires the Moltbot
|
||
extension to be attached to a tab).
|
||
|
||
Set `browser.defaultProfile: "clawd"` if you want managed mode by default.
|
||
|
||
## Configuration
|
||
|
||
Browser settings live in `~/.clawdbot/moltbot.json`.
|
||
|
||
```json5
|
||
{
|
||
browser: {
|
||
enabled: true, // default: true
|
||
// cdpUrl: "http://127.0.0.1:18792", // legacy single-profile override
|
||
remoteCdpTimeoutMs: 1500, // remote CDP HTTP timeout (ms)
|
||
remoteCdpHandshakeTimeoutMs: 3000, // remote CDP WebSocket handshake timeout (ms)
|
||
defaultProfile: "chrome",
|
||
color: "#FF4500",
|
||
headless: false,
|
||
noSandbox: false,
|
||
attachOnly: false,
|
||
executablePath: "/Applications/Brave Browser.app/Contents/MacOS/Brave Browser",
|
||
profiles: {
|
||
clawd: { cdpPort: 18800, color: "#FF4500" },
|
||
work: { cdpPort: 18801, color: "#0066CC" },
|
||
remote: { cdpUrl: "http://10.0.0.42:9222", color: "#00AA00" }
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
- The browser control service binds to loopback on a port derived from `gateway.port`
|
||
(default: `18791`, which is gateway + 2). The relay uses the next port (`18792`).
|
||
- If you override the Gateway port (`gateway.port` or `CLAWDBOT_GATEWAY_PORT`),
|
||
the derived browser ports shift to stay in the same “family”.
|
||
- `cdpUrl` defaults to the relay port when unset.
|
||
- `remoteCdpTimeoutMs` applies to remote (non-loopback) CDP reachability checks.
|
||
- `remoteCdpHandshakeTimeoutMs` applies to remote CDP WebSocket reachability checks.
|
||
- `attachOnly: true` means “never launch a local browser; only attach if it is already running.”
|
||
- `color` + per-profile `color` tint the browser UI so you can see which profile is active.
|
||
- Default profile is `chrome` (extension relay). Use `defaultProfile: "clawd"` for the managed browser.
|
||
- Auto-detect order: system default browser if Chromium-based; otherwise Chrome → Brave → Edge → Chromium → Chrome Canary.
|
||
- Local `clawd` profiles auto-assign `cdpPort`/`cdpUrl` — set those only for remote CDP.
|
||
|
||
## Use Brave (or another Chromium-based browser)
|
||
|
||
If your **system default** browser is Chromium-based (Chrome/Brave/Edge/etc),
|
||
Moltbot uses it automatically. Set `browser.executablePath` to override
|
||
auto-detection:
|
||
|
||
CLI example:
|
||
|
||
```bash
|
||
moltbot config set browser.executablePath "/usr/bin/google-chrome"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
```json5
|
||
// macOS
|
||
{
|
||
browser: {
|
||
executablePath: "/Applications/Brave Browser.app/Contents/MacOS/Brave Browser"
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
// Windows
|
||
{
|
||
browser: {
|
||
executablePath: "C:\\Program Files\\BraveSoftware\\Brave-Browser\\Application\\brave.exe"
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
// Linux
|
||
{
|
||
browser: {
|
||
executablePath: "/usr/bin/brave-browser"
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
## Local vs remote control
|
||
|
||
- **Local control (default):** the Gateway starts the loopback control service and can launch a local browser.
|
||
- **Remote control (node host):** run a node host on the machine that has the browser; the Gateway proxies browser actions to it.
|
||
- **Remote CDP:** set `browser.profiles.<name>.cdpUrl` (or `browser.cdpUrl`) to
|
||
attach to a remote Chromium-based browser. In this case, Moltbot will not launch a local browser.
|
||
|
||
Remote CDP URLs can include auth:
|
||
- Query tokens (e.g., `https://provider.example?token=<token>`)
|
||
- HTTP Basic auth (e.g., `https://user:pass@provider.example`)
|
||
|
||
Moltbot preserves the auth when calling `/json/*` endpoints and when connecting
|
||
to the CDP WebSocket. Prefer environment variables or secrets managers for
|
||
tokens instead of committing them to config files.
|
||
|
||
## Node browser proxy (zero-config default)
|
||
|
||
If you run a **node host** on the machine that has your browser, Moltbot can
|
||
auto-route browser tool calls to that node without any extra browser config.
|
||
This is the default path for remote gateways.
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
- The node host exposes its local browser control server via a **proxy command**.
|
||
- Profiles come from the node’s own `browser.profiles` config (same as local).
|
||
- Disable if you don’t want it:
|
||
- On the node: `nodeHost.browserProxy.enabled=false`
|
||
- On the gateway: `gateway.nodes.browser.mode="off"`
|
||
|
||
## Browserless (hosted remote CDP)
|
||
|
||
[Browserless](https://browserless.io) is a hosted Chromium service that exposes
|
||
CDP endpoints over HTTPS. You can point a Moltbot browser profile at a
|
||
Browserless region endpoint and authenticate with your API key.
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
```json5
|
||
{
|
||
browser: {
|
||
enabled: true,
|
||
defaultProfile: "browserless",
|
||
remoteCdpTimeoutMs: 2000,
|
||
remoteCdpHandshakeTimeoutMs: 4000,
|
||
profiles: {
|
||
browserless: {
|
||
cdpUrl: "https://production-sfo.browserless.io?token=<BROWSERLESS_API_KEY>",
|
||
color: "#00AA00"
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
- Replace `<BROWSERLESS_API_KEY>` with your real Browserless token.
|
||
- Choose the region endpoint that matches your Browserless account (see their docs).
|
||
|
||
## Security
|
||
|
||
Key ideas:
|
||
- Browser control is loopback-only; access flows through the Gateway’s auth or node pairing.
|
||
- Keep the Gateway and any node hosts on a private network (Tailscale); avoid public exposure.
|
||
- Treat remote CDP URLs/tokens as secrets; prefer env vars or a secrets manager.
|
||
|
||
Remote CDP tips:
|
||
- Prefer HTTPS endpoints and short-lived tokens where possible.
|
||
- Avoid embedding long-lived tokens directly in config files.
|
||
|
||
## Profiles (multi-browser)
|
||
|
||
Moltbot supports multiple named profiles (routing configs). Profiles can be:
|
||
- **clawd-managed**: a dedicated Chromium-based browser instance with its own user data directory + CDP port
|
||
- **remote**: an explicit CDP URL (Chromium-based browser running elsewhere)
|
||
- **extension relay**: your existing Chrome tab(s) via the local relay + Chrome extension
|
||
|
||
Defaults:
|
||
- The `clawd` profile is auto-created if missing.
|
||
- The `chrome` profile is built-in for the Chrome extension relay (points at `http://127.0.0.1:18792` by default).
|
||
- Local CDP ports allocate from **18800–18899** by default.
|
||
- Deleting a profile moves its local data directory to Trash.
|
||
|
||
All control endpoints accept `?profile=<name>`; the CLI uses `--browser-profile`.
|
||
|
||
## Chrome extension relay (use your existing Chrome)
|
||
|
||
Moltbot can also drive **your existing Chrome tabs** (no separate “clawd” Chrome instance) via a local CDP relay + a Chrome extension.
|
||
|
||
Full guide: [Chrome extension](/tools/chrome-extension)
|
||
|
||
Flow:
|
||
- The Gateway runs locally (same machine) or a node host runs on the browser machine.
|
||
- A local **relay server** listens at a loopback `cdpUrl` (default: `http://127.0.0.1:18792`).
|
||
- You click the **Moltbot Browser Relay** extension icon on a tab to attach (it does not auto-attach).
|
||
- The agent controls that tab via the normal `browser` tool, by selecting the right profile.
|
||
|
||
If the Gateway runs elsewhere, run a node host on the browser machine so the Gateway can proxy browser actions.
|
||
|
||
### Sandboxed sessions
|
||
|
||
If the agent session is sandboxed, the `browser` tool may default to `target="sandbox"` (sandbox browser).
|
||
Chrome extension relay takeover requires host browser control, so either:
|
||
- run the session unsandboxed, or
|
||
- set `agents.defaults.sandbox.browser.allowHostControl: true` and use `target="host"` when calling the tool.
|
||
|
||
### Setup
|
||
|
||
1) Load the extension (dev/unpacked):
|
||
|
||
```bash
|
||
moltbot browser extension install
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Chrome → `chrome://extensions` → enable “Developer mode”
|
||
- “Load unpacked” → select the directory printed by `moltbot browser extension path`
|
||
- Pin the extension, then click it on the tab you want to control (badge shows `ON`).
|
||
|
||
2) Use it:
|
||
- CLI: `moltbot browser --browser-profile chrome tabs`
|
||
- Agent tool: `browser` with `profile="chrome"`
|
||
|
||
Optional: if you want a different name or relay port, create your own profile:
|
||
|
||
```bash
|
||
moltbot browser create-profile \
|
||
--name my-chrome \
|
||
--driver extension \
|
||
--cdp-url http://127.0.0.1:18792 \
|
||
--color "#00AA00"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
- This mode relies on Playwright-on-CDP for most operations (screenshots/snapshots/actions).
|
||
- Detach by clicking the extension icon again.
|
||
|
||
## Isolation guarantees
|
||
|
||
- **Dedicated user data dir**: never touches your personal browser profile.
|
||
- **Dedicated ports**: avoids `9222` to prevent collisions with dev workflows.
|
||
- **Deterministic tab control**: target tabs by `targetId`, not “last tab”.
|
||
|
||
## Browser selection
|
||
|
||
When launching locally, Moltbot picks the first available:
|
||
1. Chrome
|
||
2. Brave
|
||
3. Edge
|
||
4. Chromium
|
||
5. Chrome Canary
|
||
|
||
You can override with `browser.executablePath`.
|
||
|
||
Platforms:
|
||
- macOS: checks `/Applications` and `~/Applications`.
|
||
- Linux: looks for `google-chrome`, `brave`, `microsoft-edge`, `chromium`, etc.
|
||
- Windows: checks common install locations.
|
||
|
||
## Control API (optional)
|
||
|
||
For local integrations only, the Gateway exposes a small loopback HTTP API:
|
||
|
||
- Status/start/stop: `GET /`, `POST /start`, `POST /stop`
|
||
- Tabs: `GET /tabs`, `POST /tabs/open`, `POST /tabs/focus`, `DELETE /tabs/:targetId`
|
||
- Snapshot/screenshot: `GET /snapshot`, `POST /screenshot`
|
||
- Actions: `POST /navigate`, `POST /act`
|
||
- Hooks: `POST /hooks/file-chooser`, `POST /hooks/dialog`
|
||
- Downloads: `POST /download`, `POST /wait/download`
|
||
- Debugging: `GET /console`, `POST /pdf`
|
||
- Debugging: `GET /errors`, `GET /requests`, `POST /trace/start`, `POST /trace/stop`, `POST /highlight`
|
||
- Network: `POST /response/body`
|
||
- State: `GET /cookies`, `POST /cookies/set`, `POST /cookies/clear`
|
||
- State: `GET /storage/:kind`, `POST /storage/:kind/set`, `POST /storage/:kind/clear`
|
||
- Settings: `POST /set/offline`, `POST /set/headers`, `POST /set/credentials`, `POST /set/geolocation`, `POST /set/media`, `POST /set/timezone`, `POST /set/locale`, `POST /set/device`
|
||
|
||
All endpoints accept `?profile=<name>`.
|
||
|
||
### Playwright requirement
|
||
|
||
Some features (navigate/act/AI snapshot/role snapshot, element screenshots, PDF) require
|
||
Playwright. If Playwright isn’t installed, those endpoints return a clear 501
|
||
error. ARIA snapshots and basic screenshots still work for clawd-managed Chrome.
|
||
For the Chrome extension relay driver, ARIA snapshots and screenshots require Playwright.
|
||
|
||
If you see `Playwright is not available in this gateway build`, install the full
|
||
Playwright package (not `playwright-core`) and restart the gateway, or reinstall
|
||
Moltbot with browser support.
|
||
|
||
## How it works (internal)
|
||
|
||
High-level flow:
|
||
- A small **control server** accepts HTTP requests.
|
||
- It connects to Chromium-based browsers (Chrome/Brave/Edge/Chromium) via **CDP**.
|
||
- For advanced actions (click/type/snapshot/PDF), it uses **Playwright** on top
|
||
of CDP.
|
||
- When Playwright is missing, only non-Playwright operations are available.
|
||
|
||
This design keeps the agent on a stable, deterministic interface while letting
|
||
you swap local/remote browsers and profiles.
|
||
|
||
## CLI quick reference
|
||
|
||
All commands accept `--browser-profile <name>` to target a specific profile.
|
||
All commands also accept `--json` for machine-readable output (stable payloads).
|
||
|
||
Basics:
|
||
- `moltbot browser status`
|
||
- `moltbot browser start`
|
||
- `moltbot browser stop`
|
||
- `moltbot browser tabs`
|
||
- `moltbot browser tab`
|
||
- `moltbot browser tab new`
|
||
- `moltbot browser tab select 2`
|
||
- `moltbot browser tab close 2`
|
||
- `moltbot browser open https://example.com`
|
||
- `moltbot browser focus abcd1234`
|
||
- `moltbot browser close abcd1234`
|
||
|
||
Inspection:
|
||
- `moltbot browser screenshot`
|
||
- `moltbot browser screenshot --full-page`
|
||
- `moltbot browser screenshot --ref 12`
|
||
- `moltbot browser screenshot --ref e12`
|
||
- `moltbot browser snapshot`
|
||
- `moltbot browser snapshot --format aria --limit 200`
|
||
- `moltbot browser snapshot --interactive --compact --depth 6`
|
||
- `moltbot browser snapshot --efficient`
|
||
- `moltbot browser snapshot --labels`
|
||
- `moltbot browser snapshot --selector "#main" --interactive`
|
||
- `moltbot browser snapshot --frame "iframe#main" --interactive`
|
||
- `moltbot browser console --level error`
|
||
- `moltbot browser errors --clear`
|
||
- `moltbot browser requests --filter api --clear`
|
||
- `moltbot browser pdf`
|
||
- `moltbot browser responsebody "**/api" --max-chars 5000`
|
||
|
||
Actions:
|
||
- `moltbot browser navigate https://example.com`
|
||
- `moltbot browser resize 1280 720`
|
||
- `moltbot browser click 12 --double`
|
||
- `moltbot browser click e12 --double`
|
||
- `moltbot browser type 23 "hello" --submit`
|
||
- `moltbot browser press Enter`
|
||
- `moltbot browser hover 44`
|
||
- `moltbot browser scrollintoview e12`
|
||
- `moltbot browser drag 10 11`
|
||
- `moltbot browser select 9 OptionA OptionB`
|
||
- `moltbot browser download e12 /tmp/report.pdf`
|
||
- `moltbot browser waitfordownload /tmp/report.pdf`
|
||
- `moltbot browser upload /tmp/file.pdf`
|
||
- `moltbot browser fill --fields '[{"ref":"1","type":"text","value":"Ada"}]'`
|
||
- `moltbot browser dialog --accept`
|
||
- `moltbot browser wait --text "Done"`
|
||
- `moltbot browser wait "#main" --url "**/dash" --load networkidle --fn "window.ready===true"`
|
||
- `moltbot browser evaluate --fn '(el) => el.textContent' --ref 7`
|
||
- `moltbot browser highlight e12`
|
||
- `moltbot browser trace start`
|
||
- `moltbot browser trace stop`
|
||
|
||
State:
|
||
- `moltbot browser cookies`
|
||
- `moltbot browser cookies set session abc123 --url "https://example.com"`
|
||
- `moltbot browser cookies clear`
|
||
- `moltbot browser storage local get`
|
||
- `moltbot browser storage local set theme dark`
|
||
- `moltbot browser storage session clear`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set offline on`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set headers --json '{"X-Debug":"1"}'`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set credentials user pass`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set credentials --clear`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set geo 37.7749 -122.4194 --origin "https://example.com"`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set geo --clear`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set media dark`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set timezone America/New_York`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set locale en-US`
|
||
- `moltbot browser set device "iPhone 14"`
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
- `upload` and `dialog` are **arming** calls; run them before the click/press
|
||
that triggers the chooser/dialog.
|
||
- `upload` can also set file inputs directly via `--input-ref` or `--element`.
|
||
- `snapshot`:
|
||
- `--format ai` (default when Playwright is installed): returns an AI snapshot with numeric refs (`aria-ref="<n>"`).
|
||
- `--format aria`: returns the accessibility tree (no refs; inspection only).
|
||
- `--efficient` (or `--mode efficient`): compact role snapshot preset (interactive + compact + depth + lower maxChars).
|
||
- Config default (tool/CLI only): set `browser.snapshotDefaults.mode: "efficient"` to use efficient snapshots when the caller does not pass a mode (see [Gateway configuration](/gateway/configuration#browser-clawd-managed-browser)).
|
||
- Role snapshot options (`--interactive`, `--compact`, `--depth`, `--selector`) force a role-based snapshot with refs like `ref=e12`.
|
||
- `--frame "<iframe selector>"` scopes role snapshots to an iframe (pairs with role refs like `e12`).
|
||
- `--interactive` outputs a flat, easy-to-pick list of interactive elements (best for driving actions).
|
||
- `--labels` adds a viewport-only screenshot with overlayed ref labels (prints `MEDIA:<path>`).
|
||
- `click`/`type`/etc require a `ref` from `snapshot` (either numeric `12` or role ref `e12`).
|
||
CSS selectors are intentionally not supported for actions.
|
||
|
||
## Snapshots and refs
|
||
|
||
Moltbot supports two “snapshot” styles:
|
||
|
||
- **AI snapshot (numeric refs)**: `moltbot browser snapshot` (default; `--format ai`)
|
||
- Output: a text snapshot that includes numeric refs.
|
||
- Actions: `moltbot browser click 12`, `moltbot browser type 23 "hello"`.
|
||
- Internally, the ref is resolved via Playwright’s `aria-ref`.
|
||
|
||
- **Role snapshot (role refs like `e12`)**: `moltbot browser snapshot --interactive` (or `--compact`, `--depth`, `--selector`, `--frame`)
|
||
- Output: a role-based list/tree with `[ref=e12]` (and optional `[nth=1]`).
|
||
- Actions: `moltbot browser click e12`, `moltbot browser highlight e12`.
|
||
- Internally, the ref is resolved via `getByRole(...)` (plus `nth()` for duplicates).
|
||
- Add `--labels` to include a viewport screenshot with overlayed `e12` labels.
|
||
|
||
Ref behavior:
|
||
- Refs are **not stable across navigations**; if something fails, re-run `snapshot` and use a fresh ref.
|
||
- If the role snapshot was taken with `--frame`, role refs are scoped to that iframe until the next role snapshot.
|
||
|
||
## Wait power-ups
|
||
|
||
You can wait on more than just time/text:
|
||
|
||
- Wait for URL (globs supported by Playwright):
|
||
- `moltbot browser wait --url "**/dash"`
|
||
- Wait for load state:
|
||
- `moltbot browser wait --load networkidle`
|
||
- Wait for a JS predicate:
|
||
- `moltbot browser wait --fn "window.ready===true"`
|
||
- Wait for a selector to become visible:
|
||
- `moltbot browser wait "#main"`
|
||
|
||
These can be combined:
|
||
|
||
```bash
|
||
moltbot browser wait "#main" \
|
||
--url "**/dash" \
|
||
--load networkidle \
|
||
--fn "window.ready===true" \
|
||
--timeout-ms 15000
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
## Debug workflows
|
||
|
||
When an action fails (e.g. “not visible”, “strict mode violation”, “covered”):
|
||
|
||
1. `moltbot browser snapshot --interactive`
|
||
2. Use `click <ref>` / `type <ref>` (prefer role refs in interactive mode)
|
||
3. If it still fails: `moltbot browser highlight <ref>` to see what Playwright is targeting
|
||
4. If the page behaves oddly:
|
||
- `moltbot browser errors --clear`
|
||
- `moltbot browser requests --filter api --clear`
|
||
5. For deep debugging: record a trace:
|
||
- `moltbot browser trace start`
|
||
- reproduce the issue
|
||
- `moltbot browser trace stop` (prints `TRACE:<path>`)
|
||
|
||
## JSON output
|
||
|
||
`--json` is for scripting and structured tooling.
|
||
|
||
Examples:
|
||
|
||
```bash
|
||
moltbot browser status --json
|
||
moltbot browser snapshot --interactive --json
|
||
moltbot browser requests --filter api --json
|
||
moltbot browser cookies --json
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Role snapshots in JSON include `refs` plus a small `stats` block (lines/chars/refs/interactive) so tools can reason about payload size and density.
|
||
|
||
## State and environment knobs
|
||
|
||
These are useful for “make the site behave like X” workflows:
|
||
|
||
- Cookies: `cookies`, `cookies set`, `cookies clear`
|
||
- Storage: `storage local|session get|set|clear`
|
||
- Offline: `set offline on|off`
|
||
- Headers: `set headers --json '{"X-Debug":"1"}'` (or `--clear`)
|
||
- HTTP basic auth: `set credentials user pass` (or `--clear`)
|
||
- Geolocation: `set geo <lat> <lon> --origin "https://example.com"` (or `--clear`)
|
||
- Media: `set media dark|light|no-preference|none`
|
||
- Timezone / locale: `set timezone ...`, `set locale ...`
|
||
- Device / viewport:
|
||
- `set device "iPhone 14"` (Playwright device presets)
|
||
- `set viewport 1280 720`
|
||
|
||
## Security & privacy
|
||
|
||
- The clawd browser profile may contain logged-in sessions; treat it as sensitive.
|
||
- `browser act kind=evaluate` / `moltbot browser evaluate` and `wait --fn`
|
||
execute arbitrary JavaScript in the page context. Prompt injection can steer
|
||
this. Disable it with `browser.evaluateEnabled=false` if you do not need it.
|
||
- For logins and anti-bot notes (X/Twitter, etc.), see [Browser login + X/Twitter posting](/tools/browser-login).
|
||
- Keep the Gateway/node host private (loopback or tailnet-only).
|
||
- Remote CDP endpoints are powerful; tunnel and protect them.
|
||
|
||
## Troubleshooting
|
||
|
||
For Linux-specific issues (especially snap Chromium), see
|
||
[Browser troubleshooting](/tools/browser-linux-troubleshooting).
|
||
|
||
## Agent tools + how control works
|
||
|
||
The agent gets **one tool** for browser automation:
|
||
- `browser` — status/start/stop/tabs/open/focus/close/snapshot/screenshot/navigate/act
|
||
|
||
How it maps:
|
||
- `browser snapshot` returns a stable UI tree (AI or ARIA).
|
||
- `browser act` uses the snapshot `ref` IDs to click/type/drag/select.
|
||
- `browser screenshot` captures pixels (full page or element).
|
||
- `browser` accepts:
|
||
- `profile` to choose a named browser profile (clawd, chrome, or remote CDP).
|
||
- `target` (`sandbox` | `host` | `node`) to select where the browser lives.
|
||
- In sandboxed sessions, `target: "host"` requires `agents.defaults.sandbox.browser.allowHostControl=true`.
|
||
- If `target` is omitted: sandboxed sessions default to `sandbox`, non-sandbox sessions default to `host`.
|
||
- If a browser-capable node is connected, the tool may auto-route to it unless you pin `target="host"` or `target="node"`.
|
||
|
||
This keeps the agent deterministic and avoids brittle selectors.
|