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summary, read_when
| summary | read_when | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spec: clawd-managed Chrome/Chromium instance (separate profile, lobster-orange, tab management) |
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Browser (macOS app) — clawd-managed Chrome
Status: draft spec · Date: 2025-12-13
Goal: give the clawd persona its own browser that is:
- Visually distinct (lobster-orange, profile labeled “clawd”).
- Fully agent-manageable (start/stop, list tabs, focus/close tabs, open URLs, screenshot).
- Non-interfering with the user’s own browser (separate profile + dedicated ports).
This doc covers the macOS app/gateway side. It intentionally does not mandate Playwright vs Puppeteer yet; the key is the contract and the separation guarantees.
User-facing settings
Add a dedicated settings section (preferably under Tools or its own “Browser” tab):
- Enable clawd browser (
default: on)- When off: no browser is launched, and browser tools return “disabled”.
- Browser control URL (
default: http://127.0.0.1:18791)- Interpreted as the base URL of the local/remote browser-control server.
- If the URL host is not loopback, Clawdis must not attempt to launch a local browser; it only connects.
- Accent color (
default: #FF4500, “lobster-orange”)- Used to theme the clawd browser profile (best-effort) and to tint UI indicators in Clawdis.
Optional (advanced, can be hidden behind Debug initially):
- Use headless browser (
default: off) - Attach to existing only (
default: off) — if on, never launch; only connect if already running.
Port convention
Clawdis already uses:
- Gateway WebSocket:
18789 - Bridge (voice/iris):
18790
For the clawd browser-control server, use “family” ports:
- Browser control HTTP API:
18791(bridge + 1) - Browser CDP/debugging port:
18792(control + 1)
The user usually only configures the control URL (port 18791). CDP is an internal detail.
Browser isolation guarantees (non-negotiable)
-
Dedicated user data dir
- Never attach to or reuse the user’s default Chrome profile.
- Store clawd browser state under an app-owned directory, e.g.:
~/Library/Application Support/Clawdis/browser/clawd/(mac app)- or
~/.clawdis/browser/clawd/(gateway/CLI)
-
Dedicated ports
- Never use
9222(reserved for ad-hoc dev workflows; avoids colliding withagent-tools/browser-tools). - Default ports are
18791/18792unless overridden.
- Never use
-
Named tab/page management
- The agent must be able to enumerate and target tabs deterministically (by stable
targetIdor equivalent), not “last tab”.
- The agent must be able to enumerate and target tabs deterministically (by stable
Browser selection (macOS)
On startup (when enabled + local URL), Clawdis chooses the browser executable in this order:
- Google Chrome Canary (if installed)
- Chromium (if installed)
- Google Chrome (fallback)
Implementation detail: detection is by existence of the .app bundle under /Applications (and optionally ~/Applications), then using the resolved executable path.
Rationale:
- Canary/Chromium are easy to visually distinguish from the user’s daily driver.
- Chrome fallback ensures the feature works on a stock machine.
Visual differentiation (“lobster-orange”)
The clawd browser should be obviously different at a glance:
- Profile name: clawd
- Profile color: #FF4500
Preferred behavior:
- Seed/patch the profile’s preferences on first launch so the color + name persist.
Fallback behavior:
- If preferences patching is not reliable, open with the dedicated profile and let the user set the profile color/name once via Chrome UI; it must persist because the
userDataDiris persistent.
Control server contract (proposed)
Expose a small local HTTP API (and/or gateway RPC surface) so the agent can manage state without touching the user’s Chrome.
Minimum endpoints/methods (names illustrative):
browser.status- returns:
{ enabled, url, running, pid?, version?, chosenBrowser?, userDataDir?, ports: { control, cdp } }
- returns:
browser.start- starts the browser-control server + browser (no-op if already running)
browser.stop- stops the server and closes the clawd browser (best-effort; graceful first, then force if needed)
browser.tabs.list- returns: array of
{ targetId, title, url, isActive, lastFocusedAt? }
- returns: array of
browser.tabs.open- params:
{ url, newTab?: true }→ returns{ targetId }
- params:
browser.tabs.focus- params:
{ targetId }
- params:
browser.tabs.close- params:
{ targetId }
- params:
browser.screenshot- params:
{ targetId?, fullPage?: false }→ returns aMEDIA:attachment URL (via the existing Clawdis media host)
- params:
DOM + inspection (v1):
browser.eval- params:
{ js, targetId?, await?: false }→ returns the CDPRuntime.evaluateresult (best-effortreturnByValue)
- params:
browser.query- params:
{ selector, targetId?, limit? }→ returns basic element summaries (tag/id/class/text/value/href/outerHTML)
- params:
browser.dom- params:
{ format: "html"|"text", targetId?, selector?, maxChars? }→ returns a truncated dump (textfield)
- params:
browser.snapshot- params:
{ format: "aria"|"domSnapshot", targetId?, limit? } aria: simplified Accessibility tree withbackendDOMNodeIdwhen available (future click/type hooks)domSnapshot: lightweight DOM walk snapshot (tree-ish, bounded bylimit)
- params:
Nice-to-have (later):
browser.click/browser.type/browser.waitForhelpers built atop snapshot refs / backend node ids
“Is it open or closed?”
“Open” means:
- the control server is reachable at the configured URL and
- it reports a live browser connection.
“Closed” means:
- control server not reachable, or server reports no browser.
Clawdis should treat “open/closed” as a health check (fast path), not by scanning global Chrome processes (avoid false positives).
Interaction with the agent (clawd)
The agent should use browser tools only when:
- enabled in settings
- control URL is configured
If disabled, tools must fail fast with a friendly error (“Browser disabled in settings”).
The agent should not assume tabs are ephemeral. It should:
- call
browser.tabs.listto discover existing tabs first - reuse an existing tab when appropriate (e.g. a persistent “main” tab)
- avoid opening duplicate tabs unless asked
Security & privacy notes
- The clawd browser profile is app-owned; it may contain logged-in sessions. Treat it as sensitive data.
- The control server must bind to loopback only by default (
127.0.0.1) unless the user explicitly configures a non-loopback URL. - Never reuse or copy the user’s default Chrome profile.
Non-goals (for the first cut)
- Cross-device “sync” of tabs between Mac and Pi.
- Sharing the user’s logged-in Chrome sessions automatically.
- General-purpose web scraping; this is primarily for “close-the-loop” verification and interaction.