Agent Browser Clawdbot 0
Headless browser automation CLI optimized for AI agents with accessibility tree snapshots and ref-based element selection
MIT-0 · Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.
⭐ 0 · 94 · 2 current installs · 2 all-time installs
duplicate of @ddbq/agent-browser-clawdbot-0-1-0
MIT-0
Security Scan
OpenClaw
Benign
high confidencePurpose & Capability
Name/description describe a headless browser CLI and the SKILL.md only references the agent-browser CLI, snapshots, refs, sessions, state save/load, network routing, etc. There are no unrelated env vars, binaries, or config paths requested — capabilities are coherent with browser automation.
Instruction Scope
Instructions stay within browser automation: navigation, snapshots, ref-based interaction, session/state management, network routing. These commands necessarily provide access to cookies/localStorage and can mock/abort network requests; that is expected for this tool but is powerful (able to access site data and intercept requests). The SKILL.md does not instruct reading arbitrary host files or environment secrets beyond an optional AGENT_BROWSER_SESSION var.
Install Mechanism
The skill is instruction-only (no install spec). The doc suggests installing via npm (npm install -g agent-browser) and running agent-browser install to download Chromium. This is a normal third-party installation path; it does mean executing code from npm and downloading a browser binary, which are standard but carry the usual supply-chain/privilege risks.
Credentials
No required environment variables, credentials, or config paths are declared. The only env mentioned is an optional AGENT_BROWSER_SESSION for session selection. The SKU commands allow saving/loading state files (cookies/storage) which could contain sensitive tokens — that is a functional capability of the browser tool rather than an unexplained credential request.
Persistence & Privilege
Skill is not always-included, is user-invocable, and does not request persistent platform-level privileges. It does not attempt to modify other skills or system configuration in the instructions.
Assessment
This skill is coherent and documents usage of agent-browser CLI. Before installing or running it, verify you trust the npm package and the GitHub project (supply-chain risk), run it in an isolated environment if possible, and be cautious with state save/load files (they can contain cookies or tokens). Avoid loading auth state from untrusted sources and don't expose secret files to the tool. If you need visual debugging or screenshots for auditing, use the built-in browser tool as suggested by the SKILL.md.Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.
Current versionv1.0.0
Download ziplatest
License
MIT-0
Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.
Runtime requirements
🌐 Clawdis
SKILL.md
Agent Browser Skill
Fast browser automation using accessibility tree snapshots with refs for deterministic element selection.
Why Use This Over Built-in Browser Tool
Use agent-browser when:
- Automating multi-step workflows
- Need deterministic element selection
- Performance is critical
- Working with complex SPAs
- Need session isolation
Use built-in browser tool when:
- Need screenshots/PDFs for analysis
- Visual inspection required
- Browser extension integration needed
Core Workflow
# 1. Navigate and snapshot
agent-browser open https://example.com
agent-browser snapshot -i --json
# 2. Parse refs from JSON, then interact
agent-browser click @e2
agent-browser fill @e3 "text"
# 3. Re-snapshot after page changes
agent-browser snapshot -i --json
Key Commands
Navigation
agent-browser open <url>
agent-browser back | forward | reload | close
Snapshot (Always use -i --json)
agent-browser snapshot -i --json # Interactive elements, JSON output
agent-browser snapshot -i -c -d 5 --json # + compact, depth limit
agent-browser snapshot -s "#main" -i # Scope to selector
Interactions (Ref-based)
agent-browser click @e2
agent-browser fill @e3 "text"
agent-browser type @e3 "text"
agent-browser hover @e4
agent-browser check @e5 | uncheck @e5
agent-browser select @e6 "value"
agent-browser press "Enter"
agent-browser scroll down 500
agent-browser drag @e7 @e8
Get Information
agent-browser get text @e1 --json
agent-browser get html @e2 --json
agent-browser get value @e3 --json
agent-browser get attr @e4 "href" --json
agent-browser get title --json
agent-browser get url --json
agent-browser get count ".item" --json
Check State
agent-browser is visible @e2 --json
agent-browser is enabled @e3 --json
agent-browser is checked @e4 --json
Wait
agent-browser wait @e2 # Wait for element
agent-browser wait 1000 # Wait ms
agent-browser wait --text "Welcome" # Wait for text
agent-browser wait --url "**/dashboard" # Wait for URL
agent-browser wait --load networkidle # Wait for network
agent-browser wait --fn "window.ready === true"
Sessions (Isolated Browsers)
agent-browser --session admin open site.com
agent-browser --session user open site.com
agent-browser session list
# Or via env: AGENT_BROWSER_SESSION=admin agent-browser ...
State Persistence
agent-browser state save auth.json # Save cookies/storage
agent-browser state load auth.json # Load (skip login)
Screenshots & PDFs
agent-browser screenshot page.png
agent-browser screenshot --full page.png
agent-browser pdf page.pdf
Network Control
agent-browser network route "**/ads/*" --abort # Block
agent-browser network route "**/api/*" --body '{"x":1}' # Mock
agent-browser network requests --filter api # View
Cookies & Storage
agent-browser cookies # Get all
agent-browser cookies set name value
agent-browser storage local key # Get localStorage
agent-browser storage local set key val
Tabs & Frames
agent-browser tab new https://example.com
agent-browser tab 2 # Switch to tab
agent-browser frame @e5 # Switch to iframe
agent-browser frame main # Back to main
Snapshot Output Format
{
"success": true,
"data": {
"snapshot": "...",
"refs": {
"e1": {"role": "heading", "name": "Example Domain"},
"e2": {"role": "button", "name": "Submit"},
"e3": {"role": "textbox", "name": "Email"}
}
}
}
Best Practices
- Always use
-iflag - Focus on interactive elements - Always use
--json- Easier to parse - Wait for stability -
agent-browser wait --load networkidle - Save auth state - Skip login flows with
state save/load - Use sessions - Isolate different browser contexts
- Use
--headedfor debugging - See what's happening
Example: Search and Extract
agent-browser open https://www.google.com
agent-browser snapshot -i --json
# AI identifies search box @e1
agent-browser fill @e1 "AI agents"
agent-browser press Enter
agent-browser wait --load networkidle
agent-browser snapshot -i --json
# AI identifies result refs
agent-browser get text @e3 --json
agent-browser get attr @e4 "href" --json
Example: Multi-Session Testing
# Admin session
agent-browser --session admin open app.com
agent-browser --session admin state load admin-auth.json
agent-browser --session admin snapshot -i --json
# User session (simultaneous)
agent-browser --session user open app.com
agent-browser --session user state load user-auth.json
agent-browser --session user snapshot -i --json
Installation
npm install -g agent-browser
agent-browser install # Download Chromium
agent-browser install --with-deps # Linux: + system deps
Credits
Skill created by Yossi Elkrief (@MaTriXy)
agent-browser CLI by Vercel Labs
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