Star 历史趋势
数据来源: GitHub API · 生成自 Stargazers.cn
README.md

Playwriter - For browser automation MCP

Let your agents control your own Chrome, via CLI or MCP. Your logins, extensions, cookies — already there.


Other browser MCPs spawn a fresh Chrome — no logins, no extensions, instantly flagged by bot detectors, double the memory. Playwriter connects to your running browser instead. One Chrome extension, full Playwright API, everything you're already logged into.

Installation

  1. Install Extension from Chrome Web Store

  2. Click extension icon on a tab → turns green when connected

  3. Install the CLI and start automating the browser:

    npm i -g playwriter playwriter -s 1 -e 'await page.goto("https://example.com")'
  4. Install the skill so your agent knows how to use Playwriter:

    npx -y skills add remorses/playwriter

Quick Start

playwriter browser start # starts Chrome for Testing/Chromium with bundled Playwriter extension playwriter session new # creates stateful sandbox, outputs session id (e.g. 1) playwriter -s 1 -e 'await page.goto("https://example.com")' playwriter -s 1 -e 'console.log(await snapshot({ page }))' playwriter -s 1 -e 'await page.locator("aria-ref=e5").click()'

Tip: Always use single quotes for -e to prevent bash from interpreting $, backticks, and \ in your JS code. Use double quotes for strings inside the JS.

CLI Usage

Each session has isolated state. Browser tabs are shared across sessions.

# Browser management playwriter browser start # auto-finds Chrome for Testing or Chromium, with recording flags enabled playwriter browser start /path/to/browser-binary # Session management playwriter session new # creates stateful sandbox, outputs id (e.g. 1) playwriter session list # show sessions + state keys playwriter session reset <id> # fix connection issues # Execute (always use -s) playwriter -s 1 -e 'await page.goto("https://example.com")' playwriter -s 1 -e 'await page.click("button")' playwriter -s 1 -e 'console.log(await page.title())'

Create your own page to avoid interference from other agents:

playwriter -s 1 -e 'state.myPage = await context.newPage(); await state.myPage.goto("https://example.com")'

Multiline:

playwriter -s 1 -e $' const title = await page.title(); console.log({ title, url: page.url() }); '

Examples

Variables in scope: page, context, state (persists between calls), require, and Node.js globals.

Persist data in state:

playwriter -e "state.users = await page.$$eval('.user', els => els.map(e => e.textContent))" playwriter -e "console.log(state.users)"

Intercept network requests:

playwriter -e "state.requests = []; page.on('response', r => { if (r.url().includes('/api/')) state.requests.push(r.url()) })" playwriter -e "await Promise.all([page.waitForResponse(r => r.url().includes('/api/')), page.click('button')])" playwriter -e "console.log(state.requests)"

Set breakpoints and debug:

playwriter -e "state.cdp = await getCDPSession({ page }); state.dbg = createDebugger({ cdp: state.cdp }); await state.dbg.enable()" playwriter -e "state.scripts = await state.dbg.listScripts({ search: 'app' }); console.log(state.scripts.map(s => s.url))" playwriter -e "await state.dbg.setBreakpoint({ file: state.scripts[0].url, line: 42 })"

Live edit page code:

playwriter -e "state.cdp = await getCDPSession({ page }); state.editor = createEditor({ cdp: state.cdp }); await state.editor.enable()" playwriter -e "await state.editor.edit({ url: 'https://example.com/app.js', oldString: 'const DEBUG = false', newString: 'const DEBUG = true' })"

Screenshot with labels:

playwriter -e "await screenshotWithAccessibilityLabels({ page })"

MCP Setup

Using the CLI with the skill (step 4 above) is the recommended approach. For direct MCP server configuration, see MCP.md.

Visual Labels

Vimium-style labels for AI agents to identify elements:

await screenshotWithAccessibilityLabels({ page }) // Returns screenshot + accessibility snapshot with aria-ref selectors await page.locator('aria-ref=e5').click()

Color-coded: yellow=links, orange=buttons, coral=inputs, pink=checkboxes, peach=sliders, salmon=menus, amber=tabs.

Comparison

vs Playwright MCP

Playwright MCPPlaywriter
BrowserSpawns new ChromeUses your Chrome
ExtensionsNoneYour existing ones
Login stateFreshAlready logged in
Bot detectionAlways detectedCan bypass (disconnect extension)
CollaborationSeparate windowSame browser as user

Note: Playwriter video recording is 100x more efficient than Playwright video recording, which sends base64 images for every frame.

Playwright CLIPlaywriter
BrowserSpawns new browserUses your Chrome
Login stateFreshAlready logged in
ExtensionsNoneYour existing ones
CaptchasAlways blockedBypass (disconnect extension)
CollaborationSeparate windowSame browser as user
CapabilitiesLimited command setAnything Playwright can do
Raw CDP accessNoYes
Video recordingFile-based tracingNative tab capture (30–60fps)

vs BrowserMCP

BrowserMCPPlaywriter
Tools12+ dedicated tools1 execute tool
APILimited actionsFull Playwright
Context usageHigh (tool schemas)Low
LLM knowledgeMust learn toolsAlready knows Playwright

vs Antigravity (Jetski)

JetskiPlaywriter
Tools17+ tools1 tool
SubagentSpawns for each browser taskDirect execution
LatencyHigh (agent overhead)Low

vs Claude Browser Extension

Claude ExtensionPlaywriter
Agent supportClaude onlyAny MCP client
Windows WSLNoYes
Context methodScreenshots (100KB+)A11y snapshots (5-20KB)
Playwright APINoFull
Debugger/breakpointsNoYes
Live code editingNoYes
Network interceptionLimitedFull
Raw CDP accessNoYes

vs Built-in Chrome CDP (--remote-debugging-port)

Built-in CDPPlaywriter
SetupRestart Chrome with special flagsClick extension icon
Confirmation dialogShows automation infobar agents can't dismissNo blocking dialog
Autonomous agentsInterrupted by debug bannersFully autonomous
User disruptionBanners appear mid-workflowSilent — no interruption
Existing sessionMust relaunch Chrome (lose state)Uses your running browser

Chrome's --remote-debugging-port flag shows a persistent "controlled by automated software" banner that agents cannot dismiss. It pops up in the middle of your workflow whenever you're using the browser. Playwriter runs silently — agents work autonomously without any confirmation dialogs, so you're never interrupted.

Architecture

+---------------------+     +-------------------+     +-----------------+
|   BROWSER           |     |   LOCALHOST       |     |   MCP CLIENT    |
|                     |     |                   |     |                 |
|  +---------------+  |     | WebSocket Server  |     |  +-----------+  |
|  |   Extension   |<--------->  :19988         |     |  | AI Agent  |  |
|  +-------+-------+  | WS  |                   |     |  +-----------+  |
|          |          |     |  /extension       |     |        |        |
|    chrome.debugger  |     |       |           |     |        v        |
|          v          |     |       v           |     |  +-----------+  |
|  +---------------+  |     |  /cdp/:id <--------------> |  execute  |  |
|  | Tab 1 (green) |  |     +-------------------+  WS |  +-----------+  |
|  | Tab 2 (green) |  |                               |        |        |
|  | Tab 3 (gray)  |  |     Tab 3 not controlled      |  Playwright API |
+---------------------+     (no extension click)      +-----------------+

Remote Access

Control Chrome on a remote machine over the internet using traforo tunnels:

On host:

npx -y traforo -p 19988 -t my-machine -- npx -y playwriter serve --token <secret>

From remote:

export PLAYWRITER_HOST=https://my-machine-tunnel.traforo.dev export PLAYWRITER_TOKEN=<secret> playwriter -s 1 -e 'await page.goto("https://example.com")'

Also works on a LAN without traforo (PLAYWRITER_HOST=192.168.1.10). Full guide with use cases (remote Mac mini, user support, multi-machine control): docs/remote-access.md

Security

  • Local only: WebSocket server on localhost:19988
  • Origin validation: Only our extension IDs allowed (browsers can't spoof Origin)
  • Explicit consent: Only tabs where you clicked the extension icon
  • Visible automation: Chrome shows automation banner on controlled tabs
  • No remote access: Malicious websites cannot connect

Playwright API

Connect programmatically (without CLI):

import { chromium } from 'playwright-core' import { startPlayWriterCDPRelayServer, getCdpUrl } from 'playwriter' const server = await startPlayWriterCDPRelayServer() const browser = await chromium.connectOverCDP(getCdpUrl()) const page = browser.contexts()[0].pages()[0] await page.goto('https://example.com') await page.screenshot({ path: 'screenshot.png' }) // Don't call browser.close() - it closes the user's Chrome server.close()

Or connect to a running server:

npx -y playwriter serve --host 127.0.0.1
const browser = await chromium.connectOverCDP('http://127.0.0.1:19988')

Troubleshooting

View relay server logs to debug issues:

playwriter logfile # prints the log file path # typically: ~/.playwriter/relay-server.log

The relay log contains extension, MCP and WebSocket server logs. A separate CDP JSONL log is also created alongside it (see playwriter logfile). Both are recreated on each server start.

Example: summarize CDP traffic counts by direction + method:

jq -r '.direction + "\t" + (.message.method // "response")' ~/.playwriter/cdp.jsonl | uniq -c

Support

If Playwriter is useful to you, consider sponsoring the project.

Known Issues

  • If all pages return about:blank, restart Chrome (Chrome bug in chrome.debugger API)
  • Browser may switch to light mode on connect (Playwright issue)

关于 About

Chrome extension to let agents control your browser. Runs Playwright snippets in a stateful sandbox. Available as CLI or MCP
mcpplaywright

语言 Languages

HTML55.8%
TypeScript41.4%
CSS1.4%
JavaScript0.9%
MDX0.4%

提交活跃度 Commit Activity

代码提交热力图
过去 52 周的开发活跃度
975
Total Commits
峰值: 98次/周
Less
More

核心贡献者 Contributors