--- name: browser description: Automate web browser interactions using natural language via CLI commands. Use when the user asks to browse websites, navigate web pages, extract data from websites, take screenshots, fill forms, click buttons, or interact with web applications. Supports remote Browserbase sessions with automatic CAPTCHA solving, anti-bot stealth mode, and residential proxies — ideal for scraping protected websites, bypassing bot detection, and interacting with JavaScript-heavy pages. compatibility: "Requires the browse CLI (`npm install -g @browserbasehq/browse-cli`). Optional: set BROWSERBASE_API_KEY and BROWSERBASE_PROJECT_ID for remote Browserbase sessions; falls back to local Chrome otherwise." license: MIT allowed-tools: Bash metadata: openclaw: requires: bins: - browse install: - kind: node package: "@browserbasehq/browse-cli" bins: [browse] homepage: https://github.com/browserbase/skills --- # Browser Automation Automate browser interactions using the browse CLI with Claude. ## Setup check Before running any browser commands, verify the CLI is available: ```bash which browse || npm install -g @browserbasehq/browse-cli ``` ## Environment Selection (Local vs Remote) The CLI automatically selects between local and remote browser environments based on available configuration: ### Local mode (default) - Uses local Chrome — no API keys needed - Best for: development, simple pages, trusted sites with no bot protection ### Remote mode (Browserbase) - Activated when `BROWSERBASE_API_KEY` and `BROWSERBASE_PROJECT_ID` are set - Provides: anti-bot stealth, automatic CAPTCHA solving, residential proxies, session persistence - **Use remote mode when:** the target site has bot detection, CAPTCHAs, IP rate limiting, Cloudflare protection, or requires geo-specific access - Get credentials at https://browserbase.com/settings ### When to choose which - **Simple browsing** (docs, wikis, public APIs): local mode is fine - **Protected sites** (login walls, CAPTCHAs, anti-scraping): use remote mode - **If local mode fails** with bot detection or access denied: switch to remote mode ## Commands All commands work identically in both modes. The daemon auto-starts on first command. ### Navigation ```bash browse open # Go to URL (aliases: goto) browse reload # Reload current page browse back # Go back in history browse forward # Go forward in history ``` ### Page state (prefer snapshot over screenshot) ```bash browse snapshot # Get accessibility tree with element refs (fast, structured) browse screenshot [path] # Take visual screenshot (slow, uses vision tokens) browse get url # Get current URL browse get title # Get page title browse get text # Get text content (use "body" for all text) browse get html # Get HTML content of element browse get value # Get form field value ``` Use `browse snapshot` as your default for understanding page state — it returns the accessibility tree with element refs you can use to interact. Only use `browse screenshot` when you need visual context (layout, images, debugging). ### Interaction ```bash browse click # Click element by ref from snapshot (e.g., @0-5) browse type # Type text into focused element browse fill # Fill input and press Enter browse select # Select dropdown option(s) browse press # Press key (Enter, Tab, Escape, Cmd+A, etc.) browse drag # Drag from one point to another browse scroll # Scroll at coordinates browse highlight # Highlight element on page browse is visible # Check if element is visible browse is checked # Check if element is checked browse wait [arg] # Wait for: load, selector, timeout ``` ### Session management ```bash browse stop # Stop the browser daemon browse status # Check daemon status (includes env) browse env # Show current environment (local or remote) browse env local # Switch to local Chrome browse env remote # Switch to Browserbase (requires API keys) browse pages # List all open tabs browse tab_switch # Switch to tab by index browse tab_close [index] # Close tab ``` ### Typical workflow 1. `browse open ` — navigate to the page 2. `browse snapshot` — read the accessibility tree to understand page structure and get element refs 3. `browse click ` / `browse type ` / `browse fill ` — interact using refs from snapshot 4. `browse snapshot` — confirm the action worked 5. Repeat 3-4 as needed 6. `browse stop` — close the browser when done ## Quick Example ```bash browse open https://example.com browse snapshot # see page structure + element refs browse click @0-5 # click element with ref 0-5 browse get title browse stop ``` ## Mode Comparison | Feature | Local | Browserbase | |---------|-------|-------------| | Speed | Faster | Slightly slower | | Setup | Chrome required | API key required | | Stealth mode | No | Yes (custom Chromium, anti-bot fingerprinting) | | CAPTCHA solving | No | Yes (automatic reCAPTCHA/hCaptcha) | | Residential proxies | No | Yes (201 countries, geo-targeting) | | Session persistence | No | Yes (cookies/auth persist across sessions) | | Best for | Development/simple pages | Protected sites, bot detection, production scraping | ## Best Practices 1. **Always `browse open` first** before interacting 2. **Use `browse snapshot`** to check page state — it's fast and gives you element refs 3. **Only screenshot when visual context is needed** (layout checks, images, debugging) 4. **Use refs from snapshot** to click/interact — e.g., `browse click @0-5` 5. **`browse stop`** when done to clean up the browser session ## Troubleshooting - **"No active page"**: Run `browse stop`, then check `browse status`. If it still says running, kill the zombie daemon with `pkill -f "browse.*daemon"`, then retry `browse open` - **Chrome not found**: Install Chrome or use `browse env remote` - **Action fails**: Run `browse snapshot` to see available elements and their refs - **Browserbase fails**: Verify API key and project ID are set ## Switching to Remote Mode Switch to remote when you detect: CAPTCHAs (reCAPTCHA, hCaptcha, Turnstile), bot detection pages ("Checking your browser..."), HTTP 403/429, empty pages on sites that should have content, or the user asks for it. Don't switch for simple sites (docs, wikis, public APIs, localhost). ```bash browse env remote # switch to Browserbase browse env local # switch back to local Chrome ``` The switch is sticky until you run `browse stop` or switch again. If API keys aren't set: ```bash openclaw browserbase setup # interactive — prompts for API key + project ID ``` For detailed examples, see [EXAMPLES.md](EXAMPLES.md). For API reference, see [REFERENCE.md](REFERENCE.md).