| name | webapp-testing |
| description | Toolkit for interacting with and testing local web applications using Playwright. Supports verifying frontend functionality, debugging UI behavior, capturing browser screenshots, and viewing browser logs. |
Web Application Testing
When you need to test local web applications, write native Python Playwright scripts.
Helper Scripts Available:
scripts/with_server.py- Manages server lifecycle (supports multiple servers)
Always run scripts with --help first to see usage. DO NOT read the source until you try running the script first and find that a customized solution is abslutely necessary. These scripts can be very large and thus pollute your context window. They exist to be called directly as black-box scripts rather than ingested into your context window.
Decision Tree: Choosing Your Approach
User task → Is it static HTML?
├─ Yes → Read HTML file directly to identify selectors
│ ├─ Success → Write Playwright script using selectors
│ └─ Fails/Incomplete → Treat as dynamic (below)
│
└─ No (dynamic webapp) → Is the server already running?
├─ No → Run: python scripts/with_server.py --help
│ Then use the helper + write simplified Playwright script
│
└─ Yes → Reconnaissance-then-action:
1. Navigate and wait for networkidle
2. Take screenshot or inspect DOM
3. Identify selectors from rendered state
4. Execute actions with discovered selectors
Example: Using with_server.py
When you need a server, run --help first, then use the helper:
Single server:
python scripts/with_server.py --server "npm run dev" --port 5173 -- python your_automation.py
Multiple servers (e.g., backend + frontend):
python scripts/with_server.py \
--server "cd backend && python server.py" --port 3000 \
--server "cd frontend && npm run dev" --port 5173 \
-- python your_automation.py
Your automation script only needs Playwright logic (servers are managed for you):
from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright
with sync_playwright() as p:
browser = p.chromium.launch(headless=True) # Always launch chromium in headless mode
page = browser.new_page()
page.goto('http://localhost:5173') # Server already running and ready
page.wait_for_load_state('networkidle') # CRITICAL: Wait for JS to execute
# ... your automation logic
browser.close()
Reconnaissance-Then-Action Pattern
Inspect rendered DOM:
page.screenshot(path='/tmp/inspect.png', full_page=True) content = page.content() page.locator('button').all()Identify selectors from inspection results
Execute actions using discovered selectors
Common Pitfall
❌ Don't inspect the DOM before waiting for networkidle on dynamic apps
✅ Do wait for page.wait_for_load_state('networkidle') before inspection
Best Practices
- Use bundled scripts as black boxes - When you need to accomplish something, consider whether one of the scripts available in
scripts/can help. These scripts handle common, complex workflows reliably without cluttering your context window. Use--helpto see usage, then invoke directly. - Use
sync_playwright()for synchronous scripts - Always close the browser when done
- Use descriptive selectors:
text=,role=, CSS selectors, or IDs - Add appropriate waits:
page.wait_for_selector()orpage.wait_for_timeout()
Reference Files
- examples/ - Examples showing common patterns:
element_discovery.py- Discovering buttons, links, and inputs on a pagestatic_html_automation.py- Using file:// URLs for local HTMLconsole_logging.py- Capturing console logs during automation