A powerful browser devtools extension for debugging, visualizing, and controlling test executions in real-time.
Works with WebdriverIO, Nightwatch.js, and Selenium WebDriver (any test runner) — same backend, same UI, same capture infrastructure.
- Selective Test Rerun: Click play buttons on individual test cases, test suites, or Cucumber scenario examples to re-execute them instantly
- Smart Browser Reuse: Tests rerun in the same browser window without opening new tabs, improving performance and user experience
- Stop Test Execution: Terminate running tests with proper process cleanup using the stop button
- Test List Preservation: All tests remain visible in the sidebar during reruns, maintaining full context
- Mocha: Full support with grep-based filtering for test/suite execution
- Jasmine: Complete integration with grep-based filtering
- Cucumber: Scenario-level and example-specific execution with feature:line targeting
- Live Browser Preview: View the application under test in a scaled iframe with automatic screenshot updates
- Actions Timeline: Command-by-command execution log with timestamps and parameters
- Test Hierarchy: Nested test suite and test case tree view with status indicators
- Live Status Updates: Immediate spinner icons and visual feedback when tests start/stop
- Command Logging: Detailed capture of all WebDriver commands with arguments and results
- Screenshot Capture: Automatic screenshots after each command for visual debugging
- Source Code Mapping: View the exact line of code that triggered each command
- Console Logs: Capture and display application console output with timestamps and log levels
- Network Logs: Monitor and inspect HTTP requests/responses including headers, payloads, timing, and status codes
- Error Tracking: Full error messages and stack traces for failed tests
- Global Test Running State: All play buttons automatically disable during test execution to prevent conflicts
- Immediate Feedback: Spinner icons update instantly when tests start
- Actions Tab Auto-Clear: Execution data automatically clears and refreshes on reruns
- Metadata Tracking: Test duration, status, and execution timestamps
- Automatic Video Recording: Captures a continuous
.webmvideo of the browser session alongside the existing snapshot and DOM mutation views - Per-framework modes:
- WebdriverIO: CDP push mode for Chrome/Chromium (efficient, no per-command overhead); polling fallback for other browsers
- Selenium WebDriver: CDP push mode via
selenium-webdriver/bidi; polling fallback otherwise - Nightwatch.js: Polling mode (Nightwatch doesn't expose a stable CDP escape hatch); works on every browser Nightwatch supports
- Per-Session Videos: Each browser session (including sessions created by
browser.reloadSession()) produces its own recording, selectable from a dropdown in the UI - Smart Trimming: Leading blank frames before the first URL navigation are automatically removed so videos start at the first meaningful page action
For setup, configuration options, and prerequisites see each adapter's README: WebdriverIO · Selenium · Nightwatch.
- When the bug icon appears: Only on test/suite rows in a
failedstate and the icon sits next to ▶ on hover, available wherever a plain rerun is supported (e.g. Cucumber scenarios at the scenario row, Mocha tests at the test or suite row) - Side-by-side diff: Click the bug-play icon on a failed test to snapshot the failing run and rerun in one action and the Compare tab shows the two runs aligned by command, with the failure point and assertion error (Expected vs Received) called out
- Diagnose flaky tests: See exactly which command differed between a pass and a fail without re-reading logs
- Pop out: Open the comparison in a separate, themed window for a roomier view
Available across WebdriverIO, Selenium WebDriver, and Nightwatch.js. The rerun mechanism differs per framework (WDIO uses
--spec+ grep, Selenium substitutes a runner-specific filter flag like--grep/--testNamePattern, Nightwatch readsDEVTOOLS_RERUN_LABEL); the dashboard contract is identical.
Real-time capture of browser-side events through the WebDriver BiDi protocol — entries arrive in the dashboard as they happen instead of being scraped after each command.
| Adapter | BiDi source | Default | How to enable |
|---|---|---|---|
| WebdriverIO | WDIO's native browser.on('log.entryAdded' | 'network.*') |
On | Automatic when the driver advertises BiDi (Chrome ≥114) |
| Selenium WebDriver | selenium-webdriver/bidi/{logInspector, networkInspector} |
On when available | Automatic; ensureBidiCapability sets webSocketUrl=true on the Builder |
| Nightwatch.js | Same selenium-webdriver/bidi inspectors (Nightwatch ships selenium-webdriver internally) |
Opt-in | globals: nightwatchDevtools({ bidi: true }) + desiredCapabilities: { webSocketUrl: true } |
When BiDi is active in Selenium or Nightwatch, the per-command Chrome performance-log network-capture path is gated off so requests don't appear twice in the dashboard. The attach + sink logic lives in @wdio/devtools-core's bidi.ts — same module both adapters consume.
- Code Intelligence: View test definitions directly in your editor
- Run/Debug Actions: Execute individual tests or suites with inline CodeLens actions
- Quick Navigation: Jump between test code and execution results seamlessly
- Status Indicators: Visual feedback for test pass/fail states in the editor
- Frontend: Lit web components with reactive state management (
@lit/context) - Backend: Fastify server with WebSocket streaming for real-time updates
- Shared core: All three adapters share the same capture/reporting library (
@wdio/devtools-core) —SessionCapturerBase,TestReporterBase,ScreencastRecorderBase, plus pure helpers for console/network/error/sourcemap/BiDi - Process Management: Tree-kill for proper cleanup of spawned processes
See ARCHITECTURE.md for the full package map and data flow, and CLAUDE.md for the conventions in place across the repo.
WebdriverIO:
npm install @wdio/devtools-serviceNightwatch:
npm install @wdio/nightwatch-devtoolsSelenium:
npm install @wdio/selenium-devtoolsSee the Nightwatch Integration and Selenium Integration sections for configuration details.
Add the service to your wdio.conf.js:
export const config = {
// ...
services: ['devtools']
}- Run your WebdriverIO tests
- The devtools UI automatically opens in an external browser window at
http://localhost:3000 - Tests begin executing immediately with real-time visualization
- View live browser preview, test progress, and command execution
- After initial run completes, use play buttons to rerun individual tests or suites
- Click stop button anytime to terminate running tests
- Explore actions, metadata, console logs, and source code in the workbench tabs
# Install dependencies
pnpm install
# Build all packages
pnpm build
# Run demo
pnpm demo:wdioUsing Nightwatch.js? A dedicated adapter package brings the same DevTools UI to your Nightwatch test suite with zero test code changes.
→ @wdio/nightwatch-devtools — configuration, Cucumber/BDD setup, and limitations.
Using selenium-webdriver directly — under Mocha, Jest, Cucumber, or a plain Node script? A runner-agnostic adapter brings the same DevTools UI to any Selenium test suite. The plugin auto-detects the runner and wires test boundaries; no code changes required for hook-aware runners, and a small DevTools.startTest/endTest API for plain scripts.
→ @wdio/selenium-devtools — per-runner setup, configuration options, and screencast details.
packages/
├── shared/ # Types, constants, HTTP/WS contracts — single source of truth
├── core/ # Framework-agnostic capture/reporting library (SessionCapturerBase, etc.)
├── app/ # Frontend Lit-based UI application
├── backend/ # Fastify server, WS gateway, baseline store, rerun spawner
├── script/ # Browser-injected trace collection script (runs in the page under test)
├── service/ # WebdriverIO adapter (@wdio/devtools-service)
├── nightwatch-devtools/ # Nightwatch adapter (@wdio/nightwatch-devtools)
└── selenium-devtools/ # Selenium WebDriver adapter (@wdio/selenium-devtools)
shared and core are workspace-internal ("private": true) — every consumer bundles them into its own dist/ at build time. The three adapter packages each translate framework-specific hooks into calls on core's shared capture library; backend and app import only from shared and communicate via the WS/HTTP boundary.
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.