Description
The chrome.debugger
API serves as an alternate transport for Chrome's remote debugging protocol. Use chrome.debugger
to attach to one or more tabs to instrument network interaction, debug JavaScript, mutate the DOM and CSS, and more. Use the Debuggee
property tabId
to target tabs with sendCommand
and route events by tabId
from onEvent
callbacks.
Permissions
debugger
You must declare the "debugger"
permission in your extension's manifest to use this API.
{
"name": "My extension",
...
"permissions": [
"debugger",
],
...
}
Concepts and usage
Once attached, the chrome.debugger
API lets you send Chrome DevTools Protocol
(CDP) commands to a given target. Explaining the CDP in depth is out of scope
for this documentation—to learn more about CDP check out the
official CDP documentation.
Targets
Targets represent something which is being debugged—this could include a tab,
an iframe or a worker. Each target is identified by a UUID and has an associated
type (such as iframe
, shared_worker
, and more).
Within a target, there may be multiple execution contexts—for example same process iframes don't get a unique target but are instead represented as different contexts that can be accessed from a single target.
Restricted domains
For security reasons, the chrome.debugger
API does not provide access to all Chrome DevTools
Protocol Domains. The available domains are: Accessibility,
Audits, CacheStorage, Console,
CSS, Database, Debugger, DOM,
DOMDebugger, DOMSnapshot,
Emulation, Fetch, IO, Input,
Inspector, Log, Network, Overlay,
Page, Performance, Profiler,
Runtime, Storage, Target, Tracing,
WebAudio, and WebAuthn.
Work with frames
There is not a one to one mapping of frames to targets. Within a single tab, multiple same process frames may share the same target but use a different execution context. On the other hand, a new target may be created for an out-of-process iframe.
To attach to all frames, you need to handle each type of frame separately:
Listen for the
Runtime.executionContextCreated
event to identify new execution contexts associated with same process frames.Follow the steps to attach to related targets to identify out-of-process frames.
Attach to related targets
After connecting to a target, you may want to connect to further related targets including out-of-process child frames or associated workers.
Starting in Chrome 125, the chrome.debugger
API supports flat sessions. This
lets you add additional targets as children to your main debugger session and
message them without needing another call to chrome.debugger.attach
. Instead,
you can add a sessionId
property when calling chrome.debugger.sendCommand
to
identify the child target you would like to send a command to.
To automatically attach to out of process child frames, first add a listener for
the Target.attachedToTarget
event:
chrome.debugger.onEvent.addListener((source, method, params) => {
if (method === "Target.attachedToTarget") {
// `source` identifies the parent session, but we need to construct a new
// identifier for the child session
const session = { ...source, sessionId: params.sessionId };
// Call any needed CDP commands for the child session
await chrome.debugger.sendCommand(session, "Runtime.enable");
}
});
Then, enable auto attach by sending the Target.setAutoAttach
command with
the flatten
option set to true
:
await chrome.debugger.sendCommand({ tabId }, "Target.setAutoAttach", {
autoAttach: true,
waitForDebuggerOnStart: false,
flatten: true,
filter: [{ type: "iframe", exclude: false }]
});
Examples
To try this API, install the debugger API example from the chrome-extension-samples repository.
Types
Debuggee
Debuggee identifier. Either tabId, extensionId or targetId must be specified
Properties
-
extensionId
string optional
The id of the extension which you intend to debug. Attaching to an extension background page is only possible when the
--silent-debugger-extension-api
command-line switch is used. -
tabId
number optional
The id of the tab which you intend to debug.
-
targetId
string optional
The opaque id of the debug target.
DebuggerSession
Debugger session identifier. One of tabId, extensionId or targetId must be specified. Additionally, an optional sessionId can be provided. If sessionId is specified for arguments sent from onEvent
, it means the event is coming from a child protocol session within the root debuggee session. If sessionId is specified when passed to sendCommand
, it targets a child protocol session within the root debuggee session.
Properties
-
extensionId
string optional
The id of the extension which you intend to debug. Attaching to an extension background page is only possible when the
--silent-debugger-extension-api
command-line switch is used. -
sessionId
string optional
The opaque id of the Chrome DevTools Protocol session. Identifies a child session within the root session identified by tabId, extensionId or targetId.
-
tabId
number optional
The id of the tab which you intend to debug.
-
targetId
string optional
The opaque id of the debug target.
DetachReason
Connection termination reason.
Enum
"target_closed" "canceled_by_user"
TargetInfo
Debug target information
Properties
-
attached
boolean
True if debugger is already attached.
-
extensionId
string optional
The extension id, defined if type = 'background_page'.
-
faviconUrl
string optional
Target favicon URL.
-
id
string
Target id.
-
tabId
number optional
The tab id, defined if type == 'page'.
-
title
string
Target page title.
-
type
Target type.
-
url
string
Target URL.
TargetInfoType
Target type.
Enum
"page" "background_page" "worker" "other"
Methods
attach()
chrome.debugger.attach(
target: Debuggee,
requiredVersion: string,
callback?: function,
)
Attaches debugger to the given target.
Parameters
-
target
Debugging target to which you want to attach.
-
requiredVersion
string
Required debugging protocol version ("0.1"). One can only attach to the debuggee with matching major version and greater or equal minor version. List of the protocol versions can be obtained here.
-
callback
function optional
The
callback
parameter looks like:() => void
Returns
-
Promise<void>
Chrome 96+Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.
detach()
chrome.debugger.detach(
target: Debuggee,
callback?: function,
)
Detaches debugger from the given target.
Parameters
-
target
Debugging target from which you want to detach.
-
callback
function optional
The
callback
parameter looks like:() => void
Returns
-
Promise<void>
Chrome 96+Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.
getTargets()
chrome.debugger.getTargets(
callback?: function,
)
Returns the list of available debug targets.
Parameters
-
callback
function optional
The
callback
parameter looks like:(result: TargetInfo[]) => void
-
result
Array of TargetInfo objects corresponding to the available debug targets.
-
Returns
-
Promise<TargetInfo[]>
Chrome 96+Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.
sendCommand()
chrome.debugger.sendCommand(
target: DebuggerSession,
method: string,
commandParams?: object,
callback?: function,
)
Sends given command to the debugging target.
Parameters
-
target
Debugging target to which you want to send the command.
-
method
string
Method name. Should be one of the methods defined by the remote debugging protocol.
-
commandParams
object optional
JSON object with request parameters. This object must conform to the remote debugging params scheme for given method.
-
callback
function optional
The
callback
parameter looks like:(result?: object) => void
-
result
object optional
JSON object with the response. Structure of the response varies depending on the method name and is defined by the 'returns' attribute of the command description in the remote debugging protocol.
-
Returns
-
Promise<object | undefined>
Chrome 96+Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.
Events
onDetach
chrome.debugger.onDetach.addListener(
callback: function,
)
Fired when browser terminates debugging session for the tab. This happens when either the tab is being closed or Chrome DevTools is being invoked for the attached tab.
Parameters
-
callback
function
The
callback
parameter looks like:(source: Debuggee, reason: DetachReason) => void
-
source
-
reason
-
onEvent
chrome.debugger.onEvent.addListener(
callback: function,
)
Fired whenever debugging target issues instrumentation event.
Parameters
-
callback
function
The
callback
parameter looks like:(source: DebuggerSession, method: string, params?: object) => void
-
source
-
method
string
-
params
object optional
-