react-devtools

SKILL.md

agent-react-devtools

CLI that connects to a running React or React Native app via the React DevTools protocol and exposes the component tree, props, state, hooks, and profiling data in a token-efficient format.

Core Workflow

  1. Ensure connection — check agent-react-devtools status. If the daemon is not running, start it with agent-react-devtools start. Use agent-react-devtools wait --connected to block until a React app connects.
  2. Inspect — get the component tree, search for components, inspect props/state/hooks.
  3. Profile — start profiling, trigger the interaction (or ask the user to), stop profiling, analyze results.
  4. Act — use the data to fix the bug, optimize performance, or explain what's happening.

Essential Commands

Daemon

agent-react-devtools start              # Start daemon (auto-starts on first command)
agent-react-devtools stop               # Stop daemon
agent-react-devtools status             # Check connection, component count, last event
agent-react-devtools wait --connected   # Block until a React app connects
agent-react-devtools wait --component App # Block until a component appears

Component Inspection

agent-react-devtools get tree           # Full component hierarchy (labels: @c1, @c2, ...)
agent-react-devtools get tree --depth 3 # Limit depth
agent-react-devtools get component @c5  # Props, state, hooks for a specific component
agent-react-devtools find Button        # Search by display name (fuzzy)
agent-react-devtools find Button --exact # Exact match
agent-react-devtools count              # Count by type: fn, cls, host, memo, ...

Performance Profiling

agent-react-devtools profile start              # Start recording
agent-react-devtools profile stop               # Stop and collect data
agent-react-devtools profile slow               # Slowest components by avg render time
agent-react-devtools profile slow --limit 10    # Top 10
agent-react-devtools profile rerenders          # Most re-rendered components
agent-react-devtools profile report @c5         # Detailed report for one component
agent-react-devtools profile timeline           # Chronological commit list
agent-react-devtools profile commit 3           # Detail for commit #3

Understanding the Output

Component Labels

Every component gets a stable label like @c1, @c2. Use these to reference components in follow-up commands:

@c1 [fn] App
├─ @c2 [fn] Header
├─ @c3 [fn] TodoList
│  ├─ @c4 [fn] TodoItem key=1
│  └─ @c5 [fn] TodoItem key=2
└─ @c6 [host] div

Type abbreviations: fn = function, cls = class, host = DOM element, memo = React.memo, fRef = forwardRef, susp = Suspense, ctx = context.

Inspected Component

@c3 [fn] TodoList
props:
  items: [{"id":1,"text":"Buy milk"},{"id":2,"text":"Walk dog"}]
  onDelete: ƒ
state:
  filter: "all"
hooks:
  useState: "all"
  useMemo: [...]
  useCallback: ƒ

ƒ = function value. Values over 60 chars are truncated.

Profiling Output

Slowest (by avg render time):
  @c3 [fn] ExpensiveList  avg:12.3ms  max:18.1ms  renders:47  causes:props-changed  changed: props: items, filter
  @c4 [fn] TodoItem  avg:2.1ms  max:5.0ms  renders:94  causes:parent-rendered, props-changed  changed: props: onToggle

Render causes: props-changed, state-changed, hooks-changed, parent-rendered, force-update, first-mount.

When specific changed keys are available, a changed: suffix shows exactly which props, state keys, or hooks triggered the render (e.g. changed: props: onClick, className state: count hooks: #0).

Common Patterns

Wait for the app to connect after a reload

agent-react-devtools wait --connected --timeout 10
agent-react-devtools get tree

Use this after triggering a page reload or HMR update to avoid querying empty state.

Diagnose slow interactions

agent-react-devtools profile start
# User interacts with the app (or use agent-browser to drive the UI)
agent-react-devtools profile stop
agent-react-devtools profile slow --limit 5
agent-react-devtools profile rerenders --limit 5

Then inspect the worst offenders with get component @cN and profile report @cN.

Find a component and check its state

agent-react-devtools find SearchBar
agent-react-devtools get component @c12

Verify a fix worked

agent-react-devtools profile start
# Repeat the interaction
agent-react-devtools profile stop
agent-react-devtools profile slow --limit 5
# Compare render counts and durations to the previous run

Using with agent-browser

When using agent-browser to drive the app while profiling or debugging, you must use headed mode (--headed). Headless Chromium does not execute ES module scripts the same way as a real browser, which prevents the devtools connect script from running properly.

agent-browser --session devtools --headed open http://localhost:5173/
agent-react-devtools status  # Should show 1 connected app

Important Rules

  • Labels reset when the app reloads or components unmount/remount. After a reload, use wait --connected then re-check with get tree or find.
  • status first — if status shows 0 connected apps, the React app is not connected. The user may need to run npx agent-react-devtools init in their project first.
  • Headed browser required — if using agent-browser, always use --headed mode. Headless Chromium does not properly load the devtools connect script.
  • Profile while interacting — profiling only captures renders that happen between profile start and profile stop. Make sure the relevant interaction happens during that window.
  • Use --depth on large trees — a deep tree can produce a lot of output. Start with --depth 3 or --depth 4 and go deeper only on the subtree you care about.

References

File When to read
commands.md Full command reference with all flags and edge cases
profiling-guide.md Step-by-step profiling workflows and interpreting results
setup.md How to connect different frameworks (Vite, Next.js, Expo, CRA)
Weekly Installs
38
GitHub Stars
37
First Seen
Feb 11, 2026
Installed on
codex36
opencode35
gemini-cli35
github-copilot35
amp31
kimi-cli31