argent-metro-debugger

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Debug a JS runtime via CDP using argent debugger tools. Primary path is React Native via Metro (iOS / Android); a subset of the tools (debugger-connect, debugger-status, debugger-evaluate, debugger-log-registry) also drive a Chromium (CDP) app's renderer (an Electron app, or any Chromium browser exposing CDP) through the same surface. Use when connecting to the runtime, inspecting React components, reading console logs, or evaluating JavaScript.

software-mansion By software-mansion schedule Updated 6/15/2026

name: argent-metro-debugger description: Debug a JS runtime via CDP using argent debugger tools. Primary path is React Native via Metro (iOS / Android); a subset of the tools (debugger-connect, debugger-status, debugger-evaluate, debugger-log-registry) also drive an Electron app's renderer through the same surface. Use when connecting to the runtime, inspecting React components, reading console logs, or evaluating JavaScript.

1. Prerequisites

For React Native (iOS / Android): requires Metro dev server running (default localhost:8081) and a React Native app connected to Metro (at least one CDP target). Verify via debugger-status.

For Electron: requires an Electron app already booted via boot-device with electronAppPath. The debugger re-uses the page CDP session that boot opens — port is ignored, device_id is the electron-cdp-<port> value returned by boot-device. Only debugger-connect, debugger-status, debugger-evaluate, and debugger-log-registry work on Electron; debugger-component-tree, debugger-reload-metro, debugger-inspect-element, the view-network-* tools, and the react-profiler-* / profiler-* tools are RN-only and reject Electron at the capability gate with Tool 'X' is not supported on electron app.

Android: reverse port for Metro

Android emulators and physical devices do not resolve the host's localhost by default. Before the RN app can reach Metro, forward port 8081 (or whichever port Metro is on) from the device back to the host:

adb -s <serial> reverse tcp:8081 tcp:8081

<serial> is the Android serial from list-devices. Once reversed, the app on the device connects to Metro just like an iOS simulator does, and all debugger-* / network-* / react-profiler-* tools work unchanged. If the device restarts or adb drops, re-run the command. A failing Metro connection on Android almost always means adb reverse has not been done or has been lost.

2. Tool Overview

All tools accept port (default 8081) AND device_id (the iOS Simulator UDID or Android serial, a.k.a. logicalDeviceId — the CDP-reported id that matches the device). Always make sure you target the correct app on the correct device.

One Metro port can serve multiple connected devices (e.g. two simulators on localhost:8081, or an iOS simulator alongside an Android emulator with adb reverse set up). device_id pins every debugger/network/profiler call to a specific device so sessions do not collide.

Connect & diagnostics

Tool Purpose
debugger-connect Connect to the JS runtime's CDP (Metro on iOS / Android; the page CDP session on Electron). Returns port, projectRoot (empty on Electron), deviceName, appName, logicalDeviceId, isNewDebugger, connected. The returned logicalDeviceId is the device_id for every subsequent debugger call.
debugger-status Like connect + loadedScripts, enabledDomains, sourceMapReady (no-op on Electron). Use to diagnose.

Reload & recovery

Tool Purpose
debugger-reload-metro Reload all connected apps (like pressing "r" in Metro terminal). Needs a CDP target.
restart-app Terminate and relaunch the app by device id and bundleId. Use when app lost Metro connection.

Inspection & console

Tool Purpose
debugger-component-tree Full React fiber tree (names, depth, bounding rects, tap coordinates).
debugger-inspect-element Inspect at (x, y) using logical pixel coordinates (not normalized 0-1): component hierarchy with source file:line and code fragment. See references/source-maps.md.
debugger-log-registry Get log summary (counts, clusters, file path). Then use Grep/Read on the flat log file for details.
debugger-evaluate Run a JS expression in the app runtime.

3. Component Inspection

debugger-component-tree vs debugger-inspect-element

debugger-component-tree debugger-inspect-element
Best for Layout overview; finding tap targets; user-defined component hierarchy Identifying a visible element and tracing it to its source file
Use when "What's on screen and where?" "What component is this and where is it defined?"

Both can point to source files, but inspect-element is purpose-built for source tracing. component-tree is for orientation and tap-target discovery.

includeSkipped guidance

Applies to both debugger-component-tree and debugger-inspect-element. Set to true only when debugging filter behavior — e.g., an expected component is missing from output, or you need to inspect a very specific branch of the tree (not just an overview).

Warning: Output can be very large. Always combine with maxNodes (component-tree) or maxItems (inspect-element) and increase it incrementally (e.g., start at 50, then grow). Do not use includeSkipped without a limit on large apps.


4. Golden Rules

  1. debugger-status first when something fails — it runs discovery, connection, and returns diagnostics.
  2. "No CDP targets" → get the app to connect to Metro — use restart-app on the device, then retry debugger-status.
  3. Never assume one failure is permanent — follow recovery steps before asking the user. For starting Metro and full failure recovery, see argent-react-native-app-workflow and references/failure-scenarios.md.

5. Reading Console Logs (Log Registry)

Logs are written to a flat log file on disk. Use the log-registry → grep pattern instead of reading logs inline.

Workflow

  1. Call debugger-log-registry — returns: file (log path), totalEntries, byLevel, clusters (top message groups with counts and source file info)
  2. Search the file using Grep or Read with patterns from the response.

Large log files: If totalEntries exceeds 10 000, delegate the grep exploration to an Explore subagent — pass it the file path, the entry format, and the patterns you need.

Flat log format

One entry per line — fields (whitespace-separated, | delimiter before message)

Field Example Notes
[L:<id>] [L:42] Unique grep anchor
<timestamp> 2026-03-17T14:30:00.000Z ISO 8601
<LEVEL> ERROR, WARN , LOG Uppercase, padded to 5 chars
<source> src/api/user.ts:42 or - Relative path from source map; - if unavailable
<message> Failed login attempt Full message; embedded newlines replaced with space

Source attribution (file + line) is also available in clusters returned by debugger-log-registry.

Log files and messages can be large - Always scope your search, treat the file like a database, not a document.

When reading from the log file:

  • Never Read the log file directly. Use grep or shell commands with limits using the above file format tips.
  • Default to -m 50 unless you need more.
  • Use tail -N recent entries.
  • clusters[].message gives you the exact text which you may look for

If the file is too large Delegate to an Explore subagent with the file path, the format spec above, and the specific patterns you need.


Quick Reference

Action Tool
Diagnose / check connection debugger-status
Connect to CDP (Metro / Electron) debugger-connect
Reload JS (already connected) debugger-reload-metro
Relaunch app on device restart-app
Inspect component at point debugger-inspect-element
Full component tree debugger-component-tree
Console log overview debugger-log-registry (summary + log file path for Grep/Read)
Evaluate JS debugger-evaluate
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/software-mansion/argent --skill argent-metro-debugger
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