# Agent mode > Looking for a step-by-step walkthrough instead of a reference? > See [agent-tutorial.md](agent-tutorial.md) — it builds one end-to-end > Hacker News scenario covering the REPL, recording, replay, and the MCP > roundtrip. > > Looking for the JavaScript script format? > See [agent-script.md](agent-script.md) for the runtime contract and > primitive API. `lightpanda agent` runs a browsing agent backed by Lightpanda's headless engine. It can act as: - an **LLM agent** that drives the browser with tool calls (`--provider`), - a **scripted runner** that runs a recorded `.js` script deterministically, - a **basic REPL** for hand-driven slash commands with no LLM at all, - a **one-shot task runner** that prints a single answer to stdout (`--task`). All four modes share the same browser tools (`goto`, `click`, `fill`, `tree`, `markdown`, `search`, ...). The same set is exposed over MCP via `lightpanda mcp`, so an agent script and an MCP client see the same surface — that is also the way to drive Lightpanda from an external LLM agent (Claude Code, etc.) without giving Lightpanda its own API key. ## Quick start ```console # Interactive REPL — auto-detects an API key from your environment ./lightpanda agent # Force a specific provider ./lightpanda agent --provider anthropic # Basic REPL (no LLM, slash commands only) ./lightpanda agent --no-llm # Run a saved script, then exit ./lightpanda agent session.js # One-shot: ask a question, capture the answer on stdout ./lightpanda agent --task "what is on the front page of hn?" ``` ## Providers and API keys | Provider | Flag | API key env | |-------------|------------------------|--------------------------------------| | Anthropic | `--provider anthropic` | `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY` | | OpenAI | `--provider openai` | `OPENAI_API_KEY` | | Gemini | `--provider gemini` | `GOOGLE_API_KEY` or `GEMINI_API_KEY` | | Ollama | `--provider ollama` | none (local) | Defaults: `--model` falls back to a sensible per-provider default; in the REPL, `/provider ` and `/model ` change the current selection (Tab completes the candidates). `--base-url` overrides the API endpoint (Ollama defaults to `http://localhost:11434/v1`). ### Provider auto-detection When `--provider` is omitted, lightpanda picks one in this order, printing a one-line notice (on stderr) of what it chose: 1. **Remembered** → the provider/model you last selected with `/provider` or `/model`, persisted per-directory in `.lp-agent.zon`, as long as its key is still set. 2. **Auto-detected** → otherwise the first key found in priority order (`ANTHROPIC_API_KEY` → `GOOGLE_API_KEY`/`GEMINI_API_KEY` → `OPENAI_API_KEY`). Switch any time with `/provider` in the REPL, or override with `--provider`. 3. **No keys set** → falls back to the basic REPL (slash commands only). Natural language, `/login`, and `/acceptCookies` will reject. Ollama is never auto-detected (no env var to look at) — pass `--provider ollama`, or select it once with `/provider ollama` and it'll be remembered. `--no-llm` is the explicit bypass: it forces the basic REPL even when an API key is present or `--provider` is set. Use it to test slash commands without burning tokens, or to disable the LLM in a saved command without editing the existing flags. `--no-llm` wins over `--provider`. ## REPL Slash Commands The REPL uses a tiny slash-command language for browser actions. Each command is `/ [args]`, a `#` comment, or blank. There is no other syntax in basic REPL mode: anything that doesn't match those three forms is a parse error. Slash commands accept any of: - a single positional value, when the tool has exactly one required field — `/goto 'https://example.com'`, `/extract '{"karma":"#karma"}'`; - `key=value` pairs — values may be bare or quoted; strings with whitespace must be quoted (`/fill selector='#email' value='user@x.com'`); - a raw `{json}` blob — handed straight to the tool (`/findElement {"role":"button"}`). Tools whose selector is optional (e.g. `/click`, `/hover`, `/findElement`) have zero required fields, so they don't take a positional and must be written as `key=value`: `/click selector='a.login'`, not `/click 'a.login'`. Quoting is content-aware: `'…'`, `"…"`, and triple-quoted `'''…'''` / `"""…"""` for values that mix both quote styles or span multiple lines. Recorded JavaScript scripts use the equivalent function-call form instead of slash lines. Two slash commands have no underlying tool — they trigger an LLM turn that the agent translates into actual tool calls: | Command | Notes | |------------------|------------------------------------------------------| | `/login` | LLM-driven: fills credentials from `$LP_*` env vars. | | `/acceptCookies` | LLM-driven: dismiss the consent banner. | Both require an LLM. `--no-llm` rejects them. In the REPL (and only the REPL), a line that isn't a slash command and doesn't start with `#` is sent to the LLM as a natural-language prompt. To leave the REPL, use the `/quit` meta command. ### Example script ```console # Log into the demo and grab the dashboard title and visible cards. # Site-scoped vars (LP__) avoid collisions when you have # credentials for several sites; the unprefixed form is the fallback. /goto 'https://demo-browser.lightpanda.io/' /acceptCookies /fill selector='#email' value='$LP_DEMO_USERNAME' /fill selector='#password' value='$LP_DEMO_PASSWORD' /click selector='button[type="submit"]' /waitForSelector '.dashboard' /extract '{"title": ".dashboard h1", "cards": [".dashboard .card .name"]}' ``` `/extract` takes a JSON schema object — each value tells the extractor what to lift off the page, and the whole result is printed to stdout as a single JSON object. Supported value forms: - `""` — `textContent.trim()` of the first match (string or `null`). - `""` — the matched element's own text (only inside a `fields` block). - `[""]` — text of every match (string array). Sugar for `[{"selector": ""}]`. - `{"selector": "", "attr": ""}` — attribute of the first match. - `[{"selector": "", "fields": {…}}]` — array of records, each `fields` value resolved relative to the matched element. - Add `"limit": N` inside any array's object spec to cap matches at N (works for text, attribute, and `fields` shapes — e.g. `[{"selector": ".story .title", "limit": 5}]` for top 5 titles). Use `/extract '''…'''` (or `"""…"""`) to spread a schema across multiple lines. The schema is parsed in Zig before the page-side walker runs, so a malformed schema fails with `Error: invalid /extract schema JSON` rather than a V8 stack trace. See [agent-tutorial.md](agent-tutorial.md) section 3 for a worked example against Hacker News. ### Cross-call state with `lp.*` `/extract` and `/evaluate` each return one value per call, but real scrapes often need to carry data forward — capture a list on one page, then walk it across navigations. Two primitives keep that simple. **`save=`** on `/extract` or `/evaluate` stashes the result in a Session-scoped store keyed by `` instead of dumping it to stdout. The stored value is then exposed to every subsequent `/evaluate` as `globalThis.lp.`: ```console /goto 'https://news.ycombinator.com/' /extract save=front ''' { "stories": [{ "selector": "tr.athing", "limit": 5, "fields": { "id": {"attr": "id"}, "title": ".titleline > a" } }] } ''' /evaluate ''' console.log(lp.front.stories[0].title); ''' ``` `save=`d commands print nothing on success so scripts pipe cleanly. **Auto-sync.** Any mutation of `lp.*` inside an `/evaluate` is persisted at the end of the call. Adding a key (`lp.x = …`), updating a nested value (`lp.front.stories[0].comments = […]`), or removing a key (`delete lp.x`) all propagate to the store. The next `/evaluate` sees the update — even after a navigation, because the store lives Session-side, not on the page. **List → detail.** A common scrape captures a list, then visits each row for more data. Capture the list with `/extract save=`, then loop in `/evaluate`: read `lp.`, `goto` each row's URL, and extract the detail — `/evaluate`'s top-level `await` and full JS make the round-trip explicit. **Async evaluate.** When a scrape needs logic `/extract` can't express, `/evaluate` is the escape hatch: top-level `await` works directly — the body runs as an async function, so use `return` to produce a value. `runEval` pumps the event loop until it settles, then surfaces the resolved value (or the rejection as an error). A body with no explicit `return` resolves to `undefined`, which evaluate treats as silent. Returned objects and arrays are serialized to JSON automatically, so no `JSON.stringify` is needed. The store is **script-run scoped**: it's bound to the Session that runs the script, and goes away when that Session does. There is no cross-session persistence; if you need that, use `localStorage` (which is origin-scoped and persists across navigations within a session). ### Saving and loading From the REPL, `/save [file.js]` writes the session back to a `.js` file and `/load ` runs a script from disk against the current session. State-mutating commands (`/goto`, `/click`, `/fill`, `/scroll`, `/hover`, `/selectOption`, `/setChecked`, `/waitForSelector`, `/press`, `/evaluate`, `/extract`) are saved; read-only commands (`/tree`, `/markdown`, `/links`, `/findElement`, …) and the natural-language turns that produced them are not. Natural-language turns are saved as `// ` comments above the resulting JavaScript calls so the script stays readable. In the basic REPL (`--no-llm`) `/save` transcribes the session deterministically; with an LLM it synthesizes an equivalent idiomatic script. ### JavaScript Script Running `./lightpanda agent script.js` runs without making any LLM call. Agent scripts are plain synchronous JavaScript plus the installed Lightpanda primitives: ```js goto("https://example.com"); click({ selector: "a.login" }); evaluate("document.title"); ``` The script runs in an agent-only V8 context. It has no `window`, `document`, or DOM APIs. Browser interaction happens only through the installed primitives (`goto`, `click`, `fill`, `evaluate`, `extract`, and the other recorded browser actions). The primitives are **synchronous and blocking** — each returns its result directly, so write `const data = extract(…)`, not `await extract(…)`. There is no `async`/`await`/Promise contract around them. (`evaluate(...)` can run async JS *inside* the page, but the `evaluate(...)` call itself still returns synchronously.) It is not Node.js either: there is no `require`, `process`, `fs`, npm package loading, or Node standard library. The `evaluate(...)` primitive executes its string in the current page context; page scripts cannot see agent variables or agent primitives. Tool errors throw JavaScript exceptions and stop execution. See [agent-script.md](agent-script.md) for the full script format reference. ## REPL features - **Tab completion** (case-insensitive): cycles through `/` and meta slash commands. The dim grey suffix shown after the cursor is the first match. - **Persistent history**: stored in `.lp-history` in the working directory. - **Meta slash commands**: `/help` lists tools (`/help ` prints the JSON schema), `/provider [name]` and `/model [name]` change the active provider/model — Tab after the space completes from detected providers and the provider's fetched model list, and bare `/provider`/`/model` print the current selection — `/save [file.js]` writes the session to a script and `/load ` runs one from disk (Tab completes file paths), `/quit` exits the REPL, `/verbosity ` tunes the log level. These are REPL-only and never recorded. ``` > /goto https://example.com > /findElement role=button name=Submit > /evaluate {"script": "document.title"} > /quit ``` - **Stdout vs stderr**: the final assistant answer and data-producing slash commands (`/extract`, `/evaluate`, `/markdown`, `/tree`, …) write to stdout. Tool calls, progress, and errors go to stderr, so `lightpanda agent --task ... > out.txt` captures a clean answer. ## One-shot mode (`--task`) ```console ./lightpanda agent --provider gemini \ --task "what is the top story on news.ycombinator.com?" ``` `--task` runs a single user turn, prints the final answer on stdout, and exits. Combine with `-a ` / `--attach ` (repeatable) to feed local files to providers that accept attachments. Text files are inlined into the prompt (max 512 KiB each); binary files (`image/*`, `audio/*`, `pdf`) are base64-encoded inline (max 20 MiB each). Unsupported MIME types error out before any browser work runs. ## Driving Lightpanda from an external LLM agent When the calling agent already has its own LLM (e.g. Claude Code), use `lightpanda mcp` rather than `lightpanda agent`. The MCP server exposes the same browser tools (`goto`, `click`, `fill`, ...) listed below, so the external agent does the planning while Lightpanda only drives the browser. No `--provider` or API key is required on the Lightpanda side. ```json { "mcpServers": { "lightpanda": { "command": "/path/to/lightpanda", "args": ["mcp"] } } } ``` Tool names are camelCase and case-sensitive — there are no aliases. MCP clients must call the canonical tags (`goto`, `evaluate`, `tree`, `save`, …). For sub-task delegation in the other direction — calling Lightpanda's own LLM-driven agent in a one-shot fashion — use `--task` on stdin instead. ### Saving a script over MCP `lightpanda mcp` exposes a `save` tool so an external agent can persist the session as a `.js` script for later deterministic replay. Unlike the standalone agent's `/save`, the MCP server has no LLM of its own — the calling client holds the conversation, so it synthesizes the script and passes it in: | Tool | Args | Effect | |--------|------------------------------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | `save` | `{ path: string, script: string }` | Write `script` to `path` (relative, no `..`; created or overwritten) and return the absolute location and line count. | The tool's description carries the same synthesis guidance the agent's `/save` gives its LLM: prefer the builtins you called as tools (`goto`, `click`, `fill`, `extract`, …) as JavaScript calls, drop dead-ends, and keep `$LP_*` placeholders. Any literal `LP_*` value is scrubbed back to its placeholder before the file is written. The result runs without an LLM via `./lightpanda agent session.js`. ## Browser tools The agent and MCP server share the tool set defined in `src/browser/tools.zig`. Highlights: - `goto`, `search` (Google with DuckDuckGo fallback on captcha) - `tree`, `markdown`, `links`, `interactiveElements`, `structuredData`, `detectForms`, `nodeDetails`, `findElement` - `click`, `fill`, `hover`, `press`, `scroll`, `selectOption`, `setChecked`, `waitForSelector` - `evaluate`, `consoleLogs`, `getUrl`, `getCookies`, `getEnv` Selectors prefer CSS over `backendNodeId` for the click-family tools, since node IDs are invalidated by any DOM mutation. The system prompt enforces this for the LLM. ## Security notes - The agent treats page content as untrusted data, not instructions. URLs surfaced by a page are not followed unless they match the user's task. - `$LP_*` environment variable references in `/fill` values are resolved at execution time inside the subprocess, so credentials never enter the LLM context. Conventional naming for site-scoped values is `LP__` (e.g. `LP_HN_USERNAME`, `LP_GH_TOKEN`); the unprefixed `LP_USERNAME` / `LP_PASSWORD` form is the generic fallback. - The `getEnv` tool only reads variables whose name starts with `LP_`. Everything else (provider API keys, system env, third-party secrets) reports "not set" so the model can't probe for it. The user controls what lives under `LP_*`. Note that `getEnv` returns the *value* to the model — fine for non-secret config like base URLs, but never call it on credentials (use `$LP_*` placeholders in fill values instead). - `--obey-robots`, `--http-proxy`, `--user-agent`, and the rest of the browser-level CLI flags apply to `agent` the same way they apply to `serve`, `fetch`, and `mcp`. - REPL prompts are persisted to `.lp-history` in the current working directory in plaintext (no encryption). Anything you type at the prompt — including natural-language context that accompanies a `/login` — lands in that file. Delete it or move out of sensitive directories if you don't want it retained. - `save` rejects empty, absolute, and `..` paths, but does **not** follow up on symlinks. On a shared filesystem, a pre-existing symlink at the target would be written through to whatever it points at. Prefer a fresh directory you own when saving in untrusted environments.