DevTools API

Warning

Deprecated: This feature is no longer recommended. Though some browsers might still support it, it may have already been removed from the relevant web standards, may be in the process of being dropped, or may only be kept for compatibility purposes. Avoid using it, and update existing code if possible; see the compatibility table at the bottom of this page to guide your decision. Be aware that this feature may cease to work at any time.

Warning

The DevTools API is still WIP. If you notice any inconsistency, please let The Firefox Developer Tools Team know.

While this api is currently a work-in-progress, there are usable portions of page inspector and debugger that may be used currently.

Introduction

The DevTools API provides a way to register and access developer tools in Firefox.

In terms of User Interface, each registered tool lives in its own tab (we call one tab a panel). These tabs are located in a box we call a Toolbox. A toolbox can be hosted within a browser tab (at the bottom or on the side), or in its own window (we say that the toolbox is undocked). A Toolbox (and all the tools it contains) is linked to a Target, which is the object the tools are debugging. A target is usually a web page (a tab), but can be other things (a chrome window, a remote tab,…).

In terms of code, each tool has to provide a ToolDefinition object. A definition is a JS light object that exposes different information about the tool (like its name and its icon), and a build method that will be used later-on to start an instance of this tool. The gDevTools global object provides methods to register a tool definition and to access tool instances. An instance of a tool is called a ToolPanel. The ToolPanel is built only when the tool is selected (not when the toolbox is opened). There is no way to “close/destroy” a ToolPanel. The only way to close a toolPanel is to close its containing toolbox. All these objects implement the EventEmitter interface.

API

gDevTools

The gDevTools API can be used to register new tools, themes and handle toolboxes for different tabs and windows. To use the gDevTools API from an add-on, it can be imported with following snippet

const { gDevTools } = require("resource:///modules/devtools/gDevTools.jsm");

Methods

registerTool(toolDefinition)

Registers a new tool and adds a tab to each existing toolbox.

Parameters:

  • toolDefinition {ToolDefinition} - An object that contains information about the tool. See ToolDefinition for details.

unregisterTool(toolId)

Unregisters the given tool and removes it from all toolboxes.

Parameters:

  • tool {ToolDefinition|String} - The tool definition object or the id of the tool to unregister.

registerTheme(themeDefinition)

Registers a new theme.

Parameters:

  • themeDefinition {ThemeDefinition} - An object that contains information about the theme.

unregisterTheme(theme)

Unregisters the given theme.

Parameters:

  • theme {ThemeDefinition|String} - The theme definition object or the theme identifier.

showToolbox(commands[, toolId [, hostType [, hostOptions]]])

Opens a toolbox for given target either by creating a new one or activating an existing one.

Parameters:

  • commands {Object} - The commands object designating which debugging context the toolbox will debug.

  • toolId {String} - The tool that should be activated. If unspecified the previously active tool is shown.

  • hostType {String} - The position the toolbox will be placed. One of bottom, side, window, custom. See HostType for details.

  • hostOptions {Object} - An options object passed to the selected host. See HostType for details.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled with the Toolbox instance once it has been initialized and the selected tool is loaded.

getToolbox(target)

Fetch the Toolbox object for the given target.

Parameters:

  • target {Target} - The target the toolbox is debugging.

Return value: Toolbox object or undefined if there’s no toolbox for the given target..

closeToolbox(target)

Closes the toolbox for given target.

Parameters:

  • target {Target} - The target of the toolbox that should be closed.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled once the toolbox has been destroyed.

getDefaultTools()

Returns an Array of ToolDefinition objects for the built-in tools.

getAdditionalTools()

Returns an Array of ToolDefinition objects for tools added by addons.

getToolDefinition(toolId)

Fetch the ToolDefinition object for a tool if it exists and is enabled.

Parameters:

  • toolId {String} - The ID of the tool.

Return value: A ToolDefinition if a tool with the given ID exists and is enabled, null otherwise.

getToolDefinitionMap()

Returns a toolId → ToolDefinition map for tools that are enabled.

getToolDefinitionArray()

Returns an Array of ToolDefinition objects for enabled tools sorted by the order they appear in the toolbox.

getThemeDefinition(themeId)

Fetch the ThemeDefinition object for the theme with the given id.

Parameters:

  • themeId {String} - The ID of the theme.

Return value: A ThemeDefinition object if the theme exists, null otherwise.

getThemeDefinitionMap()

Returns a toolId → ThemeDefinition map for available themes.

getThemeDefinitionArray()

Returns an Array of ThemeDefinition objects for available themes.

Events

Following events are emitted by the gDevTools object via the EventEmitter interface.

tool-registered (toolId)

A new tool has been registered.

tool-unregistered(tool)

A tool has been unregistered. The parameter is a ToolDefinition object.

theme-registered(themeId)

A new theme has been registered.

theme-unregistered(theme)

A theme has been unregistered. The parameter is a ThemeDefinition object.

toolbox-ready(toolbox)

A new toolbox has been created and is ready to use. The parameter is a Toolbox object instance.

toolbox-destroy(target)

The toolbox for the specified target is about to be destroyed.

toolbox-destroyed(target)

The toolbox for the specified target has been destroyed.

{toolId}-init(toolbox, iframe)

A tool with the given ID has began to load in the given toolbox to the given frame.

{toolId}-build(toolbox, panel)

A tool with the given ID has began to initialize in the given toolbox. The panel is the object returned by the ToolDefinition.build() method.

{toolId}-ready(toolbox, panel)

A tool with the given ID has finished its initialization and is ready to be used. The panel is the object returned by the ToolDefinition.build() method.

{toolId}-destroy(toolbox, panel)

A tool with the given ID is about to be destroyed. The panel is the object returned by the ToolDefinition.build() method.

Toolbox

A Toolbox is a frame for the ToolPanel that is debugging a specific target.

Properties

target

Target. The Target this toolbox is debugging.

hostType

Toolbox.HostType. The type of the host this Toolbox is docked to. The value is one of the Toolbox.HostType constants.

zoomValue

The current zoom level of the Toolbox.

Constants

The Toolbox constructor contains following constant properties.

Toolbox.HostType.BOTTOM

Host type for the default toolbox host at the bottom of the browser window.

Toolbox.HostType.SIDE

Host type for the host at the side of the browser window.

Toolbox.HostType.WINDOW

Host type for the separate Toolbox window.

Toolbox.HostType.CUSTOM

Host type for a custom frame host.

Methods

getCurrentPanel()

Get the currently active ToolPanel.

Return value: The ToolPanel object that was returned from ToolPanel.build().

getPanel(toolId)

Get the ToolPanel for given tool.

Parameters:

  • toolId {String} - The tool identifier.

Return value: The ToolPanel object if the tool with the given toolId is active, otherwise undefined.

getPanelWhenReady(toolId)

Similar to getPanel() but waits for the tool to load first. If the tool is not already loaded or currently loading the returned Promise won’t be fulfilled until something triggers the tool to load.

Parameters:

  • toolId {String} - The tool identifier.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled with the ToolPanel object once the tool has finished loading.

getToolPanels()

Returns a toolIdToolPanel Map for currently loaded tools.

getNotificationBox()

Returns a XULElem("notificationbox") element for the Toolbox that can be used to display notifications to the user.

loadTool(toolId)

Loads the tool with the given toolId in the background but does not activate it.

Parameters:

  • toolId {String} - The tool identifier.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled with the ToolPanel object of the loaded panel once the tool has loaded.

selectTool(toolId)

Selects the tool with the given toolId.

Parameters:

  • toolId {String} - The tool identifier.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled with the ToolPanel object of the selected panel once the tool has loaded and activated.

selectNextTool()

Selects the next tool in the Toolbox.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled with the ToolPanel object of the selected panel.

selectPreviousTool()

Selects the previous tool in the Toolbox.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled with the ToolPanel object of the selected panel.

highlightTool(toolId)

Highlights the tab for the given tool.

Parameters:

  • toolId {String} - The tool to highlight.

unhighlightTool(toolId)

Unhighlights the tab for the given tool.

Parameters:

  • toolId {String} - The tool to unhighlight.

openSplitConsole()

Opens the split Console to the bottom of the toolbox.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled once the Console has loaded.

closeSplitConsole()

Closes the split console.

toggleSplitConsole()

Toggles the state of the split console.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled once the operation has finished.

switchHost(hostType)

Switches the location of the toolbox

Parameters:

  • hostType {Toolbox.HostType} - The type of the new host.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled once the new host is ready.

reloadTarget(force)

Reloads the current target of the toolbox.

Parameters:

  • force {Boolean} - If true the target is shift-reloaded i.e. the cache is bypassed during the reload.

zoomIn()

Increases the zoom level of the Toolbox document.

zoomOut()

Decreases the zoom level of the Toolbox document.

zoomReset()

Resets the zoom level of the Toolbox document.

setZoom(value)

Set the zoom level to an arbitrary value.

Parameters:

  • value {Number} - The zoom level such as 1.2.

destroy()

Closes the toolbox.

Return value: A Promise that is resolved once the Toolbox is destroyed.

Events

The Toolbox object emits following events via the EventEmitter interface.

host-changed

The Host for this Toolbox has changed.

ready

The Toolbox is ready to use.

select(toolId)

A tool has been selected. This event is emitted before the corresponding {toolId}-selected event.

{toolId}-init(frame)

A tool is about to be loaded. The frame is the iframe element that has been created for the tool.

{toolId}-build(panel)

The frame for a tool has loaded and the ToolPanel.build() method has been called but the asynchronous initialization has not started. The parameter is a ToolPanel object.

{toolId}-ready(panel)

The asynchronous initialization for a tool has completed and it is ready to be used. The parameter is a ToolPanel object.

{toolId}-selected(panel)

A tool has been selected. The parameter is a ToolPanel object.

{toolId}-destroy(panel)

A tool is about to be destroyed. The parameter is a ToolPanel object.

destroy

The Toolbox is about to be destroyed.

destroyed

The Toolbox has been destroyed.

ToolDefinition

A ToolDefinition object contains all the required information for a tool to be shown in the toolbox.

Methods

isToolSupported(toolbox)

A method that is called during toolbox construction to check if the tool supports debugging the given target of the given toolbox.

Parameters:

  • toolbox {Toolbox} - The toolbox where the tool is going to be displayed, if supported.

Return value: A boolean indicating if the tool supports the given toolbox’s target.

build(window, toolbox)

A method that builds the ToolPanel for this tool.

Parameters:

  • window {Window} - The Window object for frame the tool is being built into.

  • toolbox {Toolbox} - The Toolbox the tool is being built for.

Return value: A ToolPanel for the tool.

onKey(panel, toolbox)

Optional. A method that is called when the keyboard shortcut for the tool is activated while the tool is the active tool.

Parameters:

  • panel {ToolPanel} - The ToolPanel for the tool.

  • toolbox {Toolbox} - The toolbox for the shortcut was triggered for.

Return value: Undefined.

Properties

The ToolDefinition object can contain following properties. Most of them are optional and can be used to customize the presence of the tool in the Browser and the Toolbox.

id

String, required. An unique identifier for the tool. It must be a valid id for an HTML Element.

url

String, required. An URL of the panel document.

label

String, optional. The tool’s name. If undefined the icon should be specified.

tooltip

String, optional. The tooltip for the tool’s tab.

panelLabel

String, optional. An accessibility label for the panel.

ordinal

Integer, optional. The position of the tool’s tab within the toolbox. Default: 99

visibilityswitch

String, optional. A preference name that controls the visibility of the tool. Default: devtools.{id}.enabled

icon

String, optional. An URL for the icon to show in the toolbox tab. If undefined the label should be defined.

highlightedicon

String, optional. An URL for an icon that is to be used when the tool is highlighted (see e.g. paused, inactive debugger). Default: {icon}

iconOnly

Boolean, optional. If true, the label won’t be shown in the tool’s tab. Default: false

invertIconForLightTheme

Boolean, optional. If true the colors of the icon will be inverted for the light theme. Default: false

key

String, optional. The key used for keyboard shortcut. Either key or keycode value.

modifiers

String, optional. modifiers for the keyboard shortcut.

preventClosingOnKey

Boolean, optional. If true the tool won’t close if its keybinding is pressed while it is active. Default: false

inMenu

Boolean, optional. If true the tool will be shown in the Developer Menu. Default: false

menuLabel

String, optional. A label for the Developer Menu item. Default: {label}

accesskey

String, optional. accesskey for the Developer Menu xul:menuitem.

Example

Here’s a minimal definition for a tool.

let def = {
  id: "my-tool",
  label: "My Tool",
  icon: "chrome://browser/skin/devtools/tool-webconsole.svg",
  url: "about:blank",
  isToolSupported: toolbox => true,
  build: (window, toolbox) => new MyToolPanel(window, toolbox)
};

// Register it.
gDevTools.registerTool(def);

TargetType

FIXME:

HostType

FIXME

ToolPanel

The ToolPanel is an interface the toolbox uses to manage the panel of a tool. The object that ToolDefinition.build() returns should implement the methods described below.

Methods

open()

Optional. A method that can be used to perform asynchronous initialization. If the method returns a Promise, many operations (e.g. gDevTools.showToolbox() or toolbox.selectTool()) and events (e.g. toolbox-ready are delayed until the promise has been fulfilled.

Return value: The method should return a Promise that is resolved with the ToolPanel object once it’s ready to be used.

destroy()

A method that is called when the toolbox is closed or the tool is unregistered. If the tool needs to perform asynchronous operations during destruction the method should return a Promise that is resolved once the process is complete.

Return value: A Promise if the function performs asynchronous operations, otherwise undefined.

Example

Here’s a basic template for a ToolPanel implementation.

// In the ToolDefinition object, do
//   build: (window, target) => new MyPanel(window, target),

function MyPanel(window, target) {
  // The window object that has loaded the URL defined in the ToolDefinition
  this.window = window;
  // The Target this toolbox is debugging.
  this.target = target;

  // Do synchronous initialization here.
  window.document.body.addEventListener("click", this.handleClick);
}

MyPanel.prototype = {
  open: function() {
    // Any asynchronous operations should be done here.
    return this.doSomethingAsynchronous()
      .then(() => this);
  },

  destroy: function() {
    // Synchronous destruction.
    this.window.document.body.removeEventListener("click", this.handleClick);

    // Async destruction.
    return this.destroySomethingAsynchronously()
      .then(() => console.log("destroyed"));
  },

  handleClick: function(event) {
    console.log("Clicked", event.originalTarget);
  },
};

EventEmitter

EventEmitter is an interface many Developer Tool classes and objects implement and use to notify others about changes in their internal state.

When an event is emitted on the EventEmitter, the listeners will be called with the event name as the first argument and the extra arguments are spread as the remaining parameters.

Note

Some components use Add-on SDK event module instead of the DevTools EventEmitter. Unfortunately, their API’s are a bit different and it’s not always evident which one a certain component is using. The main differences between the two modules are that the first parameter for Add-on SDK events is the first payload argument instead of the event name and the once method does not return a Promise. The work for unifying the event paradigms is ongoing in bug 952653.

Methods

The following methods are available on objects that have been decorated with the EventEmitter interface.

emit(eventName, ...extraArguments)

Emits an event with the given name to this object.

Parameters:

  • eventName {String} - The name of the event.

  • extraArguments {...Any} - Extra arguments that are passed to the listeners.

on(eventName, listener)

Adds a listener for the given event.

off(eventName, listener)

Removes the previously added listener from the event.

once(eventName, listener)

Adds a listener for the event that is removed after it has been emitted once.

Return value: A Promise that is fulfilled with the first extra argument for the event when then event is emitted. If the event contains multiple payload arguments, the rest are discarded and can only be received by providing the listener function to this method.

Examples

Here’s a few examples using the gDevTools object.

let onInit = (eventName, toolbox, netmonitor) => console.log("Netmonitor initialized!");

// Attach a listener.
gDevTools.on("netmonitor-init", onInit);

// Remove a listener.
gDevTools.off("netmonitor-init", onInit);

// Attach a one time listener.
gDevTools.once("netmonitor-init", (eventName, toolbox, netmonitor) => {
  console.log("Network Monitor initialized once!", toolbox, netmonitor);
});

// Use the Promise returned by the once method.
gDevTools.once("netmonitor-init").then(toolbox => {
  // Note that the second argument is not available here.
  console.log("Network Monitor initialized to toolbox", toolbox);
});

ToolSidebar

To build a sidebar in your tool, first, add a xul:tabbox where you want the sidebar to live:

<splitter class="devtools-side-splitter"/>
<tabbox id="mytool-sidebar" class="devtools-sidebar-tabs" hidden="true">
  <tabs/>
  <tabpanels flex="1"/>
</tabbox>

A sidebar is composed of tabs. Each tab will hold an iframe. For example, in the Inspector, there are 3 tabs (Computed View, Rule View, Layout View). The user can select the tab they want to see.

If the availability of the tabs depends on some tool-related conditions, we might want to not let the user select a tab. This API provides methods to hide the tabstripe. For example, in the Web Console, there are 2 views (Network View and Object View). These views are only available in certain conditions controlled by the WebConsole code. So it’s up the WebConsole the hide and show the sidebar, and select the correct tab.

If the loaded document exposes a window.setPanel(ToolPanel) function, the sidebar will call it once the document is loaded.

Methods

Method

Description

new ToolSidebar(xul:tabbox, ToolPanel, uid, showTabstripe=true)

ToolSidebar constructor

void addTab(tabId, url, selected=false)

Add a tab in the sidebar

void select(tabId)

Select a tab

void hide()

Hide the sidebar

void show()

Show the sidebar

void toggle()

Toggle the sidebar

void getWindowForTab(tabId)

Get the iframe containing the tab content

tabId getCurrentTabID()

Return the id of tabId of the current tab

tabbox getTab(tabId)

Return a tab given its id

destroy()

Destroy the ToolSidebar object

Events

Events

Description

new-tab-registered

A new tab has been added

{tabId}-ready

Tab is loaded and can be used

{tabId}-selected

Tab has been selected and is visible

{tabId}-unselected

Tab has been unselected and is not visible

show

The sidebar has been opened.

hide

The sidebar has been closed.

Examples

Register a tool

gDevTools.registerTool({
  // FIXME: missing key related properties.
  id: "inspector",
  icon: "chrome://browser/skin/devtools/inspector-icon.png",
  url: "chrome://browser/content/devtools/inspector/inspector.xul",
  get label() {
    let strings = Services.strings.createBundle("chrome://browser/locale/devtools/inspector.properties");
    return strings.GetStringFromName("inspector.label");
  },

  isToolSupported: function(toolbox) {
    return toolbox.commands.descriptorFront.isLocalTab;
  },

  build: function(iframeWindow, toolbox, node) {
    return new InspectorPanel(iframeWindow, toolbox, node);
  }
});

Open a tool, or select it if the toolbox is already open:

let target = TargetFactory.forTab(gBrowser.selectedTab);
let toolbox = gDevTools.openToolbox(target, null, "inspector");

toolbox.once("inspector-ready", function(event, panel) {
  let inspector = toolbox.getToolPanels().get("inspector");
  inspector.selection.setNode(target, "browser-context-menu");
});

Add a sidebar to an existing tool:

let sidebar = new ToolSidebar(xulTabbox, toolPanel, "toolId");
sidebar.addTab("tab1", "chrome://browser/content/.../tab1.xhtml", true);
sidebar.addTab("tab2", "chrome://browser/content/.../tab2.xhtml", false);
sidebar.show();