A curated list of awesome tools, libraries, extensions, and resources for the Chrome DevTools and DevTools Protocol ecosystem.
Awesome Chrome DevTools is a curated list of tools, libraries, extensions, and educational resources centered around Chrome DevTools and the Chrome DevTools Protocol. It helps developers discover utilities for debugging, performance analysis, browser automation, and integrating DevTools with various platforms and programming languages.
Web developers, QA engineers, and software testers who use Chrome DevTools for debugging, profiling, or automating browser interactions and need to extend its capabilities.
It saves significant research time by providing a single, community-vetted directory of the best tools and libraries in the ecosystem, from learning resources to production-ready automation libraries like Puppeteer and Playwright.
Awesome tooling and resources in the Chrome DevTools & DevTools Protocol ecosystem
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Curates over 100 links across learning materials, extensions, and protocol libraries, as seen in sections like 'Learning' and 'DevTools Extensions', saving significant research time.
Lists client libraries for the Chrome DevTools Protocol in JavaScript, Python, Go, Ruby, and more, enabling automation in diverse tech stacks, detailed in the 'Libraries for driving the protocol' section.
Highlights tools like VS Code debuggers and Sublime Text extensions, enhancing debugging workflows within familiar environments, as shown in 'Chrome Debugger integration with Editors'.
Includes resources for debugging Node.js, Android, and iOS apps with DevTools, extending utility beyond web browsers, referenced in sections like 'Using DevTools frontend with other platforms'.
As a community-curated list, some entries in the 'Alumni' section are marked as unmaintained, and users must independently verify tool viability and updates.
Focuses on listing resources rather than providing hands-on tutorials, which can overwhelm newcomers; the 'Learning' section offers tips but no structured courses.
Primarily targets Chrome DevTools, with limited resources for other browsers like Firefox or Safari, as evidenced by the absence of dedicated sections for non-Chrome tools.