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8.1 KiB
Markdown
248 lines
No EOL
8.1 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Chrome DevTools Extension
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description: Add Chrome DevTools MCP Server as a Goose Extension
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---
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import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs';
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import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem';
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import GooseDesktopInstaller from '@site/src/components/GooseDesktopInstaller';
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This tutorial covers how to add the Chrome DevTools MCP Server as a Goose extension to enable browser automation, web performance testing, and interactive web application debugging in a Chrome browser.
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:::tip TLDR
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<Tabs groupId="interface">
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<TabItem value="ui" label="goose Desktop" default>
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[Launch the installer](goose://extension?cmd=npx&arg=-y&arg=chrome-devtools-mcp%40latest&id=chrome-devtools&name=Chrome%20DevTools&description=Browser%20automation%20and%20web%20performance%20testing%20capabilities)
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</TabItem>
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<TabItem value="cli" label="goose CLI">
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**Command**
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```sh
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npx -y chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
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```
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</TabItem>
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</Tabs>
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:::
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## Configuration
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:::info
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Note that you'll need [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) installed on your system to run this command, as it uses `npx`.
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:::
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<Tabs groupId="interface">
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<TabItem value="ui" label="goose Desktop" default>
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<GooseDesktopInstaller
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extensionId="chrome-devtools"
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extensionName="Chrome DevTools"
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description="Browser automation and web performance testing capabilities"
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command="npx"
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args={["-y", "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest"]}
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cliCommand="npx -y chrome-devtools-mcp@latest"
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timeout={300}
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note="Note that you'll need Node.js installed on your system to run this command, as it uses npx."
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/>
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</TabItem>
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<TabItem value="cli" label="goose CLI">
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1. Run the `configure` command:
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```sh
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goose configure
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```
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2. Choose to add a `Command-line Extension`
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```sh
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┌ goose-configure
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│
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◇ What would you like to configure?
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│ Add Extension (Connect to a new extension)
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│
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◆ What type of extension would you like to add?
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│ ○ Built-in Extension
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// highlight-start
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│ ● Command-line Extension (Run a local command or script)
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// highlight-end
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│ ○ Remote Extension (SSE)
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│ ○ Remote Extension (Streaming HTTP)
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└
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```
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3. Give your extension a name
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```sh
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┌ goose-configure
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│
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◇ What would you like to configure?
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│ Add Extension (Connect to a new extension)
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│
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◇ What type of extension would you like to add?
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│ Command-line Extension
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│
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// highlight-start
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◆ What would you like to call this extension?
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│ chrome-devtools
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// highlight-end
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└
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```
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4. Enter the command
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```sh
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┌ goose-configure
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│
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◇ What would you like to configure?
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│ Add Extension (Connect to a new extension)
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│
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◇ What type of extension would you like to add?
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│ Command-line Extension
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│
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◇ What would you like to call this extension?
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│ chrome-devtools
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│
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// highlight-start
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◆ What command should be run?
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│ npx -y chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
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// highlight-end
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└
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```
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5. Enter the number of seconds Goose should wait for actions to complete before timing out. Default is 300s
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```sh
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┌ goose-configure
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│
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◇ What would you like to configure?
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│ Add Extension (Connect to a new extension)
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│
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◇ What type of extension would you like to add?
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│ Command-line Extension
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│
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◇ What would you like to call this extension?
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│ chrome-devtools
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│
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◇ What command should be run?
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│ npx -y chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
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│
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// highlight-start
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◆ Please set the timeout for this tool (in secs):
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│ 300
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// highlight-end
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│
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└
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```
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6. Choose to add a description. If you select "Yes" here, you will be prompted to enter a description for the extension.
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```sh
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┌ goose-configure
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│
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◇ What would you like to configure?
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│ Add Extension (Connect to a new extension)
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│
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◇ What type of extension would you like to add?
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│ Command-line Extension
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│
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◇ What would you like to call this extension?
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│ chrome-devtools
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│
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◇ What command should be run?
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│ npx -y chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
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│
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◇ Please set the timeout for this tool (in secs):
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│ 300
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│
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// highlight-start
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◇ Would you like to add a description?
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│ No
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// highlight-end
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│
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└
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```
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7. Choose No when asked to add environment variables
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```sh
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┌ goose-configure
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│
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◇ What would you like to configure?
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│ Add Extension (Connect to a new extension)
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│
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◇ What type of extension would you like to add?
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│ Command-line Extension
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│
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◇ What would you like to call this extension?
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│ chrome-devtools
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│
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◇ What command should be run?
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│ npx -y chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
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│
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◇ Please set the timeout for this tool (in secs):
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│ 300
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│
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◇ Would you like to add a description?
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│ No
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│
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// highlight-start
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◆ Would you like to add environment variables?
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│ No
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// highlight-end
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└ Added chrome-devtools extension
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```
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</TabItem>
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</Tabs>
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## Example Usage
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In this example, I'll show you how to use Goose with the Chrome DevTools Extension to perform automated performance testing on a demo website.
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### Goose Prompt
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```
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Use the chrome dev tools extension to Navigate to https://www.saucedemo.com
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Then, login as performance_glitch_user and measure the site's performance
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```
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### Goose Output
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```
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I'll help you navigate to the Sauce Demo site, login as the performance_glitch_user, and measure the performance impact. Let me start by checking what pages are currently open and then navigate to the site.
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Perfect! I can see the login page for Swag Labs. I can see that `performance_glitch_user` is one of the accepted usernames, and the password for all users is `secret_sauce`. Let me log in with these credentials and then measure the performance.
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I've successfully navigated to the Saucedemo website and logged in as the `performance_glitch_user` to measure the site's performance. Here's what I discovered:
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## Performance Analysis Results for performance_glitch_user
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### Initial Observations
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1. **Login Performance**: The initial login with the performance_glitch_user took noticeably longer than normal - the click on the Login button actually timed out after 5 seconds, indicating significant delays.
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2. **Page Load Metrics**:
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- **Total Load Time**: ~5.03 seconds (5030ms)
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- **First Paint**: 5.08 seconds
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- **First Contentful Paint**: 5.08 seconds
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- **Response Time**: 2.5ms (server response was actually fast)
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- **DOM Content Loaded**: 0.1ms
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### Performance Issues Identified
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The performance issues with the `performance_glitch_user` account appear to be **client-side rendering delays** rather than network or server issues:
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- The server responds quickly (2.5ms response time)
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- The major delay occurs in the rendering phase (5+ seconds to first paint)
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- This suggests the performance glitch is intentionally built into the client-side JavaScript execution for this specific user
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### Interactive Performance
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- **Button Clicks**: Adding items to cart works, but with noticeable delays
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- **DOM Queries**: Standard DOM operations perform normally (~0.1ms)
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- **JavaScript Execution**: Basic computations run at normal speed (~2ms for 100k operations)
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### Cart Functionality
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I was able to successfully add multiple items to the cart (the cart counter increased from 1 to 3), showing that despite the performance issues, the core functionality remains intact.
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### Conclusion
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The `performance_glitch_user` account demonstrates **intentional performance degradation** primarily affecting:
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- Initial page rendering (5+ second delays)
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- Login process (timeouts)
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- Visual feedback delays
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This makes it an excellent test account for performance testing scenarios, as it simulates real-world performance issues that users might experience with slow devices or poor network conditions, while maintaining functional correctness.
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``` |