Skip to main content
Glama

Peekaboo MCP

by steipete
README.md59.9 kB
# Peekaboo MCP: Lightning-fast macOS Screenshots & GUI Automation 🚀 ![Peekaboo Banner](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/steipete/peekaboo/main/assets/banner.png) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/%40steipete%2Fpeekaboo-mcp.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@steipete/peekaboo-mcp) [![License: MIT](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-MIT-yellow.svg)](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT) [![macOS](https://img.shields.io/badge/macOS-14.0%2B-blue.svg)](https://www.apple.com/macos/) [![Swift](https://img.shields.io/badge/Swift-6.0-orange.svg)](https://swift.org/) [![Node.js](https://img.shields.io/badge/node-%3E%3D20.0.0-brightgreen.svg)](https://nodejs.org/) [![Download for macOS](https://img.shields.io/badge/Download-macOS-black?logo=apple)](https://github.com/steipete/peekaboo/releases/latest) [![Homebrew](https://img.shields.io/badge/Homebrew-steipete%2Ftap-tan?logo=homebrew)](https://github.com/steipete/homebrew-tap) <a href="https://deepwiki.com/steipete/peekaboo"><img src="https://deepwiki.com/badge.svg" alt="Ask DeepWiki"></a> > 🎉 **NEW in v3**: Complete GUI automation framework with AI Agent! Click, type, scroll, and automate any macOS application using natural language. Plus comprehensive menu bar extraction without clicking! See the [GUI Automation section](#-gui-automation-with-peekaboo-v3) and [AI Agent section](#-ai-agent-automation) for details. Peekaboo is a powerful macOS utility for capturing screenshots, analyzing them with AI vision models, and now automating GUI interactions. It works both as a **standalone CLI tool** (recommended) and as an **MCP server** for AI assistants like Claude Desktop and Cursor. ## 🎯 Choose Your Path ### 🖥️ **CLI Tool** (Recommended for Most Users) Perfect for: - Command-line workflows and automation - Shell scripts and CI/CD pipelines - Quick screenshots and AI analysis - System administration tasks ### 🤖 **MCP Server** (For AI Assistants) Perfect for: - Claude Desktop integration - Cursor IDE workflows - AI agents that need visual context - Interactive AI debugging sessions ## What is Peekaboo? Peekaboo bridges the gap between visual content on your screen and AI understanding. It provides: - **Lightning-fast screenshots** of screens, applications, or specific windows - **AI-powered image analysis** using GPT-4.1 Vision, Claude, Grok, or local models (Ollama) - **Complete GUI automation** (v3) - Click, type, scroll, and interact with any macOS app - **Natural language automation** (v3) - AI agent that understands tasks like "Open TextEdit and write a poem" - **Smart UI element detection** - Automatically identifies buttons, text fields, links, and more with precise coordinate mapping - **Menu bar extraction** (v3) - Discover all menus and keyboard shortcuts without clicking or opening menus - **Automatic session resolution** - Commands intelligently use the most recent session (no manual tracking!) - **Window and application management** with smart fuzzy matching - **Multi-screen support** - List which screen windows are on and move them between displays - **Privacy-first operation** with local AI options via Ollama - **Non-intrusive capture** without changing window focus - **Automation scripting** - Chain commands together for complex workflows ### 🏗️ Architecture Peekaboo uses a modern service-based architecture: - **PeekabooCore** - Shared services for screen capture, UI automation, window management, and more - **CLI** - Command-line interface that uses PeekabooCore services directly - **Mac App** - Native macOS app with 100x+ performance improvement over CLI spawning - **MCP Server** - Model Context Protocol server for AI assistants All components share the same core services, ensuring consistent behavior and optimal performance. See [Service API Reference](docs/service-api-reference.md) for detailed documentation. ## 🚀 Quick Start: CLI Tool ### Installation ```bash # Option 1: Homebrew (Recommended) brew tap steipete/tap brew install peekaboo # Option 2: Direct Download curl -L https://github.com/steipete/peekaboo/releases/latest/download/peekaboo-macos-universal.tar.gz | tar xz sudo mv peekaboo-macos-universal/peekaboo /usr/local/bin/ # Option 3: npm (includes MCP server) npm install -g @steipete/peekaboo-mcp # Option 4: Build from source git clone https://github.com/steipete/peekaboo.git cd peekaboo ./scripts/build-cli-standalone.sh --install ``` ### Basic Usage ```bash # Capture screenshots peekaboo image --app Safari --path screenshot.png peekaboo image --mode frontmost peekaboo image --mode screen --screen-index 0 # List applications, windows, and screens peekaboo list apps peekaboo list windows --app "Visual Studio Code" peekaboo list screens # List all displays with indices for --screen-index # Analyze images with AI (use image command with --analyze) peekaboo image --analyze "What error is shown?" --path screenshot.png peekaboo image --analyze "Find all buttons" --app Safari peekaboo see --analyze "Describe this UI" --app Chrome # GUI Automation (v3) peekaboo see --app Safari # Identify UI elements peekaboo see --mode screen # Capture all screens (multi-screen) peekaboo see --mode screen --screen-index 1 # Capture specific screen peekaboo click "Submit" # Click button by text peekaboo type "Hello world" # Type at current focus peekaboo type "Line 1\nLine 2" # Type with newline (escape sequences) peekaboo press return # Press Enter key peekaboo press tab --count 3 # Press Tab 3 times peekaboo scroll --direction down --amount 5 # Scroll down 5 ticks # AI Agent - Natural language automation peekaboo "Open Safari and search for weather" peekaboo agent "Fill out the contact form" --verbose peekaboo hotkey cmd,c # Press Cmd+C # AI Agent Automation (v3) 🤖 peekaboo "Open TextEdit and write Hello World" peekaboo agent "Take a screenshot of Safari and email it" peekaboo agent --verbose "Find all Finder windows and close them" # Window Management (v3) peekaboo window close --app Safari # Close Safari window peekaboo window minimize --app Finder # Minimize Finder window peekaboo window move --app TextEdit --x 100 --y 100 peekaboo window resize --app Terminal --width 800 --height 600 peekaboo window focus --app "Visual Studio Code" # Multi-Screen Support (v3) peekaboo window resize --app Safari --target-screen 1 # Move to screen 1 peekaboo window move --app Terminal --screen-preset next # Move to next screen peekaboo window resize --app Notes --preset left_half --target-screen 0 # Space (Virtual Desktop) Management peekaboo space list # List all Spaces peekaboo space switch --to 2 # Switch to Space 2 peekaboo space move-window --app Safari --to 3 # Move Safari to Space 3 # Menu Bar Interaction (v3) peekaboo menu list --app Calculator # List all menus and items peekaboo menu list-all # List menus for frontmost app peekaboo menu click --app Safari --item "New Window" peekaboo menu click --app TextEdit --path "Format > Font > Bold" peekaboo menu click-extra --title "WiFi" # Click system menu extras # Configure settings peekaboo config init # Create config file peekaboo config edit # Edit in your editor peekaboo config show --effective # Show current settings ``` ### Debugging with Verbose Mode All Peekaboo commands support the `--verbose` or `-v` flag for detailed logging: ```bash # See what's happening under the hood peekaboo image --app Safari --verbose peekaboo see --app Terminal -v peekaboo click --on B1 --verbose # Verbose output includes: # - Application search details # - Window discovery information # - UI element detection progress # - Timing information # - Session management operations ``` Verbose logs are written to stderr with timestamps: ``` [2025-01-06T08:05:23Z] VERBOSE: Searching for application: Safari [2025-01-06T08:05:23Z] VERBOSE: Found exact bundle ID match: Safari [2025-01-06T08:05:23Z] VERBOSE: Capturing window for app: Safari [2025-01-06T08:05:23Z] VERBOSE: Found 3 windows for application ``` This is invaluable for: - Debugging automation scripts - Understanding why elements aren't found - Performance optimization - Learning Peekaboo's internals ### Configuration Peekaboo uses a unified configuration directory at `~/.peekaboo/` for better discoverability: ```bash # Create default configuration peekaboo config init # Files created: # ~/.peekaboo/config.json - Main configuration (JSONC format) # ~/.peekaboo/credentials - API keys (chmod 600) ``` #### Managing API Keys Securely ```bash # Set API key securely (stored in ~/.peekaboo/credentials) peekaboo config set-credential OPENAI_API_KEY sk-... # View current configuration (keys shown as ***SET***) peekaboo config show --effective ``` #### Example Configuration `~/.peekaboo/config.json`: ```json { // AI Provider Settings "aiProviders": { "providers": "openai/gpt-4.1,anthropic/claude-opus-4,grok/grok-4,ollama/llava:latest", // NOTE: API keys should be in ~/.peekaboo/credentials "ollamaBaseUrl": "http://localhost:11434" }, // Default Settings "defaults": { "savePath": "~/Desktop/Screenshots", "imageFormat": "png", "captureMode": "window", "captureFocus": "auto" }, // Logging "logging": { "level": "info", "path": "~/.peekaboo/logs/peekaboo.log" } } ``` `~/.peekaboo/credentials` (auto-created with proper permissions): ``` # Peekaboo credentials file # This file contains sensitive API keys and should not be shared OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-... ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=sk-ant-... X_AI_API_KEY=xai-... ``` ### Common Workflows ```bash # Capture and analyze in one command peekaboo image --app Safari --analyze "What's on this page?" --path /tmp/page.png # Monitor active window changes while true; do peekaboo image --mode frontmost --json-output | jq -r '.data.saved_files[0].window_title' sleep 5 done # Batch analyze screenshots for img in ~/Screenshots/*.png; do peekaboo image --analyze "Summarize this screenshot" --path "$img" done # Automated login workflow (v3 with automatic session resolution) peekaboo see --app MyApp # Creates new session peekaboo click --on T1 # Automatically uses session from 'see' peekaboo type "user@example.com" # Still using same session peekaboo press tab # Press Tab to move to next field peekaboo type "password123" peekaboo press return # Press Enter to submit peekaboo sleep 2000 # Wait 2 seconds # Multiple app automation with explicit sessions SESSION_A=$(peekaboo see --app Safari --json-output | jq -r '.data.session_id') SESSION_B=$(peekaboo see --app Notes --json-output | jq -r '.data.session_id') peekaboo click --on B1 --session $SESSION_A # Click in Safari peekaboo type "Hello" --session $SESSION_B # Type in Notes # Run automation script peekaboo run login.peekaboo.json ``` ## 🤖 MCP Server Setup For AI assistants like Claude Desktop and Cursor, Peekaboo provides a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. ### For Claude Desktop 1. Open Claude Desktop Settings (from the **menubar**, not the in-app settings) 2. Navigate to Developer → Edit Config 3. Add the Peekaboo MCP server configuration: ```json { "mcpServers": { "peekaboo": { "command": "npx", "args": ["-y", "@steipete/peekaboo-mcp@beta"], "env": { "PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS": "anthropic/claude-opus-4,openai/gpt-4.1,ollama/llava:latest", "OPENAI_API_KEY": "your-openai-api-key-here" } } } } ``` 4. Save and restart Claude Desktop ### For Claude Code Run the following command: ```bash claude mcp add-json peekaboo '{ "type": "stdio", "command": "npx", "args": ["-y", "@steipete/peekaboo-mcp"], "env": { "PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS": "anthropic/claude-opus-4,openai/gpt-4.1,ollama/llava:latest", "OPENAI_API_KEY": "your-openai-api-key-here" } }' ``` Alternatively, if you've already installed the server via Claude Desktop, you can import it: ```bash claude mcp add-from-claude-desktop ``` ### Local Development For local development, use the built MCP server directly: ```json { "mcpServers": { "peekaboo": { "command": "node", "args": ["/path/to/peekaboo/Server/dist/index.js"], "env": { "PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS": "anthropic/claude-opus-4" } } } } ``` ### For Cursor IDE Add to your Cursor settings: ```json { "mcpServers": { "peekaboo": { "command": "npx", "args": ["-y", "@steipete/peekaboo-mcp@beta"], "env": { "PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS": "openai/gpt-4.1,ollama/llava:latest", "OPENAI_API_KEY": "your-openai-api-key-here" } } } } ``` ## 🔗 MCP Client Integration Peekaboo v3 now functions as both an MCP server (exposing its tools) and an MCP client (consuming external tools). This enables powerful workflows that combine Peekaboo's native automation with tools from the broader MCP ecosystem. ### Default Integration: BrowserMCP Peekaboo ships with [BrowserMCP](https://browsermcp.io) enabled by default, providing browser automation capabilities via Puppeteer: ```bash # BrowserMCP tools are available immediately peekaboo tools --mcp-only # List only external MCP tools peekaboo tools --mcp browser # Show BrowserMCP tools specifically peekaboo agent "Navigate to github.com and click the sign up button" # Uses browser:navigate and browser:click ``` ### Managing External MCP Servers ```bash # List all configured servers with health status peekaboo mcp list # Add popular MCP servers peekaboo mcp add github -e GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_xxx -- npx -y @modelcontextprotocol/server-github peekaboo mcp add files -- npx -y @modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem ~/Documents # Test server connection peekaboo mcp test github --show-tools # Enable/disable servers peekaboo mcp disable browser # Disable default BrowserMCP peekaboo mcp enable github # Re-enable a server ``` ### Configuration External servers are configured in `~/.peekaboo/config.json`. To disable BrowserMCP: ```json { "mcpClients": { "browser": { "enabled": false } } } ``` ### Available External Tools All external tools are prefixed with their server name: - **browser:navigate** - Navigate to URL (BrowserMCP) - **browser:click** - Click elements on webpage (BrowserMCP) - **browser:screenshot** - Take webpage screenshot (BrowserMCP) - **github:create_issue** - Create GitHub issues (GitHub server) - **files:read_file** - Read files (Filesystem server) The AI agent automatically uses the best combination of native and external tools for each task. See [docs/mcp-client.md](docs/mcp-client.md) for complete documentation. ### MCP Tools Available #### Core Tools 1. **`image`** - Capture screenshots (with optional AI analysis via question parameter) 2. **`list`** - List applications, windows, or check server status 3. **`analyze`** - Analyze existing images with AI vision models (MCP-only tool, use `peekaboo image --analyze` in CLI) #### UI Automation Tools 4. **`see`** - Capture screen and identify UI elements 5. **`click`** - Click on UI elements or coordinates 6. **`type`** - Type text into UI elements (supports escape sequences) 7. **`press`** - Press individual keys (return, tab, escape, arrows, etc.) 8. **`scroll`** - Scroll content in any direction 9. **`hotkey`** - Press keyboard shortcuts 10. **`swipe`** - Perform swipe/drag gestures 11. **`move`** - Move mouse cursor to specific position or element 12. **`drag`** - Perform drag and drop operations #### Application & Window Management 13. **`app`** - Launch, quit, focus, hide, and manage applications 14. **`window`** - Manipulate windows (close, minimize, maximize, move, resize, focus) 15. **`menu`** - Interact with application menus and system menu extras 16. **`dock`** - Launch apps from dock and manage dock items 17. **`dialog`** - Handle dialog windows (click buttons, input text) 18. **`space`** - Manage macOS Spaces (virtual desktops) #### Utility Tools 19. **`run`** - Execute automation scripts from .peekaboo.json files 20. **`sleep`** - Pause execution for specified duration 21. **`clean`** - Clean up session cache and temporary files 22. **`permissions`** - Check system permissions (screen recording, accessibility) 23. **`agent`** - Execute complex automation tasks using AI ## 🚀 GUI Automation with Peekaboo v3 Peekaboo v3 introduces powerful GUI automation capabilities, transforming it from a screenshot tool into a complete UI automation framework for macOS. This enables AI assistants to interact with any application through natural language commands. ### How It Works The v3 automation system uses a **see-then-interact** workflow: 1. **See** - Capture the screen and identify UI elements 2. **Interact** - Click, type, scroll, or perform other actions 3. **Verify** - Capture again to confirm the action succeeded ### 🎯 The `see` Tool - UI Element Discovery The `see` tool is the foundation of GUI automation. It captures a screenshot and identifies all interactive UI elements, assigning them unique Peekaboo IDs. ```typescript // Example: See what's on screen await see({ app_target: "Safari" }) // Multi-screen support - capture all screens await see({ app_target: "" }) // Empty string captures all screens // Capture specific screen by index await see({ app_target: "screen:0" }) // Primary screen await see({ app_target: "screen:1" }) // Second screen // Returns: { screenshot_path: "/tmp/peekaboo_123.png", session_id: "session_456", elements: { buttons: [ { id: "B1", label: "Submit", bounds: { x: 100, y: 200, width: 80, height: 30 } }, { id: "B2", label: "Cancel", bounds: { x: 200, y: 200, width: 80, height: 30 } } ], text_fields: [ { id: "T1", label: "Email", value: "", bounds: { x: 100, y: 100, width: 200, height: 30 } }, { id: "T2", label: "Password", value: "", bounds: { x: 100, y: 150, width: 200, height: 30 } } ], links: [ { id: "L1", label: "Forgot password?", bounds: { x: 100, y: 250, width: 120, height: 20 } } ], // ... other elements } } ``` #### Discovering Available Screens Before capturing specific screens, you can list all connected displays: ```bash # List all screens with details peekaboo list screens # Example output: # Screens (3 total): # # 0. Built-in Display (Primary) # Resolution: 3008×1692 # Position: 0,0 # Scale: 2.0x (Retina) # Visible Area: 3008×1612 # # 1. External Display # Resolution: 3840×2160 # Position: 3008,0 # Scale: 2.0x (Retina) # # 2. Studio Display # Resolution: 5120×2880 # Position: -5120,0 # Scale: 2.0x (Retina) # # 💡 Use 'peekaboo see --screen-index N' to capture a specific screen # Get JSON output for scripting peekaboo list screens --json-output ``` This command shows: - **Screen index**: Use with `see --screen-index` or `image --screen-index` - **Display name**: Built-in, External, or specific model names - **Resolution**: Full screen resolution - **Position**: Coordinates in the unified desktop space - **Scale factor**: Retina display information - **Visible area**: Usable area (excluding menu bar on primary screen) #### Multi-Screen Capture When capturing multiple screens, Peekaboo automatically saves each screen as a separate file: - Primary screen: `screenshot.png` - Additional screens: `screenshot_screen1.png`, `screenshot_screen2.png`, etc. Display information (name, resolution) is shown for each captured screen: ``` 📸 Captured 3 screens: 🖥️ Display 0: Built-in Retina Display (2880×1800) → screenshot.png 🖥️ Display 1: LG Ultra HD (3840×2160) → screenshot_screen1.png 🖥️ Display 2: Studio Display (5120×2880) → screenshot_screen2.png ``` **Note**: Annotation is automatically disabled for full screen captures due to performance constraints. #### Element ID Format - **B1, B2...** - Buttons - **T1, T2...** - Text fields/areas - **L1, L2...** - Links - **G1, G2...** - Groups/containers - **I1, I2...** - Images - **S1, S2...** - Sliders - **C1, C2...** - Checkboxes/toggles - **M1, M2...** - Menu items ### 🖱️ The `click` Tool Click on UI elements using various targeting methods: ```typescript // Click by element ID from see command await click({ on: "B1" }) // Click by query (searches button labels) await click({ query: "Submit" }) // Click by coordinates await click({ coords: "450,300" }) // Double-click await click({ on: "I1", double: true }) // Right-click await click({ query: "File", right: true }) // With custom wait timeout await click({ query: "Save", wait_for: 10000 }) ``` ### ⌨️ The `type` Tool Type text with support for escape sequences: ```typescript // Type into a specific field await type({ text: "user@example.com", on: "T1" }) // Type at current focus await type({ text: "Hello world" }) // Clear existing text first await type({ text: "New text", on: "T2", clear: true }) // Use escape sequences await type({ text: "Line 1\nLine 2\nLine 3" }) // Newlines await type({ text: "Name:\tJohn\tDoe" }) // Tabs await type({ text: "Path: C:\\data\\file.txt" }) // Literal backslash // Press return after typing await type({ text: "Submit", press_return: true }) // Adjust typing speed await type({ text: "Slow typing", delay: 100 }) ``` #### Supported Escape Sequences - `\n` - Newline/return - `\t` - Tab - `\b` - Backspace/delete - `\e` - Escape - `\\` - Literal backslash ### 🔑 The `press` Tool Press individual keys or key sequences: ```typescript // Press single keys await press({ key: "return" }) // Press Enter await press({ key: "tab", count: 3 }) // Press Tab 3 times await press({ key: "escape" }) // Press Escape // Navigation keys await press({ key: "up" }) // Arrow up await press({ key: "down", count: 5 }) // Arrow down 5 times await press({ key: "home" }) // Home key await press({ key: "end" }) // End key // Function keys await press({ key: "f1" }) // F1 help key await press({ key: "f11" }) // F11 full screen // Special keys await press({ key: "forward_delete" }) // Forward delete (fn+delete) await press({ key: "caps_lock" }) // Caps Lock ``` #### Available Keys - **Navigation**: up, down, left, right, home, end, pageup, pagedown - **Editing**: delete (backspace), forward_delete, clear - **Control**: return, enter, tab, escape, space - **Function**: f1-f12 - **Special**: caps_lock, help ### 📜 The `scroll` Tool Scroll content in any direction: ```typescript // Scroll down 3 ticks (default) await scroll({ direction: "down" }) // Scroll up 5 ticks await scroll({ direction: "up", amount: 5 }) // Scroll on a specific element await scroll({ direction: "down", on: "G1", amount: 10 }) // Smooth scrolling await scroll({ direction: "down", smooth: true }) // Horizontal scrolling await scroll({ direction: "right", amount: 3 }) ``` ### ⌨️ The `hotkey` Tool Press keyboard shortcuts: ```typescript // Common shortcuts await hotkey({ keys: "cmd,c" }) // Copy await hotkey({ keys: "cmd,v" }) // Paste await hotkey({ keys: "cmd,tab" }) // Switch apps await hotkey({ keys: "cmd,shift,t" }) // Reopen closed tab // Function keys await hotkey({ keys: "f11" }) // Full screen // Custom hold duration await hotkey({ keys: "cmd,space", hold_duration: 100 }) ``` ### 👆 The `swipe` Tool Perform swipe or drag gestures: ```typescript // Basic swipe await swipe({ from: "100,200", to: "300,200" }) // Slow drag await swipe({ from: "50,50", to: "200,200", duration: 2000 }) // Precise movement with more steps await swipe({ from: "0,0", to: "100,100", steps: 50 }) ``` ### 🖱️ The `move` Tool Move the mouse cursor to specific positions or UI elements: ```typescript // Move to absolute coordinates await move({ coordinates: "500,300" }) // Move to center of screen await move({ center: true }) // Move to a specific UI element await move({ id: "B1" }) // Smooth movement with animation await move({ coordinates: "100,200", smooth: true, duration: 1000 }) ``` ### 🎯 The `drag` Tool Perform drag and drop operations between UI elements or coordinates: ```typescript // Drag from one element to another await drag({ from: "B1", to: "T1" }) // Drag using coordinates await drag({ from_coords: "100,100", to_coords: "500,500" }) // Drag with modifiers (e.g., holding shift) await drag({ from: "I1", to: "G2", modifiers: "shift" }) // Cross-application drag await drag({ from: "T1", to_app: "Finder", to_coords: "300,400" }) ``` ### 🔐 The `permissions` Tool Check macOS system permissions required for automation: ```typescript // Check all permissions await permissions({}) // Returns permission status for: // - Screen Recording (required for screenshots) // - Accessibility (required for UI automation) ``` ### 📝 The `run` Tool - Automation Scripts Execute complex automation workflows from JSON script files: ```typescript // Run a script await run({ script_path: "/path/to/login.peekaboo.json" }) // Continue on error await run({ script_path: "test.peekaboo.json", no_fail_fast: true }) ``` #### Script Format (.peekaboo.json) ```json { "name": "Login to Website", "description": "Automated login workflow", "commands": [ { "command": "see", "args": { "app_target": "Safari" }, "comment": "Capture current state" }, { "command": "click", "args": { "query": "Email" }, "comment": "Click email field" }, { "command": "type", "args": { "text": "user@example.com" } }, { "command": "click", "args": { "query": "Password" } }, { "command": "type", "args": { "text": "secure_password" } }, { "command": "click", "args": { "query": "Sign In" } }, { "command": "sleep", "args": { "duration": 2000 }, "comment": "Wait for login" } ] } ``` ### 🎯 Automatic Window Focus Management Peekaboo v3 includes intelligent window focus management that ensures your automation commands target the correct window, even across different macOS Spaces (virtual desktops). #### How Focus Management Works All interaction commands (`click`, `type`, `scroll`, `menu`, `hotkey`, `drag`) automatically: 1. **Track window identity** - Using stable window IDs that persist across interactions 2. **Detect window location** - Find which Space contains the target window 3. **Switch Spaces if needed** - Automatically switch to the window's Space 4. **Focus the window** - Ensure the window is frontmost before interaction 5. **Verify focus** - Confirm the window is ready before proceeding #### Focus Options All interaction commands support these focus-related flags: ```bash # Disable automatic focus (not recommended) peekaboo click "Submit" --no-auto-focus # Set custom focus timeout (default: 5 seconds) peekaboo type "Hello" --focus-timeout 10 # Set retry count for focus operations (default: 3) peekaboo menu click --app Safari --item "New Tab" --focus-retry-count 5 # Control Space switching behavior peekaboo click "Login" --space-switch # Force Space switch peekaboo type "text" --bring-to-current-space # Move window to current Space ``` #### Space Management Commands Peekaboo provides dedicated commands for managing macOS Spaces: ```bash # List all Spaces peekaboo space list # Switch to a specific Space peekaboo space switch --to 2 # Move windows between Spaces peekaboo space move-window --app Safari --to 3 # Use list to see which Space contains windows peekaboo space list # Shows all Spaces and their windows ``` #### Window Focus Command For explicit window focus control: ```bash # Focus a window (switches Space if needed) peekaboo window focus --app Safari # Focus without switching Spaces (space-switch is a flag, not an option with value) peekaboo window focus --app Terminal # Default is to not switch spaces unless needed # Move window to current Space and focus peekaboo window focus --app "VS Code" --bring-to-current-space ``` #### Focus Behavior By default, Peekaboo: - **Automatically focuses windows** before any interaction - **Switches Spaces** when the target window is on a different desktop - **Waits for focus** to ensure the window is ready - **Retries if needed** with exponential backoff This ensures reliable automation across complex multi-window, multi-Space workflows without manual window management. ## 🤖 AI Agent Automation Peekaboo v3 introduces an AI-powered agent that can understand and execute complex automation tasks using natural language. The agent uses OpenAI's Chat Completions API with streaming support to break down your instructions into specific Peekaboo commands. ### Setting Up the Agent ```bash # Set your API key (OpenAI, Anthropic, or Grok) export OPENAI_API_KEY="your-openai-key-here" # OR export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY="your-anthropic-key-here" # OR export X_AI_API_KEY="your-grok-key-here" # Or save it securely in Peekaboo's config peekaboo config set-credential OPENAI_API_KEY your-api-key-here peekaboo config set-credential ANTHROPIC_API_KEY your-anthropic-key-here peekaboo config set-credential X_AI_API_KEY your-grok-key-here # Now you can use natural language automation! peekaboo "Open Safari and search for weather" peekaboo agent "Fill out the form" --model grok-4-0709 peekaboo agent "Create a document" --model claude-opus-4 ``` ### Two Ways to Use the Agent #### 1. Direct Natural Language (Default) When you provide a text argument without a subcommand, Peekaboo automatically uses the agent: ```bash # These all invoke the agent directly peekaboo "Click the Submit button" peekaboo "Open TextEdit and write Hello" peekaboo "Take a screenshot of Safari" ``` #### 2. Explicit Agent Command Use the `agent` subcommand for more control and options: ```bash # With options and flags peekaboo agent "Fill out the contact form" --verbose peekaboo agent "Close all Finder windows" --dry-run peekaboo agent "Install this app" --max-steps 30 --json-output ``` ### How the Agent Works 1. **Understands Your Intent** - The AI agent analyzes your natural language request 2. **Plans the Steps** - Breaks down the task into specific actions 3. **Executes Commands** - Uses Peekaboo's automation tools to perform each step 4. **Verifies Results** - Takes screenshots to confirm actions succeeded 5. **Handles Errors** - Can retry failed actions or adjust approach ### Real-World Examples ```bash # Web Automation peekaboo "Go to github.com and search for peekaboo" peekaboo "Click the first search result" peekaboo "Star this repository" # Document Creation peekaboo "Open Pages and create a new blank document" peekaboo "Type 'Meeting Agenda' as the title and make it bold" peekaboo "Add bullet points for Introduction, Main Topics, and Action Items" # File Management peekaboo "Open Finder and navigate to Downloads" peekaboo "Select all PDF files and move them to Documents" peekaboo "Create a new folder called 'Archived PDFs'" # Application Testing peekaboo "Launch Calculator and calculate 42 * 17" peekaboo "Take a screenshot of the result" peekaboo "Clear the calculator and close it" # System Tasks peekaboo "Open System Settings and go to Display settings" peekaboo "Change the display resolution to 1920x1080" peekaboo "Take a screenshot to confirm the change" ``` ### Agent Options - `--verbose` - See the agent's reasoning and planning process - `--dry-run` - Preview what the agent would do without executing - `--max-steps <n>` - Limit the number of actions (default: 20) - `--model <model>` - Choose OpenAI model (default: gpt-4-turbo) - `--json-output` - Get structured JSON output - `--resume` - Resume the latest unfinished agent session - `--resume <session-id>` - Resume a specific session by ID ### Agent Capabilities The agent has access to all Peekaboo commands: - **Visual Understanding** - Can see and understand what's on screen - **UI Interaction** - Click buttons, fill forms, navigate menus - **Text Entry** - Type text, use keyboard shortcuts - **Window Management** - Open, close, minimize, arrange windows - **Application Control** - Launch apps, switch between them - **File Operations** - Save files, handle dialogs - **Complex Workflows** - Chain multiple actions together - **Multiple AI Models** - Supports OpenAI (GPT-4o, o3), Anthropic (Claude), and Grok (xAI) ### Understanding Agent Execution When you run an agent command, here's what happens behind the scenes: ```bash # Your command: peekaboo "Click the Submit button" # Agent breaks it down into: peekaboo see # Capture screen and identify elements peekaboo click "Submit" # Click the identified button ``` ### Example Workflow ```bash # Complex multi-step task peekaboo agent --verbose "Create a new document in Pages with the title 'Meeting Notes' and add today's date" # Agent will execute commands like: # 1. peekaboo see --app Pages # Check if Pages is open # 2. peekaboo app launch Pages # Launch if needed # 3. peekaboo sleep --duration 2000 # Wait for app to load # 4. peekaboo click "Create Document" # Click new document # 5. peekaboo type "Meeting Notes" # Enter title # 6. peekaboo hotkey cmd+b # Make text bold # 7. peekaboo hotkey return # New line # 8. peekaboo type "Date: $(date)" # Add current date # Relaunch an application (useful for applying settings or fixing issues) peekaboo app relaunch Safari # Quit and restart Safari peekaboo app relaunch "Visual Studio Code" --wait 3 --wait-until-ready ``` ### Debugging Agent Actions Use `--verbose` to see exactly what the agent is doing: ```bash peekaboo agent --verbose "Find and click the login button" # Output will show: # [Agent] Analyzing request... # [Agent] Planning steps: # 1. Capture current screen # 2. Identify login button # 3. Click on the button # [Agent] Executing: peekaboo see # [Agent] Found elements: button "Login" at (834, 423) # [Agent] Executing: peekaboo click "Login" # [Agent] Action completed successfully ``` ### Tips for Best Results 1. **Be Specific** - "Click the blue Submit button" works better than "submit" 2. **One Task at a Time** - Break complex workflows into smaller tasks 3. **Verify State** - The agent works best when it can see the current screen 4. **Use Verbose Mode** - Add `--verbose` to understand what the agent is doing 5. **Set Reasonable Limits** - Use `--max-steps` to prevent runaway automation ### Resuming Agent Sessions The agent supports resuming interrupted or incomplete sessions, maintaining full conversation context: ```bash # Start a complex task peekaboo agent "Help me write a document about automation" # Agent creates document, starts writing... # <Interrupted by Ctrl+C or error> # Resume the latest session with context peekaboo agent --resume "Continue where we left off" # Or resume a specific session peekaboo agent --resume session_abc123 "Add a conclusion section" # List available sessions peekaboo agent --list-sessions # Note: There is no show-session command, use list-sessions to see all sessions ``` #### How Resume Works 1. **Session Persistence** - Each agent run creates a session with a unique ID 2. **Thread Continuity** - Uses OpenAI's thread persistence to maintain conversation history 3. **Context Preservation** - The AI remembers all previous interactions in the session 4. **Smart Recovery** - Can continue from any point, understanding what was already done #### Resume Examples ```bash # Scenario 1: Continue an interrupted task peekaboo agent "Create a presentation about AI" # <Interrupted after creating first slide> peekaboo agent --resume "Add more slides about machine learning" # Scenario 2: Iterative refinement peekaboo agent "Fill out this form with test data" # <Agent completes task> peekaboo agent --resume "Actually, change the email to test@example.com" # Scenario 3: Debugging automation peekaboo agent --verbose "Login to the portal" # <Login fails> peekaboo agent --resume --verbose "Try clicking the other login button" ``` ### ⏸️ The `sleep` Tool Pause execution between actions: ```typescript // Sleep for 1 second await sleep({ duration: 1000 }) // Sleep for 500ms await sleep({ duration: 500 }) ``` ### 🪟 The `window` Tool Comprehensive window manipulation for any application: ```typescript // Close window await window({ action: "close", app: "Safari" }) await window({ action: "close", app: "Safari", title: "Downloads" }) // Minimize/Maximize await window({ action: "minimize", app: "Finder" }) await window({ action: "maximize", app: "Terminal" }) // Move window await window({ action: "move", app: "TextEdit", x: 100, y: 100 }) // Resize window await window({ action: "resize", app: "Notes", width: 800, height: 600 }) // Set exact bounds (move + resize) await window({ action: "set-bounds", app: "Safari", x: 50, y: 50, width: 1200, height: 800 }) // Focus window await window({ action: "focus", app: "Visual Studio Code" }) await window({ action: "focus", app: "Safari", index: 0 }) // Focus first window // List all windows (Note: window tool doesn't have a list action) // Use the list tool instead: await list({ item_type: "application_windows", app: "Finder" }) ``` #### Window Actions - **close** - Close the window (animated if has close button) - **minimize** - Minimize to dock - **maximize** - Maximize/zoom window - **move** - Move to specific coordinates - **resize** - Change window dimensions - **set-bounds** - Set position and size in one operation - **focus** - Bring window to front and focus #### Targeting Options - **app** - Target by application name (fuzzy matching supported) - **title** - Target by window title (substring matching) - **index** - Target by index (0-based, front to back order) ### 🖥️ Multi-Screen Support Peekaboo v3 includes comprehensive multi-screen support for window management across multiple displays. When listing windows, Peekaboo shows which screen each window is on, and provides powerful options for moving windows between screens. #### Screen Identification When listing windows, each window shows its screen location: ```bash # Windows now show their screen in the output peekaboo list windows --app Safari # Output includes: "Screen: Built-in Display" or "Screen: External Display" ``` #### Moving Windows Between Screens **Using Screen Index (0-based):** ```bash # Move window to specific screen by index peekaboo window resize --app Safari --target-screen 0 # Primary screen peekaboo window resize --app Terminal --target-screen 1 # Second screen peekaboo window resize --app Notes --target-screen 2 # Third screen ``` **Using Screen Presets:** ```bash # Move to next/previous screen peekaboo window resize --app Safari --screen-preset next peekaboo window resize --app Terminal --screen-preset previous # Move to primary screen (with menu bar) peekaboo window resize --app Notes --screen-preset primary # Keep on same screen (useful with other resize options) peekaboo window resize --app TextEdit --screen-preset same --preset left_half ``` #### Combined Screen and Window Operations You can combine screen movement with window positioning: ```bash # Move to screen 1 and maximize peekaboo window resize --app Safari --target-screen 1 --preset maximize # Move to next screen and position on left half peekaboo window resize --app Terminal --screen-preset next --preset left_half # Move to screen 0 at specific coordinates peekaboo window resize --app Notes --target-screen 0 --x 100 --y 100 # Move to primary screen with custom size peekaboo window resize --app TextEdit --screen-preset primary --width 1200 --height 800 ``` #### How It Works - **Unified Coordinate System**: macOS uses a single coordinate space across all screens - **Smart Positioning**: When moving windows between screens without explicit coordinates, windows maintain their relative position (e.g., a window at 25% from the left edge stays at 25% on the new screen) - **Screen Detection**: Windows are assigned to screens based on their center point - **0-Based Indexing**: Screens are indexed starting from 0, matching macOS's internal ordering #### Multi-Screen with AI Agent The AI agent understands multi-screen commands: ```bash peekaboo agent "Move all Safari windows to the external display" peekaboo agent "Put Terminal on my second screen" peekaboo agent "Arrange windows with Safari on the left screen and Notes on the right" ``` ### 📋 The `menu` Tool Interact with application menu bars and system menu extras: ```typescript // List all menus and items for an app await menu({ action: "list", app: "Calculator" }) // Click a simple menu item await menu({ action: "click", app: "Safari", item: "New Window" }) // Navigate nested menus with path await menu({ action: "click", app: "TextEdit", path: "Format > Font > Bold" }) // Click system menu extras (WiFi, Bluetooth, etc.) await menu({ action: "click-extra", title: "WiFi" }) ``` #### Menu Subcommands - **list** - List all menus and their items (including keyboard shortcuts) - **list-all** - List menus for the frontmost application - **click** - Click a menu item (default if not specified) - **click-extra** - Click system menu extras in the status bar #### Key Features - **Pure Accessibility** - Extracts menu structure without clicking or opening menus - **Full Hierarchy** - Discovers all submenus and nested items - **Keyboard Shortcuts** - Shows all available keyboard shortcuts - **Smart Discovery** - AI agents can use list to discover available options ### 🚀 The `app` Tool Control applications - launch, quit, focus, hide, and switch between apps: ```typescript // Launch an application await app({ action: "launch", name: "Safari" }) // Quit an application await app({ action: "quit", name: "TextEdit" }) // Force quit await app({ action: "quit", name: "Notes", force: true }) // Focus/switch to app await app({ action: "focus", name: "Google Chrome" }) // Hide/unhide apps await app({ action: "hide", name: "Finder" }) await app({ action: "unhide", name: "Finder" }) ``` ### 🎯 The `dock` Tool Interact with the macOS Dock: ```typescript // List all dock items await dock({ action: "list" }) // Launch app from dock await dock({ action: "launch", app: "Safari" }) // Right-click on dock item await dock({ action: "right-click", app: "Finder" }) // Show/hide dock await dock({ action: "hide" }) await dock({ action: "show" }) ``` ### 💬 The `dialog` Tool Handle system dialogs and alerts: ```typescript // List open dialogs await dialog({ action: "list" }) // Click dialog button await dialog({ action: "click", button: "OK" }) // Input text in dialog field await dialog({ action: "input", text: "filename.txt" }) // Select file in open/save dialog await dialog({ action: "file", path: "/Users/me/Documents/file.pdf" }) // Dismiss dialog await dialog({ action: "dismiss" }) ``` ### 🧹 The `clean` Tool Clean up session cache and temporary files: ```typescript // Clean all sessions await clean({}) // Clean sessions older than 7 hours await clean({ older_than: 7 }) // Clean specific session await clean({ session: "session_123" }) // Dry run to see what would be cleaned await clean({ dry_run: true }) ``` ### Session Management Peekaboo v3 uses sessions to maintain UI state across commands: - Sessions are created automatically by the `see` tool - Each session stores screenshot data and element mappings - Sessions persist in `~/.peekaboo/session/<PID>/` - Element IDs remain consistent within a session - Sessions are automatically cleaned up on process exit ### Best Practices 1. **Always start with `see`** - Capture the current UI state before interacting 2. **Use element IDs when possible** - More reliable than coordinate clicking 3. **Add delays for animations** - Use `sleep` after actions that trigger animations 4. **Verify actions** - Call `see` again to confirm actions succeeded 5. **Handle errors gracefully** - Check if elements exist before interacting 6. **Clean up sessions** - Use the `clean` tool periodically ### Example Workflows #### Login Automation ```typescript // 1. See the login form const { elements } = await see({ app_target: "MyApp" }) // 2. Fill in credentials await click({ on: "T1" }) // Click email field await type({ text: "user@example.com" }) await click({ on: "T2" }) // Click password field await type({ text: "password123" }) // 3. Submit await click({ query: "Sign In" }) // 4. Wait and verify await sleep({ duration: 2000 }) await see({ app_target: "MyApp" }) // Verify logged in ``` #### Web Search ```typescript // 1. Focus browser await see({ app_target: "Safari" }) // 2. Open new tab await hotkey({ keys: "cmd,t" }) // 3. Type search await type({ text: "Peekaboo MCP automation" }) await type({ text: "{return}" }) // 4. Wait for results await sleep({ duration: 3000 }) // 5. Click first result await see({ app_target: "Safari" }) await click({ on: "L1" }) ``` #### Form Filling ```typescript // 1. Capture form const { elements } = await see({ app_target: "Forms" }) // 2. Fill each field for (const field of elements.text_fields) { await click({ on: field.id }) await type({ text: "Test data", clear: true }) } // 3. Check all checkboxes for (const checkbox of elements.checkboxes) { if (!checkbox.checked) { await click({ on: checkbox.id }) } } // 4. Submit await click({ query: "Submit" }) ``` ### Troubleshooting 1. **Elements not found** - Ensure the UI is visible and not obscured 2. **Clicks not working** - Try increasing `wait_for` timeout 3. **Wrong element clicked** - Use specific element IDs instead of queries 4. **Session errors** - Run `clean` tool to clear corrupted sessions 5. **Permissions denied** - Grant Accessibility permission in System Settings ### Debugging with Logs Peekaboo uses macOS's unified logging system. Use `pblog` to monitor logs: ```bash # View recent logs ./scripts/pblog.sh # Stream logs continuously ./scripts/pblog.sh -f # Debug specific issues ./scripts/pblog.sh -c ClickService -d ``` **Note**: macOS redacts log values by default, showing `<private>`. See [docs/pblog-guide.md](docs/pblog-guide.md) and [docs/logging-profiles/README.md](docs/logging-profiles/README.md) for solutions. ## 🔧 Configuration ### Configuration Precedence Settings follow this precedence (highest to lowest): 1. Command-line arguments 2. Environment variables 3. Credentials file (`~/.peekaboo/credentials`) 4. Configuration file (`~/.peekaboo/config.json`) 5. Built-in defaults ### Available Options | Setting | Config File | Environment Variable | Description | |---------|-------------|---------------------|-------------| | AI Providers | `aiProviders.providers` | `PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS` | Comma-separated list (e.g., "openai/gpt-4.1,anthropic/claude,grok/grok-4,ollama/llava:latest") | | OpenAI API Key | Use `credentials` file | `OPENAI_API_KEY` | Required for OpenAI provider | | Anthropic API Key | Use `credentials` file | `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY` | Required for Claude models | | Grok API Key | Use `credentials` file | `X_AI_API_KEY` or `XAI_API_KEY` | Required for Grok (xAI) models | | Ollama URL | `aiProviders.ollamaBaseUrl` | `PEEKABOO_OLLAMA_BASE_URL` | Default: http://localhost:11434 | | Default Save Path | `defaults.savePath` | `PEEKABOO_DEFAULT_SAVE_PATH` | Where screenshots are saved (default: current directory) | | Log Level | `logging.level` | `PEEKABOO_LOG_LEVEL` | trace, debug, info, warn, error, fatal | | Log Path | `logging.path` | `PEEKABOO_LOG_FILE` | Log file location | | CLI Binary Path | - | `PEEKABOO_CLI_PATH` | Override bundled Swift CLI path (advanced usage) | ### Environment Variable Details #### API Key Storage Best Practices For security, Peekaboo supports three methods for API key storage (in order of recommendation): 1. **Environment Variables** (Most secure for automation) ```bash export OPENAI_API_KEY="sk-..." ``` 2. **Credentials File** (Best for interactive use) ```bash peekaboo config set-credential OPENAI_API_KEY sk-... # Stored in ~/.peekaboo/credentials with chmod 600 ``` 3. **Config File** (Not recommended - use credentials file instead) #### AI Provider Configuration - **`PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS`**: Comma-separated list of AI providers to use for image analysis - Format: `provider/model,provider/model` - Example: `"openai/gpt-4.1,anthropic/claude-opus-4,grok/grok-4,ollama/llava:latest"` - The first available provider will be used - Default: `"openai/gpt-4.1,ollama/llava:latest"` - Supported providers: `openai`, `anthropic`, `grok`, `ollama` - **`OPENAI_API_KEY`**: Your OpenAI API key for GPT-4.1 Vision - Required when using the `openai` provider - Get your key at: https://platform.openai.com/api-keys - **`ANTHROPIC_API_KEY`**: Your Anthropic API key for Claude models - Required when using the `anthropic` provider - Get your key at: https://console.anthropic.com/ - **`X_AI_API_KEY`** or **`XAI_API_KEY`**: Your xAI API key for Grok models - Required when using the `grok` provider - Get your key at: https://console.x.ai/ - Both environment variable names are supported - **`PEEKABOO_OLLAMA_BASE_URL`**: Base URL for your Ollama server - Default: `http://localhost:11434` - Use for custom Ollama installations or remote servers #### Default Behavior - **`PEEKABOO_DEFAULT_SAVE_PATH`**: Default directory for saving screenshots - Default: Current working directory - Supports tilde expansion (e.g., `~/Desktop/Screenshots`) - Created automatically if it doesn't exist #### Logging and Debugging - **`PEEKABOO_LOG_LEVEL`**: Control logging verbosity - Options: `trace`, `debug`, `info`, `warn`, `error`, `fatal` - Default: `info` - Use `debug` or `trace` for troubleshooting - **`PEEKABOO_LOG_FILE`**: Custom log file location - Default: `/tmp/peekaboo-mcp.log` (MCP server) - For CLI, logs are written to stderr by default #### Advanced Options - **`PEEKABOO_CLI_PATH`**: Override the bundled Swift CLI binary path - Only needed if using a custom-built CLI binary - Default: Uses the bundled binary ### Using Environment Variables Environment variables can be set in multiple ways: ```bash # For a single command PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS="ollama/llava:latest" peekaboo image --analyze "What is this?" --path image.png # Export for the current session export OPENAI_API_KEY="sk-..." export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY="sk-ant-..." export X_AI_API_KEY="xai-..." export PEEKABOO_DEFAULT_SAVE_PATH="~/Desktop/Screenshots" # Add to your shell profile (~/.zshrc or ~/.bash_profile) echo 'export OPENAI_API_KEY="sk-..."' >> ~/.zshrc echo 'export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY="sk-ant-..."' >> ~/.zshrc echo 'export X_AI_API_KEY="xai-..."' >> ~/.zshrc ``` ## 🎨 Setting Up Local AI with Ollama For privacy-focused local AI analysis: ```bash # Install Ollama brew install ollama ollama serve # Download recommended models ollama pull llama3.3 # RECOMMENDED for agent tasks (supports tool calling) ollama pull llava:latest # Vision model (no tool support) ollama pull qwen2-vl:7b # Lighter vision alternative # Use with Peekaboo PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS="ollama/llama3.3" peekaboo agent "Click the Submit button" PEEKABOO_AI_PROVIDERS="ollama/llama" peekaboo agent "Take a screenshot" # Defaults to llama3.3 # Configure Peekaboo (optional) peekaboo config edit # Set providers to: "ollama/llama3.3" for agent tasks # Or: "ollama/llava:latest" for image analysis only ``` ### Ollama Model Support **Models with Tool Calling** (✅ Recommended for automation): - `llama3.3` - Best overall for agent tasks - `llama3.2` - Good alternative **Vision Models** (❌ No tool calling): - `llava` - Image analysis only - `bakllava` - Alternative vision model **Note**: For agent automation tasks, use `llama3.3`. Vision models like `llava` can analyze images but cannot perform GUI automation. ## 📋 Requirements - **macOS 14.0+** (Sonoma or later) - **Screen Recording Permission** (required) - **Accessibility Permission** (optional, for window focus control) ### Granting Permissions 1. **Screen Recording** (Required): - System Settings → Privacy & Security → Screen & System Audio Recording - Enable for Terminal, Claude Desktop, or your IDE - **Performance Benefit**: Enables fast window enumeration using CGWindowList API - Without this permission, window operations may be slower 2. **Accessibility** (Optional): - System Settings → Privacy & Security → Accessibility - Enable for better window focus control and UI automation Check permissions status: ```bash peekaboo permissions check peekaboo permissions request screen-recording peekaboo permissions request accessibility ``` ### Performance Optimizations Peekaboo v3 includes significant performance improvements: - **Hybrid Window Enumeration**: Automatically uses the faster CGWindowList API when screen recording permission is granted, with seamless fallback to accessibility APIs - **Built-in Timeout Protection**: All window and menu operations have configurable timeouts (default 2s) to prevent hangs - **Smart API Selection**: Automatically chooses the fastest available API based on your permissions - **Parallel Processing**: Window data is fetched concurrently when possible These optimizations ensure that operations that previously could hang for 2+ minutes now complete in seconds. ## 🏗️ Building from Source ### Prerequisites - macOS 14.0+ (Sonoma or later) - Node.js 20.0+ and npm - Xcode 16.4+ with Command Line Tools (`xcode-select --install`) - Swift 6.0+ (included with Xcode 16.4+) ### Build Commands ```bash # Clone the repository git clone https://github.com/steipete/peekaboo.git cd peekaboo # Install dependencies npm install # Build everything (CLI + MCP server) npm run build:all # Build options: npm run build # TypeScript only npm run build:swift # Swift CLI only (universal binary) ./scripts/build-cli-standalone.sh # Quick CLI build ./scripts/build-cli-standalone.sh --install # Build and install to /usr/local/bin ``` ### Creating Release Binaries ```bash # Run all pre-release checks and create release artifacts ./scripts/release-binaries.sh # Skip checks (if you've already run them) ./scripts/release-binaries.sh --skip-checks # Create GitHub release draft ./scripts/release-binaries.sh --create-github-release # Full release with npm publish ./scripts/release-binaries.sh --create-github-release --publish-npm ``` The release script creates: - `peekaboo-macos-universal.tar.gz` - Standalone CLI binary (universal) - `@steipete-peekaboo-mcp-{version}.tgz` - npm package - `checksums.txt` - SHA256 checksums for verification ### Debug Build Staleness Detection For development, enable automatic staleness detection to ensure you're always using the latest built CLI version: `git config peekaboo.check-build-staleness true`. This is recommended when working with AI assistants that frequently modify source code, as it prevents using outdated binaries. ## 👻 Poltergeist - Swift CLI Auto-rebuild Watcher Poltergeist is a helpful ghost that watches your Swift files and automatically rebuilds the CLI when they change. Perfect for development workflows! ### Installation First, install Watchman (required): ```bash brew install watchman ``` ### Usage Run these commands from the project root: ```bash # Start the watcher npm run poltergeist:start # or the more thematic: npm run poltergeist:haunt # Check status npm run poltergeist:status # View activity logs npm run poltergeist:logs # Stop watching npm run poltergeist:stop # or the more thematic: npm run poltergeist:rest ``` ### What It Does Poltergeist monitors: - `Core/PeekabooCore/**/*.swift` - `Core/AXorcist/**/*.swift` - `Apps/CLI/**/*.swift` - All `Package.swift` and `Package.resolved` files When changes are detected, it automatically: 1. Rebuilds the Swift CLI using `npm run build:swift` 2. Copies the binary to the project root for easy access 3. Logs all activity to `.poltergeist.log` ### Features - 👻 **Smart Rebuilding** - Only rebuilds when Swift files actually change - 🔒 **Single Instance** - Prevents multiple concurrent builds - 📝 **Activity Logging** - Track all rebuild activity with timestamps - ⚡ **Native Performance** - Uses macOS FSEvents for minimal overhead - 🎯 **Persistent Watches** - Survives terminal sessions ## 🧪 Testing ### Running Tests Peekaboo uses Swift Testing framework (Swift 6.0+) for all test suites: ```bash # Run all tests swift test # Run specific test target swift test --filter PeekabooTests # Run tests with verbose output swift test --verbose ``` ### Testing the CLI ```bash # Test CLI directly peekaboo list server_status peekaboo image --mode screen --path test.png peekaboo image --analyze "What is shown?" --path test.png # Test MCP server npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector npx -y @steipete/peekaboo-mcp ``` ## 📚 Documentation - [API Documentation](./docs/spec.md) - [Contributing Guide](https://github.com/steipete/Peekaboo?tab=readme-ov-file#-contributing) - [Blog Post](https://steipete.me/posts/2025/peekaboo-2-freeing-the-cli-from-its-mcp-shackles/) ## 🐛 Troubleshooting | Issue | Solution | |-------|----------| | `Permission denied` | Grant Screen Recording permission in System Settings | | `Window not found` | Try using fuzzy matching or list windows first | | `AI analysis failed` | Check API keys and provider configuration | | `Command not found` | Ensure Peekaboo is in your PATH or use full path | Enable debug logging for more details: ```bash export PEEKABOO_LOG_LEVEL=debug peekaboo list server_status ``` For step-by-step debugging, use the verbose flag: ```bash peekaboo image --app Safari --verbose 2>&1 | less ``` ## 🛠️ Development ### Poltergeist - Automatic CLI Builder Peekaboo includes **Poltergeist**, an automatic build system that watches Swift source files and rebuilds the CLI in the background. This ensures your CLI binary is always up-to-date during development. ```bash # Start Poltergeist (runs in background) npm run poltergeist:haunt # Check status npm run poltergeist:status # Stop Poltergeist npm run poltergeist:rest ``` **Key features:** - Watches all Swift source files automatically - Smart wrapper script (`./scripts/peekaboo-wait.sh`) handles build coordination - Exit code 42 indicates build failure - fix immediately - See [Poltergeist repository](https://github.com/steipete/poltergeist) for full documentation ### Building from Source ```bash # Build everything npm run build:all # Build CLI only npm run build:swift # Build TypeScript server npm run build ``` ## 🤝 Contributing Contributions are welcome! Please: 1. Fork the repository 2. Create a feature branch 3. Commit your changes 4. Push to the branch 5. Open a Pull Request ## 📝 License MIT License - see [LICENSE](./LICENSE) file for details. ## 👤 Author Created by [Peter Steinberger](https://steipete.com) - [@steipete](https://github.com/steipete) ## 🙏 Acknowledgments - Apple's ScreenCaptureKit for blazing-fast captures - The MCP team for the Model Context Protocol - The Swift and TypeScript communities ---# CI Test

MCP directory API

We provide all the information about MCP servers via our MCP API.

curl -X GET 'https://glama.ai/api/mcp/v1/servers/steipete/Peekaboo'

If you have feedback or need assistance with the MCP directory API, please join our Discord server