Skip to main content
Glama
itk-dev

Browser Feedback MCP

by itk-dev

Browser Feedback MCP for Claude Code

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that enables visual browser feedback collection directly into Claude Code. Users can point at elements in their browser and send annotated feedback that Claude can act on immediately.

How It Works

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  Your Web App (localhost:3000)                                  │
│                                                                 │
│  [Widget delivered by browser extension]                        │
│                                                                 │
│                                        ┌──────────────────┐     │
│       Your App UI                      │ Add annotation   │     │
│                                        └──────────────────┘     │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
                             │
                        WebSocket
                             ▼
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  browser-feedback-mcp server (localhost:9877)                   │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
                             │
                        MCP Protocol
                             ▼
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  Claude Code                                                    │
│                                                                 │
│  "Let me annotate" → installs widget → waits → receives feedback│
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Related MCP server: gotham-browser

Installation

1. Install the MCP Server

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/itk-dev/mcp-claude-code-browser-feedback.git
cd mcp-claude-code-browser-feedback

# Install dependencies
npm install

2. Add to Claude Code

claude mcp add --scope user browser-feedback node /path/to/mcp-claude-code-browser-feedback/src/server.js

Or add manually to your Claude Code MCP configuration:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "browser-feedback": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": ["/path/to/mcp-claude-code-browser-feedback/src/server.js"],
      "env": {
        "FEEDBACK_PORT": "9877"
      }
    }
  }
}

3. Install the Browser Extension

The extension delivers the widget to any tab with a single toggle — no changes to your project's files. Ask Claude to run the setup_extension tool, which opens the extension folder and shows instructions, or install manually:

Chrome

  1. Navigate to chrome://extensions

  2. Enable Developer Mode (toggle in top right)

  3. Click Load unpacked

  4. Select the extension/ folder from this repository

Firefox

  1. Navigate to about:debugging#/runtime/this-firefox

  2. Click Load Temporary Add-on...

  3. Select extension/manifest.json from this repository

Usage

Basic Workflow

Turn the widget on for your app's tab via the extension:

  1. Click the extension icon in your browser toolbar

  2. Toggle the widget ON for the current tab — the "Add annotation" button appears without any file changes

  3. Toggle OFF to cleanly remove the widget

The extension connects to the MCP server at http://localhost:9877 by default (configurable in the popup) and auto-matches the tab to your Claude Code session by project URL.

Then tell Claude you want to show it something:

You: There's a bug with the checkout button, let me show you

Claude: [Calls: wait_for_browser_feedback]
        Click "Add annotation" in your browser, then click on the
        problematic element.

--- You use the browser widget to select the button ---

Claude: I received your feedback! I can see:

        📸 Screenshot captured
        🎯 Element: <button class="checkout-btn" disabled>
        📝 Your description: "Button stays disabled even with items in cart"
        🔴 Console Error: "TypeError: Cannot read property 'items' of null"

        Let me look at the checkout code and fix this...

Multiple Annotations

You can submit multiple feedback items at once:

You: I have several issues to show you

Claude: [Calls: wait_for_multiple_feedback]
        Submit all your annotations, then click "Done" when finished.

--- You submit 3 feedback items, then click Done ---

Claude: I received 3 feedback items. Let me address each one...

Offline Export

The widget works without a server connection. When offline, feedback is stored locally and can be exported:

  • Export Markdown - Click "Pending" to open the queue, then "Export Markdown" to download a .md file

  • Create GitHub Issue - Click "Create GitHub Issue" to open a pre-filled issue in your browser (you'll be prompted for the repository on first use, stored in localStorage)

Available MCP Tools

Tool

Description

setup_extension

Help install the browser extension (opens folder + instructions)

wait_for_browser_feedback

Block until user submits single feedback

wait_for_multiple_feedback

Wait for multiple feedback items (user clicks Done when finished)

get_pending_feedback

Get any feedback that's been submitted

preview_pending_feedback

Preview pending feedback summaries without consuming them

delete_pending_feedback

Delete a specific pending feedback item by ID

get_connection_status

Check if browser clients are connected

request_annotation

Prompt the user to annotate something specific

open_in_browser

Open project URL in default browser (auto-detects from config files)

install_widget

Deprecated — auto-inject the widget script into your app's HTML

uninstall_widget

Deprecated — remove the injected widget script

get_widget_snippet

Deprecated — get the script tag for manual installation

Script Installation (deprecated)

Deprecated: Script installation modifies your project's HTML, which produces git noise and risks accidental commits. Use the browser extension instead. This path is kept only for environments where installing a browser extension is genuinely blocked, and will be removed in a future major release (#48).

Add this script tag to your HTML:

<script src="http://localhost:9877/widget.js"></script>

The install_widget / uninstall_widget tools still automate injecting and removing the tag (with hostname gating via dev_only / allowed_hostnames and auto-detection of common entry points like public/index.html), and get_widget_snippet returns the tag with your session ID.

Widget Features

  • Draggable dialog - Move the feedback panel anywhere on screen

  • Minimizable - Collapse the panel to just the header bar

  • Collapsible element details - Technical info hidden by default

  • Screenshot capture - Automatic viewport capture using html2canvas (bundled)

  • Console log capture - Includes recent console messages

  • Multi-feedback mode - Submit multiple annotations before sending to Claude

  • Shadow DOM isolation - Widget styles are isolated from host page CSS

  • Offline mode - Annotate elements even without a server connection; feedback is stored locally

  • Export to Markdown - Download pending feedback as a structured Markdown file

  • Export to GitHub Issue - Open a pre-filled GitHub issue directly from the widget

Configuration

Environment Variables

Variable

Default

Description

FEEDBACK_PORT

9877

Port for HTTP/WebSocket server

Screenshot Capture

The widget automatically captures viewport screenshots using html2canvas, which is bundled with the MCP server and loaded on demand. No extra setup is needed.

Troubleshooting

Widget shows "disconnected" (gray button)

  • Make sure the MCP server is running (check with /mcp in Claude Code)

  • Check that the port (9877) is not in use by another process

  • Try restarting Claude Code

Port already in use

The server handles this gracefully - the MCP tools will still work, but you'll need to free the port for the browser widget:

# Find and kill the process using port 9877
lsof -i :9877
kill <PID>

Or use a different port:

FEEDBACK_PORT=9878 node src/server.js

No feedback received

  • Check browser console for WebSocket errors

  • Ensure the widget script loaded correctly

  • Verify the MCP server logs for connection info

Security Notes

  • The widget only connects to localhost

  • No data is sent to external servers

  • All communication stays on your machine

  • Note: The HTTP/WebSocket server listens on all interfaces (0.0.0.0) by default. If you need to restrict this, use a firewall or bind to a specific interface via a reverse proxy.

Development

npm test          # Unit tests (vitest)
npm run test:e2e  # Widget end-to-end test (requires a Playwright Chromium)

The e2e test drives the widget in a headless browser to cover annotation-mode behavior the unit suite can't reach (iframe selection, Escape handling, shadow DOM focus). It looks for a Chromium in the Playwright browser cache; run npx playwright install chromium once, or point PLAYWRIGHT_CHROMIUM at a browser executable.

License

MIT

F
license - not found
-
quality - not tested
B
maintenance

Maintenance

Maintainers
18hResponse time
1wRelease cycle
18Releases (12mo)
Commit activity
Issues opened vs closed

Resources

Unclaimed servers have limited discoverability.

Looking for Admin?

If you are the server author, to access and configure the admin panel.

Latest Blog Posts

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/itk-dev/mcp-claude-code-browser-feedback'

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