Node Inspect Debugger
Debug Node.js via --inspect + Chrome DevTools Protocol CLI.
Skill metadata
| Source | Bundled (installed by default) |
| Path | skills/software-development/node-inspect-debugger |
| Version | 1.0.0 |
| Author | Hermes Agent |
| License | MIT |
| Tags | debugging, nodejs, node-inspect, cdp, breakpoints, ui-tui |
| Related skills | systematic-debugging, python-debugpy, debugging-hermes-tui-commands |
Reference: full SKILL.md
The following is the complete skill definition that Hermes loads when this skill is triggered. This is what the agent sees as instructions when the skill is active.
Node.js Inspect Debugger
Overview
When console.log isn't enough, drive Node's built-in V8 inspector programmatically from the terminal. You get real breakpoints, step in/over/out, call-stack walking, local/closure scope dumps, and arbitrary expression evaluation in the paused frame.
Two tools, pick one:
node inspect— built-in, zero install, CLI REPL. Best for quick poking.ndb/ CDP viachrome-remote-interface— scriptable from Node/Python; best when you want to automate many breakpoints, collect state across runs, or debug non-interactively from an agent loop.
Prefer node inspect first. It's always available and the REPL is fast.
When to Use
- A Node test fails and you need to see intermediate state
- ui-tui crashes or behaves wrong and you want to inspect React/Ink state pre-render
- tui_gateway child processes (
_SlashWorker, PTY bridge workers) misbehave - You need to inspect a value in a closure that
console.logcan't reach without patching - Perf: attach to a running process to capture a CPU profile or heap snapshot
Don't use for: things console.log solves in under a minute. Breakpoint-driven debugging is heavier; use it when the payoff is real.
Quick Reference: node inspect REPL
Launch paused on first line:
node inspect path/to/script.js
# or with tsx
node --inspect-brk $(which tsx) path/to/script.ts
The debug> prompt accepts:
| Command | Action |
|---|---|
c or cont | continue |
n or next | step over |
s or step | step into |
o or out | step out |
pause | pause running code |
sb('file.js', 42) | set breakpoint at file.js line 42 |
sb(42) | set breakpoint at line 42 of current file |
sb('functionName') | break when function is called |
cb('file.js', 42) | clear breakpoint |
breakpoints | list all breakpoints |
bt | backtrace (call stack) |
list(5) | show 5 lines of source around current position |
watch('expr') | evaluate expr on every pause |
watchers | show watched expressions |
repl | drop into REPL in current scope (Ctrl+C to exit REPL) |
exec expr | evaluate expression once |
restart | restart script |
kill | kill the script |
.exit | quit debugger |
In the repl sub-mode: type any JS expression, including access to locals/closure variables. Ctrl+C exits back to debug>.
Attaching to a Running Process
When the process is already running (e.g. a long-lived dev server or the TUI gateway):
# 1. Send SIGUSR1 to enable the inspector on an existing process
kill -SIGUSR1 <pid>
# Node prints: Debugger listening on ws://127.0.0.1:9229/<uuid>
# 2. Attach the debugger CLI
node inspect -p <pid>
# or by URL
node inspect ws://127.0.0.1:9229/<uuid>
To start a process with the inspector from the beginning:
node --inspect script.js # listen on 127.0.0.1:9229, keep running
node --inspect-brk script.js # listen AND pause on first line
node --inspect=0.0.0.0:9230 script.js # custom host:port
For TypeScript via tsx:
node --inspect-brk --import tsx script.ts
# or older tsx
node --inspect-brk -r tsx/cjs script.ts
Programmatic CDP (scripting from terminal)
When you want to automate — set many breakpoints, capture scope state, script a repro — use chrome-remote-interface:
npm i -g chrome-remote-interface # or project-local
# Start your target:
node --inspect-brk=9229 target.js &
Driver script (save as /tmp/cdp-debug.js):
const CDP = require('chrome-remote-interface');
(async () => {
const client = await CDP({ port: 9229 });
const { Debugger, Runtime } = client;
Debugger.paused(async ({ callFrames, reason }) => {
const top = callFrames[0];
console.log(`PAUSED: ${reason} @ ${top.url}:${top.location.lineNumber + 1}`);
// Walk scopes for locals
for (const scope of top.scopeChain) {
if (scope.type === 'local' || scope.type === 'closure') {
const { result } = await Runtime.getProperties({
objectId: scope.object.objectId,
ownProperties: true,
});
for (const p of result) {
console.log(` ${scope.type}.${p.name} =`, p.value?.value ?? p.value?.description);
}
}
}
// Evaluate an expression in the paused frame
const { result } = await Debugger.evaluateOnCallFrame({
callFrameId: top.callFrameId,
expression: 'typeof state !== "undefined" ? JSON.stringify(state) : "n/a"',
});
console.log('state =', result.value ?? result.description);
await Debugger.resume();
});
await Runtime.enable();
await Debugger.enable();
// Set a breakpoint by URL regex + line
await Debugger.setBreakpointByUrl({
urlRegex: '.*app\\.tsx$',
lineNumber: 119, // 0-indexed
columnNumber: 0,
});
await Runtime.runIfWaitingForDebugger();
})();
Run it:
node /tmp/cdp-debug.js
Hermes-specific note: chrome-remote-interface is NOT in ui-tui/package.json. Install it to a throwaway location if you don't want to dirty the project:
mkdir -p /tmp/cdp-tools && cd /tmp/cdp-tools && npm i chrome-remote-interface
NODE_PATH=/tmp/cdp-tools/node_modules node /tmp/cdp-debug.js
Debugging Hermes ui-tui
The TUI is built Ink + tsx. Two common scenarios:
Debugging a single Ink component under dev
ui-tui/package.json has npm run dev (tsx --watch). Add --inspect-brk by running tsx directly:
cd /home/bb/hermes-agent/ui-tui
npm run build # produce dist/ once so transpile isn't needed on first load
node --inspect-brk dist/entry.js
# In another terminal:
node inspect -p <node pid>
Then inside debug>:
sb('dist/app.js', 220) # or wherever the suspect render is
cont
When it pauses, repl → inspect props, state refs, useInput handler values, etc.
Debugging a running hermes --tui
The TUI spawns Node from the Python CLI. Easiest path:
# 1. Launch TUI
hermes --tui &
TUI_PID=$(pgrep -f 'ui-tui/dist/entry' | head -1)
# 2. Enable inspector on that Node PID
kill -SIGUSR1 "$TUI_PID"
# 3. Find the WS URL
curl -s http://127.0.0.1:9229/json/list | jq -r '.[0].webSocketDebuggerUrl'
# 4. Attach
node inspect ws://127.0.0.1:9229/<uuid>
Interacting with the TUI (typing in its window) continues to advance execution; your debugger can pause it on a breakpoint at any sb(...).
Debugging _SlashWorker / PTY child processes
Those are Python, not Node — use the python-debugpy skill for them. Only Node portions (Ink UI, tui_gateway client, tsx-run tests under ui-tui/) use this skill.
Running Vitest Tests Under the Debugger
cd /home/bb/hermes-agent/ui-tui
# Run a single test file paused on entry
node --inspect-brk ./node_modules/vitest/vitest.mjs run --no-file-parallelism src/app/foo.test.tsx
In another terminal: node inspect -p <pid>, then sb('src/app/foo.tsx', 42), cont.
Use --no-file-parallelism (vitest) or --runInBand (jest) so only one worker exists — debugging a pool is painful.
Heap Snapshots & CPU Profiles (Non-interactive)
From the CDP driver above, swap Debugger for HeapProfiler / Profiler:
// CPU profile for 5 seconds
await client.Profiler.enable();
await client.Profiler.start();
await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, 5000));
const { profile } = await client.Profiler.stop();
require('fs').writeFileSync('/tmp/cpu.cpuprofile', JSON.stringify(profile));
// Open /tmp/cpu.cpuprofile in Chrome DevTools → Performance tab
// Heap snapshot
await client.HeapProfiler.enable();
const chunks = [];
client.HeapProfiler.addHeapSnapshotChunk(({ chunk }) => chunks.push(chunk));
await client.HeapProfiler.takeHeapSnapshot({ reportProgress: false });
require('fs').writeFileSync('/tmp/heap.heapsnapshot', chunks.join(''));
Common Pitfalls
-
Wrong line numbers in TS source. Breakpoints hit the emitted JS, not the
.ts. Either (a) break in the builtdist/*.js, or (b) enable sourcemaps (node --enable-source-maps) and usesb('src/app.tsx', N)— but only with CDP clients that follow sourcemaps.node inspectCLI does not. -
--inspectvs--inspect-brk.--inspectstarts the inspector but doesn't pause; your script races past your first breakpoint if you attach too late. Use--inspect-brkwhen you need to set breakpoints before any code runs. -
Port collisions. Default is
9229. If multiple Node processes are inspecting, pass--inspect=0(random port) and read the actual URL from/json/list:curl -s http://127.0.0.1:9229/json/list # lists all inspectable targets on the host -
Child processes.
--inspecton a parent does NOT inspect its children. UseNODE_OPTIONS='--inspect-brk' node parent.jsto propagate to every child; be aware they all need unique ports (Node auto-increments whenNODE_OPTIONS='--inspect'is inherited). -
Background kills. If you
Ctrl+Cout ofnode inspectwhile the target is paused, the target stays paused. Eithercontfirst, orkillthe target explicitly. -
Running
node inspectthrough an agent terminal. It's a PTY-friendly REPL. In Hermes, launch it withterminal(pty=true)orbackground=true+process(action='submit', data='...'). Non-PTY foreground mode will work for one-shot commands but not for interactive stepping. -
Security.
--inspect=0.0.0.0:9229exposes arbitrary code execution. Always bind to127.0.0.1(the default) unless you have an isolated network.
Verification Checklist
After setting up a debug session, verify:
-
curl -s http://127.0.0.1:9229/json/listreturns exactly the target you expect - First breakpoint actually hits (if it doesn't, you likely missed
--inspect-brkor attached after execution completed) - Source listing at pause shows the right file (mismatch = sourcemap issue, see pitfall 1)
-
exec process.pidinreplreturns the PID you meant to attach to
One-Shot Recipes
"Why is this variable undefined at line X?"
node --inspect-brk script.js &
node inspect -p $!
# debug>
sb('script.js', X)
cont
# paused. Now:
repl
> myVariable
> Object.keys(this)
"What's the call path into this function?"
debug> sb('suspectFn')
debug> cont
# paused on entry
debug> bt
"This async chain hangs — where?"
# Start with --inspect (no -brk), let it run to the hang, then:
debug> pause
debug> bt
# Now you see the stuck frame