Overview
The StagehandTool
integrates the Stagehand framework with CrewAI, enabling agents to interact with websites and automate browser tasks using natural language instructions.
Overview
Stagehand is a powerful browser automation framework built by Browserbase that allows AI agents to:
- Navigate to websites
- Click buttons, links, and other elements
- Fill in forms
- Extract data from web pages
- Observe and identify elements
- Perform complex workflows
The StagehandTool wraps the Stagehand Python SDK to provide CrewAI agents with browser control capabilities through three core primitives:
- Act: Perform actions like clicking, typing, or navigating
- Extract: Extract structured data from web pages
- Observe: Identify and analyze elements on the page
Prerequisites
Before using this tool, ensure you have:
- A Browserbase account with API key and project ID
- An API key for an LLM (OpenAI or Anthropic Claude)
- The Stagehand Python SDK installed
Install the required dependency:
Usage
Basic Implementation
The StagehandTool can be implemented in two ways:
1. Using Context Manager (Recommended)
The context manager approach is recommended as it ensures proper cleanup of resources even if exceptions occur.
from crewai import Agent, Task, Crew
from crewai_tools import StagehandTool
from stagehand.schemas import AvailableModel
# Initialize the tool with your API keys using a context manager
with StagehandTool(
api_key="your-browserbase-api-key",
project_id="your-browserbase-project-id",
model_api_key="your-llm-api-key", # OpenAI or Anthropic API key
model_name=AvailableModel.CLAUDE_3_7_SONNET_LATEST, # Optional: specify which model to use
) as stagehand_tool:
# Create an agent with the tool
researcher = Agent(
role="Web Researcher",
goal="Find and summarize information from websites",
backstory="I'm an expert at finding information online.",
verbose=True,
tools=[stagehand_tool],
)
# Create a task that uses the tool
research_task = Task(
description="Go to https://www.example.com and tell me what you see on the homepage.",
agent=researcher,
)
# Run the crew
crew = Crew(
agents=[researcher],
tasks=[research_task],
verbose=True,
)
result = crew.kickoff()
print(result)
2. Manual Resource Management
from crewai import Agent, Task, Crew
from crewai_tools import StagehandTool
from stagehand.schemas import AvailableModel
# Initialize the tool with your API keys
stagehand_tool = StagehandTool(
api_key="your-browserbase-api-key",
project_id="your-browserbase-project-id",
model_api_key="your-llm-api-key",
model_name=AvailableModel.CLAUDE_3_7_SONNET_LATEST,
)
try:
# Create an agent with the tool
researcher = Agent(
role="Web Researcher",
goal="Find and summarize information from websites",
backstory="I'm an expert at finding information online.",
verbose=True,
tools=[stagehand_tool],
)
# Create a task that uses the tool
research_task = Task(
description="Go to https://www.example.com and tell me what you see on the homepage.",
agent=researcher,
)
# Run the crew
crew = Crew(
agents=[researcher],
tasks=[research_task],
verbose=True,
)
result = crew.kickoff()
print(result)
finally:
# Explicitly clean up resources
stagehand_tool.close()
Command Types
The StagehandTool supports three different command types for specific web automation tasks:
1. Act Command
The act
command type (default) enables webpage interactions like clicking buttons, filling forms, and navigation.
# Perform an action (default behavior)
result = stagehand_tool.run(
instruction="Click the login button",
url="https://example.com",
command_type="act" # Default, so can be omitted
)
# Fill out a form
result = stagehand_tool.run(
instruction="Fill the contact form with name 'John Doe', email 'john@example.com', and message 'Hello world'",
url="https://example.com/contact"
)
2. Extract Command
The extract
command type retrieves structured data from webpages.
# Extract all product information
result = stagehand_tool.run(
instruction="Extract all product names, prices, and descriptions",
url="https://example.com/products",
command_type="extract"
)
# Extract specific information with a selector
result = stagehand_tool.run(
instruction="Extract the main article title and content",
url="https://example.com/blog/article",
command_type="extract",
selector=".article-container" # Optional CSS selector
)
3. Observe Command
The observe
command type identifies and analyzes webpage elements.
# Find interactive elements
result = stagehand_tool.run(
instruction="Find all interactive elements in the navigation menu",
url="https://example.com",
command_type="observe"
)
# Identify form fields
result = stagehand_tool.run(
instruction="Identify all the input fields in the registration form",
url="https://example.com/register",
command_type="observe",
selector="#registration-form"
)
Configuration Options
Customize the StagehandTool behavior with these parameters:
stagehand_tool = StagehandTool(
api_key="your-browserbase-api-key",
project_id="your-browserbase-project-id",
model_api_key="your-llm-api-key",
model_name=AvailableModel.CLAUDE_3_7_SONNET_LATEST,
dom_settle_timeout_ms=5000, # Wait longer for DOM to settle
headless=True, # Run browser in headless mode
self_heal=True, # Attempt to recover from errors
wait_for_captcha_solves=True, # Wait for CAPTCHA solving
verbose=1, # Control logging verbosity (0-3)
)
Best Practices
- Be Specific: Provide detailed instructions for better results
- Choose Appropriate Command Type: Select the right command type for your task
- Use Selectors: Leverage CSS selectors to improve accuracy
- Break Down Complex Tasks: Split complex workflows into multiple tool calls
- Implement Error Handling: Add error handling for potential issues
Troubleshooting
Common issues and solutions:
- Session Issues: Verify API keys for both Browserbase and LLM provider
- Element Not Found: Increase
dom_settle_timeout_ms
for slower pages
- Action Failures: Use
observe
to identify correct elements first
- Incomplete Data: Refine instructions or provide specific selectors
Additional Resources
For questions about the CrewAI integration: