From a developers perspective the Chromium DevTools experience can be customized in multiple ways:
- via Settings > Preferences,
- via Settings > Experiments,
- via
chrome://flags
, - or by passing a command line flag to Chromium.
Adding new DevTools experiments is deprecated, the preferred way for adding new
features / exposing experimental features is via base::Feature
s. These are
controllable via Chromium command line parameters or optionally via chrome://flags
.
[TOC]
go/chrome-devtools:command-line-config
base::Feature
s are defined in the Chromium repository and made available to
DevTools via host bindings. This allows configuring features which have both a
DevTools front-end and a Chromium back-end component from a single source of
truth. But front-end-only features can be controlled via a base::Feature
just
as well.
By default, base::Feature
s are configurable via command line parameters when
launching Chromium. Optionally, they can be made available via the chrome://flags
UI as well.
Add a new base::Feature
to DevTools' features.cc
. This feature will automatically be available as a Chrome command line parameter:
// in browser_features.cc
BASE_FEATURE(kDevToolsNewFeature, "DevToolsNewFeature",
base::FEATURE_DISABLED_BY_DEFAULT);
// Optionally add feature parameters
const base::FeatureParam<std::string> kDevToolsNewFeatureStringParam{
&kDevToolsNewFeature, "string_param", /*default_value=*/""};
const base::FeatureParam<double> kDevToolsNewFeatureDoubleParam{
&kDevToolsNewFeature, "double_param", /*default_value=*/0};
Start Chrome via command line including flags:
out/Default/chrome --enable-features=DevToolsNewFeature
You can even pass additional feature parameters:
out/Default/chrome --enable-features="DevToolsNewFeature:string_param/foo/double_param/0.5"
This step is optional. If you want the base::Feature
to be controllable via the chrome://flags
UI and not only via the command line, follow this documentation.
Add the new feature to DevToolsUIBindings::GetHostConfig
(link to code, example CL).
- Update the type definition in
Runtime.ts
. - Update the dummy value returned by
getHostConfig
inInspectorFrontendHost.ts
. - Access the host config via
Root.Runtime.hostConfig
. - In unit tests, make sure to assign the expected configuration using
updateHostConfig({ foo: bar })
.
Please refer to this example CL.
Note: Adding new DevTools experiments is deprecated, please use a base::Feature
instead.
If you want to launch a new feature in DevTools behind an experiment flag, you will need to do two things:
- Make Chromium aware of the experiment and enable it to track users enabling/disabling the experiment.
- Register the experiment in DevTools to have it added to the Settings UI.
In Chromium, edit tools/metrics/histograms/enums.xml
. Find the enum titled
DevToolsExperiments
(your best bet is to search for this text in your editor,
as enums.xml
is very large).
Go to the end of this enum, and add a new entry. Make sure that the value
is
increased by one from the previous entry. The label can be anything you like but
make sure it is easily identifiable.
<int value="95" label="yourExperimentNameHere"/>
See an example Chromium CL here.
In DevTools, you need to register the experiment. This is done in
front_end/entrypoints/main/MainImpl.ts
and is done by calling
Root.Runtime.experiments.register
:
Root.Runtime.experiments.register(
'yourExperimentNameHere',
'User facing short description of experiment here',
false);
The first argument is the experiment's label, and this must match the label you used in your Chromium CL.
The second argument is a short description of the experiment. This string will be shown to users.
Finally, the third argument marks the experiment as unstable. You should pass
true
if you want your experiment to be marked as unstable. This moves it into
a separate part of the UI where users are warned that enabling the experiment
may cause issues.
You may also pass in two additional arguments which can be used to link users to documentation and a way to provide feedback:
Root.Runtime.experiments.register(
'jsProfilerTemporarilyEnable',
'Enable JavaScript Profiler temporarily',
/* unstable= */ false,
/* documentation */ 'https://goo.gle/js-profiler-deprecation',
/* feedback */ 'https://crbug.com/1354548'
);
You must also add the experiment to front_end/core/host/UserMetrics.ts
. Add an
entry to the DevToolsExperiments
enum, using the same label and integer
value that you used in the Chromium CL. You should also increase the
MaxValue
entry by one.
Once the experiment is registered, you can check if it is enabled and use this to run certain code blocks conditionally:
if(Root.Runtime.experiments.isEnabled('yourExperimentNameHere')) {
// Experiment code here
}