This domain exposes CSS read/write operations. All CSS objects (stylesheets, rules, and styles)
have an associated id used in subsequent operations on the related object. Each object type has
a specific id structure, and those are not interchangeable between objects of different kinds.
CSS objects can be loaded using the get*ForNode() calls (which accept a DOM node id). A client
can also keep track of stylesheets via the styleSheetAdded/styleSheetRemoved events and
subsequently load the required stylesheet contents using the getStyleSheet[Text]() methods.
Debugger domain exposes JavaScript debugging capabilities. It allows setting and removing
breakpoints, stepping through execution, exploring stack traces, etc.
This domain exposes DOM read/write operations. Each DOM Node is represented with its mirror object
that has an id. This id can be used to get additional information on the Node, resolve it into
the JavaScript object wrapper, etc. It is important that client receives DOM events only for the
nodes that are known to the client. Backend keeps track of the nodes that were sent to the client
and never sends the same node twice. It is client's responsibility to collect information about
the nodes that were sent to the client.
DOM debugging allows setting breakpoints on particular DOM operations and events. JavaScript
execution will stop on these operations as if there was a regular breakpoint set.
EventBreakpoints permits setting breakpoints on particular operations and
events in targets that run JavaScript but do not have a DOM.
JavaScript execution will stop on these operations as if there was a regular
breakpoint set.
Network domain allows tracking network activities of the page. It exposes information about http,
file, data and other requests and responses, their headers, bodies, timing, etc.
Runtime domain exposes JavaScript runtime by means of remote evaluation and mirror objects.
Evaluation results are returned as mirror object that expose object type, string representation
and unique identifier that can be used for further object reference. Original objects are
maintained in memory unless they are either explicitly released or are released along with the
other objects in their object group.