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Colin McDonnell 5fa8c3603d Add writeups
2026-01-09 16:03:25 -08:00

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# WebFetch Tool Analysis
Analysis of webfetch/URL fetching implementations across three AI coding agents to inform the design of pullfrog's custom webfetch MCP tool.
---
## 1. OpenCode Implementation
**Source**: `packages/opencode/src/tool/webfetch.ts`
### Architecture
OpenCode's webfetch is straightforward - a simple fetch wrapper with HTML-to-markdown conversion:
```typescript
const response = await fetch(params.url, {
signal: AbortSignal.any([controller.signal, ctx.abort]),
headers: {
"User-Agent": "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36...",
Accept: acceptHeader,
"Accept-Language": "en-US,en;q=0.9",
},
})
```
### Key Features
| Feature | Implementation |
|---------|---------------|
| **Output formats** | `text`, `markdown`, `html` (default: markdown) |
| **HTML→Markdown** | Uses `turndown` library |
| **Max response size** | 5MB hard limit |
| **Timeout** | 30s default, 120s max |
| **Permission system** | Application-level `ctx.ask()` prompt |
| **Domain blocking** | None - relies on user approval |
| **Caching** | None |
| **Redirect handling** | Native fetch behavior |
### HTML Processing
Two methods depending on output format:
1. **`extractTextFromHTML()`** - Uses Bun's `HTMLRewriter` to strip scripts/styles and extract text
2. **`convertHTMLToMarkdown()`** - Uses `turndown` with sensible defaults (ATX headings, fenced code blocks)
### Permission Model
```typescript
await ctx.ask({
permission: "webfetch",
patterns: [params.url],
always: ["*"], // User can allow all future requests
metadata: { url, format, timeout },
})
```
**Verdict**: No enforcement - purely advisory. If user approves, the fetch proceeds with no restrictions.
### What I Like
- Clean, minimal implementation
- Good HTML processing with `turndown`
- Sensible size limits (5MB)
- Format flexibility
### What I Don't Like
- No domain whitelisting/blocklisting
- No caching (repeated requests to same URL are wasteful)
- Permission system is advisory-only
- No redirect safety checks
---
## 2. Claude Code Implementation
**Source**: Extracted from bundled `claude` CLI binary
### Architecture
Claude Code uses a more sophisticated approach with server-side domain validation:
```javascript
// Domain validation before fetch
async function Ci5(domain) {
const response = await fetch(
`https://claude.ai/api/web/domain_info?domain=${encodeURIComponent(domain)}`
);
if (response.status === 200) {
return response.data.can_fetch === true
? { status: "allowed" }
: { status: "blocked" };
}
return { status: "check_failed" };
}
```
### Key Features
| Feature | Implementation |
|---------|---------------|
| **Domain blocklist** | Server-side API at `claude.ai/api/web/domain_info` |
| **Permission format** | `WebFetch(domain:example.com)` - domain-only, not URLs |
| **Wildcard support** | `domain:*.google.com` patterns |
| **HTTP→HTTPS upgrade** | Automatic protocol upgrade |
| **Caching** | 15-minute self-cleaning cache |
| **HTML→Markdown** | Uses `turndown` |
| **Redirect handling** | Special handling - informs user of cross-host redirects |
| **Enterprise override** | `skipWebFetchPreflight` setting |
### Domain Permission Model
Claude Code enforces domain-level permissions, not URL-level:
```javascript
WebFetch: (A) => {
if (A.includes("://") || A.startsWith("http"))
return {
valid: false,
error: "WebFetch permissions use domain format, not URLs",
suggestion: 'Use "domain:hostname" format',
examples: ["WebFetch(domain:example.com)", "WebFetch(domain:github.com)"]
};
if (!A.startsWith("domain:"))
return {
valid: false,
error: 'WebFetch permissions must use "domain:" prefix',
examples: ["WebFetch(domain:example.com)", "WebFetch(domain:*.google.com)"]
};
return { valid: true };
}
```
### Blocklist Enforcement Flow
```
User requests URL
Extract hostname
Check claude.ai/api/web/domain_info?domain=hostname
┌──────────────────────────────────┐
│ allowed → proceed with fetch │
│ blocked → throw AC0 error │
│ check_failed → throw QC0 error │
└──────────────────────────────────┘
```
### Redirect Handling
When a URL redirects to a different host:
```javascript
// Returns special response asking user to manually re-request
return `To complete your request, I need to fetch content from the redirected URL.
Please use WebFetch again with these parameters:
- url: "${redirectUrl}"
- prompt: "${originalPrompt}"`;
```
This prevents open redirect attacks where a "safe" domain redirects to a malicious one.
### What I Like
- **Server-side blocklist** - centralized, updateable without client changes
- **Domain-level permissions** - prevents path-based bypasses
- **Redirect safety** - cross-host redirects require explicit user action
- **15-minute caching** - reduces redundant requests
- **Enterprise override** - `skipWebFetchPreflight` for corporate environments
### What I Don't Like
- **External dependency** - requires `claude.ai` API to be available
- **No local blocklist** - can't work offline or with custom blocklists
- **Opaque blocklist** - users can't see what's blocked or why
---
## 3. Gemini CLI Implementation
**Source**: `@google/gemini-cli` npm package
### Architecture
Gemini CLI takes a fundamentally different approach - it doesn't have a dedicated webfetch tool. Instead it relies on:
1. **Google Search grounding** - built into the Gemini API
2. **MCP servers** - external tools can provide fetch capabilities
3. **No native URL fetching** - by design
### Key Observations
From searching the codebase:
- No `webfetch`, `url_fetch`, or similar tool definitions
- Has `github_fetch.ts` for fetching GitHub releases (internal use)
- Relies on model's built-in capabilities or MCP extensions
### Why No WebFetch?
Gemini's design philosophy appears to be:
1. Use the model's grounding capabilities for web information
2. Delegate specialized fetching to MCP servers
3. Avoid building network access into the CLI itself
### What I Like
- **Clean separation** - network access is opt-in via MCP
- **Security by default** - no built-in way to exfiltrate data
### What I Don't Like
- **Missing functionality** - can't fetch arbitrary URLs
- **Requires MCP setup** - more complex for users who need fetching
---
## 4. Pullfrog Design Decisions
### Core Requirements
1. **Domain-level whitelisting** - enforced in-tool, not advisory
2. **Simple implementation** - no external API dependencies
3. **GitHub-focused** - optimized for common development URLs
### Proposed Architecture
```
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ WebFetch Tool │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ 1. Parse URL → extract hostname │
│ 2. Check against DOMAIN_ALLOWLIST │
│ 3. If not allowed → return error (not throw) │
│ 4. Fetch with timeout + size limits │
│ 5. Convert HTML → Markdown if needed │
│ 6. Return content │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
```
### Domain Allowlist Strategy
**Included in initial allowlist**:
```typescript
const DOMAIN_ALLOWLIST = new Set([
// Documentation sites
"docs.github.com",
"developer.mozilla.org",
"nodejs.org",
"docs.python.org",
"go.dev",
"doc.rust-lang.org",
"docs.microsoft.com",
"learn.microsoft.com",
// Package registries (documentation)
"npmjs.com",
"www.npmjs.com",
"pypi.org",
"crates.io",
"pkg.go.dev",
// GitHub (raw content, gists)
"raw.githubusercontent.com",
"gist.githubusercontent.com",
// Common API documentation
"api.github.com", // Already have GitHub tools, but for reference docs
]);
```
**Explicitly NOT included**:
- `github.com` itself - we have dedicated GitHub MCP tools
- Social media sites
- General web pages
- Arbitrary user-provided domains
### Features Borrowed from Each Agent
| Feature | Source | Included? | Rationale |
|---------|--------|-----------|-----------|
| HTML→Markdown via turndown | OpenCode | ✅ | Clean, proven library |
| 5MB size limit | OpenCode | ✅ | Sensible default |
| Domain-level permissions | Claude Code | ✅ | Core requirement |
| Redirect safety checks | Claude Code | ✅ | Prevents open redirect attacks |
| 15-minute caching | Claude Code | ❌ | Adds complexity, MCP is stateless |
| Server-side blocklist | Claude Code | ❌ | External dependency |
| Enterprise override | Claude Code | ❌ | Not needed for GitHub Actions |
| No built-in fetching | Gemini | ❌ | We need this functionality |
### Features NOT Included (and why)
1. **Caching** - MCP tools are stateless by design. Caching would require shared state across requests. The agent can cache results itself.
2. **Server-side blocklist** - Would require standing up an API endpoint. The allowlist approach is simpler and more transparent.
3. **User permission prompts** - In GitHub Actions context, there's no interactive user. Allowlist is enforced automatically.
4. **Wildcard domain patterns** - Adds complexity. Start with explicit domains, add patterns if needed.
5. **Multiple output formats** - Start with markdown only. Can add `text` and `html` later if needed.
### Error Handling Strategy
Unlike OpenCode/Claude which throw errors, we return errors as content:
```typescript
// Domain not allowed - return message, don't throw
if (!isDomainAllowed(hostname)) {
return {
output: `Domain "${hostname}" is not in the allowlist. Allowed domains: ${Array.from(DOMAIN_ALLOWLIST).join(", ")}`,
error: true,
};
}
```
This lets the agent understand the limitation and potentially find alternative approaches.
### Redirect Handling
Adopt Claude Code's approach with modification:
```typescript
// If redirect crosses domains, check the new domain
if (response.redirected) {
const redirectUrl = new URL(response.url);
if (!isDomainAllowed(redirectUrl.hostname)) {
return {
output: `URL redirected to "${redirectUrl.hostname}" which is not in the allowlist.`,
error: true,
};
}
}
```
---
## 5. Implementation Plan
### Summary
Add a new `webfetch` MCP tool that fetches web content with domain-level whitelisting enforced server-side. The whitelist is configured via the payload (from GitHub App), and non-whitelisted domains return a helpful message guiding the LLM to alternative approaches.
### Key Design Decisions
| Aspect | OpenCode | Claude Code | Our Implementation |
|--------|----------|-------------|-------------------|
| **Whitelisting** | Permission prompt (advisory) | External API `domain_info` | Payload-configured whitelist |
| **Enforcement** | None (user approval) | Server-side check | Server-side check |
| **HTML Processing** | Turndown for markdown | Turndown for markdown | Turndown for markdown |
| **Redirects** | Follows automatically | Detects cross-host redirects | Follow with host check |
| **Timeout** | 30s default, 120s max | Configurable | 30s default, 120s max |
### Step 1: Add whitelist to payload type
Update `index.ts` to include `allowedWebFetchDomains`:
```typescript
interface Payload {
// ... existing fields
allowedWebFetchDomains?: string[]; // e.g. ["github.com", "*.npmjs.com", "docs.python.org"]
}
```
### Step 2: Create `mcp/webfetch.ts`
```typescript
// Core structure
export const WebFetchParams = type({
url: "string",
"format?": "'markdown' | 'text' | 'html'",
"timeout?": "number",
});
export function WebFetchTool(ctx: ToolContext) {
return tool({
name: "webfetch",
description: `Fetch content from whitelisted web URLs...`,
parameters: WebFetchParams,
execute: execute(async (params) => {
// 1. Validate URL format
// 2. Check domain against whitelist (from ctx.payload)
// 3. Fetch with timeout and size limits
// 4. Convert HTML to markdown if needed
// 5. Return content or guidance message
}),
});
}
```
### Step 3: Domain Matching Logic
Support wildcards for subdomains:
- `github.com` - exact match
- `*.github.com` - any subdomain (e.g., `docs.github.com`, `api.github.com`)
- `*.npmjs.com` - matches `www.npmjs.com`, `registry.npmjs.com`, etc.
```typescript
function isDomainAllowed(hostname: string, whitelist: string[]): boolean {
for (const pattern of whitelist) {
if (pattern.startsWith("*.")) {
const suffix = pattern.slice(1); // ".github.com"
if (hostname.endsWith(suffix) || hostname === pattern.slice(2)) {
return true;
}
} else if (hostname === pattern) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
```
### Step 4: Response for Non-Whitelisted Domains
When domain is not whitelisted, return guidance (not an error):
```typescript
return {
allowed: false,
message: `The domain "${hostname}" is not in the allowed list for direct fetching. ` +
`Consider using web_search to find relevant information, or ask the user to ` +
`provide the content directly. Allowed domains: ${whitelist.join(", ")}`,
};
```
### Step 5: HTML to Markdown Conversion
Use Turndown (same as OpenCode) for HTML-to-markdown conversion:
```typescript
import TurndownService from "turndown";
function htmlToMarkdown(html: string): string {
const turndown = new TurndownService({
headingStyle: "atx",
codeBlockStyle: "fenced",
});
turndown.remove(["script", "style", "meta", "link"]);
return turndown.turndown(html);
}
```
### Step 6: Register the Tool
Add to `mcp/index.ts`:
```typescript
import { WebFetchTool } from "./webfetch.ts";
// In the tools array
WebFetchTool(ctx),
```
### Data Flow
```mermaid
sequenceDiagram
participant LLM
participant MCP as MCP Server
participant WF as WebFetch Tool
participant Web as External URL
LLM->>MCP: webfetch(url, format)
MCP->>WF: execute(params)
WF->>WF: Parse URL, extract hostname
WF->>WF: Check whitelist from payload
alt Domain allowed
WF->>Web: fetch(url)
Web-->>WF: Response
WF->>WF: Convert to markdown
WF-->>MCP: {content, contentType}
MCP-->>LLM: Success result
else Domain not allowed
WF-->>MCP: {allowed: false, guidance}
MCP-->>LLM: Guidance message
end
```
### Files to Create/Modify
| File | Action |
|------|--------|
| `mcp/webfetch.ts` | Create - main tool implementation |
| `mcp/index.ts` | Modify - register the tool |
| `index.ts` | Modify - add `allowedWebFetchDomains` to payload type |
| `package.json` | Modify - add `turndown` dependency |
### Dependencies
Add to `package.json`:
- `turndown` - HTML to markdown conversion (same as OpenCode)
- `@types/turndown` - TypeScript types
---
## 6. Implementation Checklist
- [ ] Add `allowedWebFetchDomains` field to payload type in `index.ts`
- [ ] Create `mcp/webfetch.ts` with domain whitelisting and HTML conversion
- [ ] Register `WebFetchTool` in `mcp/index.ts`
- [ ] Add `turndown` and `@types/turndown` dependencies to `package.json`
- [ ] Test with allowed domains
- [ ] Test with blocked domains
- [ ] Test redirect behavior
---
## 7. Open Questions
1. **Should we support query parameters in allowlist?**
- e.g., allow `api.example.com/v1/*` but not `api.example.com/admin/*`
- Initial decision: No, domain-level only
2. **Should we allow configurable allowlists?**
- Via environment variable or config file?
- Initial decision: No, hardcoded for simplicity
3. **Should we support authentication headers?**
- For private documentation sites
- Initial decision: No, security risk
4. **Rate limiting?**
- Prevent agent from hammering a site
- Initial decision: Rely on timeout, add if needed