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eas-simulator

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by expo · part of expo/skills

Run and control a user's app on a remote iOS/Android simulator hosted on EAS cloud. Always read before executing any `eas simulator:*` commands — it has the current syntax for this experimental API. Use whenever the user needs a simulator they can't run locally — 'run my app on a cloud simulator', 'use eas simulator to run/install/screenshot my app', 'I'm on Linux/Cursor and need an iOS device', 'no sim on this box / headless CI', 'let an agent click through my app and screenshot it', 'test my d

🧩 One of 7 skills in the expo/skills package — works on its own, and pairs well with its siblings.

This is the playbook your agent receives when the skill activates — you don't need to read it to use the skill, but it's here to audit before installing.

EAS Simulator

EAS Simulator runs a remote iOS simulator or Android emulator on EAS infrastructure that you drive from your machine — from the CLI, from an AI agent (via agent-device), and from a browser preview. It's the unlock for environments that can't run a simulator locally (Linux boxes, cloud/background agents like Cursor Cloud), and for letting an agent verify a change on a real device instead of only reasoning about code.

The simulator:* commands are experimental and hidden, and need a recent eas-cli (≥ 20.3.0 as of writing) — which is why this skill runs everything via npx --yes eas-cli@latest. Flags and verbs may change; if a command fails, <cmd> --help is authoritative.

When to use

The frontmatter description carries the trigger phrases. In short: use this to get a user's app onto a cloud simulator and interact with it — especially from a Mac-less or cloud/sandbox agent. Not for local sims (expo run:ios, Xcode, Android Studio), store builds/signing (that's EAS Build), or physical devices. For the macOS case, see Cloud vs local next.

Cloud vs local: decide this first

  • Non-macOS (Linux / CI / cloud sandbox like Cursor Cloud, detect via uname -sDarwin): the only way to get a sim — just proceed.
  • macOS: local sims exist and a cloud session costs money + latency, so ask first ("a remote cloud sim — to share a live preview, offload, or test an iOS version you lack — or just run locally?") unless the user explicitly said cloud/remote/shareable.
  • Always honor an explicit choice; for "run it locally" hand off to expo run:ios / Xcode.
# Programmatic detection — run this to decide before doing anything else:
if [ "$(uname -s)" != "Darwin" ] || ! xcrun --find simctl &>/dev/null 2>&1; then
  echo "no local sim — proceed with EAS Simulator"
else
  echo "local sim available — ask the user (cloud or local?)"
fi

The core loop (always the same)

A session is: start → (install your app) → drive → stop. eas-cli owns the session; the device verbs (open/tap/screenshot) come from the controller, which npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:exec runs for you with the session's connection env loaded.

# 1. Start a session (boots the remote sim + agent-device daemon; writes .env.eas-simulator).
printf '# managed by eas-cli\n' > .env.eas-simulator   # clear any stale session first
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:start --platform ios --type agent-device --non-interactive
#    Then confirm it's live: simulator:get --json → status IN_PROGRESS (bounded poll in run-your-app.md).

# 2. Drive it through `exec` (loads the session env, then runs the command you give it).
#    agent-device runs on demand via npx — nothing installed globally.
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:exec npx agent-device@latest open <app-or-url> --platform ios
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:exec npx agent-device@latest snapshot -i          # interactive UI tree → @e1, @e2 refs
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:exec npx agent-device@latest press @e2            # tap a ref (NOTE: 'press', not 'tap')
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:exec npx agent-device@latest screenshot ./shot.png

# 3. Stop (ends billing; tears down the VM) and reset the dotenv. Omit --id to target the dotenv session.
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:stop
printf '# managed by eas-cli\n' > .env.eas-simulator

To watch it live, hand the user the webPreviewUrl that start prints (an --type agent-device iOS session runs serve-sim alongside the daemon, so it emits one — agent control and a browser preview in one session; Android has no preview, and --type serve-sim is preview-only). This URL is for the user's browser — you cannot open it for them, and it must never touch the sim:

  • "Open it here" (Cursor/VS Code) → print the URL on its own line and tell the user to open Simple Browser (Cmd/Ctrl+Shift+P → "Simple Browser: Show") and paste it. Then stop: do not shell out to a system browser or a Cursor/VS Code URL handler, and do not ask "did a tab appear?" — you can't confirm it, the handoff is done.
  • Never open the webPreviewUrl on the sim. It's a browser preview, not a deep link and not an agent-device open argument; routing it to the device renders a browser-in-a-browser (a real past failure).
  • Headless agent (no display) → just return the URL as the deliverable.
  • Keeping it alive for the user to drive → bound it: start with --max-duration-minutes N so it auto-stops; tell them it bills until stopped and when it auto-stops; offer to reopen/extend when it ends. (This is the one case where "stop right away" doesn't apply; one-shot screenshot/get runs still stop immediately.)

start also prints a job-run URL.

Commands at a glance

CommandPurpose
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:start --platform ios|android [--type agent-device|argent|serve-sim] [--package-version X] [--max-duration-minutes N] [--non-interactive] [--json]Create a session; boot the sim + controller; write .env.eas-simulator; print webPreviewUrl + job-run URL
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:exec <cmd> [args…]Load .env.eas-simulator, then run <cmd> with that env. The bridge to the controller.
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:get [--id] [--json]Session status + connection details. Use this to confirm readiness (see Operating principles).
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:list [--status …] [--type …] [--platform …]List an app's sessions
npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:stop [--id]Stop a session (idempotent)

Driving the device (agent-device)

agent-device is the controller. Common verbs (run each as npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:exec npx agent-device@latest <verb>):

VerbDoes
apps --platform iosList installed apps (the blank sim shows none)
install <appId> <path> --platform iosInstall a local .app (uploads it)
install-from-source <url> --platform iosInstall from a URL — the VM downloads it (use for EAS artifacts)
open <appId|deep-link> --platform iosLaunch an app (bundle id) or follow an app deep link (exp+slug://…). Not for the webPreviewUrl — that's a browser preview for the user, never the device.
snapshot -iInteractive accessibility tree → @e1-style refs
press <ref|selector>Tap (e.g. press @e2 or press 'label="Open"') — the tap verb is press, not tap
fill <ref> "text"Type into a field
screenshot <path>Capture the screen to a local PNG (downloaded from the daemon) — requires an app to be open (open first)
metro prepare / metro reloadPoint a dev client at Metro / reload (Mode C)

For the full verb set and the argent controller alternative, see references/controllers.md.

Operating principles

The non-obvious mental model worth internalizing. Specific error→fix lookups (hung verbs, tappress, --platform, --json, pod install locale, orphaned sessions, boot variability) live in references/troubleshooting.md.

  1. Establish ground truth, then reset — don't patch-loop. Never assume an existing session or Metro is yours or healthy. Before driving, confirm:

    • cwd — you're in the intended Expo project dir (a misdirected start/exec sessions the wrong app + drops a stray .env.eas-simulator; pwd / check app.json).
    • session liveIN_PROGRESS via simulator:get --json (a stopped session keeps its id + remoteConfig, so the dotenv alone isn't proof).
    • one Metro on :8081 — reuse if it's yours, else free the port before starting (run-your-app.md).
    • build fits intent — a release build can't live-reload; if live edits are wanted and a release build is installed, install the dev build, don't reconnect.

    If current code isn't rendering after your first connect, stop poking live state: reset to baseline (stop session → clear dotenv → kill Metro) and redo the mode once; a second failure → stop and report. Never restart Metro in place, reconnect more than once, rebuild the native client to fix a JS/connection problem, or surface a preview URL while state is unknown. (A daemon drop — ERR_NGROK_3200 / Remote daemon is unavailable — is the same: reset, don't retry.)

  2. exec is a wrapper, not a driver. simulator:exec loads .env.eas-simulator and spawns the command you pass; the device verbs come from the controller (npx agent-device@latest). There is no simulator:tap.

  3. Act immediately; don't park an idle session. Sessions are short-lived — install and drive right after start. Leaving one idle drops the tunnel/daemon (→ reset, per #1).

  4. Stop on every exit path (billing) and reset the dotenv. --non-interactive doesn't auto-stop, and a forgotten session bills until stopped. Don't start again to "retry" a slow boot — that orphans a second billed session.

  5. Screenshot only the correct, fresh build. Mode C only after the dev client connects to Metro; A/B only from a build matching current source — reusing a pre-existing build is the #1 "my edits don't show" cause (see the build caveat above). (9:41 in the status bar is the sim default, not staleness.)

Stop and clean up

Stop the session (ends billing) and reset the dotenv so a later run doesn't try to reuse the dead session:

npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:stop          # omit --id → stops the dotenv session (or pass --id <id>)
printf '# managed by eas-cli\n' > .env.eas-simulator   # clear the stale session id so it isn't reused
# if you started Metro for Mode C, stop it too (Ctrl+C in its terminal, or kill the expo process)

References

Source of truth: Expo docs and the eas / agent-device CLIs (npx --yes eas-cli@latest simulator:* --help, agent-device --help). This skill teaches how to apply them; it doesn't replace them.