There is an existing solution for CefGlue: Call .Net from javascript in CefSharp 1 - wpf
I want exactly this, but for CefGlue: I want to communicate with the App using JavaScript. So when I click a button in my HTML site, I want the application to handle this (for example: start a tcp server).
I tried to register an own CefV8Handler but without success, the Execute function on the handler is never called. Here is what I do right now
    protected override void OnWebKitInitialized()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Registering testy extension");
        Xilium.CefGlue.CefRuntime.RegisterExtension("testy", "var testy;if (!testy)testy = {};(function() {testy.hello = function() {};})();", new V8Handler());
        base.OnWebKitInitialized();
    }
My V8Handler code looks as follows:
public class V8Handler : Xilium.CefGlue.CefV8Handler
{
    protected override bool Execute(string name, CefV8Value obj, CefV8Value[] arguments, out CefV8Value returnValue, out string exception)
    {
        if (name == "testy")
            Console.WriteLine("CALLED TESTY");
        else
            Console.WriteLine("CALLED SOMETHING WEIRED ({0})", name);
        returnValue = CefV8Value.CreateNull();
        exception = null;
        return true;
    }
}
I'm in multiprocess mode, no console window shows "CALLED TESTY" nor "CALLED SOMETHING WEIRED".
                        
Found a solution for that. The trick is to create a CefV8Value (CreateFunction) and assign it to a V8Handler. Then assign this value to the global context. This is what it looks like:
Another problem came up: it was called in the renderer process, but I required the callback in the browser process. In the CefV8Handlers execute function i did this:
This way I can retrive the message in the OnProcessMessageReceived function in the CefClient implementation.