The warp repository (warpdotdev/warp) focuses on: Warp is an agentic development environment, born out of the terminal.. It belongs in this directory only insofar as it supports developer-centric engineering workflows, multi-agent orchestration, workflow automation in AI products, agent systems, or developer tooling.
License
AGPL-3.0
Stars
61,640
Homepage
https://warp.dev/Features
- Recorded summary for warp: Warp is an agentic development environment, born out of the terminal.
- warp uses Rust as its recorded primary language, which helps with stack-fit review.
- warp helps evaluate coordination, planning, or task-decomposition patterns in agent systems.
- warp fits engineering teams assessing code, CLI, SDK, runtime, or developer-tooling workflows.
- warp lists AGPL-3.0 license metadata; review obligations before redistribution or hosted use.
- warp has about 34,985 GitHub stars in the local metadata snapshot.
Use Cases
- Evaluate warp when the need is agent orchestration and the repo summary matches: Warp is an agentic development environment, born out of the terminal.
- Compare the Rust implementation in warp before choosing a similar internal architecture.
- Use warp to test agent coordination patterns with a concrete open-source codebase.
- Use warp to study developer-tooling implementation details before building internal workflows.
- Complete a AGPL-3.0 license review before packaging warp into a commercial or hosted workflow.
- Use warp's GitHub traction as one input when prioritizing open-source evaluation.
FAQ
Start from the repository summary (Warp is an agentic development environment, born out of the terminal.), then verify maintenance status, integration boundaries, and whether its agent orchestration, developer engineering workflows focus matches the intended workflow. Repository: https://github.com/warpdotdev/warp. Stars: about 34,985. License: AGPL-3.0. Language: Rust.
warp is best treated as a repository-level component or reference implementation for agent orchestration, developer engineering workflows. Good evaluation scenarios include: Evaluate warp when the need is agent orchestration and the repo summary matches: Warp is an agentic development environment, born out of the terminal. Compare the Rust implementation in warp before choosing a similar internal architecture. Use warp to test agent coordination patterns with a concrete open-source codebase.