Welcome to OpenHands, a platform for autonomous software engineers, powered by AI and LLMs.
OpenHands agents collaborate with human developers to write code, fix bugs, and ship features.
OpenHands works best with Docker version 26.0.0+ (Docker Desktop 4.31.0+). You must be using Linux, Mac OS, or WSL on Windows.
To start OpenHands in a docker container, run the following commands in your terminal:
Warning
When you run the following command, files in ./workspace
may be modified or deleted.
WORKSPACE_BASE=$(pwd)/workspace
docker run -it \
--pull=always \
-e SANDBOX_USER_ID=$(id -u) \
-e WORKSPACE_MOUNT_PATH=$WORKSPACE_BASE \
-v $WORKSPACE_BASE:/opt/workspace_base \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
-p 3000:3000 \
--add-host host.docker.internal:host-gateway \
--name openhands-app-$(date +%Y%m%d%H%M%S) \
ghcr.io/opendevin/opendevin:0.8
Note
By default, this command pulls the latest
tag, which represents the most recent release of OpenHands. You have other options as well:
- For a specific release version, use
ghcr.io/opendevin/opendevin:<OpenHands_version>
(replace <OpenHands_version> with the desired version number). - For the most up-to-date development version, use
ghcr.io/opendevin/opendevin:main
. This version may be (unstable!) and is recommended for testing or development purposes only.
Choose the tag that best suits your needs based on stability requirements and desired features.
You'll find OpenHands running at http://localhost:3000 with access to ./workspace
. To have OpenHands operate on your code, place it in ./workspace
.
OpenHands will only have access to this workspace folder. The rest of your system will not be affected as it runs in a secured docker sandbox.
Upon opening OpenHands, you must select the appropriate Model
and enter the API Key
within the settings that should pop up automatically. These can be set at any time by selecting
the Settings
button (gear icon) in the UI. If the required Model
does not exist in the list, you can manually enter it in the text box.
For the development workflow, see Development.md.
Are you having trouble? Check out our Troubleshooting Guide.
To learn more about the project, and for tips on using OpenHands, check out our documentation.
There you'll find resources on how to use different LLM providers (like ollama and Anthropic's Claude), troubleshooting resources, and advanced configuration options.
OpenHands is a community-driven project, and we welcome contributions from everyone. Whether you're a developer, a researcher, or simply enthusiastic about advancing the field of software engineering with AI, there are many ways to get involved:
- Code Contributions: Help us develop new agents, core functionality, the frontend and other interfaces, or sandboxing solutions.
- Research and Evaluation: Contribute to our understanding of LLMs in software engineering, participate in evaluating the models, or suggest improvements.
- Feedback and Testing: Use the OpenHands toolset, report bugs, suggest features, or provide feedback on usability.
For details, please check CONTRIBUTING.md.
Whether you're a developer, a researcher, or simply enthusiastic about OpenHands, we'd love to have you in our community. Let's make software engineering better together!
- Slack workspace - Here we talk about research, architecture, and future development.
- Discord server - This is a community-run server for general discussion, questions, and feedback.
Distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE
for more information.
OpenHands is built by a large number of contributors, and every contribution is greatly appreciated! We also build upon other open source projects, and we are deeply thankful for their work.
For a list of open source projects and licenses used in OpenHands, please see our CREDITS.md file.
@misc{opendevin,
title={{OpenDevin: An Open Platform for AI Software Developers as Generalist Agents}},
author={Xingyao Wang and Boxuan Li and Yufan Song and Frank F. Xu and Xiangru Tang and Mingchen Zhuge and Jiayi Pan and Yueqi Song and Bowen Li and Jaskirat Singh and Hoang H. Tran and Fuqiang Li and Ren Ma and Mingzhang Zheng and Bill Qian and Yanjun Shao and Niklas Muennighoff and Yizhe Zhang and Binyuan Hui and Junyang Lin and Robert Brennan and Hao Peng and Heng Ji and Graham Neubig},
year={2024},
eprint={2407.16741},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.SE},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.16741},
}