Website · Docs · Install Guide · How Warp Works
This is an issues-only repo for Warp, a modern terminal with AI and your dev team’s knowledge built-in.
Warp is:
Built with Rust
GPU-accelerated
Compatible with zsh, bash, fish, and PowerShell
Ready to use on MacOS and Linux (Windows waitlist)
You can download Warp and read our docs for platform-specific instructions.
We try to release an update weekly, typically on Thursdays. Read our changelog (release notes).
Please search through our existing issues for your bug (including workarounds) or feature request.
If you can't find a solution above, please file issue requests in this repo! We kindly ask that you please use our issue templates to make the issues easier to track for our team.
We are planning to first open-source our Rust UI framework, and then parts and potentially all of our client codebase. The server portion of Warp will remain closed-source for now.
You can see how we’re thinking about open source here: #400
As a side note, we are open-sourcing our extension points as we go. The community has already been contributing new themes. And we’ve just opened our Workflows repository for the community to contribute common useful commands.
Interested in joining the team? See our open roles and feel free to email us: hello at warpdotdev
See our docs for a walk-through of the features within our app.
Join our Discord to chat with other users and get immediate help from members of the Warp team.
For anything else, please don't hesitate to reach out via email at hello at warpdotdev
At a high level, we ask everyone to be respectful and empathetic. We follow the GitHub Community Guidelines:
Be welcoming and open-minded
Respect each other
Communicate with empathy
Be clear and stay on topic
We'd like to call out a few of the open source dependencies that have helped Warp to get off the ground:
Tokio
NuShell
Fig Completion Specs
Warp Server Framework
Alacritty
Hyper HTTP library
FontKit
Core-foundation
Smol