Warp is now open-source, with GPT-powered agents

Warp has just rolled out an open-source push, opening its code, roadmap, and contribution process to the community. The company says “Oz-managed” GPT-powered agents will handle coding and testing, while users provide ideas and verification.

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TL;DR

  • **Warp is now open-source:** Opened **code, roadmap, and contribution process** to the community
  • **Oz-managed agents:** Handle **coding, planning, testing**; community focuses on ideas, direction, verification
  • **Agentic workflows:** Powered by **GPT models**; **OpenAI Devs** named founding sponsor of the repository
  • **Public roadmap and discussions:** Emphasis on transparent planning and community input
  • **New /feedback skill:** Submit feedback and open **GitHub issues** directly from within Warp
  • Community reactions: Mostly supportive; questions on **license**, account support, agent keys; GNOME crash reported

Warp announced on X that it is now open-source, saying it is opening “the code, the roadmap, and the contribution process” to the community.

In a follow-up post, the company stated that “Oz-managed agents” will handle “coding, planning, testing,” while community members focus on “ideas, direction, and verification.” Warp also claimed that the workflow will help it “build a better Warp, faster.” The post added that OpenAI Devs is the founding sponsor of the new open source Warp repository and that the agentic management workflows are powered by GPT models.

Warp further pointed to a public roadmap, open discussions, and a new /feedback skill that lets people submit feedback and open GitHub issues directly from within Warp. It also directed readers to the CONTRIBUTING guide for getting started.

Replies to the announcement were mostly supportive, with commenters describing the move as a welcome step and, in some cases, a reason to revisit the product. Others asked practical questions about the license, whether OpenAI and Claude accounts might be usable in Warp, and whether agent keys could be brought in without a Warp plan. One user also reported a GNOME crash after onboarding, suggesting that early testing is already surfacing both enthusiasm and complaints.

Source: Warp on X

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