Highlights
- Quick setup — a one-command installer brings up the full stack and a setup wizard walks you through the rest.
- Self-hosted by default — run Roomote on your own server and connect the providers your team already uses.
- Self-configuring environments — Roomote agents prepare their own sandboxes from your repositories and setup guidance.
- Easy to use web dashboard — launch, follow, and steer tasks from the browser.
- Model agnostic — bring your own key for OpenRouter, Anthropic, OpenAI, and other inference providers.
- Source control integrations — GitHub, GitLab, Gitea, and Azure DevOps.
- Conversation surfaces — Slack, Microsoft Teams, Telegram, and Discord.
- Choose your own sandbox provider — including Docker-in-Docker on your own host.
Where to go next
- Self-hosting — run Roomote on your own server with the one-command installer or Docker Compose.
- How Roomote works — where work starts, how it runs, and how results come back.
- What to ask Roomote — frame asks so tasks stay scoped, useful, and reviewable.
- Environments — give Roomote the repositories, services, secrets, and guidance it needs to run and verify work.
- Review a task — inspect the transcript, logs, diffs, and previews before anything ships.
- Local development — set up the repository to contribute to Roomote itself.
- Architecture — a contributor-oriented map of the apps and packages that make up Roomote.
License
Roomote is released under the Fair Core License 1.0 (FCL-1.0-ALv2) — source-available, with each release converting to Apache-2.0 two years after it is published. A deployment is free for up to 10 registered users; adding more users requires a paid license key (Settings → Users, or theR_LICENSE_KEY environment variable). The license prohibits disabling or
circumventing the license key functionality. See
the LICENSE
file for details.