
Warp offers an open-source agentic development platform centered on its AI terminal and Oz.
Warp's Agentic Development Environment centers on a modern terminal that runs coding agents, terminal commands, and collaborative review in one interface. The product bundles Code, Agents, Terminal, and Drive capabilities so developers can prompt tasks, monitor parallel agent sessions, and ship across local repositories and infrastructure.
Warp 2.0 launched in June 2025 with benchmark-leading coding performance and native support for third-party harnesses including Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, and Gemini CLI. The company open-sourced the Warp client under AGPL in April 2026 while offering Oz for cloud agent orchestration and enterprise governance.
The developer-tools market is shifting from hand-written code toward prompt-driven agentic workflows across setup, coding, deployment, and incident response. Warp positions its agentic development environment for professional engineers who already live in terminals and need orchestration across large, existing codebases rather than greenfield IDE projects.
Warp reports adoption by more than 800,000 developers and enterprise customers including GitHub, Docker, and VMware, with paid tiers expanding AI request limits and enterprise controls for SSO, RBAC, and usage governance. Oz extends the roadmap toward cloud fleets of agents, scheduled tasks, and deeper file-tree editing as agentic development becomes standard practice.
Warp differentiates by building agent workflows natively in a terminal rather than bolting chat panels onto IDEs or burying agents inside CLI wrappers. Its block-based interface, vertical session tabs, in-terminal code review, and multi-agent management UI support parallel tasks with notifications and configurable autonomy.
The platform scores highly on coding benchmarks such as SWE-bench Verified and Terminal-Bench while supporting multiple models and external harnesses in one surface. Shared context through Warp Drive, MCP integration, codebase indexing, and cross-repository coding give enterprise teams standardized agent behavior without forcing a single vendor model.