A calm home for your AI agents.
Rabbitty is a native Mac terminal that runs your coding agents like Claude Code, Codex, and more, side by side, each on its own branch. It shows you which ones are done, stuck, or waiting on you, so you stop polling terminal tabs all day.
For developers who run more than one AI agent at a time.
Apple Silicon & Intel · macOS 13+ · Beta
One developer used it to go from 0 → 22 merged branches a day.
Claude finished · rabbitty
Spike 1 is done. Take a look when you're ready.
Every agent gets a row in the sidebar with a live status like working, done, needs you, or rate-limited, next to a real terminal. One window for all your agents.
Why Rabbitty
One window for every agent you run
The agents do the work. Rabbitty keeps them organized and tells you when they need you.
Stop Babysitting CLIs
Start an agent task and switch away. Rabbitty fires a native macOS notification the moment the agent finishes or needs your input, so you stop polling terminal tabs.
Always know what each agent is doing
Rabbitty automatically parses terminal buffers to detect if an agent is working, done, needs you, or has hit a rate limit. No shell plugins required.
Run agents in parallel, safely
Launch four or five agents concurrently. Keep them grouped in isolated worktrees so they can build and test on separate branches without touching each other's files.
Bring Your Own Agents
Rabbitty runs your local CLIs unmodified. Whether you use Claude Code, Codex, Antigravity, or custom bash scripts, they run in a real terminal. No wrappers, no proxies.
Your code never leaves your Mac
Your code and terminal buffers never leave your machine. Rabbitty is built on Rust, GPUI (the GPU-accelerated UI framework), and Alacritty's terminal emulation engine. A native app, not an Electron shell, and everything stays local.
Diffs & Commits, In Place
Review your working tree without leaving the terminal. A keyboard-toggled panel (⌘⇧G) shows syntax-highlighted diffs with word-level emphasis on what changed, lets you expand or collapse each file, and commit inline.
Where we fit
Not a terminal. Not an orchestrator.
Rabbitty sits in between: it runs the real AI CLIs you already use, and adds the status, notifications, and safety a plain terminal doesn't.
Traditional Terminals
iTerm · Warp · Alacritty · Ghostty · cmux
Powerful and fast, but completely blind. They execute your AI CLI like a standard script, leaving you to stare at a screen waiting out rate limits, reviews, and approvals.
The Command Center
Native agent command center
Observes the shell directly. Keeps your official CLIs as they are and runs them inside a command center that handles notifications, menu-bar status, and rate-limit detection. It also guards every worktree: terminals close before delete, and unmerged work asks to merge or discard.
Orchestrators
Conductor · Superset
Full apps that hide the CLI entirely or proxy prompts. Designed for running dozens of agents in parallel, replacing your terminal workflows and control.
| Capability | Terminals iTerm · Warp · Alacritty · Ghostty · cmux |
Rabbitty | Orchestrators Conductor · Superset |
|---|---|---|---|
| Runs official AI CLIs unmodified (Claude Code, Codex) | Yes | Yes | Often wrapped or proxied |
| Agent status visible without switching tabs | No | Yes, in the sidebar and menu bar | Yes |
| Parallel agents in git worktrees, one command | Manual git worktree | Yes, the agent starts right away | Varies |
| Worktree lifecycle managed (status, merge, safe delete) | No | Yes | Partially |
| Your shell and terminal workflow preserved | Yes | Yes, it is a real terminal | No |
| Local-first, no extra account | Yes | Yes | Not always |
Worktrees
The secret to speed?
Build in parallel.
Running several agents at once is the fastest way to build. Rabbitty puts each one in its own git worktree, so they can all work side by side without ever touching the same files.
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1
Press ⌘N to start. Describe the task in a sentence. Your agent gets a fresh worktree on its own branch. Your main checkout never moves.
-
2
Bring your local files. The first time, pick the ignored files it needs to run, like .env. Rabbitty saves the list to a .worktreeinclude and reuses it every time after.
-
3
Let it work. The agent builds and tests on its own while you start the next one.
-
4
Delete when it's done. Rabbitty merges the finished work into main, or asks what to do if anything is left unmerged.
branch fix-env-loader · claude comes along
Delete fix-env-loader?
merged clean · 2 commits ahead
Quick Switcher
Run five agents.
Jump to the one that needs you.
Press ⌘P to see every agent at once, ranked by how much they need you. The one waiting on a decision sits right at the top. Type a few letters or a number, press Enter, and you land on it.
-
1
Ranked by attention. Agents that need a decision rise to the top. The ones still working sit below them, and idle ones fall to the bottom.
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2
Your ask on every row. Each agent shows the task you gave it and its current state, so you recognize it without opening it.
-
3
One key, then go. Type a name or number to filter the list, then press Enter to jump straight to that agent.
fix-sidebar-hover
fix the sidebar hover flicker on inactive tabs
theme-two-step-picker
split theme selection into a two-step picker
queue-retry-logic
add retry logic to the queue consumer
brave-otter
explore migrating the glyph atlas to term-render
The numbers
Built with itself, measured in git.
Rabbitty is built inside Rabbitty, by AI agents. The numbers come from our own git history.
0 → 22
Merged branches per day, before and after parallel worktrees. Same agents, same developer. The difference is parallelism.
9 days
From first commit to a public macOS beta, built by AI agents inside the app itself.
4–5
Agents one developer runs at once, each in its own git worktree, all visible in the sidebar.
Give your AI a calm place to work.
Rabbitty is free and takes a minute to set up.