new https://t.co/bWoqA88FUO is live.
also, the site is terminal-native now too.
it has an interactive theme switcher that restyles the whole site, so you can preview how your herdr setup would look across different terminal themes!
@krasy8 great to hear!
for keybinds, see optional bindings section in docs. i think what you need is "previous_workspace" and "next_workspace"
https://t.co/afBCUh6fSp
new herdr update!
agent session restore is now enabled by default for supported integrations.
after a herdr restart or update, supported agents can automatically resume their native sessions right where they left off.
also introducing release channels. a small thread:
.@herdrdev is cool. I am tired of doing back and forth with github in the browser, so I created my own clickable PR/issue viewer, inspired by gh-dash
put that in the left pane, codex on the right. saves me so much time
herdr is a tmux-like agent multiplexer that lives in your terminal.
It can split panes, has mouse support, is agent aware, detach/attach sessions, works over SSH, supports sound notifications and more.
@lumendriada made herdr using @ratatui_rs and is Terminal Tool of the Week! ⭐️
if you prefer living on the edge:
herdr set channel preview
preview builds receive new features and fixes before they land in stable!
see docs for more:
https://t.co/RLKj4BvT8l
as herdr grows, i'm slowing down stable releases a bit.
starting today, stable releases will happen weekly or bi-weekly unless there's a hotfix.
for many people, herdr is becoming part of their daily workflow. stability matters.
herdr started with a simple question:
"why can't i manage ai agents from my terminal without another app forcing its own workflow on me?"
2 months later, we're at 3,000 stars as of today.
thanks everyone.
back to work.
@magomaev default scrollback should be pretty long, but you could increase it in settings too; see https://t.co/QkVLQdWNco
if you still have problems, that might not be herdr. please open an issue on the repo!
people using herdr:
- developers who still choose their own tools
- people who like simple software
- people who don’t want another app
- people who just want to ssh into a vps
- terminal enjoyers
- tmux users
- people who want tmux energy without tmux homework
https://t.co/kQHrHNin8S is a fantastic piece of software.
I was in the early stages of building something similar, but happy to throw it away cuz this is *so* much better.
Herdr is seriously dope.
It feels like tmux reimagined for agentic coding, with an agent status pane built in.
My new IDE stack: Ghostty → Herdr → Neovim | LazyGit | Claude
https://t.co/vpEkAk9hN2