| name | agentbox-setup |
| description | Generate an agentbox.yaml for the current AgentBox workspace. Invoke when the user opens a sandbox without an agentbox.yaml or asks to (re)configure one. |
/agentbox-setup
Box layout (what you're configuring against)
Your user i vscode and you can use sudo to run commands as root.
/workspace is where the user code lives, a per-box git worktree on a fresh agentbox/<box-name> branch (or a tar-piped copy of the host workspace for non-git projects).
Run agentbox checkpoint --set-default (similar to docker commit) to save any changes make to the system and workspace so that new boxes will start from a warm state. Everything is wiped on agentbox destroy.
Some special folders:
- Host main repo's
.git/ — If the box bind-mounted RW at its identical absolute host path. In-box commits land on the host's branch refs (visible to git log on the host immediately); the box itself carries no SSH/git creds, so git push goes through the host relay (agentbox-ctl git push). The host's working tree is never written to — only refs/objects under .git/. GitHub PR ops (agentbox-ctl git pr create|view|list|comment|review|merge|close|reopen|checkout) flow the same way through host gh; write ops require host confirmation (deny → exit 10), merge and checkout have additional opt-in guards.
~/.claude — and similar home folders for coding agents are seeded from the host's ~/.claude on each create so auth, skills, and plugins persist without leaking the host's home dir.
agentbox.yaml — read by agentbox-ctl from /workspace. Tasks and services declared here are what the supervisor will run.
Exposed ports and services:
- portless - every port with
expose: setting in agentbox.yaml, will be exposed not only as a local port but also as a special domain name https://<name>.localhost (so on https) using portless cli and proxy. This will be also mapped to the host where also portless proxy is running so users can access the same service on the same looking url.
- vnc - the webVNC server exposed on 6080 will be proxies to the host on a random port.
- vscode - the vscode server is proxied to the host on a random port.
Goal
Produce a /workspace/agentbox.yaml that captures this project's services, tasks, and box defaults so the in-box supervisor (agentbox-ctl) can boot the workspace deterministically.
agentbox.yaml is declarative. The supervisor reads it on box start, but you don't have to restart the box: after you write the file, agentbox-ctl reload (run from inside the box) makes the already-running supervisor re-read it and immediately run the declared tasks and autostart the services. See step 8.
1. Discover the project
Look at /workspace:
- Top-level manifests:
package.json, pyproject.toml / requirements.txt, Cargo.toml, go.mod, Gemfile, composer.json, mix.exs, etc. — these tell you the runtime.
docker-compose.yaml / docker-compose.yml — often lists the real services the project expects.
package.json → scripts: look for dev, start, build, test, migrate, seed.
Makefile / justfile / Taskfile.yaml — alternative task runners.
- Listening ports: grep for
listen(, PORT=, framework defaults (3000 for Next.js / Nuxt, 5173 for Vite, 8000 for Django, 8080 for Spring, etc.).
- Database / cache deps to spin up locally (Postgres, Redis, …) — declare them as services if the project doesn't expect them to be external.
2. Pick services and tasks
- Services = long-running. Web servers, watchers, queue workers, databases.
restart: on-failure by default.
- Tasks = one-shot.
pnpm install, DB migrations, codegen, fixture loaders, install apt packages. Wire dependent services with needs: so they wait for the task to finish successfully.
- Names: must match
[A-Za-z0-9_-]+. Task names and service names share a namespace — no collisions.
- No cycles in
needs:.
- Always generate a dependency-install task and make it the root of the
needs: graph (every service that needs deps gets needs: [install, …]). Future boxes start from a snapshot of the final filesystem so they won't need this, but updates or moving to a cloud provider might need to rebuild the container from scratch. The filesystem can be then later captured by agentbox-ctl checkpoint --set-default. The task must be idempotent: agentbox-ctl re-runs pending tasks on every box stop/start (the daemon dies with the container and is relaunched), so an unguarded install would reinstall on every start. The clean way is the run_once: true field — the supervisor stores a marker keyed by a hash of the command and skips warm boots automatically (the marker lives at /var/lib/agentbox/tasks/<name>, on the box rootfs, captured by checkpoints, never polluting /workspace). Editing the command re-runs it. Detect the package manager from the lockfile — never hardcode pnpm. See the worked example below.
- Add a comment to the beginning of the file to explain what you did and what issues you encountered, so that future run might use this information in case the project evolves and you need to update the agentbox.yaml file.
Stateful services: data persistence & re-seeding (read this for databases)
Declare a containerized dependency with the image: service form — AgentBox
generates the docker start-or-run shell (no hand-written docker run … || docker start …). The container runs in the box's dockerd; a published port is reachable
from other in-box services at 127.0.0.1:<host port>:
services:
postgres:
image:
name: postgres:17-alpine
ports: ["5432:5432"]
env:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
POSTGRES_DB: app
args: "-c max_connections=200"
container_name: app_db
ready_when: { port: 5432 }
restart: always
The container is reused by name across box stop/start. (Changing image/env
reuses the existing container as-is; docker rm <container_name> + agentbox-ctl reload to apply.) Install the DB client the migrate/seed tasks need (e.g.
postgresql-client) in the install task and reach the DB over TCP — don't
docker exec the container (nested exec fails with a setns error in a box).
A checkpoint does NOT capture docker-in-docker data. agentbox checkpoint is a docker commit of the box's writable filesystem (the system + /workspace). The in-box dockerd keeps its storage in a separate per-box volume (/var/lib/docker), which is not part of that image — it's fresh on every new box and wiped on agentbox destroy. So a database or cache you run as a docker container (e.g. docker run … postgres) starts empty on every new box created from a checkpoint (every agentbox claude / agentbox create), even though /workspace and any marker files you wrote were restored. (A DB run as a native process with its data dir on the box filesystem — e.g. postgres -D /var/lib/postgresql/data — is captured by the checkpoint, since it lives in the writable layer.)
Consequence for migrate/seed tasks of a containerized DB: do NOT use run_once: true (the marker form). A command-hash marker is correct for deps (they live in /workspace, which the checkpoint captures), but wrong for DB data living in a docker volume: the marker is restored from the checkpoint while the DB is empty, so a marker-guarded seed wrongly skips and the app boots against an empty database. Instead use the run_once: { check: <cmd> } form — the probe runs first and the seed runs unless the probe exits 0, and no marker is written (the DB is the source of truth). Gate on the actual data:
seed:
command: pnpm db:seed
needs: [install, migrate]
run_once:
check: |
export PGPASSWORD=postgres
psql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 5432 -U postgres -d app -tAc \
"SELECT EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM users LIMIT 1)" 2>/dev/null | grep -q t
Lifecycle nuance (this is why the data check, not a marker, is right):
- Box stop → start (
agentbox stop/start): the supervisor daemon dies with the container and is relaunched, so it re-runs all tasks from pending. The per-box docker volume does survive stop/start, so the DB still has data — the data check makes the seed a fast no-op.
- New box from a checkpoint (
agentbox claude/create): tasks run and the DB volume is empty → the check fails → the seed runs. Correct.
- Resume after pause (
agentbox pause/unpause): the daemon is frozen and thawed, not restarted, so tasks do not re-run at all — nothing to seed, the running DB is untouched.
(Migrations are usually safe to re-run as-is: migration tools track applied migrations in their own table, which on a fresh box is empty, so they simply re-apply. Only the data seed needs the existence check.) Install the DB client the seed/migrate tasks need (e.g. postgresql-client) in the install task — don't docker exec the DB container for these checks (nested docker exec fails inside a box with a setns error); reach it over TCP with the client tools instead.
3. Wire readiness probes (services only)
ready_when: lets the supervisor decide when a service is "ready" (vs. just "running"). Exactly one of these must be present:
port: 3000 — TCP connect (default host 127.0.0.1; override with host:).
log_match: "Listening on" — regex matched against stdout/stderr. First match flips the service to ready.
http: "http://127.0.0.1:3000/health" — GET probe. Optional expect_status: 200 (default: any 2xx).
Tunables: interval_ms (default 500), initial_delay_ms (default 0), timeout_ms (default 60000), on_timeout: kill | mark_unhealthy (default kill — re-enters the restart policy).
Mark the web service with expose:
The box's primary web app (the dev server / Next.js / API the user opens in a browser) should declare:
expose:
port: 3000
as: 80
At most one service may set expose:. AgentBox forwards container :80 to 127.0.0.1:<port> and publishes it on the host with portless proxy to a .localhost url, so agentbox list/status show it as the box's main URL on every engine (no OrbStack dependency). Set this on the same service whose ready_when: you just wrote (a DB or worker should not get expose:).
4. Restart + backoff
Per service:
restart: always | on-failure | never (default on-failure).
backoff: — initial_ms (default 500), max_ms (default 30000; must be >= initial_ms), factor (default 2).
5. (Optional) defaults: block
Sets per-project defaults for agentbox create/claude/code/shell — same shape as ~/.agentbox/config.yaml. CLI flags still override. Common keys:
box.hostSnapshot (bool) — APFS-clone the host workspace into a per-box scratch dir before seeding /workspace (stabilizes the tar-pipe source).
box.defaultCheckpoint (string) — checkpoint new boxes start from (normally you set this via agentbox-ctl checkpoint --set-default at the end of setup — see section 9, not by hand).
box.withPlaywright (bool) — install @playwright/cli globally inside the box.
box.vnc (bool) — run Xvnc + noVNC on container port 6080.
box.isolateClaudeConfig (bool) — per-box ~/.claude volume instead of the shared one.
code.ide — vscode | cursor | auto.
code.autoTerminals (bool) — auto-generate .vscode/tasks.json with per-service tails.
browser.default — agent-browser | playwright | both.
Full key list (run on the host): agentbox config list --keys.
6. Worked example
defaults:
box:
withPlaywright: true
code:
ide: cursor
tasks:
install:
command: |
set -e
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y postgresql-client
if [ -f pnpm-lock.yaml ]; then
corepack enable >/dev/null 2>&1 || true
pnpm install --frozen-lockfile || pnpm install
fi
run_once: true
migrate:
command: pnpm db:migrate
needs: [install]
services:
postgres:
command: postgres -D /var/lib/postgresql/data
ready_when:
port: 5432
restart: always
dev:
command: pnpm dev
needs: [install, migrate, postgres]
ready_when:
port: 3000
timeout_ms: 120000
expose:
port: 3000
as: 80
restart: on-failure
backoff:
initial_ms: 500
max_ms: 5000
factor: 2
6b. Bringing extra host files/folders into the box
Two ways to copy host files in (both COPY — never a live mount, so the box can't
write back to the host):
carry: block (declarative, in agentbox.yaml) — for files/dirs every box
should get at create time. Each entry is { src, dest } with optional mode,
user, optional, and exclude: (a list of tar globs / bare dir names to drop
when copying a directory). Heavy regenerable dirs (.git, node_modules, bin,
obj, packages, dist, .next, target) are dropped by default; exclude:
is additive. Each carry entry is capped at box.cpMaxBytes (default 100 MiB
after excludes) — the same limit agentbox cp enforces.
agentbox-ctl cp fromHost <hostPath...> <boxPath> (ad-hoc, from inside the box)
— for a one-off copy. Takes several sources in one call (last path is the dest,
which must be a directory). Prompts the user on the host to approve.
The per-copy size limit (important for large/legacy folders). A single copy is
blocked above box.cpMaxBytes (default 100 MB) after default excludes, so it
fails loud instead of silently hanging. When blocked you get a du-style tree of
the biggest remaining folders/subfolders. To get under the limit, EITHER:
- drop what the box can regenerate (the default excludes already remove
node_modules/.git/build output; add more with --exclude=<glob-or-name>), OR
- copy the heavy folders one at a time so each copy is under the limit, OR
- pass
--yes to copy the whole thing anyway (only when you really need it all).
Example: a 2.4 GB legacy folder is mostly packages/ (NuGet) + .git; those are
excluded by default, and what's left can be copied in one call by listing the
sub-folders into a destination directory:
agentbox-ctl cp fromHost ../legacy/src ../legacy/Database /workspace/legacy/.
7. Validate before handing off
- check with
agentbox-ctl reload and then agentbox-ctl status that everything is running as expected.
- Every name in
needs: must reference an existing task or service.
- A service with
restart: never and an autostart dependency will block the dependent forever after one failed run — usually a mistake.
command: is either a shell string (run via bash -c) or an argv array. Use the argv form if you need to avoid shell quoting.
8. Hand-off
Tell the user (verbatim):
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██║ ██║╚██████╔╝███████╗██║ ╚████║ ██║ ██████╔╝╚██████╔╝██╔╝ ██╗
╚═╝ ╚═╝ ╚═════╝ ╚══════╝╚═╝ ╚═══╝ ╚═╝ ╚═════╝ ╚═════╝ ╚═╝ ╚═╝
your box is ready, you can start more sessions with agentbox claude
you can access the web app at https://.localhost
9. Checkpoint the warm state - DON't SKIP THIS STEP
Checkpoint (snapshot) this box writable layer: once the box is warmed up (deps installed, services ready), checkpoint it with agentbox-ctl checkpoint --name setup --replace --set-default so future boxes start ready.
Remember the checkpoint captures the writable layer (/workspace + system), not docker-in-docker volumes — so a containerized DB's data does not carry into new boxes. That's expected; the data-existence-gated seed task from section 2 re-seeds those automatically. (If you need the data itself to persist into new boxes, run the DB as a native process with its data dir on the box filesystem, or bind a /workspace path as the container's data volume so it lands in the checkpoint.)
Run this command exactly once. The --name setup --replace makes it idempotent — if it ever needs to run again it overwrites the existing setup checkpoint instead of stacking duplicates.
On all providers except Vercel, this doesn't need to be confirmed by the user. It will pause the container for several seconds so warn the user about it and write Done when it's done.
On Vercel: this actually STOPS the sandbox, so warn the user about it. Also the system will ask confirmation.
10. Known issues
-
For Nextjs/Vite/Tasnstack projects, makes sure to forward also websocket for hot reload.
-
Service like flask, nextjs, BETTER_AUTH_URL, NEXT_PUBLIC_APP_URL should use the env-init {{AGENTBOX_BOX_HOST}} in agentbox.yaml so it will be automatically replaced.
-
The install task above uses run_once: true, so it is a no-op on warm boots. Do not wrap it in a manual marker check too. To force a one-off rebuild, run agentbox-ctl run-task install --force (which bypasses the run_once marker), or edit the command (a changed command invalidates the hash and re-runs).
11. Pin URLs / render config files (env, secrets)
Many apps hard-code a hostname (e.g. optima.localhost) or read a gitignored .env. Instead of long sed commands in a task, use the built-ins:
-
agentbox-ctl render <src> — a declarative sed for files already in the workspace. --env substitutes {{AGENTBOX_*}} placeholders; --rules <name> applies a named rule-set from the top-level replacements: block; --rule 'from=>to' / --rule-regex 'pat=>repl' are inline. Write to --out <path> (or --in-place). The whitelist placeholders are {{AGENTBOX_BOX_NAME}}, {{AGENTBOX_BOX_HOST}} (= <boxname>.localhost), {{AGENTBOX_BOX_ID}}, {{AGENTBOX_BOX_KIND}}, {{AGENTBOX_HOST_WORKSPACE}}, {{AGENTBOX_PROJECT_ROOT}}.
Render a gitignored .env from a committed env.example on every boot, pinning the URLs to this box:
replacements:
box-host:
- { from: 'optima\.localhost', to: '{{AGENTBOX_BOX_HOST}}', regex: true }
tasks:
env:
command: agentbox-ctl render apps/saas/env.example --out apps/saas/.env --env --rules box-host
Note: an run_once: { check: <cmd> } probe runs verbatim via bash -c with the box env — use shell vars like $AGENTBOX_BOX_NAME, NOT {{…}} placeholders (those are only expanded by render/carry, never by the supervisor).
Generated secrets: put {{AGENTBOX_AUTO_SECRET}} in the template for a value like BETTER_AUTH_SECRET instead of shelling out to openssl rand. Unnamed → a fresh 32-byte base64url secret each render (stable when you render the template→.env once). {{AGENTBOX_AUTO_SECRET:better-auth}} → generated once, persisted at /var/lib/agentbox/secrets/<name>, reused on every render (stable even if you render every boot). Example env.example line: BETTER_AUTH_SECRET="{{AGENTBOX_AUTO_SECRET:better-auth}}".
-
carry: + replaceEnvs/replace/rules — for a host-only file (e.g. a real .env with secrets that never lives in the repo), carry it in and render it host-side in one step (file entries only):
carry:
- src: ~/secrets/optima.env
dest: /workspace/apps/saas/.env
replaceEnvs: true
rules: [box-host]