| name | golem-local-dev-server |
| description | Starting, configuring, and debugging the local Golem development server with `golem server`. Use when asked to start, stop, clean, or configure the local Golem server, or when you need to enable debug logs, find a useful tracing target, or diagnose runtime behavior of a deployed agent (e.g. status-code retry not firing, semantic trap retry decisions, durability events). |
Local Golem Development Server (golem server)
The golem server command runs a self-contained Golem server on the local machine for development and testing. It bundles all Golem services (worker executor, component compilation, shard manager, registry, and router) into a single process.
Note: Only the golem binary supports this command. golem-cli does not include golem server.
Subcommands
golem server run
Starts the local Golem server.
golem server run
Parameters
| Parameter | Description | Default |
|---|
--router-addr <ADDR> | Address to serve the main API on | 0.0.0.0 |
--router-port <PORT> | Port to serve the main API on | 9881 |
--custom-request-port <PORT> | Port to serve custom HTTP requests on (HTTP API endpoints) | 9006 |
--mcp-port <PORT> | Port to serve the MCP server on | 9007 |
--ports-file <PATH> | Write discovered startup ports to this JSON file | (none) |
--data-dir <PATH> | Directory to store data in | Platform-specific (see below) |
--clean | Clean the data directory before starting | false |
--agent-filesystem-root <PATH> | Use deterministic agent filesystem directories rooted at the given path instead of random temp directories. Layout: <root>/<environment_id>/<component_id>/<agent_name>/ | (none) |
Examples
Start with defaults:
golem server run
Start on a custom port:
golem server run --router-port 8080
Start fresh, deleting all previous state:
golem server run --clean
Start with a custom data directory and deterministic agent filesystems:
golem server run --data-dir ./my-data --agent-filesystem-root ./agent-fs
Write port information to a file (useful for scripting and CI):
golem server run --ports-file ./ports.json
Default Data Directory
The default data directory is platform-specific:
| Platform | Default Path |
|---|
| macOS | ~/Library/Application Support/golem |
| Linux | ~/.local/share/golem |
| Windows | C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\golem |
Ports File Format
When --ports-file is specified, the server writes a JSON file with the actual ports it bound to. This is useful when using port 0 (OS-assigned) or for scripting and CI automation. The file is written atomically (via a .tmp rename) once all services are ready.
{
"routerPort": 9881,
"customRequestPort": 9006,
"mcpPort": 9007
}
The application manifest can mirror stable local ports with localServer.customRequestPort and localServer.mcpPort. Those fields control how deployment subdomain values expand: HTTP API domains resolve to <label>.localhost:<customRequestPort> and MCP domains resolve to <label>.localhost:<mcpPort>. Use nonzero ports for deployments that register persistent subdomains. Load golem-configure-api-domain or golem-configure-mcp-server for the full subdomain versus domain rules.
Manual Testing with Free Ports
For manual testing in temporary apps, pass 0 directly as golem server run flags to let the OS assign free ports:
golem server run \
--router-port 0 \
--custom-request-port 0 \
--mcp-port 0 \
--ports-file .golem/ports.json \
--data-dir .golem/data
The 0 flag values request OS-assigned free ports. The --ports-file path records the actual bound ports and is also the readiness signal; wait for .golem/ports.json before sending requests.
Do not put 0 in manifest localServer port fields. Manifest localServer.customRequestPort and localServer.mcpPort values are used for deployment subdomain expansion and must be stable nonzero ports.
For persistent local deployment subdomains, use stable manifest ports or omit the port fields to use the defaults:
localServer:
customRequestPort: 9006
mcpPort: 9007
portsFile: .golem/ports.json
dataDir: .golem/data
Setting only portsFile records the selected ports but does not request free ports. Explicit CLI flags such as --router-port, --custom-request-port, --mcp-port, --ports-file, and --data-dir override the manifest values.
Warning: --agent-filesystem-root
Do not use --agent-filesystem-root unless you have a specific reason. This option replaces the default random temporary directories with deterministic paths. Manually modifying files under this root while agents are running can break durable execution guarantees — Golem relies on controlling the agent filesystem to ensure consistency across restarts and replays. This flag is intended for advanced debugging and inspection scenarios only.
golem server clean
Deletes the local server's data directory without starting the server.
golem server clean
This removes all stored state including deployed components, agent data, and operation logs.
Important Notes
--clean deletes all state: Running golem server run --clean deletes all existing agents, deployed components, and data. Never run it without explicitly asking the user for confirmation first.
- The server runs in the foreground: It blocks the terminal. Run it in a separate terminal or background process before deploying or invoking agents.
- Deploy after starting: Components must be deployed with
golem deploy after the server is running before agents can be invoked.
- File limits: On startup the server automatically attempts to increase the OS file descriptor limit to 1,000,000 for better performance.
Typical Development Workflow
- Start the server:
golem server run
- In another terminal, deploy:
golem deploy --yes
- Invoke agents or use the REPL:
golem repl
- After code changes, redeploy:
golem deploy --yes --reset
Debugging a Running Server
The server runs in the foreground and writes structured logs to stderr. Verbosity is
controlled by the -v flag — note that golem server defaults to a higher base level than the
rest of the CLI, so the mapping is different from other golem subcommands:
| Flag | golem server run level | other golem ... commands |
|---|
| (no flag, default) | INFO | ERROR |
-v | WARN | WARN |
-vv | INFO | INFO |
-vvv | DEBUG | DEBUG |
-vvvv | TRACE | TRACE |
Use -vvv to see the durability and retry decision logs that are usually needed for diagnosing
runtime behavior:
golem -vvv server run
RUST_LOG is ignored. The server builds its own tracing filter from the -v flag and
does not consult the RUST_LOG environment variable. Use -v levels instead.
Useful Tracing Targets
When diagnosing a specific subsystem you can grep the server's stderr by tracing target.
The most useful prefixes are:
| Prefix | What it covers |
|---|
golem_worker_executor::durable_host::http::inline_retry | HTTP status-code retry decisions and eligibility |
golem_worker_executor::durable_host::http | All outgoing HTTP host calls and durability events |
golem_worker_executor::durable_host::durability | Durable host function replay and retry resolution |
golem_worker_executor::durable_host (semantic trap retry) | "Semantic trap retry: …" decision lines |
golem_worker_executor::services::events | Internal worker events (invocations, suspends, ...) |
Key Log Lines When Diagnosing Common Issues
These are the first debug lines to grep for when a feature "doesn't seem to work":
-
Status-code retry not firing for an outgoing HTTP request:
HTTP status retry skipped reason=<NotIdempotent|BodyNotFinished|NoRetry|...> uri=... status=...
HTTP status retry skipped: inside atomic region
The reason field is the source of truth — it tells you exactly why a particular request was
not retried (most commonly NotIdempotent for opt-out-of-idempotence cases, or NoRetry when
no status-code-keyed policy matched). Look for it before assuming the policy or the feature
is broken.
-
Semantic trap retry policy decisions:
Semantic trap retry: delaying retry_policy=... delay_ms=... attempt=... trap=...
Semantic trap retry: exhausted retry_policy=... attempt=... trap=...
Indicates which user-defined retry policy matched the trap and how it decided. Absence of these
lines for a 5xx-throwing handler means no named trap policy matched (the legacy retry
config is used instead).
-
HTTP retry policy resolution failed (genuine error):
WARN Failed resolving semantic trap retry policy, falling back to legacy retry config
This now only fires for genuine evaluation errors (e.g. type-coercion failures inside a
predicate). Policies whose predicate references a property that does not exist in the current
context (e.g. a status-code-keyed policy in the trap context) are silently skipped instead.
Running the Server in the Background
To keep the server running while inspecting logs from another terminal:
golem -vvv server run > /tmp/golem-server.log 2>&1 &
tail -f /tmp/golem-server.log | grep -E "HTTP status retry|Semantic trap retry"