Manifold is an experimental platform for long-horizon workflow automation with teams of AI assistants.
It supports OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic models, along with OpenAI-compatible APIs for self-hosted open-weight models served through llama.cpp or vLLM.
Warning
Manifold is an experimental frontier AI platform. Do not deploy it in production environments that require strong stability guarantees unless this README explicitly states otherwise.
Manifold is built for workflows that go beyond one-shot prompts. It gives you a workspace where specialists, tools, projects, and workflows can work together on multi-step objectives over extended periods.
Use a traditional chat interface to assign objectives to specialists. Agent specialists can be configured to render visualizations in addition to text responses.
Specialists can collaborate across multiple turns. Manifold is designed to take advantage of the long-horizon capabilities of frontier models and can work on complex objectives for hours.
Manifold supports image generation with OpenAI and Google models, as well as local image generation through a custom ComfyUI MCP client.
Example ComfyUI-generated image using a custom workflow.
Schedule tasks for agent specialists to execute in time intervals, daily, or only once at a defined date and time. Send results to various external services. Matrix is natively supported, but Skills or MCP's can extend the channels Manifold has access to.
Design agent workflows with a visual flow editor. MCP tools are exposed as nodes automagically. Saved workflows become tools that can be invoked by specialists or inserted as nodes into other workflows. It's workflows all the way down.
Define and configure AI agents, then build your own team of experts.
Configure projects as agent workspaces.
Each project is isolated to its own root path. Agents load project skills from that project's skills/ folder, and can also discover universal read-only skills from $HOME/.manifold/skills and $HOME/.agents/skills through dedicated skill tools.
Manifold includes built-in tools for agent workflows and supports MCP to extend agent capabilities. You can configure multiple MCP servers and enable tools individually to manage context size more precisely.
Create, iterate on, and version prompts that can be assigned to agents. Configure datasets and run experiments to understand how prompt changes affect agent behavior.
The recommended first-run path is Docker-based and does not require a local Go, Node, or pnpm toolchain.
For a basic local deployment, you need:
- Docker with Docker Compose support
- An LLM API key or a reachable OpenAI-compatible endpoint
- A writable host directory to use as
WORKDIR
Optional local tooling is only needed if you are developing Manifold itself:
- Node 22 and
pnpmfor running the frontend outside Docker - Go 1.26.3 for local binary builds
- Chrome or another Chromium-compatible browser if you plan to use browser-driven tools from a host build
cp example.env .env
cp config.yaml.example config.yaml
# Edit .env and set at minimum:
# OPENAI_API_KEY=...
# WORKDIR=/absolute/path/to/your/manifold-workdir
docker compose up -d manifoldThen open http://localhost:32180.
Manifold can run without external database or telemetry services when you build the manifold binary locally. SQLite is the default durable backend, and Postgres is optional:
databases:
backend: sqlite
defaultDSN: ""
sqlite:
path: "~/.manifold/manifold.db"
obs:
otlp: ""
local:
enabled: true
clickhouse:
dsn: ""Check local storage before startup with:
./dist/manifold storage doctor --jsonWith that configuration, manifold stores durable state in SQLite with FTS5 and Vec1 enabled, and serves metrics, logs, and traces from bounded process-local telemetry. You still need an LLM provider, which can be a remote API key or a local OpenAI-compatible endpoint.
For the full deployment walkthrough, see:
make build-manifold is the standard host build for Manifold. It builds dist/manifold with the Forge backend, embedded frontend, and stable UI feature gate. Stable builds do render frontend undocumented features still in active development.
To build the same backend and embedded frontend with beta UI links enabled, use either command:
make build-manifold-beta
make build-manifold FEATURE_GATE=betaThe build passes FEATURE_GATE through to Vite as VITE_MANIFOLD_FEATURE_GATE.
Release artifacts are zip files that contain the runtime manifold binary and the example configuration files needed to bootstrap a deployment:
manifoldormanifold.execonfig.yaml.examplespecialists.yaml.examplemcp.yaml.exampleexample.envTHIRD_PARTY_NOTICES.txt
The agent one-shot CLI and openapi generator are developer tools and are not required for the Manifold server, UI, or API runtime.
Standard Manifold builds use the Forge backend. The stricter guarded harness modes for workflow enforcement, tool-error recovery, and control-flow-safe compaction are still controlled by runtime configuration. See docs/forge_harness.md for modes, configuration, rollout guidance, and deterministic scenario tests.









