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SWE-agent takes a GitHub issue and tries to automatically fix it, using your LM of choice. It can also be employed for offensive cybersecurity or competitive coding challenges. [NeurIPS 2024]

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swe-agent.com

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SWE-agent enables your language model of choice (e.g. GPT-4o or Claude Sonnet 4) to autonomously use tools to fix issues in real GitHub repositories, find cybersecurity vulnerabilities, or perform any custom task.

  • State of the art on SWE-bench among open-source projects
  • Free-flowing & generalizable: Leaves maximal agency to the LM
  • Configurable & fully documented: Governed by a single yaml file
  • Made for research: Simple & hackable by design

SWE-agent is built and maintained by researchers from Princeton University and Stanford University.

📣 News

🚀 Get started!

👉 Try SWE-agent in your browser: Open in GitHub Codespaces (more information)

Read our documentation to learn more:

SWE-agent for offensive cybersecurity (EnIGMA)

SWE-agent: EnIGMA is a mode for solving offensive cybersecurity (capture the flag) challenges. EnIGMA achieves state-of-the-art results on multiple cybersecurity benchmarks (see leaderboard). Please use SWE-agent 0.7 while we update EnIGMA for 1.0.

In addition, you might be interested in the following projects:

SWE-ReX    SWE-bench    SWE-smith    sb-cli

Contributions

If you'd like to contribute to the codebase, we welcome issues and pull requests! For larger code changes, we always encourage discussion in issues first.

Citation & contact

SWE-agent is an academic project started at Princeton University by John Yang*, Carlos E. Jimenez*, Alexander Wettig, Kilian Lieret, Shunyu Yao, Karthik Narasimhan, and Ofir Press. Contact person: John Yang, Carlos E. Jimenez, and Kilian Lieret (Email: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]).

If you found this work helpful, please consider citing it using the following:

SWE-agent citation
@inproceedings{yang2024sweagent,
  title={{SWE}-agent: Agent-Computer Interfaces Enable Automated Software Engineering},
  author={John Yang and Carlos E Jimenez and Alexander Wettig and Kilian Lieret and Shunyu Yao and Karthik R Narasimhan and Ofir Press},
  booktitle={The Thirty-eighth Annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year={2024},
  url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.15793}
}

If you used the summarizer, interactive commands or the offensive cybersecurity capabilities in SWE-agent, please also consider citing:

EnIGMA citation
@misc{abramovich2024enigmaenhancedinteractivegenerative,
      title={EnIGMA: Enhanced Interactive Generative Model Agent for CTF Challenges},
      author={Talor Abramovich and Meet Udeshi and Minghao Shao and Kilian Lieret and Haoran Xi and Kimberly Milner and Sofija Jancheska and John Yang and Carlos E. Jimenez and Farshad Khorrami and Prashanth Krishnamurthy and Brendan Dolan-Gavitt and Muhammad Shafique and Karthik Narasimhan and Ramesh Karri and Ofir Press},
      year={2024},
      eprint={2409.16165},
      archivePrefix={arXiv},
      primaryClass={cs.AI},
      url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.16165},
}

🪪 License

MIT. Check LICENSE.

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SWE-agent takes a GitHub issue and tries to automatically fix it, using your LM of choice. It can also be employed for offensive cybersecurity or competitive coding challenges. [NeurIPS 2024]

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