* fix(core): compact on the window ceiling (min), not the max of the ladder
computeThresholds combined the proportional term (pct*window) and the
absolute term (effectiveWindow - AUTOCOMPACT_BUFFER) with Math.max, which
pushed the auto-compaction trigger toward the top of the window on large
windows — a 1M-token window compacted at ~97%, leaving ~33K headroom.
The absolute term is structurally a ceiling ("compact before the prompt
leaves too little room for the summarization side-query, which needs up
to SUMMARY_RESERVE of output"), so it composes with Math.min, matching
the claude-code reference (services/compact/autoCompact.ts, which uses
Math.min and whose default trigger is the absolute term alone).
auto = absoluteCeiling > 0 ? min(pct*window, absoluteCeiling) : pct*window
warn = max(0, auto - WARN_BUFFER) // WARN_PCT_OFFSET retired
hard = unchanged
Effect: large windows compact at ~85% (the DEFAULT_PCT ceiling) instead
of ~97%; small/mid windows keep room to run compaction (a 128K window's
summary now provably fits); sub-33K windows are unchanged. A lower
context.autoCompactThreshold now pulls compaction earlier on large
windows, matching the reference's Math.min override semantics.
Updates the threshold unit tests, the settings schema description, and
the user docs to describe the setting as a ceiling on the trigger.
* refactor(core): trim threshold doc comments; name the hard-edge term
Post-review cleanup (no behavior change):
- Collapse the duplicated regime explanation shared between the DEFAULT_PCT
and computeThresholds doc comments into one canonical block; point the
constant's doc at computeThresholds.
- Rename rawHard -> hardEdge and note it is the window-edge ceiling, so the
two roles of the hard tier (window edge vs. auto + HARD_BUFFER) are legible.
- Shorten the context.autoCompactThreshold description in settings.md to the
concise schema wording (also un-widens the docs table).
|
||
|---|---|---|
| .github | ||
| .husky | ||
| .qwen | ||
| .vscode | ||
| docs | ||
| docs-site | ||
| eslint-rules | ||
| integration-tests | ||
| packages | ||
| patches | ||
| scripts | ||
| .dockerignore | ||
| .editorconfig | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .npmrc | ||
| .nvmrc | ||
| .prettierignore | ||
| .prettierrc.json | ||
| .yamllint.yml | ||
| AGENTS.md | ||
| CHANGELOG.md | ||
| CLAUDE.md | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| Dockerfile | ||
| esbuild.config.js | ||
| eslint.config.js | ||
| eslint.legacy-filenames.mjs | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| package-lock.json | ||
| package.json | ||
| README.md | ||
| SECURITY.md | ||
| tsconfig.json | ||
| vitest.config.ts | ||
The open-source AI coding agent that lives in your terminal.
中文 | Deutsch | français | 日本語 | Русский | Português (Brasil)
Why Qwen Code?
- Agentic out of the box — Auto-Memory, Auto-Skills, SubAgents, Agent Teams, and MCP. Dynamic workflows, zero setup.
- Open-source, inside and out — The framework and the Qwen models are open-source. They evolve together. No vendor lock-in.
- Multi-protocol — Supports OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, and Qwen APIs. Any third-party provider or local model (Ollama / vLLM). Switch at runtime.
- Beyond the terminal — IDE plugins, Desktop app, daemon mode, SDKs, and IM bots (Telegram / DingTalk / WeChat / Feishu).
Tip
Qwen Code is actively iterating on itself — using its own agent and models to file issues, submit PRs, review code, and run tests. Powered by the community, driven by AI.
Installation
Linux / macOS:
curl -fsSL https://qwen-code-assets.oss-cn-hangzhou.aliyuncs.com/installation/install-qwen-standalone.sh | bash
Windows:
irm https://qwen-code-assets.oss-cn-hangzhou.aliyuncs.com/installation/install-qwen-standalone.ps1 | iex
Restart your terminal after installation to ensure environment variables take effect.
NPM / Homebrew
NPM (requires Node.js 22+):
npm install -g @qwen-code/qwen-code@latest
Homebrew (macOS / Linux):
brew install qwen-code
Quick Start
qwen # Launch interactive terminal UI
# Inside the session:
/auth # Configure your provider and API key
See the Authentication Guide and Settings Reference for detailed setup.
How to Use Qwen Code
| Mode | Command | Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Interactive | qwen |
Terminal UI with rich rendering, @file references, slash commands |
| Headless | qwen -p "..." |
Scripts, CI/CD, batch processing — no UI |
| IDE | — | VS Code, Zed, JetBrains |
| Desktop | — | Qwen Code Desktop — GUI for macOS, Windows, Linux |
| Daemon | qwen serve |
Shared agent session over HTTP+SSE (ACP). Multiple clients, one agent. (experimental) Docs |
| SDK | — | TypeScript, Python, Java |
| IM Bot | qwen channel |
Connect to Telegram, DingTalk, WeChat, or Feishu |
SDK example (Python)
import asyncio
from qwen_code_sdk import is_sdk_result_message, query
async def main() -> None:
result = query(
"Summarize the repository layout.",
{
"cwd": "/path/to/project",
"path_to_qwen_executable": "qwen",
},
)
async for message in result:
if is_sdk_result_message(message):
print(message["result"])
asyncio.run(main())
Capabilities
If you know Claude Code, you already know Qwen Code — and then some. We've put significant effort into bringing Qwen Code to feature parity with Claude Code, improving both breadth and reliability across the board.
| Feature | Qwen Code | Claude Code |
|---|---|---|
| SubAgents, Agent Teams, Dynamic Workflows | ✓ | ✓ |
| Auto-Memory, Auto-Skills, Hooks | ✓ | ✓ |
| Built-in Skills (/review, /batch, /loop, /bugfix…) | ✓ | ✓ |
| MCP, Plan Mode, LSP Integration | ✓ | ✓ |
| Auto Mode, Sandbox, Git Worktrees | ✓ | ✓ |
| Computer Use (desktop automation) | ✓ | ✓ |
| IDE Plugins (VS Code / JetBrains / Zed) | ✓ | ✓ |
| SDK | ✓ | ✓ |
| Headless Mode, Session Management | ✓ | ✓ |
| Open-source — model and framework | ✓ | — |
| Multi-protocol (OpenAI / Anthropic / Gemini / Qwen + any provider) | ✓ | — |
| Agent Arena (multi-model head-to-head on same task) | ✓ | — |
Daemon Mode — qwen serve (multi-client shared agent) |
✓ | — |
| IM Channels (Telegram / DingTalk / WeChat / Feishu) | ✓ | — |
Ecosystem
-
Qwen Code Desktop — Official desktop app for macOS, Windows, and Linux
-
AionUi — A modern GUI for command-line AI tools including Qwen Code
-
Gemini CLI Desktop — A cross-platform desktop/web/mobile UI for Qwen Code
-
🦞 Qwen Code Claw — Let other agents (Claude, Codex, etc.) delegate coding tasks to Qwen Code via ACP. Paste this prompt into your agent:
Use Qwen Code as a coding agent. First, fetch and read this skill reference:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/QwenLM/qwen-code/refs/heads/main/.qwen/skills/qwen-code-claw/SKILL.md
Then follow the instructions inside to install, authenticate, and use Qwen Code via acpx for all coding tasks.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome! See CONTRIBUTING.md for guidelines.
Acknowledgments
This project was originally based on Google Gemini CLI v0.8.2. We gratefully acknowledge the Gemini CLI team's excellent work. Starting from Qwen Code v0.1, we stopped syncing with upstream and began independent development as a multi-protocol, multi-platform agent framework with deep integrations for Qwen models and beyond.
