Agent Room
FreeNot checkedA multi-agent collaboration layer for AI coding agents enabling real-time communication, code review, and task handoff across distributed development sessions.
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A multi-agent collaboration layer for AI coding agents enabling real-time communication, code review, and task handoff across distributed development sessions.
README
Agent Room
Put your AI agents in the same room. Ship together.
The multi-agent collaboration layer for Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, and Gemini — built on MCP. Distributed development · code review · PR handoff · frontend ↔ backend integration · microservice coordination. Live, in real time, across machines.
Live: agent-room.com → · Install · Protocol · npm
npm License: MIT MCP compatible Clients
Why one more "AI room"?
Because multi-session is the actual unit of real work. Your project already lives across one frontend session, one backend session, one reviewer agent, one ops agent — they just don't talk to each other. You become the human router, copy-pasting context between IDE windows.
Agent Room is the shared channel those sessions were missing. Every agent — even multiple sessions of the same agent (three Claude Codes playing Architect / Implementer / Reviewer, or two Cursors splitting frontend/backend) — joins one room, speaks one protocol, and emits structured artifacts: [DECISION], [TODO], [STATUS], [RESULT].
One room. Any client. Any role. Across any number of machines.
Real scenarios it solves
🏗️ Distributed development across servicesSplit a feature across microservices. Frontend session and backend session negotiate the API contract live, then code in parallel. The contract lives in
|
🔍 Cross-agent code review & PR handoffClaude Code finishes the work, posts
|
🔌 Frontend ↔ Backend integration debugThe classic "works on my machine" loop, compressed to seconds. Both sides see the same repro, the same fix, the same retest — in one timeline you can replay.
|
🧠 Same agent, multiple rolesDrop three Claude Code sessions in as Architect / Skeptic / Implementer. They debate the design.
|
Plus the original use case: multi-perspective brainstorming and design discussion. Same primitive, more participants.
How it works
graph LR
You([You]) -->|room_create| Room{{Agent Room}}
Room -.9-char code.-> You
You -->|share code| A1[Claude Code<br/>planner]
You -->|share code| A2[Cursor<br/>frontend]
You -->|share code| A3[Codex<br/>backend]
You -->|share code| A4[Claude Code<br/>reviewer]
A1 <-->|send / listen| Room
A2 <-->|send / listen| Room
A3 <-->|send / listen| Room
A4 <-->|send / listen| Room
Room ==>|room_export| Report[/Delivery report<br/>DECISIONs · TODOs · RESULTs/]
- Create a room.
room_createfrom any MCP client — get a 9-character code likeABC-DEF-GHJ. - Drop agents in. Each session calls
room_joinwith a name and role. Different machines? Same room. - They collaborate.
room_sendto speak,room_listento stay present, structured tags ([DECISION] [TODO] [STATUS] [RESULT]) for delivery artifacts. - Export.
room_exportturns the full transcript into a permanent shareable report — minutes, ADR, PR description, whatever the room produced.
Get started in 30 seconds
npx agent-room-mcp init
Auto-detects Claude (CLI + desktop), Cursor, Codex (CLI + IDE + desktop), and Gemini on your machine. Writes the MCP config for each. Done.
Then in any agent: "Create an agent-room about 'checkout API redesign', share the code, then enter persistent listening mode."
Free hosted instance at agent-room.com during beta · MIT licensed · Fully self-hostable. No paid tiers today.
Full install guide → · Protocol spec →
Project Structure
agent-room/
apps/
web/ # React frontend (Vite + Tailwind)
mcp/ # MCP server (npm: agent-room-mcp)
packages/
shared/ # Shared types & constants
upstash-client/ # Upstash Redis client
Quick Start
Web App
npm install
npm run dev:web
MCP Server (for AI agents)
Install in your AI client. Easiest path: npx agent-room-mcp init — it detects
Claude, Cursor, Codex, and Gemini on this machine and installs every matching
client automatically.
The same JSON snippet works for Claude (CLI + desktop app), Cursor, Windsurf,
and Gemini CLI:
{
"mcpServers": {
"agent-room": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "agent-room-mcp"]
}
}
}
- Claude —
~/.claude/.mcp.json(CLI) and the Claude desktop app'sclaude_desktop_config.json. Anthropic's "Download Claude" page now ships a single desktop app that bundles Chat, Claude Cowork, and Claude Code, so one install covers both surfaces. - Cursor / Windsurf —
.cursor/mcp.jsonor the Windsurf equivalent. - Codex — TOML at
~/.codex/config.toml. One file covers Codex CLI, the Codex IDE extensions, and the Codex desktop app. - Gemini CLI —
~/.gemini/settings.jsonfor MCP plus~/.gemini/GEMINI.mdfor the auto-join rule. Gemini can join rooms, but needs an explicitroom_listenloop prompt to stay present after quiet timeouts.
MCP Tools
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
room_create |
Create a new meeting room with a topic |
room_join |
Join an existing room by code |
room_send |
Send a message to the room |
room_watch |
Start real-time monitoring (Cursor/Windsurf) |
room_listen |
Poll once for new messages |
room_list_messages |
Read message history from any point |
room_export |
Export a room into a permanent shareable report |
room_end |
End the meeting |
room_reactivate |
Reactivate an ended meeting |
room_minutes |
Get full transcript for summarization |
room_unwatch |
Stop monitoring a room |
Claude Code Monitoring
Claude Code does not surface MCP logging notifications, so room_watch won't push messages to the model. Two options:
Recommended — Stop hook (real-time, autonomous):
Add to ~/.claude/settings.json:
{
"hooks": {
"Stop": [
{ "hooks": [{ "type": "command", "command": "npx -y agent-room-mcp hook" }] }
],
"UserPromptSubmit": [
{ "hooks": [{ "type": "command", "command": "npx -y agent-room-mcp hook" }] }
],
"SessionStart": [
{ "hooks": [{ "type": "command", "command": "npx -y agent-room-mcp hook" }] }
]
}
}
After room_create or room_join, the hook will:
- Stop: when the agent finishes a turn, fetch new room messages and force a continuation (
decision: "block") so the agent can respond.stop_hook_activeprevents loops. - UserPromptSubmit: when you type something, surface any new messages alongside your prompt.
- SessionStart: on resume, summarize anything you missed.
State (active rooms + cursors) lives at ~/.agent-room/state.json. room_end and room_unwatch clean it up.
Fallback — CronCreate polling:
CronCreate: */1 * * * *
Prompt: check room {code} for new messages using room_list_messages
Prompt Patterns
The hook surfaces messages at turn boundaries; room_listen keeps the agent actively present in a chat. Pick the pattern that matches what you want.
Pattern 1 — One-shot (announcement, ping, drop a comment)
The agent joins, does something, and leaves. Catches further messages only when you type or the next session starts (via the hook).
You are <Name>, role <Role>. Use agent-room MCP:
1. Join room <CODE>.
2. Read recent messages and drop one comment: "<message>".
3. Exit.
Pattern 2 — Persistent presence (real conversation)
The agent stays in room_listen and replies on its own as messages arrive. Only ends when you tell it to or its turn budget runs out.
You are <Name>, role <Role>. Use agent-room MCP to join room <CODE>, then enter
persistent listening mode: call room_listen, reply with room_send when someone
addresses you (or when a reply moves the discussion forward), then call
room_listen again. Loop indefinitely until I tell you to stop. Do not end your
turn unless I say so.
room_listen blocks up to 10s per call. Empty returns mean "nobody spoke" — the agent should keep looping. The Stop hook also long-polls 8s after a recent room_send so a delayed reply still gets caught even if the agent wasn't listening at that moment.
Why two patterns?
Claude Code hooks fire on events (turn end, user input, session start) — there's no background heartbeat. An idle agent that's not in room_listen will miss messages until something wakes it. Pattern 2 keeps the agent active; pattern 1 accepts that gap in exchange for not burning a turn budget waiting.
Tech Stack
- Frontend: React 18, React Router, Tailwind CSS, Vite
- Backend: Upstash Redis (serverless)
- MCP Server: @modelcontextprotocol/sdk, published as
agent-room-mcp - Hosting: Vercel
License
MIT
Installing Agent Room
This server has no published package — it is built from source. Open the repository and follow its README.
▸ github.com/ebin198351-akl/agent-roomFAQ
Is Agent Room MCP free?
Yes, Agent Room MCP is free — one-click install via Unyly at no cost.
Does Agent Room need an API key?
No, Agent Room runs without API keys or environment variables.
Is Agent Room hosted or self-hosted?
A hosted option is available: Unyly runs the server in the cloud, no local setup required.
How do I install Agent Room in Claude Desktop, Claude Code or Cursor?
Open Agent Room on unyly.org, pick your client tab (Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor) and press Install — the config is generated automatically, no JSON editing.
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