Follow-up to #23716. Moves ConfigPermission.Info from zod-first (with a preprocess hack) to Effect Schema canonical using Schema.StructWithRest + Schema.decodeTo, and deletes the now-unused ZodPreprocess plumbing. Core change: rule precedence in `Permission.fromConfig` now sorts top-level keys so wildcard permissions (e.g. `*`, `mcp_*`) come before specific ones (e.g. `bash`, `edit`). Combined with `findLast` in evaluate(), this gives the intuitive semantic 'specific tool rules override the `*` fallback' regardless of the user's JSON key order. This silently fixes the previously-broken case `{bash: "allow", "*": "deny"}` (which under the old semantics denied bash because `*` came last). Once rule precedence no longer depends on JSON insertion order, the `__originalKeys` + ZodPreprocess hack can go — StructWithRest's natural canonicalisation is fine because fromConfig sorts anyway. - src/config/permission.ts: rewrite. InputObject is StructWithRest with known permission keys (read/edit/bash/... as Rule, todowrite/webfetch/... as Action-only for type narrowing) + Record rest. Schema.decodeTo normalises the Action shorthand into { "*": action }. .zod is derived — walker already carries the decodeTo transform. - src/config/config.ts, src/config/agent.ts: reference ConfigPermission.Info directly instead of via Schema.Any + ZodOverride. The Effect decoder now applies the permission transform at load time. - src/permission/index.ts: fromConfig sorts wildcards-before-specifics at top level. Sub-pattern order inside a tool key is preserved (documented `*` first, specifics after). - src/util/effect-zod.ts: delete ZodPreprocess symbol, its walkUncached branch, and the TODO comment. Zero remaining consumers. - test/permission/next.test.ts: 6 new tests pinning the new semantics — order-independent precedence, wildcard-as-fallback, sub-pattern order preservation, canonical documented-example regression guard. - test/config/config.test.ts: updated the "preserves key order" test to reflect the new canonical output shape (declaration-order known fields, then input-order rest keys). Behavioural guarantees live in the new permission tests. - test/util/effect-zod.test.ts: delete the ZodPreprocess describe block (~115 lines of tests for the now-removed feature). SDK diff vs dev: - Removed `__originalKeys?: Array<string>` (internal leak). - Catchall cleaned up (no unrelated `Array<string>`). - Known-field types preserved (autocomplete + narrowing). - Only shape change: PermissionConfig union order swap (commutative). Safety audit: no config, test, or doc in the repo (including all 16 translations) exercises the pattern where specifics come before wildcards at the top level. The only configs whose behaviour changes are ones that were silently broken.
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Installation
# YOLO
curl -fsSL https://opencode.ai/install | bash
# Package managers
npm i -g opencode-ai@latest # or bun/pnpm/yarn
scoop install opencode # Windows
choco install opencode # Windows
brew install anomalyco/tap/opencode # macOS and Linux (recommended, always up to date)
brew install opencode # macOS and Linux (official brew formula, updated less)
sudo pacman -S opencode # Arch Linux (Stable)
paru -S opencode-bin # Arch Linux (Latest from AUR)
mise use -g opencode # Any OS
nix run nixpkgs#opencode # or github:anomalyco/opencode for latest dev branch
Tip
Remove versions older than 0.1.x before installing.
Desktop App (BETA)
OpenCode is also available as a desktop application. Download directly from the releases page or opencode.ai/download.
| Platform | Download |
|---|---|
| macOS (Apple Silicon) | opencode-desktop-darwin-aarch64.dmg |
| macOS (Intel) | opencode-desktop-darwin-x64.dmg |
| Windows | opencode-desktop-windows-x64.exe |
| Linux | .deb, .rpm, or AppImage |
# macOS (Homebrew)
brew install --cask opencode-desktop
# Windows (Scoop)
scoop bucket add extras; scoop install extras/opencode-desktop
Installation Directory
The install script respects the following priority order for the installation path:
$OPENCODE_INSTALL_DIR- Custom installation directory$XDG_BIN_DIR- XDG Base Directory Specification compliant path$HOME/bin- Standard user binary directory (if it exists or can be created)$HOME/.opencode/bin- Default fallback
# Examples
OPENCODE_INSTALL_DIR=/usr/local/bin curl -fsSL https://opencode.ai/install | bash
XDG_BIN_DIR=$HOME/.local/bin curl -fsSL https://opencode.ai/install | bash
Agents
OpenCode includes two built-in agents you can switch between with the Tab key.
- build - Default, full-access agent for development work
- plan - Read-only agent for analysis and code exploration
- Denies file edits by default
- Asks permission before running bash commands
- Ideal for exploring unfamiliar codebases or planning changes
Also included is a general subagent for complex searches and multistep tasks.
This is used internally and can be invoked using @general in messages.
Learn more about agents.
Documentation
For more info on how to configure OpenCode, head over to our docs.
Contributing
If you're interested in contributing to OpenCode, please read our contributing docs before submitting a pull request.
Building on OpenCode
If you are working on a project that's related to OpenCode and is using "opencode" as part of its name, for example "opencode-dashboard" or "opencode-mobile", please add a note to your README to clarify that it is not built by the OpenCode team and is not affiliated with us in any way.
FAQ
How is this different from Claude Code?
It's very similar to Claude Code in terms of capability. Here are the key differences:
- 100% open source
- Not coupled to any provider. Although we recommend the models we provide through OpenCode Zen, OpenCode can be used with Claude, OpenAI, Google, or even local models. As models evolve, the gaps between them will close and pricing will drop, so being provider-agnostic is important.
- Out-of-the-box LSP support
- A focus on TUI. OpenCode is built by neovim users and the creators of terminal.shop; we are going to push the limits of what's possible in the terminal.
- A client/server architecture. This, for example, can allow OpenCode to run on your computer while you drive it remotely from a mobile app, meaning that the TUI frontend is just one of the possible clients.
