charmbracelet/crush: The glamourous AI coding agent for your favourite terminal 💘

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Your new coding bestie, now available in your favourite terminal.
Your tools, your code, and your workflows, wired into your LLM of choice.

Crush Demo

  • Multi-Model: choose from a wide range of LLMs or add your own via OpenAI- or Anthropic-compatible APIs
  • Flexible: switch LLMs mid-session while preserving context
  • Session-Based: maintain multiple work sessions and contexts per project
  • LSP-Enhanced: Crush uses LSPs for additional context, just like you do
  • Extensible: add capabilities via MCPs (http, stdio, and sse)
  • Works Everywhere: first-class support in every terminal on macOS, Linux, Windows (PowerShell and WSL), and FreeBSD

Use a package manager:

# Homebrew
brew install charmbracelet/tap/crush

# NPM
npm install -g @charmland/crush

# Arch Linux (btw)
yay -S crush-bin
Nix

Crush is available via NUR in nur.repos.charmbracelet.crush.

You can also try out Crush via nix-shell:

# Add the NUR channel.
nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/NUR/archive/main.tar.gz nur
nix-channel --update

# Get Crush in a Nix shell.
nix-shell -p '(import  { pkgs = import  {}; }).repos.charmbracelet.crush'
Debian/Ubuntu
sudo mkdir -p /etc/apt/keyrings
curl -fsSL https://repo.charm.sh/apt/gpg.key | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /etc/apt/keyrings/charm.gpg
echo "deb [signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/charm.gpg] https://repo.charm.sh/apt/ * *" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/charm.list
sudo apt update && sudo apt install crush
Fedora/RHEL
echo '[charm]
name=Charm
baseurl=https://repo.charm.sh/yum/
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://repo.charm.sh/yum/gpg.key' | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/charm.repo
sudo yum install crush

Or, download it:

  • Packages are available in Debian and RPM formats
  • Binaries are available for Linux, macOS, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD

Or just install it with Go:

go install github.com/charmbracelet/crush@latest

Warning

Productivity may increase when using Crush and you may find yourself nerd
sniped when first using the application. If the symptoms persist, join the
Discord and nerd snipe the rest of us.

The quickest way to get started is to grab an API key for your preferred
provider such as Anthropic, OpenAI, Groq, or OpenRouter and just start
Crush. You’ll be prompted to enter your API key.

That said, you can also set environment variables for preferred providers.

Environment Variable Provider
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY Anthropic
OPENAI_API_KEY OpenAI
GEMINI_API_KEY Google Gemini
VERTEXAI_PROJECT Google Cloud VertexAI (Gemini)
VERTEXAI_LOCATION Google Cloud VertexAI (Gemini)
GROQ_API_KEY Groq
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID AWS Bedrock (Claude)
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY AWS Bedrock (Claude)
AWS_REGION AWS Bedrock (Claude)
AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT Azure OpenAI models
AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY Azure OpenAI models (optional when using Entra ID)
AZURE_OPENAI_API_VERSION Azure OpenAI models

Is there a provider you’d like to see in Crush? Is there an existing model that needs an update?

Crush’s default model listing is managed in Catwalk, an community-supported, open source repository of Crush-compatible models, and you’re welcome to contribute.

Catwalk Badge

Crush runs great with no configuration. That said, if you do need or want to
customize Crush, configuration can be added either local to the project itself,
or globally, with the following priority:

  1. ./.crush.json
  2. ./crush.json
  3. $HOME/.config/crush/crush.json

Configuration itself is stored as a JSON object:

{
   "this-setting": { }
   "that-setting": { }
}

Crush can use LSPs for additional context to help inform its decisions, just
like you would. LSPs can be added manually like so:

{
  "$schema": "https://charm.land/crush.json",
  "lsp": {
    "go": {
      "command": "gopls"
    },
    "typescript": {
      "command": "typescript-language-server",
      "args": ["--stdio"]
    },
    "nix": {
      "command": "nil"
    }
  }
}

Crush also supports Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers through three
transport types: stdio for command-line servers, http for HTTP endpoints,
and sse for Server-Sent Events. Environment variable expansion is supported
using $(echo $VAR) syntax.

{
  "$schema": "https://charm.land/crush.json",
  "mcp": {
    "filesystem": {
      "type": "stdio",
      "command": "node",
      "args": ["/path/to/mcp-server.js"],
      "env": {
        "NODE_ENV": "production"
      }
    },
    "github": {
      "type": "http",
      "url": "https://example.com/mcp/",
      "headers": {
        "Authorization": "$(echo Bearer $EXAMPLE_MCP_TOKEN)"
      }
    },
    "streaming-service": {
      "type": "sse",
      "url": "https://example.com/mcp/sse",
      "headers": {
        "API-Key": "$(echo $API_KEY)"
      }
    }
  }
}

By default, Crush will ask you for permission before running tool calls. If
you’d like, you can whitelist tools to be executed without prompting you for
permissions. Use this with care.

{
  "$schema": "https://charm.land/crush.json",
  "permissions": {
    "allowed_tools": [
      "view",
      "ls",
      "grep",
      "edit",
      "mcp_context7_get-library-doc"
    ]
  }
}

You can also skip all permission prompts entirely by running Crush with the
--yolo flag. Be very, very careful with this feature.

Crush supports custom provider configurations for both OpenAI-compatible and
Anthropic-compatible APIs.

Here’s an example configuration for Deepseek, which uses an OpenAI-compatible
API. Don’t forget to set DEEPSEEK_API_KEY in your environment.

{
  "$schema": "https://charm.land/crush.json",
  "providers": {
    "deepseek": {
      "type": "openai",
      "base_url": "https://api.deepseek.com/v1",
      "api_key": "$DEEPSEEK_API_KEY",
      "models": [
        {
          "id": "deepseek-chat",
          "name": "Deepseek V3",
          "cost_per_1m_in": 0.27,
          "cost_per_1m_out": 1.1,
          "cost_per_1m_in_cached": 0.07,
          "cost_per_1m_out_cached": 1.1,
          "context_window": 64000,
          "default_max_tokens": 5000
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}

Anthropic-Compatible APIs

Custom Anthropic-compatible providers follow this format:

{
  "$schema": "https://charm.land/crush.json",
  "providers": {
    "custom-anthropic": {
      "type": "anthropic",
      "base_url": "https://api.anthropic.com/v1",
      "api_key": "$ANTHROPIC_API_KEY",
      "extra_headers": {
        "anthropic-version": "2023-06-01"
      },
      "models": [
        {
          "id": "claude-sonnet-4-20250514",
          "name": "Claude Sonnet 4",
          "cost_per_1m_in": 3,
          "cost_per_1m_out": 15,
          "cost_per_1m_in_cached": 3.75,
          "cost_per_1m_out_cached": 0.3,
          "context_window": 200000,
          "default_max_tokens": 50000,
          "can_reason": true,
          "supports_attachments": true
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}

Sometimes you need to look at logs. Luckily, Crush logs all sorts of
stuff. Logs are stored in ./.crush/logs/crush.log relative to the project.

The CLI also contains some helper commands to make perusing recent logs easier:

# Print the last 1000 lines
crush logs

# Print the last 500 lines
crush logs --tail 500

# Follow logs in real time
crush logs --follow

Want more logging? Run crush with the --debug flag, or enable it in the
config:

{
  "$schema": "https://charm.land/crush.json",
  "options": {
    "debug": true,
    "debug_lsp": true
  }
}

We’d love to hear your thoughts on this project. Need help? We gotchu. You can find us on:

FSL-1.1-MIT


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