Stacked on top of #57429. Adds a new `sandboxing` feature flag (off for staff by default) and a single source-of-truth helper `sandboxing_enabled(cx) = cfg!(target_os = "macos") && cx.has_flag::<SandboxingFeatureFlag>()`. When the helper returns true, the agent's system prompt gains a new `## Terminal sandbox` section that: - Lists each worktree's absolute path as a writable directory. - Describes the per-command `$TMPDIR` scratch directory. - States that outbound network access is blocked. - Documents the three per-command flags (`allow_network`, `allow_fs_write`, `unsandboxed`) the model can request to relax the sandbox. - Tells the model the section is stable for the duration of the conversation. When the flag is off, the section is omitted entirely — no mention of sandboxing at all. No behavior change to terminal execution yet; that's the next PR in the stack. Three new tests cover: section omitted when `sandboxing: false`, section rendered with all worktrees + flag docs when `sandboxing: true`, and the zero-worktrees case. Release Notes: - N/A --------- Co-authored-by: MartinYe1234 <52641447+MartinYe1234@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Martin Ye <martin@zed.dev> |
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| .agents/skills | ||
| .cargo | ||
| .cloudflare | ||
| .config | ||
| .factory | ||
| .github | ||
| .zed | ||
| assets | ||
| ci | ||
| crates | ||
| docs | ||
| extensions | ||
| legal | ||
| nix | ||
| script | ||
| tooling | ||
| .git-blame-ignore-revs | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .mailmap | ||
| .prettierrc | ||
| .rules | ||
| AGENTS.md | ||
| Cargo.lock | ||
| Cargo.toml | ||
| CLAUDE.md | ||
| clippy.toml | ||
| CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
| compose.yml | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| debug.plist | ||
| default.nix | ||
| Dockerfile-collab | ||
| Dockerfile-collab.dockerignore | ||
| Dockerfile-cross.dockerignore | ||
| Dockerfile-distros | ||
| Dockerfile-distros.dockerignore | ||
| flake.lock | ||
| flake.nix | ||
| GEMINI.md | ||
| LICENSE-AGPL | ||
| LICENSE-APACHE | ||
| LICENSE-GPL | ||
| livekit.yaml | ||
| lychee.toml | ||
| Procfile | ||
| Procfile.all | ||
| Procfile.web | ||
| README.md | ||
| renovate.json | ||
| REVIEWERS.conl | ||
| rust-toolchain.toml | ||
| rustfmt.toml | ||
| shell.nix | ||
| typos.toml | ||
Zed
Welcome to Zed, a high-performance, multiplayer code editor from the creators of Atom and Tree-sitter.
Installation
On macOS, Linux, and Windows you can download Zed directly or install Zed via your local package manager (macOS/Linux/Windows).
Other platforms are not yet available:
- Web (tracking discussion)
Developing Zed
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md for ways you can contribute to Zed.
Also... we're hiring! Check out our jobs page for open roles.
Licensing
License information for third party dependencies must be correctly provided for CI to pass.
We use cargo-about to automatically comply with open source licenses. If CI is failing, check the following:
- Is it showing a
no license specifiederror for a crate you've created? If so, addpublish = falseunder[package]in your crate's Cargo.toml. - Is the error
failed to satisfy license requirementsfor a dependency? If so, first determine what license the project has and whether this system is sufficient to comply with this license's requirements. If you're unsure, ask a lawyer. Once you've verified that this system is acceptable add the license's SPDX identifier to theacceptedarray inscript/licenses/zed-licenses.toml. - Is
cargo-aboutunable to find the license for a dependency? If so, add a clarification field at the end ofscript/licenses/zed-licenses.toml, as specified in the cargo-about book.
Sponsorship
Zed is developed by Zed Industries, Inc., a for-profit company.
If you’d like to financially support the project, you can do so via GitHub Sponsors. Sponsorships go directly to Zed Industries and are used as general company revenue. There are no perks or entitlements associated with sponsorship.