Autonomous coding agent

Your AI engineer
never stops.

ShipStream watches your repos, writes the code, ships the PRs, and reports back every morning — while you sleep. No chat interface. No steering wheel. Just a steady stream of merged work.

shipstream — watch mode
$ shipstream init --repo owner/project
Connecting to repository...
Scanning 847 files across 12 packages...
Context loaded. 3 tasks queued.
ShipStream is working. You can go to sleep.
24/7
Always running
0
Prompts needed
Daily
Progress reports
PRs
Written & submitted

How it works

01

Connect your repo

Link ShipStream to any GitHub repository. It reads the codebase, understands your patterns, and builds a working model of your architecture.

02

Define the target

Describe what you want built — a feature, a refactor, a fix. ShipStream breaks it into tasks, plans the approach, and starts executing without further input.

03

Wake up to merged PRs

ShipStream writes, tests, and opens pull requests autonomously. Every morning you get a status report: what shipped, what changed, what needs review.

A dashboard that means something

Not another metrics dashboard. ShipStream shows you what your agent is actually doing: current task, files modified, next steps. Real-time, grounded in your actual codebase.

Live task stream with file-level visibility
Diff previews before you review
Daily summary emailed every morning
shipstream://workspace
▶ Tasks
▶ Reports
▶ Repos
Building auth middleware
auth/middleware.ts · 3 sub-tasks active
Refactored API routes
api/v2/ · PR #47 merged
Write tests for auth middleware
Queued · Starts after current task
"The best developer you have is not the one who types the fastest. It's the one who keeps working when you've gone home."

Copilot and Cursor are tools you steer. ShipStream is an employee you delegate to. It sits in your codebase, works through your backlog, and doesn't need a weekly standup. The next time you open your laptop, something will have shipped.

Ship more. Steer less.

ShipStream runs autonomously on your repos. You define the destination, not the route.