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A flexible AI agent library with tool support

Project description

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Fury

Discord Tests

A flexible and powerful AI agent library for Python, designed to build agents with tool support, multimodal capabilities, and streaming responses.

Features

  • [New] Durable Memory: Persist named memory scopes, bind them to individual agents, and expose an airgapped memory tool.
  • Interruption and early stopping: Agents now use the Runner pattern, allowing them to be interrupted or stopped mid-generation.
  • Tool Support: Define and register custom tools (functions) that the agent can execute and parallel tool execution support.
  • Image and Voice inputs: Support for image and voice inputs, plus standalone speech-to-text via SpeechToText.
  • Text-to-Speech (TTS): Generate audio with NeuTTS via standalone TextToSpeech or Agent.speak().
  • History Management: Use HistoryManager for auto-compaction support or StaticHistoryManager for strict fixed-size context trimming.

Installation

Install with uv:

uv add fury-sdk

Quick Start

from fury import Agent

agent = Agent(
    model="unsloth/GLM-4.6V-Flash-GGUF:Q8_0",
    system_prompt="You are a helpful assistant.",
)

print(agent.ask("Hello!", history=[]))
print(agent.ask("Hello!", history=[], model="another-model"))

Other examples:

Speech-to-Text

If you only need transcription, you do not need to initialize an Agent.

from fury import SpeechToText

stt = SpeechToText()

# Accepts a base64-encoded audio string, bytes, a file-like object, or a path.
transcript = stt.transcribe("...")
print(transcript)

HistoryManager.add_voice(...) still uses the same Faster Whisper path under the hood, but SpeechToText exposes it directly for standalone voice workflows.

Text-to-Speech

If you only need synthesis, you do not need to initialize an Agent.

from fury import TextToSpeech

tts = TextToSpeech()
audio_chunks = tts.speak(
    text="Hello from Fury!",
    ref_text="Welcome home sir.",
    ref_audio_path="./examples/resources/ref.wav",
)

Agent.speak(...) still uses the same NeuTTS path under the hood, but TextToSpeech exposes it directly for standalone audio generation.

History Management

Fury makes managing history limits easy by providing simple, built-in history managers. They are just list managers that monitor context utilization and trim or compact your list accordingly.

The standard HistoryManager will auto-compact your history as you add messages to it (summarise using an Agent) in a similar way to Claude Code, Codex and Pi.

from fury import HistoryManager

history_manager = HistoryManager(agent=agent)

# Add something to history like this:
await history_manager.add({"role": "user", "content": user_input})

# Use the history like this:
runner = agent.runner()
async for event in runner.chat(history_manager.history):
    # ...

See examples/chat.py for a full working example.

To persist the raw transcript as JSONL and reload it on startup:

history_manager = HistoryManager(
    agent,
    persist_to_disk=True,
    session_id="demo-session",
)

This stores the session under .fury/history/ and rehydrates history_manager.history from the existing file if the session already exists. See examples/persistent_chat.py for a runnable example. If auto_compact=True, a reloaded session is compacted in memory on the first async add() or extend() call, while the JSONL file remains a full raw transcript. When compaction runs, Fury prints a short [history] Compacting ... notice by default. Managed image history is lightweight by default: HistoryManager.add_image(...) stores a [The user shared an image] placeholder plus path metadata instead of embedding raw base64 in saved history. Set save_images_to_history=True to keep the full image payload in history.

If you do not want auto-compaction and a hard history limit, use StaticHistoryManager:

from fury import StaticHistoryManager

history_manager = StaticHistoryManager(
    target_context_length=4096,
    history=[{"role": "system", "content": "You are helpful."}],
)

It keeps only the newest messages that fit in the target context length. See docs/example.md for a complete example.

Durable Memory

Fury can persist durable memory outside the current chat history using explicit named scopes. Pass memory_scope when constructing an agent and Fury will:

  • create or reuse a MemoryStore
  • inject the latest memory snapshot for that scope into the system prompt
  • register a memory tool bound only to that scope
from fury import Agent

agent = Agent(
    model="your-model-name",
    system_prompt="You are a helpful assistant.",
    memory_scope="my-project",
)

To share one backing store across multiple airgapped agents:

from fury import Agent, MemoryStore

store = MemoryStore(".fury/memory")

alpha = Agent(
    model="your-model-name",
    system_prompt="You help project alpha.",
    memory_store=store,
    memory_scope="project-alpha",
)

beta = Agent(
    model="your-model-name",
    system_prompt="You help project beta.",
    memory_store=store,
    memory_scope="project-beta",
)

See docs/memory.md for the full API.

Configuration Options

agent = Agent(
    model="your-model-name",
    system_prompt="You are a helpful assistant.",
    parallel_tool_calls=False,
    disable_stt=False,
    disable_tts=False,
    generation_params={
        "temperature": 0.2,
        "max_tokens": 512,
    },
)

# Disable reasoning stream content (default is False)
runner = agent.runner()
async for event in runner.chat(history, reasoning=False):
    ...

Defining Tools

You can give your agent tools to interact with the world. Tools are defined using the create_tool helper.

Input and output schemas help the model to correctly pass parameters through to the function. Fury will automatically prune any hallucinated parameters not defined in the input schema.

Learn more in the OpenAI guide

from fury import Agent, create_tool


def add(a: int, b: int):
    return {"result": a + b}

# Create the tool
add_tool = create_tool(
    id="add",
    description="Add two numbers together",
    execute=add,
    input_schema={
        "type": "object",
        "properties": {
            "a": {"type": "integer"},
            "b": {"type": "integer"},
        },
        "required": ["a", "b"],
    },
    output_schema={
        "type": "object",
        "properties": {"result": {"type": "integer"}},
        "required": ["result"],
    },
)

# Pass to agent
agent = Agent(..., tools=[add_tool])

If your tool accepts an emit parameter, Fury injects a runtime-only callback during execution so the tool can stream structured UI events during tool execution.

def search(query: str, emit):
    emit({"id": "search-1", "title": f"Searching for {query}", "type": "tool_call"})
    return {"query": query}

These arrive in the chat stream as event.tool_ui, separate from event.tool_call.

Coding Assistant Example

Check out examples/coding-assistant/coding_assistant.py for a full-featured example that includes:

  • Tools: File system operations (read, write, edit, bash).
  • Skills System: Loading specialized capabilities from SKILL.md files.
  • Memory System: Using durable memory plus SOUL.md for project context.
  • History Manager: Uses HistoryManager to summarize long conversations and save context window.

Build something neat.

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