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The first reliability testing framework for multi-agent AI systems

Project description

swarm-test

The first reliability testing framework for multi-agent AI systems.

swarm-test

swarm-test builds a NetworkX interaction graph of your agent swarm and runs 5 automated chaos tests to surface cascade failures, context leakage, intent drift, collusion, and blast radius risks — all from a 3-line API.

CrewAI, LangGraph, AutoGen — one tool.

GitHub Action

Drop swarm-test into your CI as a reliability gate on every PR. If your agent system's reliability drops below the configured threshold, the build fails.

# .github/workflows/swarm-test.yml
on: [pull_request]
jobs:
  swarm-test:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v4
      - uses: surajkumar811/swarm-test@v0.3.0
        with:
          script: my_crew.py
          fail-on-severity: high

Findings appear inline on the PR as ::error:: / ::warning:: / ::notice:: annotations, and a swarm-score summary is posted to the workflow's job summary. Add a badge to your repo:

[![swarm-test](https://img.shields.io/badge/swarm--test-passing-purple)](https://github.com/surajkumar811/swarm-test)

See .github/workflows/swarm-test-example.yml for a fully-annotated reference workflow.


from swarm_test import SwarmProbe

probe  = SwarmProbe(crew)
report = probe.run_all()
report.print_summary()
# First line of output:
# Swarm Score: 72/100 — NEEDS IMPROVEMENT (3 critical, 2 high findings)

Output Modes

Every command (probe, scan, run) leads with a single headline verdict line that tells you the swarm's reliability at a glance — perfect for CI logs and dashboards.

Swarm Score: 92/100 — EXCELLENT (no findings)
Swarm Score: 72/100 — NEEDS IMPROVEMENT (3 critical, 2 high findings)
Swarm Score:  8/100 — CRITICAL (5 critical, 11 high findings)
Flag Output
--quiet / -q Only the headline verdict (one line). Ideal for if checks in CI scripts.
(default) Headline + test results table + CRITICAL / HIGH findings + SPOFs.
--verbose / -V Headline + every finding (including LOW / INFO), graph metrics, full health & redundancy tables.
swarm-test run my_crew.py --quiet           # CI-friendly: one line out
swarm-test run my_crew.py                   # default summary
swarm-test run my_crew.py --verbose         # full report

The same setting is available in .swarmtest.yml:

output_verbosity: normal   # quiet | normal | verbose

Interactive HTML Report

--output-format html renders a self-contained dashboard with a sticky navigation bar, a live D3 force-directed agent graph (drag, zoom, click to highlight neighbours), an NxN interaction heatmap, sortable health and redundancy tables, and collapsible findings cards filterable by severity.

swarm-test run my_crew.py --output-format html --output-path report.html --open

--open launches the report in your default browser as soon as it's generated. Single-points-of-failure pulse red on the graph; cells in the heatmap that have findings are tinted red so you can jump straight to the offending edge.


Features

Test What it checks
Cascade Failure Which agents, if they fail, bring down the most of the swarm
Context Leakage Sensitive data (credentials, PII) crossing agent boundaries
Intent Drift Agents acting outside their role; prompt injection; goal hijacking
Collusion Detection Dense cliques, echo chambers, orchestrator-bypass cycles
Blast Radius Single points of failure, critical path, redundancy score

Redundancy Scoring

Every agent gets a 0-100 redundancy score that quantifies how replaceable it is:

Score Level Meaning
0-20 IRREPLACEABLE Single point of failure — removing this agent breaks the swarm
21-40 LOW Few or no peers can cover for this agent
41-60 MODERATE Some overlap with peers; monitor
61-80 HIGH Multiple peers can pick up the work
81-100 FULLY REDUNDANT Failure is invisible — graph survives with no degradation

The score is composed from five factors: path redundancy (30%), role uniqueness (25%), tool coverage (20%), betweenness centrality (15%), and degree ratio (10%). Agents detected as articulation points (SPOFs) are capped below 20.

Console output

                       Agent Redundancy
╭───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╮
│ Agent          Score      Level             Risk              │
│ Orchestrator   8/100      IRREPLACEABLE     SPOF              │
│ Writer         45/100     MODERATE          Monitor           │
│ Researcher     65/100     HIGH              Safe              │
│ Reviewer       82/100     FULLY REDUNDANT   Safe              │
╰───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╯

JSON output

{
  "overall_redundancy": 50.0,
  "redundancy_scores": [
    {
      "agent_id": "abc-123",
      "agent_name": "Orchestrator",
      "agent_role": "orchestrator",
      "score": 8.0,
      "level": "IRREPLACEABLE"
    },
    {
      "agent_id": "def-456",
      "agent_name": "Researcher",
      "agent_role": "researcher",
      "score": 65.0,
      "level": "HIGH"
    }
  ]
}

Supported Frameworks

Framework Adapter Status
CrewAI CrewAIAdapter Stable
LangGraph LangGraphAdapter Stable
AutoGen AutoGenAdapterGroupChat, GroupChatManager, ConversableAgent Stable
Generic / static graph BaseAdapter Stable

Installation

pip install swarm-test
# or with framework extras:
pip install "swarm-test[crewai]"
pip install "swarm-test[langgraph]"
pip install "swarm-test[langchain]"
pip install "swarm-test[autogen]"

From source:

git clone https://github.com/surajkumar811/swarm-test
cd swarm-test
pip install -e ".[dev]"

Quick Start

With a CrewAI crew

from crewai import Crew, Agent, Task
from swarm_test import SwarmProbe

researcher = Agent(role="researcher", goal="...", backstory="...")
writer     = Agent(role="writer",     goal="...", backstory="...")
crew = Crew(agents=[researcher, writer], tasks=[...])

probe  = SwarmProbe(crew, swarm_name="my-crew")
report = probe.run_all()
report.print_summary()
report.to_html("report.html")   # D3 graph visualization

With a LangGraph workflow

from langgraph.graph import StateGraph
from swarm_test import SwarmProbe

graph = StateGraph(dict)
graph.add_node("researcher", researcher_fn)
graph.add_node("writer", writer_fn)
graph.add_edge("researcher", "writer")
compiled = graph.compile()

probe  = SwarmProbe(compiled, swarm_name="my-langgraph")
report = probe.run_all()
report.print_summary()
report.to_json("report.json")   # Structured JSON with stable finding IDs

With an AutoGen GroupChat

from autogen import ConversableAgent, GroupChat, GroupChatManager
from swarm_test import SwarmProbe

planner  = ConversableAgent(name="Planner",  system_message="...")
coder    = ConversableAgent(name="Coder",    system_message="...")
reviewer = ConversableAgent(name="Reviewer", system_message="...")

groupchat = GroupChat(
    agents=[planner, coder, reviewer],
    allowed_or_disallowed_speaker_transitions={
        planner:  [coder],
        coder:    [reviewer],
        reviewer: [planner],
    },
    speaker_transitions_type="allowed",
)
manager = GroupChatManager(groupchat=groupchat)

probe  = SwarmProbe(manager, swarm_name="my-autogen")
report = probe.run_all()
report.print_summary()

From the CLI:

swarm-test run autogen_app.py            # auto-detects `groupchat` / `manager`

Static graph (no live swarm)

from swarm_test import SwarmProbe, AgentNode, InteractionEvent, EventType

a = AgentNode(name="Fetcher", role="researcher")
b = AgentNode(name="Summarizer", role="writer")

probe = SwarmProbe(
    swarm_name="my-swarm",
    agents=[a, b],
    events=[InteractionEvent(
        source_agent_id=a.id,
        target_agent_id=b.id,
        event_type=EventType.TASK_DELEGATE,
    )],
)
report = probe.run_all()
report.print_summary()

CLI

# Run against a Python script containing a `crew` variable
swarm-test probe my_crew.py --output report.html --fail-on-critical

# Static scan from the command line
swarm-test scan \
  --agents Researcher --agents Analyst --agents Writer \
  --edges "Researcher:Analyst" --edges "Analyst:Writer" \
  --output report.html

Configuration

swarm-test supports a YAML config file for repeatable runs and CI gates. Copy the example and edit it to taste:

cp .swarmtest.example.yml .swarmtest.yml

A minimal .swarmtest.yml:

fail_on_severity: high        # critical | high | medium | low | info | none
max_blast_radius: 0.5         # 0.0 - 1.0 — findings above this threshold fail
disabled_tests:               # skip individual tests
  - collusion
sensitive_patterns:           # extra regexes added to the sensitive-data scanner
  - "INTERNAL-[A-Z0-9]+"
output_format: html           # console | json | markdown | html
output_path: ./swarm.html
quick_scan: false
timeout_seconds: 30
strict: false                 # treat ANY finding as a failure

Run with the new run subcommand:

swarm-test run --config .swarmtest.yml
swarm-test run -a "A,B,C" -e "A>B,B>C" --strict
swarm-test run my_crew.py --config custom-config.yml --output-format json

Auto-discovery. With no --config flag, swarm-test discovers .swarmtest.yml, .swarmtest.yaml, or swarmtest.yml in the project root, falling back to a [tool.swarmtest] table in pyproject.toml.

CLI flags always override config-file values. Exit codes from run: 0 (passed), 1 (findings exceed thresholds), 2 (config or runtime error).


Architecture

swarm_test/
├── core/
│   ├── models.py       # Pydantic models (AgentNode, Finding, SwarmReport, …)
│   ├── graph.py        # NetworkX SwarmGraph
│   ├── interceptor.py  # Monkey-patch agent methods, sensitive-data scanner
│   └── probe.py        # SwarmProbe — main entry point
├── attacks/
│   ├── cascade.py          # Cascade failure simulation
│   ├── context_leakage.py  # Sensitive-data boundary check
│   ├── intent_drift.py     # Role violations + goal hijacking
│   ├── collusion.py        # Clique/echo-chamber/cycle detection
│   └── blast_radius.py     # Topological SPOF + redundancy analysis
├── integrations/
│   ├── base.py                # BaseAdapter
│   ├── crewai_adapter.py      # CrewAI Crew ingestion
│   ├── langgraph_adapter.py   # LangGraph StateGraph / CompiledGraph ingestion
│   └── autogen_adapter.py     # AutoGen GroupChat / ConversableAgent ingestion
├── reporters/
│   ├── console.py          # Rich terminal output
│   └── html.py             # D3 force-directed graph report
└── cli.py                  # Click CLI

Report Output

Terminal (Rich)

─────────────────── SWARM-TEST RELIABILITY REPORT ───────────────────

 Summary
 Swarm: research-crew-demo    Framework: crewai
 Agents: 4   Edges: 6
 Risk Score: 45/100
 Duration: 12ms

╭─────────────────── Test Results ─────────────────────╮
│ Test                  Status   Findings  Critical  High │
│ cascade_failure       FAILED       2         1       1  │
│ context_leakage       PASSED       0         0       0  │
│ intent_drift          PASSED       0         0       0  │
│ collusion_detection   PASSED       0         0       0  │
│ blast_radius          FAILED       1         1       0  │
╰───────────────────────────────────────────────────────╯

HTML Report

Interactive D3.js force-directed graph showing agent nodes, interaction edges, and color-coded findings.


Plugin System

Ship custom reliability tests as installable Python packages. swarm-test auto-discovers anything registered under the swarm_test.plugins entry-point group and runs it alongside the built-in chaos tests — the findings show up in the console, JSON, Markdown, and HTML reports.

Write a plugin in 10 lines

from swarm_test.plugins import BasePlugin, PluginResult


class MyPlugin(BasePlugin):
    name = "my_custom_test"
    version = "0.1.0"
    description = "Checks for X"

    def run(self, graph, agents, edges, config):
        findings = []
        # your test logic here
        return PluginResult(
            test_name=self.name,
            status="passed" if not findings else "failed",
            score=100,
            findings=findings,
            duration_ms=0.0,
        )

Register the plugin

In your plugin package's pyproject.toml:

[project.entry-points."swarm_test.plugins"]
my_custom_test = "my_package.plugins:MyPlugin"

Then install it in the same environment as swarm-test:

pip install -e .
swarm-test plugins list   # → my_custom_test  0.1.0   Checks for X
swarm-test plugins info my_custom_test

From this point on every swarm-test run, probe, and scan will execute your plugin and report its findings.

Need a working starting point? See examples/plugin_template/ for a fully runnable plugin package, and examples/example_plugin.py for a single-file edge-count check.

Extending

Custom attack

from swarm_test.attacks.base import BaseAttack
from swarm_test.core.models import Finding, Severity, TestResult

class MyCustomAttack(BaseAttack):
    name = "my_custom_attack"

    def run(self, graph):
        findings = []
        # ... analyze graph.graph, graph.events ...
        return TestResult(test_name=self.name, findings=findings)

Custom adapter

from swarm_test.integrations.base import BaseAdapter

class MyFrameworkAdapter(BaseAdapter):
    framework_name = "my-framework"

    def _ingest_impl(self, swarm, graph):
        for raw_agent in swarm.my_agents:
            node = self._make_agent_node(raw_agent.name, raw_agent.role)
            graph.add_agent(node)

Integrations

swarm-test exports (agent_health scores and structural findings) can feed runtime risk gates. Each integration has its own page under docs/integrations/:

  • Black_Wall — pre-action risk gate; consumes agent_health as a downside-only prior.

Development

pip install -e ".[dev]"
pytest tests/ -v --cov=swarm_test
ruff check swarm_test/
black swarm_test/

License

MIT — see LICENSE.

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