Skip to main content

Event-sourced agent engine — CLI and Python bindings for auditable AI workflows

Project description

zymi

zymi-core

dbt for AI workflows — declarative agents, deterministic replay, human-in-the-loop, all from YAML.

Pronounced zoomi — like dog zoomies.

PyPI


Why zymi-core?

Most agent frameworks are imperative Python: write a script that makes LLM calls, persist some messages, hope you logged enough to debug a bad run later.

zymi-core inverts that:

  • Declarative, like dbt. Agents, pipelines, tools, connectors, approvals — all YAML. The engine validates and runs them as a DAG.
  • Event-sourced. Every state change is an immutable, hash-chained event. Runs are replayable, resumable, and auditable without extra logging.
  • Boundary-safe. Agents emit intentions (run shell, write file, call HTTP) that pass through policy + contracts + optional human approval before execution. The risky thing doesn't happen until someone says yes.

Bring a useful agent online in minutes without writing code. A year later, still answer exactly what this agent did on any past run.

📚 AI-assistant friendly out of the box. Every zymi init scaffold drops an AGENTS.md into the user's project — vocabulary, file map, task→file routing. Claude Code / Cursor / Aider read it automatically; the YAML they help you write gets noticeably more correct.


Run a Telegram agent in two minutes

This is the canonical demo — a real chat bot, wired declaratively.

pip install zymi-core

mkdir telegram-agent && cd telegram-agent
zymi init --example telegram

# 1. Create a bot via @BotFather in Telegram; copy the token.
# 2. Fill .env:
cp .env.example .env       # edit TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN + OPENAI_API_KEY
# 3. Open project.yml, replace "your_username_here" with your actual
#    Telegram username (no @). Keeps strangers out of the bot.

set -a; source .env; set +a
zymi serve chat

Message the bot. It replies in seconds. Every inbound message, LLM call, approval decision, and outbound reply is in .zymi/events.db; watch live with zymi observe.

The whole wiring — Telegram I/O, two-step DAG (assistant drafts, reviewer polishes), declarative + Python tools, approval channel — lives in YAML. The scaffold also drops AGENTS.md so an AI coding assistant can extend the project safely. Concrete demo of:

  • http_poll connector — long-polls Telegram's getUpdates, no HTTPS / ngrok needed
  • http_post output — sends each ResponseReady back to the user
  • Telegram approval channel — DMs admins with ✅ / ❌ buttons when the agent calls broadcast (requires_approval: true)
  • Python @tool auto-discovery — drop tools/get_weather.py (sync) or tools/translate.py (async) and the agent picks them up

Ask the bot to "announce that we're closing at 5pm" — the agent calls broadcast, you get a DM with approve/deny buttons, nothing goes out until you click. End-to-end audit trail in zymi events.

Full setup in docs/getting-started.md. Connector deep-dive in docs/connectors.md. Approvals in docs/approvals.md.


What's in the box

Pipelines — DAGs, agent steps, deterministic tool steps

A pipeline is a list of steps with depends_on: edges. Independent steps run in parallel. Each step is either an agent step (LLM ReAct loop) or a deterministic tool step (ADR-0024) — direct dispatch with templated args, no LLM hop, but the same event envelope.

Mix them freely:

steps:
  - id: fetch                            # deterministic — no LLM
    tool: http_get
    args: { url: "https://api.example.com/${inputs.id}" }

  - id: classify                         # LLM
    agent: classifier
    task: "${steps.fetch.output}"
    depends_on: [fetch]

Schema, examples, gotchas → docs/pipelines.md.

Tools — four kinds, one catalogue

All four kinds emit identical ToolCallRequested / ToolCallCompleted events; the agent doesn't know which catalogue a tool came from.

  • Declarative HTTP / shell in tools/<name>.yml — no code.
  • Python @tool in tools/<name>.py — sync or async, signature → JSON Schema, auto-discovered.
  • MCP servers — one mcp_servers: entry gives N tools, namespaced mcp__<server>__<tool> (ADR-0023).
  • Builtinsread_file, write_file, write_memory, execute_shell_command, spawn_sub_agent.
# tools/get_weather.py — auto-discovered at runtime startup.
from zymi import tool

@tool
def get_weather(city: str) -> str:
    """Return the current weather for a city."""
    return f"sunny in {city}"

Schema and the four kinds in detail → docs/tools.md.

Connectors and outputs

Inbound: http_inbound (webhook), http_poll (long-poll), cron, file_read, stdin. Outbound: http_post, file_append, stdout.

All declarative, all emit events. Filter recipes (docs/connectors.md):

# GitHub — only react to PR opens
filter:
  "$.action":              { equals: "opened" }
  "$.pull_request.draft":  { equals: false }

429 + Retry-After handled automatically. Cursors persist across restarts. Multi-process zymi serve against shared Postgres sees one cursor table, no double-fire.

Approvals — event-sourced, restart-safe

Tools with requires_approval: true publish ApprovalRequested on the bus; an approval channel routes a human decision back. Three channels in the box: terminal, http, telegram (ADR-0022).

Resolution order: pipeline override → project default → fail-closed. A zymi serve crash mid-approval is repaired on next start: in-flight requests are redelivered to live channels; expired ones are sealed with ApprovalDenied{reason: restart_timeout}.

Full schemas + telegram setup → docs/approvals.md.

Replay, resume, observe

zymi runs                                   # all pipeline runs
zymi events --stream pipeline-chat-abc      # every event in one run
zymi verify --stream pipeline-chat-abc      # hash-chain integrity check
zymi observe                                # 3-panel TUI: runs / DAG / events live

# Fork-resume from a chosen step. Upstream steps are frozen; the fork
# step + DAG-descendants re-run against current configs on disk.
zymi resume pipeline-chat-abc --from-step polish
zymi resume pipeline-chat-abc --from-step polish --dry-run

Useful when you're iterating on a prompt: don't re-burn the expensive early steps every time you tweak the later ones. → docs/events-and-replay.md.

Store backends

SQLite (default, zero-config) for single-process / dev. Postgres for multi-process zymi serve against shared state — one store: postgres://… line in project.yml (ADR-0012). Same hash-chain semantics either way. → docs/store-backends.md.

Context window management

The agent's working context is reconstructed from the event log each iteration, not accumulated in a buffer. Older tool observations are masked in-place (~2× cost reduction, no extra LLM calls). When the budget still gets tight, hybrid compaction summarises the oldest masked batch with one fast LLM call. Tunable in runtime.context: (ADR-0016).

JSON Schemas for configs

IDE autocomplete and LLM-assisted YAML come free:

zymi schema project          # draft-07 JSON Schema for project.yml
zymi schema --all

Python embedding

The same pip install zymi-core exposes a Python API: Runtime, Event, EventBus, EventStore, Subscription, ToolRegistry, plus the @tool decorator.

from zymi_core import Runtime

rt = Runtime.for_project(".", approval="terminal")
result = rt.run_pipeline("chat", {"message": "hello"})
print(result.success, result.final_output)

rt.bus() and rt.store() share Arc-handles with the runtime — Python subscribers see exactly what the handler publishes.

Cross-process pattern (Django view / Celery task drives zymi serve over the shared store):

import uuid
from zymi_core import Event, EventBus, EventStore

store = EventStore(".zymi/events.db")
bus = EventBus(store)

corr = str(uuid.uuid4())
sub = bus.subscribe_correlation(corr)

ev = Event(
    stream_id=f"web-{corr}",
    kind={"type": "PipelineRequested",
          "data": {"pipeline": "research", "inputs": {"topic": "rust event sourcing"}}},
    source="django",
)
ev.with_correlation(corr)
bus.publish(ev)

result = sub.recv(timeout_secs=300)

Full surface → docs/python-api.md.


CLI cheatsheet

zymi init [--example telegram]              # scaffold a project
zymi run <pipeline> -i key=value           # one-shot run
zymi serve <pipeline>                       # long-running: react to PipelineRequested

zymi runs                                   # list pipeline runs
zymi events [--stream ID] [--kind TAG]      # query event log
zymi verify [--stream ID]                   # hash-chain integrity check
zymi observe [--run ID]                     # interactive TUI
zymi resume <run-id> --from-step <id>       # fork-resume

zymi mcp probe <name> -- <cmd> [args ]     # smoke an MCP server
zymi schema {project|agent|pipeline|tool|--all}

Full reference → docs/cli.md.


Documentation


Contributing & License

zymi-core is built in Rust and shipped via PyPI. Bug reports, examples, PRs welcome — see CONTRIBUTING.md for the dev loop, test matrix, ADR workflow, and how to build from source.

MIT — see LICENSE.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

zymi_core-0.6.0.tar.gz (905.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl (6.0 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11Windows x86-64

zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl (5.8 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11manylinux: glibc 2.17+ x86-64

zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl (5.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11manylinux: glibc 2.17+ ARM64

zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (5.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 11.0+ ARM64

zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (5.6 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 10.12+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file zymi_core-0.6.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: zymi_core-0.6.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 905.4 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for zymi_core-0.6.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f6cb32022c984f8f8ed90fa9c4c2be7c09d47a0f68d1ea59fd6feb1059e4ebae
MD5 d227f00f4f7400f362be76ada4561b4d
BLAKE2b-256 ad1fa34b9c2253473630fa0df331a2049bb22e9df33531b92a9b49bc820479e6

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for zymi_core-0.6.0.tar.gz:

Publisher: release.yml on metravod/zymi-core

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 6.0 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.11, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 46bd7c9a657a5bc0af6b8551e38886c6d28396d2d90ef82dfce2877a4232ffbb
MD5 12f475111e81cc1e0f32835b110c0f48
BLAKE2b-256 7029bd878fc911ae83b06ea9cc043eae2964a4e610aed675f03e2fd2c043b523

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on metravod/zymi-core

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ce530dc37a81c975acadcb9a3222d1ed8af2531dce294e079e58596f08f2a661
MD5 0f3f866316a511c5cf3fc74a2c8351ba
BLAKE2b-256 6a332c24b84c514217f2aa3bf2b2bd1e8203eb8d1800256efe361a2a995d98f1

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on metravod/zymi-core

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 760c407ecc395c219864ce7b4420cf4bd44eeaf51b3b581f0222f6b79d838140
MD5 cee8bb1e1db23c9dc5799f27c77d4b70
BLAKE2b-256 9b2f760385de375781825b296ea62fbf9aa083851b63f3ed4fba9c4ffe674cd2

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on metravod/zymi-core

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 58454e73a5525c0e20b8692bf77f07cff74b97b9a27fef6776436385ad5bd14c
MD5 768f88fce3205acf54cd3428b790fd89
BLAKE2b-256 0504f70a95d40e64aa55ed55c45c9ad87d0c01d9ceaab4bc1c4252517beb17f0

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on metravod/zymi-core

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 4219fafa039f90ecd0d604949a510874d348324ab80df04f828987f7875fd552
MD5 23ce7152378eedb2d4d3d9e098902d6c
BLAKE2b-256 25f75d69f9fbc25acd82191376f01395bc4e9a03fc8217b7b34a9273fe4ce61d

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for zymi_core-0.6.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on metravod/zymi-core

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page