Freeze the current workspace-first surface as the stable 3.0 contract and reposition the landing docs, CLI help, and public contract around the stable workspace path after the one-shot proof. Bump the package and catalog compatibility to 3.0.0, add a dedicated workspace walkthrough tape/GIF, and mark the 3.0.0 roadmap milestone done while keeping runtime capability unchanged in this release. Validation: uv lock; UV_CACHE_DIR=.uv-cache make check; UV_CACHE_DIR=.uv-cache make dist-check; UV_CACHE_DIR=.uv-cache uv build; UV_CACHE_DIR=.uv-cache uvx --from twine twine check dist/*; built-wheel CLI smoke for pyro --help and pyro workspace --help; vhs validate plus rendered workspace-first-run.gif outside the sandbox because vhs crashes when sandboxed.
10 KiB
Install
Support Matrix
Supported today:
- Linux x86_64
- Python 3.12+
uv/dev/kvm
Optional for outbound guest networking:
ipnftoriptables- privilege to create TAP devices and configure NAT
Not supported today:
- macOS
- Windows
- Linux hosts without working KVM at
/dev/kvm
If you do not already have uv, install it first:
python -m pip install uv
Use these command forms consistently:
- published package without install:
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro ... - installed package:
pyro ... - source checkout:
uv run pyro ...
Fastest Evaluation Path
Use either of these equivalent evaluator paths:
# Package without install
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro doctor
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro env list
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro env pull debian:12
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro run debian:12 -- git --version
# Already installed
pyro doctor
pyro env list
pyro env pull debian:12
pyro run debian:12 -- git --version
If you are running from a repo checkout instead, replace pyro with uv run pyro.
After that one-shot proof works, continue into the stable workspace path with pyro workspace ....
1. Check the host first
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro doctor
Expected success signals:
Platform: linux-x86_64
Runtime: PASS
KVM: exists=yes readable=yes writable=yes
Environment cache: /home/you/.cache/pyro-mcp/environments
Capabilities: vm_boot=yes guest_exec=yes guest_network=yes
Networking: tun=yes ip_forward=yes
If Runtime: FAIL, stop here and use troubleshooting.md.
2. Inspect the catalog
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro env list
Expected output:
Catalog version: 3.0.0
debian:12 [installed|not installed] Debian 12 environment with Git preinstalled for common agent workflows.
debian:12-base [installed|not installed] Minimal Debian 12 environment for shell and core Unix tooling.
debian:12-build [installed|not installed] Debian 12 environment with Git and common build tools preinstalled.
3. Pull the default environment
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro env pull debian:12
The first pull downloads an OCI environment from public Docker Hub, requires outbound HTTPS
access to registry-1.docker.io, and needs local cache space for the guest image. See
host-requirements.md for the full host requirements.
Expected success signals:
[pull] phase=install environment=debian:12
[pull] phase=ready environment=debian:12
Pulled: debian:12
...
4. Run one command in a guest
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro run debian:12 -- git --version
Expected success signals:
[run] phase=create environment=debian:12
[run] phase=start vm_id=...
[run] phase=execute vm_id=...
[run] environment=debian:12 execution_mode=guest_vsock exit_code=0 duration_ms=...
git version ...
The guest command output and the [run] ... summary are written to different streams, so they
may appear in either order in terminals or capture tools. Use --json if you need a
deterministic structured result.
If guest execution is unavailable, the command fails unless you explicitly pass
--allow-host-compat.
5. Continue into the stable workspace path
The commands below use plain pyro .... Run the same flow with uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro ...
for the published package, or uv run pyro ... from a source checkout.
uv tool install pyro-mcp
WORKSPACE_ID="$(pyro workspace create debian:12 --seed-path ./repo --json | python -c 'import json,sys; print(json.load(sys.stdin)["workspace_id"])')"
pyro workspace sync push "$WORKSPACE_ID" ./changes
pyro workspace exec "$WORKSPACE_ID" -- cat note.txt
pyro workspace snapshot create "$WORKSPACE_ID" checkpoint
pyro workspace service start "$WORKSPACE_ID" web --ready-file .web-ready -- sh -lc 'touch .web-ready && while true; do sleep 60; done'
pyro workspace reset "$WORKSPACE_ID" --snapshot checkpoint
pyro workspace export "$WORKSPACE_ID" note.txt --output ./note.txt
pyro workspace delete "$WORKSPACE_ID"
This is the stable persistent-workspace contract:
workspace createseeds/workspaceworkspace sync pushimports later host-side changesworkspace execandworkspace shell *keep work inside one sandboxworkspace service *manages long-running processes with typed readinessworkspace snapshot *andworkspace resetmake reset-over-repair explicitworkspace diffcompares against the immutable create-time baselineworkspace exportcopies results back to the host
6. Optional demo proof point
uvx --from pyro-mcp pyro demo
pyro demo proves the one-shot create/start/exec/delete VM lifecycle works end to end.
Example output:
{
"cleanup": {
"deleted": true,
"reason": "post_exec_cleanup",
"vm_id": "..."
},
"command": "git --version",
"environment": "debian:12",
"execution_mode": "guest_vsock",
"exit_code": 0,
"stdout": "git version ...\n"
}
For a fuller copy-pasteable transcript, see first-run.md.
When you are done evaluating and want to remove stale cached environments, run pyro env prune.
Installed CLI
If you already installed the package, the same evaluator path works with plain pyro ...:
uv tool install pyro-mcp
pyro --version
pyro doctor
pyro env list
pyro env pull debian:12
pyro run debian:12 -- git --version
After the CLI path works, you can move on to:
- persistent workspaces:
pyro workspace create debian:12 --seed-path ./repo - live workspace updates:
pyro workspace sync push WORKSPACE_ID ./changes - guest networking policy:
pyro workspace create debian:12 --network-policy egress - workspace secrets:
pyro workspace create debian:12 --secret API_TOKEN=expected --secret-file PIP_TOKEN=./token.txt - baseline diff:
pyro workspace diff WORKSPACE_ID - snapshots and reset:
pyro workspace snapshot create WORKSPACE_ID checkpointandpyro workspace reset WORKSPACE_ID --snapshot checkpoint - host export:
pyro workspace export WORKSPACE_ID note.txt --output ./note.txt - interactive shells:
pyro workspace shell open WORKSPACE_ID - long-running services:
pyro workspace service start WORKSPACE_ID app --ready-file .ready -- sh -lc 'touch .ready && while true; do sleep 60; done' - localhost-published ports:
pyro workspace create debian:12 --network-policy egress+published-portsandpyro workspace service start WORKSPACE_ID app --ready-http http://127.0.0.1:8080/ --publish 18080:8080 -- ./start-app - MCP:
pyro mcp serve - Python SDK:
from pyro_mcp import Pyro - Demos:
pyro demoorpyro demo --network
Stable Workspace
Use pyro workspace ... when you need repeated commands in one sandbox instead of one-shot pyro run.
pyro workspace create debian:12 --seed-path ./repo
pyro workspace create debian:12 --network-policy egress
pyro workspace create debian:12 --seed-path ./repo --secret API_TOKEN=expected
pyro workspace create debian:12 --network-policy egress+published-ports
pyro workspace sync push WORKSPACE_ID ./changes --dest src
pyro workspace exec WORKSPACE_ID -- cat src/note.txt
pyro workspace exec WORKSPACE_ID --secret-env API_TOKEN -- sh -lc 'test "$API_TOKEN" = "expected"'
pyro workspace diff WORKSPACE_ID
pyro workspace snapshot create WORKSPACE_ID checkpoint
pyro workspace reset WORKSPACE_ID --snapshot checkpoint
pyro workspace reset WORKSPACE_ID
pyro workspace export WORKSPACE_ID src/note.txt --output ./note.txt
pyro workspace shell open WORKSPACE_ID --secret-env API_TOKEN
pyro workspace shell write WORKSPACE_ID SHELL_ID --input 'pwd'
pyro workspace shell read WORKSPACE_ID SHELL_ID
pyro workspace shell close WORKSPACE_ID SHELL_ID
pyro workspace service start WORKSPACE_ID web --secret-env API_TOKEN --ready-file .web-ready -- sh -lc 'touch .web-ready && while true; do sleep 60; done'
pyro workspace service start WORKSPACE_ID worker --ready-file .worker-ready -- sh -lc 'touch .worker-ready && while true; do sleep 60; done'
pyro workspace service start WORKSPACE_ID app --ready-http http://127.0.0.1:8080/ --publish 18080:8080 -- ./start-app
pyro workspace service list WORKSPACE_ID
pyro workspace service status WORKSPACE_ID web
pyro workspace service logs WORKSPACE_ID web --tail-lines 50
pyro workspace service stop WORKSPACE_ID web
pyro workspace service stop WORKSPACE_ID worker
pyro workspace logs WORKSPACE_ID
pyro workspace delete WORKSPACE_ID
Workspace commands default to the persistent /workspace directory inside the guest. If you need
the identifier programmatically, use --json and read the workspace_id field. Use --seed-path
when the workspace should start from a host directory or a local .tar / .tar.gz / .tgz
archive. Use pyro workspace sync push for later host-side changes to a started workspace. Sync
is non-atomic in 3.0.0; if it fails partway through, prefer pyro workspace reset to recover
from baseline or one named snapshot. Use pyro workspace diff to compare the current workspace
tree to its immutable create-time baseline, pyro workspace snapshot * to capture named
checkpoints, and pyro workspace export to copy one changed file or directory back to the host. Use
pyro workspace exec for one-shot commands and pyro workspace shell * when you need an
interactive PTY that survives across separate calls. Use pyro workspace service * when the
workspace needs long-running background processes with typed readiness probes. Service metadata and
logs stay outside /workspace, so the service runtime itself does not show up in workspace diff or
export results. Use --network-policy egress when the workspace needs outbound guest networking,
and --network-policy egress+published-ports plus workspace service start --publish when one
service must be reachable from the host on 127.0.0.1. Use --secret and --secret-file at
workspace creation when the sandbox needs private tokens or config, and
--secret-env SECRET_NAME[=ENV_VAR] when one exec, shell, or service call needs that secret as an
environment variable. Persisted secret files are available in the guest at
/run/pyro-secrets/<name>.
Contributor Clone
git lfs install
git clone <repo>
cd pyro
git lfs pull
make setup