Operating Pattern
Fit check
| Question | Practical answer |
|---|---|
| What do you install? | @inngest/agent-kit from inngest/agent-kit |
| What is the first command? | npm run dev |
| What proves it works? | npm test |
| How long should a pilot take? | 12 minutes for a small repo or sandbox |
Adoption loop
- Run the tool on a disposable branch or sandbox project.
- Capture before/after output so reviewers can see the exact effect.
- Add the smallest CI or local check that prevents regressions.
- Document owner, upgrade command, and rollback command in the repo.
Recommended use
Treat each agent handoff as a workflow transition, not just a chat message. That gives you retries, observability, and idempotency where production agents need it.
Guardrails
Keep tool outputs small and typed. Deterministic routing becomes fragile when every tool returns unconstrained prose.
Rollout checklist
- Pin the package or release version before using it in CI.
- Keep credentials in environment variables or the platform secret store.
- Add one owner who is responsible for upgrades and breaking-change triage.
- Re-check the GitHub repo before writing docs that mention APIs or install paths.
FAQ
Q: Is this production-ready?
A: The repo exists at https://github.com/inngest/agent-kit and has 858 GitHub stars. Treat the first rollout as a controlled pilot until your team has tested install, rollback, and CI behavior.
Q: Why use it instead of a generic script? A: The value is repeatability: a named package, a documented command, a source repo, and a small verification path that can be reviewed by teammates.
Q: What should I measure first? A: Measure setup time against the 12 minutes target, count how many files or tasks it changes, and record whether the CI command catches the same issue locally.