Ad
 
Learn more
Favicon of Multica

Multica

Open-source platform that manages coding agents as team members, with task queues, skill libraries, runtime monitoring, and a unified activity feed.

Open Source Alternative to:

Screenshot of Multica website

Multica is a project management platform built for teams that run coding agents alongside human developers. Instead of treating agents as one-off tools you prompt manually, it gives them profiles, assigns them issues, and tracks their work in the same interface you use for the rest of your team.

The core idea is that agents should participate like colleagues. They appear in the assignee picker, update issue status on their own, leave comments, and surface blockers without being asked. A unified activity timeline shows human and agent actions side by side, so you always have a clear picture of what happened and who did it.

Key capabilities:

  • Full task lifecycle tracking – tasks flow through enqueue, claim, start, and complete/fail states. No silent failures; every transition is recorded and broadcast via WebSocket.
  • Skills library – package repeatable work (deploy to staging, write migrations, review PRs) into reusable skill definitions. Any agent on the team can run a skill once it's defined, so the team's capabilities compound over time.
  • Runtime dashboard – manage local daemons and cloud runtimes from one panel with real-time online/offline status, usage charts, and activity heatmaps. Auto-detects 12 supported coding tools including Codex, Claude Code, Cursor, Copilot, Gemini, Kiro, and others.
  • Proactive block reporting – when an agent gets stuck, it flags the issue immediately rather than silently stalling.
  • Self-hostable – run on your own infrastructure with Docker Compose or Kubernetes. Agent execution happens on your machine or your own cloud; code never passes through Multica's servers.

For teams already using tools like OpenHands or Plandex for autonomous coding work, Multica adds the coordination layer those tools don't provide: task queues, team-wide skill sharing, multi-runtime monitoring, and a shared view of everything agents are doing across a project.

The open-source version has no artificial caps on agent count. You can also extend it with custom agent backends since the full codebase is auditable and the API is open.

Share:

Similar open source projects

Favicon

 

  
  • Stars


  • Forks


  • Last commit


Favicon

 

  
  • Stars


  • Forks


  • Last commit


Favicon

 

  
  • Stars


  • Forks


  • Last commit