Documentation
Coding in multiplayer mode with AI agents and your team
Bunny is a self-hosted workspace where your team and your AI agents build on the same remote machine: shared shells (SSH access), live previews (streamed browser windows), and teams chats (Discord, Slack, Teams) in one place. It's like a remote desktop, but for your team and your AI agents, repecting your governance (policies, access control, etc.).

What is bunny?
Think of bunny as coding in multiplayer mode with AI agents. You set up one remote environment—a Linux server or Docker container—and everyone works on the same machine: teammates, contributors, and the agents you already use.
No more ten local setups and slow hand-offs through Git alone. bunny gives you one live station with web terminals, app previews, streamed browsers, and Discord. A developer runs a command, a designer checks the preview, someone asks a question in chat, an agent picks up the thread—all in shared context, on the same box.
You install bunny on infrastructure you control. It is self-hosted: your code, sessions, and data stay yours. Invite the team, connect Discord, and work from the browser like you are in the same room—because on the server, you are.
Get started
Then configure your server and follow the first-run checklist.
Use bunny with your team
- Configure the server — owner account, network, Discord
- Discord setup · Day-to-day workflows · Slash commands
- Security — accounts, MFA, and permissions
Need more detail?
- CLI reference — server commands
- API reference — for custom integrations