Compose the agent
Define identity, prompt, model, response schema, tools, MCP servers, knowledge bases, connectors, and memories as one versioned unit.
Build, run, and improve production AI agents without turning your stack into glue code. Flaredin brings prompts, tools, MCP, knowledge, memory, traces, evals, approvals, and deployments into one operator-grade workspace.
Flaredin treats agents like software you can inspect, test, version, deploy, and repair. It is not a chatbot skin. It is the workspace around the agent loop.
Define identity, prompt, model, response schema, tools, MCP servers, knowledge bases, connectors, and memories as one versioned unit.
Every turn records timing, tokens, tool calls, approvals, cost signals, and trace links so debugging does not depend on log archaeology.
Ship versions into environments, gate risky tools, scope API keys, manage secrets, review audit events, and let Ember propose changes for approval.
The current Flaredin app is organized around the lifecycle your team actually uses: chat with the agent, edit its identity, attach capabilities, tune runtime state, connect channels, govern access, and inspect runs.
prompt + modelwhat it can dostate + triggersexternal entrypointsbefore productionEmber is Flaredin's meta-agent. Ask her why an agent is slow, where it is failing, or how to make a prompt safer. She reads operational context, writes investigations, and stages proposals you review before they land.
Tighten escalation language after repeated approval failures in recent traces.
Turn the agent's prompt goals into realistic input and expected-output cases.
Persist what Ember learned so the next debugging conversation starts ahead.
Traces show the full turn. Scores show human feedback. Evals pin examples to agent versions. Deployments pin versions to environments. Together, they give the team a loop: inspect, improve, test, ship.
Flaredin already exposes a TypeScript SDK and CLI around the REST API. The app is the workspace; the API is how teams wire agent creation, deployment, testing, and Ember review into their own workflows.
Create agents, deploy versions, trigger tests, and chat with Ember from Node, browsers, and Bun.
Manage agents, configure org context, review Ember proposals, and request ranked fix recommendations.
Mint API keys for external callers, bind secrets to tools, and keep audit trails around operational changes.
Flaredin's workspace is organized into build, observe, and govern surfaces so teams can move from first prompt to production agent without another stack diagram.
Flaredin is the workbench around your Cloudflare-hosted agents: build the loop, connect the tools, watch the traces, evaluate versions, approve changes, and tell us what should feel faster next.