suna/backend/README.md

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# Suna Backend
## Quick Setup
The easiest way to get your backend configured is to use the setup wizard from the project root:
```bash
cd .. # Navigate to project root if you're in the backend directory
python setup.py
```
This will configure all necessary environment variables and services automatically.
## Running the backend
Within the backend directory, run the following command to stop and start the backend:
```bash
docker compose down && docker compose up --build
```
## Running Individual Services
You can run individual services from the docker-compose file. This is particularly useful during development:
### Running only Redis
```bash
docker compose up redis
```
### Running only the API and Worker
```bash
docker compose up api worker
```
## Development Setup
For local development, you might only need to run Redis, while working on the API locally. This is useful when:
- You're making changes to the API code and want to test them directly
- You want to avoid rebuilding the API container on every change
- You're running the API service directly on your machine
To run just Redis for development:
```bash
docker compose up redis
```
Then you can run your API service locally with the following commands:
```sh
# On one terminal
cd backend
uv run api.py
# On another terminal
cd backend
uv run dramatiq --processes 4 --threads 4 run_agent_background
```
### Environment Configuration
The setup wizard automatically creates a `.env` file with all necessary configuration. If you need to configure manually or understand the setup:
#### Required Environment Variables
```sh
# Environment Mode
ENV_MODE=local
# Database (Supabase)
SUPABASE_URL=https://your-project.supabase.co
SUPABASE_ANON_KEY=your-anon-key
SUPABASE_SERVICE_ROLE_KEY=your-service-role-key
# Infrastructure
REDIS_HOST=redis # Use 'localhost' when running API locally
REDIS_PORT=6379
# LLM Providers (at least one required)
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=your-anthropic-key
OPENAI_API_KEY=your-openai-key
OPENROUTER_API_KEY=your-openrouter-key
GEMINI_API_KEY=your-gemini-api-key
MODEL_TO_USE=openrouter/moonshotai/kimi-k2
# Search and Web Scraping
TAVILY_API_KEY=your-tavily-key
FIRECRAWL_API_KEY=your-firecrawl-key
FIRECRAWL_URL=https://api.firecrawl.dev
# Agent Execution
DAYTONA_API_KEY=your-daytona-key
DAYTONA_SERVER_URL=https://app.daytona.io/api
DAYTONA_TARGET=us
WEBHOOK_BASE_URL=https://yourdomain.com
# MCP Configuration
MCP_CREDENTIAL_ENCRYPTION_KEY=your-generated-encryption-key
# Optional APIs
RAPID_API_KEY=your-rapidapi-key
NEXT_PUBLIC_URL=http://localhost:3000
```
When running services individually, make sure to:
1. Check your `.env` file and adjust any necessary environment variables
2. Ensure Redis connection settings match your local setup (default: `localhost:6379`)
3. Update any service-specific environment variables if needed
### Important: Redis Host Configuration
When running the API locally with Redis in Docker, you need to set the correct Redis host in your `.env` file:
- For Docker-to-Docker communication (when running both services in Docker): use `REDIS_HOST=redis`
- For local-to-Docker communication (when running API locally): use `REDIS_HOST=localhost`
Example `.env` configuration for local development:
```sh
REDIS_HOST=localhost # (instead of 'redis')
REDIS_PORT=6379
REDIS_PASSWORD=
```
---
## Feature Flags
The backend includes a Redis-backed feature flag system that allows you to control feature availability without code deployments.
### Setup
The feature flag system uses the existing Redis service and is automatically available when Redis is running.
### CLI Management
Use the CLI tool to manage feature flags:
```bash
cd backend/flags
python setup.py <command> [arguments]
```
#### Available Commands
**Enable a feature flag:**
```bash
python setup.py enable test_flag "Test decsription"
```
**Disable a feature flag:**
```bash
python setup.py disable test_flag
```
**List all feature flags:**
```bash
python setup.py list
```
### API Endpoints
Feature flags are accessible via REST API:
**Get all feature flags:**
```bash
GET /feature-flags
```
**Get specific feature flag:**
```bash
GET /feature-flags/{flag_name}
```
Example response:
```json
{
"test_flag": {
"enabled": true,
"description": "Test flag",
"updated_at": "2024-01-15T10:30:00Z"
}
}
```
### Backend Integration
Use feature flags in your Python code:
```python
from flags.flags import is_enabled
# Check if a feature is enabled
if await is_enabled('test_flag'):
# Feature-specific logic
pass
# With fallback value
enabled = await is_enabled('new_feature', default=False)
```
### Current Feature Flags
The system currently supports these feature flags:
- **`custom_agents`**: Controls custom agent creation and management
- **`agent_marketplace`**: Controls agent marketplace functionality
### Error Handling
The feature flag system includes robust error handling:
- If Redis is unavailable, flags default to `False`
- API endpoints return empty objects on Redis errors
- CLI operations show clear error messages
### Caching
- Backend operations are direct Redis calls (no caching)
- Frontend includes 5-minute caching for performance
- Use `clearCache()` in frontend to force refresh
---
## Production Setup
For production deployments, use the following command to set resource limits
```sh
docker compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.prod.yml up -d
```