代码代理IDE工具

Serena是一款专为编码代理设计的集成开发环境工具,提供语义代码检索、编辑和重构功能,支持40多种编程语言,适用于大型复杂代码库的开发。

作者 By oraios
本地部署 可托管 语义代码检索
GitHub

Serena is the IDE for your coding agent.

  • Serena provides essential semantic code retrieval, editing and refactoring tools that are akin to an IDE’s capabilities, operating at the symbol level and exploiting relational structure.
  • It integrates with any client/LLM via the model context protocol (MCP).

Serena’s agent-first tool design involves robust high-level abstractions, distinguishing it from approaches that rely on low-level concepts like line numbers or primitive search patterns.

Practically, this means that your agent operates faster, more efficiently and more reliably, especially in larger and more complex codebases.

[!IMPORTANT] Do not install Serena via an MCP or plugin marketplace! They contain outdated and suboptimal installation commands. Instead, follow our Quick Start instructions.

How Serena Works

Serena provides the necessary tools for coding workflows, but an LLM is required to do the actual work, orchestrating tool use.

Serena can extend the functionality of your existing AI client via the model context protocol (MCP). Most modern AI chat clients directly support MCP, including

  • terminal-based clients like Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, or Gemini-CLI,
  • IDEs and IDE assistant plugins for VSCode, Cursor and JetBrains IDEs,
  • desktop and web clients like Claude Desktop or OpenWebUI.

To connect the Serena MCP server to your client, you either

  • provide the client with a launch command that allows it to start the MCP server, or
  • start the Serena MCP server yourself in HTTP mode and provide the client with the URL.

See the Quick Start section below for information on how to get started.

Programming Language Support & Semantic Analysis Capabilities

Serena provides a set of versatile code querying and editing functionalities based on symbolic understanding of the code. Equipped with these capabilities, your agent discovers and edits code just like a seasoned developer making use of an IDE’s capabilities would. Serena can efficiently find the right context and do the right thing even in very large and complex projects!

There are two alternative technologies powering these capabilities:

  • Language servers implementing the language server Protocol (LSP) — the free/open-source alternative which is used by default.
  • The Serena JetBrains Plugin, which leverages the powerful code analysis and editing capabilities of your JetBrains IDE (paid plugin; free trial available).

You can choose either of these backends depending on your preferences and requirements.

Language Servers

Serena incorporates a powerful abstraction layer for the integration of language servers that implement the language server protocol (LSP). The underlying language servers are typically open-source projects or at least freely available for use.

When using Serena’s language server backend, we provide support for over 40 programming languages, including AL, Ansible, Bash, C#, C/C++, Clojure, Crystal, Dart, Elixir, Elm, Erlang, Fortran, F#, GLSL, Go, Groovy, Haskell, Haxe, HLSL, Java, JavaScript, Julia, Kotlin, Lean 4, Lua, Luau, Markdown, MATLAB, Nix, OCaml, Perl, PHP, PowerShell, Python, R, Ruby, Rust, Scala, Solidity, Swift, TOML, TypeScript, WGSL, YAML, and Zig.

The Serena JetBrains Plugin

The paid Serena JetBrains Plugin (free trial available) leverages the powerful code analysis capabilities of your JetBrains IDE. The plugin naturally supports all programming languages and frameworks that are supported by JetBrains IDEs, including IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, Android Studio, WebStorm, PhpStorm, RubyMine, GoLand, and potentially others (Rider and CLion are unsupported though).

See our documentation page for further details and instructions on how to apply the plugin.

Features

Serena provides a wide range of tools for efficient code retrieval, editing and refactoring, as well as a memory system for long-lived agent workflows.

Given its large scope, Serena adapts to your needs by offering a multi-layered configuration system.

Details

Retrieval

Serena’s retrieval tools allow agents to explore codebases at the symbol level, understanding structure and relationships without reading entire files.

CapabilityLanguage ServersJetBrains Plugin
find symbolyesyes
symbol overview (file outline)yesyes
find referencing symbolsyesyes
search in project dependenciesyes
type hierarchyyes
find declarationyes
find implementationsyes
query external projectsyesyes

Refactoring

Without precise refactoring tools, agents are forced to resort to unreliable and expensive search and replace operations.

CapabilityLanguage ServersJetBrains Plugin
renameyes (only symbols)yes (symbols, files, directories)
move (symbol, file, directory)yes
inlineyes
propagate deletions (remove unused code)yes

Symbolic Editing

Serena’s symbolic editing tools are less error-prone and much more token-efficient than typical alternatives.

CapabilityLanguage ServersJetBrains Plugin
replace symbol bodyyesyes
insert after symbolyesyes
insert before symbolyesyes
safe deleteyesyes

Basic Features

Beyond its semantic capabilities, Serena includes a set of basic utilities for completeness. When Serena is used inside an agentic harness such as Claude Code or Codex, these tools are typically disabled by default, since the surrounding harness already provides overlapping file, search, and shell capabilities.

  • search_for_pattern – flexible regex search across the codebase
  • replace_content – agent-optimised regex-based and literal text replacement
  • list_dir / find_file – directory listing and file search
  • read_file – read files or file chunks
  • execute_shell_command – run shell commands (e.g. builds, tests, linters)

Memory Management

A memory system is elemental to long-lived agent workflows, especially when knowledge is to be shared across sessions, users and projects. Despite its simplicity, we received positive feedback from many users who tend to combine Serena’s memory management system with their agent’s internal system (e.g., AGENTS.md files). It can easily be disabled if you prefer to use something else.

Configurability

Active tools, tool descriptions, prompts, language backend details and many other aspects of Serena can be flexibly configured on a per-case basis by simply adjusting a few lines of YAML. To achieve this, Serena offers multiple levels of (composable) configuration:

  • global configuration
  • MCP launch command (CLI) configuration
  • per-project configuration (with local overrides)
  • execution context-specific configuration (e.g. for particular clients)
  • dynamically composable configuration fragments (modes)

Serena in Action

Demonstrations

Demonstration 1: Efficient Operation in Claude Code

A demonstration of Serena efficiently retrieving and editing code within Claude Code, thereby saving tokens and time. Efficient operations are not only useful for saving costs, but also for generally improving the generated code’s quality. This effect may be less pronounced in very small projects, but often becomes of crucial importance in larger ones.

https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ab78ebe0-f77d-43cc-879a-cc399efefd87

Demonstration 2: Serena in Claude Desktop

A demonstration of Serena implementing a small feature for itself (a better log GUI) with Claude Desktop. Note how Serena’s tools enable Claude to find and edit the right symbols.

https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6eaa9aa1-610d-4723-a2d6-bf1e487ba753

Quick Start

Prerequisites. Serena is managed by uv, and installing uv is the only required prerequisite.

[!NOTE] When using the language server backend, some additional dependencies may need to be installed to support certain languages; see the Language Support page for details.

Install Serena. Serena is installed via uv as follows:

uv tool install -p 3.13 serena-agent@latest --prerelease=allow

After successful installation, the command serena should be available in your shell.

Initialise Serena. To initialise Serena and verify that your setup works correctly, simply run:

serena init

By default, this will set up Serena to use the language server backend. To use the JetBrains backend instead, add the parameters -b JetBrains (see the JetBrains Plugin documentation page for additional usage details).
Either way, you should receive a success message indicating that Serena has been initialised successfully.

Configuring Your Client. To connect Serena to your preferred MCP client, you typically need to configure a launch command in your client. Follow the link for specific instructions on how to set up Serena for Claude Code, Codex, Claude Desktop, MCP-enabled IDEs and other clients (such as local and web-based GUIs).

[!TIP] While getting started quickly is easy, Serena is a powerful toolkit with many configuration options. We highly recommend reading through the user guide to get the most out of Serena.

Specifically, we recommend to read about …

User Guide

Please refer to the user guide for detailed instructions on how to use Serena effectively.

Acknowledgements

A significant part of Serena, especially support for various languages, was contributed by the open source community. We are very grateful for the many contributors who made this possible and who played an important role in making Serena what it is today.