Spatial workspace
Repos, worktrees, and terminals live in one spatial layout. Your mental model survives context switches.
Liney brings repos, worktrees, and terminal sessions into one native macOS workspace. Keep parallel work visible. Stay in flow.
Built from scratch for macOS. No Electron, no compromises.
Repos, worktrees, and terminals live in one spatial layout. Your mental model survives context switches.
First-class worktree support. Branch, review, and build in parallel without losing track of what goes where.
Long-running tasks, builds, and debugging sessions stay visible and discoverable instead of buried in tabs.
Built-in diff views tied to your workspace context. Review changes without leaving your flow.
Not Electron. A real macOS app with the speed, responsiveness, and system integration you expect.
Launch agent sessions and use HAPI from the active workspace without losing repository context.
Repos, worktrees, and terminals stay grouped so your mental model survives context switching. No more hunting through tabs or losing track of that build you started.
Learn how it worksGuides, workflows, and everything you need to get the most out of Liney.
Set up your first repository, open sessions, and learn the sidebar signals.
Use multiple checkouts and terminal panes without losing your mental model.
Reuse agent launchers, SSH presets, remote targets, and workspace startup flows.
Surface the parts of Liney that are easy to miss but matter in daily use.
Launch agent sessions and manage reusable agent presets tied to workspace context.
Use HAPI and relay-related actions from the current worktree with workspace-aware launch.
Save SSH targets, reuse remote shells, and keep remote work attached to repository context.
Use higher-level surfaces that summarize active work and show live terminal context.
A native macOS workspace for repositories, Git worktrees, terminal sessions, and diff-heavy daily development.
Developers who keep multiple branches, worktrees, and shell tasks active at the same time.
Yes! Liney is completely free and open source under the Apache 2.0 license. The source code is available on GitHub. Pull requests are welcome — we love contributions from the community.