MCP server that gives any LLM its own computer — managed Docker workspaces with live browser, terminal, code execution, document skills, and autonomous sub-agents. Self-hosted, open-source, pluggable into any model.
Online demo: chat.yambr.com — Open WebUI with Computer Use already set up, sign in with GitHub or Google. (More ways to try it below.)
See it in action: Demo course on docs.yambr.com — eight live scenarios captured from the chat above (pitch deck, Word doc, Excel, PDF invoice, data chart, live-rendered landing page, web scrape, building a custom skill). Real prompts, real screenshots, copy-pasteable.
If any of this looks useful, a ⭐ on the repo really helps — thanks!
An MCP server that gives any LLM a fully-equipped Ubuntu sandbox with isolated Docker containers. Think of it as your AI's computer — it can do everything a developer can do:
- Execute code — bash, Python, Node.js, Java in isolated containers
- Create documents — Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF with professional styling via skills
- Browse the web — Playwright + live CDP browser streaming (you see what AI sees in real-time)
- Run Claude Code — autonomous sub-agent with interactive terminal, MCP servers auto-configured
- Use 13+ skills — battle-tested workflows for document creation, web testing, design, and more
Built for production multi-user deployments. Tested with 1,000+ MAU. Each chat session runs in its own isolated Docker container — the AI can install packages, create files, run servers, and nothing leaks between users. Works seamlessly across MCP clients: start with Open WebUI today, switch to Claude Desktop or n8n tomorrow — same backend, no migration.
| Feature | Open Computer Use | Claude.ai (Claude Code web) | open-terminal | OpenAI Operator |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-hosted | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| Any LLM | Yes (OpenAI-compatible) | Claude only | Any (via Open WebUI) | GPT only |
| Code execution | Full Linux sandbox | Sandbox (Claude Code web) | Sandbox / bare metal | No |
| Live browser | CDP streaming (shared, interactive) | Screenshot-based | No | Screenshot-based |
| Terminal + Claude Code | ttyd + tmux + Claude Code CLI | Claude Code web (built-in) | PTY + WebSocket | N/A |
| Skills system | 13 built-in (auto-injected) + custom | Built-in skills + custom instructions | Open WebUI native (text-only) | N/A |
| Container isolation | Docker (runc), per chat | Docker (gVisor) | Shared container (OS-level users) | N/A |
Works with any MCP-compatible client: Open WebUI, Claude Desktop, LiteLLM, n8n, or your own integration. See docs/COMPARISON.md for a detailed comparison with alternatives.
For all eight live scenarios with prompts you can copy-paste, see the Demo course. See docs/FEATURES.md for architecture details and docs/SCREENSHOTS.md for all screenshots.
Pro tip: Create skills with Claude Code in the terminal, then use them with any model in the chat. Skills are model-agnostic — write once, use everywhere.
Multi-CLI sub-agent runtime (v0.9.2.1+): The sub-agent dispatch supports Claude Code (default), OpenAI Codex, and OpenCode (with OpenRouter / qwen / DeepSeek / 75+ providers). Flip
SUBAGENT_CLI=claude|codex|opencodein.env— see docs/multi-cli.md for the worked OpenCode + qwen3-coder + OpenRouter recipe.
| Path | URL | What you need | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free online demo — Open WebUI + Computer Use, models included | chat.yambr.com | GitHub or Google sign-in | Trying it end-to-end in 30 seconds |
| Hosted MCP endpoint — tools only, bring your own LLM | Key at app.yambr.com → connect to https://api.yambr.com/mcp/computer_use |
GitHub/Google sign-in; your own OpenAI / Anthropic / OpenRouter key | Plugging Computer Use into Claude Desktop, n8n, OpenAI Agents SDK |
| Self-host | Quick Start below | Docker, ~15 min first build | Full control, air-gapped, heavy use |
OAuth only — no email/password, no SMS. On chat.yambr.com models are bundled as a free convenience; the hosted API is tools-only. Canonical cloud docs: docs.yambr.com. Repo-side orientation: docs/CLOUD.md.
git clone https://github.com/Yambr/open-computer-use.git
cd open-computer-use
cp .env.example .env
# Edit .env — set OPENAI_API_KEY (or any OpenAI-compatible provider)
# 1. Start Computer Use Server (builds workspace image on first run, ~15 min)
docker compose up --build
# 2. Start Open WebUI (in another terminal)
docker compose -f docker-compose.webui.yml up --buildOpen http://localhost:3000 — Open WebUI with Computer Use ready to go.
Note: Two separate docker-compose files:
docker-compose.yml(Computer Use Server) anddocker-compose.webui.yml(Open WebUI). They communicate vialocalhost:8081. This mirrors real deployments where the server and UI run on different hosts.
After adding a model in Open WebUI, go to Model Settings and set:
| Setting | Value | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Function Calling | Native |
Required for Computer Use tools to work |
| Stream Chat Response | On |
Enables real-time output streaming |
Without Function Calling: Native, the model won't invoke Computer Use tools.
| Category | Tools |
|---|---|
| Languages | Python 3.12, Node.js 22, Java 21, Bun |
| Documents | LibreOffice, Pandoc, python-docx, python-pptx, openpyxl |
| pypdf, pdf-lib, reportlab, tabula-py, ghostscript | |
| Images | Pillow, OpenCV, ImageMagick, sharp, librsvg |
| Web | Playwright (Chromium), Mermaid CLI |
| AI | Claude Code CLI, Playwright MCP |
| OCR | Tesseract (configurable languages) |
| Media | FFmpeg |
| Diagrams | Graphviz, Mermaid |
| Dev | TypeScript, tsx, git |
13 built-in public skills + 14 examples:
| Skill | Description |
|---|---|
| pptx | Create/edit PowerPoint presentations with html2pptx |
| docx | Create/edit Word documents with tracked changes |
| xlsx | Create/edit Excel spreadsheets with formulas |
| Create, fill forms, extract, merge PDFs | |
| sub-agent | Delegate complex tasks to Claude Code |
| playwright-cli | Browser automation and web scraping |
| describe-image | Vision API image analysis |
| frontend-design | Build production-grade UIs |
| webapp-testing | Test web applications with Playwright |
| doc-coauthoring | Structured document co-authoring workflow |
| test-driven-development | TDD methodology enforcement |
| skill-creator | Create custom skills |
| gitlab-explorer | Explore GitLab repositories |
14 example skills: web-artifacts-builder, copy-editing, social-content, canvas-design, algorithmic-art, theme-factory, mcp-builder, and more.
See docs/SKILLS.md for details.
The server speaks standard MCP over Streamable HTTP. Point any MCP client at it — hosted or self-hosted.
- Hosted:
https://api.yambr.com/mcp/computer_usewithAuthorization: Bearer <key from app.yambr.com>. Client configs and full reference live on docs.yambr.com. - Self-hosted:
http://localhost:8081/mcp. Quick sanity check:Full self-host integration guide (LiteLLM, Claude Desktop, custom clients): docs/MCP.md. The per-chat system prompt rides six redundant MCP-native channels (tool descriptions,curl -X POST http://localhost:8081/mcp \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ -H "X-Chat-Id: test" \ -d '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"method":"initialize","params":{"protocolVersion":"2024-11-05","capabilities":{},"clientInfo":{"name":"test","version":"1.0"}}}'
/home/assistant/README.mdin the sandbox,InitializeResult.instructions,resources/listfor uploaded files, plus an HTTP/system-promptendpoint for legacy integrations) — full map in docs/system-prompt.md.
All settings via .env:
| Variable | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
OPENAI_API_KEY |
— | LLM API key (any OpenAI-compatible) |
OPENAI_API_BASE_URL |
— | Custom API base URL (OpenRouter, etc.) |
MCP_API_KEY |
— | Bearer token for MCP endpoint |
DOCKER_IMAGE |
open-computer-use:latest |
Sandbox container image |
COMMAND_TIMEOUT |
120 |
Bash tool timeout (seconds) |
SUB_AGENT_TIMEOUT |
3600 |
Sub-agent timeout (seconds) |
SINGLE_USER_MODE |
— | true = one container, no chat ID needed; false = require X-Chat-Id; unset = lenient |
PUBLIC_BASE_URL |
http://computer-use-server:8081 |
Browser-reachable URL of the Computer Use server. Baked into /system-prompt and returned to the Open WebUI filter in the X-Public-Base-URL response header — single source of truth for the public URL. Open WebUI filter URL requirements. |
CHAT_RESPONSE_MAX_TOOL_CALL_RETRIES, ORCHESTRATOR_URL, TOOL_RESULT_MAX_CHARS, TOOL_RESULT_PREVIEW_CHARS |
— | Settings on the open-webui container (not CU-server). Required when embedding — see Required setup when embedding Open WebUI. |
POSTGRES_PASSWORD |
openwebui |
PostgreSQL password |
VISION_API_KEY |
— | Vision API key (for describe-image) |
ANTHROPIC_AUTH_TOKEN |
— | Anthropic key (for Claude Code sub-agent) |
MCP_TOKENS_URL |
— | Settings Wrapper URL (optional, see below) |
MCP_TOKENS_API_KEY |
— | Settings Wrapper auth key |
By default, all 13 built-in skills are available to everyone. For per-user skill access and custom skills, deploy the Settings Wrapper — see settings-wrapper/README.md.
Personal Access Tokens (PATs): The settings wrapper can also store encrypted per-user PATs for external services (GitLab, Confluence, Jira, etc.). The server fetches them by user email and injects into the sandbox — so each user's AI has access to their repos/docs without sharing credentials. The server-side code for token injection is implemented (docker_manager.py), but the Open WebUI tool doesn't pass the required headers yet. This is on the roadmap — if you need PAT management, open an issue.
The Computer Use Server speaks standard MCP over Streamable HTTP — any MCP-compatible client can connect. Open WebUI is the primary tested frontend, but not the only option.
| Client | Self-hosted URL | Hosted URL | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open WebUI | Docker Compose stack included, auto-configured | n/a — use chat.yambr.com directly (pointing your own Open WebUI at the hosted API isn't a documented path) | Tested in production |
| Claude Desktop | http://localhost:8081/mcp — see docs/MCP.md |
https://api.yambr.com/mcp/computer_use — see docs/CLOUD.md |
Works |
| n8n | MCP Tool node → http://computer-use-server:8081/mcp |
MCP Tool node → https://api.yambr.com/mcp/computer_use |
Works |
| LiteLLM | MCP proxy config — see docs/MCP.md | MCP proxy → https://api.yambr.com/mcp/computer_use |
Works |
| Custom client | Any HTTP client with MCP JSON-RPC — see curl examples in docs/MCP.md | Same, with Authorization: Bearer sk-... (key from app.yambr.com) |
Works |
Open WebUI is an extensible, self-hosted AI interface. We use it as the primary frontend because it supports tool calling, function filters, and artifacts — everything needed for Computer Use.
Compatibility: This build is strictly built and verified against Open WebUI 0.9.2. The first 3 segments of our build version (v0.9.2.X) always match the Open WebUI base version it targets. If you run a different Open WebUI version, pick the Open Computer Use build whose first 3 version segments match yours — e.g., for Open WebUI 0.8.12 use a v0.8.12.Y build.
Why not a fork? We intentionally did not fork Open WebUI. Instead, everything is bolted on via the official plugin API (tools + functions) and build-time patches for missing features. This means you can use stock Open WebUI 0.9.2 with this build (the version that the first 3 segments of our build version v0.9.2.X match) — just install the tool and filter. Patches are applied at Docker build time; strongly recommended — 4 of them affect user-visible UX (artifacts panel, preview iframe, error banners, large tool-result handling). Pulling ghcr.io/open-webui/open-webui directly skips all of them — see Required setup when embedding Open WebUI for the full checklist.
Running Claude Code through a corporate gateway (LiteLLM, Azure, Bedrock)? See docs/claude-code-gateway.md for the three-path operator recipe.
The openwebui/ directory contains:
- tools/ — MCP client tool (thin proxy to Computer Use Server). Required — this is the bridge between Open WebUI and the sandbox.
- functions/ — System prompt injector + file link rewriter + archive button. Required — without it the model doesn't know about skills and file URLs.
- patches/ — Build-time fixes for artifacts, error handling, file preview. Optional but recommended — improves UX significantly.
- init.sh — Auto-installs tool + filter on first startup. Optional — you can install manually via Workspace UI instead.
- Dockerfile — Builds a patched Open WebUI image with auto-init. Optional — use stock Open WebUI + manual setup if you prefer.
On first docker compose up, the init script automatically:
- Creates an admin user (
admin@open-computer-use.dev/admin) - Installs the Computer Use tool via
POST /api/v1/tools/create - Installs the Computer Use filter via
POST /api/v1/functions/create - Configures tool and filter valves (
ORCHESTRATOR_URL=http://computer-use-server:8081— internal URL for server↔server, seeded into both Valves) - Marks the tool public-read (access grants for both
group:*anduser:*wildcards) — so non-admin users see the tool in their workspace - Marks the filter both active and global (two separate toggles:
/toggleand/toggle/global) — active-but-not-global is silently inert and a common manual-setup mistake - Merges
{function_calling: "native", stream_response: true}intoDEFAULT_MODEL_PARAMSviaPOST /api/v1/configs/models— every model gets the right defaults without per-model Advanced Params clicks
A marker file (.computer-use-initialized) prevents re-running on subsequent starts.
Note: Open WebUI doesn't support pre-installed tools from the filesystem — they must be loaded via the REST API. The init script automates this so you don't have to do it manually.
If you run Open WebUI separately, you need to manually:
- Go to Workspace > Tools → Create new tool → paste contents of
openwebui/tools/computer_use_tools.py - Set Tool ID to
ai_computer_use(required for filter to work) - Configure Valves:
ORCHESTRATOR_URL= internal URL of your Computer Use Server (http://computer-use-server:8081for Docker compose) - Open the tool's ⋯ → Share menu and set access to Public (grants read to both
group:*anduser:*wildcards) — otherwise only your admin account sees the tool and non-admin users get an empty tool list with no error - Go to Workspace > Functions → Create new function → paste
openwebui/functions/computer_link_filter.py - Enable the filter: toggle Active and toggle Global in the Functions list — these are two separate switches, and active-but-not-global means the filter loads but is never applied to chats
- In your model settings, set Function Calling =
Nativeand Stream Chat Response =On. Or set them globally once in Admin → Settings → Models → Advanced Params (function_calling: native,stream_response: true) — that becomesDEFAULT_MODEL_PARAMSfor every model.
The docker-compose stack handles all of this automatically.
If you run Open WebUI outside the stock docker-compose.webui.yml — your own compose, Kubernetes, Portainer, or a downstream repo — there are four traps that will silently break Computer Use. All four hit us in production. Check in this order.
Pulling ghcr.io/open-webui/open-webui:vX.Y.Z gives you a stock image without any of this repo's patches. Four of them are critical for UX:
| Patch | Without it |
|---|---|
fix_artifacts_auto_show |
HTML/iframe renders as raw text in chat body instead of the artifacts panel |
fix_preview_url_detection |
Preview iframe is never auto-inserted after file links |
fix_tool_loop_errors |
Raw exceptions instead of banners; MCP call failed: Session terminated appears unwrapped |
fix_large_tool_results |
TOOL_RESULT_MAX_CHARS stops truncating and the large-result upload path (via ORCHESTRATOR_URL) becomes a no-op; large outputs wreck the model context |
Only CHAT_RESPONSE_MAX_TOOL_CALL_RETRIES keeps working on an upstream image (it's a stock Open WebUI env) — which creates a false "everything is configured" feeling.
Use build: in your downstream compose, mirroring docker-compose.webui.yml:11-15:
services:
open-webui:
build:
context: ./openwebui # path into this repo
dockerfile: Dockerfile
args:
OPENWEBUI_VERSION: "0.9.2"
image: open-webui-with-cu-patches:latest # local tag, do not pullVerify the patches are baked into the running container:
docker exec open-webui bash -c \
'grep -rl "FIX_ARTIFACTS_AUTO_SHOW" /app/build/_app/immutable/chunks/ >/dev/null \
&& echo "patches applied" || echo "MISSING — you are on upstream image"'The FIX_ARTIFACTS_AUTO_SHOW JS comment marker is injected by fix_artifacts_auto_show.py at build time as a version-stable identifier — it does not depend on minified Svelte variable names, which change with every Open WebUI release.
fix_preview_url_detection is now fully host-agnostic. The injected JS reads the origin directly from the matched URL at runtime (_pm[1] captures the full https://host:port prefix), so the patch requires no build-time host configuration. The COMPUTER_USE_SERVER_URL build-arg has been removed from openwebui/Dockerfile.
No action needed — the patch works automatically regardless of whether you use localhost:8081, a public domain, or Docker internal DNS. The preview iframe src is always reconstructed from the URL the model wrote into the message, which in turn comes from the server's PUBLIC_BASE_URL env var.
Verify the patch is applied:
docker exec open-webui bash -c \
'grep -rl "FIX_PREVIEW_URL_DETECTION" /app/build/_app/immutable/chunks/ >/dev/null \
&& echo "patches applied" || echo "MISSING — fix_preview_url_detection not baked in"'
# → should print "patches applied"v4.0.0: the old "three FILE_SERVER_URL places that must match" footgun is gone. There are now only two places and two distinct roles — public (browser-reachable) vs internal (Docker-local). The COMPUTER_USE_SERVER_URL build-arg was removed in v0.9.2.0 — fix_preview_url_detection is now host-agnostic (see Step 2).
| Where | Role | Who reads it | Prod (with domain) | Local dev (Docker Desktop) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
PUBLIC_BASE_URL env on the computer-use-server container (docker-compose.yml / .env) |
PUBLIC — baked into /system-prompt links + returned to filter via X-Public-Base-URL response header |
Server (single source of truth for public URL) | https://cu.your-domain.com |
http://localhost:8081 |
Filter + Tool Valves ORCHESTRATOR_URL (seeded by init.sh from ORCHESTRATOR_URL env on the open-webui container) |
INTERNAL — server↔server fetch of /system-prompt; MCP tools/call forwarding |
Filter and tool (Docker network) | http://computer-use-server:8081 |
http://computer-use-server:8081 |
ORCHESTRATOR_URL at your public domain. It technically works, but every MCP request then goes browser→CDN→Traefik→container. Any hiccup in that chain kills the stream mid-tool-call and the user sees MCP call failed: Session terminated. Stay inside the Docker network.
The filter no longer has a public-URL Valve at all — it reads the public URL from the server's X-Public-Base-URL response header and caches it alongside the prompt. One public knob, one internal knob.
See also docs/openwebui-filter.md.
Copy-paste into your downstream compose environment: block:
services:
open-webui:
environment:
# --- Computer Use required env vars (read by build-time patches) ---
- CHAT_RESPONSE_MAX_TOOL_CALL_RETRIES=200
- TOOL_RESULT_MAX_CHARS=50000
- TOOL_RESULT_PREVIEW_CHARS=2000
# Internal URL of the Computer Use server — seeded by init.sh into both
# Tool and Filter Valves, and read by the fix_large_tool_results patch.
# Same Docker network: use the service DNS name.
- ORCHESTRATOR_URL=http://computer-use-server:8081| Variable | Default if unset | Effect when correctly set |
|---|---|---|
CHAT_RESPONSE_MAX_TOOL_CALL_RETRIES |
30 (upstream) |
Tool-call cap per turn. 30 cuts Computer Use multi-step tasks short; stock repo uses 200. |
TOOL_RESULT_MAX_CHARS |
50000 (patch built-in) |
Truncation threshold above which a tool result is truncated or uploaded. 0 disables. |
TOOL_RESULT_PREVIEW_CHARS |
2000 (patch built-in) |
Preview size the model sees after truncation or upload. |
ORCHESTRATOR_URL |
empty | Seeded into both Tool and Filter Valves by init.sh, and read by fix_large_tool_results patch as the upload target. If empty, oversized results are silently truncated — the model loses the data. |
Note: the last three are no-ops if the image is upstream ghcr.io — they need
fix_large_tool_resultsfrom Step 1.
Open WebUI has two separate switches for each function (is_active and is_global) and two required grants for each tool (group:* + user:*). The stock init.sh does this for you; manual / custom deployments commonly miss one side and then spend hours wondering why "everything is installed but nothing works."
| Resource | What to flip | UI path | Endpoint | Why |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Filter computer_use_filter |
is_active = true AND is_global = true |
Admin → Functions → computer_use_filter → toggle Active + toggle Global |
POST /api/v1/functions/id/computer_use_filter/toggle + .../toggle/global |
is_active only loads the function; is_global actually applies it to every chat. Active-but-not-global is silently inert with no log line. |
Tool ai_computer_use |
access_grants for group:* AND user:*, permission: read |
Workspace → Tools → ai_computer_use → ⋯ → Share → Public |
POST /api/v1/tools/id/ai_computer_use/access/update with {"access_grants":[{"principal_type":"group","principal_id":"*","permission":"read"},{"principal_type":"user","principal_id":"*","permission":"read"}]} |
Without grants, only the admin account that created the tool sees it. Non-admin users get an empty tool list and no error. The UI "Public" toggle writes both wildcards; writing only one leaves the tool visible to some users and invisible to others depending on Open WebUI version. |
Verify against the database (Postgres used by the stock stack; see docker-compose.webui.yml:53):
# Filter flags — expect (t, t):
docker exec <postgres-container> psql -U openwebui -d openwebui -c \
"SELECT is_active, is_global FROM function WHERE id='computer_use_filter';"
# Tool grants — expect TWO rows (group|* and user|*, both 'read'):
docker exec <postgres-container> psql -U openwebui -d openwebui -c \
"SELECT principal_type, principal_id, permission FROM access_grant WHERE resource_id='ai_computer_use';"For SQLite-backed Open WebUI deployments, swap psql for sqlite3 /app/backend/data/webui.db with the same SQL.
# 1. Image has patches (marker-based — version-stable across Open WebUI releases):
docker exec open-webui bash -c \
'grep -rl "FIX_ARTIFACTS_AUTO_SHOW" /app/build/_app/immutable/chunks/ >/dev/null \
&& echo OK || echo MISSING'
# 2. Preview URL detection is host-agnostic (no build-arg needed since v0.9.2.0):
docker exec open-webui bash -c \
'grep -rl "FIX_PREVIEW_URL_DETECTION" /app/build/_app/immutable/chunks/ >/dev/null \
&& echo "patches applied" || echo "MISSING — fix_preview_url_detection not baked in"'
# → should print "patches applied"
# 3. Env vars reached the container:
docker exec open-webui env | grep -E 'CHAT_RESPONSE_MAX_TOOL_CALL_RETRIES|TOOL_RESULT_|ORCHESTRATOR_URL'
# 4. Tool+Filter Valve (Session-terminated trap) — Admin UI is simplest:
# Workspace → Tools → ai_computer_use → Valves → ORCHESTRATOR_URL
# Admin → Functions → computer_link_filter → Valves → ORCHESTRATOR_URL
# → both must be http://computer-use-server:8081 (internal URL, Docker service DNS),
# NOT your public domain.
# 5. Server env (baked into system prompt AND returned to filter via header):
docker exec computer-use-server env | grep ^PUBLIC_BASE_URL=
# → must be a URL your browser can reach (e.g. http://localhost:8081 for local dev).
# 7. Filter is ACTIVE *and* GLOBAL (see Step 5):
docker exec <postgres-container> psql -U openwebui -d openwebui -c \
"SELECT is_active, is_global FROM function WHERE id='computer_use_filter';"
# → expect (t, t). Two 't's, not one.
# 8. Tool is public-read with both wildcards (see Step 5):
docker exec <postgres-container> psql -U openwebui -d openwebui -c \
"SELECT principal_type, principal_id, permission FROM access_grant WHERE resource_id='ai_computer_use';"
# → expect TWO rows: (group, *, read) and (user, *, read).After rebuilding the image, do a hard reload in the browser (Cmd+Shift+R / Ctrl+Shift+R). Otherwise it keeps the old cached JS chunks and you'll think the fix didn't work.
| Symptom | Step |
|---|---|
HTML artifact renders as raw <iframe ...> text in chat |
1 (upstream image, fix_artifacts_auto_show missing) |
| Preview iframe auto-insertion doesn't happen for file links | 1 (fix_preview_url_detection missing) or PUBLIC_BASE_URL unreachable from browser |
MCP call failed: Session terminated on every tool call |
3 (tool Valve points at public domain) |
| Tool loop cuts off at ~30 calls; banner "Model temporarily unavailable" | 4 (CHAT_RESPONSE_MAX_TOOL_CALL_RETRIES not set) |
Large tool outputs silently ...(truncated); model makes wrong decisions |
4 (ORCHESTRATOR_URL not set or unreachable) OR 1 (fix_large_tool_results missing) |
| Tool-loop errors show raw Python exception | 1 (fix_tool_loop_errors missing) |
| Tool list is empty for non-admin users (admin sees it) | 5 (tool missing access_grants — not public-read) |
| Filter looks "Active" in UI but preview iframe / archive button never appear | 5 (filter is_global=false — only is_active=true was flipped) |
| File links in chat go to 404 / white screen | PUBLIC_BASE_URL on the server doesn't match what the browser can reach — see docs/openwebui-filter.md |
| New behavior didn't appear even after rebuild | Browser cached old JS — hard reload |
Production tested with 1000+ users on Open WebUI in a self-hosted environment. For public-facing deployments, see the hardening roadmap below.
- Docker socket: The server needs Docker socket access to manage sandbox containers. This grants significant host access — run in a trusted environment only.
- MCP_API_KEY: Set a strong random key in production. Without it, anyone with network access to port 8081 can execute arbitrary commands in containers.
- Sandbox isolation: Each chat session runs in a separate container with resource limits (2GB RAM, 1 CPU). Containers use standard Docker runtime (runc), not gVisor — they share the host kernel. For stronger isolation, consider switching to gVisor runtime (see roadmap). Containers have network access by default.
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD: Change the default password in
.envfor production.
- Unauthenticated file/preview endpoints:
/files/{chat_id}/,/api/outputs/{chat_id},/browser/{chat_id}/,/terminal/{chat_id}/— accessible to anyone who knows the chat ID. Chat IDs are UUIDs (hard to guess but not a real security boundary). - No per-user auth on server: The MCP server trusts whoever sends a valid
MCP_API_KEY. User identity (X-User-Email) is passed by the client but not verified server-side. - Credentials in HTTP headers: API keys (GitLab, Anthropic, MCP tokens) are passed as HTTP headers from client to server. Safe within Docker network, but use HTTPS if exposing externally.
- Default admin credentials:
admin@open-computer-use.dev/admin— change immediately in multi-user setups.
We plan to address these in future releases:
- Per-session signed tokens for file/preview/terminal endpoints (replace chat ID as auth)
- Server-side user verification via Open WebUI JWT validation
- HTTPS support with automatic TLS certificates
- Audit logging for all tool calls and file access
- Network policies for sandbox containers (restrict egress by default)
- Secret management — move credentials from headers to encrypted server-side storage
- gVisor (runsc) runtime — optional container sandboxing for stronger isolation (like Claude.ai)
Ideas? Open a GitHub Issue. Want to contribute? See CONTRIBUTING.md or reach out on Telegram @yambrcom.
# Build workspace image locally
docker build --platform linux/amd64 -t open-computer-use:latest .
# Run tests
./tests/test-docker-image.sh open-computer-use:latest
./tests/test-no-corporate.sh
./tests/test-project-structure.sh
# Build and run full stack
docker compose up --buildSee CONTRIBUTING.md. PRs welcome!
- Managed hosting: yambr.com — cloud version by the maintainers (chat.yambr.com for the free demo, app.yambr.com for API keys, docs.yambr.com for the cloud docs)
- Issues & Ideas: GitHub Issues
- Telegram: @yambrcom
This project uses a multi-license model:
- Core (
computer-use-server/,openwebui/,settings-wrapper/, Docker configs): Business Source License 1.1 — free for production use, modification, and self-hosting. Converts to Apache 2.0 on the Change Date. Offering as a managed/hosted service requires a commercial agreement. - Our skills (
skills/public/describe-image,skills/public/sub-agent): MIT - Third-party skills: see individual LICENSE.txt files or original sources.
Attribution required: include "Open Computer Use" and a link to this repository.
See NOTICE for details.








