--- layout: default --- # Roadmap Go Micro is a framework for building **agents and services** in Go. An agent is a distributed system — it discovers services, calls them, holds state, and recovers from failure — so building an agent is building a service. The roadmap has two jobs: make **agentic development** excellent, and make the **developer experience** around it excellent. Nothing else. ## Where we are (v6) The foundation is in place: - **Services** — register, discover, RPC, events; every endpoint is automatically an MCP tool. - **Agents** — a model with memory and tools that manages services, with `plan`, `delegate`, guardrails (`MaxSteps`, `LoopLimit`, `ApproveTool`), tool-execution middleware (`WrapTool`), run metadata, checkpoint/resume, and OpenTelemetry run spans built in. - **Flows** — durable, event-driven workflows: ordered steps that checkpoint and resume after a crash. - **Interop** — the MCP gateway (services as tools) and the A2A gateway (agents as agents, both directions, including A2A streaming, push notifications, and multi-turn continuation), both generated from the registry; x402 for paid tools. - **Secure by default** — TLS verification on, state scoped per component. ## Principles These constrain everything below: 1. **Build into what people run, never a separate product.** No hosted platform, no enterprise edition. Improvements go deeper into the framework, not beside it. 2. **CLI-first.** The CLI is the experience. Any UI must be genuinely good and earn its place; bloat gets trimmed, not maintained. 3. **The getting-started flow is a contract.** *0→1* (scaffold → run → call) and *0→hero* (the ~10 steps to a working multi-agent system) must always work, and every change is checked against them. 4. **Interaction is as important as running.** Talking to an agent, inspecting runs and history — end to end, not just "it starts." 5. **Battle-tested.** Works across every provider, fails safely, and is observable. ## Now — hardening ("functional on every level") The priority is that what exists works everywhere, under real conditions. - **Cross-provider conformance.** Each of the seven providers implements its own tool-call loop; today only the mock and one live provider are exercised. A suite that runs the same agent scenario (tool-calling, multi-step, plan/delegate, guardrails) across every provider, gated on keys, on a schedule. - **Failure & resilience.** Provider timeouts, rate limits, and cancellation mid-run; deadline/`context` propagation through the agent loop; retry and backoff at the model call. - **The getting-started contract.** Define and CI-verify the 0→1 and 0→hero flows so they can't silently break. ## Shipped agent depth - **Durable agent loop.** Opt-in `Checkpoint` support now lets agent `Ask` and streaming runs persist, list pending work, and resume without replaying completed tool calls. Human-input pauses resume through explicit input helpers. - **Agent observability.** `RunInfo` now feeds OpenTelemetry spans and events for agent runs, model turns, tool calls, retries, delegation lineage, and resume checkpoints so production runs are traceable. ## Next — agentic depth - **Streaming.** Broaden provider-backed `ai.Stream` coverage and keep chat plus A2A `message/stream` working end to end for real chat and long-task UX. - **Resume operations polish.** Keep improving CLI/docs breadcrumbs for finding pending agent runs and deciding whether to call resume, resume-input, or stream resume in production. - **Observability hardening.** Keep span attributes and run inspection coherent across agents, flows, and gateways as more providers and workflow paths are exercised. ## Later - **Memory management** — summarization and retrieval (RAG) beyond a fixed buffer. - **Human-in-the-loop** — broaden pause/resume UX around `input-required` runs and approvals. - **A2A** — richer live-stream reconnection (`tasks/resubscribe`) and `input-required` handoffs. ## Developer experience (ongoing) - **The CLI inner loop** — scaffold → run → chat → inspect (`runs`/`history`) → deploy, made seamless. This is the main lever for "dramatically improve the experience." - **UI discipline** — keep only high-value, well-built surfaces; trim or cut the rest. The web UI should never be a worse version of the CLI. - **Examples & a real-world build** — a maintained example that builds something real with the framework, doubling as the 0→hero reference and continuous battle-testing. - **Docs in lockstep** — the getting-started guide tracks the code on every change. ## How it's sustained The framework is the product. It's funded by **sponsorship** from the people and companies who run it — not a hosted service, not an enterprise tier, not venture funding. The model is deliberate: keep refining the framework, aligned users adopt and depend on it, and that dependence funds the work. (See [blog/27](/blog/27) for why.) ## Feedback Open an issue or start a discussion on [GitHub](https://github.com/micro/go-micro), or join the [Discord](https://discord.gg/G8Gk5j3uXr).