by InnerWarden · MCP Server · ★ 163
Inner Warden Local safety layer for AI agents that can use the terminal. AI agents are starting to do real work: read files, run commands, install packages, call APIs, and touch servers. That is useful. It is also the moment a chatbot becomes something with operational power. Inner Warden sits outside the agent, on the host it is using. It screens risky commands and MCP/tool traffic routed through its guard, watches the real Linux activity underneath with eBPF, blocks or flags dangerous behavior, and keeps the decision trail local. No cloud control plane. Open source. Dry-run by default.
| Stars | 163 |
| Forks | 32 |
| Language | Rust |
| Category | MCP Server |
| License | Apache-2.0 |
| Quality Score | 60.5177576184094/100 |
| Open Issues | 23 |
| Last Updated | 2026-07-07 |
| Created | 2026-03-12 |
| Platforms | mcp, rust |
| Est. Tokens | ~34k |
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innerwarden is Local safety layer for AI agents that use the terminal. Screens risky commands and MCP/tool calls, watches Linux activity with eBPF, blocks dangerous behavior, and keeps audit trails local. Open sourc. It is categorized as a MCP Server with 163 GitHub stars.
innerwarden is primarily written in Rust. It covers topics such as agent-guard, ai-agent-security, anomaly-detection.
You can find installation instructions and usage details in the innerwarden GitHub repository at github.com/InnerWarden/innerwarden. The project has 163 stars and 32 forks, indicating an active community.
innerwarden is released under the Apache-2.0 license, making it free to use and modify according to the license terms.