--- title: Config description: Using the OpenCode JSON config. --- You can configure OpenCode using a JSON config file. --- ## Format OpenCode supports both **JSON** and **JSONC** (JSON with Comments) formats. ```jsonc title="opencode.jsonc" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", // Theme configuration "theme": "opencode", "model": "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-20250514", "autoupdate": true, } ``` --- ## Locations You can place your config in a couple of different locations and they have a different order of precedence. --- ### Global Place your global OpenCode config in `~/.config/opencode/opencode.json`. You'll want to use the global config for things like themes, providers, or keybinds. --- ### Per project You can also add a `opencode.json` in your project. It takes precedence over the global config. This is useful for configuring providers or modes specific to your project. :::tip Place project specific config in the root of your project. ::: When OpenCode starts up, it looks for a config file in the current directory or traverse up to the nearest Git directory. This is also safe to be checked into Git and uses the same schema as the global one. --- ### Custom path You can also specify a custom config file path using the `OPENCODE_CONFIG` environment variable. This takes precedence over the global and project configs. ```bash export OPENCODE_CONFIG=/path/to/my/custom-config.json opencode run "Hello world" ``` --- ### Custom directory You can specify a custom config directory using the `OPENCODE_CONFIG_DIR` environment variable. This directory will be searched for agents, commands, modes, and plugins just like the standard `.opencode` directory, and should follow the same structure. ```bash export OPENCODE_CONFIG_DIR=/path/to/my/config-directory opencode run "Hello world" ``` Note: The custom directory is loaded after the global config and `.opencode` directories, so it can override their settings. --- ## Schema The config file has a schema that's defined in [**`opencode.ai/config.json`**](https://opencode.ai/config.json). Your editor should be able to validate and autocomplete based on the schema. --- ### TUI You can configure TUI-specific settings through the `tui` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "tui": { "scroll_speed": 3 } } ``` [Learn more about using the TUI here](/docs/tui). --- ### Tools You can manage the tools an LLM can use through the `tools` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "tools": { "write": false, "bash": false } } ``` [Learn more about tools here](/docs/tools). --- ### Models You can configure the providers and models you want to use in your OpenCode config through the `provider`, `model` and `small_model` options. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "provider": {}, "model": "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-20250514", "small_model": "anthropic/claude-3-5-haiku-20241022" } ``` The `small_model` option configures a separate model for lightweight tasks like title generation. By default, OpenCode tries to use a cheaper model if one is available from your provider, otherwise it falls back to your main model. You can also configure [local models](/docs/models#local). [Learn more](/docs/models). --- ### Themes You can configure the theme you want to use in your OpenCode config through the `theme` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "theme": "" } ``` [Learn more here](/docs/themes). --- ### Agents You can configure specialized agents for specific tasks through the `agent` option. ```jsonc title="opencode.jsonc" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "agent": { "code-reviewer": { "description": "Reviews code for best practices and potential issues", "model": "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-20250514", "prompt": "You are a code reviewer. Focus on security, performance, and maintainability.", "tools": { // Disable file modification tools for review-only agent "write": false, "edit": false, }, }, }, } ``` You can also define agents using markdown files in `~/.config/opencode/agent/` or `.opencode/agent/`. [Learn more here](/docs/agents). --- ### Sharing You can configure the [share](/docs/share) feature through the `share` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "share": "manual" } ``` This takes: - `"manual"` - Allow manual sharing via commands (default) - `"auto"` - Automatically share new conversations - `"disabled"` - Disable sharing entirely By default, sharing is set to manual mode where you need to explicitly share conversations using the `/share` command. --- ### Commands You can configure custom commands for repetitive tasks through the `command` option. ```jsonc title="opencode.jsonc" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "command": { "test": { "template": "Run the full test suite with coverage report and show any failures.\nFocus on the failing tests and suggest fixes.", "description": "Run tests with coverage", "agent": "build", "model": "anthropic/claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022", }, "component": { "template": "Create a new React component named $ARGUMENTS with TypeScript support.\nInclude proper typing and basic structure.", "description": "Create a new component", }, }, } ``` You can also define commands using markdown files in `~/.config/opencode/command/` or `.opencode/command/`. [Learn more here](/docs/commands). --- ### Keybinds You can customize your keybinds through the `keybinds` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "keybinds": {} } ``` [Learn more here](/docs/keybinds). --- ### Autoupdate OpenCode will automatically download any new updates when it starts up. You can disable this with the `autoupdate` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "autoupdate": false } ``` --- ### Formatters You can configure code formatters through the `formatter` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "formatter": { "prettier": { "disabled": true }, "custom-prettier": { "command": ["npx", "prettier", "--write", "$FILE"], "environment": { "NODE_ENV": "development" }, "extensions": [".js", ".ts", ".jsx", ".tsx"] } } } ``` [Learn more about formatters here](/docs/formatters). --- ### Permissions By default, opencode **allows all operations** without requiring explicit approval. You can change this using the `permission` option. For example, to ensure that the `edit` and `bash` tools require user approval: ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "permission": { "edit": "ask", "bash": "ask" } } ``` [Learn more about permissions here](/docs/permissions). --- ### MCP servers You can configure MCP servers you want to use through the `mcp` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "mcp": {} } ``` [Learn more here](/docs/mcp-servers). --- ### Instructions You can configure the instructions for the model you're using through the `instructions` option. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "instructions": ["CONTRIBUTING.md", "docs/guidelines.md", ".cursor/rules/*.md"] } ``` This takes an array of paths and glob patterns to instruction files. [Learn more about rules here](/docs/rules). --- ### Disabled providers You can disable providers that are loaded automatically through the `disabled_providers` option. This is useful when you want to prevent certain providers from being loaded even if their credentials are available. ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "disabled_providers": ["openai", "gemini"] } ``` The `disabled_providers` option accepts an array of provider IDs. When a provider is disabled: - It won't be loaded even if environment variables are set. - It won't be loaded even if API keys are configured through `opencode auth login`. - The provider's models won't appear in the model selection list. --- ## Variables You can use variable substitution in your config files to reference environment variables and file contents. --- ### Env vars Use `{env:VARIABLE_NAME}` to substitute environment variables: ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "model": "{env:OPENCODE_MODEL}", "provider": { "anthropic": { "models": {}, "options": { "apiKey": "{env:ANTHROPIC_API_KEY}" } } } } ``` If the environment variable is not set, it will be replaced with an empty string. --- ### Files Use `{file:path/to/file}` to substitute the contents of a file: ```json title="opencode.json" { "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json", "instructions": ["./custom-instructions.md"], "provider": { "openai": { "options": { "apiKey": "{file:~/.secrets/openai-key}" } } } } ``` File paths can be: - Relative to the config file directory - Or absolute paths starting with `/` or `~` These are useful for: - Keeping sensitive data like API keys in separate files. - Including large instruction files without cluttering your config. - Sharing common configuration snippets across multiple config files.