Install HASP, prove one brokered run, bind a repo, connect an agent, and verify releases without leaving the docs surface.
How to think about vaults, repo boundaries, consumers, grants, sessions, audit, and redaction.
02 QuickstartThe shortest safe path to a working local HASP install.
03 Command guideWhat each HASP command does, when to use it, and how it compares to nearby commands.
04 Agent ProfilesFirst-class support profile expectations and the generic broker path.
What HASP is, what ships in the public repo, and what the local broker does.
How to think about vaults, repo boundaries, consumers, grants, sessions, audit, and redaction.
The shortest safe path to a working local HASP install.
The common first-run path after installing HASP with Homebrew.
Source builds, packaged releases, and the signed release install path.
What each HASP command does, when to use it, and how it compares to nearby commands.
Environment variables, repo guardrails, audit, backup, and safe local operation.
Value-free repo requirements, target-scoped delivery, examples, and app/MCP target behavior.
First-class support profile expectations and the generic broker path.
Connect Codex CLI through HASP as a brokered MCP surface.
Connect Claude Code through HASP as a brokered MCP surface.
Connect Cursor through HASP as a brokered MCP surface.
Connect Aider through HASP as a brokered MCP surface.
Connect Hermes through HASP as a brokered MCP surface.
Connect OpenClaw through HASP as a brokered MCP surface.
Use HASP with CLI- or MCP-capable agents that do not have first-class profiles yet.
Public release notes for shipped HASP versions.
Release assets, hosted mirrors, checksums, signatures, and Homebrew formula updates.
Operator-facing release verification and install details.
HASP vocabulary used across CLI help, docs, audit events, and errors.
Exact help output generated by the installed hasp binary.
Error messages, stable exit buckets, JSON error codes, hints, and recovery guidance.
Open the docs that match an installed HASP release.