About Texx
Texx documentation
Texx is a local-first automation platform for building executable workflows, configurable AI agents, and integrations that run under your control.
It is designed for teams that need predictable execution, transparent configuration, and portable deployment across laptops, workstations, and edge environments.
With Texx, you can combine workflow orchestration, agent configuration, plugins, MCP servers, and structured data tools in one operational environment.
What you can do with Texx
Design executable workflows
Build repeatable processes with explicit steps, validations, captured outputs, and deterministic execution flow.Configure operational AI agents
Define prompts, models, tool access, external MCP connections, and output capture in a controlled configuration surface.Extend runtime behavior with plugins
Add internal tools, custom plugins, and task-specific capabilities without rebuilding the entire application.Connect external systems through MCP
Attach remote tools and enterprise services using the Model Context Protocol for structured, auditable agent access.Deploy the same configuration in different environments
Use the same workflow and agent definitions on a developer machine, internal workstation, or hardware-adjacent runtime.Work with structured records and knowledge
Use tables, outputs, and connected sources to keep automation runs traceable and operationally useful.
Why teams use Texx
Control: Workflows, tools, and agent behavior are configured explicitly rather than hidden behind opaque automation.
Portability: Deploy the same runtime where it is needed, including local environments and device-adjacent setups.
Extensibility: Add new plugins, tool sources, and integrations without breaking the core workflow model.
Who this documentation is for
- Engineering teams building local-first automation and agent workflows.
- Operations teams that need controlled AI execution with logs, outputs, and approvals.
- Integrators and developers connecting MCP servers, plugins, internal services, or hardware-adjacent environments.
Start with the sections that matter
Use the documentation sections below to get started with workflows, interface basics, integrations, tables, and deployment-oriented usage patterns in Texx.