Which IDEs and hosts does Cosine support?
Cosine integrates with GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, VS Code, JetBrains, and CLI — fitting seamlessly into your existing engineering workflow.
Cosine integrates with the tools your team already uses — from Git platforms like GitHub and GitLab to collaboration environments like Slack and task managers like Jira. It’s designed to fit naturally into your workflow, not replace it.
Supported source hosts
Cosine works natively with the world’s most common repository hosts:
GitHub – Full support for cloud and enterprise instances, including issue import, PR creation, and CI triggers.
GitLab – Both self-hosted and GitLab.com versions.
Bitbucket – Available for enterprise customers on request.
You can import any Git-based project, regardless of host. Cosine’s onboarding flow detects your repos automatically once you connect your organization.
IDEs and local workflows
Cosine isn’t tied to an IDE like Cursor or Windsurf — it’s asynchronous and platform-agnostic. However, it integrates seamlessly with local dev setups:
VS Code & JetBrains – Optional CLI tools connect your local environment to Cosine’s execution layer so you can test or debug PRs locally.
Command-line interface (CLI) – Developers can trigger Cosine from their terminal, making it easy to assign or monitor tasks from within any IDE.
CI/CD pipelines – Compatible with Jenkins, CircleCI, and GitHub Actions for automated validation and testing.
Collaboration integrations
Jira, Linear, and Asana for task intake
Slack and Microsoft Teams for chat-based triggers and updates
This means engineers, PMs, and QA can all interact with Cosine from the tools they already use daily.
Deployment environments
Cosine runs in whichever environment suits your security and compliance needs:
Cosine Cloud – Fully managed SaaS platform
VPC deployment – Private cloud hosting inside your infrastructure
On-premise – Fully air-gapped installations for regulated industries
Related pages
→ Next: Who uses Cosine?
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