- Replace all docker-compose.yml/docker-compose.monitoring.yml references with compose.yaml/compose.monitoring.yaml (modern Compose Spec naming) - Replace all `docker-compose` CLI commands with `docker compose` (plugin syntax) - Update Dockerfile stage descriptions: node:18-alpine → node:20.11-bookworm-slim, built-in node user → explicit nodeapp:1001 non-root user - Update image version references: postgres:14-alpine → postgres:14.12-alpine3.19, redis:7-alpine → redis:7.2-alpine3.19 - Externalize postgres credentials: hardcoded values → POSTGRES_USER/PASSWORD/DB env vars - Externalize Grafana admin password: hardcoded 'agentidp' → GF_ADMIN_PASSWORD env var - Add Docker Compose Variables section to environment-variables.md (POSTGRES_*, GF_ADMIN_PASSWORD) - Update local-development.md Step 3: cp .env.example .env, document POSTGRES_* purpose - Update quick-start.md: cp .env.example .env, use awk/sed for JWT key injection - Update 07-dev-setup.md: remove 'no .env.example' claim, reference cp .env.example - Update docker-compose.yml key file description in 04-codebase-structure.md - Update monitoring overlay launch commands across all docs (compose.yaml + compose.monitoring.yaml) - Update volume names to kebab-case: postgres_data → postgres-data, redis_data → redis-data - Fix compliance encryption-runbook: docker-compose restart agentidp → docker compose restart app All docs now consistent with compose.yaml in repo root. Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Quick Start — Register Your First Agent
This guide gets you from zero to a working agent identity inside an organization, with a valid OAuth 2.0 access token. It takes under 5 minutes.
Prerequisites
You need two tools installed:
- Docker (with Compose plugin, v2.20+) — to run PostgreSQL and Redis
- Node.js 18+ (includes
npm) — to run the server - curl — to call the API
Nothing else. No accounts, no sign-ups.
Step 1 — Clone and configure
git clone https://git.sentryagent.ai/vijay_admin/sentryagent-idp.git
cd sentryagent-idp
npm install
Generate an RSA keypair for signing tokens (required):
# Generate private key
openssl genrsa -out private.pem 2048
# Extract public key
openssl rsa -in private.pem -pubout -out public.pem
Copy the environment template and fill in your JWT keys:
cp .env.example .env
Write your JWT keys into .env:
PRIVATE_KEY_LINE=$(awk 'NF {sub(/\r/, ""); printf "%s\\n",$0;}' private.pem)
PUBLIC_KEY_LINE=$(awk 'NF {sub(/\r/, ""); printf "%s\\n",$0;}' public.pem)
sed -i "s|JWT_PRIVATE_KEY=.*|JWT_PRIVATE_KEY=\"${PRIVATE_KEY_LINE}\"|" .env
sed -i "s|JWT_PUBLIC_KEY=.*|JWT_PUBLIC_KEY=\"${PUBLIC_KEY_LINE}\"|" .env
Note
: The
.envfile stores your private key. Do not commit it to version control.
Step 2 — Start infrastructure
Start PostgreSQL and Redis using Docker Compose (infrastructure services only):
docker compose up -d postgres redis
Expected output:
[+] Running 2/2
✔ Container sentryagent-idp-postgres-1 Healthy
✔ Container sentryagent-idp-redis-1 Healthy
Services are ready when both show Healthy. Run migrations:
npm run db:migrate
Expected output:
Running database migrations...
✓ Applied: 001_create_agents.sql
✓ Applied: 002_create_credentials.sql
✓ Applied: 003_create_tokens.sql
✓ Applied: 004_create_audit_log.sql
Migrations complete. 4 migration(s) applied.
Step 3 — Start the AgentIdP server
npm run dev
Expected output:
SentryAgent.ai AgentIdP listening on port 3000
Database pool connected
Redis client connected
The API is now live at http://localhost:3000/api/v1.
Step 4 — Generate a bootstrap token
All API endpoints require a Bearer token. For first-time setup, generate a bootstrap token using your RSA private key:
node -e "
const jwt = require('jsonwebtoken');
const fs = require('fs');
const { v4: uuidv4 } = require('uuid');
const key = fs.readFileSync('private.pem', 'utf8');
const now = Math.floor(Date.now() / 1000);
const token = jwt.sign({
sub: 'bootstrap',
client_id: 'bootstrap',
scope: 'agents:read agents:write tokens:read audit:read',
jti: uuidv4(),
iat: now,
exp: now + 3600
}, key, { algorithm: 'RS256' });
console.log(token);
"
Copy the token output and export it:
export BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN="<paste token here>"
This bootstrap token is a one-time tool for registering your first agent. Once you have an agent with credentials, use
POST /tokenfor all subsequent authentication.
Step 5 — Create an organization
Agents are scoped to organizations. Create one now so your agent has an organization_id to belong to:
curl -s -X POST http://localhost:3000/api/v1/organizations \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"name": "My AI Project",
"slug": "my-ai-project"
}' | jq .
Example response (201 Created):
{
"organizationId": "org-0a1b2c3d-e4f5-6789-abcd-ef0123456789",
"name": "My AI Project",
"slug": "my-ai-project",
"planTier": "free",
"maxAgents": 10,
"maxTokensPerMonth": 10000,
"status": "active",
"createdAt": "2026-04-04T09:00:00.000Z",
"updatedAt": "2026-04-04T09:00:00.000Z"
}
Save the organizationId:
export ORG_ID="org-0a1b2c3d-e4f5-6789-abcd-ef0123456789"
Step 6 — Register an agent
curl -s -X POST http://localhost:3000/api/v1/agents \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"email": "my-first-agent@myproject.ai",
"agentType": "custom",
"version": "1.0.0",
"capabilities": ["data:read"],
"owner": "my-team",
"deploymentEnv": "development",
"organization_id": "'$ORG_ID'"
}' | jq .
Example response (201 Created):
{
"agentId": "a1b2c3d4-e5f6-7890-abcd-ef1234567890",
"email": "my-first-agent@myproject.ai",
"agentType": "custom",
"version": "1.0.0",
"capabilities": ["data:read"],
"owner": "my-team",
"deploymentEnv": "development",
"status": "active",
"createdAt": "2026-03-28T09:00:00.000Z",
"updatedAt": "2026-03-28T09:00:00.000Z"
}
Save the agentId:
export AGENT_ID="a1b2c3d4-e5f6-7890-abcd-ef1234567890"
Step 7 — Generate a credential
curl -s -X POST "http://localhost:3000/api/v1/agents/$AGENT_ID/credentials" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{}' | jq .
Example response (201 Created):
{
"credentialId": "c9d8e7f6-a5b4-3210-fedc-ba9876543210",
"clientId": "a1b2c3d4-e5f6-7890-abcd-ef1234567890",
"clientSecret": "sk_live_7f3a2b1c9d8e4f0a6b5c3d2e1f0a9b8c",
"status": "active",
"createdAt": "2026-03-28T09:00:00.000Z",
"expiresAt": null,
"revokedAt": null
}
Save the
clientSecretnow. It is shown once and never retrievable again. The server stores only a bcrypt hash.
export CLIENT_ID="a1b2c3d4-e5f6-7890-abcd-ef1234567890" # same as AGENT_ID
export CLIENT_SECRET="sk_live_7f3a2b1c9d8e4f0a6b5c3d2e1f0a9b8c"
Step 8 — Issue an access token
Use the OAuth 2.0 Client Credentials flow. Note that the /token endpoint uses form-encoded body, not JSON:
curl -s -X POST http://localhost:3000/api/v1/token \
-H "Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded" \
-d "grant_type=client_credentials" \
-d "client_id=$CLIENT_ID" \
-d "client_secret=$CLIENT_SECRET" \
-d "scope=agents:read agents:write" | jq .
Example response (200 OK):
{
"access_token": "eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9...",
"token_type": "Bearer",
"expires_in": 3600,
"scope": "agents:read agents:write"
}
export TOKEN="eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9..."
Your agent now has a valid JWT. Use it in the Authorization: Bearer <token> header for all API calls.
What's next
- Core Concepts — understand AgentIdP, AGNTCY, orgs, DID, delegation, and tiers
- Guides — step-by-step walkthroughs for all workflows
- API Reference — every endpoint documented with curl examples
New guides for Phase 6 features:
- Use the Analytics Dashboard — query token trends and activity
- Manage API Tiers — check limits and upgrade your plan
- A2A Delegation — delegate authority between agents
- Configure Webhooks — subscribe to real-time events
- AGNTCY Compliance — export agent cards and generate compliance reports