Agentgateway project enables reliable, governed and scalable agentic workflows in enterprise and multi-agent systems
AMSTERDAM, Aug. 25, 2025 /PRNewswire/ --ย Open Source Summit Europe โย The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization enabling mass innovation through open source, today welcomed the agentgateway project, an open source, AI-native proxy, created by cloud native application networking company Solo.io to optimize connectivity, security, and observability in agentic AI environments.
There are many gateways available today, but most were designed before the rise of AI agents and struggle to support modern AI protocols without major rearchitecture. To keep up with the rapidly evolving industry, organizations need a purpose-built agent gateway โ one designed specifically for the fast-evolving AI ecosystem. Agentgateway is the first and only data plane built from the ground up for AI agents, governing and securing communication across agent-to-agent, agent-to-tool and agent-to-LLM interactions.
Agentgateway supports leading protocols including Agent2Agent (A2A), which was recently contributed to the Linux Foundation, and Anthropic's Model Context Protocol (MCP). The project has attracted contributors from leading organizations such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Cisco, Huawei, IBM, Microsoft, Red Hat, Shell and Zayo.
"The rise of AI agents depends on a strong foundation of open source infrastructure that is built to last. The agentgateway project provides a centralized and secure management layer for AI agent interactions, supporting emerging standards like the Model Context Protocol, " said Jim Zemlin, executive director of the Linux Foundation. "We're pleased to welcome agentgateway to the Linux Foundation where it will benefit from the neutral governance and global community needed to build open, interoperable, secure agent systems for the next generation of AI applications."
With the neutral governance of the Linux Foundation, the agentgateway project will remain vendor-agnostic and community-driven, helping to grow its AI agent gateway for open collaboration, intellectual property management, and long-term stewardship.
"The future of software is agentic and that changes everything about how systems connect and communicate. Existing API gateways weren't designed for the rapidly evolving networking demands of AI and agentic architectures, and they can't adapt fast enough." said Idit Levine, CEO of Solo.io. "We built agentgateway from the ground up to handle the protocols, patterns, and scale required for agentic infrastructure - from A2A and MCP to LLM provider APIs and high-volume inferencing. Agentgateway is the connective tissue for the next generation of intelligent systems."
To follow the project's development, contribute, or explore the code, visit: https://github.com/agentgateway/agentgateway. Ask questions about the project on the Discord server.
Supporting Quotes
"The future won't be built by standalone agents, MCP servers or LLMs โ it's shaped by their interconnection and ability to work together seamlessly. To unlock their full potential, we must apply policies, ensure control and maintain clear visibility into their interactions. This is where agentgateway plays a pivotal role โ bridging not only agent-to-agent (A2A) communication but also agent-to-MCP servers, filling a critical gap in the ecosystem. I look forward to seeing the project's continued momentum within the Linux Foundation."
โ John Roese, global chief technology officer & chief AI officer, Dell
"AI agents are rapidly transforming how enterprises work and innovate. To adopt them responsibly at scale, organizations need open and interoperable gateways that provide governance, visibility, and security. Agentgateway delivers the foundation enterprises need. I'm excited to see the community come together to accelerate the open foundation our customers need to scale AI on cloud platforms like CoreWeave."
โ Chen Goldberg, senior vice president of engineering at CoreWeave
"Agentic AI demands purpose-built infrastructure, not just another software layer. This requires rethinking compute, storage, and data movement from the ground up, so retrofitting legacy systems doesn't work. The agentgateway project is a solid step toward that future. We're happy to see it hosted by the Linux Foundation, where open source and community can drive the adoption and longevity that AI infrastructure requires."
โ Jon Alexander, senior vice president, cloud technology, Akamai
"We are excited to welcome the agentgateway project to the Linux Foundation, ensuring that best practices for agentic workflows remain free and open to all. Agentgateway complements emerging specifications like A2A and MCP, and offers scalable, specification-aligned infrastructure for agent communication thereby empowering customers and developers to build robust agentic workflows across platforms."
โ Mitch Connors, CNCF Ambassador (Microsoft)
"I'm excited to see Solo.io donate the agentgateway project to the Linux Foundation. Open sourcing an AI-native connectivity solution that understands MCP and A2A is a big win for the community. It helps us scale AI responsibly, with the security, flexibility, and governance we need in the real world."
โ Rob Hansen, director, digital product engineering and platforms, T-Mobile
"Building reliable AI agents is a challenge, especially when every step involves non-deterministic calls to LLMs, tools, and autonomous agents. Agentgateway's integration with OpenTelemetry provides a robust foundation for observability, allowing us to treat each request-response pair as an evaluable unit. This capability is crucial for ensuring system-level accuracy and trustworthiness, paving the way for a true 'AI mesh' that empowers teams to scale, secure and optimize their AI workflows."
โ Sathish Krishnan, executive director/distinguished engineer, cloud & AI, UBS
"One of the biggest open security problems today is how to do MCP security effectively. While there are a lot of problems in this space that the community doesn't know how to address, the agentgateway project provides a first step toward addressing some of the important issues with basic role-based access control and visibility of actions to MCP servers. I look forward to seeing how this project adapts and evolves to handle the complex, evolving threats in this space under open source governance."
โ Justin Cappos, professor at New York University and creator of the TUF, Uptane and in-toto projects
"The rapid evolution of the AI landscape demands robust, vendor-neutral infrastructure for how agents communicate with each other and with external tools. Without it, we risk stifling innovation and adoption. The agentgateway project, hosted by the Linux Foundation, is a crucial step in creating that common ground. We are excited to partner with Solo.io and support a community-driven foundation for the future of interoperable AI."
โ Jim Bugwadia, creator, Kyverno and CEO, Nirmata
"This is a critical time in our industry as organizations seek to gain compelling benefits from AI agents. The acceptance of agentgateway as an open source project by The Linux Foundation fills a vital need in the ecosystem of AI open standards. The leadership demonstrated by Solo.io enables tech vendors to continue delivering AI innovations at an unprecedented pace."
โ Mitch Ashley, vice president and practice lead, software lifecycle engineering, The Futurum Group
About the Linux Foundation
The Linux Foundation is the world's leading home for collaboration on open source software, hardware, standards, and data. Linux Foundation projects are critical to the world's infrastructure including Linux, Kubernetes, Node.js, ONAP, OpenChain, OpenSSF, OpenStack, PyTorch, RISC-V, SPDX, Zephyr, and more. The Linux Foundation is focused on leveraging best practices and addressing the needs of contributors, users, and solution providers to create sustainable models for open collaboration. For more information, please visit us at linuxfoundation.org.
The Linux Foundation has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of trademarks of the Linux Foundation, please see its trademark usage page: www.linuxfoundation.org/trademark-usage. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.
Media Contact
The Linux Foundation
pr@linuxfoundation.org
SOURCE The Linux Foundation
Recommended For You:
The AI Agent Protocol Battle Explained: MCP vs ACP vs A2A
AI Agents as Special Agents for Driving Autonomous Innovation in 2025