In the previous post talked about why the GitHub Copilot SDK matters: it gives you a production-grade agent harness out of the box, so you can skip building the infrastructure and focus on your actual product. Now let's make it concrete. This post walks through everything you need to get up and running with the SDK in .NET — from prerequisites to a working streaming agent with a custom tool. What we will build We’ll keep it simple. By the end of this post you'll have a console application that: Connects to Copilot's agent runtime Sends a prompt and receives a streaming response Has a multi-turn conversation with persistent context Calls a custom tool you define in C# Prerequisites You'll need three things before touching any code. 1. .NET 8 or later The SDK requires .NET 8+. Verify your version: dotnet --version 2. GitHub Copilot CLI, installed and authenticated The SDK communicates with the Copilot CLI running as a local process — it...
Building an agent sounds straightforward until you actually start. Before you write a single line of business logic, you're already deep in infrastructure decisions: How do you manage context across multiple turns? How do you orchestrate tool calls? How do you handle model routing, MCP server integration, permissions, failure modes, and safety boundaries? By the time you've answered all those questions, you've quietly built a small platform — and you haven't shipped anything yet. This is the tax that every team building agentic applications has been paying. Until now... Meet the GitHub Copilot SDK GitHub launched the Copilot SDK in technical preview in January 2026, and its core value proposition is refreshingly direct: stop building the harness, start building your product . The SDK gives you programmatic access to the same production-tested execution loop that powers GitHub Copilot CLI. That means the planning, tool invocation, multi-turn context management,...