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Open Source Agentic LLMs

As of July 2026, AIDiveForge tracks 3 open source agentic llms. Curated open source agentic llms tracked by AIDiveForge. Each project has a verified public source repository. Listings are verified against each tool's live website and re-checked regularly.

Last updated June 30, 2026 · 3 tools

  1. Command R7B

    1. Command R7B

    Command R7B is a smaller language model optimized for tasks that don't require reasoning at the frontier—summarization, classification, instruction-following, and document analysis. Cohere positions it as the pragmatic choice for teams tired of paying for (or waiting on) 70B+ parameter models when a tighter, faster alternative works. It's free and open source, which means no API charges and full control over deployment. The real limitation: it will struggle on abstract reasoning, mathematical proof, or multi-step logic puzzles where 70B models shine. For enterprises choosing between this and proprietary APIs, the tradeoff is real but worth calculating.

    PaidOpen Source
  2. Mistral Large 2

    2. Mistral Large 2

    Mistral Large 2 is a general-purpose language model trained to handle complex reasoning, code generation, and multilingual work at the scale enterprises need. It's free to use via API or self-host, sits in the same performance tier as proprietary models from OpenAI and Anthropic, and can ingest documents up to 128,000 tokens long. The core trade-off: it has a knowledge cutoff earlier than competitors and lacks serious vision capabilities, making it less suitable for tasks requiring current events or image understanding. For teams optimizing on cost and reasoning quality rather than breadth of modalities, it's a genuine alternative to paid tiers.

    FreeOpen Source
  3. Ornith-1.0

    3. Ornith-1.0

    The model family spans 9B-Dense through 397B-MoE, all post-trained on Gemma 4 and Qwen 3.5 with a reinforcement learning framework that jointly optimizes the agent scaffold and the solution rollouts it produces. The vendor states benchmark performance on Terminal-Bench 2.1, SWE-Bench, NL2Repo, and OpenClaw at the top of the open-source range for each size tier. There is no hosted API — you pull the weights and run inference yourself, which means your infra team owns the deployment stack from day one. The 397B-MoE variant requires hardware that most teams do not have on-hand, so realistic entry for self-hosted production starts at the 31B-Dense tier. Community activity is early-stage: ten commits in the repository, six open issues, no closed pull requests.

    FreeOpen Source

Listings on this page are sourced and verified by the AIDiveForge data pipeline. AIDiveForge is editorially independent — no money changes hands for inclusion.