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Butler's Log

Agentic Version Control Benchmarks Grit: rewriting Git in Rust with agents Git Merge 2026 Agent-safe Git with GitButler Announcing the GitButler CLI for Linux The Great CSS Expansion A couple of git nits Simplifying Git by Using GitButler Introducing the GitButler CLI GitButler 0.19 - "Commander Keen" But Head: Crafting a Custom Font MCP vs RAG: Two Very Different Ways to Gain Context Getting Started With GitButler Agents Using the GitButler MCP Server to Build Better AI-Driven Git Workflows Using GitButler With Multiple GitHub Accounts Advent of Code! Upcoming GitButler Events Use GitButler for your Gerrit workflow Integrating GitButler and GitHub Enterprise Butler Flow: shipping code faster (but less like Alfred, more like CI on steroids) - Part 3 Butler Flow: shipping code faster (but less like Alfred, more like CI on steroids) - Part 2 Butler Flow: shipping code faster (but less like Alfred, more like CI on steroids) - Part 1 Grid Happens: Because Flexbox Wasn’t Enough Using Cursor Hooks for automatic version control Deep Dive into the new Cursor Hooks A Responsive Item Counter with CSS only GitButler 0.16 - "Sweet Sixteen" GitButler's Claude Code tab GitButler's Annual Open Source Pledge Report Git Mini Summit 2025 Videos Automate Your AI Workflows with Claude Code Hooks Managing Multiple Claude Code Sessions Without Worktrees GitButler 0.15 - "Quirky Quinceañera" 20 years of Git. Still weird, still wonderful. GitButler's new patch based Code Review (Beta) Going down the rabbit hole of Git's new bundle-uri How to do patch-based review with git range-diff How Core Git Developers Configure Git Why is Git Autocorrect too fast for Formula One drivers? Stacked Branches with GitButler Git Merge 2024 Talks are Up GitButler 0.13 - "Lucky Baseball" Fearless Rebasing Git Merge 2024 Why GitHub Actually Won GitButler is joining the Open Source Pledge The New Era of Town Hall Chat The Future of Open Source GitButler is now Fair Source Git Merge 2024 GitButler 0.12 - "Stingy Baker" The Birth of THE MERGE GitButler for Windows Fixing up Git with Autosquash The Git Zeitgeist Git Worktrees and GitButler DevWorld Git Slides Git Tips and Tricks Git Tips 1: Oldies but Goodies Git Tips 2: New Stuff in Git Git Tips 3: Really Large Repositories FOSDEM Git Talk Opening Up GitButler Debugging Tauri in VS Code Advent of GitButler Code Signing Commits in Git, Explained Virtual Branches Alpha Our We Are Developers Adventure Building Virtual Branches DevDays in Vilnius The Future of Software and Open Source Introducing GitButler
We’ve raised $17M to build what comes after Git
Scott Chacon · 2026-04-09 · via Butler's Log

Today we’re announcing that GitButler has raised a $17M Series A led by a16z with continuing support from our lead seed investors, Fly Ventures and A Capital.

I know what you’re thinking. You’re hoping that we’ll use phrases such as “we’re excited,” “this is just the beginning,” and “AI is changing everything”. While all those things are true, I’ll try to avoid them and instead make this announcement a little more personal.

Our new board member, a16z's Peter Levine, and myself at the GitButler Series A signing. We're excited to have Peter join us - he and I also worked together on GitHub's board.

Our new board member, a16z's Peter Levine, and myself at the GitButler Series A signing. We're excited to have Peter join us - he and I also worked together on GitHub's board.

For me this is a long story.

I was one of the cofounders of GitHub and over the last 15 years I’ve watched Git go from a rather niche developer tool written for a very esoteric collaboration style to the foundational infrastructure of all software development on the planet. I may have even had a small hand in some part of that.

What I learned from watching that story unfold is that developer platforms win when they remove friction from collaboration, and when they let the people producing code have less overhead to deal with.

GitButler was started three years ago because we felt like our development practices have been shoehorned into what Git could do for such a long time, it would be amazing to see what we could do with tooling that was actually designed for those practices.

That’s fundamentally what is behind this round.

We think software development is quickly moving into a new phase, and the problem that Git has solved for the last 20 years is overdue for a redesign. Today, with Git, we're all teaching swarms of agents to use a tool built for sending patches over mailing lists. That's far from what is needed today.

At GitHub, one thing became painfully clear over and over: developers don’t struggle because they can’t write code. They struggle because context falls apart between tools, between people, and now between people and agents. The hard problem is not generating change, it’s organizing, reviewing, and integrating change without creating chaos.

The old model assumed one person, one branch, one terminal, one linear flow. Not only has the problem not been solved well for that old model, it’s now only been compounded with our new AI tools.

Last week we released our first answer to that, the technical preview of the GitButler CLI.

A quick tour through a typical workflow with the new GitButler CLI.

This is a tool designed for the GitHub Flow style - the short lived branch, trunk based workflows that so many of us are using. This is a tool designed for humans, designed for agents, designed for scripting. Designed to stack branches, to multitask, to control and organize your changes, to easily undo - to be simple, powerful and intuitive, no matter who (or what) you are. Best of all, it just drops into any existing Git project.

But of course, that’s just the beginning. (Damn, I said I wasn’t going to say that…)

There was a tagline at GitHub that I always loved, but I never felt like we lived up to the promise of: “Social Coding”.

While GitHub certainly made it easier to collaborate on open source projects with forks and pull requests, it otherwise didn’t much improve the process of working together. There are still lists of issues and kanban boards, there are still patches (we just call them PRs now), we still chat in external chat rooms. We don’t look at commit messages and our PR descriptions aren’t stored in Git and usually lost in history. Heck, it could be argued that development in teams is less social than it was when version control was centralized.

But what if coding was actually social? What if it was easier to for a team to work together than it is to work alone?

Imagine your version control tool taking what you’ve worked on and helping you craft logical, beautiful changes with proper context. Imagine being able to access agent interactions, related conversations and other information we’re currently losing. Imagine your tools telling you as soon as there are possible merge conflicts between teammates, rather than at the end of the process. Imaging being able to work on a branch stacked on a coworkers branch while you’re both constantly modifying them. Imagine your agent being fully aware of not only what your other agents are working on, but what everyone on your team is working on, right now.

There is so much more that this fundamental layer of our software tooling could be doing for us. This is what we’re doing at GitButler, this is why we’ve raised the funding to help build all of this, faster.

We’re not building some “better git”.

We’re building the infrastructure for how software gets built next.

Scott Chacon

Written by Scott Chacon

Scott Chacon is a co-founder of GitHub and GitButler, where he builds innovative tools for modern version control. He has authored Pro Git and spoken globally on Git and software collaboration.