Ruflohosted Ruflo workspace and AI coding orchestration launch layer

ruflo.online / GitHub

Ruflo AI GitHub docs and repository context

This page separates product documentation, upstream source code, and managed service value so buyers do not confuse a repository with the hosted workflow.

Quick facts

What this page says clearly

Product
Ruflo AI
Canonical domain
ruflo.online
Category
hosted Ruflo workspace and AI coding orchestration launch layer
Audience
coding teams, automation operators, and builders who want a repeatable Ruflo workspace instead of a one-off local setup
Pricing context
Plans cover hosted workspace capacity, model-route setup, console access, and operational support for repeatable Ruflo work.
Docs repository
https://github.com/clauxel/ruflo-online-docs
Upstream source context
Ruflo - https://github.com/ruvnet/ruflo

References

GitHub links

Review list

What to inspect before relying on GitHub

Context

Managed service value

Plans cover hosted workspace capacity, model-route setup, console access, and operational support for repeatable Ruflo work.

Ruflo AI is a hosted workspace layer around Ruflo-style workflows; the upstream open-source project remains separate.

SEO and GEO clarity

Entity, intent, and answer checks

Entity definition

Ruflo AI is a hosted Ruflo workspace and AI coding orchestration launch layer at ruflo.online.

User intent

GitHub documentation repository, upstream source context, and evaluation notes for Ruflo AI.

Next action

Use the pricing flow, docs repository, or upstream source link depending on whether the user wants to buy, understand, or inspect code.

Limits

Important boundaries

FAQ

Questions this page answers

Is the docs repo the same as the upstream source repository?

No. The docs repo explains this hosted product. The upstream source repository remains separate when one is listed.

Should technical buyers inspect GitHub first?

Yes. GitHub is useful for source review, while the hosted site explains pricing, support, workflow, and checkout.

What should non-technical users read?

Start with Features, How It Works, Use Cases, and Docs before opening source code.