When we first started RWX, we built and shipped several dev tools to solve a variety of problems related to builds and tests.
Over the past year, we've made the biggest impact for engineering teams with Mint, our CI/CD platform.
Given this focus, we've decided to deprecate the Mint name, and rebrand the CI/CD functionality directly as RWX.
Nothing is changing with ABQ and Captain. We'll continue to develop and support both products. We plan to create a more seamless UX for engineering teams using Captain on RWX, but we'll continue supporting it from other CI/CD platforms as well.
#Backwards Compatibility
We've provided backwards compatibility for all of the Mint → RWX renames.
See the full migration guide in the docs:
https://www.rwx.com/docs/rwx/mint-to-rwx-migration
#Automatically Renaming Packages
As you'll see in the docs, we've renamed "leaves" to "packages."
Previously, some leaves were owned by mint/, such as mint/install-node.
We decided to move all of the language runtime packages to be owned by the respective language.
For example, mint/install-node is now nodejs/install.
We're always willing to spend significant effort to make changes as easy as possible for engineering teams using RWX, so we implemented a feature in the rwx CLI to automatically handle the renames.
Just run rwx packages update.
Related posts

RWX November 2025 Recap: container image builds, git patching runs, OTEL, and more
At RWX, we use our own product to rapidly prototype, develop, and ship features all the time. Here's what we've built recently...

We deleted our Dockerfiles: a better, faster way to build container images
Two weeks ago, we deleted the Dockerfile for our application, and we deleted the step in our CI pipelines that previously ran docker build.

