> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://v2.opencode.ai/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Attachments

OpenCode can add local context to a prompt as text or image media. Current V2
sessions make these attachment types visible to the model:

| Input                   | Model receives                                                 |
| ----------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------- |
| UTF-8 text file         | The filename and decoded text                                  |
| Directory               | A non-recursive listing of its immediate files and directories |
| PNG, JPEG, GIF, or WebP | Image media                                                    |

SVG files are treated as text, not image media. PDF, AVIF, BMP, audio, video,
and other binary prompt attachments are not currently included in the model
request. Some clients may let you select a PDF, but V2 does not yet make that
PDF visible to the model.

<Warning>
  Use a model that supports image input before attaching an image. OpenCode
  passes supported image media to the selected provider, but the provider and
  model still enforce their own formats, dimensions, file counts, and size
  limits. A text-only model may reject the request.
</Warning>

## Add attachments

### TUI

Type `@` followed by a filename and select the result to attach a project file.
This is the preferred way to add source code and other text files:

```text theme={null}
Explain the error handling in @src/server.ts
```

Paste an image from the clipboard with the configured paste key, `Ctrl+V` by
default. You can also drag a supported image into a terminal that exposes the
dropped file path to the TUI. The TUI reads PNG, JPEG, GIF, and WebP as image
attachments; a dropped SVG is inserted as text.

### Desktop and web

Use **Attach file**, paste, or drag and drop. Attach UTF-8 text or a PNG, JPEG,
GIF, or WebP image. The desktop file picker limits one selection to 20 MiB in
total; the server also applies the per-attachment limit described below.

### CLI

Pass `--file` or `-f` to `opencode2 run`. Repeat the flag for multiple files:

```bash theme={null}
opencode2 run -f src/server.ts -f screenshot.png "Explain the failure"
```

The run command accepts at most 100 file flags and reads at most 10 MiB per
file. Use it for text files and the four supported image formats; other binary
files do not become model context.

### API

The V2 prompt and command payloads accept a `files` array. Each item requires a
`uri` and can include `name` and `description`:

```bash theme={null}
opencode2 api post /api/session/ses_example/prompt --data '{
  "text": "Review this file",
  "files": [
    {
      "uri": "file:///home/me/project/src/server.ts",
      "name": "server.ts",
      "description": "Request handler"
    }
  ]
}'
```

Use an absolute `file:` URL for a file available to the server, or an inline
data URL:

```json theme={null}
{
  "text": "What is wrong with this layout?",
  "files": [
    {
      "uri": "data:image/png;base64,<base64-data>",
      "name": "layout.png"
    }
  ]
}
```

HTTP and HTTPS attachment URLs are not supported. OpenCode materializes each
attachment before admitting the prompt and rejects invalid URLs, unreadable
paths, non-files other than directories, and attachments over 20 MiB decoded.
For a text `file:` URL, optional positive `start` and `end` query parameters
select one-based lines:

```text theme={null}
file:///home/me/project/src/server.ts?start=20&end=60
```

The server infers the media type from the bytes. A supplied filename or data
URL media type does not make an unsupported binary format model-visible.

## Configure image processing

Configure image normalization in `opencode.json` or `opencode.jsonc`:

```jsonc title="opencode.jsonc" theme={null}
{
  "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json",
  "attachments": {
    "image": {
      "auto_resize": true,
      "max_width": 2000,
      "max_height": 2000,
      "max_base64_bytes": 5242880
    }
  }
}
```

All fields are optional:

| Field              |   Default | Behavior                                                                            |
| ------------------ | --------: | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `auto_resize`      |    `true` | Resize an image that exceeds any configured limit. If `false`, reject it.           |
| `max_width`        |    `2000` | Maximum width in pixels. Must be a positive integer.                                |
| `max_height`       |    `2000` | Maximum height in pixels. Must be a positive integer.                               |
| `max_base64_bytes` | `5242880` | Maximum byte length of the Base64-encoded image string. Must be a positive integer. |

<Note>
  In the current V2 runtime, these settings apply to image media produced by
  the built-in `read` tool. Images attached directly through the TUI, desktop,
  web, CLI, or API bypass this normalization. Resize direct attachments before
  adding them if the provider requires smaller media.
</Note>

The `read` tool recognizes PNG, JPEG, GIF, and WebP by their contents and will
ingest at most 20 MiB of source image bytes. It decodes the image and compares
its width, height, and encoded Base64 length with all three configured limits.

When `auto_resize` is `true`, OpenCode preserves the aspect ratio, scales the
image down to the dimension limits, and tries progressively smaller PNG and
JPEG encodings until the Base64 limit is met. The resulting media type can
therefore change to PNG or JPEG. If no encoding fits, the tool call fails.

When `auto_resize` is `false`, exceeding any limit fails the tool call without
modifying the image. An image that cannot be decoded also fails. If the image
resizer cannot be loaded, the `read` tool returns the
original image instead, so these settings are processing limits rather than an
upload or security boundary.

## Limits and provider behavior

* Direct prompt attachments are limited to 20 MiB decoded per item by the V2
  server. Client-specific limits can be lower.
* `max_base64_bytes` counts the encoded Base64 characters in bytes, not the
  decoded file size and not the complete `data:` URL.
* Text attachments are inserted into the prompt as text and do not require a
  multimodal model. Large text read through the `read` tool has separate
  paging and truncation limits.
* Image attachments use provider-native image input. Provider errors can still
  occur when OpenCode's limits pass but the selected model's limits do not.
* PDFs and other unsupported binary prompt attachments should be converted to
  text or supported images before attaching them.
