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24 de março de 2026
Testing autonomous agents (Or: how I learned to stop worrying and embrace chaos)

Testing autonomous agents (Or: how I learned to stop worrying and embrace chaos)

Look, we've spent the last 18 months building production AI systems, and we'll tell you what keeps us up at night — and it's not whether the model can answer questions. That's table stakes now. What haunts us is the mental image of an agent autonomously approving a six-figure vendor contract at 2 a.m. because someone typo'd a config file. We've moved past the era of "ChatGPT wrappers" (thank God), but the industry still treats autonomous agents like they're just chatbots with API access. They're not. When you give an AI system the ability to take actions without human confirmation, you're crossing a fundamental threshold. You're not building a helpful assistant anymore — you're building something closer to an employee. And that changes everything about how we need to engineer these systems. The autonomy problem nobody talks about Here's what's wild: We've gotten really good at making models that *sound* confident. But confidence and reliability aren't the same thing, and the gap between them is where production systems go to die. We learned this the hard way during a pilot program where we let an AI agent manage calendar scheduling across executive teams. Seems simple, right? The agent could check availability, send invites, handle conflicts. Except, one Monday morning, it rescheduled a board meeting because it interpreted "let's push this if we need to" in a Slack message as an actual directive. The model wasn't wrong in its interpretation — it was plausible. But plausible isn't good enough when you're dealing with autonomy. That incident taught us something crucial: The challenge isn't building agents that work most of the time. It's building agents that fail gracefully, know their limitations, and have the circuit breakers to prevent catastrophic mistakes. What reliability actually means for autonomous systems Layered reliability architecture When we talk about reliability in traditional software engineering, we've got decades of patterns: Redundancy, retries, idempotency, graceful degradation. But AI agents break a lot of our assumptions. Traditional software fails in predictable ways. You can write unit tests. You can trace execution paths. With AI agents, you're dealing with probabilistic systems making judgment calls. A bug isn't just a logic error—it's the model hallucinating a plausible-sounding but completely fabricated API endpoint, or misinterpreting context in a way that technically parses but completely misses the human intent. So what does reliability look like here? In our experience, it's a layered approach. Layer 1: Model selection and prompt engineering This is foundational but insufficient. Yes, use the best model you can afford. Yes, craft your prompts carefully with examples and constraints. But don't fool yourself into thinking that a great prompt is enough. I've seen too many teams ship "GPT-4 with a really good system prompt" and call it enterprise-ready. Layer 2: Deterministic guardrails Before the model does anything irreversible, run it through hard checks. Is it trying to access a resource it shouldn't? Is the action within acceptable parameters? We're talking old-school validation logic — regex, schema validation, allowlists. It's not sexy, but it's effective. One pattern that's worked well for us: Maintain a formal action schema. Every action an agent can take has a defined structure, required fields, and validation rules. The agent proposes actions in this schema, and we validate before execution. If validation fails, we don't just block it — we feed the validation errors back to the agent and let it try again with context about what went wrong. Layer 3: Confidence and uncertainty quantification Here's where it gets interesting. We need agents that know what they don't know. We've been experimenting with agents that can explicitly reason about their confidence before taking actions. Not just a probability score, but actual articulated uncertainty: "I'm interpreting this email as a request to delay the project, but the phrasing is ambiguous and could also mean…" This doesn't prevent all mistakes, but it creates natural breakpoints where you can inject human oversight. High-confidence actions go through automatically. Medium-confidence actions get flagged for review. Low-confidence actions get blocked with an explanation. Layer 4: Observability and auditability Action Validation Pipeline If you can't debug it, you can't trust it. Every decision the agent makes needs to be loggable, traceable, and explainable. Not just "what action did it take" but "what was it thinking, what data did it consider, what was the reasoning chain?" We've built a custom logging system that captures the full large language model (LLM) interaction — the prompt, the response, the context window, even the model temperature settings. It's verbose as hell, but when something goes wrong (and it will), you need to be able to reconstruct exactly what happened. Plus, this becomes your dataset for fine-tuning and improvement. Guardrails: The art of saying no Let's talk about guardrails, because this is where engineering discipline really matters. A lot of teams approach guardrails as an afterthought — "we'll add some safety checks if we need them." That's backwards. Guardrails should be your starting point. We think of guardrails in three categories. Permission boundaries What is the agent physically allowed to do? This is your blast radius control. Even if the agent hallucinates the worst possible action, what's the maximum damage it can cause? We use a principle called "graduated autonomy." New agents start with read-only access. As they prove reliable, they graduate to low-risk writes (creating calendar events, sending internal messages). High-risk actions (financial transactions, external communications, data deletion) either require explicit human approval or are simply off-limits. One technique that's worked well: Action cost budgets. Each agent has a daily "budget" denominated in some unit of risk or cost. Reading a database record costs 1 unit. Sending an email costs 10. Initiating a vendor payment costs 1,000. The agent can operate autonomously until it exhausts its budget; then, it needs human intervention. This creates a natural throttle on potentially problematic behavior. Graduated Autonomy and Action Cost Budget Semantic Houndaries What should the agent understand as in-scope vs out-of-scope? This is trickier because it's conceptual, not just technical. I've

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