memwarden 0.0.1

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Files changed (119) hide show
  1. package/LICENSE +202 -0
  2. package/README.md +402 -0
  3. package/dist/bundle/bundle.d.ts +28 -0
  4. package/dist/bundle/bundle.js +85 -0
  5. package/dist/cli/bin.d.ts +2 -0
  6. package/dist/cli/bin.js +593 -0
  7. package/dist/cli/connect.d.ts +63 -0
  8. package/dist/cli/connect.js +121 -0
  9. package/dist/cli/hook.d.ts +24 -0
  10. package/dist/cli/hook.js +186 -0
  11. package/dist/cli/tools.d.ts +47 -0
  12. package/dist/cli/tools.js +246 -0
  13. package/dist/daemon/ensure.d.ts +12 -0
  14. package/dist/daemon/ensure.js +54 -0
  15. package/dist/daemon/service.d.ts +15 -0
  16. package/dist/daemon/service.js +210 -0
  17. package/dist/embedding/index.d.ts +10 -0
  18. package/dist/embedding/index.js +33 -0
  19. package/dist/embedding/local-embedding.d.ts +14 -0
  20. package/dist/embedding/local-embedding.js +80 -0
  21. package/dist/functions/access-tracker.d.ts +13 -0
  22. package/dist/functions/access-tracker.js +92 -0
  23. package/dist/functions/audit.d.ts +46 -0
  24. package/dist/functions/audit.js +0 -0
  25. package/dist/functions/cjk-segmenter.d.ts +6 -0
  26. package/dist/functions/cjk-segmenter.js +120 -0
  27. package/dist/functions/compress-synthetic.d.ts +2 -0
  28. package/dist/functions/compress-synthetic.js +104 -0
  29. package/dist/functions/config.d.ts +68 -0
  30. package/dist/functions/config.js +231 -0
  31. package/dist/functions/conflicts.d.ts +19 -0
  32. package/dist/functions/conflicts.js +328 -0
  33. package/dist/functions/context.d.ts +3 -0
  34. package/dist/functions/context.js +155 -0
  35. package/dist/functions/dedup.d.ts +11 -0
  36. package/dist/functions/dedup.js +51 -0
  37. package/dist/functions/dejafix.d.ts +96 -0
  38. package/dist/functions/dejafix.js +356 -0
  39. package/dist/functions/doctor.d.ts +29 -0
  40. package/dist/functions/doctor.js +137 -0
  41. package/dist/functions/forget.d.ts +3 -0
  42. package/dist/functions/forget.js +87 -0
  43. package/dist/functions/hybrid-search.d.ts +17 -0
  44. package/dist/functions/hybrid-search.js +205 -0
  45. package/dist/functions/index.d.ts +32 -0
  46. package/dist/functions/index.js +44 -0
  47. package/dist/functions/keyed-mutex.d.ts +1 -0
  48. package/dist/functions/keyed-mutex.js +21 -0
  49. package/dist/functions/logger.d.ts +6 -0
  50. package/dist/functions/logger.js +37 -0
  51. package/dist/functions/memory-utils.d.ts +2 -0
  52. package/dist/functions/memory-utils.js +29 -0
  53. package/dist/functions/observe.d.ts +5 -0
  54. package/dist/functions/observe.js +326 -0
  55. package/dist/functions/paths.d.ts +1 -0
  56. package/dist/functions/paths.js +38 -0
  57. package/dist/functions/privacy.d.ts +1 -0
  58. package/dist/functions/privacy.js +30 -0
  59. package/dist/functions/provenance.d.ts +9 -0
  60. package/dist/functions/provenance.js +57 -0
  61. package/dist/functions/quantized-vector-index.d.ts +60 -0
  62. package/dist/functions/quantized-vector-index.js +275 -0
  63. package/dist/functions/receipt.d.ts +31 -0
  64. package/dist/functions/receipt.js +95 -0
  65. package/dist/functions/search-index.d.ts +27 -0
  66. package/dist/functions/search-index.js +217 -0
  67. package/dist/functions/search.d.ts +25 -0
  68. package/dist/functions/search.js +523 -0
  69. package/dist/functions/stemmer.d.ts +1 -0
  70. package/dist/functions/stemmer.js +110 -0
  71. package/dist/functions/synonyms.d.ts +1 -0
  72. package/dist/functions/synonyms.js +69 -0
  73. package/dist/functions/turboquant.d.ts +53 -0
  74. package/dist/functions/turboquant.js +278 -0
  75. package/dist/functions/types.d.ts +217 -0
  76. package/dist/functions/types.js +8 -0
  77. package/dist/functions/vector-index.d.ts +25 -0
  78. package/dist/functions/vector-index.js +125 -0
  79. package/dist/functions/vector-persistence.d.ts +14 -0
  80. package/dist/functions/vector-persistence.js +75 -0
  81. package/dist/functions/verify.d.ts +13 -0
  82. package/dist/functions/verify.js +104 -0
  83. package/dist/index.d.ts +1 -0
  84. package/dist/index.js +219 -0
  85. package/dist/kernel/http.d.ts +24 -0
  86. package/dist/kernel/http.js +261 -0
  87. package/dist/kernel/index.d.ts +19 -0
  88. package/dist/kernel/index.js +21 -0
  89. package/dist/kernel/kernel.d.ts +80 -0
  90. package/dist/kernel/kernel.js +297 -0
  91. package/dist/kernel/pubsub.d.ts +21 -0
  92. package/dist/kernel/pubsub.js +38 -0
  93. package/dist/kernel/types.d.ts +139 -0
  94. package/dist/kernel/types.js +20 -0
  95. package/dist/mcp/bin.d.ts +2 -0
  96. package/dist/mcp/bin.js +27 -0
  97. package/dist/mcp/server.d.ts +34 -0
  98. package/dist/mcp/server.js +377 -0
  99. package/dist/observability/metrics.d.ts +26 -0
  100. package/dist/observability/metrics.js +104 -0
  101. package/dist/proxy/server.d.ts +30 -0
  102. package/dist/proxy/server.js +331 -0
  103. package/dist/state/kv.d.ts +41 -0
  104. package/dist/state/kv.js +50 -0
  105. package/dist/state/oplog.d.ts +25 -0
  106. package/dist/state/oplog.js +57 -0
  107. package/dist/state/schema.d.ts +60 -0
  108. package/dist/state/schema.js +88 -0
  109. package/dist/state/store-libsql.d.ts +46 -0
  110. package/dist/state/store-libsql.js +263 -0
  111. package/dist/state/store-memory.d.ts +23 -0
  112. package/dist/state/store-memory.js +121 -0
  113. package/dist/state/store.d.ts +87 -0
  114. package/dist/state/store.js +58 -0
  115. package/dist/triggers/api.d.ts +14 -0
  116. package/dist/triggers/api.js +510 -0
  117. package/dist/triggers/auth.d.ts +1 -0
  118. package/dist/triggers/auth.js +13 -0
  119. package/package.json +58 -0
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package/README.md ADDED
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+ <div align="center">
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+
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+ # 🧠 memwarden
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+
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+ ### The memory firewall for AI coding agents.
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+
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+ **Your agent's memory is lying to you. Prove yours isn't.**
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+
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+ memwarden is verified, self-custodied memory for AI coding agents. It is local-first,
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+ dependency-light, and works across every tool you use — Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Kiro,
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+ Antigravity, OpenCode, OpenClaw. The point isn't to remember *more*. It's that nothing gets
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+ injected into your agent's context without provenance that still checks out.
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+
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+ `memory firewall` · `verified recall` · `tamper-evident` · `self-custodied` · `cross-tool` · `no API key`
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+
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+ </div>
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+
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+ ---
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+
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+ ## The problem: is the memory still true?
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+
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+ Most memory layers are built to *remember more.* memwarden is built around a harder question:
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+ **is the memory still true?**
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+
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+ The failure mode that hurts isn't forgetting — it's **confidently wrong recall**. A stored fact
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+ silently goes stale: it points at code you've since changed or deleted, and the agent injects it
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+ with full confidence anyway. The industry has started naming this class of risk — OWASP added
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+ Memory Poisoning (ASI06) to its 2026 Agentic Top 10 — yet memory still tends to store everything
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+ and trust everything.
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+
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+ A memory that points at code you deleted, or that nothing backs up, is worse than no memory at
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+ all — because the agent injects it with full confidence.
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+
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+ memwarden is built around the opposite default: **memory is untrusted until its source still
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+ checks out.**
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+
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+ ## Three reasons it exists
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+
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+ **1. Verified Recall — the anti-feature.** Memory is firewalled before it reaches a model.
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+ A memory whose source file was deleted or changed since capture is `stale` and never injected.
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+ Run `memwarden doctor` against any memory store and get a red/yellow/green audit of what's
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+ verified, what's merely sourced, what's stale, and what has no provenance at all. It's a
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+ shareable artifact you can point at your own existing memory and watch it light up yellow.
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+
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+ **2. Self-custodied and portable.** Your second brain shouldn't depend on a vendor's roadmap.
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+ memwarden is local-first, tamper-evident, and portable: one `export` produces a Brain Bundle you
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+ can move between machines or agents. Zero cloud. The data lives at `~/.memwarden` and nowhere else.
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+
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+ **3. The memory firewall.** Nothing enters your agent's context without provenance that still
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+ holds. The unique lever — possible only for a coding-agent tool because the repo is ground
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+ truth — is tying memory validity to **source-file content hashes**. The repo tells us, on every
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+ recall, whether a memory is still earned.
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+
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+ ## Source-file hashes: the ground truth
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+
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+ A coding agent has something general-purpose memory doesn't: the repository on disk is the source
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+ of truth. When memwarden captures a code-backed memory, it records a SHA-256 content hash for
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+ each referenced file (best-effort, files up to ~2 MB). On recall it re-hashes the live file and
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+ compares. If the file is gone or its content moved, the memory is provably stale — not by
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+ heuristic, by hash.
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+
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+ Tying memory validity to source-file content hashes is what lets the repo tell us, on every
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+ recall, whether a memory is still earned.
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+
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+ ## Verified Recall — what the four states mean
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+
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+ Every memory is classified against the live repo:
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+
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+ - **verified** — a captured source-file hash still matches the file on disk (code-backed and
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+ current).
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+ - **sourced_unverified** — it has a source (a command, or files that were present but not
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+ hashable), but no content hash to re-check. Allowed, but not content-verified.
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+ - **stale** — a referenced file was deleted, or its content changed since capture.
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+ - **unsourced** — no provenance at all: no files, no command, not user-confirmed.
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+
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+ **The firewall drops `stale` before injecting. It does not drop `unsourced`** — unsourced means
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+ *unverified*, not *dangerous*, so it stays available for explicit lookups. `memory_resume`, the
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+ `/recall` prompt, the Claude Code SessionStart hook, and the proxy all run recall with the
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+ firewall on. It scans a wide window to backfill lower-ranked safe results and warns (rather than
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+ silently capping) if that window is exhausted. It also drops an older memory that a newer safe
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+ memory contradicts, using conservative subject/value claims — no LLM, no fuzzy black box. Plain
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+ `memory_search` stays unfiltered for deliberate lookups; the REST API refuses `safe_only` without
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+ a `cwd` to verify against rather than pass memory through unchecked.
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+
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+ ## The shareable audit: `memwarden doctor`
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+
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+ Point it at a repo and it runs the exact same check as a report, plus conservative conflict
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+ detection:
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+
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+ ```bash
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+ node dist/cli/bin.js doctor .
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+
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+ VERIFIED: 8 memories (code-backed, current)
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+ SOURCED: 3 memories (sourced, not content-verified)
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+ STALE: 2 memories reference files that changed/deleted
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+ UNSOURCED: 1 memory has no evidence
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+ CONFLICTS: 1 possible contradiction
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+
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+ [stale] Edit — references files that no longer match (changed: src/legacy.ts)
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+ [conflict] Edit may contradict Edit — same subject "auth" has incompatible values
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+ ```
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+
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+ This is the artifact. Run it against your current memory store and see how much of it is still
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+ earned.
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+
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+ ## Déjà Fix — never solve the same error twice, across every tool
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+
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+ memwarden is the one process that sees **every** agent's sessions on your machine, so it can do
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+ something no per-tool memory can: when any agent (Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, …) resolves an
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+ error, it captures `{error signature → root cause + fix}` with the same provenance file-hashes.
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+ When **any** agent later hits a matching error, the verified fix is surfaced automatically —
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+ but only if its referenced files still hash-match. A stale fix is never surfaced.
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+
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+ ```bash
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+ # Codex solved a failing test yesterday. Today Claude Code hits the same failure:
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+ # Déjà Fix (memwarden): this error was solved by codex on 2026-06-09 and the fix
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+ # is verified current against your working tree.
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+ # Root cause: clock skew · Fix: mock NTP in conftest
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+
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+ # scriptable too — pipe any failing command's output straight in:
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+ npm test 2>&1 | node dist/cli/bin.js dejafix lookup
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+ ```
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+
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+ Three properties, all load-bearing: it is **cross-agent** (a fix learned in Codex helps Claude
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+ Code), **project-scoped** (a fix never leaks across repos), and **safe by construction** — it
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+ reuses Verified Recall, so file drift or deletion auto-suppresses the fix. The hook auto-injects
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+ only `verified current` fixes; `sourced, unverified` ones stay available via `dejafix lookup`,
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+ `/recall`, and the `dejafix_lookup` MCP tool but are never silently pushed into your context.
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+
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+ ## Tamper-evident, honestly
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+
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+ Every write lands in an append-only, SHA-256 hash-chained oplog. `memory_verify` walks the chain
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+ and recomputes every hash, so an **edit or a reorder** of any past entry breaks the chain at the
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+ first touched entry.
135
+
136
+ It is **tamper-evident, not tamper-proof.** There is no signing. The chain detects edits and
137
+ reorders, but it does **not** detect tail-truncation — dropping the newest entries leaves a
138
+ shorter, still-valid chain. We say "tamper-evident" and mean exactly that.
139
+
140
+ **Deletion comes with a receipt.** `memwarden forget <id>` removes a memory from the store and
141
+ every index, and prints a receipt citing the oplog entries that recorded the original write and
142
+ the deletion, plus whole-chain verification — proof the delete actually happened, without
143
+ re-disclosing the deleted content. An unknown id reports failure honestly; there is no
144
+ `{deleted: 0, success: true}` theater here.
145
+
146
+ ## Start here: audit the memory you already have
147
+
148
+ You don't have to install anything or trust any claim — point the auditor at the memory store
149
+ you already use and the repo it talks about:
150
+
151
+ ```bash
152
+ npx memwarden audit ~/.claude-mem/claude-mem.db --root ~/code/my-repo # claude-mem (any SQLite store)
153
+ npx memwarden audit CLAUDE.md # a CLAUDE.md / AGENTS.md / rules pile
154
+ npx memwarden audit mem0-export.json --root ~/code/my-repo # a Mem0-style JSON export
155
+ ```
156
+
157
+ No daemon, no setup, read-only (SQLite stores are copied before opening). The report classifies
158
+ every memory: **MISSING** (red — references files that no longer exist), **DRIFTED** (yellow —
159
+ files changed after the memory was recorded, when the store has timestamps), **PRESENT** (files
160
+ exist — which is the strongest claim a store without content hashes can make), **UNANCHORED**
161
+ (no file evidence at all). Every red and yellow memory is one your agent would have injected
162
+ with full confidence.
163
+
164
+ ## Setup is one command
165
+
166
+ ```bash
167
+ npx memwarden up
168
+ ```
169
+
170
+ (From a checkout: `npm install && npm run build && node dist/cli/bin.js up`.)
171
+
172
+ `memwarden up` is the whole thing. It:
173
+
174
+ - **starts a self-healing daemon** in the background (one global brain at `~/.memwarden`) and
175
+ registers it as an OS service (macOS LaunchAgent / Linux systemd `--user`) so it restarts on
176
+ crash and starts at login,
177
+ - **detects your installed tools** and writes the memwarden MCP server into each one's config,
178
+ in that tool's own schema, without clobbering servers you already have,
179
+ - **writes an `AGENTS.md`** block so tools without a hook system still recall and save on every
180
+ task.
181
+
182
+ | Tool | What `up` writes | How memory flows |
183
+ | --- | --- | --- |
184
+ | **Claude Code** | `~/.claude.json` + `~/.claude/settings.json` hooks | mechanical (auto inject + auto capture) |
185
+ | **Codex** | `~/.codex/config.toml` | standing instruction + `/recall` |
186
+ | **Cursor** | `~/.cursor/mcp.json` | standing instruction + `/recall` |
187
+ | **Kiro** | `~/.kiro/settings/mcp.json` | standing instruction + `/recall` |
188
+ | **Antigravity** | `~/.gemini/config/mcp_config.json` | standing instruction + `/recall` |
189
+ | **OpenCode** | `~/.config/opencode/opencode.json` | standing instruction + `/recall` |
190
+ | **OpenClaw** | `~/.openclaw/openclaw.json` | standing instruction + `/recall` |
191
+
192
+ Restart each tool once so it loads the new server. `memwarden down` removes the service.
193
+
194
+ **You stay in charge of the automatic paths.** `MEMWARDEN_INJECT=off` starts sessions with a
195
+ clean slate (no auto-injection anywhere — explicit `/recall` and the MCP tools still work);
196
+ `MEMWARDEN_CAPTURE=off` stops auto-capture. `memwarden exclude <path>` firewalls a project
197
+ completely — no capture from it, no injection into it, across hooks and proxy alike, effective
198
+ immediately (the list is re-read per request, so there is no "excluded but still summarized"
199
+ failure mode). `memwarden include <path>` undoes it; `memwarden exclude --list` shows the list.
200
+
201
+ ## How memory crosses your tools
202
+
203
+ Cross-tool reach is table stakes — the trust layer above is the point. Still, the mechanics
204
+ matter, so here they are honestly. There are exactly three ways memory reaches a tool, and
205
+ `memwarden up` wires whichever ones each tool supports:
206
+
207
+ 1. **Hooks (Claude Code).** Mechanical. A `SessionStart` hook injects this project's verified
208
+ memory before you type a word; a `PostToolUse` hook captures your work as it happens. The
209
+ agent cannot forget to do it.
210
+ 2. **Standing instruction (Codex, Cursor, Kiro, Antigravity, OpenCode, OpenClaw).** `up` writes
211
+ an `AGENTS.md` block telling the agent to recall at the start of every task and save what it
212
+ learns. This is the same mechanism every cross-tool memory layer uses for these tools: they
213
+ expose no deeper hook, so "automatic" means a standing instruction the agent follows, backed
214
+ by the `/recall` command when you want to force it.
215
+ 3. **Proxy (model-configurable tools).** Mechanical at the API boundary, but only where you
216
+ control the model endpoint — OpenCode, OpenClaw, Ollama, LM Studio, or any custom OpenAI base
217
+ URL. Point the tool's base URL at the memwarden proxy on `:3113` and every turn is recalled
218
+ and captured with no agent cooperation. It does **not** intercept Claude Code (own protocol —
219
+ covered by hooks) or Cursor/Kiro/Antigravity (their own backends).
220
+
221
+ So: capture in Claude Code, then open Cursor or Codex and they pull up what Claude learned. On
222
+ Claude Code that handoff is mechanical via hooks; on the MCP tools the agent does it via the
223
+ standing instruction (or you type `/recall`); through the proxy it is mechanical for any model
224
+ endpoint you control.
225
+
226
+ ## The 60-second trust demo
227
+
228
+ Run the product thesis locally without starting a daemon:
229
+
230
+ ```bash
231
+ npm run demo:trust
232
+ ```
233
+
234
+ It creates a temp repo, captures a code-backed memory, changes the file, and proves `safe_only`
235
+ recall refuses the now-stale memory while plain search can still find it. Then it captures two
236
+ sourced claims (`runtime uses node 22` / `runtime uses bun runtime`), proves safe recall keeps
237
+ **both** (it never silently drops a true fact), and shows `memwarden doctor` flagging the
238
+ contradiction as an advisory.
239
+
240
+ ## Self-healing
241
+
242
+ Once it is up, you never touch it.
243
+
244
+ - **On use** — if the daemon is down, the next tool that launches the MCP server revives it
245
+ automatically (it spawns the daemon and retries the request).
246
+ - **On crash or reboot** — the OS service (macOS LaunchAgent / Linux systemd `--user`) restarts
247
+ it on failure and starts it at login.
248
+ - **Race-safe** — a second daemon on the same port exits cleanly instead of crash-looping.
249
+
250
+ ## How it works
251
+
252
+ ```
253
+ your tool ──observe──▶ compress (on-device) ──▶ libSQL store + hash-chained oplog
254
+
255
+ MiniLM embed ──▶ TurboQuant 4-bit codes ──▶ vector index │ (tamper-evident)
256
+
257
+ your tool ◀──verified recall── BM25 + vector (RRF), firewalled, packed under a token budget
258
+ ```
259
+
260
+ 1. **Capture.** `observe` compresses raw tool output into a compact record (no LLM call), and
261
+ hashes the source files it references.
262
+ 2. **Embed and compress.** text → `all-MiniLM-L6-v2` vector → **TurboQuant** 2/4-bit codes
263
+ (Google's quantization algorithm, [arXiv:2504.19874](https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.19874),
264
+ implemented from scratch in pure TypeScript).
265
+ 3. **Store and chain.** Every write lands in the SHA-256 hash-chained oplog, so the store is
266
+ tamper-evident and `memory_verify` can confirm the chain is intact.
267
+ 4. **Verified recall.** Hybrid BM25 + vector search (RRF), scoped to your project by canonical
268
+ path (symlinks and path spellings resolved, so recall never silently misses), firewalled so
269
+ stale memory never reaches the model, packed under a token budget. (Contradictions are
270
+ surfaced by `doctor` as advisories — recall never silently drops a true memory.)
271
+
272
+ ## The numbers
273
+
274
+ Measured on this machine with the real on-device model (`all-MiniLM-L6-v2`), 30 coding
275
+ memories, 14 **paraphrased** queries (worded differently than the answers). Reproduce with
276
+ `npm run benchmark`:
277
+
278
+ | Retrieval (gold answer in top-k) | R@5 | R@10 |
279
+ | --- | --- | --- |
280
+ | Full-precision vectors | 100% | 100% |
281
+ | **TurboQuant (4-bit, compressed)** | **100%** | **100%** |
282
+ | Keyword search (lexical baseline) | 71% | 79% |
283
+
284
+ - **Compression costs zero recall** — TurboQuant matches full-precision exactly.
285
+ - **Meaning beats keywords by ~25 points** — paraphrased questions that share no words with
286
+ the answer still resolve.
287
+ - **5.9× smaller** vectors (384-dim @ 4-bit; ~11× at 2-bit), **~1ms** per search.
288
+
289
+ > The 100% figures are on a small, clean corpus. The point is that compression is free
290
+ > (quantized == full-precision) and semantic recall beats lexical. Larger, noisier corpora
291
+ > land below 100%, but the relationship holds.
292
+
293
+ ## What it does
294
+
295
+ | Capability | How |
296
+ | --- | --- |
297
+ | Memory firewall — stale memory never injected | Verified Recall (`safe_only`) |
298
+ | Trust audit — stale / unsourced / conflicts | `memwarden doctor` |
299
+ | Validity tied to source-file content | per-file SHA-256, re-checked on recall |
300
+ | Tamper-evident store | hash-chained oplog + `memory_verify` |
301
+ | One-command setup across every tool | `memwarden up` (7 tools) |
302
+ | Self-healing daemon (use + crash + reboot) | LaunchAgent / systemd + revive-on-use |
303
+ | Self-custodied, portable | `export` / `import` Brain Bundle, zero cloud |
304
+ | Compressed storage | TurboQuant, ~6–11× smaller |
305
+ | Lean footprint | 2 runtime deps (libSQL, zod); embeddings + MCP add nothing native |
306
+
307
+ ## MCP tools and the `/recall` command
308
+
309
+ | Tool | What it does |
310
+ | --- | --- |
311
+ | `memory_resume` | Verified recall of what was worked on in this project, across all past sessions and tools |
312
+ | `memory_search` | Hybrid semantic + keyword search (unfiltered, for explicit lookups) |
313
+ | `memory_remember` | Save a memory explicitly |
314
+ | `memory_verify` | Confirm the oplog hash chain is intact (tamper-evident; not signed) |
315
+ | `memory_stats` | Live counts, compression ratio, token reduction, latency |
316
+
317
+ Plus an MCP **prompt**, `recall`, surfaced as a slash command (`/mcp__memwarden__recall <query>`
318
+ in Claude Code): type it mid-chat to pull this project's matching, verified memory into the
319
+ conversation.
320
+
321
+ ## The proxy — one memory layer for the models you control
322
+
323
+ An OpenAI-compatible gateway on `:3113` that any model-configurable tool can point its base URL
324
+ at. It injects relevant verified memory, captures the answer, and is blind to the model behind
325
+ it. Local (Ollama, LM Studio) and paid (OpenAI, OpenRouter, Together) all speak the same
326
+ `/v1/chat/completions`, so it is one memory layer for all of them. Streaming (SSE) passes
327
+ straight through. It applies only where you control the model endpoint — tools with their own
328
+ protocol or backend (Claude Code, Cursor, Kiro, Antigravity) are covered by hooks or the
329
+ standing instruction instead.
330
+
331
+ ```bash
332
+ # paid upstream:
333
+ MEMWARDEN_UPSTREAM_URL=https://api.openai.com/v1 MEMWARDEN_UPSTREAM_KEY=sk-... node dist/index.js
334
+ # local model, no key:
335
+ MEMWARDEN_UPSTREAM_URL=http://localhost:11434/v1 node dist/index.js
336
+ # then point your tool's OpenAI base URL at: http://localhost:3113/v1
337
+ ```
338
+
339
+ When the install has a secret (`memwarden up` generates one), the proxy requires it from
340
+ clients too: set your tool's API key to the secret (`cat ~/.memwarden/secret`). The proxy
341
+ strips it before forwarding, so it never reaches the upstream. Without this, any local
342
+ process could spend your upstream key and poison capture.
343
+
344
+ ## Portability — your memory survives the next pivot
345
+
346
+ ```bash
347
+ node dist/cli/bin.js export brain.json # on machine A
348
+ node dist/cli/bin.js import brain.json # on machine B
349
+ ```
350
+
351
+ Your memory is a portable JSON Brain Bundle. No cloud, no vendor in the loop. When the next
352
+ memory startup gets acquired or sunset, you keep your brain.
353
+
354
+ ## Layout
355
+
356
+ ```
357
+ src/kernel/ in-process runtime: function registry, trigger dispatch, pubsub, HTTP
358
+ src/state/ StateKV, memory + libSQL stores, append-only hash-chained oplog
359
+ src/functions/ observe / search (BM25 + TurboQuant vector + RRF) / doctor / conflicts / dejafix / context / forget
360
+ src/functions/verify.ts Verified Recall: content-hash provenance -> verified / sourced_unverified / stale / unsourced
361
+ src/functions/paths.ts canonical project/cwd scoping (recall never silently misses)
362
+ src/embedding/ on-device embedding provider (transformers.js, optional)
363
+ src/mcp/ dependency-free MCP server (stdio JSON-RPC) + the recall prompt
364
+ src/proxy/ OpenAI-compatible memory gateway (for model endpoints you control)
365
+ src/daemon/ ensure (self-heal on use) + service (self-heal on crash/reboot)
366
+ src/cli/ up / down / connect / doctor / audit / forget / exclude / dejafix / hooks / export / import
367
+ src/cli/tools.ts per-tool adapters: Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Kiro, Antigravity, OpenCode, OpenClaw
368
+ src/bundle/ portable Brain Bundle export & import
369
+ benchmark/ reproducible recall benchmark
370
+ test/ 290 tests: kernel, store parity, oplog, quantizer, MCP, proxy, tool-wiring,
371
+ Verified Recall, Déjà Fix, foreign-store audit, delete receipts, injection
372
+ controls, conflict audit, HTTP security (auth/host/content-type),
373
+ path scoping, self-heal, cross-tool reliability harness, e2e
374
+ ```
375
+
376
+ ## Configuration
377
+
378
+ | Env | Default | Purpose |
379
+ | --- | --- | --- |
380
+ | `MEMWARDEN_DATA_DIR` | `~/.memwarden` | where the brain lives |
381
+ | `MEMWARDEN_EMBEDDING_PROVIDER` | `local` | `local` (on-device MiniLM) or `none` (keyword-only) |
382
+ | `MEMWARDEN_QUANT_VECTOR` | follows embeddings | force TurboQuant on/off |
383
+ | `MEMWARDEN_QUANT_BITS` | `4` | `2` or `4` bits per dimension |
384
+ | `MEMWARDEN_FORGET_TTL_DAYS` | `30` | retention window for the forget sweep |
385
+ | `MEMWARDEN_SECRET` | unset | bearer token for the REST API and the proxy (clients send it as their API key) |
386
+ | `MEMWARDEN_INJECT` | on | `off` disables ALL auto-injection (SessionStart, Déjà Fix, proxy); `/recall` and MCP still work |
387
+ | `MEMWARDEN_CAPTURE` | on | `off` disables ALL auto-capture (PostToolUse hook, proxy tee) |
388
+ | `MEMWARDEN_UPSTREAM_URL` | unset | upstream OpenAI-compatible base URL; enables the proxy |
389
+ | `MEMWARDEN_UPSTREAM_KEY` | unset | API key forwarded to the upstream (omit for local models) |
390
+ | `MEMWARDEN_PROXY_PORT` | `3113` | port the memory proxy listens on |
391
+
392
+ ## Not built yet (so this README does not pretend otherwise)
393
+
394
+ Verified Recall checks deletion and content drift; `doctor` additionally flags conservative
395
+ subject/value conflicts as advisories (it never drops them from recall).
396
+ Tamper-*evidence* ships via the hash chain, but oplog *signing* (Ed25519), *encrypted* Brain
397
+ Bundles, and an ANN index for >1M-memory scale are not. These are candidates, not claims. The
398
+ hash chain detects edits and reorders; it does not detect tail-truncation.
399
+
400
+ ## License
401
+
402
+ Apache-2.0
@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
1
+ import type { StateKV } from "../state/kv.js";
2
+ import type { CompressedObservation, Memory, Session } from "../functions/types.js";
3
+ export declare const BRAIN_BUNDLE_KIND = "memwarden.brain";
4
+ export declare const BRAIN_BUNDLE_VERSION = 1;
5
+ export interface BrainBundle {
6
+ kind: typeof BRAIN_BUNDLE_KIND;
7
+ version: number;
8
+ exportedAt?: string;
9
+ sessions: Session[];
10
+ memories: Memory[];
11
+ observations: Record<string, CompressedObservation[]>;
12
+ quantBlob?: string;
13
+ }
14
+ export interface BundleCounts {
15
+ sessions: number;
16
+ memories: number;
17
+ observations: number;
18
+ }
19
+ /** Gather the durable store into a portable bundle. */
20
+ export declare function exportBundle(kv: StateKV): Promise<BrainBundle>;
21
+ /** Validate a parsed object is a bundle we can import. */
22
+ export declare function isBrainBundle(value: unknown): value is BrainBundle;
23
+ /**
24
+ * Write a bundle into a (typically fresh) store. Existing keys are
25
+ * overwritten (last-write-wins), matching the store's own semantics. The
26
+ * search/vector indexes rebuild lazily on the next mem::search.
27
+ */
28
+ export declare function importBundle(kv: StateKV, bundle: BrainBundle): Promise<BundleCounts>;