Files
mempalace-toolkit/SKILL.md
T
Joakim Persson 36845e14b2 Document the operational routine + ship automation templates
Until opencode session-stopping hooks land upstream, mempalace-session
is the entire mechanism that gets opencode conversations into the
palace — skip it and session history stays trapped in a local SQLite
DB, invisible to semantic search. Previous docs covered setup well
but were thin on when and how often to run it.

- ARCHITECTURE.md §5: replace the one-line 'When to re-mine' note with
  a full Operational Routine section — triggers, cadence, relationship
  to the session lifecycle, automation pointers, verification.
- SKILL.md: add an Operational Routine section aimed at agents —
  when to suggest invoking the tool, cadence guidance, how to
  distinguish this producer-side tool from the consumer-side
  mempalace skill's in-session habits.
- README.md: add 'Keeping it fresh' subsection pointing at contrib/
  and the full docs.

contrib/ ships three ready-to-use templates:
- systemd/mempalace-session.{service,timer} — user units with weekly
  Mon 03:00 schedule, Persistent=true catch-up, RandomizedDelaySec for
  fleet-wide jitter, ConditionPathExists guard for opencode-less boxes,
  Nice+IOSchedulingClass=idle so it never fights interactive work.
- cron/mempalace-session.cron — sample crontab entry with log
  redirection and clear USER-substitution instructions.
- README.md with install/verify/uninstall recipes for both, a chooser
  table (systemd vs cron), container/devbox caveats, and tuning notes
  (daily vs weekly vs monthly trade-offs).

The user's LATER-list item 'wrap mempalace-session in cron/systemd
timer for true auto-save coverage' is now actionable: a single
systemctl --user enable --now command stands it up.
2026-04-30 06:29:55 +00:00

12 KiB
Raw Blame History

name, description
name description
opencode-mempalace-bridge Set up the producer side of MemPalace — feed opencode session history and project docs into the palace via the wrappers in the mempalace-toolkit repo. Use when provisioning a new machine, when the user asks how palace feeding works, when opencode sessions aren't showing up in searches, or when a project needs docs-only mining. Pairs with the `mempalace` skill (consumer side).

Opencode ↔ MemPalace Bridge (producer side)

Overview

The mempalace skill covers using the palace (search, diary, KG). This skill covers feeding it — specifically, how to wire opencode session history and project docs into the palace on a new machine or after a container recreate.

Authoritative source: /workspace/mempalace-toolkit/ARCHITECTURE.md (also at the root of the mempalace-toolkit repo on gitea). When in doubt, read that file — it's the canonical spec. This skill is the short-form checklist.

Core idea: two thin wrappers in mempalace-toolkit/bin/ close gaps in the stock mempalace CLI:

Gap Wrapper
mempalace mine floods the palace with source code we don't want mempalace-docs
mempalace mine --mode convos can't read opencode's SQLite DB mempalace-session

Both follow the same stage-to-cache-then-mine idiom — they curate input into ~/.cache/…/<wing>/, then delegate to mempalace mine.

When to Load This Skill

  • User asks "how does the palace get fed?" or mentions setting up mempalace on a new machine.
  • Opencode conversations are missing from palace searches (wing_conversations is empty or stale).
  • A project needs to be mined but you want docs only, no source code.
  • User asks about mempalace-docs or mempalace-session.
  • After a container recreate on a devbox — the wrappers need reinstall.
  • Planning to retire either wrapper once upstream PRs merge (see §6 of ARCHITECTURE.md).

Setup Recipe (new machine)

Prerequisites: opencode installed with an active DB at ~/.local/share/opencode/opencode.db, mempalace CLI v3.3.3+, Python 3 (stdlib sqlite3 only — no extra deps).

# 1. Clone mempalace-toolkit (holds the two wrappers in bin/)
git clone ssh://git@gitea.jordbo.se:2222/joakimp/mempalace-toolkit.git ~/mempalace-toolkit
cd ~/mempalace-toolkit

# 2. Install — symlinks bin/* into ~/.local/bin, adds loader to rc file
./install.sh

# 3. Verify ~/.local/bin is on PATH
which mempalace-session mempalace-docs

# 4. Initialize palace (one-time, platform-wide)
mempalace init --yes

# 5. Mine opencode session history into wing_conversations
mempalace-session --dry-run              # preview: which sessions qualify?
mempalace-session                        # do it (~20 min per 60 sessions)

# 6. Mine project docs per project (docs only — no source code)
mempalace-docs /workspace/my_project --dry-run
mempalace-docs /workspace/my_project

# 7. If a long-lived MCP session is open, reconnect it
#    (from inside the MCP client): mempalace_reconnect

Containerized (devbox) specifics

Named Docker volumes preserve state across container recreate:

  • devbox-palace~/.mempalace/palace
  • devbox-data~/.local/share/opencode

Bind mount /workspace/mempalace-toolkit from the host — code survives recreate, syncs via gitea.

After container recreate: ~/.local/bin is ephemeral. Just re-run ./install.sh (idempotent) — everything else already persists.

Key Operational Rules

Always dry-run first on a cold system

mempalace-session --dry-run       # shows qualifying sessions
mempalace-docs <dir> --dry-run    # shows files that would be mined

A docs-heavy repo should produce ~510 drawers per file. >15 drawers/file on average = code leaked in; investigate.

Dedup is free — re-running is safe

  • mempalace-docs: dedup keyed on source_file path + mtime. Unchanged files skipped.
  • mempalace-session: dedup keyed on source_file path alone (no mtime check for convos). Staging filenames are deterministic per session (<slug>_<id>.jsonl), so re-runs skip already-filed sessions.

Second run immediately after first → 0 new drawers, only the post-mine repair step runs (~5 min on 5k drawers).

Incremental catch-up

mempalace-session --since 2026-04-20          # only recent sessions
mempalace-session --session ses_abc123        # one specific session

Force re-mine

rm -rf ~/.cache/mempalace-session/<wing>/     # nukes staging dir
mempalace-session                              # stages + mines fresh

Staging is ephemeral by design; the palace is the source of truth.

Operational Routine (when to invoke)

Until upstream opencode session hooks land, mempalace-session is the entire mechanism that gets opencode conversations into the palace. If the user's opencode history isn't showing up in mempalace_search, the most likely cause is "mempalace-session hasn't been run recently".

Agent-level triggers

Suggest invoking the tool when any of these apply:

  • User asks "why can't you find our conversation from earlier?" / "you should remember this from last week" → the palace may not have the opencode session yet. Check mempalace_list_wings for wing_conversations; if the last drawer there is older than the referenced conversation, run mempalace-session.
  • User mentions an upcoming container recreate / system migration / OS reinstall → suggest a full mine first as a backup checkpoint. The opencode DB normally survives via named volumes, but an explicit mine is cheap insurance.
  • User has just set up a new machine and asks about mempalace → part of the recipe is the initial backfill. Run mempalace-session --dry-run first to show scope, then the real mine.
  • User completed a substantive session they want preserved past /exit → offer a targeted mempalace-session --session <id> right then.
  • User asks "how do I keep this up to date?" → point at contrib/ (systemd timer or cron recipes).

Cadence guidance

Situation Suggested cadence
Active devbox, daily opencode use Weekly automated (systemd timer or cron)
Occasional opencode user Monthly manual or weekly automated
Fresh machine / first setup One-shot full backfill, then schedule
"I'm about to rebuild the container" Run now, as a checkpoint
Automated daily mines Pass --no-repair + schedule weekly repair separately

Don't suggest running more often than daily — the post-mine HNSW repair (~5 min on 5k drawers) dominates cost, and session growth is slow enough that daily is already overkill.

Relationship to the mempalace skill

The consumer-side mempalace skill covers in-session habits (wake-up search, wind-down diary). mempalace-session is between-session maintenance — it runs when no agent session is active, typically automated. Both are needed:

  • Wake-up/wind-down → curated summaries (what mattered, what was decided)
  • mempalace-session → raw turns (the actual words exchanged)

A machine running only one of these has half a memory. Agents loading the mempalace skill on an opencode machine should be aware this tool exists and point users at it if they ask about persistence.

Quick automation pitch

If the user has a devbox and hasn't set up automation, offer it:

# One-time setup (modern Linux, systemd user timer)
cd ~/mempalace-toolkit
mkdir -p ~/.config/systemd/user
cp contrib/systemd/*.{service,timer} ~/.config/systemd/user/
systemctl --user daemon-reload
systemctl --user enable --now mempalace-session.timer
sudo loginctl enable-linger "$USER"   # optional, for headless boxes

Full install/verify/uninstall recipes for both systemd and cron are in contrib/README.md. The quick-start above defaults to weekly runs on Monday 03:00 local time with a ≤30 min randomized delay.

Failure Modes & Fixes

Symptom Cause Fix
mempalace-session: command not found ~/.local/bin wiped (container recreate) cd ~/mempalace-toolkit && ./install.sh --yes
Sessions missing from palace Fewer messages than --min-messages (default 3) Lower threshold or --session <id> explicitly
"Error finding id" on search after mining Stale HNSW index mempalace repair --yes + mempalace_reconnect
Drawers doubled for a project Someone ran raw mempalace mine alongside wrapper, or renamed wing mid-flight Inspect embedding_metadata in chroma.sqlite3, purge duplicates by source prefix, then mempalace repair
Post-mine ChromaDB search returns stale results in MCP MCP server caches old index Call mempalace_reconnect from MCP
Opencode DB not at default path Non-standard XDG_DATA_HOME or opencode config export OPENCODE_DB=/custom/path/opencode.db or --db

What to File Under Which Wing

Content type Wing (convention) Room Tool
Opencode session transcripts wing_conversations auto (keyword) mempalace-session
Project docs (md, yaml, Dockerfile) wing_<project-name> auto mempalace-docs
Per-agent session diaries wing_<agent-name> diary mempalace_diary_write (from the consumer-side mempalace skill)
Ad-hoc verbatim facts any any mempalace_add_drawer

Cost Profile (reference)

From a 10-day opencode corpus (140 sessions / 1491 msgs / 4656 parts):

  • Dry run: seconds.
  • Full mine: ~21 min wall / ~38 min user CPU → 2378 drawers from 62 qualifying sessions.
  • Dedup re-run: mine instant, repair ~5 min.

Budget ~20 minutes per 60-session batch. Scales roughly linearly with message count.

Anti-Patterns

  • Don't run mempalace mine directly on a project. Use mempalace-docs — otherwise source code floods the palace.
  • Don't try to point mempalace mine --mode convos at opencode.db directly. The convos miner reads files (txt/md/json/jsonl) only — no SQLite support. Use mempalace-session to export first.
  • Don't delete staging dirs unnecessarily. They're dedup anchors; deleting means a forced re-mine of everything in that wing.
  • Don't forget mempalace_reconnect after a mine from inside a live MCP session — otherwise search hits the stale index.
  • Don't mine with --min-messages 0 or 1 — 78 out of 140 sessions in reference corpus were throwaway /exit'd sessions that would flood the palace with noise. Default 3 is sensible.

Upstream Roadmap (when to retire these wrappers)

  • MemPalace PR #1213 merges → mempalace-docs becomes redundant (exclude patterns in mempalace.yaml). Retire to thin shim or delete.
  • Opencode session-stopping hooks merge (PR #16598 et al.) AND hooks_cli.py gains opencode harness → live auto-save works; mempalace-session becomes a manual-only backfill tool (cron / historic import).
  • SQLite mode lands in mempalace mine --mode convosmempalace-session loses its reason to exist entirely.

Check ARCHITECTURE.md §6 in mempalace-toolkit/ for current upstream status before doing any retirement work.

See Also

  • <mempalace-toolkit>/ARCHITECTURE.mdcanonical spec (diagrams, implementation notes, full troubleshooting).
  • <mempalace-toolkit>/README.md — per-tool usage reference.
  • ~/.agents/skills/mempalace/SKILL.md — consumer-side skill (search, diary, KG) — pair this skill with that one.