Files
mempalace-toolkit/README.md
T
joakimp 71c335148a docs(pi): full 'new machine' deploy recipe in extensions/pi/README
Consolidates the step-by-step recipe that's been living in diary entries
and session chat into the canonical pi bring-up doc. Covers:

  0. Prerequisites (zsh+oh-my-zsh, uv, tmux 3.2+, AWS creds)
  1. Dotfiles: myconfigs provision (tmux CSI-u, ~/.config/pi/.env, zsh loader)
  2. pi install (upstream brew/npm)
  3. mempalace CLI (uv tool install) + mempalace-toolkit install.sh
  4. pi settings bootstrap (start without --model, region prefix table)
  5. AWS env verification (git-crypt unlock gotcha)
  6. Opencode MCP registration pointer (if applicable)
  7. First run + wake-up injection smoke test
  + Verification checklist + uninstall

Root README.md adds a short summary box in the Setup section pointing at
the full recipe, so readers coming in from the front door find the pi
path immediately but the details stay with the files they install.

Covers: macOS + Linux. Works for homelab / work-macos / any myconfigs
profile that ships .config/pi/ + pi-env.zsh.
2026-05-05 15:20:47 +02:00

422 lines
24 KiB
Markdown

# mempalace-toolkit
Producer-side tooling for [MemPalace](https://github.com/MemPalace/mempalace) — bridges that feed opencode session history and project documentation into the palace. Pairs with the consumer-side [`mempalace` agent skill](https://github.com/MemPalace/mempalace).
**What this repo contains:**
- `bin/mempalace-session` — exports [opencode](https://github.com/anomalyco/opencode) session history from its local SQLite DB to Claude Code JSONL, then mines it via `mempalace mine --mode convos`.
- `bin/mempalace-docs` — mines project directories into MemPalace while excluding source code, keeping the palace signal-dense.
- [`ARCHITECTURE.md`](ARCHITECTURE.md) — **canonical spec**: architecture diagram, component details, setup recipe, operational notes, upstream-retirement roadmap.
- [`SKILL.md`](SKILL.md) — the companion agent skill, symlinked into `~/.agents/skills/opencode-mempalace-bridge/` on install.
- [`extensions/pi/`](extensions/pi/) — pi coding-agent bridge: the MemPalace MCP extension (symlinked), a mosh/tmux-friendly keybindings file (symlinked), and a `settings.example.json` template for starting pi without `--model`. `install.sh` also probes for `AWS_PROFILE`/`AWS_REGION` (needed by pi's Bedrock provider) and points at the recommended `~/.config/pi/.env` layout if missing.
**If you're just trying to get this working on a new machine → jump to [Setup](#setup).**
**If you want the full architecture story → read [`ARCHITECTURE.md`](ARCHITECTURE.md).**
---
## Why this exists
MemPalace is the agent memory layer. Its stock CLI has two gaps that bite on a machine running opencode with a docs-first palace policy:
1. **`mempalace mine` floods the palace with source code** — every `__init__` fragment, every generated file, hundreds of low-signal drawers per project. `mempalace-docs` fixes this by staging only documentation-class files (`*.md`, `*.yml`, `Dockerfile`, etc.) before mining.
2. **`mempalace mine --mode convos` can't read opencode's SQLite DB** — only file-based chat formats (Claude Code JSONL, Claude.ai JSON, ChatGPT, Slack, Codex). Opencode persists every turn in `~/.local/share/opencode/opencode.db` and has no upstream hook into mempalace's auto-save. `mempalace-session` fixes this by exporting each session to Claude Code JSONL before mining.
Both wrappers follow the same **stage-to-cache-then-mine** idiom. Neither reimplements the miner; they curate input and delegate.
Long-term, both should retire:
- `mempalace-docs` → retires when [MemPalace PR #1213](https://github.com/MemPalace/mempalace/pull/1213) (`exclude_patterns` in `mempalace.yaml`) merges.
- `mempalace-session` → retires when opencode session-stopping hooks ([PR #16598](https://github.com/anomalyco/opencode/pull/16598) et al.) merge **and** `hooks_cli.py` gains an `opencode` harness. Until both land, this repo fills the gap.
See [`ARCHITECTURE.md`](ARCHITECTURE.md) §6 for the full upstream roadmap.
---
## Setup
### Prerequisites
- [MemPalace](https://github.com/MemPalace/mempalace) CLI v3.3.3+ — **see [Installing mempalace itself](#installing-mempalace-itself-prerequisite) below if you haven't already**.
- Python 3 (stdlib `sqlite3` only — no extra deps)
- [opencode](https://github.com/anomalyco/opencode) with an active session DB at `~/.local/share/opencode/opencode.db` *(only needed for `mempalace-session`)*
- The mempalace **wake-up protocol** at `~/.config/opencode/instructions/mempalace.md` — without it, opencode loads the mempalace skill but never auto-runs it at session start, so most of mempalace's value is forfeited silently. Shipped by the [skillset repo](https://gitea.jordbo.se/joakimp/skillset); deploy via `./deploy-skills.sh --bootstrap` once per machine. `mempalace-toolkit/install.sh` probes for this file and warns if it's missing.
- The mempalace **MCP server registered in `~/.config/opencode/opencode.json`** — without this, opencode has no way to reach the mempalace tools and every `mempalace_*` call silently fails. See [Registering mempalace with opencode](#registering-mempalace-with-opencode-or-other-mcp-clients) below for the one-line JSON stanza. `install.sh` probes for this too.
### Installing mempalace itself (prerequisite)
mempalace-toolkit wraps the mempalace CLI but does not bundle it. The upstream [MemPalace repo](https://github.com/MemPalace/mempalace) documents `pip install mempalace` as the install method; `uv tool install` is cleaner and is the flow used in production containers like [opencode-devbox](https://gitea.jordbo.se/joakimp/opencode-devbox).
**Why uv over pip:**
- Isolated venv per tool — mempalace's dependencies (chromadb, embedding model runtime, …) don't leak into system Python or your project venvs.
- No PEP 668 fight — modern Debian / Ubuntu / Homebrew Python all refuse `pip install` into the system site-packages. `uv tool install` sidesteps this entirely.
- The shim (`~/.local/bin/mempalace` by default) is a thin wrapper that automatically activates the isolated venv on invocation, so `mempalace` is available from any bash or zsh terminal without manual `source venv/bin/activate`.
**Install uv** if it's not already on the machine:
```bash
# macOS / Linux, official installer — puts uv in ~/.local/bin
curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh
# Or: Homebrew on macOS
brew install uv
# Verify
uv --version
```
#### Personal machine (recommended default)
```bash
# Installs mempalace into an isolated venv under ~/.local/share/uv/tools/mempalace/,
# puts the `mempalace` shim into ~/.local/bin/.
uv tool install mempalace
# Make sure ~/.local/bin is on $PATH (uv prints this if it isn't)
export PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH" # add to ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc
# Verify
mempalace --version # should print the installed version
which mempalace # should point into ~/.local/bin/
```
After this, `mempalace` works the same from any bash or zsh terminal — interactive shell, script, cron, systemd user service, launchd agent, all fine.
To upgrade later: `uv tool upgrade mempalace` (or `--all`).
To uninstall: `uv tool uninstall mempalace`.
#### System-wide / container install (opencode-devbox pattern)
For a Docker image or a multi-user box where the shim should live on the system `PATH` rather than in each user's `~/.local/bin`, use `UV_TOOL_DIR` + `UV_TOOL_BIN_DIR` to relocate both the venv and the shim:
```bash
# In the Dockerfile — this is the pattern used by opencode-devbox
ENV UV_TOOL_DIR=/opt/uv-tools
ENV UV_TOOL_BIN_DIR=/usr/local/bin
RUN mkdir -p /opt/uv-tools && \
uv tool install --no-cache mempalace && \
/opt/uv-tools/mempalace/bin/python -c "import mempalace; print('mempalace installed')"
```
After this:
- `/opt/uv-tools/mempalace/` — the isolated venv.
- `/usr/local/bin/mempalace` — the CLI shim (globally on `PATH`, works for every user).
The last `python -c` line in the RUN step is a build-time sanity check: if the install silently failed, the build fails here rather than at runtime.
See [opencode-devbox/Dockerfile](https://gitea.jordbo.se/joakimp/opencode-devbox/src/branch/main/Dockerfile) §"MemPalace install" for the full production version (adds `INSTALL_MEMPALACE=true` build arg so the install can be skipped to shave ~300 MB off the image).
#### Registering mempalace with opencode (or other MCP clients)
Installing `mempalace` via `uv tool install` puts two shims on `PATH`: `mempalace` (the CLI) and `mempalace-mcp` (the MCP server). Neither the skill nor `mempalace-toolkit` will give you anything useful in opencode until the MCP server is registered in `~/.config/opencode/opencode.json`.
**Add to opencode.json:**
```json
{
"$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json",
"mcp": {
"mempalace": {
"type": "local",
"command": ["mempalace-mcp"]
}
}
}
```
If you already have other MCP servers configured, add the `mempalace` entry into the existing `mcp` object — don't replace the whole file. opencode's JSON is merged shallow-ly.
**Minimal full opencode.json for someone starting fresh** (adjust `model` to your preferred provider):
```json
{
"$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json",
"model": "anthropic/claude-opus-4-6",
"share": "disabled",
"autoupdate": false,
"instructions": [
"~/.config/opencode/instructions/mempalace.md"
],
"mcp": {
"mempalace": {
"type": "local",
"command": ["mempalace-mcp"]
}
}
}
```
Note the `instructions` array: this is what tells opencode to load the wake-up protocol at session start (see the previous section on installing that file via `skillset --bootstrap`).
**Custom palace path** (rare — default `~/.mempalace/palace/` works for everyone):
```json
"command": ["mempalace-mcp", "--palace", "/path/to/palace"]
```
**Claude Code** has a one-liner helper:
```bash
claude mcp add mempalace -- mempalace-mcp
```
…or `mempalace mcp` prints the current recommended snippets on demand:
```bash
mempalace mcp # shows `claude mcp add` + direct-run commands
```
**After editing the config**, restart opencode (or your MCP client). Verify the connection:
```bash
# From inside an opencode session:
# mempalace_status → should return palace stats, not "tool unavailable"
```
If the MCP tools don't show up in your agent's tool list, the most common causes are:
| Symptom | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| `mempalace_*` tools absent from tool list entirely | opencode.json not re-read | Restart opencode. |
| Server reported "unavailable" at startup | Shim not on `PATH`, or CLI itself broken | Run `mempalace-mcp --help` manually; fix PATH or re-run `uv tool install mempalace`. |
| `ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'mempalace'` in logs | You configured `["python3", "-m", "mempalace.mcp_server"]` instead of `["mempalace-mcp"]` | Use the shim. See the legacy-fallback section below if you specifically need the python-invocation form. |
#### Legacy fallback: `mempalace-mcp-server` wrapper
Older MCP configs sometimes reference `["python3", "-m", "mempalace.mcp_server"]`. This worked when mempalace was installed via `pip install --break-system-packages` into the system site-packages, but breaks after switching to `uv tool install` — system `python3` cannot import mempalace from the isolated venv. On opencode-devbox a thin wrapper script on `PATH` bridged the two worlds during the transition:
```sh
#!/bin/sh
# /usr/local/bin/mempalace-mcp-server
exec /opt/uv-tools/mempalace/bin/python -m mempalace.mcp_server "$@"
```
With the wrapper in place, MCP configs referencing `["mempalace-mcp-server"]` work on a `uv tool install` setup.
**This is legacy; don't use it for new installs.** The modern `["mempalace-mcp"]` form — the uv-tool shim — does the same job without the extra script. The wrapper is documented here only so you know what to look for if you encounter an older config or a machine that was set up during the transition.
#### Verification checklist
After any install (personal or system-wide), confirm:
```bash
# CLI reachable from PATH
which mempalace # → a shim path
mempalace --version # → v3.3.3+ without import errors
# CLI can import its own modules (catches venv vs site-packages mismatch)
mempalace status 2>&1 | head -3 # → either palace stats or "No palace found" — not a Python traceback
# MCP shim reachable and runnable
which mempalace-mcp # → a shim path matching the `mempalace` CLI location
mempalace-mcp --help 2>&1 | head -5 # → MCP server help, not a Python traceback
```
If any of these produce `ModuleNotFoundError`, the isolated venv is broken — re-run `uv tool install --force mempalace` (or the system-install equivalent with `UV_TOOL_DIR` set) and check the verification again.
### Install mempalace-toolkit
```bash
git clone ssh://git@gitea.jordbo.se:2222/joakimp/mempalace-toolkit.git ~/mempalace-toolkit
cd ~/mempalace-toolkit
./install.sh
```
The installer symlinks `bin/*` into `~/.local/bin/` and installs the agent skill into `~/.agents/skills/opencode-mempalace-bridge/`. If [pi](https://github.com/mariozechner/pi-coding-agent) is installed (detected via `~/.pi/agent/extensions/`), it also symlinks [`extensions/pi/mempalace.ts`](extensions/pi/) into that directory so the pi↔mempalace bridge tracks version control. On machines without pi this step is silently skipped. Works on macOS and Linux.
Ensure `~/.local/bin` is on `$PATH`:
```bash
export PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH"
```
**If `install.sh` reports `Skipping <name> — already exists`:** there's a leftover symlink or file at `~/.local/bin/<name>` from a previous install (e.g. the pre-split `cli_utils` days). The installer prints the exact `rm && ./install.sh` command to fix it — remove the stale entry and re-run. It will never clobber an existing file without the user explicitly removing it first.
### Deploying pi on a new machine (full recipe)
If the target machine also runs [pi](https://github.com/mariozechner/pi-coding-agent), there's a longer multi-step recipe covering dotfiles provisioning (tmux CSI-u keys, `~/.config/pi/.env`, zsh loader), mempalace install, pi settings bootstrap (starting pi without `--model`), and the AWS env verification. It lives in **[`extensions/pi/README.md` § Deploying pi on a new machine](extensions/pi/README.md#deploying-pi-on-a-new-machine)** so the step-by-step stays next to the files it installs.
Quick summary:
```bash
# 1. Dotfiles (tmux extended-keys, ~/.config/pi/.env, pi-env.zsh)
git clone <myconfigs> && cd myconfigs && ./provision.sh --profile <profile>
# 2. pi (upstream) 3. mempalace CLI
brew install pi-coding-agent uv tool install mempalace
# 4. This repo's install.sh
cd ~/mempalace-toolkit && ./install.sh
# 5. pi settings (one-time bootstrap, region-specific)
cp extensions/pi/settings.example.json ~/.pi/agent/settings.json
$EDITOR ~/.pi/agent/settings.json # adjust eu./us./anthropic: prefix
# 6. Open fresh shell, run `pi`. Wake-up auto-injection proves end-to-end.
```
### First mine
```bash
# Mine opencode session history into wing_conversations (no init needed)
mempalace-session --dry-run # preview qualifying sessions
mempalace-session # do it (~20 min per 60 sessions)
# Mine a project (docs only). If you want to pre-init the project with a
# custom wing name or entity config, run `mempalace init --yes <dir>` first;
# otherwise `mempalace-docs` derives the wing from the directory name.
mempalace-docs /workspace/my_project --dry-run
mempalace-docs /workspace/my_project
```
> **Note:** mempalace has no one-time global init. The palace itself is created lazily on first write (at `~/.mempalace/palace/`). `mempalace init <dir>` is a *per-project* command that sets up a `mempalace.yaml` + entity list for a specific source directory — optional, not a prerequisite for either wrapper.
### Diary vs session mine: why keep both?
Automated session mining captures every turn verbatim into `wing_conversations`. But agents are still expected to write a short AAAK-compressed diary entry at wind-down (the consumer-side `mempalace` skill calls this out as mandatory). They're not redundant — they answer different questions:
- **Session mine** = git log with diffs. *"What did we say exactly?"* Raw, searchable, complete. High noise.
- **Diary** = release notes. *"What did we decide / learn / accomplish?"* Curated, compressed, recency-scanned. The agent's editorial judgment of what mattered, including meta-observations that were never said aloud.
A machine running only one of these has half a memory. Full treatment with practical implications in [`ARCHITECTURE.md` §5 → "Diary vs session mine: why keep both?"](ARCHITECTURE.md#diary-vs-session-mine-why-keep-both). Short answer: automate the mine, keep writing diaries, and let them specialize.
### Keeping it fresh (automation)
Manual invocation is fine while you're actively driving the machine, but long-running devboxes benefit from a weekly automated mine. [`contrib/`](contrib/) ships ready-to-install templates:
- **systemd user timer** (recommended on Linux): survives reboots, catches missed runs, logs to `journalctl`.
- **launchd user agent** (recommended on macOS): native-equivalent — logs to `~/Library/Logs/`, single-instance guarantees, `ProcessType=Background` throttling.
- **cron**: simplest, works on BSD and systemd-less distros. No user-unit awareness needed.
- **Devbox variants** (`*-devbox.*`): if you run `mempalace-session` inside a long-lived container (e.g. [opencode-devbox](https://gitea.jordbo.se/joakimp/opencode-devbox)), the scheduler lives on the **host** and uses `docker exec` to reach the tool inside the container. Systemd and cron variants are included; both guard against "container currently stopped" so the timer is safe to leave enabled across dev cycles.
Quick-start (Linux / systemd, weekly Mon 03:00 local):
```bash
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
```
Quick-start (macOS / launchd, same schedule):
```bash
sed "s|USER|$USER|g" contrib/launchd/se.jordbo.mempalace-session.plist \
> ~/Library/LaunchAgents/se.jordbo.mempalace-session.plist
mkdir -p ~/Library/Logs
launchctl bootstrap "gui/$(id -u)" ~/Library/LaunchAgents/se.jordbo.mempalace-session.plist
launchctl enable "gui/$(id -u)/se.jordbo.mempalace-session"
```
Quick-start (host-side scheduling for a long-running opencode-devbox container):
```bash
# systemd on the host → docker exec into the container
mkdir -p ~/.config/systemd/user
cp contrib/systemd/mempalace-session-devbox.{service,timer} ~/.config/systemd/user/
systemctl --user daemon-reload
systemctl --user enable --now mempalace-session-devbox.timer
# If your container isn't named 'opencode-devbox' or its user isn't
# 'developer', run `systemctl --user edit mempalace-session-devbox.service`
# to set CONTAINER / CONTAINER_USER via an override.
```
See [`contrib/README.md`](contrib/README.md) for full install/verify/uninstall recipes, tuning, chooser table (host vs. devbox), and devbox/container caveats. The full operational routine (triggers, cadence, verification) is in [`ARCHITECTURE.md`](ARCHITECTURE.md) §5.
### Containerized (devbox) notes
On a Docker-based devbox, the palace and opencode DB should live on named volumes so they survive container recreate:
- `devbox-palace``~/.mempalace/palace`
- `devbox-data``~/.local/share/opencode`
This repo is typically bind-mounted from the host, so code survives recreate and syncs via git. After a container recreate, `~/.local/bin` is wiped — just re-run `./install.sh` (idempotent) to relink.
---
## `mempalace-docs`
Docs-only MemPalace miner. Stages documentation files into a cache dir and runs `mempalace mine` against the cache — never against the raw project dir.
```bash
mempalace-docs <directory> # mine with wing = dirname
mempalace-docs <directory> --wing my_project # override wing name
mempalace-docs <directory> --agent alice # record agent on drawers
mempalace-docs <directory> --dry-run # list files, don't file
mempalace-docs <directory> --repair # opt-in post-mine repair (risky, interactive only)
mempalace-docs --help
```
**What gets mined:** `*.md`, `*.mdx`, `*.rst`, `*.txt`, `*.yml`, `*.yaml`, `*.toml`, `*.json`, `*.sh`, `*.bash`, `*.zsh`, `*.fish`, `Dockerfile*`, `Makefile*`, `*.conf`, `*.cfg`, `*.ini`, `LICENSE*`, `COPYING*`, `NOTICE*`.
**What gets skipped:** `.py`, `.ts`, `.tsx`, `.js`, `.jsx`, `.go`, `.rs`, `.java`, `.cpp`, `.c`, `.rb`, `.kt`, `.swift`, build output directories (`.git`, `.venv`, `node_modules`, `__pycache__`, `.mypy_cache`, `.pytest_cache`, `.ruff_cache`, `dist`, `build`, `.next`, `target`, `coverage`), lockfiles.
**Rationale:** the palace is for *context and intent*. Agents already have `grep`/`glob`/`Read` for code — always authoritative, never stale. Embedding source code creates a parallel, lossier, drift-prone copy that pollutes semantic search for years.
---
## `mempalace-session`
Opencode → MemPalace session bridge. Reads `~/.local/share/opencode/opencode.db`, transforms each session into Claude Code JSONL, and files via `mempalace mine --mode convos`.
```bash
mempalace-session # mine all sessions (≥3 msgs)
mempalace-session --wing my_convos # custom wing (default: wing_conversations)
mempalace-session --session ses_abc123 # one session only
mempalace-session --since 2026-04-01 # only sessions updated on/after date
mempalace-session --min-messages 6 # stricter short-session filter
mempalace-session --db /custom/path/opencode.db # non-default DB location
mempalace-session --dry-run # export + list, skip mine
mempalace-session --repair # opt-in post-mine repair (risky, interactive only)
mempalace-session --help
```
**What gets exported per session:**
- Synthetic header injected as the first user turn (`[session: <title> | <dir> | <date>]`) so the palace can find sessions by topic, not just by ID.
- Each message → Claude Code JSONL line (`{"type": "user"|"assistant", "message": {"content": ...}}`).
- Tool calls → `tool_use` blocks. Known tools (`Bash`, `Read`, `Grep`, `Edit`, `Write`) get formatted summaries; unknown tools are JSON-serialized.
- Tool outputs → `tool_result` blocks in a follow-up human message, folded back into the assistant turn by the mempalace normalizer.
- `step-start` / `step-finish` parts are dropped as noise. `reasoning` parts are kept with a `[reasoning]` prefix.
**Dedup:** staging at `~/.cache/mempalace-session/<wing>/` with deterministic per-session filenames (`<slug>_<id>.jsonl`). The convos miner keys on `source_file`, so re-runs skip unchanged sessions. To force re-mining a session, delete its JSONL from the staging dir.
**`--dry-run` is dedup-aware.** Each session is tagged `[NEW]` (would be filed) or `[SKIP]` (already in the palace), and the summary breaks down the count:
```
Exported 62 session(s) to ~/.cache/mempalace-session/wing_conversations
0 new → will be filed on mine
62 already filed → will be skipped (dedup by source_file)
--dry-run: no new sessions to mine. A real run would skip all 62.
```
If the palace is unreachable (fresh install, moved, permission-denied) the wrapper falls back to "everything is new" — the real mine step delegates dedup to `mempalace mine --mode convos`, which is always the source of truth. So running `mempalace-session` twice in a row is never destructive or wasteful: the second run's only cost is the post-mine HNSW `repair` step (~5 min on a ~5k-drawer palace).
**Filter:** sessions with fewer than `--min-messages` messages (default 3) are skipped — drops throwaway `/exit`'d sessions that would otherwise flood the palace. On a reference 140-session corpus, 78 were filtered this way.
**Cost profile:** ~20 minutes per 60-session batch. Scales roughly linearly with message count. Dedup re-run: mine step instant, only the post-mine `repair` runs (~5 min on 5k drawers).
---
## Companion agent skill
Installing this repo symlinks `SKILL.md` into `~/.agents/skills/opencode-mempalace-bridge/SKILL.md`, where it's auto-discovered by opencode (and by Claude Code / Kiro if you run `agents-sync` from [`cli_utils`](https://gitea.jordbo.se/joakimp/cli_utils)).
The skill is the *short-form checklist* for agents — when to use which wrapper, failure modes, setup recipes, anti-patterns. The canonical reference is always [`ARCHITECTURE.md`](ARCHITECTURE.md); the skill points there for deep context.
The skill pairs with the consumer-side [`mempalace` skill](https://github.com/MemPalace/mempalace) — that one covers using the palace (search, diary, KG); this one covers feeding it.
**Colocated skill pattern.** The skill lives here (not in [`skillset`](https://gitea.jordbo.se/joakimp/skillset)) because it moves in lockstep with the wrappers it documents. `install.sh` drops a `.skill-source` marker file in the deployed skill directory so sibling tooling (skillset's `deploy-skills.sh`, cli_utils's `agents-sync.zsh`) can tell the directory is externally owned. See [`AGENTS.md`](AGENTS.md) for the full convention and how to adopt it for future colocated skills.
---
## See also
- [`ARCHITECTURE.md`](ARCHITECTURE.md) — canonical spec: diagrams, setup recipe, failure modes, upstream roadmap.
- [`AGENTS.md`](AGENTS.md) — repo conventions for AI agents modifying this codebase.
- [MemPalace](https://github.com/MemPalace/mempalace) — the memory layer itself.
- [opencode](https://github.com/anomalyco/opencode) — the agent harness this bridges.
- [cli_utils](https://gitea.jordbo.se/joakimp/cli_utils) — sibling repo with shell quality-of-life tools (origin of these wrappers before the 2026-04-30 split).