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Installer for the kijito-claude toolkit — context tracking, session catch-up, and self-clear scripts plus the Kijito skills, deployed into ~/.claude.

Project description

kijito-claude

Tools for Claude Code sessions to track their own context window and, optionally, run unattended. A session can catch up on memory at startup, report how much of its context window is actually in use, and recycle its context at high usage without losing the working state. It uses Kijito as the memory backend by default, and also runs standalone (see "Running without Kijito").

Everything here is optional. The catch-up and curation steps are a handful of memory calls you can run by hand; the scripts and the two skills just make the routine uniform and easy to deploy across machines. Install only the pieces you want — the context check stands alone, the autonomy harness is opt-in per pane, and the skills are convenience wrappers, not requirements.

Components

Component What it does Needs Kijito
myctx.sh, statusline-context.sh Report actual context-window usage from the API token counts recorded in the session transcript (the same numbers /context shows). Cheap to call. The statusline shows it live. No
Session catch-up (session-catchup-hint.sh, a SessionStart hook) Each session catches up on memory and notes before it starts on the task. Optional
Armed-pane autonomy (claude-armed.sh, arm-session.sh, session-autosend.sh) An armed tmux pane sends itself a first prompt and continues preloaded work. Arming is per pane, so one pane can run unattended while you drive another. Optional
Self-clear loop (self-clear.sh, lifecycle-lib.sh, kijito-qa-pass.sh) At high measured context, the session curates memory, confirms a fresh session can resume, runs /clear, then catches up again and continues. Gated so it will not clear with unsaved work. Optional (see note)
kijito-start skill The active, thorough version of session catch-up: load memory, read the current-state pointer and recent lessons, arm the inbox, and resume active work — or, for a new persona, set up identity and the pointer. Yes
kijito-qa-memory skill Memory curation that requires writing the new memories (not only fixing existing ones), then uses a fresh subagent to confirm a cold start can reconstruct the work. Yes

The two skills are conveniences, not the only way in: an agent can run the same catch-up and curation by hand from a few prompts. They are packaged as skills because that makes them simple to drop into ~/.claude/skills/ and invoke the same way everywhere.

The self-clear loop needs some durable store to carry the handoff across /clear. That is Kijito by default; a notes file works in standalone mode.

Install

From source:

git clone https://github.com/KijitoAI/kijito-claude
cd kijito-claude && ./install.sh

Or, once the v0.1 packages are published, with a package runner (no clone needed):

npx kijito-claude       # via npm
pipx run kijito-claude  # via PyPI  (uvx kijito-claude also works)

Both package runners do the same thing as the from-source install: they bundle the scripts and skills and run install.sh. They need bash, so on Windows run them inside WSL (see Platform support).

The installer copies the scripts to ~/.claude/, deploys the skills to ~/.claude/skills/, drops the CLAUDE.md doctrine snippet alongside them, and merges the keys it needs into settings.json. It backs up settings.json and merges with jq, so it leaves your existing settings alone and is safe to re-run, including on other machines. Requires jq. The autonomy features require tmux.

Platform support

The scripts are POSIX-style bash and avoid GNU-only flags (epoch and timestamp formatting work on both BSD and GNU date), so they run the same on Linux and macOS.

Platform Context check Catch-up + skills Armed-pane autonomy / self-clear
Linux yes yes yes (needs tmux)
macOS yes yes yes (needs tmux)
Windows via WSL yes yes yes — run claude inside the WSL distro, where tmux works
Windows native (no WSL) with Git Bash with Git Bash no — tmux is not available

On Windows, use WSL: install and launch claude inside the Linux distro and everything works as it does on native Linux. The autonomy harness drives a session by typing into its own tmux pane, which has no native-Windows equivalent, so without WSL only the context check and the by-hand catch-up apply. Requirements everywhere: bash and jq; add tmux for the autonomy features.

Managed vs. autonomous panes

Arming is per pane.

plain claude armed pane
Catch-up reminder only; you send the first prompt sends its own first prompt
Self-clear not allowed; you manage context allowed, after the gate below

To arm a pane, launch it with ~/.claude/claude-armed.sh, or tell the agent to go autonomous mid-session and it runs ~/.claude/arm-session.sh on (off turns it back off). A plain claude session stays under your control.

Self-clear gate

A pane clears itself only after both steps:

  1. /kijito-qa-memory curates memory, writes a current-state note that begins with RESUME NOW:, and confirms with a fresh subagent that a cold start can resume. It records a pass token.
  2. self-clear.sh checks that the pane is armed, is in tmux, has a fresh token, and is under the cycle cap.

It then runs /clear. The SessionStart hook catches the new session up and it resumes from the note. To stop all autonomous sending and clearing, create the file ~/.claude/.lifecycle/STOP.

Running without Kijito

The context check (myctx.sh) has no dependencies; install and run it.

For the autonomy harness, set KIJITO_MODE=off for a generic catch-up prompt, or set your own with KIJITO_AUTOCATCHUP_PROMPT. The self-clear gate only requires that some curation step write the pass token (~/.claude/kijito-qa-pass.sh). Kijito is the default backend, not a requirement.

Tests

bash tests/lc_test.sh

Covers arming, the token gate, the cycle cap, the checkpoint, the kill switch, and auto-send.

License

Apache 2.0. Copyright 2026 Arcada Labs. See LICENSE and NOTICE.

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