Skip to main content

Cross-agent observational memory and local search for Claude Code, Codex CLI, Grok Build TUI, Cowork, and Hermes Agent

Project description

Observational Memory

Observational Memory header showing local agent memory moving through Codex hooks, Claude, Grok, ChatGPT Memory, Claude Cowork, and Hermes.

PyPI version PyPI downloads CI GitHub stars

Local memory for the agents you already use.

Observational Memory, or om, gives Claude Code, Codex, Grok Build TUI, Claude Cowork, and Hermes one shared memory on your machine. It watches agent transcripts, writes useful notes into local Markdown files, and gives new sessions a compact startup context. You can search that memory later, export reviewed memory bundles for hosted platforms, or opt in to encrypted multi-machine sync with OM Cluster.

The current release is v0.6.6. It includes:

  • See and cap LLM spend — every observe/reflect call records tokens and an estimated cost, with token/dollar budgets (hard or soft, per day/month/session) that stop a runaway job before it bills (om usage status, om usage budget)
  • Offline reflection via OpenAI Batchom reflect --async submits a job and om jobs poll applies it later, at ~50% token cost on a metered OpenAI key
  • Cheaper, faster observe/reflect — bounded reflector input, ChatGPT Codex reasoning-effort control, and Anthropic prompt caching
  • Higher-quality startup context — cross-section de-duplication, freshness markers on stale operational facts, and cwd/task-aware scope, inspectable with om context --quality-report
  • om login for your ChatGPT or SuperGrok subscription so the observer and reflector run off your existing plan instead of a metered API key
  • first-class Grok Build TUI hooks and transcript observation
  • budgeted startup context through om context, with compact profile projection and project-level active-context routing
  • first-class recall through om recall
  • richer reflection metadata and host-memory controls
  • OM Cluster relay operations, health checks, and public-safe validation docs
  • Windows, macOS, and Linux install paths

For configuration of all of these — providers, usage budgets, async Batch, and startup quality — see docs/configuration.md. Subscription-auth background is in docs/RELEASE-0.6.5.md.

Quick Install

macOS with Homebrew:

brew install intertwine/tap/observational-memory
om install
om doctor

Linux, macOS, or Windows with uv:

uv tool install observational-memory
om install
om doctor

Install the optional enterprise auth extras if you use Anthropic through Vertex AI or Bedrock:

uv tool install "observational-memory[enterprise]"

What It Does

om keeps four main memory files under your local data directory:

File Purpose
observations.md Recent notes from sessions and checkpoints.
reflections.md Longer-term facts, preferences, decisions, and active work.
profile.md Compact stable context for startup.
active.md Compact current context for startup.

Those files are plain Markdown. You can read them, back them up, and search them.

Default paths:

Platform Memory directory Config directory
macOS / Linux ~/.local/share/observational-memory/ ~/.config/observational-memory/
Windows %LOCALAPPDATA%\observational-memory\ %APPDATA%\observational-memory\

How Memory Flows

flowchart LR
    A["Claude Code, Codex, Grok, Cowork, Hermes logs"] --> B["om observe"]
    C["Claude auto-memory files"] --> D["search index"]
    B --> E["observations.md"]
    E --> F["om reflect"]
    D --> F
    F --> G["reflections.md"]
    G --> H["profile.md + active.md"]
    H --> I["om context startup pack"]
    G --> J["om recall / om search"]

First Week Workflow

  1. Install om.
  2. Run om install and answer the provider questions.
  3. Run om doctor.
  4. Start using Claude Code, Codex, or Grok normally.
  5. Search memory when you need it:
om recall --query "current project status"
om search "release checklist"
  1. Check generated startup context:
om context --for codex --cwd "$PWD" --task "finish docs"

Guides

Start here:

Agent Support

Host Current support
Claude Code Hooks for startup context and checkpoints.
Codex Hooks-first startup and Stop checkpoints, with an AGENTS fallback.
Grok Build TUI Native hook file with Claude-compatibility awareness, plus updates.jsonl observation.
Claude Cowork Local plugin on macOS with hooks and /recall.
Hermes External memory-provider plugin through intertwine/hermes-observational-memory, plus manual session-log ingestion.
ChatGPT / Claude Managed Agents Reviewed export bundles through om export; om does not silently write hosted memory.

Common Commands

om status
om doctor
om observe --source codex
om reflect
om reflect --async              # submit an offline OpenAI Batch job (API-key 'openai')
om jobs poll                    # apply completed async jobs
om recall --query "what was decided about sync?"
om recall --handle startup:active
om search "preferences" --json
om usage status                 # token usage, cost, and budgets
om usage budget set --daily-usd 5.00
om context --quality-report     # startup-context dedup / freshness / budget report
om export --target chatgpt
om export --target claude-managed-agents --output ./om-claude-memory

OM Cluster is off until you initialize or join a cluster:

om cluster init --name "Personal Memory" --transport filesystem:~/Sync/om-cluster --import-existing
om cluster invite --expires 10m
om cluster join "omc1:..."
om cluster requests
om cluster approve join_...
om cluster sync
om cluster status

Do not sync ~/.local/share/observational-memory/ directly with Dropbox, iCloud, Syncthing, rsync, or a NAS. Use the cluster transport directory instead.

Architecture At A Glance

Observational Memory system diagram showing agent hooks feeding shared local markdown memory, search, and reflection.

The short version:

  • om observe turns transcripts into recent notes.
  • om reflect turns recent notes into durable memory.
  • om context gives agents a bounded startup pack.
  • om recall and om search retrieve more when the startup pack is not enough.
  • om export prepares reviewed memory seed bundles for hosted systems.
  • om cluster syncs encrypted records across machines when you opt in.

Release State

v0.6.6 is the current release. It adds a host-local usage/cost/budget subsystem (om usage), offline reflection through the OpenAI Batch API (om reflect --async, om jobs), observe/reflect cost-and-latency improvements (bounded reflector input, Codex reasoning-effort control, Anthropic prompt caching), and startup-context quality controls (cross-section de-duplication, freshness markers, cwd/task scope, om context --quality-report). It builds on v0.6.5 subscription auth (om login) and the v0.6.4 SessionStart timeout hardening (make verify-session-start).

Before the next release, maintainers should run:

make check
uv run ruff check .
uv run ruff format --check .
uv run pytest

See docs/MAINTAINERS.md for the full release workflow.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

observational_memory-0.6.6.tar.gz (2.6 MB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

observational_memory-0.6.6-py3-none-any.whl (224.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file observational_memory-0.6.6.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: observational_memory-0.6.6.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 2.6 MB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.11.15

File hashes

Hashes for observational_memory-0.6.6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9263b1345d3bba5b1899b8e38eea7f5e2f1ac257f5f757a74adeee5af0d78378
MD5 e3c681e5566a63f06fa8b4107ef40232
BLAKE2b-256 142617e3781b1eb264b618003746ab6a16db1d8f6801824dc6cb36197998f499

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file observational_memory-0.6.6-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for observational_memory-0.6.6-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 bfd9b4b4fbc9323f893f0a3e99d8dc3612f5c05b6c2bd25e77718e1302d2a1e3
MD5 af0b69669790d5fe49c3f497fd15685f
BLAKE2b-256 428b0315cbd17542938be18caab1069c573b319de3591603d69724a8b9f423ff

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page