Skip to main content

Trusted memory for long-lived coding agents. SQLite + FTS5. Truth governance built in.

Project description

agentmem

Governed memory for long-lived coding agents. Your agent stops forgetting, stops repeating mistakes, and knows what's still true.

PyPI Python License: MIT Tests

The Problem

Your AI coding assistant forgets everything between sessions. It repeats old mistakes. It can't tell current rules from outdated ones. Context compresses and recovery is painful.

Most memory tools solve storage. agentmem solves trust.

Install

pip install quilmem

60-Second Demo

from agentmem import Memory

mem = Memory()

# Store typed memories
mem.add(type="bug", title="loudnorm undoes SFX levels",
        content="Never apply loudnorm to final mix. It re-normalizes everything.",
        status="validated")

mem.add(type="decision", title="Use per-line atempo",
        content="Bake speed into per-line TTS. No global pass.",
        status="active")

# Something you're not sure about yet
hypothesis = mem.add(type="decision", title="Maybe try 2-second gaps before CTA",
        content="Hypothesis from last session. Needs testing.",
        status="hypothesis")

# Search — validated and active memories rank highest.
# Deprecated and superseded memories are excluded automatically.
results = mem.search("audio mixing")

# Context-budgeted recall — fits the best memories into your token limit
context = mem.recall("building a narration track", max_tokens=2000)

# Lifecycle — promote what's proven, deprecate what's not
mem.promote(hypothesis.id)                # hypothesis -> active -> validated
mem.deprecate(hypothesis.id, reason="Disproven by data")
mem.supersede(old.id, new.id)             # old points to replacement

# Health check — is your memory system trustworthy?
from agentmem import health_check
report = health_check(mem._conn)
# Health: 85/100 | Conflicts: 0 | Stale: 2 | Validated: 14

What Makes This Different

Other memory tools store things. agentmem knows what's still true.

Mem0 Letta Mengram agentmem
Memory storage Yes Yes Yes Yes
Full-text search Vector Agent-driven Knowledge graph FTS5
Memory lifecycle states No Partial No hypothesis -> active -> validated -> deprecated -> superseded
Conflict detection No No Partial Built-in
Staleness detection No No No Built-in
Health scoring No No No Built-in
Provenance tracking No No No source_path + source_hash
Trust-ranked recall No No No Validated > active > hypothesis
Human-readable source files No No No Canonical markdown
Local-first, zero infrastructure No Self-host option Self-host option Yes, always
MCP server Separate Separate Yes Built-in

Truth Governance

The core idea: every memory has a status that tracks how much you should trust it.

hypothesis    New observation. Not yet confirmed. Lowest trust in recall.
    |
  active      Default. Currently believed true. Normal trust.
    |
 validated    Explicitly confirmed. Highest trust in recall.

 deprecated   Was true, no longer. Excluded from recall. Kept for history.
 superseded   Replaced by a newer memory. Points to replacement.

Why this matters: Without governance, your agent's memory accumulates stale rules, contradictions, and outdated decisions. It doesn't know that the voice setting from January was overridden in March. It retrieves both and the LLM picks randomly. Governed memory solves this.

Conflict Detection

from agentmem import detect_conflicts

conflicts = detect_conflicts(mem._conn)
# Found 2 conflict(s):
#   !! [decision] "Always apply loudnorm to voice"
#      vs [decision] "NEVER apply loudnorm to voice"
#      Contradiction on shared topic (voice, loudnorm, audio)

agentmem finds memories that contradict each other:

  • Detects topic overlap (Jaccard similarity)
  • Separates duplicates from contradictions
  • Sentence-level negation matching (not just keyword scanning)
  • Severity: critical (both active) vs warning (one deprecated)

Staleness Detection

from agentmem import detect_stale

stale = detect_stale(mem._conn, stale_days=30)
# [decision] "Use atempo 0.90" — Source changed since import (hash mismatch)
# [bug] "Firewall blocks port" — Not updated in 45 days

Finds outdated memories by:

  • Age (not updated in N days)
  • Source file missing (referenced file was deleted)
  • Hash drift (source file content changed but memory wasn't updated)

Health Check

from agentmem import health_check

report = health_check(mem._conn)
print(f"Health: {report.health_score}/100")
print(f"Conflicts: {len(report.conflicts)}")
print(f"Stale: {len(report.stale)}")

Scores your memory system 0-100 based on: conflicts, stale percentage, orphaned references, deprecated weight, and whether you have any validated memories.

Provenance-Aware Sync

Sync canonical markdown files into the DB with source tracking:

# Each memory tracks where it came from
mem.add(type="bug", title="loudnorm lifts noise",
        content="...",
        source_path="/docs/errors.md",
        source_section="Audio Bugs",
        source_hash="a1b2c3d4e5f6")

The sync engine:

  • Same hash = skip (idempotent, re-running changes nothing)
  • Different hash = update (source file changed)
  • Section removed = deprecate (with reason)
  • Section restored = resurrect (reactivates deprecated memory)

Three Interfaces

Python API

from agentmem import Memory

mem = Memory("./my-agent.db", project="frontend")

# CRUD
record = mem.add(type="decision", title="Use TypeScript", content="...")
mem.get(record.id)
mem.update(record.id, content="Updated reasoning.")
mem.delete(record.id)
mem.list(type="bug", limit=20)

# Search + recall
results = mem.search("typescript migration", type="decision")
context = mem.recall("setting up the build", max_tokens=3000)

# Governance
mem.promote(record.id)              # hypothesis -> active -> validated
mem.deprecate(record.id, reason="No longer relevant")
mem.supersede(old.id, new.id)       # links old to replacement

# Session persistence
mem.save_session("Working on auth refactor. Blocked on token refresh.")
mem.load_session()                  # picks up where last instance left off

# Health
mem.stats()

CLI

# Get started in 30 seconds
agentmem init --tool claude --project myapp

# Check if everything's working
agentmem doctor

# Core
agentmem add --type bug --title "CSS grid issue" "Flexbox fallback needed"
agentmem search "grid layout"
agentmem recall "frontend styling" --tokens 2000

# Governance
agentmem promote <id>
agentmem deprecate <id> --reason "Fixed in v2.3"
agentmem health
agentmem conflicts
agentmem stale --days 14

# Import + sessions
agentmem import ./errors.md --type bug
agentmem save-session "Finished auth module, starting tests"
agentmem load-session

# MCP server
agentmem serve

MCP Server

Built-in Model Context Protocol server for Claude Code, Cursor, and any MCP client.

pip install quilmem[mcp]

Claude Code config (.claude/settings.json):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "agentmem": {
      "command": "agentmem",
      "args": ["--db", "./memory.db", "--project", "myproject", "serve"],
      "type": "stdio"
    }
  }
}

MCP tools: add_memory, search_memory, recall_memory, update_memory, delete_memory, list_memories, save_session, load_session, promote_memory, deprecate_memory, supersede_memory, memory_health, memory_conflicts

Typed Memory

Seven types that cover real agent workflows:

Type What it stores Example
setting Configuration, parameters "Voice speed: atempo 1.08"
bug Errors and their fixes "loudnorm lifts noise floor"
decision Rules, policies, choices "3rd-person narration banned"
procedure Workflows, pipelines "TTS -> speed -> 48kHz -> mix"
context Background knowledge "Project uses FFmpeg + Python 3.11"
feedback User corrections "Always pick, don't ask"
session Current work state "Working on auth. Blocked on tokens."

Trust-Ranked Recall

recall() doesn't just find relevant memories. It finds the most trustworthy relevant memories:

  1. FTS5 search returns candidates
  2. Each scored: relevance (25%) + trust status (20%) + provenance (20%) + recency (15%) + frequency (10%) + confidence (10%)
  3. Validated canonical memories rank above unprovenanced hypothesis memories
  4. Deprecated and superseded memories are excluded entirely
  5. Packed greedily into your token budget

Project Scoping

frontend = Memory("./shared.db", project="frontend")
backend = Memory("./shared.db", project="backend")

frontend.search("bug")  # Only frontend bugs
backend.search("bug")   # Only backend bugs

Battle-Tested

This isn't theoretical. agentmem was built under production pressure over 2+ months of daily use:

  • 65+ YouTube Shorts produced with zero repeated production bugs
  • 330+ memories governing voice generation, FFmpeg assembly, image prompting, upload workflows
  • Every bug caught once, fixed once, never repeated
  • Governance engine reduced conflicts from 1,848 false positives to 11 real findings

How It Works

  • Storage: SQLite with WAL mode (concurrent reads, thread-safe)
  • Search: FTS5 with porter stemming and unicode61 tokenizer
  • Ranking: Composite score: text relevance + trust status + provenance + recency + frequency + confidence
  • Governance: Status lifecycle, conflict detection, staleness detection, health scoring
  • Sync: Provenance-aware with source hashing and resurrection
  • Zero infrastructure: No API keys, no cloud, no vector DB. Just a .db file.

License

MIT

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

quilmem-0.2.1.tar.gz (309.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

quilmem-0.2.1-py3-none-any.whl (31.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file quilmem-0.2.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: quilmem-0.2.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 309.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.13.5

File hashes

Hashes for quilmem-0.2.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 eced10d47b84cdb125b5f29dc6a65d2965909f9c7bfe914839091c3eed859c96
MD5 aa4b5748738648ba4ea006799f8b3b77
BLAKE2b-256 9752db468501df73590ab96c5ebcb081e1e1253b5e741fab4210a6f0512aa36c

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file quilmem-0.2.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: quilmem-0.2.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 31.7 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.13.5

File hashes

Hashes for quilmem-0.2.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 17e918407854a389c687ba07f24b2119a63958e6bc1a4d54e037d0641e1a86f3
MD5 3ac0f3fe0888b8040ae78350123943a4
BLAKE2b-256 2989442558d776395bef2b6bedcfddb9d69efb8d66c6f62fa6e54316c22b1212

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