Skip to main content

Long-term memory MCP server for LLMs — hybrid search in a single SQLite file

Project description

rekal

Long-term memory for LLMs. One SQLite file, no cloud, no API keys.

rekal is an MCP server that gives AI coding agents persistent memory across sessions. Memories are stored locally in SQLite and retrieved with hybrid search (BM25 keywords + vector semantics + recency decay). Nothing leaves your machine.

Works with any MCP-capable agent: Claude Code, Codex CLI, OpenCode.

Session 1:   "I prefer Ruff over Black"  → memory_store(...)
Session 47:  "Set up linting"            → memory_search("formatting preferences")
                                          ← "User prefers Ruff over Black" (0.92)
                                          Sets up Ruff without asking.

Install

pip install rekal
# or
uv tool install rekal

Requires Python 3.11+. On first run, rekal creates ~/.rekal/memory.db.

Setup — Claude Code

Three steps: add the MCP server, install the plugin, and disable built-in memory.

1. Add the MCP server — gives Claude Code the memory tools:

claude mcp add rekal rekal

2. Install the plugin — teaches Claude Code when to use those tools, and prevents conflicts with built-in memory:

claude plugin marketplace add janbjorge/rekal
claude plugin install rekal-skills@rekal

3. Disable built-in auto memory — add "autoMemoryEnabled": false to ~/.claude/settings.json:

{
  "autoMemoryEnabled": false
}

Why is this required? Claude Code's instruction priority is system prompt > CLAUDE.md > MCP server instructions. Built-in memory lives in the system prompt and always wins — without disabling it, the agent ignores rekal and writes to a flat file with no search, no deduplication, no ranking. The plugin's SessionStart hook replaces the context injection auto memory normally provides, so you don't lose anything.

What if I forget? The plugin's block-memory-writes hook will catch and block MEMORY.md writes as a safety net, but the agent wastes turns hitting the block. Disabling auto memory is cleaner.

Can the plugin do this automatically? No — Claude Code doesn't allow plugins to modify user settings. This manual step is the only way.

What the plugin provides

Hooks (automatic, no user action needed):

Hook Event What it does
session-start SessionStart Reminds agent to call memory_build_context before doing anything
block-memory-writes PreToolUse on Edit/Write Blocks writes to MEMORY.md, redirects to rekal tools

Skills (user-invocable):

Skill Trigger What it does
rekal-init /rekal-init Scans codebase and bootstraps rekal with project knowledge
rekal-save /rekal-save or auto on session end Deduplicates and stores durable knowledge from the conversation
rekal-usage /rekal-usage Teaches agents how to use rekal effectively
rekal-hygiene /rekal-hygiene Finds conflicts, duplicates, stale data — proposes fixes

Setup — Codex CLI

One step. rekal is a standard MCP stdio server — no plugin system, no competing memory to disable (Codex memories are off by default).

Add to ~/.codex/config.toml (Codex MCP docs):

[mcp_servers.rekal]
command = "rekal"

# optional: scope all memories to a project automatically
[mcp_servers.rekal.env]
REKAL_PROJECT = "my-project"

Instruct the agent to call memory_build_context at session start. Add to your project's AGENTS.md:

Call memory_build_context with your current task before exploring the codebase.

If you have enabled Codex memories (memories = true in ~/.codex/config.toml): disable them to avoid competing memory instructions.

[features]
memories = false

Setup — OpenCode

One step. OpenCode has no built-in memory system — rekal plugs in cleanly with no conflicts.

Add to opencode.jsonc in your project root (OpenCode MCP docs):

{
  "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json",
  "mcp": {
    "rekal": {
      "type": "local",
      "command": ["rekal"],
      "enabled": true,
      "environment": {
        "REKAL_PROJECT": "my-project"
      }
    }
  }
}

OpenCode does not auto-read AGENTS.md — you must list instruction files explicitly (OpenCode config docs). Add to your opencode.jsonc:

{
  "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json",
  "instructions": ["AGENTS.md"]
}

Tools

rekal exposes 16 MCP tools grouped into four categories.

Core — read and write memories:

Tool Purpose
memory_store Store a memory with type, project, and tags
memory_search Hybrid search across all memories
memory_update Edit content, tags, or type of an existing memory
memory_delete Remove a memory by ID

Smart write — manage knowledge over time:

Tool Purpose
memory_supersede Replace a memory while linking the old one as history
memory_link Connect memories: supersedes, contradicts, or related_to
memory_build_context One call that returns relevant memories + conflicts + timeline

Introspection — explore what's stored:

Tool Purpose
memory_similar Find memories similar to a given one
memory_topics Topic summary grouped by type
memory_timeline Chronological view with optional date range
memory_related All links to and from a memory
memory_health Database stats: counts by type, project, date range
memory_conflicts Find memories that contradict each other

Conversations — track session threads:

Tool Purpose
conversation_start Start a conversation, optionally linked to a previous one
conversation_tree Get the full conversation DAG
conversation_threads List recent conversations with memory counts
conversation_stale Find inactive conversations

How it works

Storage

Everything lives in ~/.rekal/memory.db. Three subsystems share it:

  • memories table — content, type, project, tags, timestamps, access counts
  • FTS5 virtual table — full-text index over content+tags+project, auto-synced via triggers
  • sqlite-vec virtual table — 384-dimensional vector index for semantic search

Memory links (supersedes, contradicts, related_to) are stored in a separate table. memory_supersede writes the new memory and creates a supersedes link in a single operation — old knowledge stays queryable with explicit lineage.

Embeddings

rekal uses fastembed with BAAI/bge-small-en-v1.5 (384 dimensions). Runs locally via ONNX — no API calls, no network. The model downloads once on first use (~50MB) and is cached.

Search

Every memory_search runs two parallel lookups, merges candidates, then scores:

score = w_fts × sigmoid(-BM25)                       ← keyword relevance    (default 0.4)
      + w_vec × (1 - cosine_distance)                 ← semantic similarity  (default 0.4)
      + w_recency × exp(-0.693 × days/half_life)      ← recency              (default 0.2, 30-day half-life)

Why three signals? Keywords miss synonyms ("deploy" vs "ship to prod"). Vectors miss exact identifiers. Recency alone buries important old knowledge. The blend covers all three failure modes.

Configurable weights. All weights and half-life are configurable at three levels:

Priority Source Set by Persists?
1 (highest) Per-search params memory_search(..., w_fts=0.8) No — single query only
2 Database project config memory_set_config(key, value, project) Yes — SQLite, across sessions
3 .rekal/config.yml Checked into version control Yes — shared with team
4 (lowest) Hardcoded defaults Built into rekal Always: 0.4 / 0.4 / 0.2, 30-day half-life

Layers resolve per-key independently. A .rekal/config.yml setting w_fts and a DB override for half_life combine — each key uses its highest-priority source.

# .rekal/config.yml
scoring:
  w_fts: 0.6
  w_vec: 0.3
  w_recency: 0.1
  half_life: 14.0

Why SQLite?

  • Single file — copy, back up, version-control, or delete to start fresh
  • Zero config — no daemon, no port, no connection string
  • FTS5 built-in — BM25 ranking without an external search engine
  • sqlite-vec extension — vector search in the same process, no separate vector DB
  • Sub-millisecond — local disk I/O, no network round-trips

Troubleshooting — Claude Code

Agent still writes to MEMORY.md

  1. Check autoMemoryEnabled is false in ~/.claude/settings.json
  2. Check the plugin is installed: claude plugin list should show rekal-skills

Agent doesn't call memory_build_context at session start

The SessionStart hook injects a reminder. If the agent ignores it, add to your project's CLAUDE.md:

Call memory_build_context before exploring the codebase.

Memories not being stored

Check the MCP server is running: claude mcp list should show rekal. If missing:

claude mcp add rekal rekal

Updating the plugin

Claude Code's plugin system may serve a stale cache after plugin install. If hooks or skills are missing after an update, clear the marketplace cache first:

rm -rf ~/.claude/plugins/marketplaces/rekal
claude plugin marketplace add janbjorge/rekal
claude plugin install rekal-skills@rekal

Architecture (for contributors)

Plugin (hooks + skills)
  │
  ├── hooks/
  │   ├── handlers/session-start.py       ← SessionStart: inject context reminder
  │   └── handlers/block-memory-writes.py ← PreToolUse: block MEMORY.md writes
  │
  └── skills/
      ├── rekal-init/    ← /rekal-init: bootstrap project knowledge
      ├── rekal-save/    ← /rekal-save: end-of-session capture
      ├── rekal-usage/   ← /rekal-usage: operational guide for tools
      └── rekal-hygiene/ ← /rekal-hygiene: maintenance

MCP Server (rekal)
  │ stdio (JSON-RPC)
  │
  mcp_adapter.py          ← FastMCP server, lifespan, instructions
  │
  ├── tools/core.py       ─┐
  ├── tools/introspection.py│─ thin @mcp.tool() wrappers
  ├── tools/smart_write.py  │
  └── tools/conversations.py┘
                            │
                    sqlite_adapter.py ← all SQL lives here
                            │
                            ├── SQLite (memories, conversations, tags, conflicts)
                            ├── FTS5 (full-text index)
                            └── sqlite-vec (vector index)

Instruction flow (single source per concern):

What Where Why
"Use rekal tools, not MEMORY.md" MCP server instructions + PreToolUse hook Instructions guide, hook enforces
"Call memory_build_context first" SessionStart hook Automatic, every session
"How to store/search/supersede" MCP server instructions Always present next to the tools
"Capture session knowledge" rekal-save skill Explicit trigger, detailed procedure
"Bootstrap project" rekal-init skill Explicit trigger
"Clean up database" rekal-hygiene skill Explicit trigger

CLI

rekal serve    # Run as MCP server (default)
rekal health   # Database health report
rekal export   # Export all memories as JSON

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

rekal-1.10.0.tar.gz (155.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

rekal-1.10.0-py3-none-any.whl (25.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file rekal-1.10.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: rekal-1.10.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 155.5 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for rekal-1.10.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 319ed8834c539167610e569cc49cd0850960af833f408f99c72fcb9d68624db9
MD5 954336df2d3281e5b0b2de72040b6831
BLAKE2b-256 63fd7ad1cd45930fdd496b7042eda28235f41f01f07e5919575a2dbd363c4f72

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for rekal-1.10.0.tar.gz:

Publisher: release.yml on janbjorge/rekal

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file rekal-1.10.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: rekal-1.10.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 25.1 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for rekal-1.10.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 92ba5b197818fa4eb81622e6dcdf5bd5df6668b8a8c59abac827d6e5872ef065
MD5 4328ef9128b9d9f468e2c5440cb32e2a
BLAKE2b-256 37ed82f7c87a3657a4928bd35b2951a426c585e422a39259628a50d209d46f89

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for rekal-1.10.0-py3-none-any.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on janbjorge/rekal

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

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