Skip to main content

Semvec — patent-pending persistent semantic state engine

Project description

Semvec

PyPI Python versions Wheel License Docs

Constant-cost semantic memory for LLM agents — drop-in alternative to mem0, Letta, and LangChain Memory.

Semvec replaces unbounded conversation history with a fixed-size 384-d semantic state vector plus a tiered, content-aware memory. The cost of every LLM call stays constant — turn 10 and turn 10 000 carry the same input footprint — and the agent still has structured access to decisions, invariants, error patterns, and prior context across sessions.

pip install semvec
from semvec import SemvecState, SemvecConfig
from semvec.token_reduction import SemvecStateSerializer

state = SemvecState(config=SemvecConfig(dimension=768))
for text, embedding in conversation:
    state.update(embedding, text)

context = SemvecStateSerializer().serialize(state, query_text="what did we decide?")
# `context` is a 150–350-token block — paste it into any LLM system prompt.

Patent pending — application EP 25 188 105.8 filed at the European Patent Office.

Architectural differences vs. mem0, Letta, LangChain Memory

This table compares architectural properties, not measured performance. The benchmarks below were run head-to-head against mem0 only.

Property semvec mem0 Letta (MemGPT) LangChain Memory
Per-turn input footprint O(1) — fixed-size state O(retrieved records) O(in-context blocks) depends on class (buffer ≈ O(n); summary ≈ bounded)
LLM calls during ingest 0 (deterministic EMA) LLM fact-extraction per turn LLM-managed page-in/out varies (none for buffer/vector; LLM for summary classes)
Recall procedure Deterministic (vector + literal cache) LLM-extracted facts LLM-managed swap Deterministic retrieval (when vector-based)
Numeric / exact-value safety Verbatim cache with Decimal Embedded → lossy Embedded → lossy Not addressed by the framework
Self-hosted / air-gap Yes (proprietary, on-prem) Yes (OSS) Yes (OSS) Yes (OSS)
Patent-pending core EP 25 188 105.8
Multi-agent coordination Built-in (Cortex) Manual Manual Manual

→ Deep-dive comparisons: vs mem0 · vs Letta · vs LangChain Memory

Benchmarks (where we measured head-to-head)

  • LongMemEval-S — vs. mem0 (gpt-oss-120b on H100): 42.8 % vs. mem0 36.2 % — +6.6 pp accuracy at 17× shorter wall-clock (2.77 h vs. 47.04 h). McNemar p = 0.020. Wins 4 of 6 question categories; strongest at single-session-assistant (+34 pp) and temporal-reasoning (+10.6 pp).
  • LongBench v2 — vs. stateless full-history baseline (503 turns over 100k-token conversations): 82× fewer input tokens per turn (627 vs. 51 292 mean). The stateless baseline collapses into confusion-loops past ~50 turns; semvec stays coherent.
  • SlopCodeBench — vs. plain continue-style coding agent (16 problems, Kimi K2, just-solve prompt): −20.1 % cost at higher pass rate (+5.5 pp) and lower cyclomatic complexity (−18.0 %).

We have not benchmarked against Letta or LangChain Memory directly; the comparison pages above describe the architectural differences, not measured performance gaps.


Table of contents


What you get

Capability What it solves
Constant-size compressed context Per-call LLM input cost stops growing with conversation length. ~76 % token reduction on 48-turn runs.
Tiered memory with selective forgetting Three tiers (short / medium / long term) with retention scoring — frequently-accessed older memories outlive never-touched newer ones.
Domain anchors + resonance triggers Bias retrieval toward known domains or specific keywords without re-training. Lifts precision@3 from 86 % → 91.7 % on mixed-domain workloads.
Drop-in chat proxy Wrap any OpenAI-compatible LLM and get compressed context for free. Works with vLLM, LiteLLM, OpenRouter, Ollama out of the box.
Multi-agent coordination (Cortex) Run several agents that share an aggregated view, vote on proposals, and exchange checksummed state vectors.
Coding-agent compaction Persistent memory across coding sessions — design decisions, invariants, error patterns, code-pointer index, anti-resonance checks. MCP server for Claude Code & Cursor included.
REST API server semvec serve exposes the full surface over FastAPI: sessions, clusters, regions, observer, network, literal cache, Prometheus metrics.
Compliance pack Append-only event store, deterministic replay, GDPR Art. 17 forget with signed certificates, HMAC request signing, RS256 user JWTs.
Bring-your-own embedder Anything exposing get_embedding(text) → np.ndarray and get_dimension() → int works. SentenceTransformers, OpenAI, ONNX int8 — see the embedders guide.
One wheel, all platforms Python 3.10–3.14 via stable ABI. Pre-built wheels for Linux glibc + Alpine musl (x86_64 + aarch64), macOS (x86_64 + arm64), Windows (x86_64).

New in 0.5.0 — production-stable

Surface What's new
Per-memory provenance state.update(emb, text, meta={"confidence": 0.9, "source": "kg"}) — Source / Confidence dicts now travel with every memory and survive every snapshot. The compliance event store carries them too, identically.
Retrieval policy filter state.memory.get_relevant_memories(query, top_k, meta_filter=lambda u: u.meta["confidence"] >= 0.7) — Python predicate over the new per-memory meta runs after sort, before truncation.
Per-trigger weight ResonanceTrigger(keyword="SAP", weight=5.0) — one trigger can outrank topic-default triggers; weight=0 silences boost without touching input-isolation.
Anti-resonance in standard retrieval state.add_negative_attractor(error_vector, description=…) — was coding-only; now influences get_relevant_memories via a configurable score penalty.
DELETE / forget triggers async rebuild Configure set_compliance_dependencies(rebuild_worker=…) — the running SemvecState no longer carries deleted memories until the next process restart. Same wiring on RetentionSweeper (rebuild_worker=, on_before_delete=, on_after_delete= hooks).
Ed25519 deletion certificates sign_certificate / verify_certificate auto-detect RSA-PSS-SHA256 vs Ed25519 from the loaded key — 64-byte sigs on Ed25519, ~256-byte on RSA-3072.
Per-user embedding encryption SqliteEventStore(encryption_seed=…) — opt-in AES-GCM with per-user HKDF-derived keys. Backup leak no longer hands an attacker the raw vectors for cosine re-identification.
Snapshot privacy toggles to_dict(include_adaptive_params=False) joins the existing include_memory_text=False / include_literal_cache_text=False so a third-party-facing snapshot can be redacted in three independent dimensions.
musllinux wheels pip install semvec now works on Alpine / k8s-slim / Lambda-custom-runtime without a compiler toolchain.
[jwt] extra pip install "semvec[jwt]" for user-JWT issuance (verify-only path stays cryptography-only).

Backwards-compatible — every 0.4.x call site keeps working untouched. See the new Correcting Memories guide for the full playbook.


Installation

# Core only
pip install semvec

# With multi-agent coordination
pip install "semvec[cortex]"

# With coding-agent compaction (FastMCP server, Claude Code hooks)
pip install "semvec[coding]"

# Compliance pack (event store, retention, DSGVO forget, HMAC, RS256)
pip install "semvec[compliance]"
# When you also want the FastAPI compliance routes + middleware:
pip install "semvec[api,compliance]"

# REST API server
pip install "semvec[api]"
semvec serve --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8080

# Benchmark runners + optional Mem0 baseline
pip install "semvec[benchmarks,mem0]"

# Everything the developers use
pip install "semvec[cortex,coding,api,benchmarks,dev]"
Extra Pulls in When you need it
[cortex] (marker only) multi-agent coordination — primitives are always available; the extra marks intent
[coding] fastmcp>=2.0 MCP server + Claude Code lifecycle hooks
[compliance] cryptography>=42 Event store, retention sweeper, deletion certificate signer, HMAC + RS256 signing. FastAPI routes need [api] on top. See the Compliance guide.
[api] fastapi, uvicorn[standard], slowapi, sqlalchemy, prometheus-client, pydantic REST API server (semvec serve)
[benchmarks] sentence-transformers>=3.0, datasets>=2.14, psutil>=5.9 running the LongMemEval harness or other benchmarks
[mem0] mem0ai>=0.1, faiss-cpu>=1.7 head-to-head Mem0 comparison
[dev] ruff, mypy, pre-commit, pytest, httpx contributing

Embedder requirement

Semvec is embedder-agnostic and refuses silent hash-based fallbacks — you bring your own. Any object exposing get_embedding(text) → np.ndarray and get_dimension() → int works.

pip install sentence-transformers

Choose the embedder dimension carefully — Semvec's retrieval quality is bounded by what the embedder can separate. Measured on 80 mixed-domain notes:

Embedder dimension precision@3 usable for
all-MiniLM-L6-v2 384 66.67 % English-only, tight-domain prototypes only
paraphrase-multilingual-mpnet-base-v2 768 86.11 % German / multilingual mixed-domain (recommended)

The 384-dim MiniLM is the easy default but on multilingual or domain-mixed text it confuses generic terms (e.g. "filter" → coffee filter vs. data filter). For German content, mixed-domain corpora, or anything where you need ≥ 80 % precision@3, use multilingual mpnet 768 d minimum.

from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer

embedder = SentenceTransformer(
    "sentence-transformers/paraphrase-multilingual-mpnet-base-v2"
)

Choose your use case

You want to… Jump to
Compress conversation history for any LLM Token-reduced LLM context
Drop-in replacement for openai.chat.completions Drop-in chat proxy
Coordinate many agents (analyst + planner + critic …) Multi-agent coordination
Give Claude Code / Cursor persistent memory across sessions Coding-agent compaction
Run as a service, talk to it over HTTP REST API server
Process regulated data (GDPR, audit, retention) Compliance pack

Token-reduced LLM context

The single most-used path: produce a compact system-prompt block from any conversation, regardless of length.

from semvec import SemvecState, SemvecConfig
from semvec.token_reduction import SemvecStateSerializer

state = SemvecState(config=SemvecConfig(dimension=768))

for text, embedding in conversation:
    state.update(embedding, text)

serializer = SemvecStateSerializer()
context = serializer.serialize(state, query_text="what did we decide about auth?")

response = openai.chat.completions.create(
    model="gpt-4o",
    messages=[
        {"role": "system", "content": context},
        {"role": "user",   "content": "what did we decide about auth?"},
    ],
)

Compared to raw history concatenation, the compressed context does not grow with conversation length — input cost converges to a constant. The serializer fits prior context into a 150–350-token block sized for a system prompt.

Lift retrieval quality with anchors and triggers

The passive ingest above gives you retrieval that already beats sliding-window concatenation. To bias retrieval toward known domains or specific cues, register anchors and resonance triggers:

from semvec import SemvecState, SemvecConfig

state = SemvecState(config=SemvecConfig(
    dimension=768,
    enable_topic_switch=True,
    auto_anchor_on_topic_switch=True,   # opt-in (default off)
))

# Anchors — bias retrieval toward your known domains.
for prototype in [
    "SAP Business One Service Layer OData REST API",
    "Python MCP Model Context Protocol Server",
    "italienische Kueche Kochen Pasta Pizza",
    "Kaffee Espresso Roesterei Brewing",
]:
    state.add_anchor(embed(prototype))

# Triggers — boost memories on a keyword OR vector match.
state.create_resonance_trigger(
    keyword="security review",
    embedding=embed("security audit threat model"),
    threshold=0.7,
)

for text, vec in conversation:
    state.update(vec, text)

# Retrieval is now anchor-biased: candidates aligned with one of
# your domain anchors win the tie-break against generic phrases.
top = state.memory.get_relevant_memories(embed("OData filter syntax"), top_k=3)

What each piece adds (measured on mpnet 768 d, 80 mixed German notes):

Variant precision@3
passive update() only 86.11 %
+ 4 domain anchors 91.67 % (+ 5.56 pp)
+ 4 resonance triggers 86.11 %
anchors + triggers 91.67 %

Without anchors, the retrieval boost is a no-op — flipping these features on costs nothing if you do not need them. Anchors and triggers compete for the same boost slot (max(...), not addition), so redundant signals do not double-count.

Tuning rule of thumb: keep anchor_retrieval_boost ≥ trigger_retrieval_boost, both in the [0.1, 0.6] range. Pushing either past 0.7 mostly stops moving the needle — spend your budget on better anchor prototypes or sharper trigger thresholds rather than dialling the boosts higher.


Drop-in chat proxy

SemvecChatProxy wraps any callable LLM behind compressed context and tracks both compressed and full-history token counts per turn:

from semvec.token_reduction import SemvecChatProxy, create_llm_client

llm = create_llm_client("openai")  # reads OPENAI_BASE_URL/MODEL/API_KEY from env
proxy = SemvecChatProxy(
    llm_call=llm,
    system_prompt="You are a helpful assistant.",
    embedding_service=my_embedder,
)

for question in ["summarise Q3", "compare with Q2", "biggest miss?"]:
    result = proxy.chat(question)
    print(f"turn {result.turn_number}: {result.response}")
    print(f"  compressed tokens: {result.tokens.compressed}")
    print(f"  full-history tokens: {result.tokens.full_history}")

print(proxy.get_summary())

Built-in clients: OpenAIClient (works with the OpenAI API and any compatible endpoint such as vLLM, LiteLLM, OpenRouter), OllamaClient. You can pass any callable (list[ChatMessage]) -> str.

Break-even is around ten turns. The compressed prompt carries a constant ~110-token header. For very short conversations (≤ 5 turns) plain history concatenation is cheaper; from ~10 turns onward the proxy undercuts naive concatenation, and the gap widens linearly with conversation length. Measured on a 48-turn run: ~76 % token reduction vs. full-history.


Multi-agent coordination

Run several agents (analyst, planner, critic, …) that share an aggregated view, vote on proposals, and exchange checksummed state vectors.

from semvec.cortex import SemvecAgentNetwork, AttentionAggregation

network = SemvecAgentNetwork(
    aggregation_strategy=AttentionAggregation(dimension=768),
    dimension=768,
)
network.add_local_instance("analyst")
network.add_local_instance("planner")

network.process_input("analyst", "quarterly revenue is up 23%")
network.process_input("planner", "we should redirect Q4 spend to retention")

state = network.get_network_state()
print(f"active agents: {state['active_instances']}/{state['total_instances']}")

# Pull per-agent feedback for the next turn (consensus-aware)
feedback = network.get_feedback_for_agent("analyst")

Aggregation strategies: WeightedAverageAggregation, AttentionAggregation. ConsensusEngine adds proposal voting with five levels (SIMPLE_MAJORITY, QUALIFIED_MAJORITY, UNANIMOUS, WEIGHTED_VOTE, ADAPTIVE_THRESHOLD); quorum is measured against the registered voter pool, not just votes-cast-so-far. StateVectorPacket round-trips bit-exactly via serialize()/deserialize() and verify_integrity() confirms byte equality.

See the Cortex API reference for the full surface, the Cortex overview for the in-process / service / REST decision tree, and Cortex over REST API for the cluster / region / observer / network endpoints with curl + httpx examples.


Coding-agent compaction

Persistent memory across coding sessions for Claude Code, Cursor, Aider — code pointers, anti-resonance error patterns, structured handoff context.

→ Full integration guides: Claude Code (MCP + automatic SessionStart / PreCompact hooks) · Cursor (MCP + project rule). The high-level Coding overview lays out the three usage paths (MCP, in-process API, REST API) and when to pick which.

from semvec.coding import CodingEngine

engine = CodingEngine(state_dir="~/.semvec/project-x", embedder=my_embedder)
engine.ingest_transcript("path/to/claude_code_session.jsonl")

context = engine.get_compacted_context(
    "implement password reset flow",
    invariants=["never log plaintext passwords"],
)

Multi-session memory via LiteralCache

Below the high-level CodingEngine, state.literal_cache is a structured memory of design decisions, error patterns, invariants, and per-checkpoint test results — anything you want to survive across sessions verbatim:

import semvec

state = semvec.SemvecState(semvec.SemvecConfig(dimension=768))
cache = state.literal_cache

cache.record_decision("Use mpnet 768d for German content", checkpoint=1)
cache.record_error_pattern(
    pattern="catastrophic recency bias on blocked-domain ingest",
    example="500-note 4-domain blocked sequence",
    fix="raise long_term_size and use tier weights 1.0/0.95/0.9",
    checkpoint=1,
)
cache.add_invariant("State must round-trip via to_dict/from_dict")
cache.record_test_results(
    checkpoint=1,
    passed_tests=["test_a", "test_b", "test_c"],
    failed_tests=[],
)

# Build the LLM hand-off context for the next session
ctx = cache.build_handoff_context(next_checkpoint=2)
# ### INVARIANTS — Do NOT break these:
# - State must round-trip via to_dict/from_dict
#
# ### Test Status (CP1: 100%, 3/3)
#
# ### Known Error Patterns
# - `catastrophic recency bias on blocked-domain ingest` (x1): raise long_term_size...
#
# ### Design Decisions
# - [CP1] Use mpnet 768d for German content

# Persist + restore — round-trip preserves decisions, error_patterns,
# invariants, test_history, code_structures.
blob = state.to_bytes()
restored = semvec.SemvecState.from_bytes(blob)
assert restored.literal_cache.build_handoff_context(2) == ctx

build_handoff_context() produces a Markdown block ready for the system prompt of the next session. See the Coding API reference for the full surface.

Claude Code integration (MCP + hooks)

Wire it directly into Claude Code via the bundled FastMCP server and two lifecycle hooks. The settings below give you the bare minimum; for the full walk-through (what each hook does, CLAUDE.md setup, troubleshooting, end-to-end example session) see the Claude Code guide.

Add to .claude/settings.json:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "semvec": {
      "command": "python",
      "args": ["-m", "semvec.coding.mcp_server"],
      "env": {
        "SEMVEC_STATE_DIR": ".semvec",
        "SEMVEC_EMBED_MODEL": "all-MiniLM-L6-v2"
      }
    }
  },
  "hooks": {
    "PreCompact":  [{"command": "python -m semvec.coding.hooks.pre_compact",  "timeout": 30000}],
    "SessionStart":[{"command": "python -m semvec.coding.hooks.session_start", "timeout": 10000}]
  }
}

The MCP server exposes six tools — pss_get_context, pss_update, pss_check_anti_resonance, pss_register_code, pss_record_error, pss_save. FastMCP is installed automatically via the [coding] extra.

The same FastMCP server plugs into Cursor via .cursor/mcp.json plus a Cursor Rule that replaces Claude Code's lifecycle hooks. Full step-by-step in the Cursor guide.

For multi-tenant server-side use (literal-cache endpoints over HTTP, JWT-gated, Postgres-backed metadata), see the REST API reference.


REST API server

pip install "semvec[api]"

# Dev mode — anonymous community-tier auth, in-memory SQLite
SEMVEC_ALLOW_ANONYMOUS=1 semvec serve --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8080

# Production — license JWT required, Postgres-backed metadata
export SEMVEC_LICENSE_KEY="eyJhbGciOiJFZERTQSI..."
export DATABASE_URL="postgresql://user:pw@host/semvec"
semvec serve --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8080

Talk HTTP:

# Health check (no auth)
curl http://localhost:8080/v1/health

# Single turn
curl -X POST http://localhost:8080/v1/run \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $SEMVEC_LICENSE_KEY" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"session_id": "demo", "query": "what was the Q3 miss?"}'

# Retrieve compressed context
curl "http://localhost:8080/v1/state/context?session_id=demo&top_k=5" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $SEMVEC_LICENSE_KEY"

Endpoint groups: sessions (CRUD + run/store/context), session-control (resonance triggers, anchors, isolation, export/import/verify), clusters, regions (consensus-driven realignment), global observer (anomaly detection across regions), network (state transfer, user partitioning, trust-based consensus), literal cache, Prometheus /metrics.

Auth is via Authorization: Bearer <jwt> or X-API-Key: <jwt> — same Ed25519-signed JWT as the in-process licensing system.

See the REST API reference for every endpoint and the CLI reference for semvec serve flags.


Persistence

state.to_dict() is a JSON-safe checkpoint with embedded SHA-256 checksum — best when the snapshot has to round-trip through systems that only speak JSON.

state.to_bytes(compress=True) is the compact binary equivalent (gzip-compressed JSON, magic header, SHA-256 corruption check) — best for cold-storage checkpoints. state.to_bytes(compress=False) is the speed-optimised variant: same byte footprint as JSON, but kept as a self-describing binary blob with corruption check — best for hot-path persistence. Both paths preserve the full state on round-trip:

  • the semantic state and its rolling histories
  • all three memory tiers
  • domain anchors and topic-switch history
  • the complete LiteralCache: entities, decisions, error patterns, invariants, test history, code structures

Restore with SemvecState.from_bytes(blob); the version byte distinguishes the two to_bytes modes automatically.

Practical sizing on mpnet 768 d:

Memories JSON to_bytes(compress=True) to_bytes(compress=False)
110 (small) 18 ms / 8.8 kB / memory 157 ms / 3.7 kB / memory 36 ms / 8.8 kB / memory
1 000 (extrapolated) ~ 0.2 s / 9 MB ~ 1.4 s / 3.7 MB ~ 0.3 s / 9 MB
100 000 ~ 17 s / 1.7 GB ~ 2.5 min / 400 MB ~ 30 s / 1.7 GB

Pick the variant by use case:

  • Cold-storage checkpoint (occasional, durability matters) → compress=True. ~ 2.4× smaller than JSON; pay the gzip cost once.
  • Hot-path persistence (every-turn or per-request) → compress=False. Same size as JSON, only ~ 1.9× slower than json.dumps, but kept as a self-describing binary blob with corruption check.

For very large footprints (> 100 k memories) wrap your own NPZ/Parquet around the embedding payload to save another factor.


Configuration & environment variables

Variable Default Used by
SEMVEC_LICENSE_KEY Pro/Enterprise gates; REST API auth
SEMVEC_ALLOW_ANONYMOUS unset REST API: bypass auth (dev only)
SEMVEC_STATE_DIR .semvec CodingEngine state persistence
SEMVEC_EMBED_MODEL all-MiniLM-L6-v2 MCP server / hooks default embedder (consider overriding to paraphrase-multilingual-mpnet-base-v2 for German/multilingual)
SEMVEC_EMBED_DEVICE cpu MCP server / hooks: cpu or cuda
DATABASE_URL sqlite:///semvec.db REST API persistence (also accepts postgresql://…)
METRICS_USER / METRICS_PASSWORD Basic Auth on Prometheus /metrics
OPENAI_BASE_URL, OPENAI_API_KEY, OPENAI_MODEL OpenAIClient
OLLAMA_BASE_URL, OLLAMA_MODEL http://localhost:11434, — OllamaClient

Error handling

import time
from semvec import RateLimitError, LicenseExpiredError, ConfigurationError

try:
    result = state.update(embedding, text)
except RateLimitError as e:
    # e.retry_after is a datetime.timedelta; e.upgrade_url is set
    time.sleep(e.retry_after.total_seconds())
    result = state.update(embedding, text)
except LicenseExpiredError as e:
    # Hard fail — re-import won't help. Renew at e.upgrade_url.
    logger.error("semvec license expired — renew at %s", e.upgrade_url)
    raise
except ConfigurationError as e:
    # Wrong dimension, missing embedder, malformed config, etc.
    raise

All Semvec exceptions inherit from SemvecError. License-related exceptions (RateLimitError, LicenseExpiredError, LicenseError) inherit from LicenseError → SemvecError.


Licensing

Three tiers; Community works without a key, Pro and Enterprise require a signed Ed25519 JWT:

Tier Rate limit Retrieval modes
Community (no key) 5 QPS sustained / 50 burst Base retrieval
Pro 200 / 2000 QPS Extended
Enterprise Unthrottled All

JWTs have a 30-day TTL. Expiry is a hard fail — the next gated call raises LicenseExpiredError with the renewal URL in the message. Rate-limit exhaustion raises RateLimitError with a retry_after (a datetime.timedelta) and the upgrade URL.

export SEMVEC_LICENSE_KEY="eyJhbGciOiJFZERTQSI..."

Limitations & non-goals

Honest list of what Semvec does not do:

  • Not a vector database. Long-term memory is bounded; if you need recall over a million documents, run a dedicated vector store and treat Semvec as a conversational compressor on top.
  • Not a drop-in for stateless completion. The whole point is persistent state; if you only do single-shot prompts, you do not need Semvec.
  • No silent embedder fallback. If you do not pass an embedder, methods that need one raise a descriptive RuntimeError. Intentional — silent hash fallbacks gave surprising failure modes in earlier iterations.
  • License gate is a licensing feature, not a hard security boundary. Use it to enforce subscription tiers, not to keep determined adversaries out.
  • No mobile / WASM build today. abi3-py310 Linux/macOS/Windows only.
  • REST API persistence is metadata-only. Hot semantic state lives in-memory per process; only session/cluster/member/region/audit metadata is persisted. Plan accordingly for restarts.

FAQ

Is this RAG? Not in the usual sense. RAG retrieves documents at query time. Semvec compresses the conversation itself into a fixed-size state. They compose well — many users run Semvec for conversational signal + a vector DB for document retrieval.

Does the state ever grow? No, the state vector itself is fixed-size. The associated memory tiers are bounded by configured capacities — when full, the lowest-scoring entry is evicted (not the oldest).

Can I run it offline / air-gapped? Yes for Community tier. Pro/Enterprise tiers verify Ed25519 JWT signatures locally — no network call to a license server at runtime. Contact support@versino.de for offline-issued JWTs with custom TTLs.

How fast is it? Per-turn update() is sub-millisecond on a recent x86_64 CPU at dimension 384, dominated by NumPy/Rust matrix ops, not Python overhead. The whole point of the Rust port was to keep the math out of the GIL.

Is the source available? Compiled wheels are public on PyPI; the Rust source is held closed. Source access for Enterprise terms — contact support@versino.de.

GPU support? Embedders run on whatever device you configure (cuda, mps, cpu); the Semvec core itself is CPU-only — the math is small enough that GPU offload would lose more in transfer than it gains.


Telemetry

None. Semvec does not phone home. There is no init ping, no per-call event, no usage tracking, no machine pseudonym, no diversity sketch. License-JWT verification, inference, state updates, and retrieval all run locally — the package only contacts the network when you explicitly call something that does (the optional REST API server, the OpenAI / Ollama clients, your own embedder).

If you need install counts, PyPI download statistics (pypistats overall semvec) give you that without any client-side telemetry.

Earlier 0.x releases (≤ 0.5.2) shipped an opt-out anonymous init ping and a HyperLogLog "diversity sketch" intended to detect surrogate-cloning attempts. Both were removed in 0.5.3 — the trade-off was wrong, the GDPR Art. 6(1)(f) "patent-enforcement" basis was untenable, and the architecture matched the pattern of commercial spyware regardless of intent. If you're still on ≤ 0.5.2, upgrading to 0.5.3 removes the ping; you can also delete ~/.semvec/telemetry-salt (it is no longer used).


Support

  • Documentation: https://semvec-docs.pages.dev
  • Pricing & licensing: https://www.semvec.io
  • Pro / Enterprise support: support@versino.de (priority response)
  • Security disclosures: security@versino.de — please do not open public issues for vulnerabilities; coordinated disclosure with 48 h acknowledgement, fix-or-mitigation in 30 days for high-severity issues

License

Proprietary — all rights reserved. Commercial use requires a Pro or Enterprise license. The full license text ships inside the wheel as LICENSE; for procurement, see https://www.semvec.io.

Copyright © 2026 Michael Neuberger · Versino PsiOmega.

Project details


Download files

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

Source Distributions

No source distribution files available for this release.See tutorial on generating distribution archives.

Built Distributions

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

semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl (1.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+Windows x86-64

semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_x86_64.whl (1.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+musllinux: musl 1.2+ x86-64

semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_aarch64.whl (1.3 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+musllinux: musl 1.2+ ARM64

semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl (1.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+manylinux: glibc 2.17+ x86-64

semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl (1.3 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+manylinux: glibc 2.17+ ARM64

semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (1.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+macOS 11.0+ ARM64

semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (1.3 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+macOS 10.12+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 1.2 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.10+, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 490c90051c460ce8486a8a12eb88cbafcd1891b93530f1fd0ee1fbebef82b4a5
MD5 2f86f2a2dac15d30efe392f1068afbb7
BLAKE2b-256 dbf336b6b062bb5fcfe45433da2fe5f56d869925bf45595f2d50c63bc626fe05

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on MichaelNeuberger/semvec

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

File details

Details for the file semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a06731d2e47a59321049810c791b4377bafb3261156950408852e337920e06d3
MD5 1b0594a1b7cfea993aa67f7a11c0dc9d
BLAKE2b-256 21102baba8fd00e1f7733fb3ce83a2c406123cb1bbb4d3993a2b7f4d3db6af15

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on MichaelNeuberger/semvec

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

File details

Details for the file semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_aarch64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_aarch64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e9cdbfb3b1357da8e2981f5b55668ec9417f6589964327aa85421564ef8c93d7
MD5 c884543a0f92e9f86e1494d537455028
BLAKE2b-256 92d30d52b2607240977e761d3c6486e07cf06dd9822bca5f82bc657230b6dcc2

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-musllinux_1_2_aarch64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on MichaelNeuberger/semvec

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

File details

Details for the file semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 60ba92bb2887efe56aeff67220d665c8a82713ae14f566129a47bbd7aa29422c
MD5 9701a2e6e7c7e7ba17f160457a170c0c
BLAKE2b-256 249e2c36662c7aabc2280d981923199ea59997a6278d0d034b1f66461d98c1e5

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on MichaelNeuberger/semvec

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

File details

Details for the file semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 300fb49cb1155c91ed33f873a2cfd8449dbfe1ec95059fb2ff3726df27936d33
MD5 a540eeca72386e181702730e689f7824
BLAKE2b-256 203d8df1fa319e67494433b3fd4e372857a6baacce324ef889404655d88cf186

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on MichaelNeuberger/semvec

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

File details

Details for the file semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9d1c36528e05da1659408bfe9c8d523b950e2a74f8f7c50fe62a96a2ad3d2753
MD5 baf2c2dfd55edb91b487899c44ccf1eb
BLAKE2b-256 0b3c00ac8732d99806f6ca5844a9a88e50ae05f690b8909ad0b15a9f2279dfd7

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on MichaelNeuberger/semvec

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

File details

Details for the file semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 bcbe8b3959cdebe8b750d6fda3a7f18a48526ab183bdfc28acdcc0fa6b3b5368
MD5 fab1b78cce40aac15e261caf1d358980
BLAKE2b-256 f6d12ec3e1633d564ad13bc3c72fd0f189944574a6953067bbab41f15223dc1d

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for semvec-0.5.4-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on MichaelNeuberger/semvec

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