name: memory description: Use AI DevKit memory via CLI commands. Search before non-trivial work, store verified reusable knowledge, update stale entries, and avoid saving transcripts, secrets, or one-off task progress.
AI DevKit Memory CLI
Use npx ai-devkit@latest memory ... as the durable knowledge layer.
Workflow
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For implementation, debugging, review, planning, or documentation tasks, search before deep work unless the task is trivial:
npx ai-devkit@latest memory search --query "<task, subsystem, error, or convention>" --limit 5For broad or risky tasks, search multiple angles: subsystem, error text, framework, command, and task intent.
-
Use results as context:
- Trust repo files, tests, fresh command output, and explicit user instructions over memory.
- If memory conflicts with verified evidence, use the evidence and update the stale memory.
- Mention memory only when it changes the plan or avoids asking the user again.
-
Search before storing:
npx ai-devkit@latest memory search --query "<knowledge to store>" --table -
Store or update only after the quality gate passes.
Quality Gate
Before storing, all must be true:
- Future sessions are likely to reuse it.
- It is verified by code, docs, tests, command output, or explicit user instruction.
- It is not merely a restatement of obvious nearby files unless it prevents repeated agent mistakes.
- It is scoped narrowly enough.
- Existing memory does not already cover it.
- It contains no secrets, credentials, private customer data, personal data, raw logs, or temporary paths.
Store:
- Project conventions, user preferences, durable decisions.
- Reusable fixes, testing patterns, commands, setup gotchas.
- Non-obvious constraints, architecture rules, failure patterns.
Do not store:
- Task progress, transcripts, speculation, generic programming facts.
- Raw errors without diagnosis.
- Anything the user did not intend to persist.
Commands
Search
npx ai-devkit@latest memory search \
--query "<query>" \
--tags "<tags>" \
--scope "<scope>" \
--limit 5
Use --table to get IDs for updates:
npx ai-devkit@latest memory search --query "<query>" --table
Options: --query/-q required; --tags; --scope/-s; --limit/-l from 1-20; --table.
Store
npx ai-devkit@latest memory store \
--title "<actionable title, 10-100 chars>" \
--content "<context, guidance, evidence, exceptions>" \
--tags "<lowercase,tags>" \
--scope "<global|project:name|repo:org/repo>"
Use this content shape when helpful:
Context: Where this applies.
Guidance: What to do.
Evidence: File, command, test, or user instruction.
Exceptions: When not to apply it.
Update
Find the ID with search --table, then update only changed fields:
npx ai-devkit@latest memory update \
--id "<memory-id>" \
--title "<updated title>" \
--content "<updated content>" \
--tags "<replacement,tags>" \
--scope "<updated scope>"
--tags replaces all existing tags.
Scoping
Use the narrowest useful scope:
repo:<org/repo>for one repository.project:<name>for one app, product, or workspace.globalonly for knowledge that applies across unrelated projects.
If unsure, use a narrower scope.
Troubleshooting
- CLI missing: run
npx ai-devkit@latest --version. - Duplicate title: search, then update the existing item if it is the same knowledge.
- Empty results: broaden terms, remove filters, or search symptoms and subsystem names separately.
- Validation error: check title/content lengths, query length, and
--limitrange. - DB path: default is
~/.ai-devkit/memory.db; project config can override it automatically.