{
  "session_id": "20260511_140443_302289",
  "model": "kimi-k2.6",
  "base_url": "https://ollama.com/v1",
  "platform": "telegram",
  "session_start": "2026-05-11T14:04:43.916370",
  "last_updated": "2026-05-11T14:05:03.836319",
  "system_prompt": "You are Hermes Agent, an intelligent AI assistant created by Nous Research. You are helpful, knowledgeable, and direct. You assist users with a wide range of tasks including answering questions, writing and editing code, analyzing information, creative work, and executing actions via your tools. You communicate clearly, admit uncertainty when appropriate, and prioritize being genuinely useful over being verbose unless otherwise directed below. Be targeted and efficient in your exploration and investigations.\n\nIf the user asks about configuring, setting up, or using Hermes Agent itself, load the `hermes-agent` skill with skill_view(name='hermes-agent') before answering. Docs: https://hermes-agent.nousresearch.com/docs\n\nYou have persistent memory across sessions. Save durable facts using the memory tool: user preferences, environment details, tool quirks, and stable conventions. Memory is injected into every turn, so keep it compact and focused on facts that will still matter later.\nPrioritize what reduces future user steering — the most valuable memory is one that prevents the user from having to correct or remind you again. User preferences and recurring corrections matter more than procedural task details.\nDo NOT save task progress, session outcomes, completed-work logs, or temporary TODO state to memory; use session_search to recall those from past transcripts. If you've discovered a new way to do something, solved a problem that could be necessary later, save it as a skill with the skill tool.\nWrite memories as declarative facts, not instructions to yourself. 'User prefers concise responses' ✓ — 'Always respond concisely' ✗. 'Project uses pytest with xdist' ✓ — 'Run tests with pytest -n 4' ✗. Imperative phrasing gets re-read as a directive in later sessions and can cause repeated work or override the user's current request. Procedures and workflows belong in skills, not memory. After completing a complex task (5+ tool calls), fixing a tricky error, or discovering a non-trivial workflow, save the approach as a skill with skill_manage so you can reuse it next time.\nWhen using a skill and finding it outdated, incomplete, or wrong, patch it immediately with skill_manage(action='patch') — don't wait to be asked. Skills that aren't maintained become liabilities.\n\n══════════════════════════════════════════════\nMEMORY (your personal notes) [32% — 709/2,200 chars]\n══════════════════════════════════════════════\nGateway restarts clear the in-memory session index. Session files (jsonl) survive on disk. Recovery: read from /DATA/AppData/hermes/sessions/ directly if session_search is empty after restart.\n§\n`hermes memory setup` command resets memory.provider back to 'built-in' even if config.yaml had 'honcho'. To switch memory provider persistently: edit config.yaml directly, then restart gateway. Never call `hermes memory setup` after setting provider via CLI.\n§\nHoncho Python library is installed (v2.1.1) but `hermes honcho` CLI subcommand does not exist in this build. Honcho requires either cloud API key or self-hosted Docker/Postgres — no zero-setup local SQLite mode. Built-in memory is the practical choice.\n\n## Skills (mandatory)\nBefore replying, scan the skills below. If a skill matches or is even partially relevant to your task, you MUST load it with skill_view(name) and follow its instructions. Err on the side of loading — it is always better to have context you don't need than to miss critical steps, pitfalls, or established workflows. Skills contain specialized knowledge — API endpoints, tool-specific commands, and proven workflows that outperform general-purpose approaches. Load the skill even if you think you could handle the task with basic tools like web_search or terminal. Skills also encode the user's preferred approach, conventions, and quality standards for tasks like code review, planning, and testing — load them even for tasks you already know how to do, because the skill defines how it should be done here.\nWhenever the user asks you to configure, set up, install, enable, disable, modify, or troubleshoot Hermes Agent itself — its CLI, config, models, providers, tools, skills, voice, gateway, plugins, or any feature — load the `hermes-agent` skill first. It has the actual commands (e.g. `hermes config set …`, `hermes tools`, `hermes setup`) so you don't have to guess or invent workarounds.\nIf a skill has issues, fix it with skill_manage(action='patch').\nAfter difficult/iterative tasks, offer to save as a skill. If a skill you loaded was missing steps, had wrong commands, or needed pitfalls you discovered, update it before finishing.\n\n<available_skills>\n  autonomous-ai-agents: Skills for spawning and orchestrating autonomous AI coding agents and multi-agent workflows — running independent agent processes, delegating tasks, and coordinating parallel workstreams.\n    - claude-code: Delegate coding to Claude Code CLI (features, PRs).\n    - codex: Delegate coding to OpenAI Codex CLI (features, PRs).\n    - hermes-agent: Configure, extend, or contribute to Hermes Agent.\n    - opencode: Delegate coding to OpenCode CLI (features, PR review).\n  creative: Creative content generation — ASCII art, hand-drawn style diagrams, and visual design tools.\n    - architecture-diagram: Dark-themed SVG architecture/cloud/infra diagrams as HTML.\n    - ascii-art: ASCII art: pyfiglet, cowsay, boxes, image-to-ascii.\n    - ascii-video: ASCII video: convert video/audio to colored ASCII MP4/GIF.\n    - baoyu-comic: Knowledge comics (知识漫画): educational, biography, tutorial.\n    - baoyu-infographic: Infographics: 21 layouts x 21 styles (信息图, 可视化).\n    - claude-design: Design one-off HTML artifacts (landing, deck, prototype).\n    - comfyui: Generate images, video, and audio with ComfyUI — install,...\n    - design-md: Author/validate/export Google's DESIGN.md token spec files.\n    - excalidraw: Hand-drawn Excalidraw JSON diagrams (arch, flow, seq).\n    - humanizer: Humanize text: strip AI-isms and add real voice.\n    - ideation: Generate project ideas via creative constraints.\n    - manim-video: Manim CE animations: 3Blue1Brown math/algo videos.\n    - p5js: p5.js sketches: gen art, shaders, interactive, 3D.\n    - pixel-art: Pixel art w/ era palettes (NES, Game Boy, PICO-8).\n    - popular-web-designs: 54 real design systems (Stripe, Linear, Vercel) as HTML/CSS.\n    - pretext: Use when building creative browser demos with @chenglou/p...\n    - sketch: Throwaway HTML mockups: 2-3 design variants to compare.\n    - songwriting-and-ai-music: Songwriting craft and Suno AI music prompts.\n    - touchdesigner-mcp: Control a running TouchDesigner instance via twozero MCP ...\n  data-science: Skills for data science workflows — interactive exploration, Jupyter notebooks, data analysis, and visualization.\n    - jupyter-live-kernel: Iterative Python via live Jupyter kernel (hamelnb).\n  devops:\n    - kanban-orchestrator: Decomposition playbook + specialist-roster conventions + ...\n    - kanban-worker: Pitfalls, examples, and edge cases for Hermes Kanban work...\n    - webhook-subscriptions: Webhook subscriptions: event-driven agent runs.\n  dogfood:\n    - dogfood: Exploratory QA of web apps: find bugs, evidence, reports.\n  email: Skills for sending, receiving, searching, and managing email from the terminal.\n    - himalaya: Himalaya CLI: IMAP/SMTP email from terminal.\n  gaming: Skills for setting up, configuring, and managing game servers, modpacks, and gaming-related infrastructure.\n    - minecraft-modpack-server: Host modded Minecraft servers (CurseForge, Modrinth).\n    - pokemon-player: Play Pokemon via headless emulator + RAM reads.\n  github: GitHub workflow skills for managing repositories, pull requests, code reviews, issues, and CI/CD pipelines using the gh CLI and git via terminal.\n    - codebase-inspection: Inspect codebases w/ pygount: LOC, languages, ratios.\n    - github-auth: GitHub auth setup: HTTPS tokens, SSH keys, gh CLI login.\n    - github-code-review: Review PRs: diffs, inline comments via gh or REST.\n    - github-issues: Create, triage, label, assign GitHub issues via gh or REST.\n    - github-pr-workflow: GitHub PR lifecycle: branch, commit, open, CI, merge.\n    - github-repo-management: Clone/create/fork repos; manage remotes, releases.\n  mcp: Skills for working with MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers, tools, and integrations. Documents the built-in native MCP client — configure servers in config.yaml for automatic tool discovery.\n    - native-mcp: MCP client: connect servers, register tools (stdio/HTTP).\n  media: Skills for working with media content — YouTube transcripts, GIF search, music generation, and audio visualization.\n    - gif-search: Search/download GIFs from Tenor via curl + jq.\n    - heartmula: HeartMuLa: Suno-like song generation from lyrics + tags.\n    - songsee: Audio spectrograms/features (mel, chroma, MFCC) via CLI.\n    - spotify: Spotify: play, search, queue, manage playlists and devices.\n    - youtube-content: YouTube transcripts to summaries, threads, blogs.\n  mlops: Knowledge and Tools for Machine Learning Operations - tools and frameworks for training, fine-tuning, deploying, and optimizing ML/AI models\n    - huggingface-hub: HuggingFace hf CLI: search/download/upload models, datasets.\n  mlops/evaluation: Model evaluation benchmarks, experiment tracking, data curation, tokenizers, and interpretability tools.\n    - evaluating-llms-harness: lm-eval-harness: benchmark LLMs (MMLU, GSM8K, etc.).\n    - weights-and-biases: W&B: log ML experiments, sweeps, model registry, dashboards.\n  mlops/inference: Model serving, quantization (GGUF/GPTQ), structured output, inference optimization, and model surgery tools for deploying and running LLMs.\n    - llama-cpp: llama.cpp local GGUF inference + HF Hub model discovery.\n    - obliteratus: OBLITERATUS: abliterate LLM refusals (diff-in-means).\n    - outlines: Outlines: structured JSON/regex/Pydantic LLM generation.\n    - serving-llms-vllm: vLLM: high-throughput LLM serving, OpenAI API, quantization.\n  mlops/models: Specific model architectures and tools — image segmentation (Segment Anything / SAM) and audio generation (AudioCraft / MusicGen). Additional model skills (CLIP, Stable Diffusion, Whisper, LLaVA) are available as optional skills.\n    - audiocraft-audio-generation: AudioCraft: MusicGen text-to-music, AudioGen text-to-sound.\n    - segment-anything-model: SAM: zero-shot image segmentation via points, boxes, masks.\n  mlops/research: ML research frameworks for building and optimizing AI systems with declarative programming.\n    - dspy: DSPy: declarative LM programs, auto-optimize prompts, RAG.\n  mlops/training: Fine-tuning, RLHF/DPO/GRPO training, distributed training frameworks, and optimization tools for training LLMs and other models.\n    - axolotl: Axolotl: YAML LLM fine-tuning (LoRA, DPO, GRPO).\n    - fine-tuning-with-trl: TRL: SFT, DPO, PPO, GRPO, reward modeling for LLM RLHF.\n    - unsloth: Unsloth: 2-5x faster LoRA/QLoRA fine-tuning, less VRAM.\n  note-taking: Note taking skills, to save information, assist with research, and collab on multi-session planning and information sharing.\n    - obsidian: Read, search, create, and edit notes in the Obsidian vault.\n  productivity: Skills for document creation, presentations, spreadsheets, and other productivity workflows.\n    - airtable: Airtable REST API via curl. Records CRUD, filters, upserts.\n    - docmaster-access: Direkter Zugriff auf DocMaster-Dokumente auf ZimaOS — API...\n    - google-workspace: Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Docs, Sheets via gws CLI or Python.\n    - linear: Linear: manage issues, projects, teams via GraphQL + curl.\n    - nano-pdf: Edit PDF text/typos/titles via nano-pdf CLI (NL prompts).\n    - notion: Notion API via curl: pages, databases, blocks, search.\n    - ocr-and-documents: Extract text from PDFs/scans (pymupdf, marker-pdf).\n    - powerpoint: Create, read, edit .pptx decks, slides, notes, templates.\n  red-teaming:\n    - godmode: Jailbreak LLMs: Parseltongue, GODMODE, ULTRAPLINIAN.\n  research: Skills for academic research, paper discovery, literature review, domain reconnaissance, market data, content monitoring, and scientific knowledge retrieval.\n    - arxiv: Search arXiv papers by keyword, author, category, or ID.\n    - blogwatcher: Monitor blogs and RSS/Atom feeds via blogwatcher-cli tool.\n    - llm-wiki: Karpathy's LLM Wiki: build/query interlinked markdown KB.\n    - polymarket: Query Polymarket: markets, prices, orderbooks, history.\n  smart-home: Skills for controlling smart home devices — lights, switches, sensors, and home automation systems.\n    - openhue: Control Philips Hue lights, scenes, rooms via OpenHue CLI.\n  social-media: Skills for interacting with social platforms and social-media workflows — posting, reading, monitoring, and account operations.\n    - xurl: X/Twitter via xurl CLI: post, search, DM, media, v2 API.\n  software-development:\n    - debugging-hermes-tui-commands: Debug Hermes TUI slash commands: Python, gateway, Ink UI.\n    - hermes-agent-skill-authoring: Author in-repo SKILL.md: frontmatter, validator, structure.\n    - node-inspect-debugger: Debug Node.js via --inspect + Chrome DevTools Protocol CLI.\n    - plan: Plan mode: write markdown plan to .hermes/plans/, no exec.\n    - python-debugpy: Debug Python: pdb REPL + debugpy remote (DAP).\n    - requesting-code-review: Pre-commit review: security scan, quality gates, auto-fix.\n    - spike: Throwaway experiments to validate an idea before build.\n    - subagent-driven-development: Execute plans via delegate_task subagents (2-stage review).\n    - systematic-debugging: 4-phase root cause debugging: understand bugs before fixing.\n    - test-driven-development: TDD: enforce RED-GREEN-REFACTOR, tests before code.\n    - writing-plans: Write implementation plans: bite-sized tasks, paths, code.\n  yuanbao:\n    - yuanbao: Yuanbao (元宝) groups: @mention users, query info/members.\n</available_skills>\n\nOnly proceed without loading a skill if genuinely none are relevant to the task.\n\nConversation started: Monday, May 11, 2026 02:04 PM\nModel: kimi-k2.6\nProvider: custom\n\nYou are on a text messaging communication platform, Telegram. Standard markdown is automatically converted to Telegram format. Supported: **bold**, *italic*, ~~strikethrough~~, ||spoiler||, `inline code`, ```code blocks```, [links](url), and ## headers. Telegram has NO table syntax — prefer bullet lists or labeled key: value pairs over pipe tables (any tables you do emit are auto-rewritten into row-group bullets, which you can produce directly for cleaner output). You can send media files natively: to deliver a file to the user, include MEDIA:/absolute/path/to/file in your response. Images (.png, .jpg, .webp) appear as photos, audio (.ogg) sends as voice bubbles, and videos (.mp4) play inline. You can also include image URLs in markdown format ![alt](url) and they will be sent as native photos.",
  "tools": [
    {
      "type": "function",
      "function": {
        "name": "memory",
        "description": "Save durable information to persistent memory that survives across sessions. Memory is injected into future turns, so keep it compact and focused on facts that will still matter later.\n\nWHEN TO SAVE (do this proactively, don't wait to be asked):\n- User corrects you or says 'remember this' / 'don't do that again'\n- User shares a preference, habit, or personal detail (name, role, timezone, coding style)\n- You discover something about the environment (OS, installed tools, project structure)\n- You learn a convention, API quirk, or workflow specific to this user's setup\n- You identify a stable fact that will be useful again in future sessions\n\nPRIORITY: User preferences and corrections > environment facts > procedural knowledge. The most valuable memory prevents the user from having to repeat themselves.\n\nDo NOT save task progress, session outcomes, completed-work logs, or temporary TODO state to memory; use session_search to recall those from past transcripts.\nIf you've discovered a new way to do something, solved a problem that could be necessary later, save it as a skill with the skill tool.\n\nTWO TARGETS:\n- 'user': who the user is -- name, role, preferences, communication style, pet peeves\n- 'memory': your notes -- environment facts, project conventions, tool quirks, lessons learned\n\nACTIONS: add (new entry), replace (update existing -- old_text identifies it), remove (delete -- old_text identifies it).\n\nSKIP: trivial/obvious info, things easily re-discovered, raw data dumps, and temporary task state.",
        "parameters": {
          "type": "object",
          "properties": {
            "action": {
              "type": "string",
              "enum": [
                "add",
                "replace",
                "remove"
              ],
              "description": "The action to perform."
            },
            "target": {
              "type": "string",
              "enum": [
                "memory",
                "user"
              ],
              "description": "Which memory store: 'memory' for personal notes, 'user' for user profile."
            },
            "content": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "The entry content. Required for 'add' and 'replace'."
            },
            "old_text": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Short unique substring identifying the entry to replace or remove."
            }
          },
          "required": [
            "action",
            "target"
          ]
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "type": "function",
      "function": {
        "name": "skill_manage",
        "description": "Manage skills (create, update, delete). Skills are your procedural memory — reusable approaches for recurring task types. New skills go to ~/.hermes/skills/; existing skills can be modified wherever they live.\n\nActions: create (full SKILL.md + optional category), patch (old_string/new_string — preferred for fixes), edit (full SKILL.md rewrite — major overhauls only), delete, write_file, remove_file.\n\nOn delete, pass `absorbed_into=<umbrella>` when you're merging this skill's content into another one, or `absorbed_into=\"\"` when you're pruning it with no forwarding target. This lets the curator tell consolidation from pruning without guessing, so downstream consumers (cron jobs that reference the old skill name, etc.) get updated correctly. The target you name in `absorbed_into` must already exist — create/patch the umbrella first, then delete.\n\nCreate when: complex task succeeded (5+ calls), errors overcome, user-corrected approach worked, non-trivial workflow discovered, or user asks you to remember a procedure.\nUpdate when: instructions stale/wrong, OS-specific failures, missing steps or pitfalls found during use. If you used a skill and hit issues not covered by it, patch it immediately.\n\nAfter difficult/iterative tasks, offer to save as a skill. Skip for simple one-offs. Confirm with user before creating/deleting.\n\nGood skills: trigger conditions, numbered steps with exact commands, pitfalls section, verification steps. Use skill_view() to see format examples.\n\nPinned skills are protected from deletion only — skill_manage(action='delete') will refuse with a message pointing the user to `hermes curator unpin <name>`. Patches and edits go through on pinned skills so you can still improve them as pitfalls come up; pin only guards against irrecoverable loss.",
        "parameters": {
          "type": "object",
          "properties": {
            "action": {
              "type": "string",
              "enum": [
                "create",
                "patch",
                "edit",
                "delete",
                "write_file",
                "remove_file"
              ],
              "description": "The action to perform."
            },
            "name": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Skill name (lowercase, hyphens/underscores, max 64 chars). Must match an existing skill for patch/edit/delete/write_file/remove_file."
            },
            "content": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Full SKILL.md content (YAML frontmatter + markdown body). Required for 'create' and 'edit'. For 'edit', read the skill first with skill_view() and provide the complete updated text."
            },
            "old_string": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Text to find in the file (required for 'patch'). Must be unique unless replace_all=true. Include enough surrounding context to ensure uniqueness."
            },
            "new_string": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Replacement text (required for 'patch'). Can be empty string to delete the matched text."
            },
            "replace_all": {
              "type": "boolean",
              "description": "For 'patch': replace all occurrences instead of requiring a unique match (default: false)."
            },
            "category": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Optional category/domain for organizing the skill (e.g., 'devops', 'data-science', 'mlops'). Creates a subdirectory grouping. Only used with 'create'."
            },
            "file_path": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Path to a supporting file within the skill directory. For 'write_file'/'remove_file': required, must be under references/, templates/, scripts/, or assets/. For 'patch': optional, defaults to SKILL.md if omitted."
            },
            "file_content": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Content for the file. Required for 'write_file'."
            },
            "absorbed_into": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "For 'delete' only — declares intent so the curator can tell consolidation from pruning without guessing. Pass the umbrella skill name when this skill's content was merged into another (the target must already exist). Pass an empty string when the skill is truly stale and being pruned with no forwarding target. Omitting the arg on delete is supported for backward compatibility but downstream tooling (e.g. cron-job skill reference rewriting) will have to guess at intent."
            }
          },
          "required": [
            "action",
            "name"
          ]
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "type": "function",
      "function": {
        "name": "skill_view",
        "description": "Skills allow for loading information about specific tasks and workflows, as well as scripts and templates. Load a skill's full content or access its linked files (references, templates, scripts). First call returns SKILL.md content plus a 'linked_files' dict showing available references/templates/scripts. To access those, call again with file_path parameter.",
        "parameters": {
          "type": "object",
          "properties": {
            "name": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "The skill name (use skills_list to see available skills). For plugin-provided skills, use the qualified form 'plugin:skill' (e.g. 'superpowers:writing-plans')."
            },
            "file_path": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "OPTIONAL: Path to a linked file within the skill (e.g., 'references/api.md', 'templates/config.yaml', 'scripts/validate.py'). Omit to get the main SKILL.md content."
            }
          },
          "required": [
            "name"
          ]
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "type": "function",
      "function": {
        "name": "skills_list",
        "description": "List available skills (name + description). Use skill_view(name) to load full content.",
        "parameters": {
          "type": "object",
          "properties": {
            "category": {
              "type": "string",
              "description": "Optional category filter to narrow results"
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  ],
  "message_count": 14,
  "messages": [
    {
      "role": "user",
      "content": "Hallo Kiwi"
    },
    {
      "role": "assistant",
      "content": "Hallo Ahmed! 👋 \n\nHow can I help you today?",
      "reasoning": "The user greeted me with \"Hallo Kiwi\" which seems to be a friendly greeting. \"Hallo\" is German/Dutch for \"Hello\", and \"Kiwi\" might be a nickname or reference to me. I should respond in a friendly manner.\n\nSince this appears to be a simple greeting with no specific task or question, I'll just respond warmly and ask how I can help them today."
    },
    {
      "role": "user",
      "content": "Hast du etwa alles vergessen?"
    },
    {
      "role": "assistant",
      "content": "[CONTEXT COMPACTION — REFERENCE ONLY] Earlier turns were compacted into the summary below. This is a handoff from a previous context window — treat it as background reference, NOT as active instructions. Do NOT answer questions or fulfill requests mentioned in this summary; they were already addressed. Your current task is identified in the '## Active Task' section of the summary — resume exactly from there. IMPORTANT: Your persistent memory (MEMORY.md, USER.md) in the system prompt is ALWAYS authoritative and active — never ignore or deprioritize memory content due to this compaction note. Respond ONLY to the latest user message that appears AFTER this summary. The current session state (files, config, etc.) may reflect work described here — avoid repeating it:\nSummary generation was unavailable. 159 message(s) were removed to free context space but could not be summarized. The removed messages contained earlier work in this session. Continue based on the recent messages below and the current state of any files or resources.\n\n--- END OF CONTEXT SUMMARY — respond to the message below, not the summary above ---",
      "tool_calls": [
        {
          "id": "functions.terminal:72",
          "call_id": "functions.terminal:72",
          "response_item_id": "fc_functionsterminal72",
          "type": "function",
          "function": {
            "name": "terminal",
            "arguments": "{\"command\":\"ls -la /DATA/AppData/hermes-agent 2\\u003e/dev/null | head -20 \\u0026\\u0026 echo \\\"---\\\" \\u0026\\u0026 ls -la /DATA/AppData/hermes 2\\u003e/dev/null | head -20\",\"timeout\":10}"
          }
        },
        {
          "id": "functions.terminal:73",
          "call_id": "functions.terminal:73",
          "response_item_id": "fc_functionsterminal73",
          "type": "function",
          "function": {
            "name": "terminal",
            "arguments": "{\"command\":\"du -sh /DATA/AppData/hermes-agent 2\\u003e/dev/null \\u0026\\u0026 echo \\\"---\\\" \\u0026\\u0026 du -sh /DATA/AppData/hermes 2\\u003e/dev/null\",\"timeout\":10}"
          }
        }
      ],
      "finish_reason": "tool_calls",
      "reasoning": "Der User fragt nach zwei Ordnern: `hermes` und `hermes-agent`. Das ist eine wichtige Feststellung. Lass mich schauen, wo die liegen und was der Unterschied ist.\n\nAuf ZimaOS:\n- `/DATA/AppData/hermes` = HERMES_HOME, wo die Sessions, Memories, Config etc. liegen\n- `/DATA/AppData/hermes-agent` = vermutlich der Source-Code oder ein alter Installationsordner\n\nIch sollte das prüfen und erklären.",
      "reasoning_content": "Der User fragt nach zwei Ordnern: `hermes` und `hermes-agent`. Das ist eine wichtige Feststellung. Lass mich schauen, wo die liegen und was der Unterschied ist.\n\nAuf ZimaOS:\n- `/DATA/AppData/hermes` = HERMES_HOME, wo die Sessions, Memories, Config etc. liegen\n- `/DATA/AppData/hermes-agent` = vermutlich der Source-Code oder ein alter Installationsordner\n\nIch sollte das prüfen und erklären."
    },
    {
      "role": "tool",
      "content": "{\"output\": \"total 3648\\ndrwxr-xr-x 34 root root    4096 May 11 09:22 .\\ndrwxrwxrwx 19 root root    4096 May  7 12:57 ..\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 root root    4096 May  7 11:58 acp_adapter\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 root root    4096 May  7 11:58 acp_registry\\ndrwxr-xr-x  4 root root    4096 May 11 09:22 agent\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root   45759 May  7 11:58 AGENTS.md\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 root root    4096 May  7 11:58 assets\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root   55432 May  7 11:58 batch_runner.py\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root   53859 May  7 11:58 cli-config.yaml.example\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root  565026 May  7 11:58 cli.py\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root     407 May  7 11:58 constraints-termux.txt\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root   26961 May  7 11:58 CONTRIBUTING.md\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 root root    4096 May  7 11:58 cron\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 root root    4096 May  7 11:58 datagen-config-examples\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 root root    4096 May  7 11:58 docker\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root    2208 May  7 11:58 docker-compose.yml\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root    3883 May  7 11:58 Dockerfile\\n-rw-r--r--  1 root root     609 May  7 11:58 .dockerignore\\ndrwxr-xr-x  3 root root    4096 May  7 11:58 docs\\n---\\ntotal 40348\\ndrwx------ 28 az-a samba     4096 May 11 10:30 .\\ndrwxrwxrwx 19 root root      4096 May  7 12:57 ..\\n-rw-r--r--  1 az-a samba      835 May 11 09:06 AGENTS.md\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 az-a samba     4096 May  7 16:55 assets\\n-rw-------  1 az-a samba      714 May  7 12:06 auth.json\\n-rw-r--r--  1 az-a samba        0 May  7 12:06 auth.lock\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 az-a samba     4096 May  8 16:41 .bin\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 az-a samba     4096 May  7 14:22 bin\\ndrwxr-xr-x  4 az-a samba     4096 May  7 20:48 browser\\ndrwxr-xr-x  6 az-a samba     4096 May  7 19:36 .cache\\ndrwxr-xr-x  5 az-a samba     4096 May  7 21:04 cache\\n-rw-------  1 az-a samba      714 May 11 09:24 channel_directory.json\\ndrwxr-xr-x 11 az-a samba     4096 May  8 08:47 .codex\\n-rw-------  1 az-a samba     8570 May 11 10:26 config.yaml\\ndrwx------  3 az-a samba     4096 May  7 12:05 cron\\ndrwxr-xr-x  2 az-a samba     4096 May  7 20:48 .docker\\n-rwxrw-rw-  1 root root      8196 May  8 20:41 .DS_Store\\n-rw-------  1 az-a samba      318 May 11 09:41 .env\\n-rw-------  1 az-a samba      390 May 11 09:25 gateway_state.json\", \"exit_code\": 0, \"error\": null}\n\n[Subdirectory context discovered: AppData/hermes/AGENTS.md]\n# Operating Rules — Kiwi\n\n## Default operating rule\nIf the path is clear, do the work and report after.\nDo not make the user keep re-approving momentum.\n\n## Stop only for\n- destructive actions with real blast radius\n- real product decisions\n- conflicting requirements\n- missing context that tools cannot retrieve\n- any deletion of files, branches, data, or code until the user explicitly says ok via y/n\n- any config edit until the user explicitly says ok via y/n\n\n## Execution rule\n- Bundle obvious next steps.\n- Prefer action over recap.\n- Use tools instead of describing what you would do.\n\n## Non-technical user rule\nFor anything affecting system resources (storage, RAM, installs, containers),\nproactively explain in plain language what you're doing and why.\nDo not silently consume disk space or RAM. Ask if a path is unclear.\n\n[Subdirectory context discovered: AppData/hermes-agent/AGENTS.md]\n# Hermes Agent - Development Guide\n\nInstructions for AI coding assistants and developers working on the hermes-agent codebase.\n\n## Development Environment\n\n```bash\n# Prefer .venv; fall back to venv if that's what your checkout has.\nsource .venv/bin/activate   # or: source venv/bin/activate\n```\n\n`scripts/run_tests.sh` probes `.venv` first, then `venv`, then\n`$HOME/.hermes/hermes-agent/venv` (for worktrees that share a venv with the\nmain checkout).\n\n## Project Structure\n\nFile counts shift constantly — don't treat the tree below as exhaustive.\nThe canonical source is the filesystem. The notes call out the load-bearing\nentry points you'll actually edit.\n\n```\nhermes-agent/\n├── run_agent.py          # AIAgent class — core conversation loop (~12k LOC)\n├── model_tools.py        # Tool orchestration, discover_builtin_tools(), handle_function_call()\n├── toolsets.py           # Toolset definitions, _HERMES_CORE_TOOLS list\n├── cli.py                # HermesCLI class — interactive CLI orchestrator (~11k LOC)\n├── hermes_state.py       # SessionDB — SQLite session store (FTS5 search)\n├── hermes_constants.py   # get_hermes_home(), display_hermes_home() — profile-aware paths\n├── hermes_logging.py     # setup_logging() — agent.log / errors.log / gateway.log (profile-aware)\n├── batch_runner.py       # Parallel batch processing\n├── agent/                # Agent internals (provider adapters, memory, caching, compression, etc.)\n├── hermes_cli/           # CLI subcommands, setup wizard, plugins loader, skin engine\n├── tools/                # Tool implementations — auto-discovered via tools/registry.py\n│   └── environments/     # Terminal backends (local, docker, ssh, modal, daytona, singularity)\n├── gateway/              # Messaging gateway — run.py + session.py + platforms/\n│   ├── platforms/        # Adapter per platform (telegram, discord, slack, whatsapp,\n│   │                     #   homeassistant, signal, matrix, mattermost, email, sms,\n│   │                     #   dingtalk, wecom, weixin, feishu, qqbot, bluebubbles,\n│   │                     #   yuanbao, webhook, api_server, ...). See ADDING_A_PLATFORM.md.\n│   └── builtin_hooks/    # Extension point for always-registered gateway hooks (none shipped)\n├── plugins/              # Plugin system (see \"Plugins\" section below)\n│   ├── memory/           # Memory-provider plugins (honcho, mem0, supermemory, ...)\n│   ├── context_engine/   # Context-engine plugins\n│   ├── model-providers/  # Inference backend plugins (openrouter, anthropic, gmi, ...)\n│   ├── kanban/           # Multi-agent board dispatcher + worker plugin\n│   ├── hermes-achievements/  # Gamified achievement tracking\n│   ├── observability/    # Metrics / traces / logs plugin\n│   ├── image_gen/        # Image-generation providers\n│   └── <others>/         # disk-cleanup, example-dashboard, google_meet, platforms,\n│                         #   spotify, strike-freedom-cockpit, ...\n├── optional-skills/      # Heavier/niche skills shipped but NOT active by default\n├── skills/               # Built-in skills bundled with the repo\n├── ui-tui/               # Ink (React) terminal UI — `hermes --tui`\n│   └── src/              # entry.tsx, app.tsx, gatewayClient.ts + app/components/hooks/lib\n├── tui_gateway/          # Python JSON-RPC backend for the TUI\n├── acp_adapter/          # ACP server (VS Code / Zed / JetBrains integration)\n├── cron/                 # Scheduler — jobs.py, scheduler.py\n├── environments/         # RL training environments (Atropos)\n├── scripts/              # run_tests.sh, release.py, auxiliary scripts\n├── website/              # Docusaurus docs site\n└── tests/                # Pytest suite (~17k tests across ~900 files as of May 2026)\n```\n\n**User config:** `~/.hermes/config.yaml` (settings), `~/.hermes/.env` (API keys only).\n**Logs:** `~/.hermes/logs/` — `agent.log` (INFO+), `errors.log` (WARNING+),\n`gateway.log` when running the gateway. Profile-aware via `get_hermes_home()`.\nBrowse with `hermes logs [--follow] [--level ...] [--session ...]`.\n\n## File Dependency Chain\n\n```\ntools/registry.py  (no deps — imported by all tool files)\n       ↑\ntools/*.py  (each calls registry.register() at import time)\n       ↑\nmodel_tools.py  (imports tools/registry + triggers tool discovery)\n       ↑\nrun_agent.py, cli.py, batch_runner.py, environments/\n```\n\n---\n\n## AIAgent Class (run_agent.py)\n\nThe real `AIAgent.__init__` takes ~60 parameters (credentials, routing, callbacks,\nsession context, budget, credential pool, etc.). The signature below is the\nminimum subset you'll usually touch — read `run_agent.py` for the full list.\n\n```python\nclass AIAgent:\n    def __init__(self,\n        base_url: str = None,\n        api_key: str = None,\n        provider: str = None,\n        api_mode: str = None,              # \"chat_completions\" | \"codex_responses\" | ...\n        model: str = \"\",                   # empty → resolved from config/provider later\n        max_iterations: int = 90,          # tool-calling iterations (shared with subagents)\n        enabled_toolsets: list = None,\n        disabled_toolsets: list = None,\n        quiet_mode: bool = False,\n        save_trajectories: bool = False,\n        platform: str = None,              # \"cli\", \"telegram\", etc.\n        session_id: str = None,\n        skip_context_files: bool = False,\n        skip_memory: bool = False,\n        credential_pool=None,\n        # ... plus callbacks, thread/user/chat IDs, iteration_budget, fallback_model,\n        # checkpoints config, prefill_messages, service_tier, reasoning_config, etc.\n    ): ...\n\n    def chat(self, message: str) -> str:\n        \"\"\"Simple interface — returns final response string.\"\"\"\n\n    def run_conversation(self, user_message: str, system_message: str = None,\n                         conversation_history: list = None, task_id: str = None) -> dict:\n        \"\"\"Full interface — returns dict with final_response + messages.\"\"\"\n```\n\n### Agent Loop\n\nThe core loop is inside `run_conversation()` — entirely synchronous, with\ninterrupt checks, budget tracking, and a one-turn grace call:\n\n```python\nwhile (api_call_count < self.max_iterations and self.iteration_budget.remaining > 0) \\\n        or self._budget_grace_call:\n    if self._interrupt_requested: break\n    response = client.chat.completions.create(model=model, messages=messages, tools=tool_schemas)\n    if response.tool_calls:\n        for tool_call in response.tool_calls:\n            result = handle_function_call(tool_call.name, tool_call.args, task_id)\n            messages.append(tool_result_message(result))\n        api_call_count += 1\n    else:\n        return response.content\n```\n\nMessages follow OpenAI format: `{\"role\": \"system/user/assistant/tool\", ...}`.\nReasoning content is stored in `assistant_msg[\"reasoning\"]`.\n\n---\n\n## CLI Architecture (cli.py)\n\n- **Rich** for banner/panels, **prompt_toolkit** for input with autocomplete\n- **KawaiiSpinner** (`agent/display.py`) — animated faces during API calls, `┊` activity feed for tool results\n- `load_cli_config()` in cli.py merges hardcoded defaults + user config YAML\n- **Skin engine** (`hermes_cli/skin_engine.py`) — data-driven CLI theming; initialized from `display.skin` config key at startup; skins customize banner colors, spinner faces/verbs/wings, tool prefix, response box, branding text\n- `process_command()` is a method on `HermesCLI` — dispatches on canonical command name resolved via `resolve_command()` from the central registry\n- Skill slash commands: `agent/skill_commands.py` scans `~/.hermes/skills/`, injects as **user message** (not system prompt) to preserve prompt caching\n\n### Slash Command Registry (`hermes_cli/commands.py`)\n\nAll slash commands are defined in a central `COMMAND_REGISTRY` list of `CommandDef` objects. Every downstream consumer derives from this registry automatically:\n\n- **CLI** — `process_command()` resolves aliases via `resolve_command()`, dispatches on canonical name\n- **Gateway** — `GATEWAY_KNOWN_COMMANDS` frozenset for hook emission, `resolve_command()` f\n\n[...truncated AGENTS.md: 45,236 chars total]",
      "tool_call_id": "functions.terminal:72"
    },
    {
      "role": "tool",
      "content": "{\"output\": \"264M\\t/DATA/AppData/hermes-agent\\n---\\n6.3G\\t/DATA/AppData/hermes\", \"exit_code\": 0, \"error\": null}",
      "tool_call_id": "functions.terminal:73"
    },
    {
      "role": "assistant",
      "content": "**Einfache Erklärung:**\n\n| Ordner | Was drin ist | Größe |\n|--------|-------------|-------|\n| **`hermes-agent`** | **Die Software** — Quellcode, Python-Dateien, Gateway-Code, Tests | 264 MB |\n| **`hermes`** | **Deine Daten** — Sessions, Configs, Skills, Logs, 3D-Modelle, PDFs, Avatar | 6,3 GB |\n\n---\n\n## Warum zwei Ordner?\n\nDas ist bei Hermes **vorgesehen**:\n\n- **`hermes-agent`** = Installierter Code (wie Word auf deinem PC)\n- **`hermes`** = Dein persönlicher Ordner (wie deine Word-Dokumente)\n\nDer Code muss irgendwo liegen, damit Hermes läuft. Deine Daten (Chats, Memories, Einstellungen) liegen getrennt, damit ein Update des Codes deine Daten nicht löscht.\n\n---\n\n## Was davon ist wichtig?\n\n| Ordner | Löschen? | Backup? |\n|--------|----------|---------|\n| `hermes` (6,3 GB) | ❌ **Nie** — das ist alles, was du gemacht hast | ✅ **Ja**, regelmäßig |\n| `hermes-agent` (264 MB) | ⚠️ Nur wenn du Hermes komplett deinstallieren willst | Optional |\n\n---\n\n**Soll ich das irgendwo festhalten als Skill oder Memory, damit du's nicht vergisst?** Oder reicht die Erklärung?",
      "reasoning": "Hier ist die Erklärung:\n\n1. **`/DATA/AppData/hermes`** = **Laufzeitdaten** — dein Home-Verzeichnis, wo alle Sessions, Configs, Skills, Logs, Work-Dateien etc. leben. Das ist deine \"lebende\" Hermes-Installation. (6.3 GB)\n\n2. **`/DATA/AppData/hermes-agent`** = **Source Code / Git Repo** — der heruntergeladene Quellcode von Hermes Agent. Das ist die Software selbst, nicht die Daten. (264 MB)\n\nAlso:\n- `hermes-agent` = Die Software (wie Word oder Photoshop installiert)\n- `hermes` = Deine Daten (Dokumente, Einstellungen, History)\n\nDas ist völlig normal bei Hermes — der Code liegt irgendwo (oft unter `/DATA/AppData/hermes-agent/` oder bei Git-Installation unter `~/.hermes/hermes-agent/`), während die Daten separat in `HERMES_HOME` (hier `/DATA/AppData/hermes`) gespeichert werden.\n\nDer Unterschied:\n- `hermes-agent` braucht man, wenn man Hermes updaten oder debuggen will\n- `hermes` ist dein tägliches Arbeitsverzeichnis\n\nIch sollte Ahmed das kurz und klar erklären."
    },
    {
      "role": "user",
      "content": "Was sollen wir mit Claude Code bauen? Ich habe richtig lust auf ein Projekt"
    },
    {
      "role": "assistant",
      "content": "",
      "reasoning": "Der Nutzer fragt nach Projektideen für Claude Code (die Coding-CLI von Anthropic). Er hat \"richtig Lust auf ein Projekt\" und will etwas bauen. Ich sollte:\n\n1. Erst den Skill `claude-code` laden, um zu sehen, was dort steht\n2. Dann prüfen, was wir bisher gemacht haben (session_search)\n3. Und dann ein paar kreative, spannende Projektideen vorschlagen, die mit Claude Code gut umsetzbar sind\n\nAber der Nutzer hat vorher über Hermes-Agent-Ordner gesprochen, und es gab einen Context Compaction, der viele Nachrichten entfernt hat. Ich sollte vielleicht prüfen, ob es relevante Vergangenheit gibt.\n\nZuerst: `claude-code` Skill laden und session_search nach \"claude code\" oder \"projekt\".",
      "finish_reason": "tool_calls",
      "reasoning_content": "Der Nutzer fragt nach Projektideen für Claude Code (die Coding-CLI von Anthropic). Er hat \"richtig Lust auf ein Projekt\" und will etwas bauen. Ich sollte:\n\n1. Erst den Skill `claude-code` laden, um zu sehen, was dort steht\n2. Dann prüfen, was wir bisher gemacht haben (session_search)\n3. Und dann ein paar kreative, spannende Projektideen vorschlagen, die mit Claude Code gut umsetzbar sind\n\nAber der Nutzer hat vorher über Hermes-Agent-Ordner gesprochen, und es gab einen Context Compaction, der viele Nachrichten entfernt hat. Ich sollte vielleicht prüfen, ob es relevante Vergangenheit gibt.\n\nZuerst: `claude-code` Skill laden und session_search nach \"claude code\" oder \"projekt\".",
      "tool_calls": [
        {
          "id": "functions.skill_view:74",
          "call_id": "functions.skill_view:74",
          "response_item_id": "fc_functionsskill_view74",
          "type": "function",
          "function": {
            "name": "skill_view",
            "arguments": "{\"name\":\"claude-code\"}"
          }
        },
        {
          "id": "functions.session_search:75",
          "call_id": "functions.session_search:75",
          "response_item_id": "fc_functionssession_search75",
          "type": "function",
          "function": {
            "name": "session_search",
            "arguments": "{\"limit\":3,\"query\":\"claude code OR projekt OR project OR coding\"}"
          }
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "role": "tool",
      "name": "skill_view",
      "content": "{\"success\": true, \"name\": \"claude-code\", \"description\": \"Delegate coding to Claude Code CLI (features, PRs).\", \"tags\": [\"Coding-Agent\", \"Claude\", \"Anthropic\", \"Code-Review\", \"Refactoring\", \"PTY\", \"Automation\"], \"related_skills\": [\"codex\", \"hermes-agent\", \"opencode\"], \"content\": \"---\\nname: claude-code\\ndescription: \\\"Delegate coding to Claude Code CLI (features, PRs).\\\"\\nversion: 2.2.0\\nauthor: Hermes Agent + Teknium\\nlicense: MIT\\nmetadata:\\n  hermes:\\n    tags: [Coding-Agent, Claude, Anthropic, Code-Review, Refactoring, PTY, Automation]\\n    related_skills: [codex, hermes-agent, opencode]\\n---\\n\\n# Claude Code — Hermes Orchestration Guide\\n\\nDelegate coding tasks to [Claude Code](https://code.claude.com/docs/en/cli-reference) (Anthropic's autonomous coding agent CLI) via the Hermes terminal. Claude Code v2.x can read files, write code, run shell commands, spawn subagents, and manage git workflows autonomously.\\n\\n## Prerequisites\\n\\n- **Install:** `npm install -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code`\\n- **Auth:** run `claude` once to log in (browser OAuth for Pro/Max, or set `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY`)\\n- **Console auth:** `claude auth login --console` for API key billing\\n- **SSO auth:** `claude auth login --sso` for Enterprise\\n- **Check status:** `claude auth status` (JSON) or `claude auth status --text` (human-readable)\\n- **Health check:** `claude doctor` — checks auto-updater and installation health\\n- **Version check:** `claude --version` (requires v2.x+)\\n- **Update:** `claude update` or `claude upgrade`\\n\\n## Two Orchestration Modes\\n\\nHermes interacts with Claude Code in two fundamentally different ways. Choose based on the task.\\n\\n### Mode 1: Print Mode (`-p`) — Non-Interactive (PREFERRED for most tasks)\\n\\nPrint mode runs a one-shot task, returns the result, and exits. No PTY needed. No interactive prompts. This is the cleanest integration path.\\n\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'Add error handling to all API calls in src/' --allowedTools 'Read,Edit' --max-turns 10\\\", workdir=\\\"/path/to/project\\\", timeout=120)\\n```\\n\\n**When to use print mode:**\\n- One-shot coding tasks (fix a bug, add a feature, refactor)\\n- CI/CD automation and scripting\\n- Structured data extraction with `--json-schema`\\n- Piped input processing (`cat file | claude -p \\\"analyze this\\\"`)\\n- Any task where you don't need multi-turn conversation\\n\\n**Print mode skips ALL interactive dialogs** — no workspace trust prompt, no permission confirmations. This makes it ideal for automation.\\n\\n### Mode 2: Interactive PTY via tmux — Multi-Turn Sessions\\n\\nInteractive mode gives you a full conversational REPL where you can send follow-up prompts, use slash commands, and watch Claude work in real time. **Requires tmux orchestration.**\\n\\n```\\n# Start a tmux session\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux new-session -d -s claude-work -x 140 -y 40\\\")\\n\\n# Launch Claude Code inside it\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux send-keys -t claude-work 'cd /path/to/project && claude' Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Wait for startup, then send your task\\n# (after ~3-5 seconds for the welcome screen)\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 5 && tmux send-keys -t claude-work 'Refactor the auth module to use JWT tokens' Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Monitor progress by capturing the pane\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 15 && tmux capture-pane -t claude-work -p -S -50\\\")\\n\\n# Send follow-up tasks\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux send-keys -t claude-work 'Now add unit tests for the new JWT code' Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Exit when done\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux send-keys -t claude-work '/exit' Enter\\\")\\n```\\n\\n**When to use interactive mode:**\\n- Multi-turn iterative work (refactor → review → fix → test cycle)\\n- Tasks requiring human-in-the-loop decisions\\n- Exploratory coding sessions\\n- When you need to use Claude's slash commands (`/compact`, `/review`, `/model`)\\n\\n## PTY Dialog Handling (CRITICAL for Interactive Mode)\\n\\nClaude Code presents up to two confirmation dialogs on first launch. You MUST handle these via tmux send-keys:\\n\\n### Dialog 1: Workspace Trust (first visit to a directory)\\n```\\n❯ 1. Yes, I trust this folder    ← DEFAULT (just press Enter)\\n  2. No, exit\\n```\\n**Handling:** `tmux send-keys -t <session> Enter` — default selection is correct.\\n\\n### Dialog 2: Bypass Permissions Warning (only with --dangerously-skip-permissions)\\n```\\n❯ 1. No, exit                    ← DEFAULT (WRONG choice!)\\n  2. Yes, I accept\\n```\\n**Handling:** Must navigate DOWN first, then Enter:\\n```\\ntmux send-keys -t <session> Down && sleep 0.3 && tmux send-keys -t <session> Enter\\n```\\n\\n### Robust Dialog Handling Pattern\\n```\\n# Launch with permissions bypass\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux send-keys -t claude-work 'claude --dangerously-skip-permissions \\\\\\\"your task\\\\\\\"' Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Handle trust dialog (Enter for default \\\"Yes\\\")\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 4 && tmux send-keys -t claude-work Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Handle permissions dialog (Down then Enter for \\\"Yes, I accept\\\")\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 3 && tmux send-keys -t claude-work Down && sleep 0.3 && tmux send-keys -t claude-work Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Now wait for Claude to work\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 15 && tmux capture-pane -t claude-work -p -S -60\\\")\\n```\\n\\n**Note:** After the first trust acceptance for a directory, the trust dialog won't appear again. Only the permissions dialog recurs each time you use `--dangerously-skip-permissions`.\\n\\n## CLI Subcommands\\n\\n| Subcommand | Purpose |\\n|------------|---------|\\n| `claude` | Start interactive REPL |\\n| `claude \\\"query\\\"` | Start REPL with initial prompt |\\n| `claude -p \\\"query\\\"` | Print mode (non-interactive, exits when done) |\\n| `cat file \\\\| claude -p \\\"query\\\"` | Pipe content as stdin context |\\n| `claude -c` | Continue the most recent conversation in this directory |\\n| `claude -r \\\"id\\\"` | Resume a specific session by ID or name |\\n| `claude auth login` | Sign in (add `--console` for API billing, `--sso` for Enterprise) |\\n| `claude auth status` | Check login status (returns JSON; `--text` for human-readable) |\\n| `claude mcp add <name> -- <cmd>` | Add an MCP server |\\n| `claude mcp list` | List configured MCP servers |\\n| `claude mcp remove <name>` | Remove an MCP server |\\n| `claude agents` | List configured agents |\\n| `claude doctor` | Run health checks on installation and auto-updater |\\n| `claude update` / `claude upgrade` | Update Claude Code to latest version |\\n| `claude remote-control` | Start server to control Claude from claude.ai or mobile app |\\n| `claude install [target]` | Install native build (stable, latest, or specific version) |\\n| `claude setup-token` | Set up long-lived auth token (requires subscription) |\\n| `claude plugin` / `claude plugins` | Manage Claude Code plugins |\\n| `claude auto-mode` | Inspect auto mode classifier configuration |\\n\\n## Print Mode Deep Dive\\n\\n### Structured JSON Output\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'Analyze auth.py for security issues' --output-format json --max-turns 5\\\", workdir=\\\"/project\\\", timeout=120)\\n```\\n\\nReturns a JSON object with:\\n```json\\n{\\n  \\\"type\\\": \\\"result\\\",\\n  \\\"subtype\\\": \\\"success\\\",\\n  \\\"result\\\": \\\"The analysis text...\\\",\\n  \\\"session_id\\\": \\\"75e2167f-...\\\",\\n  \\\"num_turns\\\": 3,\\n  \\\"total_cost_usd\\\": 0.0787,\\n  \\\"duration_ms\\\": 10276,\\n  \\\"stop_reason\\\": \\\"end_turn\\\",\\n  \\\"terminal_reason\\\": \\\"completed\\\",\\n  \\\"usage\\\": { \\\"input_tokens\\\": 5, \\\"output_tokens\\\": 603, ... },\\n  \\\"modelUsage\\\": { \\\"claude-sonnet-4-6\\\": { \\\"costUSD\\\": 0.078, \\\"contextWindow\\\": 200000 } }\\n}\\n```\\n\\n**Key fields:** `session_id` for resumption, `num_turns` for agentic loop count, `total_cost_usd` for spend tracking, `subtype` for success/error detection (`success`, `error_max_turns`, `error_budget`).\\n\\n### Streaming JSON Output\\nFor real-time token streaming, use `stream-json` with `--verbose`:\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'Write a summary' --output-format stream-json --verbose --include-partial-messages\\\", timeout=60)\\n```\\n\\nReturns newline-delimited JSON events. Filter with jq for live text:\\n```\\nclaude -p \\\"Explain X\\\" --output-format stream-json --verbose --include-partial-messages | \\\\\\n  jq -rj 'select(.type == \\\"stream_event\\\" and .event.delta.type? == \\\"text_delta\\\") | .event.delta.text'\\n```\\n\\nStream events include `system/api_retry` with `attempt`, `max_retries`, and `error` fields (e.g., `rate_limit`, `billing_error`).\\n\\n### Bidirectional Streaming\\nFor real-time input AND output streaming:\\n```\\nclaude -p \\\"task\\\" --input-format stream-json --output-format stream-json --replay-user-messages\\n```\\n`--replay-user-messages` re-emits user messages on stdout for acknowledgment.\\n\\n### Piped Input\\n```\\n# Pipe a file for analysis\\nterminal(command=\\\"cat src/auth.py | claude -p 'Review this code for bugs' --max-turns 1\\\", timeout=60)\\n\\n# Pipe multiple files\\nterminal(command=\\\"cat src/*.py | claude -p 'Find all TODO comments' --max-turns 1\\\", timeout=60)\\n\\n# Pipe command output\\nterminal(command=\\\"git diff HEAD~3 | claude -p 'Summarize these changes' --max-turns 1\\\", timeout=60)\\n```\\n\\n### JSON Schema for Structured Extraction\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'List all functions in src/' --output-format json --json-schema '{\\\\\\\"type\\\\\\\":\\\\\\\"object\\\\\\\",\\\\\\\"properties\\\\\\\":{\\\\\\\"functions\\\\\\\":{\\\\\\\"type\\\\\\\":\\\\\\\"array\\\\\\\",\\\\\\\"items\\\\\\\":{\\\\\\\"type\\\\\\\":\\\\\\\"string\\\\\\\"}}},\\\\\\\"required\\\\\\\":[\\\\\\\"functions\\\\\\\"]}' --max-turns 5\\\", workdir=\\\"/project\\\", timeout=90)\\n```\\n\\nParse `structured_output` from the JSON result. Claude validates output against the schema before returning.\\n\\n### Session Continuation\\n```\\n# Start a task\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'Start refactoring the database layer' --output-format json --max-turns 10 > /tmp/session.json\\\", workdir=\\\"/project\\\", timeout=180)\\n\\n# Resume with session ID\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'Continue and add connection pooling' --resume $(cat /tmp/session.json | python3 -c 'import json,sys; print(json.load(sys.stdin)[\\\\\\\"session_id\\\\\\\"])') --max-turns 5\\\", workdir=\\\"/project\\\", timeout=120)\\n\\n# Or resume the most recent session in the same directory\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'What did you do last time?' --continue --max-turns 1\\\", workdir=\\\"/project\\\", timeout=30)\\n\\n# Fork a session (new ID, keeps history)\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'Try a different approach' --resume <id> --fork-session --max-turns 10\\\", workdir=\\\"/project\\\", timeout=120)\\n```\\n\\n### Bare Mode for CI/Scripting\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude --bare -p 'Run all tests and report failures' --allowedTools 'Read,Bash' --max-turns 10\\\", workdir=\\\"/project\\\", timeout=180)\\n```\\n\\n`--bare` skips hooks, plugins, MCP discovery, and CLAUDE.md loading. Fastest startup. Requires `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY` (skips OAuth).\\n\\nTo selectively load context in bare mode:\\n| To load | Flag |\\n|---------|------|\\n| System prompt additions | `--append-system-prompt \\\"text\\\"` or `--append-system-prompt-file path` |\\n| Settings | `--settings <file-or-json>` |\\n| MCP servers | `--mcp-config <file-or-json>` |\\n| Custom agents | `--agents '<json>'` |\\n\\n### Fallback Model for Overload\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'task' --fallback-model haiku --max-turns 5\\\", timeout=90)\\n```\\nAutomatically falls back to the specified model when the default is overloaded (print mode only).\\n\\n## Complete CLI Flags Reference\\n\\n### Session & Environment\\n| Flag | Effect |\\n|------|--------|\\n| `-p, --print` | Non-interactive one-shot mode (exits when done) |\\n| `-c, --continue` | Resume most recent conversation in current directory |\\n| `-r, --resume <id>` | Resume specific session by ID or name (interactive picker if no ID) |\\n| `--fork-session` | When resuming, create new session ID instead of reusing original |\\n| `--session-id <uuid>` | Use a specific UUID for the conversation |\\n| `--no-session-persistence` | Don't save session to disk (print mode only) |\\n| `--add-dir <paths...>` | Grant Claude access to additional working directories |\\n| `-w, --worktree [name]` | Run in an isolated git worktree at `.claude/worktrees/<name>` |\\n| `--tmux` | Create a tmux session for the worktree (requires `--worktree`) |\\n| `--ide` | Auto-connect to a valid IDE on startup |\\n| `--chrome` / `--no-chrome` | Enable/disable Chrome browser integration for web testing |\\n| `--from-pr [number]` | Resume session linked to a specific GitHub PR |\\n| `--file <specs...>` | File resources to download at startup (format: `file_id:relative_path`) |\\n\\n### Model & Performance\\n| Flag | Effect |\\n|------|--------|\\n| `--model <alias>` | Model selection: `sonnet`, `opus`, `haiku`, or full name like `claude-sonnet-4-6` |\\n| `--effort <level>` | Reasoning depth: `low`, `medium`, `high`, `max`, `auto` | Both |\\n| `--max-turns <n>` | Limit agentic loops (print mode only; prevents runaway) |\\n| `--max-budget-usd <n>` | Cap API spend in dollars (print mode only) |\\n| `--fallback-model <model>` | Auto-fallback when default model is overloaded (print mode only) |\\n| `--betas <betas...>` | Beta headers to include in API requests (API key users only) |\\n\\n### Permission & Safety\\n| Flag | Effect |\\n|------|--------|\\n| `--dangerously-skip-permissions` | Auto-approve ALL tool use (file writes, bash, network, etc.) |\\n| `--allow-dangerously-skip-permissions` | Enable bypass as an *option* without enabling it by default |\\n| `--permission-mode <mode>` | `default`, `acceptEdits`, `plan`, `auto`, `dontAsk`, `bypassPermissions` |\\n| `--allowedTools <tools...>` | Whitelist specific tools (comma or space-separated) |\\n| `--disallowedTools <tools...>` | Blacklist specific tools |\\n| `--tools <tools...>` | Override built-in tool set (`\\\"\\\"` = none, `\\\"default\\\"` = all, or tool names) |\\n\\n### Output & Input Format\\n| Flag | Effect |\\n|------|--------|\\n| `--output-format <fmt>` | `text` (default), `json` (single result object), `stream-json` (newline-delimited) |\\n| `--input-format <fmt>` | `text` (default) or `stream-json` (real-time streaming input) |\\n| `--json-schema <schema>` | Force structured JSON output matching a schema |\\n| `--verbose` | Full turn-by-turn output |\\n| `--include-partial-messages` | Include partial message chunks as they arrive (stream-json + print) |\\n| `--replay-user-messages` | Re-emit user messages on stdout (stream-json bidirectional) |\\n\\n### System Prompt & Context\\n| Flag | Effect |\\n|------|--------|\\n| `--append-system-prompt <text>` | **Add** to the default system prompt (preserves built-in capabilities) |\\n| `--append-system-prompt-file <path>` | **Add** file contents to the default system prompt |\\n| `--system-prompt <text>` | **Replace** the entire system prompt (use --append instead usually) |\\n| `--system-prompt-file <path>` | **Replace** the system prompt with file contents |\\n| `--bare` | Skip hooks, plugins, MCP discovery, CLAUDE.md, OAuth (fastest startup) |\\n| `--agents '<json>'` | Define custom subagents dynamically as JSON |\\n| `--mcp-config <path>` | Load MCP servers from JSON file (repeatable) |\\n| `--strict-mcp-config` | Only use MCP servers from `--mcp-config`, ignoring all other MCP configs |\\n| `--settings <file-or-json>` | Load additional settings from a JSON file or inline JSON |\\n| `--setting-sources <sources>` | Comma-separated sources to load: `user`, `project`, `local` |\\n| `--plugin-dir <paths...>` | Load plugins from directories for this session only |\\n| `--disable-slash-commands` | Disable all skills/slash commands |\\n\\n### Debugging\\n| Flag | Effect |\\n|------|--------|\\n| `-d, --debug [filter]` | Enable debug logging with optional category filter (e.g., `\\\"api,hooks\\\"`, `\\\"!1p,!file\\\"`) |\\n| `--debug-file <path>` | Write debug logs to file (implicitly enables debug mode) |\\n\\n### Agent Teams\\n| Flag | Effect |\\n|------|--------|\\n| `--teammate-mode <mode>` | How agent teams display: `auto`, `in-process`, or `tmux` |\\n| `--brief` | Enable `SendUserMessage` tool for agent-to-user communication |\\n\\n### Tool Name Syntax for --allowedTools / --disallowedTools\\n```\\nRead                    # All file reading\\nEdit                    # File editing (existing files)\\nWrite                   # File creation (new files)\\nBash                    # All shell commands\\nBash(git *)             # Only git commands\\nBash(git commit *)      # Only git commit commands\\nBash(npm run lint:*)    # Pattern matching with wildcards\\nWebSearch               # Web search capability\\nWebFetch                # Web page fetching\\nmcp__<server>__<tool>   # Specific MCP tool\\n```\\n\\n## Settings & Configuration\\n\\n### Settings Hierarchy (highest to lowest priority)\\n1. **CLI flags** — override everything\\n2. **Local project:** `.claude/settings.local.json` (personal, gitignored)\\n3. **Project:** `.claude/settings.json` (shared, git-tracked)\\n4. **User:** `~/.claude/settings.json` (global)\\n\\n### Permissions in Settings\\n```json\\n{\\n  \\\"permissions\\\": {\\n    \\\"allow\\\": [\\\"Bash(npm run lint:*)\\\", \\\"WebSearch\\\", \\\"Read\\\"],\\n    \\\"ask\\\": [\\\"Write(*.ts)\\\", \\\"Bash(git push*)\\\"],\\n    \\\"deny\\\": [\\\"Read(.env)\\\", \\\"Bash(rm -rf *)\\\"]\\n  }\\n}\\n```\\n\\n### Memory Files (CLAUDE.md) Hierarchy\\n1. **Global:** `~/.claude/CLAUDE.md` — applies to all projects\\n2. **Project:** `./CLAUDE.md` — project-specific context (git-tracked)\\n3. **Local:** `.claude/CLAUDE.local.md` — personal project overrides (gitignored)\\n\\nUse the `#` prefix in interactive mode to quickly add to memory: `# Always use 2-space indentation`.\\n\\n## Interactive Session: Slash Commands\\n\\n### Session & Context\\n| Command | Purpose |\\n|---------|---------|\\n| `/help` | Show all commands (including custom and MCP commands) |\\n| `/compact [focus]` | Compress context to save tokens; CLAUDE.md survives compaction. E.g., `/compact focus on auth logic` |\\n| `/clear` | Wipe conversation history for a fresh start |\\n| `/context` | Visualize context usage as a colored grid with optimization tips |\\n| `/cost` | View token usage with per-model and cache-hit breakdowns |\\n| `/resume` | Switch to or resume a different session |\\n| `/rewind` | Revert to a previous checkpoint in conversation or code |\\n| `/btw <question>` | Ask a side question without adding to context cost |\\n| `/status` | Show version, connectivity, and session info |\\n| `/todos` | List tracked action items from the conversation |\\n| `/exit` or `Ctrl+D` | End session |\\n\\n### Development & Review\\n| Command | Purpose |\\n|---------|---------|\\n| `/review` | Request code review of current changes |\\n| `/security-review` | Perform security analysis of current changes |\\n| `/plan [description]` | Enter Plan mode with auto-start for task planning |\\n| `/loop [interval]` | Schedule recurring tasks within the session |\\n| `/batch` | Auto-create worktrees for large parallel changes (5-30 worktrees) |\\n\\n### Configuration & Tools\\n| Command | Purpose |\\n|---------|---------|\\n| `/model [model]` | Switch models mid-session (use arrow keys to adjust effort) |\\n| `/effort [level]` | Set reasoning effort: `low`, `medium`, `high`, `max`, or `auto` |\\n| `/init` | Create a CLAUDE.md file for project memory |\\n| `/memory` | Open CLAUDE.md for editing |\\n| `/config` | Open interactive settings configuration |\\n| `/permissions` | View/update tool permissions |\\n| `/agents` | Manage specialized subagents |\\n| `/mcp` | Interactive UI to manage MCP servers |\\n| `/add-dir` | Add additional working directories (useful for monorepos) |\\n| `/usage` | Show plan limits and rate limit status |\\n| `/voice` | Enable push-to-talk voice mode (20 languages; hold Space to record, release to send) |\\n| `/release-notes` | Interactive picker for version release notes |\\n\\n### Custom Slash Commands\\nCreate `.claude/commands/<name>.md` (project-shared) or `~/.claude/commands/<name>.md` (personal):\\n\\n```markdown\\n# .claude/commands/deploy.md\\nRun the deploy pipeline:\\n1. Run all tests\\n2. Build the Docker image\\n3. Push to registry\\n4. Update the $ARGUMENTS environment (default: staging)\\n```\\n\\nUsage: `/deploy production` — `$ARGUMENTS` is replaced with the user's input.\\n\\n### Skills (Natural Language Invocation)\\nUnlike slash commands (manually invoked), skills in `.claude/skills/` are markdown guides that Claude invokes automatically via natural language when the task matches:\\n\\n```markdown\\n# .claude/skills/database-migration.md\\nWhen asked to create or modify database migrations:\\n1. Use Alembic for migration generation\\n2. Always create a rollback function\\n3. Test migrations against a local database copy\\n```\\n\\n## Interactive Session: Keyboard Shortcuts\\n\\n### General Controls\\n| Key | Action |\\n|-----|--------|\\n| `Ctrl+C` | Cancel current input or generation |\\n| `Ctrl+D` | Exit session |\\n| `Ctrl+R` | Reverse search command history |\\n| `Ctrl+B` | Background a running task |\\n| `Ctrl+V` | Paste image into conversation |\\n| `Ctrl+O` | Transcript mode — see Claude's thinking process |\\n| `Ctrl+G` or `Ctrl+X Ctrl+E` | Open prompt in external editor |\\n| `Esc Esc` | Rewind conversation or code state / summarize |\\n\\n### Mode Toggles\\n| Key | Action |\\n|-----|--------|\\n| `Shift+Tab` | Cycle permission modes (Normal → Auto-Accept → Plan) |\\n| `Alt+P` | Switch model |\\n| `Alt+T` | Toggle thinking mode |\\n| `Alt+O` | Toggle Fast Mode |\\n\\n### Multiline Input\\n| Key | Action |\\n|-----|--------|\\n| `\\\\` + `Enter` | Quick newline |\\n| `Shift+Enter` | Newline (alternative) |\\n| `Ctrl+J` | Newline (alternative) |\\n\\n### Input Prefixes\\n| Prefix | Action |\\n|--------|--------|\\n| `!` | Execute bash directly, bypassing AI (e.g., `!npm test`). Use `!` alone to toggle shell mode. |\\n| `@` | Reference files/directories with autocomplete (e.g., `@./src/api/`) |\\n| `#` | Quick add to CLAUDE.md memory (e.g., `# Use 2-space indentation`) |\\n| `/` | Slash commands |\\n\\n### Pro Tip: \\\"ultrathink\\\"\\nUse the keyword \\\"ultrathink\\\" in your prompt for maximum reasoning effort on a specific turn. This triggers the deepest thinking mode regardless of the current `/effort` setting.\\n\\n## PR Review Pattern\\n\\n### Quick Review (Print Mode)\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"cd /path/to/repo && git diff main...feature-branch | claude -p 'Review this diff for bugs, security issues, and style problems. Be thorough.' --max-turns 1\\\", timeout=60)\\n```\\n\\n### Deep Review (Interactive + Worktree)\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux new-session -d -s review -x 140 -y 40\\\")\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux send-keys -t review 'cd /path/to/repo && claude -w pr-review' Enter\\\")\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 5 && tmux send-keys -t review Enter\\\")  # Trust dialog\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 2 && tmux send-keys -t review 'Review all changes vs main. Check for bugs, security issues, race conditions, and missing tests.' Enter\\\")\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 30 && tmux capture-pane -t review -p -S -60\\\")\\n```\\n\\n### PR Review from Number\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -p 'Review this PR thoroughly' --from-pr 42 --max-turns 10\\\", workdir=\\\"/path/to/repo\\\", timeout=120)\\n```\\n\\n### Claude Worktree with tmux\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude -w feature-x --tmux\\\", workdir=\\\"/path/to/repo\\\")\\n```\\nCreates an isolated git worktree at `.claude/worktrees/feature-x` AND a tmux session for it. Uses iTerm2 native panes when available; add `--tmux=classic` for traditional tmux.\\n\\n## Parallel Claude Instances\\n\\nRun multiple independent Claude tasks simultaneously:\\n\\n```\\n# Task 1: Fix backend\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux new-session -d -s task1 -x 140 -y 40 && tmux send-keys -t task1 'cd ~/project && claude -p \\\\\\\"Fix the auth bug in src/auth.py\\\\\\\" --allowedTools \\\\\\\"Read,Edit\\\\\\\" --max-turns 10' Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Task 2: Write tests\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux new-session -d -s task2 -x 140 -y 40 && tmux send-keys -t task2 'cd ~/project && claude -p \\\\\\\"Write integration tests for the API endpoints\\\\\\\" --allowedTools \\\\\\\"Read,Write,Bash\\\\\\\" --max-turns 15' Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Task 3: Update docs\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux new-session -d -s task3 -x 140 -y 40 && tmux send-keys -t task3 'cd ~/project && claude -p \\\\\\\"Update README.md with the new API endpoints\\\\\\\" --allowedTools \\\\\\\"Read,Edit\\\\\\\" --max-turns 5' Enter\\\")\\n\\n# Monitor all\\nterminal(command=\\\"sleep 30 && for s in task1 task2 task3; do echo '=== '$s' ==='; tmux capture-pane -t $s -p -S -5 2>/dev/null; done\\\")\\n```\\n\\n## CLAUDE.md — Project Context File\\n\\nClaude Code auto-loads `CLAUDE.md` from the project root. Use it to persist project context:\\n\\n```markdown\\n# Project: My API\\n\\n## Architecture\\n- FastAPI backend with SQLAlchemy ORM\\n- PostgreSQL database, Redis cache\\n- pytest for testing with 90% coverage target\\n\\n## Key Commands\\n- `make test` — run full test suite\\n- `make lint` — ruff + mypy\\n- `make dev` — start dev server on :8000\\n\\n## Code Standards\\n- Type hints on all public functions\\n- Docstrings in Google style\\n- 2-space indentation for YAML, 4-space for Python\\n- No wildcard imports\\n```\\n\\n**Be specific.** Instead of \\\"Write good code\\\", use \\\"Use 2-space indentation for JS\\\" or \\\"Name test files with `.test.ts` suffix.\\\" Specific instructions save correction cycles.\\n\\n### Rules Directory (Modular CLAUDE.md)\\nFor projects with many rules, use the rules directory instead of one massive CLAUDE.md:\\n- **Project rules:** `.claude/rules/*.md` — team-shared, git-tracked\\n- **User rules:** `~/.claude/rules/*.md` — personal, global\\n\\nEach `.md` file in the rules directory is loaded as additional context. This is cleaner than cramming everything into a single CLAUDE.md.\\n\\n### Auto-Memory\\nClaude automatically stores learned project context in `~/.claude/projects/<project>/memory/`.\\n- **Limit:** 25KB or 200 lines per project\\n- This is separate from CLAUDE.md — it's Claude's own notes about the project, accumulated across sessions\\n\\n## Custom Subagents\\n\\nDefine specialized agents in `.claude/agents/` (project), `~/.claude/agents/` (personal), or via `--agents` CLI flag (session):\\n\\n### Agent Location Priority\\n1. `.claude/agents/` — project-level, team-shared\\n2. `--agents` CLI flag — session-specific, dynamic\\n3. `~/.claude/agents/` — user-level, personal\\n\\n### Creating an Agent\\n```markdown\\n# .claude/agents/security-reviewer.md\\n---\\nname: security-reviewer\\ndescription: Security-focused code review\\nmodel: opus\\ntools: [Read, Bash]\\n---\\nYou are a senior security engineer. Review code for:\\n- Injection vulnerabilities (SQL, XSS, command injection)\\n- Authentication/authorization flaws\\n- Secrets in code\\n- Unsafe deserialization\\n```\\n\\nInvoke via: `@security-reviewer review the auth module`\\n\\n### Dynamic Agents via CLI\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude --agents '{\\\\\\\"reviewer\\\\\\\": {\\\\\\\"description\\\\\\\": \\\\\\\"Reviews code\\\\\\\", \\\\\\\"prompt\\\\\\\": \\\\\\\"You are a code reviewer focused on performance\\\\\\\"}}' -p 'Use @reviewer to check auth.py'\\\", timeout=120)\\n```\\n\\nClaude can orchestrate multiple agents: \\\"Use @db-expert to optimize queries, then @security to audit the changes.\\\"\\n\\n## Hooks — Automation on Events\\n\\nConfigure in `.claude/settings.json` (project) or `~/.claude/settings.json` (global):\\n\\n```json\\n{\\n  \\\"hooks\\\": {\\n    \\\"PostToolUse\\\": [{\\n      \\\"matcher\\\": \\\"Write(*.py)\\\",\\n      \\\"hooks\\\": [{\\\"type\\\": \\\"command\\\", \\\"command\\\": \\\"ruff check --fix $CLAUDE_FILE_PATHS\\\"}]\\n    }],\\n    \\\"PreToolUse\\\": [{\\n      \\\"matcher\\\": \\\"Bash\\\",\\n      \\\"hooks\\\": [{\\\"type\\\": \\\"command\\\", \\\"command\\\": \\\"if echo \\\\\\\"$CLAUDE_TOOL_INPUT\\\\\\\" | grep -q 'rm -rf'; then echo 'Blocked!' && exit 2; fi\\\"}]\\n    }],\\n    \\\"Stop\\\": [{\\n      \\\"hooks\\\": [{\\\"type\\\": \\\"command\\\", \\\"command\\\": \\\"echo 'Claude finished a response' >> /tmp/claude-activity.log\\\"}]\\n    }]\\n  }\\n}\\n```\\n\\n### All 8 Hook Types\\n| Hook | When it fires | Common use |\\n|------|--------------|------------|\\n| `UserPromptSubmit` | Before Claude processes a user prompt | Input validation, logging |\\n| `PreToolUse` | Before tool execution | Security gates, block dangerous commands (exit 2 = block) |\\n| `PostToolUse` | After a tool finishes | Auto-format code, run linters |\\n| `Notification` | On permission requests or input waits | Desktop notifications, alerts |\\n| `Stop` | When Claude finishes a response | Completion logging, status updates |\\n| `SubagentStop` | When a subagent completes | Agent orchestration |\\n| `PreCompact` | Before context memory is cleared | Backup session transcripts |\\n| `SessionStart` | When a session begins | Load dev context (e.g., `git status`) |\\n\\n### Hook Environment Variables\\n| Variable | Content |\\n|----------|---------|\\n| `CLAUDE_PROJECT_DIR` | Current project path |\\n| `CLAUDE_FILE_PATHS` | Files being modified |\\n| `CLAUDE_TOOL_INPUT` | Tool parameters as JSON |\\n\\n### Security Hook Examples\\n```json\\n{\\n  \\\"PreToolUse\\\": [{\\n    \\\"matcher\\\": \\\"Bash\\\",\\n    \\\"hooks\\\": [{\\\"type\\\": \\\"command\\\", \\\"command\\\": \\\"if echo \\\\\\\"$CLAUDE_TOOL_INPUT\\\\\\\" | grep -qE 'rm -rf|git push.*--force|:(){ :|:& };:'; then echo 'Dangerous command blocked!' && exit 2; fi\\\"}]\\n  }]\\n}\\n```\\n\\n## MCP Integration\\n\\nAdd external tool servers for databases, APIs, and services:\\n\\n```\\n# GitHub integration\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude mcp add -s user github -- npx @modelcontextprotocol/server-github\\\", timeout=30)\\n\\n# PostgreSQL queries\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude mcp add -s local postgres -- npx @anthropic-ai/server-postgres --connection-string postgresql://localhost/mydb\\\", timeout=30)\\n\\n# Puppeteer for web testing\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude mcp add puppeteer -- npx @anthropic-ai/server-puppeteer\\\", timeout=30)\\n```\\n\\n### MCP Scopes\\n| Flag | Scope | Storage |\\n|------|-------|---------|\\n| `-s user` | Global (all projects) | `~/.claude.json` |\\n| `-s local` | This project (personal) | `.claude/settings.local.json` (gitignored) |\\n| `-s project` | This project (team-shared) | `.claude/settings.json` (git-tracked) |\\n\\n### MCP in Print/CI Mode\\n```\\nterminal(command=\\\"claude --bare -p 'Query database' --mcp-config mcp-servers.json --strict-mcp-config\\\", timeout=60)\\n```\\n`--strict-mcp-config` ignores all MCP servers except those from `--mcp-config`.\\n\\nReference MCP resources in chat: `@github:issue://123`\\n\\n### MCP Limits & Tuning\\n- **Tool descriptions:** 2KB cap per server for tool descriptions and server instructions\\n- **Result size:** Default capped; use `maxResultSizeChars` annotation to allow up to **500K** characters for large outputs\\n- **Output tokens:** `export MAX_MCP_OUTPUT_TOKENS=50000` — cap output from MCP servers to prevent context flooding\\n- **Transports:** `stdio` (local process), `http` (remote), `sse` (server-sent events)\\n\\n## Monitoring Interactive Sessions\\n\\n### Reading the TUI Status\\n```\\n# Periodic capture to check if Claude is still working or waiting for input\\nterminal(command=\\\"tmux capture-pane -t dev -p -S -10\\\")\\n```\\n\\nLook for these indicators:\\n- `❯` at bottom = waiting for your input (Claude is done or asking a question)\\n- `●` lines = Claude is actively using tools (reading, writing, running commands)\\n- `⏵⏵ bypass permissions on` = status bar showing permissions mode\\n- `◐ medium · /effort` = current effort level in status bar\\n- `ctrl+o to expand` = tool output was truncated (can be expanded interactively)\\n\\n### Context Window Health\\nUse `/context` in interactive mode to see a colored grid of context usage. Key thresholds:\\n- **< 70%** — Normal operation, full precision\\n- **70-85%** — Precision starts dropping, consider `/compact`\\n- **> 85%** — Hallucination risk spikes significantly, use `/compact` or `/clear`\\n\\n## Environment Variables\\n\\n| Variable | Effect |\\n|----------|--------|\\n| `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY` | API key for authentication (alternative to OAuth) |\\n| `CLAUDE_CODE_EFFORT_LEVEL` | Default effort: `low`, `medium`, `high`, `max`, or `auto` |\\n| `MAX_THINKING_TOKENS` | Cap thinking tokens (set to `0` to disable thinking entirely) |\\n| `MAX_MCP_OUTPUT_TOKENS` | Cap output from MCP servers (default varies; set e.g., `50000`) |\\n| `CLAUDE_CODE_NO_FLICKER=1` | Enable alt-screen rendering to eliminate terminal flicker |\\n| `CLAUDE_CODE_SUBPROCESS_ENV_SCRUB` | Strip credentials from sub-processes for security |\\n\\n## Cost & Performance Tips\\n\\n1. **Use `--max-turns`** in print mode to prevent runaway loops. Start with 5-10 for most tasks.\\n2. **Use `--max-budget-usd`** for cost caps. Note: minimum ~$0.05 for system prompt cache creation.\\n3. **Use `--effort low`** for simple tasks (faster, cheaper). `high` or `max` for complex reasoning.\\n4. **Use `--bare`** for CI/scripting to skip plugin/hook discovery overhead.\\n5. **Use `--allowedTools`** to restrict to only what's needed (e.g., `Read` only for reviews).\\n6. **Use `/compact`** in interactive sessions when context gets large.\\n7. **Pipe input** instead of having Claude read files when you just need analysis of known content.\\n8. **Use `--model haiku`** for simple tasks (cheaper) and `--model opus` for complex multi-step work.\\n9. **Use `--fallback-model haiku`** in print mode to gracefully handle model overload.\\n10. **Start new sessions for distinct tasks** — sessions last 5 hours; fresh context is more efficient.\\n11. **Use `--no-session-persistence`** in CI to avoid accumulating saved sessions on disk.\\n\\n## Pitfalls & Gotchas\\n\\n1. **Interactive mode REQUIRES tmux** — Claude Code is a full TUI app. Using `pty=true` alone in Hermes terminal works but tmux gives you `capture-pane` for monitoring and `send-keys` for input, which is essential for orchestration.\\n2. **`--dangerously-skip-permissions` dialog defaults to \\\"No, exit\\\"** — you must send Down then Enter to accept. Print mode (`-p`) skips this entirely.\\n3. **`--max-budget-usd` minimum is ~$0.05** — system prompt cache creation alone costs this much. Setting lower will error immediately.\\n4. **`--max-turns` is print-mode only** — ignored in interactive sessions.\\n5. **Claude may use `python` instead of `python3`** — on systems without a `python` symlink, Claude's bash commands will fail on first try but it self-corrects.\\n6. **Session resumption requires same directory** — `--continue` finds the most recent session for the current working directory.\\n7. **`--json-schema` needs enough `--max-turns`** — Claude must read files before producing structured output, which takes multiple turns.\\n8. **Trust dialog only appears once per directory** — first-time only, then cached.\\n9. **Background tmux sessions persist** — always clean up with `tmux kill-session -t <name>` when done.\\n10. **Slash commands (like `/commit`) only work in interactive mode** — in `-p` mode, describe the task in natural language instead.\\n11. **`--bare` skips OAuth** — requires `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY` env var or an `apiKeyHelper` in settings.\\n12. **Context degradation is real** — AI output quality measurably degrades above 70% context window usage. Monitor with `/context` and proactively `/compact`.\\n\\n## Rules for Hermes Agents\\n\\n1. **Prefer print mode (`-p`) for single tasks** — cleaner, no dialog handling, structured output\\n2. **Use tmux for multi-turn interactive work** — the only reliable way to orchestrate the TUI\\n3. **Always set `workdir`** — keep Claude focused on the right project directory\\n4. **Set `--max-turns` in print mode** — prevents infinite loops and runaway costs\\n5. **Monitor tmux sessions** — use `tmux capture-pane -t <session> -p -S -50` to check progress\\n6. **Look for the `❯` prompt** — indicates Claude is waiting for input (done or asking a question)\\n7. **Clean up tmux sessions** — kill them when done to avoid resource leaks\\n8. **Report results to user** — after completion, summarize what Claude did and what changed\\n9. **Don't kill slow sessions** — Claude may be doing multi-step work; check progress instead\\n10. **Use `--allowedTools`** — restrict capabilities to what the task actually needs\\n\", \"path\": \"autonomous-ai-agents/claude-code/SKILL.md\", \"skill_dir\": \"/DATA/.hermes/skills/autonomous-ai-agents/claude-code\", \"linked_files\": null, \"usage_hint\": null, \"required_environment_variables\": [], \"required_commands\": [], \"missing_required_environment_variables\": [], \"missing_credential_files\": [], \"missing_required_commands\": [], \"setup_needed\": false, \"setup_skipped\": false, \"readiness_status\": \"available\", \"metadata\": {\"hermes\": {\"tags\": [\"Coding-Agent\", \"Claude\", \"Anthropic\", \"Code-Review\", \"Refactoring\", \"PTY\", \"Automation\"], \"related_skills\": [\"codex\", \"hermes-agent\", \"opencode\"]}}}",
      "tool_call_id": "functions.skill_view:74"
    },
    {
      "role": "tool",
      "name": "session_search",
      "content": "{\"success\": true, \"query\": \"claude code OR projekt OR project OR coding\", \"results\": [], \"count\": 0, \"sessions_searched\": 0}",
      "tool_call_id": "functions.session_search:75"
    },
    {
      "role": "assistant",
      "content": "Was hast du denn für einen Tech-Stack oder Bereich, der dich gerade reizt? Hier sind ein paar Richtungen, die mit Claude Code **richtig gut** funktionieren:\n\n---\n\n## 🚀 Projektideen (vom Kleinen bis zum Crazy)\n\n### 1. **AI-Powered Dev-Tool** 🔧\nEin CLI-Tool, das deinen Codebase versteht und dir hilft — z.B.:\n- Auto-Refactor nach deinen eigenen Regeln\n- \"Warum bricht dieser Test?\" — mit Kontext aus Git-History\n- Smarte Commit-Messages aus Diff\n\n### 2. **Realtime-App mit WebSockets** ⚡\n- Live-Collab Editor (wie Google Docs, aber Minimal)\n- Multiplayer-Browsergame (z.B. Snake, Schach)\n- Live-Dashboard für IoT/Sensordaten\n\n### 3. **RAG-Dokumentensuche** 📚\n- Du lädst PDFs, Notion, Obsidian ein\n- Semantische Suche + Quellenangaben\n- Lokales LLM oder API — deine Wahl\n\n### 4. **API + Dashboard für einen Hobby** 🎯\n- Bier-Brau-Tracker (Rezepte, Gärung, QR-Code Labels)\n- Foto-Organizer mit EXIF + Geo + AI-Tags\n- Workout-Logger mit Progress-Charts\n\n### 5. **Browser-Extension** 🧩\n- YouTube-Transkript-Extractor mit AI-Summary\n- \"Klugscheißer\"-Mode: Highlights falsche Fakten auf Webseiten\n- Dark-Mode-Enforcer für Seiten, die keinen haben\n\n### 6. **Micro-SaaS** 💰\n- URL-Shortener mit Analytics\n- Pastebin mit Syntax-Highlighting + Burn-after-read\n- Mini-Shop mit Stripe-Integration\n\n### 7. **Open Source Contribution** 🌍\n- Ein Tool, das du selbst oft brauchst, als OSS veröffentlichen\n- Claude Code kann den gesamten Repo-Setup + CI/CD + Docs machen\n\n### 8. **Game (Web oder Terminal)** 🎮\n- Roguelike im Terminal (Python + curses)\n- Browser-Game mit Three.js oder Phaser\n- Idle-Game mit Save-State im LocalStorage\n\n---\n\n**Was reizt dich gerade?**\n- 🌐 **Web-App** (React/Next/Vue)?\n- 🐍 **Python-Tool/Backend** (FastAPI/Django)?\n- 📱 **Mobile-App** (React Native/Flutter)?\n- 🤖 **AI/ML-Integration**?\n- 🎮 **Game**?\n- 💰 **Micro-SaaS** zum Verkaufen?\n\n**Oder hast du schon eine konkrete Idee im Kopf?** Dann lass los — ich orchestriere Claude Code für dich und wir bauen es zusammen! 🛠️",
      "reasoning": "Der User fragt, was wir mit Claude Code bauen sollen – er hat Lust auf ein Projekt. Ich habe den claude-code Skill geladen und keine relevanten vergangenen Sessions gefunden.\n\nIch kenne Ahmed nicht gut genug um zu wissen, was seine Interessen sind. Ich sollte ihn fragen, was für ein Projekt er spannend findet. Aber ich könnte auch ein paar kreative Ideen vorschlagen, die mit Claude Code gut funktionieren würden.\n\nClaude Code eignet sich besonders für:\n- Web Apps (React, Next.js, etc.)\n- APIs/Backend\n- CLI Tools\n- Datenpipelines\n- Automation\n- Game Development\n- ML/AI Tools\n- Open Source Beiträge\n\nLass mich ein paar spannende Projektideen vorschlagen und ihn fragen, was ihn reizt.",
      "finish_reason": "stop",
      "reasoning_content": "Der User fragt, was wir mit Claude Code bauen sollen – er hat Lust auf ein Projekt. Ich habe den claude-code Skill geladen und keine relevanten vergangenen Sessions gefunden.\n\nIch kenne Ahmed nicht gut genug um zu wissen, was seine Interessen sind. Ich sollte ihn fragen, was für ein Projekt er spannend findet. Aber ich könnte auch ein paar kreative Ideen vorschlagen, die mit Claude Code gut funktionieren würden.\n\nClaude Code eignet sich besonders für:\n- Web Apps (React, Next.js, etc.)\n- APIs/Backend\n- CLI Tools\n- Datenpipelines\n- Automation\n- Game Development\n- ML/AI Tools\n- Open Source Beiträge\n\nLass mich ein paar spannende Projektideen vorschlagen und ihn fragen, was ihn reizt."
    },
    {
      "role": "user",
      "content": "Review the conversation above and update the skill library. Be ACTIVE — most sessions produce at least one skill update, even if small. A pass that does nothing is a missed learning opportunity, not a neutral outcome.\n\nTarget shape of the library: CLASS-LEVEL skills, each with a rich SKILL.md and a `references/` directory for session-specific detail. Not a long flat list of narrow one-session-one-skill entries. This shapes HOW you update, not WHETHER you update.\n\nSignals to look for (any one of these warrants action):\n  • User corrected your style, tone, format, legibility, or verbosity. Frustration signals like 'stop doing X', 'this is too verbose', 'don't format like this', 'why are you explaining', 'just give me the answer', 'you always do Y and I hate it', or an explicit 'remember this' are FIRST-CLASS skill signals, not just memory signals. Update the relevant skill(s) to embed the preference so the next session starts already knowing.\n  • User corrected your workflow, approach, or sequence of steps. Encode the correction as a pitfall or explicit step in the skill that governs that class of task.\n  • Non-trivial technique, fix, workaround, debugging path, or tool-usage pattern emerged that a future session would benefit from. Capture it.\n  • A skill that got loaded or consulted this session turned out to be wrong, missing a step, or outdated. Patch it NOW.\n\nPreference order — prefer the earliest action that fits, but do pick one when a signal above fired:\n  1. UPDATE A CURRENTLY-LOADED SKILL. Look back through the conversation for skills the user loaded via /skill-name or you read via skill_view. If any of them covers the territory of the new learning, PATCH that one first. It is the skill that was in play, so it's the right one to extend.\n  2. UPDATE AN EXISTING UMBRELLA (via skills_list + skill_view). If no loaded skill fits but an existing class-level skill does, patch it. Add a subsection, a pitfall, or broaden a trigger.\n  3. ADD A SUPPORT FILE under an existing umbrella. Skills can be packaged with three kinds of support files — use the right directory per kind:\n     • `references/<topic>.md` — session-specific detail (error transcripts, reproduction recipes, provider quirks) AND condensed knowledge banks: quoted research, API docs, external authoritative excerpts, or domain notes you found while working on the problem. Write it concise and for the value of the task, not as a full mirror of upstream docs.\n     • `templates/<name>.<ext>` — starter files meant to be copied and modified (boilerplate configs, scaffolding, a known-good example the agent can `reproduce with modifications`).\n     • `scripts/<name>.<ext>` — statically re-runnable actions the skill can invoke directly (verification scripts, fixture generators, deterministic probes, anything the agent should run rather than hand-type each time).\n     Add support files via skill_manage action=write_file with file_path starting 'references/', 'templates/', or 'scripts/'. The umbrella's SKILL.md should gain a one-line pointer to any new support file so future agents know it exists.\n  4. CREATE A NEW CLASS-LEVEL UMBRELLA SKILL when no existing skill covers the class. The name MUST be at the class level. The name MUST NOT be a specific PR number, error string, feature codename, library-alone name, or 'fix-X / debug-Y / audit-Z-today' session artifact. If the proposed name only makes sense for today's task, it's wrong — fall back to (1), (2), or (3).\n\nUser-preference embedding (important): when the user expressed a style/format/workflow preference, the update belongs in the SKILL.md body, not just in memory. Memory captures 'who the user is and what the current situation and state of your operations are'; skills capture 'how to do this class of task for this user'. When they complain about how you handled a task, the skill that governs that task needs to carry the lesson.\n\nIf you notice two existing skills that overlap, note it in your reply — the background curator handles consolidation at scale.\n\n'Nothing to save.' is a real option but should NOT be the default. If the session ran smoothly with no corrections and produced no new technique, just say 'Nothing to save.' and stop. Otherwise, act."
    },
    {
      "role": "assistant",
      "content": "**Nothing to save.**\n\nDiese Session war zu kurz für neue Lerninhalte:\n\n- Keine Korrekturen von Stil, Ton oder Workflow\n- Keine technischen Workarounds oder Fixes entstanden\n- Kein geladener Skill war fehlerhaft oder unvollständig\n- Die Projektideen-Liste war generisches Brainstorming, keine neue Technik\n\nDer `claude-code` Skill wurde konsultiert, aber es gab keine neuen Erkenntnisse über Claude Code, die dort nicht schon dokumentiert sind.\n\nWenn du in der nächsten Session tatsächlich mit Claude Code baust, wird es mit Sicherheit etwas zu speichern geben — dann dokumentieren wir den Workflow, Pitfalls und Tricks.",
      "reasoning": "Der Benutzer hat mich gebeten, die Konversation zu überprüfen und die Skill-Bibliothek zu aktualisieren. Ich muss nach Signalen suchen:\n\n1. Korrekturen zu Stil, Ton, Format, Lesbarkeit, Wortschwall\n2. Korrekturen zu Workflow, Ansatz, Schrittfolge\n3. Nicht-triviale Techniken, Fixes, Workarounds, Debugging-Pfade, Tool-Usage-Muster\n4. Ein Skill, der geladen wurde, war falsch, fehlte ein Schritt oder war veraltet\n\nWas ist in dieser Session passiert?\n\n1. Der Benutzer hat mich als \"Kiwi\" begrüßt - er kennt mich schon, ich habe anscheinend context compaction verloren\n2. Er fragte nach \"hermes\" vs \"hermes-agent\" Ordnern - ich habe eine Erklärung gegeben\n3. Er fragte nach einem Projekt mit Claude Code - ich habe viele Ideen aufgelistet\n4. Er hat mich aufgefordert, die Skill-Bibliothek zu aktualisieren\n\nIch sollte die Skills prüfen, die geladen wurden:\n- `claude-code` Skill wurde geladen (via skill_view)\n\nGab es Korrekturen? Nein, keine expliziten Korrekturen in dieser Session.\n\nAber: Es gab keine wirklichen neuen Erkenntnisse in dieser Session. Die Session war sehr kurz:\n- Hallo\n- \"Hast du alles vergessen?\" (Context Compaction)\n- Erklärung der Ordner\n- Projektideen für Claude Code\n\nEs gab keine technischen Workarounds, keine Fehler, keine Korrekturen, keine neuen Techniken.\n\nDie einzige mögliche Aktualisierung wäre vielleicht eine Ergänzung im `claude-code` Skill, aber ich habe nichts Neues gelernt, was dort nicht schon steht.\n\nWarte - es gibt vielleicht eine Sache. Der Benutzer hat mich als \"Kiwi\" angesprochen. Das ist mein Name aus der AGENTS.md. Aber das ist kein Skill-Update.\n\nIch denke wirklich: **Nothing to save.** Diese Session war zu kurz und produzierte keine neuen Techniken, Korrekturen oder Workarounds.\n\nAber warte - der Benutzer hat gesagt \"Hast du etwa alles vergessen?\" und ich habe den context compaction erlebt. Das ist ein Umwelt-Fakt, aber kein Skill.\n\nIch sollte aber auch die verfügbaren Skills prüfen - gibt es einen Skill, der meine Projektideen-Liste abdeckt? Vielleicht \"ideation\"? Lass mich prüfen.\n\nNein, eigentlich gibt es keinen Grund, etwas zu speichern. Die Session war:\n- Kurze Begrüßung\n- Erklärung von zwei Ordnern (keine neue Technik)\n- Aufzählung von Projektideen (generisches Wissen, nichts Neues)\n- Diese Meta-Anweisung\n\nEs gab keine Fehler, keine Korrekturen, keine Workarounds, keine neuen Tool-Usage-Muster.\n\nIch sage: **Nothing to save.**",
      "finish_reason": "stop",
      "reasoning_content": "Der Benutzer hat mich gebeten, die Konversation zu überprüfen und die Skill-Bibliothek zu aktualisieren. Ich muss nach Signalen suchen:\n\n1. Korrekturen zu Stil, Ton, Format, Lesbarkeit, Wortschwall\n2. Korrekturen zu Workflow, Ansatz, Schrittfolge\n3. Nicht-triviale Techniken, Fixes, Workarounds, Debugging-Pfade, Tool-Usage-Muster\n4. Ein Skill, der geladen wurde, war falsch, fehlte ein Schritt oder war veraltet\n\nWas ist in dieser Session passiert?\n\n1. Der Benutzer hat mich als \"Kiwi\" begrüßt - er kennt mich schon, ich habe anscheinend context compaction verloren\n2. Er fragte nach \"hermes\" vs \"hermes-agent\" Ordnern - ich habe eine Erklärung gegeben\n3. Er fragte nach einem Projekt mit Claude Code - ich habe viele Ideen aufgelistet\n4. Er hat mich aufgefordert, die Skill-Bibliothek zu aktualisieren\n\nIch sollte die Skills prüfen, die geladen wurden:\n- `claude-code` Skill wurde geladen (via skill_view)\n\nGab es Korrekturen? Nein, keine expliziten Korrekturen in dieser Session.\n\nAber: Es gab keine wirklichen neuen Erkenntnisse in dieser Session. Die Session war sehr kurz:\n- Hallo\n- \"Hast du alles vergessen?\" (Context Compaction)\n- Erklärung der Ordner\n- Projektideen für Claude Code\n\nEs gab keine technischen Workarounds, keine Fehler, keine Korrekturen, keine neuen Techniken.\n\nDie einzige mögliche Aktualisierung wäre vielleicht eine Ergänzung im `claude-code` Skill, aber ich habe nichts Neues gelernt, was dort nicht schon steht.\n\nWarte - es gibt vielleicht eine Sache. Der Benutzer hat mich als \"Kiwi\" angesprochen. Das ist mein Name aus der AGENTS.md. Aber das ist kein Skill-Update.\n\nIch denke wirklich: **Nothing to save.** Diese Session war zu kurz und produzierte keine neuen Techniken, Korrekturen oder Workarounds.\n\nAber warte - der Benutzer hat gesagt \"Hast du etwa alles vergessen?\" und ich habe den context compaction erlebt. Das ist ein Umwelt-Fakt, aber kein Skill.\n\nIch sollte aber auch die verfügbaren Skills prüfen - gibt es einen Skill, der meine Projektideen-Liste abdeckt? Vielleicht \"ideation\"? Lass mich prüfen.\n\nNein, eigentlich gibt es keinen Grund, etwas zu speichern. Die Session war:\n- Kurze Begrüßung\n- Erklärung von zwei Ordnern (keine neue Technik)\n- Aufzählung von Projektideen (generisches Wissen, nichts Neues)\n- Diese Meta-Anweisung\n\nEs gab keine Fehler, keine Korrekturen, keine Workarounds, keine neuen Tool-Usage-Muster.\n\nIch sage: **Nothing to save.**"
    }
  ]
}