manage-memory
정보
이 스킬은 개발자가 Claude Code의 지속적 메모리를 관리할 수 있도록 MEMORY.md 파일을 구성, 추출 및 검증하는 데 도움을 줍니다. 주제를 전용 파일로 자동 추출하고, 오래된 항목을 감지하며, 200줄 제한 조건을 적용합니다. MEMORY.md가 줄 수 제한에 근접했을 때, 지속적인 통찰력을 얻은 생산적인 세션 후, 또는 프로젝트 변경으로 메모리 항목이 오래되었을 가능성이 있을 때 사용하세요.
빠른 설치
Claude Code
추천npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/manage-memoryClaude Code에서 이 명령을 복사하여 붙여넣어 스킬을 설치하세요
문서
Manage Memory
Maintain Claude Code's persistent memory directory so it stays accurate, concise, useful across sessions. MEMORY.md loaded into system prompt on every conversation — lines after 200 are truncated. File must be lean index pointing to topic files for detail.
When Use
- MEMORY.md approaching 200-line truncation threshold
- Session produced durable insights worth preserving (new patterns, architecture decisions, debugging solutions)
- Topic section in MEMORY.md grown beyond 10-15 lines. Should be extracted
- Project state changed (renamed files, new domains, updated counts). Memory entries may be stale
- Starting new area of work. Check whether relevant memory already exists
- Periodic maintenance between sessions to keep memory directory healthy
Inputs
- Required: Access to memory directory (typically
~/.claude/projects/<project-path>/memory/) - Optional: Specific trigger (e.g., "MEMORY.md is too long," "just finished major refactor")
- Optional: Topic to add, update, or extract
Steps
Step 1: Assess Current State
Read MEMORY.md and list all files in memory directory:
wc -l <memory-dir>/MEMORY.md
ls -la <memory-dir>/
Check line count against 200-line limit. Inventory existing topic files.
Got: Clear picture of total lines, number of topic files, which sections exist in MEMORY.md.
If fail: Memory directory doesn't exist? Create it. MEMORY.md doesn't exist? Create minimal one with # Project Memory header and ## Topic Files section.
Step 2: Identify Stale Entries
Compare memory claims against current project state. Common staleness patterns:
- Count drift: File counts, skill counts, domain counts changed after additions/removals
- Renamed paths: Files or directories moved or renamed
- Superseded patterns: Workarounds no longer needed after fixes
- Contradictions: Two entries saying different things about same topic
Use Grep to spot-check key claims:
# Example: verify a skill count claim
grep -c "^ - id:" skills/_registry.yml
# Example: verify a file still exists
ls path/claimed/in/memory.md
Got: List of entries stale, with correct current values.
If fail: Can't verify claim (e.g., it references external state you can't check)? Leave it but add (unverified) note rather than silently preserving potentially wrong information.
Step 3: Decide What to Add
For new entries, apply these filters before writing:
- Durability: Will this be true next session? Avoid session-specific context (current task, in-progress work, temporary state).
- Non-duplication: Does CLAUDE.md or project documentation already cover this? Don't duplicate — memory is for things NOT captured elsewhere.
- Verified: Has this been confirmed across multiple interactions, or is it single observation? For single observations, verify against project docs before writing.
- Actionable: Does knowing this change behavior? "The sky is blue" isn't useful. "Exit code 5 means quoting error — use temp files" changes how you work.
Exception: User explicitly asks to remember something? Save immediately — no need to wait for multiple confirmations.
Got: Filtered list of entries worth adding, each meeting durability + non-duplication + verification + actionability criteria.
If fail: Unsure whether entry is worth keeping? Err toward keeping briefly in MEMORY.md — easier to prune later than to rediscover.
Step 4: Extract Oversize Topics
When section in MEMORY.md exceeds ~10-15 lines, extract to dedicated topic file:
- Create
<memory-dir>/<topic-name>.mdwith descriptive header - Move detailed content from MEMORY.md to topic file
- Replace section in MEMORY.md with 1-2 line summary and link:
## Topic Files
- [topic-name.md](topic-name.md) — Brief description of contents
Naming conventions for topic files:
- Use lowercase kebab-case:
viz-architecture.md, notVizArchitecture.md - Name by topic, not chronology:
patterns.md, notsession-2024-12.md - Group related items: combine "R debugging" and "WSL quirks" into
patterns.mdrather than creating one file per fact
Got: MEMORY.md stays under 200 lines. Each topic file self-contained and readable without MEMORY.md context.
If fail: Topic file would be fewer than 5 lines? Probably not worth extracting — leave inline in MEMORY.md.
Step 5: Update MEMORY.md
Apply all changes: remove stale entries, add new entries, update counts, ensure Topic Files section lists all dedicated files.
MEMORY.md structure should follow this pattern:
# Project Memory
## Section 1 — High-level context
- Bullet points, concise
## Section 2 — Another topic
- Key facts only
## Topic Files
- [file.md](file.md) — What it covers
Guidelines:
- Keep each bullet to 1-2 lines maximum
- Use inline formatting (
code, bold) for scanability - Put most frequently needed context first
- Topic Files section should always be last
Got: MEMORY.md under 200 lines, accurate, has working links to all topic files.
If fail: Can't get under 200 lines after extraction? Identify least-frequently-used section, extract it. Every section is candidate — even project structure overview can go to topic file if needed, leaving just 1-line summary.
Step 6: Verify Integrity
Run final check:
- Line count: Confirm MEMORY.md under 200 lines
- Links: Verify every topic file referenced in MEMORY.md exists
- Orphans: Check for topic files not referenced in MEMORY.md
- Accuracy: Spot-check 2-3 factual claims against project state
wc -l <memory-dir>/MEMORY.md
# Check for broken links
for f in $(grep -oP '\[.*?\]\(\K[^)]+' <memory-dir>/MEMORY.md); do
ls <memory-dir>/$f 2>/dev/null || echo "BROKEN: $f"
done
# Check for orphan files
ls <memory-dir>/*.md | grep -v MEMORY.md
Got: Line count under 200, no broken links, no orphan files, spot-checked claims accurate.
If fail: Fix broken links (update or remove). Orphan files? Either add reference in MEMORY.md or delete if no longer relevant.
Checks
- MEMORY.md under 200 lines
- All topic files referenced in MEMORY.md exist on disk
- No orphan
.mdfiles in memory directory (every file linked from MEMORY.md) - No stale counts or renamed paths in any memory file
- New entries meet durability/non-duplication/verified/actionable criteria
- Topic files have descriptive headers and are self-contained
- MEMORY.md reads as useful quick-reference, not changelog
Pitfalls
- Memory file pollution: Writing every session observation to memory. Most findings session-specific, don't need persisting. Apply four filters (Step 3) before writing.
- Stale counts: Updating code but not memory. Counts (skills, agents, domains, files) drift silently. Always verify counts against source of truth before trusting memory.
- Chronological organization: Organizing by "when I learned it" instead of "what it's about." Topic-based organization (
patterns.md,viz-architecture.md) far more useful for retrieval than date-based files. - Duplicating CLAUDE.md: CLAUDE.md is authoritative project instruction file. Memory should capture things NOT in CLAUDE.md — debugging insights, architecture decisions, workflow preferences, cross-project patterns.
- Over-extraction: Creating topic file for every 3-line section. Only extract when section exceeds ~10-15 lines. Small sections work fine inline.
- Forgetting 200-line limit: MEMORY.md loaded into every system prompt. Lines after 200 silently truncated. File grows past this? Bottom content effectively invisible.
See Also
write-claude-md— CLAUDE.md captures project instructions. Memory captures cross-session learningprune-agent-memory— inverse of manage-memory: auditing, classifying, selectively forgetting stored memorieswrite-continue-here— write structured continuation file for session handoff. Complements memory as short-term context bridgeread-continue-here— read and act on continuation file at session start. Consumption side of handoffcreate-skill— new skills may produce memory-worthy patternsheal— self-healing may update memory as part of integration stepmeditate— meditation sessions may surface insights worth persisting
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