Agent skill
agent-memory
Use this skill when the user asks to save, remember, recall, or organize memories. Triggers on: 'remember this', 'save this', 'note this', 'what did we discuss about...', 'check your notes', 'clean up memories'. Also use proactively when discovering valuable findings worth preserving.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/aiskillstore/marketplace/tree/main/skills/yamadashy/agent-memory
SKILL.md
Agent Memory
A persistent memory space for storing knowledge that survives across conversations.
Location: .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/
Proactive Usage
Save memories when you discover something worth preserving:
- Research findings that took effort to uncover
- Non-obvious patterns or gotchas in the codebase
- Solutions to tricky problems
- Architectural decisions and their rationale
Check memories when starting related work:
- Before investigating a problem area
- When working on a feature you've touched before
Organize memories when needed:
- Consolidate scattered memories on the same topic
- Remove outdated or superseded information
Folder Structure
When possible, organize memories into category folders. No predefined structure - create categories that make sense for the content.
Guidelines:
- Use kebab-case for folder and file names
- Consolidate or reorganize as the knowledge base evolves
Example:
memories/
├── file-processing/
│ └── large-file-memory-issue.md
├── dependencies/
│ └── iconv-esm-problem.md
└── project-context/
└── december-2025-work.md
This is just an example. Structure freely based on actual content.
Frontmatter
All memories must include frontmatter with a summary field. The summary should be concise enough to determine whether to read the full content.
Required:
---
summary: "1-2 line description of what this memory contains"
created: 2025-01-15 # YYYY-MM-DD format
---
Optional:
---
summary: "Worker thread memory leak during large file processing - cause and solution"
created: 2025-01-15
updated: 2025-01-20
tags: [performance, worker, memory-leak]
related: [src/core/file/fileProcessor.ts]
---
Search Workflow
Use summary-first approach to efficiently find relevant memories:
# 1. List categories
ls .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/
# 2. View all summaries
rg "^summary:" .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/ --no-ignore --hidden
# 3. Search summaries for keyword
rg "^summary:.*keyword" .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/ --no-ignore --hidden -i
# 4. Search by tag
rg "^tags:.*keyword" .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/ --no-ignore --hidden -i
# 5. Full-text search (when summary search isn't enough)
rg "keyword" .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/ --no-ignore --hidden -i
# 6. Read specific memory file if relevant
Note: Memory files are gitignored, so use --no-ignore and --hidden flags with ripgrep.
Operations
Save
- Determine appropriate category for the content
- Check if existing category fits, or create new one
- Write file with required frontmatter (use
date +%Y-%m-%dfor current date)
mkdir -p .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/category-name/
# Note: Check if file exists before writing to avoid accidental overwrites
cat > .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/category-name/filename.md << 'EOF'
---
summary: "Brief description of this memory"
created: 2025-01-15
---
# Title
Content here...
EOF
Maintain
- Update: When information changes, update the content and add
updatedfield to frontmatter - Delete: Remove memories that are no longer relevant
bash
trash .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/category-name/filename.md # Remove empty category folders rmdir .claude/skills/agent-memory/memories/category-name/ 2>/dev/null || true - Consolidate: Merge related memories when they grow
- Reorganize: Move memories to better-fitting categories as the knowledge base evolves
Guidelines
- Write for your future self: Include enough context to be useful later
- Keep summaries decisive: Reading the summary should tell you if you need the details
- Stay current: Update or delete outdated information
- Be practical: Save what's actually useful, not everything
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