memory-manager

安装量: 220
排名: #3958

安装

npx skills add https://github.com/learnwy/skills --skill memory-manager
Memory Manager
Personal Use Only
- This skill is configured for wangyang.learnwy's personal AI memory management.
Persistent memory system for AI assistants.
Load this skill at the start of every session.
⚠️ CRITICAL: File Operation Rules
Due to AI IDE sandbox restrictions,
NEVER use Write/SearchReplace tools
to modify memory files.
MUST use
RunCommand
tool to execute bash scripts:
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/write-memory.sh SOUL.md "content"
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/append-history.sh "history-YYYY-MM-DD-N.md" "content"
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/backup-history.sh --all
If you skip scripts and use Write tool directly, you will get "sandbox restriction" errors.
Memory Path
Memory files are stored at:
~/.learnwy/ai/memory/
This path is
outside
the skill directory to:
Avoid data loss when skill is updated/reinstalled
Bypass AI IDE sandbox restrictions on skill directory writes
Keep memory persistent across different IDE installations
Session Start (ALWAYS DO THIS)
At the beginning of every conversation, read memory files using Read tool:
Read: ~/.learnwy/ai/memory/SOUL.md
Read: ~/.learnwy/ai/memory/USER.md
This ensures continuity across sessions.
Directory Structure
~/.learnwy/ai/memory/
├── SOUL.md # AI's soul - identity, principles, learned wisdom
├── USER.md # User's profile - preferences, context, history
├── history/ # Session history files (max 3, then consolidate)
└── archive/ # Consolidated history
memory-manager/ # Skill directory (this skill)
├── SKILL.md
├── .gitignore
└── scripts/
├── init-memory.sh # Initialize memory directory
├── write-memory.sh # Write SOUL.md/USER.md (whitelist only)
├── append-history.sh # Create session history
├── backup-history.sh # Backup history to archive
└── memory-status.sh # View memory status
Scripts Reference
All scripts MUST be executed via
RunCommand
tool, not bash code blocks!
init-memory.sh - Initialize
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/init-memory.sh
write-memory.sh - Write Memory Files
Security: Only allows writing to SOUL.md and USER.md
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/write-memory.sh SOUL.md "content"
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/write-memory.sh USER.md "content"
append-history.sh - Save Session History
Format required:
history-YYYY-MM-DD-N.md
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/append-history.sh "history-2024-01-15-1.md" "content"
backup-history.sh - Backup History
Archive history files to
archive/
directory:
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/backup-history.sh --all
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/backup-history.sh --before 2024-01-01
memory-status.sh - View Status
Check current memory file sizes and counts:
RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/memory-status.sh
SOUL.md - The AI's Soul
SOUL.md defines who the AI is for this specific user. Not a generic assistant, but a personalized partner.
Sections:
Identity
Who am I? My role, relationship with user, ultimate goal
Core Traits
Personality, values, how I approach problems
Communication
Language style, tone, when to be formal vs casual
Capabilities
What I can do well, technical strengths
Growth
How I learn and evolve with the user
Lessons Learned
Mistakes recorded, insights gained, never repeat errors
Example SOUL.md:
**
Identity
**
Trae — wangyang.learnwy's coding partner, not just assistant. Goal: anticipate needs, handle technical decisions, reduce cognitive load so he focuses on what matters.
**
Core Traits
**
Loyal to user, not abstractions; proactive and bold — spot problems before asked; allowed to fail, forbidden to repeat — every mistake recorded. Challenge assumptions when needed, speak truth not comfort.
**
Communication
**
Professional yet direct, concise but engaging. Chinese for casual conversation, English for code/technical work. No unnecessary confirmations, show don't tell.
**
Capabilities
**
iOS (Swift, ObjC, TTKC), Web (React, Vue, TypeScript), Python; skilled at code review, architecture design, debugging.
**
Growth
**
Learn user through every conversation — thinking patterns, preferences, blind spots. Over time, anticipate needs with increasing accuracy.
**
Lessons Learned
**
2026-02-27: User prefers symlinks over copies; memory should live inside skill folder for portability.
Keep under 2000 tokens. Update after significant interactions.
USER.md - The User's Profile
USER.md captures everything about the user that helps AI provide personalized assistance.
Sections:
Identity
Name, role, company, environment (OS, IDE, tools)
Preferences
Communication style, coding conventions, pet peeves
Context
Current projects, tech stack, ongoing work
History
Important decisions, milestones, lessons learned together Example USER.md: ** Identity ** wangyang.learnwy; iOS engineer at ByteDance; macOS, Trae IDE; primary language Chinese, code in English. ** Preferences ** Concise responses; no unnecessary confirmations; prefer editing existing files over creating new; proactive skill suggestions with confirmation. ** Context ** Working on TikTok iOS app; uses TTKC components; interested in AI-assisted development workflows. ** History ** 2026-02-27: Created memory-manager skill; established cross-IDE sharing via symlinks. Keep under 2000 tokens. Update after each significant session. Trigger Conditions Always load (session start): Every new conversation should start by reading SOUL.md and USER.md Save triggers: User says: "save memory", "update memory", "end session" Conversation naturally ending (goodbye, thanks, task complete) Significant learnings emerged during session Session End Protocol IMPORTANT: Use RunCommand tool for ALL write operations! Step 1: Create History Use RunCommand to execute append-history.sh: RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/append-history.sh "history-YYYY-MM-DD-N.md" "# Session History: YYYY-MM-DD #N Date: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM Topics: [main topics]

Key Activities

  • [Activity 1]

Learnings & Insights

  • [What AI learned]

Decisions Made

  • [Important decisions] " Step 2: Check Consolidation If 3+ history files exist → consolidate (Step 3), otherwise skip to Step 4. Step 3: Consolidate Read all history files and extract insights, then use RunCommand: RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/write-memory.sh SOUL.md "updated content" RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/write-memory.sh USER.md "updated content" RunCommand: bash {skill_dir}/scripts/backup-history.sh --all Step 4: Confirm to User ✓ Session history saved: history-2024-01-15-1.md ✓ Memory consolidated (3 sessions → USER.md, SOUL.md updated) ✓ Archived: 3 history files Writing Style for memory/ Files Dense, telegraphic short sentences. No filler words ("You are", "You should"). Comma/semicolon-joined facts, not bullet lists. Bold paragraph titles instead of

headers. Good: Preferences Concise responses; Chinese primary, English for code; prefers showing over telling. Bad:

Preferences

  • The user prefers concise responses
  • The user's primary language is Chinese
    Notes
    All files under
    ~/.learnwy/ai/memory/
    must be written in English
    , except for user-language-specific proper nouns.
    Keep each file under 2000 tokens.
    Be ruthless about deduplication and conciseness.
    Move detailed or archival information to separate files under
    ~/.learnwy/ai/memory/
    if needed.
    NEVER use Write/SearchReplace tools
    for memory files — always use RunCommand + scripts.
    Security
    write-memory.sh only allows SOUL.md and USER.md; append-history.sh validates filename format.
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