Recall Global — Retrieve Cross-Project Knowledge
Keywords
global, convention, standard, rule, infrastructure, policy, all projects, shared, universal, what's our rule, coding standard, architecture rule, team agreement, cross-project, server config, deployment
Overview
Retrieve global memories — knowledge stored as cross-project that's visible regardless of which project you're currently working in. Global memories include architecture rules, coding conventions, infrastructure facts, security policies, and team agreements.
Note: Regular cortex:recall already surfaces global memories automatically. This skill is for when you specifically want to focus on cross-project knowledge.
Workflow
Step 1: Recall Global Knowledge
Query with any domain — global memories appear alongside domain-specific results:
cortex:recall({
"query": "<topic to search for>",
"max_results": 10
})
Global memories are included in results regardless of the current project domain.
Step 2: Filter to Global Only
To see only global cross-project knowledge, use the unified neural graph:
cortex:open_visualization()
Click the Global filter button (pink) to isolate all global memories.
Click the Global filter — global memories appear as pink nodes connected to all project domains.
Step 3: Explore by Category
Common global recall patterns:
Architecture rules:
cortex:recall({ "query": "architecture rules and principles" })
Infrastructure:
cortex:recall({ "query": "server addresses and database connections" })
Coding conventions:
cortex:recall({ "query": "coding standards and naming conventions" })
Security policies:
cortex:recall({ "query": "security policies and credential management" })
Step 4: Navigate Connections
After finding a global memory, explore what it connects to across projects:
cortex:navigate_memory({
"memory_id": <id>,
"depth": 2
})
Global memories link to all domain hubs in the knowledge graph — following connections shows which projects reference similar concepts.
How Global Recall Works
Global memories have is_global = TRUE in the database. During recall, every retrieval signal (vector, FTS, trigram, heat, recency) includes the clause:
WHERE (domain = current_domain OR is_global = TRUE)
This means global memories compete on relevance alongside domain-specific ones — they're not artificially boosted, just not filtered out.
Tips
- Global memories compete on merit: They appear in results only when relevant to the query, not automatically at the top
- Use the visualization: The unified graph shows global memories (pink) with edges to every project — a visual map of shared knowledge
- Rate for quality: Use
cortex:rate_memoryon global memories that were helpful to improve future retrieval confidence - Assess coverage: Use
cortex:assess_coverageto see if any project domain is missing shared knowledge