Timeline Report
Generate a comprehensive narrative analysis of a project's entire development history using claude-mem's persistent memory timeline.
When to Use
Use when users ask for:
- "Write a timeline report"
- "Journey into [project]"
- "Analyze my project history"
- "Full project report"
- "Summarize the entire development history"
- "What's the story of this project?"
Prerequisites
The claude-mem worker must be running. The project must have claude-mem observations recorded.
Resolve the worker port (do this once at the start and reuse $WORKER_PORT in every curl call below):
WORKER_PORT="${CLAUDE_MEM_WORKER_PORT:-$(node -e "const fs=require('fs'),p=require('path'),os=require('os');const uid=(typeof process.getuid==='function'?process.getuid():77);const fallback=String(37700+(uid%100));try{const s=JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync(p.join(os.homedir(),'.claude-mem','settings.json'),'utf-8'));process.stdout.write(String(s.CLAUDE_MEM_WORKER_PORT||fallback));}catch{process.stdout.write(fallback);}" 2>/dev/null)}"
This honors CLAUDE_MEM_WORKER_PORT env, then ~/.claude-mem/settings.json, then falls back to the per-UID default 37700 + (uid % 100) — matching how the worker itself picks its port. Required for multi-account setups (#2101) and any user who has overridden the default port (#2103).
Workflow
Step 1: Determine the Project Name
Ask the user which project to analyze if not obvious from context. The project name is typically the directory name of the project (e.g., "tokyo", "my-app"). If the user says "this project", use the current working directory's basename.
Worktree Detection: Before using the directory basename, check if the current directory is a git worktree. In a worktree, the data source is the parent project, not the worktree directory itself. Run:
git_dir=$(git rev-parse --git-dir 2>/dev/null)
git_common_dir=$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir 2>/dev/null)
if [ "$git_dir" != "$git_common_dir" ]; then
# We're in a worktree — resolve the parent project name
parent_project=$(basename "$(dirname "$git_common_dir")")
echo "Worktree detected. Parent project: $parent_project"
else
parent_project=$(basename "$PWD")
fi
echo "$parent_project"
If a worktree is detected, use $parent_project (the basename of the parent repo) as the project name for all API calls. Inform the user: "Detected git worktree. Using parent project '[name]' as the data source."
Step 2: Fetch the Full Timeline
Use Bash to fetch the complete timeline from the claude-mem worker API:
curl -s "http://localhost:${WORKER_PORT}/api/context/inject?project=PROJECT_NAME&full=true"
This returns the entire compressed timeline -- every observation, session boundary, and summary across the project's full history. The response is pre-formatted markdown optimized for LLM consumption.
Token estimates: The full timeline size depends on the project's history:
- Small project (< 1,000 observations): ~20-50K tokens
- Medium project (1,000-10,000 observations): ~50-300K tokens
- Large project (10,000-35,000 observations): ~300-750K tokens
If the response is empty or returns an error, the worker may not be running or the project name may be wrong. Try curl -s "http://localhost:${WORKER_PORT}/api/search?query=*&limit=1" to verify the worker is healthy.
Step 3: Estimate Token Count
Before proceeding, estimate the token count of the fetched timeline (roughly 1 token per 4 characters). Report this to the user:
Timeline fetched: ~X observations, estimated ~Yk tokens.
This analysis will consume approximately Yk input tokens + ~5-10k output tokens.
Proceed? (y/n)
Wait for user confirmation before continuing if the timeline exceeds 100K tokens.
Step 4: Analyze with a Subagent
Deploy an Agent (using the Task tool) with the full timeline and the following analysis prompt. Pass the ENTIRE timeline as context to the agent. The agent should also be instructed to query the SQLite database at ~/.claude-mem/claude-mem.db for the Token Economics section.
Agent prompt:
You are a technical historian analyzing a software project's complete development timeline from claude-mem's persistent memory system. The timeline below contains every observation, session boundary, and summary recorded across the project's entire history.
You also have access to the claude-mem SQLite database at ~/.claude-mem/claude-mem.db. Use it to run queries for the Token Economics & Memory ROI section. The database has an "observations" table with columns: id, memory_session_id, project, text, type, title, subtitle, facts, narrative, concepts, files_read, files_modified, prompt_number, discovery_tokens, created_at, created_at_epoch, source_tool, source_input_summary.
Write a comprehensive narrative report titled "Journey Into [PROJECT_NAME]" that covers:
## Required Sections
1. **Project Genesis** -- When and how the project started. What were the first commits, the initial vision, the founding technical decisions? What problem was being solved?
2. **Architectural Evolution** -- How did the architecture change over time? What were the major pivots? Why did they happen? Trace the evolution from initial design through each significant restructuring.
3. **Key Breakthroughs** -- Identify the "aha" moments: when a difficult problem was finally solved, when a new approach unlocked progress, when a prototype first worked. These are the observations where the tone shifts from investigation to resolution.
4. **Work Patterns** -- Analyze the rhythm of development. Identify debugging cycles (clusters of bug fixes), feature sprints (rapid observation sequences), refactoring phases (architectural changes without new features), and exploration phases (many discoveries without changes).
5. **Technical Debt** -- Track where shortcuts were taken and when they were paid back. Identify patterns of accumulation (rapid feature work) and resolution (dedicated refactoring sessions).
6. **Challenges and Debugging Sagas** -- The hardest problems encountered. Multi-session debugging efforts, architectural dead-ends that required backtracking, platform-specific issues that took days to resolve.
7. **Memory and Continuity** -- How did persistent memory (claude-mem itself, if applicable) affect the development process? Were there moments where recalled context from prior sessions saved significant time or prevented repeated mistakes?
8. **Token Economics & Memory ROI** -- Quantitative analysis of how memory recall saved work:
- Query the database directly for these metrics using `sqlite3 ~/.claude-mem/claude-mem.db`
- Count total discovery_tokens across all observations (the original cost of all work)
- Count sessions that had context injection available (sessions after the first)
- Calculate the compression ratio: average discovery_tokens vs average read_tokens per observation
- Identify the highest-value observations (highest discovery_tokens -- these are the most expensive decisions, bugs, and discoveries that memory prevents re-doing)
- Identify explicit recall events (observations where source_tool contains "search", "smart_search", "get_observations", "timeline", or where narrative mentions "recalled", "from memory", "previous session")
- Estimate passive recall savings: each session with context injection receives ~50 observations. Use a 30% relevance factor (conservative estimate that 30% of injected context prevents re-work). Savings = sessions_with_context × avg_discovery_value_of_50_obs_window × 0.30
- Estimate explicit recall savings: ~10K tokens per explicit recall query
- Calculate net ROI: total_savings / total_read_tokens_invested
- Present as a table with monthly breakdown
- Highlight the top 5 most expensive observations by discovery_tokens -- these represent the highest-value memories in the system (architecture decisions, hard bugs, implementation plans that cost 100K+ to