AgentGraphed
Local-first analytics dashboard for Claude Code and Codex CLI sessions
About AgentGraphed
AgentGraphed reads JSONL logs from Claude Code and Codex CLI and turns them into an interactive dashboard. See every session, every project, every dollar across your whole machine. Just run npx agentgraphed and open localhost:3737.
Features timeline views, session browsing with chat-bubble UI, project tracking by AI usage, one-click resume for past sessions, 30-day usage charts with token counts and cost estimates across 2700+ models, and optional live quota monitoring from Anthropic.
All data stays local in SQLite. No cloud account or API setup needed. Built with TypeScript and Next.js. MIT licensed.
More Github
blue-spec
Blue Spec is a toolkit for Security-Driven Hardening, a defensive workflow that helps AI agents detect what a system actually does and harden the defenses that matter most. It brings spec-driven, blue-team thinking to AI-assisted development so security is designed in, not bolted on.
ai-memory-vault
AI Memory Vault gives your AI a real, persistent memory using nothing but an Obsidian vault and markdown files. No vector database required. The open-source system plus templates turn your notes into durable working memory your coding agent can read and update across sessions.
foreman
Foreman is an agentic orchestrator TUI that supervises headless Claude Code agents through a gated software-delivery pipeline, pointed at any repository. It brings structure and human oversight to autonomous coding runs, letting you watch, gate, and steer multiple agents from one terminal interface.
recall
Recall gives Claude Code durable memory that lives entirely on your machine. Instead of burning tokens re-explaining your project every session, Recall stores and summarizes context offline using TextRank, keeping your AI coding agent grounded across sessions with zero cloud dependency.
Kage
Kage “shadows” any website into a single self-contained binary you can run offline. Instead of juggling scraped folders, caches, or archive formats, you get one portable executable that serves a faithful copy of the site — ideal for documentation, demos, or preserving a reference before it disappears. It is a neat reminder that not every problem needs a cloud service. For builders, Kage is a clean example of packaging a complete experience into a distributable binary, and a handy utility for keeping critical docs available even when you are offline.