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supermemory-search
// Search your coding memory. Use when user asks about past work, previous sessions, how something was implemented, what they worked on before, or wants to recall information from earlier sessions.
// Search your coding memory. Use when user asks about past work, previous sessions, how something was implemented, what they worked on before, or wants to recall information from earlier sessions.
Remove outdated or incorrect information from memory. Use when user says something is no longer true, wants to delete a memory, or information has changed.
Save important project knowledge to memory. Use when user wants to preserve architectural decisions, significant bug fixes, design patterns, or important implementation details for future reference.
Log in to Supermemory. Use when the user needs to authenticate, set up their API key, or when memory features report a missing key.
| name | supermemory-search |
| description | Search your coding memory. Use when user asks about past work, previous sessions, how something was implemented, what they worked on before, or wants to recall information from earlier sessions. |
| allowed-tools | Bash(node:*) |
Search Supermemory for past coding sessions, decisions, and saved information.
Run the search script with the user's query and optional scope flag:
node ~/.codex/supermemory/search-memory.js [--user|--project|--both|--container <tag>] "USER_QUERY_HERE"
--both (default): Search both personal and project memories in parallel--user: Search personal/user memories across sessions--project: Search project-specific memories--container <tag>: Search a specific custom container (see [SUPERMEMORY CONTAINERS] in your context for available containers)--no-profile: Skip fetching the user profile summary (included by default)User asks "what did I work on yesterday":
node ~/.codex/supermemory/search-memory.js "work yesterday recent activity"
User asks "how did we implement auth" (project-specific):
node ~/.codex/supermemory/search-memory.js --project "authentication implementation"
User asks "what are my coding preferences":
node ~/.codex/supermemory/search-memory.js --user "coding preferences style"
The script outputs formatted memory results with relevance information. Present them clearly to the user and offer to search again with different terms if needed.