# Memory - Personal Knowledge Base A personal knowledge base system that ingests, indexes, and provides semantic search over various content types including emails, documents, notes, web pages, and more. Features MCP (Model Context Protocol) integration for AI assistants to access and learn from your personal data. ## Features - **Multi-modal Content Ingestion**: Process emails, documents, ebooks, comics, web pages, and more - **Semantic Search**: Vector-based search across all your content with relevance scoring - **MCP Integration**: Direct integration with AI assistants via Model Context Protocol - **Observation System**: AI assistants can record and search long-term observations about user preferences and patterns - **Note Taking**: Create and organize markdown notes with full-text search - **User Management**: Multi-user support with authentication - **RESTful API**: Complete API for programmatic access - **Real-time Processing**: Celery-based background processing for content ingestion ## Quick Start ### Prerequisites - Docker and Docker Compose - Python 3.11+ (for tools) ### 1. Start the Development Environment ```bash # Clone the repository and navigate to it cd memory # Start the core services (PostgreSQL, RabbitMQ, Qdrant) ./dev.sh ``` This will: - Start PostgreSQL (exposed on port 5432) - Start RabbitMQ with management interface - Start Qdrant vector database - Initialize the database schema It will also generate secrets in `secrets` and make a basic `.env` file for you. ### 2. Start the Full Application ```bash # Start all services including API and workers docker-compose up -d # Check that services are healthy docker-compose ps ``` The API will be available at `http://localhost:8000` The is also an admin interface at `http://localhost:8000/admin` where you can see what the database contains. Because of how MCP can't yet handle basic auth, ## User Management ### Create a User ```bash # Install the package in development mode pip install -e ".[all]" # Create a new user python tools/add_user.py --email user@example.com --password yourpassword --name "Your Name" ``` ### Notes synchronisation You can set up notes to be automatically pushed to a git repo whenever they are modified. Run the following job to do so: ```bash python tools/run_celery_task.py notes setup-git-notes --origin ssh://git@github.com/some/repo.git --email bla@ble.com --name ``` For this to work you need to make sure you have set up the ssh keys in `secrets` (see the README.md in that folder), and you will need to add the public key that is generated there to your git server. ## Discord integration If you want to have notifications sent to discord, you'll have to [create a bot for that](https://discord.com/developers/applications). Once you have the bot's token, run ```bash python tools/discord_setup.py generate-invite --bot-token ``` to get an url that can be used to connect your Discord bot. Next you'll have to set at least the following in your `.env` file: ``` DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN= DISCORD_NOTIFICATIONS_ENABLED=True ``` When the worker starts it will automatically attempt to create the appropriate channels. You can change what they will be called by setting the various `DISCORD_*_CHANNEL` settings. ## MCP Proxy Setup Since MCP doesn't support basic authentication, use the included proxy for AI assistants that need to connect: ### Start the Proxy ```bash python tools/simple_proxy.py \ --remote-server http://localhost:8000 \ --email user@example.com \ --password yourpassword \ --port 8080 ``` ### Configure Your AI Assistant Point your MCP-compatible AI assistant to `http://localhost:8080` instead of the direct API endpoint. The proxy will: - Handle authentication automatically - Forward all requests to the main API - Add the session header to each request ### Example MCP Configuration For Claude Desktop or other MCP clients, add to your configuration: ```json { "mcpServers": { "memory": { "type": "streamable-http", "url": "http://localhost:8001/mcp", } } } ``` ## Available MCP Tools When connected via MCP, AI assistants have access to: - `search_knowledge_base()` - Search your stored content - `search_observations()` - Search recorded observations about you - `observe()` - Record new observations about your preferences/behavior - `create_note()` - Create and save notes - `note_files()` - List existing notes - `fetch_file()` - Read file contents - `get_all_tags()` - Get all content tags - `get_all_subjects()` - Get observation subjects ## Content Ingestion ### Via Workers Content is processed asynchronously by Celery workers. Supported formats include: - PDFs, DOCX, TXT files - Emails (mbox, EML formats) - Web pages (HTML) - Ebooks (EPUB, PDF) - Images with OCR - And more... ## Development ### Environment Setup ```bash # Install development dependencies pip install -e ".[dev]" # Run tests pytest # Run with auto-reload RELOAD=true python -m memory.api.app ``` ### Architecture - **FastAPI**: REST API and MCP server - **PostgreSQL**: Primary database for metadata and users - **Qdrant**: Vector database for semantic search - **RabbitMQ**: Message queue for background processing - **Celery**: Distributed task processing - **SQLAdmin**: Admin interface for database management ### Configuration Key environment variables: - `FILE_STORAGE_DIR`: Where uploaded files are stored - `DB_HOST`, `DB_PORT`: Database connection - `QDRANT_HOST`: Vector database connection - `RABBITMQ_HOST`: Message queue connection See `docker-compose.yaml` for full configuration options. ## Security Notes - Never expose the main API directly to the internet without proper authentication - Use the proxy for MCP connections to handle authentication securely - Store secrets in the `secrets/` directory (see `docker-compose.yaml`) - The application runs with minimal privileges in Docker containers ## Troubleshooting ### Common Issues 1. **Database connection errors**: Ensure PostgreSQL is running and accessible 2. **Vector search not working**: Check that Qdrant is healthy 3. **Background processing stalled**: Verify RabbitMQ and Celery workers are running 4. **MCP connection issues**: Use the proxy instead of direct API access ### Logs ```bash # View API logs docker-compose logs -f api # View worker logs docker-compose logs -f worker # View all logs docker-compose logs -f ``` ## Contributing This is a personal knowledge base system. Feel free to fork and adapt for your own use cases.