codeix

Fast semantic code search for AI agents — find symbols, references, and callers across any codebase. Pre-built index committed to git, instant queries via MCP.

codeix

codeix.dev · Fast semantic code search for AI agents — find symbols, references, and callers across any codebase.

codeix                 # start MCP server, watch for changes
codeix build           # parse source files, write .codeindex
codeix -r ~/project build  # build from a specific directory

Why

AI coding agents spend most of their token budget finding code before they can work on it. They grep, read files, grep again, backtrack. On a large codebase the agent might burn thousands of tokens just locating the right function — or worse, miss it entirely and hallucinate.

Codeix gives the agent a pre-built map of your codebase. One structured query returns the symbol name, file, line range, signature, and parent — no scanning, no guessing.

What existing tools get wrong

ProblemWhat happens today
No structuregrep finds text matches, not symbols. The agent can't distinguish a function definition from a comment mentioning it.
Slow re-parsingPython-based indexers re-parse everything on startup. On large codebases, you wait.
Not shareableIndexes are local caches — ephemeral, per-machine. A new developer or CI runner starts from scratch.
No compositionMonorepo with 10 packages? Dependencies with useful APIs? No way to query across boundaries.
Prose is invisibleTODOs, docstrings, error messages — searchable by grep but not selectively. You can't search only comments without also matching code.

What codeix does differently

  • Committed to git — the index is a .codeindex directory you commit with your code. Clone the repo, the index is already there. No re-indexing.
  • Shareable — library authors can ship .codeindex in their npm/PyPI/crates.io package. Consumers get instant navigation of dependencies.
  • Composable — the MCP server auto-discovers dependency indexes and mounts them. Query your code and your dependencies in one place.
  • Structured for LLMs — symbols have kinds, signatures, parent relationships, and line ranges. The agent gets exactly what it needs in one tool call instead of piecing it together from raw text.
  • Prose searchsearch --scope text targets comments, docstrings, and string literals specifically. Find TODOs, find the error message a user reported, find what a function's docstring says — without noise from code.
  • Fast — builds in seconds, queries in milliseconds. Rust + tree-sitter + in-memory SQLite FTS5 under the hood.

The .codeindex format

An open, portable format for structured code indexing. Plain JSONL files you commit alongside your code — git-friendly diffs, human-readable with grep and jq, no binary blobs.

.codeindex/
  index.json        # manifest: version, name, languages
  files.jsonl       # one line per source file (path, lang, hash, line count)
  symbols.jsonl     # one line per symbol (functions, classes, imports, with signatures)
  texts.jsonl       # one line per comment, docstring, string literal

Any tool that can parse JSON can consume a .codeindex. Codeix builds it using tree-sitter, and AI agents query it through MCP (Model Context Protocol).

Examplesymbols.jsonl:

{"file":"src/main.py","name":"os","kind":"import","line":[1,1]}
{"file":"src/main.py","name":"Config","kind":"class","line":[22,45]}
{"file":"src/main.py","name":"Config.__init__","kind":"method","line":[23,30],"parent":"Config","sig":"def __init__(self, path: str, debug: bool = False)"}
{"file":"src/main.py","name":"main","kind":"function","line":[48,60],"sig":"def main(args: list[str]) -> int"}

Ship your index with your package

Include .codeindex in your package and every developer who depends on you gets instant navigation of your API — no setup, no re-indexing.

Works with Git repos, npm, PyPI, and crates.io.

MCP tools

Seven tools, zero setup. The agent queries immediately — no init, no config, no refresh.

ToolWhat it does
exploreExplore project structure: metadata, subprojects, files grouped by directory
searchUnified full-text search across symbols, files, and texts (FTS5, BM25-ranked) with scope/kind/path/project filters
get_file_symbolsList all symbols in a file
get_childrenGet children of a class/module
get_callersFind all places that call or reference a symbol
get_calleesFind all symbols that a function/method calls
flush_indexFlush pending index changes to disk

Project discovery

Launch codeix from any directory. It walks downward and treats every directory containing .git/ as a separate project — each gets its own .codeindex.

Works uniformly for single repos, monorepos, sibling repos, and git submodules. No config needed.

Languages

Tree-sitter grammars, feature-gated at compile time:

LanguageFeature flagDefaultExtensions
Pythonlang-pythonyes.py .pyi .pyw
Rustlang-rustyes.rs
JavaScriptlang-javascriptyes.js .mjs .cjs .jsx
TypeScriptlang-typescriptyes.ts .mts .cts .tsx
Golang-goyes.go
Javalang-javayes.java
Clang-cyes.c .h
C++lang-cppyes.cpp .cc .cxx .hpp .hxx
Rubylang-rubyyes.rb .rake .gemspec
C#lang-csharpyes.cs
Markdownlang-markdownyes.md .markdown

Markdown support

Markdown files are parsed for headings (both ATX # and Setext underline styles) which are indexed as section symbols with hierarchical parent-child relationships — enabling TOC extraction and document structure navigation.

Fenced code blocks are extracted as code text entries, parented to their containing section.

Embedded scripts

HTML, Vue, Svelte, and Astro files are preprocessed to extract embedded <script> blocks, which are then parsed with the JavaScript or TypeScript grammar:

FormatExtensionsScript detection
HTML.html .htm<script> tags, with optional lang="ts"
Vue.vue<script> and <script setup>, with optional lang="ts"
Svelte.svelte<script>, with optional lang="ts"
Astro.astro--- frontmatter (always TypeScript) + optional <script> tags

Line numbers in the index point to the original file, not the extracted script block.

Install

# npm / npx — run without installing
npx codeix

# pip / uvx — run without installing
uvx codeix

# Rust
cargo install codeix

# Homebrew
brew install codeix

# Or build from source
git clone https://github.com/montanetech/codeix.git
cd codeix
cargo build --release

All channels install the same single binary. No runtime dependencies.

Usage

# Build the index for the current project
codeix build

# Build from a specific directory (discovers all git repos below)
codeix -r ~/projects build

# Start MCP server (default command, watches for changes)
codeix

# Or explicitly
codeix serve
codeix serve --no-watch

# Serve from a specific directory
codeix -r ~/projects serve

MCP client configuration

Add to your MCP client config (e.g. Claude Desktop, Cursor):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "codeix": {
      "command": "codeix"
    }
  }
}

Design principles

  • Local only — no network, no API keys, works offline and air-gapped
  • Deterministic — same source always produces the same index (clean diffs)
  • Composable — dependency indexes are auto-discovered and mounted at query time
  • Minimal surface — 7 query tools, zero management plumbing

Architecture

See docs/architecture.md for the full set of architecture decision records.

License

MIT OR Apache-2.0

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