YourMemory
Persistent memory for AI agents with Ebbinghaus forgetting curve decay, hybrid BM25 + vector + knowledge graph retrieval, temporal reasoning, and a local dashboard. 89.4% Recall@5 on LongMemEval.
What Is YourMemory?
Every session, your AI assistant starts from zero. It asks the same questions, forgets your preferences, re-learns your stack. There is no memory between conversations.
YourMemory fixes that with a one-command install that plugs into Claude, Cursor, Cline, Windsurf, or any MCP client. It gives your AI a persistent memory layer modelled on human cognition:
- Things that matter stick — importance score controls how quickly a memory decays
- Outdated facts get replaced — subject-aware deduplication merges or supersedes memories automatically
- Related context surfaces together — entity graph links memories that share people, places, or concepts
- Old memories fade naturally — Ebbinghaus forgetting curve prunes stale context every 24 hours
Zero infrastructure required. SQLite by default, Postgres for teams.
Table of Contents
- Benchmarks
- Quick Start
- Memory Dashboard
- Ask Without an LLM Call
- MCP Tools
- How It Works
- Multi-Agent Memory
- Stack
- Architecture
- Contributing
Benchmarks
Three external datasets, all scripts open source and reproducible. Full methodology in BENCHMARKS.md.
LongMemEval-S — 500 questions, ~53 distractor sessions each
The hardest standard benchmark for long-term memory systems. Each question is backed by ~53 conversation sessions; the model must retrieve the right one(s) from the haystack.
| Metric | Score |
|---|---|
| Recall@5 (any gold session in top-5) | 89.4% |
| Recall-all@5 (all gold sessions in top-5) | 84.8% |
| nDCG@5 (ranking quality) | 87.4% |
By question type (Recall@5):
| Question Type | Recall@5 | n |
|---|---|---|
| single-session-assistant | 98.2% | 56 |
| knowledge-update | 96.2% | 78 |
| multi-session | 95.5% | 133 |
| single-session-preference | 90.0% | 30 |
| temporal-reasoning | 84.2% | 133 |
| single-session-user | 72.9% | 70 |
LoCoMo-10 — 1,534 QA pairs across 10 multi-session conversations
Conversations spanning weeks to months. Every system ingests the same session summaries in the same order.
| System | Recall@5 | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| YourMemory (BM25 + vector + graph + decay) | 59% | 56–61% |
| Zep Cloud | 28% | 26–30% |
| Supermemory | 31%* | 28–33% |
| Mem0 | 18%* | 16–20% |
2× better recall than Zep Cloud across all 10 samples. * Supermemory and Mem0 exhausted free-tier quotas mid-benchmark; scores computed over full 1,534 pairs using 0 for unfinished samples.
HotpotQA — 200 multi-hop questions requiring two facts from different articles
| System | BOTH_FOUND@5 |
|---|---|
| YourMemory (vector + BM25 + entity graph) | 71.5% |
| YourMemory (no entity edges) | 59.5% |
Entity graph edges add +12 pp — they traverse from Fact 1 to Fact 2 even when Fact 2 has low embedding similarity to the query.
Writeup: I built memory decay for AI agents using the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve
Quick Start
Supports Python 3.11–3.14. No Docker, no database setup, no external services.
1 — Install
pip install yourmemory
yourmemory-setup
yourmemory-setup auto-detects your AI client (Claude Code, Claude Desktop, Cursor, Cline, Windsurf, OpenCode), writes the MCP config, and initialises your database. That's it for most users.
2 — Wire into your AI client manually (if needed)
Claude Code
Add to ~/.claude/settings.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"yourmemory": {
"command": "yourmemory"
}
}
}
Reload (Cmd+Shift+P → Developer: Reload Window).
Claude Desktop
Add to ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json (macOS) or %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json (Windows):
{
"mcpServers": {
"yourmemory": {
"command": "yourmemory"
}
}
}
Restart Claude Desktop.
Cline (VS Code)
VS Code doesn't inherit your shell PATH. Run yourmemory-path first to get the full executable path.
In Cline → MCP Servers → Edit MCP Settings:
{
"mcpServers": {
"yourmemory": {
"command": "/full/path/to/yourmemory",
"args": [],
"env": { "YOURMEMORY_USER": "your_name" }
}
}
}
Restart Cline after saving.
Cursor
Add to ~/.cursor/mcp.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"yourmemory": {
"command": "/full/path/to/yourmemory",
"args": [],
"env": { "YOURMEMORY_USER": "your_name" }
}
}
}
Windsurf / OpenCode / any MCP client
YourMemory is a standard stdio MCP server. Use the full path from yourmemory-path if the client doesn't inherit shell PATH.
{
"mcpServers": {
"yourmemory": {
"command": "/full/path/to/yourmemory",
"env": { "YOURMEMORY_USER": "your_name" }
}
}
}
First start is automatic. On the first run, YourMemory initialises your database at
~/.yourmemory/memories.duckdb, downloads the spaCy language model in the background, and injects memory workflow rules into your AI client config. Nothing to configure manually.
Memory Dashboard
Two built-in browser UIs — no extra setup, start automatically with the MCP server.
Memory Browser — http://localhost:3033/ui
A full read/write view of everything stored in memory.
| What you see | Details |
|---|---|
| Stats bar | Total · Strong ≥50% · Fading 5–50% · Near prune <10% |
| Agent tabs | All / User / per-agent views |
| Memory cards | Content · strength bar · category · recall count · last accessed |
| Filters | Category (fact / strategy / assumption / failure) · Sort by strength, recency, recall |
Pass ?user=<id> to pre-load a specific user: http://localhost:3033/ui?user=sachit
Graph Visualiser — http://localhost:3033/graph
An interactive force-directed map of how memories connect.
http://localhost:3033/graph?memoryId=42&userId=sachit&depth=2
- Root memory as a larger cyan node; neighbours color-coded by category
- Edge thickness = connection strength
- Click any node for full content; drag, zoom, reposition freely
Ask Without Calling the API
The only memory system that can answer questions without making any LLM API call.
yourmemory ask "what database does this project use"
# → YourMemory uses DuckDB locally and Postgres in production.
yourmemory ask "what port does the dashboard run on"
# → 3033
yourmemory ask "how do I fix a kubernetes deployment"
# → Not enough memory context to answer without Claude.
When memory is strong enough, it answers instantly — zero tokens, zero cloud cost, zero latency. When it isn't, it declines cleanly rather than hallucinating.
| Query | Mem0 / Zep / LangMem | YourMemory |
|---|---|---|
| "What port does the server run on?" | Full LLM API call | Instant, $0 |
| "What database does this project use?" | Full LLM API call | Instant, $0 |
| "How do I fix a k8s deployment?" | Full LLM API call | Declines → Claude |
| Privacy | Query sent to cloud | Never leaves your machine |
MCP Tools
Three tools, called by your AI automatically.
| Tool | When your AI calls it | What it does |
|---|---|---|
recall_memory(query, current_path?) | Start of every task | Surfaces memories ranked by similarity × decay strength; spatial boost for path-matched memories |
store_memory(content, importance, category?, context_paths?) | After learning something new | Embeds, deduplicates, stores with decay; tags optional file/dir paths |
update_memory(id, new_content, importance) | When a stored fact is outdated | Re-embeds and replaces; logs old content to audit trail |
# Store with spatial context
store_memory(
"Sachit prefers tabs over spaces in Python",
importance=0.9,
category="fact",
context_paths=["/projects/backend"]
)
# Next session — spatial boost fires when working in that directory
recall_memory("Python formatting", current_path="/projects/backend")
# → {"content": "Sachit prefers tabs over spaces in Python", "strength": 0.87}
Memory categories control decay rate
| Category | Half-life | Best for |
|---|---|---|
strategy | ~38 days | Patterns that worked, architectural decisions |
fact | ~24 days | Preferences, identity, stable knowledge |
assumption | ~19 days | Inferred context, uncertain beliefs |
failure | ~11 days | Errors, wrong approaches, environment-specific issues |
How It Works
Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve
Memory strength decays exponentially. Importance and recall frequency slow that decay:
effective_λ = base_λ × (1 − importance × 0.8)
strength = clamp(importance × e^(−effective_λ × active_days) × (1 + recall_count × 0.2), 0, 1)
hybrid_score = 0.4 × bm25_norm + 0.6 × cosine_similarity
active_days counts only days the user was active — vacations don't cause memory loss. Memories below strength 0.05 are pruned automatically every 24 hours.
Session wrap-up: recalled memory IDs are tracked per session. When a session goes idle (30 min default), those memories get a recall_count boost. Set YOURMEMORY_SESSION_IDLE to change the window.
Recall throttling: identical (user, query) pairs are cached within a configurable window. Set YOURMEMORY_RECALL_COOLDOWN (seconds, default 0 = off).
Hybrid Retrieval: Vector + BM25 + Entity Graph
Retrieval runs in two rounds:
Round 1 — Hybrid search: cosine similarity + BM25 keyword scoring, returns top-k candidates above threshold.
Round 2 — Graph expansion: BFS traversal from Round 1 seeds surfaces memories that share context but not vocabulary — connected via semantic or entity edges.
recall("Python backend")
Round 1 → [1] Python/MongoDB (sim=0.61)
[2] DuckDB/spaCy (sim=0.19)
Round 2 → [5] Docker/Kubernetes (sim=0.29 — below cut-off, surfaced via shared entity "backend")
Chain-aware pruning: a decayed memory is kept alive if any graph neighbour is above the prune threshold. Related memories age together.
Subject-Aware Deduplication
Before storing, YourMemory checks whether the new memory is about the same entity as the nearest existing one:
"Sachit uses DuckDB" vs "YourMemory uses DuckDB"
subject: Sachit subject: YourMemory
→ different entities → stored separately ✓
"YourMemory uses DuckDB" vs "YourMemory stores data in DuckDB"
subject: YourMemory subject: YourMemory
→ same entity → merged ✓
Subject comparison embeds the first two tokens of each sentence — no hardcoded word lists, generalises to any language.
Multi-Agent Memory
Multiple agents can share one YourMemory instance — each with isolated private memories and controlled access to shared context.
from src.services.api_keys import register_agent
result = register_agent(
agent_id="coding-agent",
user_id="sachit",
can_read=["shared", "private"],
can_write=["shared", "private"],
)
# → result["api_key"] — ym_xxxx (shown once only)
# Agent stores a private failure memory
store_memory(
"Staging uses self-signed cert — skip SSL verify",
importance=0.7, category="failure",
api_key="ym_xxxx", visibility="private"
)
# Recalls shared + its own private memories; other agents see shared only
recall_memory("staging SSL", api_key="ym_xxxx")
Stack
| Component | Role |
|---|---|
| DuckDB | Default vector DB — zero setup, native cosine similarity |
| NetworkX | Default graph backend — persists at ~/.yourmemory/graph.pkl |
| sentence-transformers | Local embeddings (multi-qa-mpnet-base-dot-v1, 768 dims) |
| spaCy | Local NLP for deduplication and entity extraction |
| APScheduler | Automatic 24h decay and pruning job |
| PostgreSQL + pgvector | Optional — for teams or large datasets |
| Neo4j | Optional graph backend — pip install 'yourmemory[neo4j]' |
PostgreSQL setup (optional)
pip install yourmemory[postgres]
Create a .env file:
DATABASE_URL=postgresql://YOUR_USER@localhost:5432/yourmemory
macOS
brew install postgresql@16 pgvector && brew services start postgresql@16
createdb yourmemory
Ubuntu / Debian
sudo apt install postgresql postgresql-contrib postgresql-16-pgvector
createdb yourmemory
Architecture
Claude / Cline / Cursor / Any MCP client
│
├── recall_memory(query, current_path?, api_key?)
│ └── throttle check → embed → hybrid search (Round 1)
│ → graph BFS expansion (Round 2)
│ → score = sim × strength
│ → spatial boost (+0.08) if current_path matches context_paths
│ → temporal boost (+0.25) if query has time window expression
│ → session tracking → recall_count bump on session end
│
├── store_memory(content, importance, category?, context_paths?, api_key?)
│ └── question? → reject
│ subject-aware dedup → same entity? merge/reinforce : new
│ embed() → INSERT → index_memory() → graph node + edges
│ record_activity(user_id) → active days log
│
└── update_memory(id, new_content, importance)
└── log old content → memory_history (audit trail)
embed(new_content) → UPDATE → refresh graph node
Vector DB (Round 1) Graph DB (Round 2)
DuckDB (default) NetworkX (default)
memories.duckdb graph.pkl
├── embedding FLOAT[768] ├── nodes: memory_id, strength
├── importance FLOAT └── edges: sim × verb_weight ≥ 0.4
├── recall_count INTEGER
├── context_paths JSON Neo4j (opt-in)
├── created_at TIMESTAMP └── bolt://localhost:7687
├── visibility VARCHAR
├── agent_id VARCHAR
user_activity (active days log)
memory_history (supersession audit)
Contributing
PRs are welcome. See CONTRIBUTORS.md for contributors who have already improved YourMemory.
Dataset References
- LoCoMo — Maharana et al. (2024). LoCoMo: Long Context Multimodal Benchmark for Dialogue. Snap Research.
- LongMemEval — Wu et al. (2024). LongMemEval: Benchmarking Chat Assistants on Long-Term Interactive Memory.
- HotpotQA — Yang et al. (2018). HotpotQA: A Dataset for Diverse, Explainable Multi-hop Question Answering.
License
Copyright 2026 Sachit Misra — Licensed under CC-BY-NC-4.0.
Free for: personal use, education, academic research, open-source projects. Not permitted: commercial use without a separate written agreement.
Commercial licensing: [email protected]
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