claude-code-recap

agent
Guvenlik Denetimi
Basarisiz
Health Uyari
  • License — License: MIT
  • Description — Repository has a description
  • Active repo — Last push 0 days ago
  • Low visibility — Only 5 GitHub stars
Code Basarisiz
  • fs module — File system access in .github/workflows/ci.yml
  • os.homedir — User home directory access in bin/cli.mjs
  • process.env — Environment variable access in bin/cli.mjs
  • rm -rf — Recursive force deletion command in install.sh
  • process.env — Environment variable access in scripts/check-version.mjs
  • rm -rf — Recursive force deletion command in tests/smoke.sh
Permissions Gecti
  • Permissions — No dangerous permissions requested

Bu listing icin henuz AI raporu yok.

SUMMARY

Browse every recent Claude Code session across all your projects and jump back into any of them. Shows project path, summary, git branch, model, turn count, and a ready-to-paste resume command. --open re-opens a whole working set in terminal tabs. Local files only: no network, no telemetry.

README.md

recap

See every recent Claude Code session across every project on your machine, and get the exact command to jump back into any of them.

Claude Code's built-in /resume only lists sessions for the directory you are standing in. After a reboot, a crash, or a week of jumping between five repos, there is no way to answer "what was I working on, and where did I leave off". recap answers that in one command, and can re-open a whole working set in terminal tabs.

npm version
npm downloads
ci
license

Claude Code
python
dependencies
platform
PRs welcome

recap listing recent Claude Code sessions across several projects, then re-opening them in terminal tabs

The GIF above is a downsampled loop. The full-quality recording is assets/demo.mp4.


What it does

recap reads the session logs Claude Code already writes to disk and prints a day-grouped timeline of your recent sessions. Per session: last activity, the absolute project path, a short summary, an approximate turn count, the git branch, the model, the session id, and a ready-to-paste cd <path> && claude -r <id> resume command.

  • Every project on the machine, not just the current directory.
  • --pick jumps straight into one session.
  • --open re-opens all of them, each in its own terminal tab, already resumed.
  • Pure Python 3 standard library. No dependencies, no build step.
  • Offline and read-only by default. The only network path is the opt-in --smart flag.

Install

Three ways in, all live. The plugin marketplace is the native path; npx and curl | sh install the same skill into ~/.claude/skills/recap.

1. Plugin marketplace (recommended)

The repo is its own Claude Code marketplace. Two lines inside any Claude Code session:

/plugin marketplace add noluyorAbi/claude-code-recap
/plugin install claude-code-recap@noluyorabi-plugins

Then /reload-plugins, and invoke it as:

/claude-code-recap:recap

Plugin skills are namespaced plugin-name:skill-name, so this cannot collide with anything else you have installed. Add the marketplace by repo (owner/repo), not by a direct URL to marketplace.json: a URL-added marketplace downloads only that one file, and the entry's relative source (./) would not resolve.

2. npx

Installs the skill into your Claude Code skills directory (~/.claude/skills/recap, or $CLAUDE_CONFIG_DIR/skills/recap):

npx claude-code-recap

Then invoke it as /recap. The package has no postinstall hook; it writes only when you run the command. It records a sha256 manifest of the files it wrote and refuses to clobber a directory it did not install or files you have edited, unless you pass --force.

npx claude-code-recap --force      # overwrite local edits
npx claude-code-recap --uninstall  # remove what it installed

3. curl

Same install, no Node:

curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/noluyorAbi/claude-code-recap/main/install.sh | sh

Same guarantees as the npx path: sha256 manifest, no silent overwrite, --force and --uninstall supported.

curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/noluyorAbi/claude-code-recap/main/install.sh | sh -s -- --uninstall

4. skills CLI

If you use the skills directory CLI, recap resolves straight from this repo and installs across every agent it manages:

npx skills add noluyorAbi/claude-code-recap

Claude Code picks up ~/.claude/skills without a restart. Restart only if that directory did not exist when the session started.

Pick one path. Installing the skill and the plugin gives you /recap and /claude-code-recap:recap side by side; they will not conflict, but you carry two copies of the description in the skill listing.

What you see

◆ recap                                         6 sessions · 5 projects   14d ▂▁▄▃▅▂▆█▃▅▇▄▆█

── Today ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

  1 ● 14:22 12m ago  Fix the flaky auth test in the checkout flow                a3f91c02
             ~/repos/shop-web  ·  ⎇ fix/flaky-auth  ·  opus-4.8  ·  46 turns
             cd ~/repos/shop-web && claude -r a3f91c02-7b4e-4d19-9c2a-5f83e6d1b704

  2 ● 11:05  3h ago  Rewrite the ingest worker to stream instead of buffer       6d20be14
             ~/repos/pipeline  ·  ⎇ main  ·  sonnet-4.5  ·  18 turns
             cd ~/repos/pipeline && claude -r 6d20be14-0a8f-49c7-8b31-1e4d90c7aa52

  3 ● 09:41  5h ago  Draft the migration plan for the billing schema             c17ff5a9
             ~/repos/billing-svc  ·  ⎇ chore/migrate  ·  opus-4.8  ·  7 turns
             cd ~/repos/billing-svc && claude -r c17ff5a9-2e6b-4f10-9d55-b0c3e7182f44

── Yesterday ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

  4 ● 22:58  1d ago  Debug the flexbox overflow in the sidebar                   9b3c0d67
             ~/repos/shop-web  ·  ⎇ fix/flaky-auth  ·  sonnet-4.5  ·  31 turns
             cd ~/repos/shop-web && claude -r 9b3c0d67-58a1-4c02-91ff-6ea27d3b8c19

  5 ● 17:12  1d ago  Set up the release workflow and the version check           40ea8b25
             ~/.claude  ·  opus-4.8  ·  12 turns
             cd ~/.claude && claude -r 40ea8b25-c934-4d7e-a06b-72f1958e3dd0

── Fri 10.07 ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

  6 ● 16:30  3d ago  Port the CLI to the new argparse layout                     e58a1c93
             ~/work/internal-tools/cli  ·  ⎇ main  ·  haiku-4.5  ·  4 turns
             cd ~/work/internal-tools/cli && claude -r e58a1c93-6f22-4bb8-83e0-9c17d4a52b61

 turns ≈ user + assistant messages   ·   --pick jump in   ·   --open all in tabs   ·   --smart 1-line summaries

In a real terminal this is colored: a day-grouped timeline (Today green, Yesterday amber), a 14-day activity sparkline in the header, and a stable per-project colored dot so the same repo keeps the same color across runs. Color is disabled automatically when the output is piped, and by NO_COLOR. The resume line is indented with spaces only, so a triple-click copies a command that actually runs.

Flags

Flag Default What it does
--since SPEC off only sessions active within the window: 30m, 24h, 7d, 2w
--project SUBSTR off only sessions whose absolute project path contains SUBSTR
--limit N 15 maximum number of sessions listed
--json off machine-readable output with full session ids and resume commands
--smart off replace summaries with real one-sentence descriptions, via ONE claude -p call (network)
--pick off pick a row interactively, then cd and claude -r straight into it
--open off open every listed session in its own new terminal tab and resume it there (macOS)
--claude-flags "FLAGS" "" extra flags for each resumed claude, passed through verbatim
--terminal auto|iTerm2|Terminal auto which app --open drives; auto picks iTerm2 when it is installed
--yes, -y off skip the --open confirmation prompt; required when stdin is not a TTY
--dry-run off with --open: print the tabs and commands, open nothing
--color auto force ANSI colors even when the output is piped
--plain off disable all ANSI colors

Environment: CLAUDE_CONFIG_DIR overrides ~/.claude. NO_COLOR, FORCE_COLOR and CLICOLOR_FORCE are honored. CLAUDE_CODE_SESSION_ID is read by --open so it never re-opens the session it is running in.

Run it directly, without the skill layer:

python3 ~/.claude/skills/recap/recap.py --since 7d --project shop-web
python3 ~/.claude/skills/recap/recap.py --json --limit 50 | jq '.[].projectPath'

An alias, if you want it outside Claude Code:

alias recap='python3 ~/.claude/skills/recap/recap.py'

Restoring a whole working set with --open

--open takes the sessions currently listed and opens one new terminal tab per session, typing the resume command into each. It is the fastest way back to a five-repo working set after a reboot.

# preview first: prints the tabs, opens nothing
python3 ~/.claude/skills/recap/recap.py --since 24h --limit 8 --open --dry-run

# then actually do it
python3 ~/.claude/skills/recap/recap.py --since 24h --limit 8 --open

Rules it follows:

  • Scope comes from the normal filters. --limit, --since and --project decide exactly which tabs appear. Preview with --dry-run before you commit.
  • The session recap itself runs in is skipped automatically, matched on CLAUDE_CODE_SESSION_ID. It never re-opens itself.
  • Sessions whose project directory no longer exists are skipped and reported, never opened.
  • Without --yes it asks for confirmation. When stdin is not a TTY (which is the case for Claude Code's Bash tool) it refuses to open anything unless --yes is passed explicitly.
  • Tab opening drives iTerm2 or Terminal through osascript, so it is macOS-only. On other platforms --open exits with a clear message, and --open --dry-run still prints the commands so you can paste them anywhere.

The security note on --claude-flags

--claude-flags is passed through verbatim to every resumed claude. That includes --dangerously-skip-permissions:

python3 ~/.claude/skills/recap/recap.py --since 24h --limit 8 \
  --open --yes --claude-flags "--chrome --dangerously-skip-permissions"

Read that command for what it is. It launches N Claude Code sessions, in N different repos, each with every permission check disabled, each resuming a conversation you may not remember the contents of. A resumed session carries its old context with it, so whatever it was in the middle of, it can now finish without asking you. That is a real blast radius, multiplied by the number of tabs.

recap does not stop you. It prints an explicit warning before opening the tabs:

Opening 3 tab(s):
  Fix the flaky auth test in the checkout flow    cd /Users/you/repos/shop-web && claude --dangerously-skip-permissions -r a3f91c02-7b4e-4d19-9c2a-5f83e6d1b704
  Rewrite the ingest worker to stream instead o…  cd /Users/you/repos/pipeline && claude --dangerously-skip-permissions -r 6d20be14-0a8f-49c7-8b31-1e4d90c7aa52
  Draft the migration plan for the billing sche…  cd /Users/you/repos/billing-svc && claude --dangerously-skip-permissions -r c17ff5a9-2e6b-4f10-9d55-b0c3e7182f44
  skipped (path gone): /Users/you/repos/old-spike

  WARNING: --dangerously-skip-permissions disables all permission checks in every tab opened.

Use it only on repos you fully control, and only when you have looked at the --dry-run list first. If you are not sure what a session was doing, resume it without the flag and let it ask.

How it works

Claude Code already logs your sessions to disk. recap is a reader for those logs, nothing more.

Data sources. Exactly two, both local:

Path What is read from it
~/.claude/history.jsonl fast global index: prompt text, timestamp, project path, session id
~/.claude/projects/<encoded>/<session>.jsonl the transcript, parsed only for the sessions about to be displayed: title, git branch, model, turn count, cwd

CLAUDE_CONFIG_DIR is honored, so a non-standard config directory works.

Ordering. Candidate transcripts are ranked by file mtime, then re-sorted by the true last timestamp inside the file. Claude Code touches transcripts on compaction and title writes, so mtime alone is only an approximation.

Summaries. Preference order: Claude Code's own ai-title line, then the first real user prompt of the session, then (no prompt). Slash commands, system reminders and tool results are not treated as prompts. --smart replaces this with a real one-sentence summary.

Project paths always come from the cwd and project fields in the logs, never decoded back from the directory-name encoding, which is lossy.

Turn count is user prompts plus distinct assistant messages, grouped by message id so streaming chunks are not counted twice. It is labeled approximate because it is.

Robustness. Broken or partial JSONL lines are skipped, never fatal. recap sees only sessions still on disk; Claude Code prunes old ones on its own schedule.

Privacy

This tool reads your conversation transcripts, so here is the precise claim.

  • Reads. Only $CLAUDE_CONFIG_DIR/history.jsonl and $CLAUDE_CONFIG_DIR/projects/*/*.jsonl (default ~/.claude). Nothing else on your filesystem is opened.
  • Writes. Nothing. A recap run creates, modifies and deletes zero files. It never touches your session data. (The installers are the exception, and they only write into ~/.claude/skills/recap, tracked by a sha256 manifest.)
  • Network. None by default. The default run is fully offline.
  • The one exception is --smart, which is opt-in and off by default. It shells out to your local claude CLI once and sends, for the listed sessions only: the 8-character session id prefix, the session title (first 150 characters), and the first user prompt (first 300 characters). No file contents, no transcript bodies, no other session. If the claude CLI is not on your PATH, --smart is skipped with a warning and the offline summaries are used.
  • Telemetry. None. There is no analytics, no phone-home, no counter, no crash reporter.
  • Side effects. --open and --pick are the only paths that do anything outside stdout. --open drives iTerm2 or Terminal via osascript; --pick execs claude -r in the chosen directory. Neither writes to session data.

The whole tool is one auditable file: skills/recap/recap.py, Python standard library only.

Requirements

  • Claude Code, with a config directory on disk. recap exits with a clear message if ~/.claude/projects does not exist.
  • Python 3, standard library only. No pip packages. CI exercises Python 3.11.
  • Node 18.17+, only if you install via npx. Not needed at runtime.
  • macOS, only for --open tab opening (iTerm2 or Terminal, driven by osascript). Everything else, including --open --dry-run, works on Linux and Windows.

Uninstall

# npx install
npx claude-code-recap --uninstall

# curl install
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/noluyorAbi/claude-code-recap/main/install.sh | sh -s -- --uninstall

Both refuse to delete files you have edited since installing, unless you pass --force.

If you installed it as a plugin instead, open the plugin manager with /plugin inside Claude Code and disable or remove claude-code-recap@noluyorabi-plugins there.

Contributing

Issues and pull requests are welcome. The local loop:

git clone https://github.com/noluyorAbi/claude-code-recap
cd claude-code-recap

sh tests/smoke.sh              # end-to-end test against a synthetic config dir, no network
node scripts/check-version.mjs # package.json, plugin.json and SKILL.md must agree
claude plugin validate . --strict
claude --plugin-dir .          # load this checkout as a plugin for one session

tests/smoke.sh builds a fake CLAUDE_CONFIG_DIR and asserts the --json output, so it never reads your real sessions. CI runs it on every push, together with a Python syntax check, shellcheck, node --check, and a full install-update-uninstall cycle for both installers in a scratch directory.

Version numbers live in three places (package.json, .claude-plugin/plugin.json, skills/recap/SKILL.md under metadata.version) and CI fails if they disagree. Bump them together.

Two house rules for anything you submit: no emoji, and no em dashes or en dashes as punctuation.

License

MIT. See LICENSE.

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