ByteRover
คำเตือนด้านความปลอดภัย

Manages project knowledge using ByteRover context tree. Provides two operations: query (retrieve knowledge) and curate (store knowledge). Invoke when user requests information lookup, pattern discovery, or knowledge persistence. Developed by ByteRover Inc. (https://byterover.dev/)

ติดตั้ง
$clawhub install byterover

ByteRover Context Tree

A project-level knowledge repository that persists across sessions. Use it to avoid re-discovering patterns, conventions, and decisions.

Why Use ByteRover

  • Query before working: Get existing knowledge about patterns, conventions, and past decisions before implementing
  • Curate after learning: Capture insights, decisions, and bug fixes so future sessions start informed

Quick Reference

Command When Example
brv query "question" Before starting work brv query "How is auth implemented?"
brv curate "context" -f file After completing work brv curate "JWT 24h expiry" -f auth.ts
brv status To check prerequisites brv status

When to Use

Query when you need to understand something: - "How does X work in this codebase?" - "What patterns exist for Y?" - "Are there conventions for Z?"

Curate when you learned or created something valuable: - Implemented a feature using specific patterns - Fixed a bug and found root cause - Made an architecture decision

Curate Quality

Context must be specific and actionable:

# Good - specific, explains where and why
brv curate "Auth uses JWT 24h expiry, tokens in httpOnly cookies" -f src/auth.ts

# Bad - too vague
brv curate "Fixed auth"

Note: Context argument must come before -f flags. Max 5 files.

Best Practices

  1. Break down large contexts - Run multiple brv curate commands for complex topics rather than one massive context. Smaller chunks are easier to retrieve and update.

  2. Let ByteRover read files - Don't read files yourself before curating. Use -f flags to let ByteRover read them directly: ```bash

    Good - ByteRover reads the files

    brv curate "Auth implementation details" -f src/auth.ts -f src/middleware/jwt.ts

# Wasteful - reading files twice # [agent reads files] then brv curate "..." -f same-files ```

  1. Be specific in queries - Queries block your workflow. Use precise questions to get faster, more relevant results: ```bash # Good - specific brv query "What validation library is used for API request schemas?"

# Bad - vague, slow brv query "How is validation done?" ```

  1. Signal outdated context - When curating updates that replace existing knowledge, explicitly tell ByteRover to clean up: bash brv curate "OUTDATED: Previous auth used sessions. NEW: Now uses JWT with refresh tokens. Clean up old session-based auth context." -f src/auth.ts

  2. Specify structure expectations - Guide ByteRover on how to organize the knowledge: ```bash

    Specify topics/domains

    brv curate "Create separate topics for: 1) JWT validation, 2) refresh token flow, 3) logout handling" -f src/auth.ts

# Specify detail level brv curate "Document the error handling patterns in detail (at least 30 lines covering all error types)" -f src/errors/ ```

Prerequisites

Run brv status first. If errors occur, the agent cannot fix them—instruct the user to take action in their brv terminal. See TROUBLESHOOTING.md for details.


See also: WORKFLOWS.md for detailed patterns and examples, TROUBLESHOOTING.md for error handling