--- name: cortex-remember-global description: "Store a global memory that is visible across all projects. Use when the user shares architecture rules, coding conventions, infrastructure facts, security policies, team agreements, or any knowledge that applies beyond a single project. Triggers on 'remember this everywhere', 'this applies to all projects', 'global rule', 'shared convention', 'infrastructure note', 'cross-project', or when the content is clearly universal (clean architecture, SOLID, deployment configs, server addresses)." --- # Remember Global — Store Cross-Project Knowledge ## Keywords global, everywhere, all projects, cross-project, shared, universal, convention, standard, rule, infrastructure, policy, team agreement, always, never, architecture rule, coding standard ## Overview Store knowledge that transcends any single project into Cortex's global memory. Global memories bypass domain filtering during recall — they're visible from every project you work on. Use this for architecture rules, coding conventions, infrastructure facts, security policies, and team agreements. **Cortex auto-detects many global patterns** (clean architecture, dependency injection, server addresses, etc.), but use this skill explicitly when you want to guarantee cross-project visibility. ## Workflow ### Step 1: Identify Cross-Project Knowledge Good candidates for global memory: - **Architecture rules**: "Always follow clean architecture — inner layers never import outer layers" - **Coding conventions**: "Use UTC timestamps in all database layers" - **Infrastructure**: "Production database at db.internal:5432, daily backups at 3AM UTC" - **Security policies**: "Rotate API keys every 90 days, store in 1Password vault" - **Team agreements**: "PRs must be under 300 lines, always include tests" - **Reusable patterns**: "Use factory injection for all handler composition roots" **Not global** (project-specific): bug fixes, feature decisions for one project, file-specific notes. ### Step 2: Store as Global ``` cortex:remember({ "content": "", "tags": ["", ""], "is_global": true, "force": true }) ``` **Content guidelines:** - Write as a rule or fact, not a narrative: "Always use UTC" not "Today we decided to use UTC in the auth service" - Include the *why* when it's a rule: "Use dependency injection because it enables testing and follows SOLID" - Keep it universal — no project-specific file paths, PR numbers, or branch names ### Step 3: Verify Global Status The response includes: - `is_global: true` — confirms cross-project visibility - `global_reason: "explicit"` — stored because you explicitly requested it ### Step 4: Anchor for Permanence (Optional) Global memories are already high-value, but if they must never decay: ``` cortex:anchor({ "memory_id": , "reason": "Core architecture rule — permanent" }) ``` ## Auto-Detection Even without `is_global: true`, Cortex automatically detects global content using a weighted signal classifier across 6 categories: | Category | Example signals | |---|---| | **Architecture** | clean architecture, SOLID, dependency injection, composition root | | **Convention** | coding standard, naming convention, best practice, team agreement | | **Infrastructure** | server at, database URL, Docker compose, CI/CD pipeline | | **Security** | API key rotation, credential policy, authentication, encryption | | **Cross-project** | all projects, shared across, universal, applies everywhere | | **Knowledge** | UTC timestamps, WAL mode, connection pools, idempotency | If the weighted score exceeds threshold 3.0, the memory is automatically global — no explicit flag needed. ## Tips - **Be declarative**: "Inner layers never import outer layers" is better than "We should probably avoid importing infrastructure in core" - **One rule per memory**: Don't bundle 5 conventions into one memory — store each separately for better retrieval - **Tag consistently**: Use `architecture`, `convention`, `infrastructure`, `security`, `policy` tags for easy filtering - **Review with visualization**: Use `cortex:open_visualization` and click the "Global" filter to see all cross-project knowledge