# Joining a project that already uses brainclaw You cloned a repo and noticed `.brainclaw/` already exists — someone (or something) has set it up before you. This page walks through the read-then-register path for arriving on a configured project, which is **different** from creating a new one. If the repo is brand new and `.brainclaw/` is absent, see [quickstart.md](quickstart.md) instead. ## When to use this page | Situation | Use | |---|---| | Repo has no `.brainclaw/` | [quickstart.md](quickstart.md) (`brainclaw init`) | | Repo has `.brainclaw/`, you've never worked here | **this page** (`brainclaw init` upsert + discovery) | | Repo has memory but it was scraped from docs/git, not curated | [bootstrap](concepts/workspace-bootstrapping.md) (`brainclaw bootstrap --apply`) | The three commands now target different lifecycle stages: - `setup-machine` bootstraps the current machine - `init` creates or refreshes project setup safely - `bootstrap` extracts project context into memory - `enable-agent` explicitly joins another agent to the same project ## Step 0 — verify your install is compatible ```bash brainclaw --version ``` Compare with what the project expects. If `.brainclaw/config.yaml` has a `version_policy` block, it tells you the minimum version the project requires. If your local version is older, `brainclaw doctor --json` will surface a `version_policy` failure. To upgrade: ```bash npm install -g brainclaw@latest ``` (or pull the team's local-pack tarball from `.releases/` if the project doesn't publish to npm.) ## Step 1 — bootstrap this machine if needed ```bash brainclaw setup-machine --yes ``` Run this once on a fresh machine so Brainclaw can configure the agents it detects before you touch any project-level state. ## Step 2 — refresh project setup for the current agent ```bash brainclaw init ``` On a project that already has `.brainclaw/`, `brainclaw init` acts as a safe upsert. It preserves the existing memory and refreshes the managed Brainclaw and detected-agent files for the machine you're using now. If you want the explicit path for a different or additional agent, run: ```bash brainclaw enable-agent ``` `` is one of `claude-code`, `codex`, `copilot`, `cursor`, `cline`, `windsurf`, `continue`, `kilocode`, `mistral-vibe`, `hermes`, `roo`, `opencode`, `antigravity`, etc. (see [docs/integrations/overview.md](integrations/overview.md) for the full list). These commands: - Detect the agent in your environment (env vars, installed CLIs, IDE) - Writes the agent's native instruction file (`CLAUDE.md`, `.cursor/rules/`, `AGENTS.md`, etc.) from the project's current memory - Wires the MCP server config so the agent can call brainclaw at runtime - Adds the generated files to `.gitignore` (they're regenerated locally per developer) If you use multiple agents on the same project, run `enable-agent` once per agent. ## Step 3 — read what already exists Before touching code, load the project's accumulated knowledge so you don't re-discover what others already learned. ### Via the CLI (you, the human) ```bash brainclaw context # full project memory as text (constraints, decisions, traps, plans) brainclaw agent-board # current state of plans, claims, and open handoffs brainclaw stale list # what looks abandoned and might need attention ``` ### Via your agent (recommended day-to-day) Tell the agent to call: ```text bclaw_work(intent="resume") ``` This single MCP call returns: open plans, recent decisions, active constraints, known traps, latest handoff narrative, plus a context-diff hint. Your agent reads that *before* writing any code. For a narrower view focused on the area you're about to touch: ```text bclaw_context(kind="memory", path="src//") ``` ## Step 4 — discover in-flight work Several things may be already underway when you arrive: ```bash # Plans that other agents/humans started brainclaw plan list --status in_progress # Scopes someone else has claimed (don't touch those without coordination) brainclaw claim list # Sequences with parallel lanes still active brainclaw sequence list --status active # Open handoffs waiting for a reviewer brainclaw inbox list ``` Or one-shot via MCP: ```text bclaw_context(kind="board") ``` The board surfaces all four (plans, claims, sequences, handoffs) in one structured response. ## Step 5 — pick what to work on You have a few honest options: 1. **Pick up an open handoff** — `brainclaw inbox list` shows handoffs targeted at you (or unassigned). Read the handoff narrative, then claim its scope and start. 2. **Take a `todo` plan** — `brainclaw plan list --status todo` returns work nobody has started yet. 3. **Start something new** — create a fresh plan with `bclaw_create(entity="plan", data={…})`, then claim its scope. Make sure you're not duplicating an existing plan first. In all three cases, the workflow is then the same: `bclaw_work(intent="execute", scope=…, planId=…)` opens a session, claims the scope (with an isolated git worktree), and loads the relevant context. ## Step 6 — verify your setup is healthy before commiting changes Once you've started working, sanity-check: ```bash brainclaw doctor ``` This runs a series of checks: state validity, MCP runtime health (post-pln#478), agent-integration declarations, claim hygiene, freshness markers. If anything is amber or red, see [docs/concepts/troubleshooting.md](concepts/troubleshooting.md) for the runbook. ## What this page does *not* cover - **Creating a new project** → [quickstart.md](quickstart.md) - **Extracting context from an existing repo without `.brainclaw/`** → [bootstrap](concepts/workspace-bootstrapping.md) - **Setting up brainclaw on your machine for the first time** → [docs/integrations/overview.md](integrations/overview.md) (`brainclaw setup-machine` or the broader `brainclaw setup` flow) - **Recovering from a degraded state** → [docs/concepts/troubleshooting.md](concepts/troubleshooting.md) ## See also - [docs/quickstart.md](quickstart.md) — full first-time setup (greenfield) - [docs/concepts/plans-and-claims.md](concepts/plans-and-claims.md) — claim/plan model - [docs/concepts/multi-agent-workflows.md](concepts/multi-agent-workflows.md) — coordination patterns once you're settled in - [docs/concepts/troubleshooting.md](concepts/troubleshooting.md) — when things go wrong