# Quickstart Get brainclaw running in your project in under 5 minutes. > **Joining a project that already has `.brainclaw/`?** Use [quickstart-existing-project.md](quickstart-existing-project.md) instead — this page is for setting up a new project from scratch. If you're about to cut a release that changes the CLI, MCP, or context surface, run the checklist in [release-maintenance.md](release-maintenance.md) before publishing a local pack or npm build. ## Step 1: Install ```bash npm install -g brainclaw ``` Requires Node.js 22.12+ (`engines.node = ">=22.12.0"`). CI exercises Node 22 (Active LTS) and Node 24 (current LTS) — Node 22 or 24 is the recommended runtime. Node 20 reached EOL in April 2026 and is no longer supported. Verify with `brainclaw --version`. ## Step 2: Bootstrap this machine ```bash brainclaw setup-machine --yes ``` This configures the agents Brainclaw can see on the current machine and writes the machine-level MCP/user files it manages. It does **not** initialize the current repository yet. ## Step 3: Initialize or refresh your project ```bash cd your-project brainclaw init ``` **What happens:** - Creates `.brainclaw/` when the project is new, or refreshes it safely when it already exists - Detects your coding agent (Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Copilot, Cline, Mistral Vibe, etc.) - Refreshes the detected agent's project and machine integration files when applicable - Writes instruction files (`CLAUDE.md`, `AGENTS.md`, `.cursor/rules/brainclaw.md`, etc.) - Installs session hooks (if supported by your agent) - Adds `.brainclaw/` to `.gitignore` If you want the explicit path for a second or late-arriving agent on an already initialized project, use: ```bash brainclaw enable-agent ``` If you have multiple repos, use `brainclaw setup --yes` instead — it bootstraps the machine, scans your project directories, and initializes everything at once. ## Step 4: Restart your agent Your coding agent needs to reload to pick up the new MCP configuration. | Agent | How to reload | |-------|---------------| | **Claude Code** | Restart the CLI session or VS Code window | | **Cursor** | Cmd/Ctrl+Shift+P → "Reload Window" | | **Codex** | Start a new `codex` session | | **Cline** | Reload VS Code window | | **Windsurf** | Reload the editor | | **Copilot** | Reload VS Code window (uses instruction file, not MCP) | ## Step 5: Verify it works After reloading, tell your agent: ```text Call bclaw_work with intent "resume" to check that brainclaw is connected. ``` The agent should respond with session info, project context, and available tools. If it does, brainclaw is connected. From the CLI, you can also verify: ```bash brainclaw status # active sessions, claims, plans brainclaw agent-board # what each agent sees brainclaw context # current project memory ``` ## Step 6: Start using brainclaw ### For agents with MCP (most agents) This is the primary path. Your agent calls brainclaw tools directly during work: | Tool | What it does | |------|-------------| | `bclaw_work(intent)` | Start a session, load context, claim scope — all in one call | | `bclaw_coordinate(intent, agents)` | Assign work, consult, request review, open an ideation loop, reroute, or summarize | | `bclaw_context(kind, path?)` | Read memory / execution / board / delta — narrow to a path when given | | `bclaw_claim(scope)` | Claim a file/directory before editing (prevents conflicts) | | `bclaw_write_note(text)` | Record an observation, decision, or trap during work | | `bclaw_session_end(narrative)` | Close session, release claims, hand off cleanly | The facades `bclaw_work` and `bclaw_coordinate` are the recommended entry points — they handle session setup, context loading, and claim management automatically. For entity reads and writes (plans, decisions, traps, handoffs, candidates, etc.), use the canonical grammar: `bclaw_find` / `bclaw_get` / `bclaw_create` / `bclaw_update` / `bclaw_remove` / `bclaw_transition`. ### For autonomous agents (no MCP) Autonomous agents (OpenClaw, NanoClaw, NemoClaw, PicoClaw, ZeroClaw) operate from a SKILL.md file generated by brainclaw. For Tier B/C agents that have MCP but no hooks (Cursor, Cline, Windsurf, Copilot, Continue, Kilocode, Mistral Vibe, etc.), an opt-in `.live.md` companion (regenerated on session-end and handoff) carries plans, claims, traps, candidates, and handoffs as a parity backstop. Regenerate when project memory changes: ```bash brainclaw export --detect --write ``` ### Human operators (CLI) The CLI is for inspection, scripting, and fallback: ```bash brainclaw plan create "Implement auth module" --priority high brainclaw plan list brainclaw claim list brainclaw context --for src/auth/routes.ts brainclaw export --detect --write # regenerate the detected agent instruction file brainclaw export --all # regenerate all known instruction files ``` ## Onboarding an existing project If the repo already has code, brainclaw can extract context from it: ```bash brainclaw bootstrap --json # preview: CI patterns, ADRs, Docker, branches, tags brainclaw bootstrap --apply # import detected signals into memory ``` Or let your agent drive it: ```text Call bclaw_bootstrap to detect project signals, then review what was found. ``` ## Common scenarios The same primitives serve multiple workflows. Pick the one that matches what you're doing — full walkthroughs in [`concepts/multi-agent-workflows.md`](concepts/multi-agent-workflows.md). ### Active orchestration — parallel lanes across agent instances ```text brainclaw sequence create "feature-cycle" --items '[…]' --status active bclaw_dispatch(intent="execute", agents=[…]) ``` The dispatcher creates one worktree + claim per lane and routes inbox messages by `claim_id`. Lanes with `hard_after` unblock as predecessors finish. ### Agent switching — when an agent runs out of credits mid-task ```text # On the outgoing agent: bclaw_session_end(narrative="Did X. Need to finish Y.") # On the next agent (same or different): bclaw_work(intent="resume") ``` The new agent picks up the open plans, the latest handoff narrative, and the unfinished claims it can adopt. No re-explanation needed. ### Project recovery — returning after weeks away ```text bclaw_work(intent="resume") ``` Returns active plans, decisions taken since you left, active constraints, known traps, and where the last session stopped. Use `bclaw_context(kind="memory", profile="briefing")` for a narrower scope-focused view. ### Team async — humans and agents sharing the same project Capture decisions, constraints, and traps as you discover them — they propagate to every teammate's agent on the next context read: ```text bclaw_create(entity="decision", data={ text: "…", outcome: "approved" }) bclaw_create(entity="constraint", data={ text: "…", category: "security" }) bclaw_create(entity="trap", data={ text: "…", severity: "high" }) ``` Hand off work for review with `bclaw_coordinate(intent="review", scope="…")`. Reviewers pick it up via `bclaw_read_inbox()`. ### One rule across all four Scope-level claim isolation is strict — only one active claim per scope at a time, regardless of agent type. That's how parallel work stays safe and async handoffs stay clean. ## Next reads - [integrations/overview.md](integrations/overview.md) — how brainclaw adapts to each agent - [integrations/mcp.md](integrations/mcp.md) — the MCP runtime path in detail - [concepts/memory.md](concepts/memory.md) — what project memory includes - [concepts/plans-and-claims.md](concepts/plans-and-claims.md) — coordination layer - [cli.md](cli.md) — full CLI reference