chronicle-remote-summarizer
Automate cross-system summarization workflow for Chronicle sessions. Export sessions from remote systems (like FreeBSD) and import/summarize on local machine with Gemini API. Use when you have sessions on a system without Gemini API access and need to summarize them on another machine.
Best use case
chronicle-remote-summarizer is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Automate cross-system summarization workflow for Chronicle sessions. Export sessions from remote systems (like FreeBSD) and import/summarize on local machine with Gemini API. Use when you have sessions on a system without Gemini API access and need to summarize them on another machine.
Teams using chronicle-remote-summarizer should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/chronicle-remote-summarizer/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How chronicle-remote-summarizer Compares
| Feature / Agent | chronicle-remote-summarizer | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Automate cross-system summarization workflow for Chronicle sessions. Export sessions from remote systems (like FreeBSD) and import/summarize on local machine with Gemini API. Use when you have sessions on a system without Gemini API access and need to summarize them on another machine.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Chronicle Remote Summarizer
This skill automates the workflow for summarizing Chronicle sessions across different systems (e.g., FreeBSD dev machine → Mac with Gemini API).
## Auto-Activation
> **This skill auto-activates!** (Milestone #13)
>
> Prompts like "summarize session on remote" or "import session from FreeBSD" automatically trigger this skill!
>
> **Trigger patterns:** remote, freebsd, import session, summarize on remote
> **See:** `docs/HOOKS.md` for full details
## When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when:
- You have Chronicle sessions on a remote system without Gemini API configured
- You want to summarize those sessions on your local machine (which has Gemini API)
- You need to transfer the summary back to the original system
- You're working across multiple development environments (FreeBSD, Linux, macOS)
**Common scenario**: FreeBSD development server (no Gemini API) → macOS laptop (has Gemini API key)
## How It Works
Chronicle provides `import-and-summarize --quiet` which:
1. Creates temporary session with negative ID (e.g., `-3`)
2. Generates AI summary using Gemini
3. **Auto-cleanup**: Deletes temporary session and files
4. Outputs **clean JSON** to stdout (no status messages with `--quiet`)
**No pollution between systems** - the remote session stays on the remote system, only the summary is transferred.
## Recommended Workflow: One-Line Command
**Prerequisites:**
- SSH access from local machine to remote machine
- Chronicle installed on both systems
- Gemini API key configured on local machine (`chronicle config ai.gemini_api_key YOUR_KEY`)
- **Optional**: Remote system configured in Chronicle config (automates hostname/path)
**Step 1: Configure Remote System (One-Time Setup)**
```bash
# Configure FreeBSD remote system
chronicle config remote_systems.freebsd.hostname "chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc"
chronicle config remote_systems.freebsd.chronicle_path "/home/chandlerhardy/.local/bin/chronicle"
# Verify configuration
chronicle config --list | grep freebsd
```
**Step 2: Use the Skill**
When Claude uses this skill and finds remote system configuration, it will automatically construct the command:
```bash
ssh chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc "/home/chandlerhardy/.local/bin/chronicle export-session 7" | chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>&1 | grep -A 999999 '^{$' | ssh chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc "/home/chandlerhardy/.local/bin/chronicle import-summary"
```
**If no config found**, Claude will ask for the hostname and construct the command interactively:
**Command (Manual):**
```bash
ssh <remote-host> "chronicle export-session <id>" | chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>&1 | grep -A 999999 '^{$' | ssh <remote-host> "chronicle import-summary"
```
**Example:**
```bash
ssh freebsd "chronicle export-session 7" | chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>&1 | grep -A 999999 '^{$' | ssh freebsd "chronicle import-summary"
```
**Note:** The `grep -A 999999 '^{$'` filters out Google library warnings that can leak through even with `--quiet` and `2>/dev/null`.
**What this does:**
1. **Remote → Local**: Export session 7 as JSON
2. **Local**: Import, summarize with Gemini, auto-cleanup temporary session
3. **Local → Remote**: Send summary JSON back
4. **Remote**: Update session 7 with the summary
**Why `--quiet` works:**
- Suppresses ALL status messages from summarizer
- Outputs ONLY clean JSON to stdout (essential for piping)
- No need to manually extract JSON from verbose output
- `2>/dev/null` suppresses Google library warnings (harmless)
**Time:** Typically 30-60 seconds for large sessions (depends on transcript size)
## Alternative: Manual 3-Step Workflow
If SSH pipes hang or you need to inspect intermediate files:
### Step 1: Export session from remote
```bash
ssh <remote-host> "chronicle export-session <id>" > /tmp/session_<id>.json
```
**Example:**
```bash
ssh freebsd "chronicle export-session 7" > /tmp/session_7.json
```
### Step 2: Summarize locally (transient)
```bash
cat /tmp/session_<id>.json | chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>/dev/null > /tmp/summary.json
```
**Example:**
```bash
cat /tmp/session_7.json | chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>/dev/null > /tmp/summary.json
```
**What happens:**
- Creates temporary session (negative ID like `-3`)
- Generates summary with Gemini
- **Auto-cleanup**: Deletes temporary session and transcript files
- Outputs summary JSON to `/tmp/summary.json`
### Step 3: Send summary back to remote
```bash
cat /tmp/summary.json | ssh <remote-host> "chronicle import-summary"
```
**Example:**
```bash
cat /tmp/summary.json | ssh freebsd "chronicle import-summary"
```
**Result:**
- ✅ Summary stored in remote database linked to original session
- ✅ Local system stays clean (temporary session auto-deleted)
- ✅ No data pollution between systems
## What Actually Happens (Under the Hood)
**On `import-and-summarize --quiet`:**
1. **Import**: Reads session JSON from stdin
2. **Create Temporary Session**:
- Assigns negative ID (e.g., `-1`, `-2`, `-3`)
- Stores transcript in `~/.ai-session/sessions/session_-3.cleaned`
- Creates database entry with `is_session=True`
3. **Summarize**:
- Runs `summarize_session_chunked()` with Gemini API
- Processes large transcripts in chunks (10,000 lines per chunk)
- Updates session with AI-generated summary
4. **Output JSON**:
```json
{
"version": "1.0",
"original_id": 7,
"summary": "AI-generated summary...",
"summary_generated": true,
"keywords": ["feature", "implementation", "testing"]
}
```
5. **Auto-Cleanup**:
- Deletes transcript file (`session_-3.cleaned`)
- Deletes database entry (temporary session)
- **Only the summary JSON remains** (piped to stdout)
**On `import-summary` (remote side):**
1. **Read JSON**: Reads summary from stdin
2. **Find Session**: Looks up session by `original_id` (e.g., 7)
3. **Update**: Sets `response_summary`, `summary_generated=True`, `keywords`
4. **Done**: Session 7 now has the AI summary
## Session Examples
**Tested with:**
- Session 1: 16.3 minutes, system test
- Session 2: 66.7 minutes, large session
- Session 4: 23KB JSON export
All sessions work perfectly with this workflow.
## Troubleshooting
### SSH Pipes Hang
**Symptom:** Command hangs indefinitely
**Solution:** Use manual 3-step workflow instead:
```bash
# Step 1: Export to file
ssh freebsd "chronicle export-session 7" > /tmp/session.json
# Step 2: Process locally
cat /tmp/session.json | chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet > /tmp/summary.json
# Step 3: Send back
cat /tmp/summary.json | ssh freebsd "chronicle import-summary"
```
### Gemini API Not Configured
**Symptom:** `ImportError: google-generativeai package not installed`
**Solution:** Configure Gemini API key on local machine:
```bash
chronicle config ai.gemini_api_key YOUR_API_KEY_HERE
```
Get free API key: https://ai.google.dev/
### Session Not Found
**Symptom:** `Session 7 not found`
**Solution:** Check session exists on remote:
```bash
ssh freebsd "chronicle sessions --limit 20"
```
### Summary Already Exists
**Behavior:** `import-and-summarize` will **overwrite** existing summaries
**Note:** This is by design - you can re-summarize sessions if needed.
## Tips
- **Use `--quiet` flag**: Essential for piping - suppresses status messages
- **Suppress stderr**: Add `2>/dev/null` to hide Google library warnings
- **Check SSH paths**: Remote Chronicle might be in `~/.local/bin/chronicle`
- **Inspect files**: Use 3-step workflow to save intermediate JSON for debugging
- **Large sessions**: 10K+ line transcripts are chunked automatically (no action needed)
- **Network failures**: Use 3-step workflow for unreliable connections
- **Batch processing**: You can script this to process multiple sessions
## How Claude Should Use This Skill
**When invoked, Claude should:**
1. **Check for remote system config:**
```bash
chronicle config --list | grep remote_systems
```
2. **If config exists** (e.g., `remote_systems.freebsd.hostname`):
- Read hostname: `chronicle config remote_systems.freebsd.hostname`
- Read chronicle path: `chronicle config remote_systems.freebsd.chronicle_path`
- Construct command automatically
- Announce: "Found FreeBSD config, using: `<hostname>`"
3. **If no config exists:**
- Ask user: "What's the hostname of your remote system?"
- Ask: "What's the path to chronicle on the remote? (default: chronicle)"
- Optionally suggest: "I can save this to config for future use"
- Construct command with user-provided values
4. **Run the command** and monitor output
5. **Confirm success** or handle errors
## Example Usage
**User:** "I have session 7 on my FreeBSD dev machine that needs summarization, but FreeBSD doesn't have Gemini API. Can you summarize it here on my Mac?"
**Assistant (with config):**
1. Checks config: `chronicle config remote_systems.freebsd.hostname`
2. Finds: `chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc`
3. Announces: "Found FreeBSD config, using chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc"
4. Runs the command:
```bash
ssh chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc "/home/chandlerhardy/.local/bin/chronicle export-session 7" | chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>&1 | grep -A 999999 '^{$' | ssh chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc "/home/chandlerhardy/.local/bin/chronicle import-summary"
```
5. Confirms: "Session 7 summarized successfully and summary imported back to FreeBSD"
**Assistant (without config):**
1. Checks config: `chronicle config --list | grep remote_systems`
2. No FreeBSD config found
3. Asks: "What's your FreeBSD hostname?"
4. User provides: `chandlerhardy-dev.aws0.pla-net.cc`
5. Asks: "What's the path to chronicle on FreeBSD? (press Enter for default 'chronicle')"
6. User provides: `/home/chandlerhardy/.local/bin/chronicle`
7. Suggests: "I can save this to config for future use. Would you like me to?"
8. Runs the command with provided values
9. If user agrees, saves config for next time
**If one-liner hangs:**
1. Falls back to 3-step workflow
2. Exports to `/tmp/session_7.json`
3. Processes locally → `/tmp/summary.json`
4. Imports summary back to remote
5. Confirms success
## Advanced Usage
### Batch Summarize Multiple Sessions
```bash
# List unsummarized sessions on remote
ssh freebsd "chronicle sessions --limit 50" | grep "No summary"
# For each session ID (7, 8, 9):
for id in 7 8 9; do
echo "Summarizing session $id..."
ssh freebsd "chronicle export-session $id" | \
chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>/dev/null | \
ssh freebsd "chronicle import-summary"
done
```
### Inspect Summary Before Importing
```bash
# Export and summarize
ssh freebsd "chronicle export-session 7" | \
chronicle import-and-summarize --quiet 2>/dev/null > /tmp/summary.json
# Review summary
cat /tmp/summary.json | jq '.summary'
# If satisfied, import
cat /tmp/summary.json | ssh freebsd "chronicle import-summary"
```
### Debug Verbose Output
If you need to see what's happening, remove `--quiet`:
```bash
ssh freebsd "chronicle export-session 7" | chronicle import-and-summarize
# Shows: "Importing session...", "Summarizing...", "Cleaning up...", then JSON
```
**Note:** Without `--quiet`, JSON is NOT at line 1, so it won't pipe cleanly to `import-summary`.
## Related Commands
- `chronicle export-session <id>` - Export session as JSON
- `chronicle import-session` - Import session (permanent, gets new ID)
- `chronicle import-and-summarize` - Import + summarize + auto-cleanup (transient)
- `chronicle import-summary` - Update existing session with summary
- `chronicle session <id>` - View session details and summary
## See Also
- **REMOTE_SUMMARIZE_WORKFLOW.md** - Full workflow documentation with examples
- **tests/test_import_export.py** - 17 tests covering all import/export scenarios
- **chronicle-session-documenter** - Document sessions to Obsidian vault after summarizationRelated Skills
enact-text-summarizer
Analyzes text and provides word count, character count, and sentence statistics
chronicle-workflow
Complete workflow for tracking development work with Chronicle - session recording, git tracking, AI summarization, and Obsidian documentation. Works with CLI commands (portable) or MCP tools (faster). Use when starting a new development session, setting up project tracking, or when user wants comprehensive session management.
chronicle-session-documenter
Document AI-assisted development sessions to Obsidian vault using Chronicle data. Works with MCP (fastest) or CLI commands (portable). Use when completing a coding session, creating development logs, or maintaining a knowledge base of past work. Automatically creates structured notes with metadata, summaries, and wikilinks.
chronicle-project-tracker
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chronicle-context-retriever
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chronicle-assistant-guide
Project-agnostic guidance for AI assistants using Chronicle. Provides search-first directives, best practices, and workflow patterns across ALL Chronicle-tracked projects. Works with or without MCP server.
remote-system-maintenance
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SKILL: Remote Code Execution
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feature-design-assistant
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explain-expert
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