autoresearch-agent
Autonomous experiment loop that optimizes any file by a measurable metric. Inspired by Karpathy's autoresearch. The agent edits a target file, runs a fixed evaluation, keeps improvements (git commit), discards failures (git reset), and loops indefinitely. Use when: user wants to optimize code speed, reduce bundle/image size, improve test pass rate, optimize prompts, improve content quality (headlines, copy, CTR), or run any measurable improvement loop. Requires: a target file, an evaluation command that outputs a metric, and a git repo.
Best use case
autoresearch-agent is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Autonomous experiment loop that optimizes any file by a measurable metric. Inspired by Karpathy's autoresearch. The agent edits a target file, runs a fixed evaluation, keeps improvements (git commit), discards failures (git reset), and loops indefinitely. Use when: user wants to optimize code speed, reduce bundle/image size, improve test pass rate, optimize prompts, improve content quality (headlines, copy, CTR), or run any measurable improvement loop. Requires: a target file, an evaluation command that outputs a metric, and a git repo.
Teams using autoresearch-agent 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/autoresearch-agent/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How autoresearch-agent Compares
| Feature / Agent | autoresearch-agent | 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?
Autonomous experiment loop that optimizes any file by a measurable metric. Inspired by Karpathy's autoresearch. The agent edits a target file, runs a fixed evaluation, keeps improvements (git commit), discards failures (git reset), and loops indefinitely. Use when: user wants to optimize code speed, reduce bundle/image size, improve test pass rate, optimize prompts, improve content quality (headlines, copy, CTR), or run any measurable improvement loop. Requires: a target file, an evaluation command that outputs a metric, and a git repo.
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.
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SKILL.md Source
# Autoresearch Agent
> You sleep. The agent experiments. You wake up to results.
Autonomous experiment loop inspired by [Karpathy's autoresearch](https://github.com/karpathy/autoresearch). The agent edits one file, runs a fixed evaluation, keeps improvements, discards failures, and loops indefinitely.
Not one guess — fifty measured attempts, compounding.
---
## Slash Commands
| Command | What it does |
|---------|-------------|
| `/ar:setup` | Set up a new experiment interactively |
| `/ar:run` | Run a single experiment iteration |
| `/ar:loop` | Start autonomous loop with configurable interval (10m, 1h, daily, weekly, monthly) |
| `/ar:status` | Show dashboard and results |
| `/ar:resume` | Resume a paused experiment |
---
## When This Skill Activates
Recognize these patterns from the user:
- "Make this faster / smaller / better"
- "Optimize [file] for [metric]"
- "Improve my [headlines / copy / prompts]"
- "Run experiments overnight"
- "I want to get [metric] from X to Y"
- Any request involving: optimize, benchmark, improve, experiment loop, autoresearch
If the user describes a target file + a way to measure success → this skill applies.
---
## Setup
### First Time — Create the Experiment
Run the setup script. The user decides where experiments live:
**Project-level** (inside repo, git-tracked, shareable with team):
```bash
python scripts/setup_experiment.py \
--domain engineering \
--name api-speed \
--target src/api/search.py \
--eval "pytest bench.py --tb=no -q" \
--metric p50_ms \
--direction lower \
--scope project
```
**User-level** (personal, in `~/.autoresearch/`):
```bash
python scripts/setup_experiment.py \
--domain marketing \
--name medium-ctr \
--target content/titles.md \
--eval "python evaluate.py" \
--metric ctr_score \
--direction higher \
--evaluator llm_judge_content \
--scope user
```
The `--scope` flag determines where `.autoresearch/` lives:
- `project` (default) → `.autoresearch/` in the repo root. Experiment definitions are git-tracked. Results are gitignored.
- `user` → `~/.autoresearch/` in the home directory. Everything is personal.
### What Setup Creates
```
.autoresearch/
├── config.yaml ← Global settings
├── .gitignore ← Ignores results.tsv, *.log
└── {domain}/{experiment-name}/
├── program.md ← Objectives, constraints, strategy
├── config.cfg ← Target, eval cmd, metric, direction
├── results.tsv ← Experiment log (gitignored)
└── evaluate.py ← Evaluation script (if --evaluator used)
```
**results.tsv columns:** `commit | metric | status | description`
- `commit` — short git hash
- `metric` — float value or "N/A" for crashes
- `status` — keep | discard | crash
- `description` — what changed or why it crashed
### Domains
| Domain | Use Cases |
|--------|-----------|
| `engineering` | Code speed, memory, bundle size, test pass rate, build time |
| `marketing` | Headlines, social copy, email subjects, ad copy, engagement |
| `content` | Article structure, SEO descriptions, readability, CTR |
| `prompts` | System prompts, chatbot tone, agent instructions |
| `custom` | Anything else with a measurable metric |
### If `program.md` Already Exists
The user may have written their own `program.md`. If found in the experiment directory, read it. It overrides the template. Only ask for what's missing.
---
## Agent Protocol
You are the loop. The scripts handle setup and evaluation — you handle the creative work.
### Before Starting
1. Read `.autoresearch/{domain}/{name}/config.cfg` to get:
- `target` — the file you edit
- `evaluate_cmd` — the command that measures your changes
- `metric` — the metric name to look for in eval output
- `metric_direction` — "lower" or "higher" is better
- `time_budget_minutes` — max time per evaluation
2. Read `program.md` for strategy, constraints, and what you can/cannot change
3. Read `results.tsv` for experiment history (columns: commit, metric, status, description)
4. Checkout the experiment branch: `git checkout autoresearch/{domain}/{name}`
### Each Iteration
1. Review results.tsv — what worked? What failed? What hasn't been tried?
2. Decide ONE change to the target file. One variable per experiment.
3. Edit the target file
4. Commit: `git add {target} && git commit -m "experiment: {description}"`
5. Evaluate: `python scripts/run_experiment.py --experiment {domain}/{name} --single`
6. Read the output — it prints KEEP, DISCARD, or CRASH with the metric value
7. Go to step 1
### What the Script Handles (you don't)
- Running the eval command with timeout
- Parsing the metric from eval output
- Comparing to previous best
- Reverting the commit on failure (`git reset --hard HEAD~1`)
- Logging the result to results.tsv
### Starting an Experiment
```bash
# Single iteration (the agent calls this repeatedly)
python scripts/run_experiment.py --experiment engineering/api-speed --single
# Dry run (test setup before starting)
python scripts/run_experiment.py --experiment engineering/api-speed --dry-run
```
### Strategy Escalation
- Runs 1-5: Low-hanging fruit (obvious improvements, simple optimizations)
- Runs 6-15: Systematic exploration (vary one parameter at a time)
- Runs 16-30: Structural changes (algorithm swaps, architecture shifts)
- Runs 30+: Radical experiments (completely different approaches)
- If no improvement in 20+ runs: update program.md Strategy section
### Self-Improvement
After every 10 experiments, review results.tsv for patterns. Update the
Strategy section of program.md with what you learned (e.g., "caching changes
consistently improve by 5-10%", "refactoring attempts never improve the metric").
Future iterations benefit from this accumulated knowledge.
### Stopping
- Run until interrupted by the user, context limit reached, or goal in program.md is met
- Before stopping: ensure results.tsv is up to date
- On context limit: the next session can resume — results.tsv and git log persist
### Rules
- **One change per experiment.** Don't change 5 things at once. You won't know what worked.
- **Simplicity criterion.** A small improvement that adds ugly complexity is not worth it. Equal performance with simpler code is a win. Removing code that gets same results is the best outcome.
- **Never modify the evaluator.** `evaluate.py` is the ground truth. Modifying it invalidates all comparisons. Hard stop if you catch yourself doing this.
- **Timeout.** If a run exceeds 2.5× the time budget, kill it and treat as crash.
- **Crash handling.** If it's a typo or missing import, fix and re-run. If the idea is fundamentally broken, revert, log "crash", move on. 5 consecutive crashes → pause and alert.
- **No new dependencies.** Only use what's already available in the project.
---
## Evaluators
Ready-to-use evaluation scripts. Copied into the experiment directory during setup with `--evaluator`.
### Free Evaluators (no API cost)
| Evaluator | Metric | Use Case |
|-----------|--------|----------|
| `benchmark_speed` | `p50_ms` (lower) | Function/API execution time |
| `benchmark_size` | `size_bytes` (lower) | File, bundle, Docker image size |
| `test_pass_rate` | `pass_rate` (higher) | Test suite pass percentage |
| `build_speed` | `build_seconds` (lower) | Build/compile/Docker build time |
| `memory_usage` | `peak_mb` (lower) | Peak memory during execution |
### LLM Judge Evaluators (uses your subscription)
| Evaluator | Metric | Use Case |
|-----------|--------|----------|
| `llm_judge_content` | `ctr_score` 0-10 (higher) | Headlines, titles, descriptions |
| `llm_judge_prompt` | `quality_score` 0-100 (higher) | System prompts, agent instructions |
| `llm_judge_copy` | `engagement_score` 0-10 (higher) | Social posts, ad copy, emails |
LLM judges call the CLI tool the user is already running (Claude, Codex, Gemini). The evaluation prompt is locked inside `evaluate.py` — the agent cannot modify it. This prevents the agent from gaming its own evaluator.
The user's existing subscription covers the cost:
- Claude Code Max → unlimited Claude calls for evaluation
- Codex CLI (ChatGPT Pro) → unlimited Codex calls
- Gemini CLI (free tier) → free evaluation calls
### Custom Evaluators
If no built-in evaluator fits, the user writes their own `evaluate.py`. Only requirement: it must print `metric_name: value` to stdout.
```python
#!/usr/bin/env python3
# My custom evaluator — DO NOT MODIFY after experiment starts
import subprocess
result = subprocess.run(["my-benchmark", "--json"], capture_output=True, text=True)
# Parse and output
print(f"my_metric: {parse_score(result.stdout)}")
```
---
## Viewing Results
```bash
# Single experiment
python scripts/log_results.py --experiment engineering/api-speed
# All experiments in a domain
python scripts/log_results.py --domain engineering
# Cross-experiment dashboard
python scripts/log_results.py --dashboard
# Export formats
python scripts/log_results.py --experiment engineering/api-speed --format csv --output results.csv
python scripts/log_results.py --experiment engineering/api-speed --format markdown --output results.md
python scripts/log_results.py --dashboard --format markdown --output dashboard.md
```
### Dashboard Output
```
DOMAIN EXPERIMENT RUNS KEPT BEST Δ FROM START STATUS
engineering api-speed 47 14 185ms -76.9% active
engineering bundle-size 23 8 412KB -58.3% paused
marketing medium-ctr 31 11 8.4/10 +68.0% active
prompts support-tone 15 6 82/100 +46.4% done
```
### Export Formats
- **TSV** — default, tab-separated (compatible with spreadsheets)
- **CSV** — comma-separated, with proper quoting
- **Markdown** — formatted table, readable in GitHub/docs
---
## Proactive Triggers
Flag these without being asked:
- **No evaluation command works** → Test it before starting the loop. Run once, verify output.
- **Target file not in git** → `git init && git add . && git commit -m 'initial'` first.
- **Metric direction unclear** → Ask: is lower or higher better? Must know before starting.
- **Time budget too short** → If eval takes longer than budget, every run crashes.
- **Agent modifying evaluate.py** → Hard stop. This invalidates all comparisons.
- **5 consecutive crashes** → Pause the loop. Alert the user. Don't keep burning cycles.
- **No improvement in 20+ runs** → Suggest changing strategy in program.md or trying a different approach.
---
## Installation
### One-liner (any tool)
```bash
git clone https://github.com/alirezarezvani/claude-skills.git
cp -r claude-skills/engineering/autoresearch-agent ~/.claude/skills/
```
### Multi-tool install
```bash
./scripts/convert.sh --skill autoresearch-agent --tool codex|gemini|cursor|windsurf|openclaw
```
### OpenClaw
```bash
clawhub install cs-autoresearch-agent
```
---
## Related Skills
- **self-improving-agent** — improves an agent's own memory/rules over time. NOT for structured experiment loops.
- **senior-ml-engineer** — ML architecture decisions. Complementary — use for initial design, then autoresearch for optimization.
- **tdd-guide** — test-driven development. Complementary — tests can be the evaluation function.
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