Knowledge Graph Memory Server

Knowledge Graph Memory Server

MCP server for enabling memory for Claude through a knowledge graph

edobez

Research & Data
Visit Server

README

Knowledge Graph Memory Server

A basic implementation of persistent memory using a local knowledge graph. This lets Claude remember information about the user across chats.

This is a Python port of the original reference server (version 0.6.3). I took the opportunity to do some refactoring of the code, mostly aided by Cline (and Claude Sonnet 3.5).

Core Concepts

Entities

Entities are the primary nodes in the knowledge graph. Each entity has:

  • A unique name (identifier)
  • An entity type (e.g., "person", "organization", "event")
  • A list of observations

Example:

{
  "name": "John_Smith",
  "entityType": "person",
  "observations": ["Speaks fluent Spanish"]
}

Relations

Relations define directed connections between entities. They are always stored in active voice and describe how entities interact or relate to each other.

Example:

{
  "from": "John_Smith",
  "to": "Anthropic",
  "relationType": "works_at"
}

Observations

Observations are discrete pieces of information about an entity. They are:

  • Stored as strings
  • Attached to specific entities
  • Can be added or removed independently
  • Should be atomic (one fact per observation)

Example:

{
  "entityName": "John_Smith",
  "observations": [
    "Speaks fluent Spanish",
    "Graduated in 2019",
    "Prefers morning meetings"
  ]
}

API

Tools

  • create_entities

    • Create multiple new entities in the knowledge graph
    • Input: entities (array of objects)
      • Each object contains:
        • name (string): Entity identifier
        • entityType (string): Type classification
        • observations (string[]): Associated observations
    • Ignores entities with existing names
  • create_relations

    • Create multiple new relations between entities
    • Input: relations (array of objects)
      • Each object contains:
        • from (string): Source entity name
        • to (string): Target entity name
        • relationType (string): Relationship type in active voice
    • Skips duplicate relations
  • add_observations

    • Add new observations to existing entities
    • Input: observations (array of objects)
      • Each object contains:
        • entityName (string): Target entity
        • contents (string[]): New observations to add
    • Returns added observations per entity
    • Fails if entity doesn't exist
  • delete_entities

    • Remove entities and their relations
    • Input: entityNames (string[])
    • Cascading deletion of associated relations
    • Silent operation if entity doesn't exist
  • delete_observations

    • Remove specific observations from entities
    • Input: deletions (array of objects)
      • Each object contains:
        • entityName (string): Target entity
        • observations (string[]): Observations to remove
    • Silent operation if observation doesn't exist
  • delete_relations

    • Remove specific relations from the graph
    • Input: relations (array of objects)
      • Each object contains:
        • from (string): Source entity name
        • to (string): Target entity name
        • relationType (string): Relationship type
    • Silent operation if relation doesn't exist
  • read_graph

    • Read the entire knowledge graph
    • No input required
    • Returns complete graph structure with all entities and relations
  • search_nodes

    • Search for nodes based on query
    • Input: query (string)
    • Searches across:
      • Entity names
      • Entity types
      • Observation content
    • Returns matching entities and their relations
  • open_nodes

    • Retrieve specific nodes by name
    • Input: names (string[])
    • Returns:
      • Requested entities
      • Relations between requested entities
    • Silently skips non-existent nodes

Usage with Claude Desktop

Setup

Add this to your claude_desktop_config.json:

uvx

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "memory-python":
    {
      "command": "uvx",
      "args": [
        "--refresh",
        "--quiet",
        "mcp-memory-py"
      ],
    "env": {
        "MEMORY_FILE_PATH": "/path/to/custom/memory.json"
      }
    }
}
Env arguments
  • MEMORY_FILE_PATH: Path to the memory storage JSON file (default: memory.json in the server directory)
  • DEBUG_LOGGING: Produces daily logfile with description of server calls. To be used only for development

System Prompt

The prompt for utilizing memory depends on the use case. Changing the prompt will help the model determine the frequency and types of memories created.

Here is an example prompt for chat personalization. You could use this prompt in the "Custom Instructions" field of a Claude.ai Project.

Follow these steps for each interaction:

1. User Identification:
   - You should assume that you are interacting with default_user
   - If you have not identified default_user, proactively try to do so.

2. Memory Retrieval:
   - Always begin your chat by saying only "Remembering..." and retrieve all relevant information from your knowledge graph
   - Always refer to your knowledge graph as your "memory"

3. Memory
   - While conversing with the user, be attentive to any new information that falls into these categories:
     a) Basic Identity (age, gender, location, job title, education level, etc.)
     b) Behaviors (interests, habits, etc.)
     c) Preferences (communication style, preferred language, etc.)
     d) Goals (goals, targets, aspirations, etc.)
     e) Relationships (personal and professional relationships up to 3 degrees of separation)

4. Memory Update:
   - If any new information was gathered during the interaction, update your memory as follows:
     a) Create entities for recurring organizations, people, and significant events
     b) Connect them to the current entities using relations
     b) Store facts about them as observations

Testing

Run unit tests: uv run pytest

Debugging

Debugging using MCP Inspector: npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector uv run --directory src -m mcp_memory_py

License

This MCP server is licensed under the MIT License. This means you are free to use, modify, and distribute the software, subject to the terms and conditions of the MIT License. For more details, please see the LICENSE file in the project repository.

Recommended Servers

Crypto Price & Market Analysis MCP Server

Crypto Price & Market Analysis MCP Server

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that provides comprehensive cryptocurrency analysis using the CoinCap API. This server offers real-time price data, market analysis, and historical trends through an easy-to-use interface.

Featured
TypeScript
MCP PubMed Search

MCP PubMed Search

Server to search PubMed (PubMed is a free, online database that allows users to search for biomedical and life sciences literature). I have created on a day MCP came out but was on vacation, I saw someone post similar server in your DB, but figured to post mine.

Featured
Python
dbt Semantic Layer MCP Server

dbt Semantic Layer MCP Server

A server that enables querying the dbt Semantic Layer through natural language conversations with Claude Desktop and other AI assistants, allowing users to discover metrics, create queries, analyze data, and visualize results.

Featured
TypeScript
mixpanel

mixpanel

Connect to your Mixpanel data. Query events, retention, and funnel data from Mixpanel analytics.

Featured
TypeScript
Sequential Thinking MCP Server

Sequential Thinking MCP Server

This server facilitates structured problem-solving by breaking down complex issues into sequential steps, supporting revisions, and enabling multiple solution paths through full MCP integration.

Featured
Python
Nefino MCP Server

Nefino MCP Server

Provides large language models with access to news and information about renewable energy projects in Germany, allowing filtering by location, topic (solar, wind, hydrogen), and date range.

Official
Python
Vectorize

Vectorize

Vectorize MCP server for advanced retrieval, Private Deep Research, Anything-to-Markdown file extraction and text chunking.

Official
JavaScript
Mathematica Documentation MCP server

Mathematica Documentation MCP server

A server that provides access to Mathematica documentation through FastMCP, enabling users to retrieve function documentation and list package symbols from Wolfram Mathematica.

Local
Python
kb-mcp-server

kb-mcp-server

An MCP server aimed to be portable, local, easy and convenient to support semantic/graph based retrieval of txtai "all in one" embeddings database. Any txtai embeddings db in tar.gz form can be loaded

Local
Python
Research MCP Server

Research MCP Server

The server functions as an MCP server to interact with Notion for retrieving and creating survey data, integrating with the Claude Desktop Client for conducting and reviewing surveys.

Local
Python