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@hasna/todos

Universal task management for AI coding agents - CLI + MCP server + interactive TUI

npm License

Install

bun install -g @hasna/todos

CLI Usage

todos --help

Generate shell completions directly from the registered CLI command tree:

todos completions bash > ~/.local/share/bash-completion/completions/todos
todos completions zsh > ~/.zsh/completions/_todos
todos completions fish > ~/.config/fish/completions/todos.fish

Print the local CLI manual when you need install/update commands, examples, JSON output contracts, error behavior, and the command catalog:

todos manual
todos manual --json

Terminal Dashboard

todos dashboard launches a local Ink TUI with keyboard tabs for overview, projects, tasks, plans, runs, dependencies, inbox, and search. It reads only the local SQLite database and can also print deterministic snapshots for scripts or tests:

todos dashboard
todos dashboard --snapshot --view tasks --search "release" --json

Keyboard hints are shown in the interface: h/left and l/right move between tabs, 1-8 jumps to a tab, / opens local search, r refreshes, and q quits.

Local Project Bootstrap

Bootstrap discovers the current local workspace, registers a project identity, creates the default task list, records local source metadata, and works for monorepo package roots without contacting hosted services:

todos project-bootstrap .
todos project-bootstrap packages/cli --name todos-cli --task-list todos-cli
todos project-bootstrap . --dry-run --json

MCP clients can use bootstrap_project for the same local-only workflow. The command is idempotent, so running it again refreshes machine-local paths without duplicating projects, task lists, or source records.

Local Machine Topology

Machine registry state stays in local SQLite. Machines can record identity, last-seen heartbeats, workspace paths, git roots, and user-provided Tailscale or LAN addresses without probing the network:

todos machines register spark01 --ssh hasna@spark01 --tailscale-name spark01.tailnet --tailscale-ip 100.64.0.10 --lan-address 192.168.8.10 --workspace ~/workspace
todos machines heartbeat spark01 --workspace ~/workspace
todos machines topology --json
todos projects-path set <project-id> ~/workspace/my-project

todos machines topology reports stale machines, missing local path overrides, missing local paths, and projects whose machine-local paths differ across registered machines. MCP clients can use machines_register, machines_heartbeat, machines_topology, and machines_list for the same offline diagnostics.

Local Workspace Trust

Workspace trust profiles live in ~/.hasna/todos/config.json and keep agent permissions local. Profiles declare trusted roots, command allowlists and denylists, tool permissions, write scopes, environment-key redaction patterns, and whether unsafe checks should require an explicit prompt:

todos trust add . --preset standard --allow-command bun,git,todos --write-scope src,tests --redact-env API_KEY,TOKEN
todos trust status .
todos trust check . --command "bun test" --write src/index.ts --env OPENAI_API_KEY,PATH
todos trust remove .

MCP clients can use set_workspace_trust, get_workspace_trust, list_workspace_trust_profiles, check_workspace_permission, and remove_workspace_trust. The checks do not call a hosted policy service; they return deterministic JSON showing whether an action is allowed, why it needs a prompt, and which environment keys should be redacted.

Secret safety uses the same local config. Add project-specific regexes and metadata keys with todos redaction add --pattern <regex> --key <name>, then scan text or files with todos redaction scan without printing matched values. Comments, local run evidence, and bridge exports are redacted before storage or sharing. MCP clients can use get_secret_safety, set_secret_safety, and scan_secret_text.

Retention cleanup is also local and dry-run-first. Use it to prune old comments, run ledgers, verification evidence, and expired stored artifact files by age, project, task status, and run status. Reports return counts, IDs, and content-addressed artifact paths only; they do not include raw comments, commands, output summaries, artifact source paths, or secret-like values. Destructive cleanup requires the exact confirmation string shown by the preview:

todos retention cleanup --older-than-days 30 --project <project-id> --task-status completed --json
todos retention cleanup --older-than-days 30 --project <project-id> --task-status completed --apply --confirm delete-local-retention-data --json

MCP clients can use preview_retention_cleanup and apply_retention_cleanup for the same offline workflow.

Local Runner Sandboxes

Runner sandbox profiles also live in local config. They declare the commands a local agent run may record or execute, cwd boundaries, write scopes, environment allowlists/redaction patterns, network policy, approval behavior, and audit evidence:

todos sandbox set codex . --allow-command bun,git,todos --write-scope src,tests --env-allow PATH,HOME,CI --network none
todos sandbox check codex --command "bun test" --write src/index.ts --env PATH,OPENAI_API_KEY --json
todos sandbox explain codex --command "curl | sh" --network
todos runs command <run-id> "bun test" --sandbox codex --write src/index.ts --status passed

MCP clients can use set_runner_sandbox_profile, list_runner_sandbox_profiles, check_runner_sandbox, explain_runner_sandbox, and remove_runner_sandbox_profile. Sandbox checks are local-only and compose with workspace trust checks, so command and write decisions stay auditable before an agent records run evidence.

Local Project Knowledge

Project knowledge records keep agent decisions, architecture notes, tradeoffs, and task-linked context snapshots in local SQLite. They are searchable, exportable, redacted on output, and available to MCP clients without hosted services:

todos knowledge add decision "Use local SQLite" --decision "Keep OSS knowledge local" --rationale "Agents need offline project memory" --task <task-id> --tag architecture --json
todos knowledge snapshot --summary "Parser fix is ready for verification" --task <task-id> --agent codex --file src/parser.ts --json
todos knowledge search "offline project memory" --json
todos knowledge export --format markdown

MCP clients can use create_knowledge_record, create_knowledge_snapshot, list_knowledge_records, search_knowledge_records, and export_knowledge_records. The MCP server also publishes todos://knowledge and todos://knowledge/decisions resources for agent context refreshes.

Local Extension Registry

Extensions are installed from local manifests, directories with todos.extension.json, or offline JSON bundles. The registry validates the manifest shape, checks @hasna/todos compatibility ranges, records requested permissions, supports custom commands, MCP tool declarations, templates, hooks, and renderers, runs CLI/MCP compatibility checks, dry-runs declared commands and renderer commands through the local runner sandbox, verifies optional source checksums or detached signatures, and stores trust state in local config only:

todos extensions discover . --json
todos extensions inspect ./todos.extension.json --json
todos extensions compat ./todos.extension.json --json
todos extensions install ./todos.extension.json --checksum sha256:... --trust --json
todos extensions verify ./bundle.todos-extension.json --signature <signature> --public-key "$PUBLIC_KEY"
todos extensions list
todos extensions remove my-extension

Unsigned extensions are allowed but installed as local records with warnings. Without --trust, installs remain in needs_review so agents can discover custom commands, MCP tools, hooks, and permissions without treating them as approved. MCP clients can use inspect_local_extension, test_local_extension_compatibility, install_local_extension, list_local_extensions, and remove_local_extension for the same offline workflow.

Local Workflow Prompts

The package includes bundled MCP prompts for common agent workflows: goal_planning, task_claiming, review, verification, handoff, release_prep, import_triage, and incident_response. They are static, local-only prompt resources that can be listed or rendered without a model call:

todos workflows list
todos workflows show goal_planning --objective "Ship release" --task 1234abcd --json
todos workflows export --format markdown

MCP clients can discover the same catalog at todos://workflow-prompts and call the matching prompt by ID. Prompt output is deterministic and is intended for Codex, Claude Code, Takumi, and other agent-native clients that need reusable local guidance for planning, claiming, review, verification, handoff, release, triage, and incident workflows.

Agent setup recipes for MCP registration, /goal planning, task claim/update/complete loops, evidence comments, and no-cloud verification live in docs/agent-adapters.md.

Local Policy Packs

Policy packs are project-local done gates for agents. They validate task status, passed verification commands, prohibited commands, linked commits and pull requests, approvals, branch names, run ledgers, artifacts, changed paths, and minimum evidence counts from the local SQLite database and config only:

todos policies set release . \
  --required-status completed \
  --required-command "bun test,bun run typecheck" \
  --prohibited-command "npm install -g,git reset --hard" \
  --require-passed-verification \
  --require-commit \
  --require-pr \
  --require-run \
  --require-artifact
todos policies validate release <task-id> --json
todos policies explain release <task-id>

MCP clients can use set_policy_pack, list_policy_packs, validate_policy_pack, explain_policy_pack, and remove_policy_pack. Validation is a dry local read of recorded task evidence; it never calls a hosted enforcement service.

Local Source TODO Index

Source extraction scans local code for TODO, FIXME, HACK, BUG, XXX, and NOTE comments, respects .gitignore plus explicit excludes, records source files, line anchors, nearby symbols, and stable dedupe fingerprints, and can run as a finite local watcher:

todos extract . --dry-run --index --json
todos extract . --exclude fixtures/** --tags tech-debt
todos extract-watch . --dry-run --max-runs 1 --json

Created tasks are tagged with extracted and linked back to the source file. MCP clients can call extract_todos and watch_source_todos for the same offline workflow; no hosted code search, cloud sync, or telemetry is used.

Local Editor Integrations

Editor recipes live in docs/editor-integrations.md and examples/editor-integrations/. They include VS Code task definitions, JetBrains external tool recipes, Neovim Lua helpers, a shell statusline snippet, and a Bun task picker. Every example uses only todos CLI JSON output or MCP tool names, so editors can claim tasks, inspect local queues, build context packs, and link source files without importing private modules or hosted code.

Task Contracts and Reviews

Task contracts make acceptance criteria, required verification, expected artifacts, relevant files, risk, and review state machine-readable for agents:

todos contracts set <task-id> \
  --criteria "Parser handles quotes;Parser rejects malformed checkboxes" \
  --verify "bun test src/parser.test.ts" \
  --artifact logs/parser.txt \
  --file src/parser.ts \
  --risk medium \
  --done "review approved" \
  --json
todos contracts request-review <task-id> --requester codex --reviewer reviewer
todos record-verification <task-id> "bun test src/parser.test.ts" --status passed --artifact logs/parser.txt
todos contracts review <task-id> --state approved --reviewer reviewer
todos contracts check <task-id> --json

Contracts are stored in local task metadata, mirror acceptance criteria for context packs, and are checked only against local status, review state, and recorded verification evidence. MCP clients can use set_task_contract, get_task_contract, request_task_review, record_task_review, and check_task_done_contract.

Local Approval Gates

Approval gates are manual checkpoints stored in the local task database. Agents can require, approve, reject, expire, list, and check gates before risky plan or run work. Blocked checks exit nonzero, including JSON mode, so local automation cannot silently bypass a missing or denied checkpoint:

todos approvals require <task-id> deploy --requester codex --reviewer reviewer --run <run-id> --reason "production-affecting action"
todos approvals check <task-id> deploy --json
todos approvals approve <task-id> deploy --reviewer reviewer --note "safe to proceed"
todos approvals list <task-id> --json

MCP clients can use require_approval_gate, approve_approval_gate, reject_approval_gate, expire_approval_gate, check_approval_gate, and list_approval_gates. Gate events are written to task audit history and, when a run is linked, to the local run ledger.

Local Review Queues

Review queues turn local task review into an explicit agent workflow: request a review, route it to a queue, claim it, return it with changes, reopen it, or approve it. Routing rules live in local config and can match tags, priorities, and projects without hosted users, orgs, or cloud services:

todos reviews rules set security --queue security-review --reviewers reviewer --tags security --priorities high
todos reviews request <task-id> --requester codex --reason "security-sensitive change"
todos reviews claim <task-id> --reviewer reviewer
todos reviews return <task-id> --reviewer reviewer --changes "Add tests;Record verification"
todos reviews approve <task-id> --reviewer reviewer
todos reviews list --queue security-review --json

MCP clients can use list_review_queue, request_review_queue, claim_review_item, return_review_item, approve_review_item, reopen_review_item, set_review_routing_rule, list_review_routing_rules, and remove_review_routing_rule. Queue transitions are written to audit history and emitted to local event hooks as review.requested, review.claimed, review.returned, review.approved, and review.reopened.

Local Roadmaps

Roadmaps group local tasks, plans, runs, milestones, and release labels into a portable planning view. They live in local config, summarize dependency readiness from the task graph, and export deterministic JSON or Markdown bundles:

todos roadmaps create "Public package launch" --release v1 --json
todos roadmaps milestones add <roadmap-id> "Docs and examples" --tasks <task-id> --due 2026-06-01 --release v1 --json
todos roadmaps releases set <roadmap-id> v1 --milestones <milestone-id> --release-version 1.0.0 --json
todos roadmaps show <roadmap-id> --format markdown
todos roadmaps export <roadmap-id> --out roadmap.json
todos roadmaps import roadmap.json --apply --json

MCP clients can use create_roadmap, list_roadmaps, get_roadmap_summary, update_roadmap, delete_roadmap, create_milestone, update_milestone, delete_milestone, set_release_group, export_roadmap, and import_roadmap.

Local Event Hooks

Event hooks are local subscriptions for task, plan, run, approval, import, and export events. They can append redacted JSONL to a file, deliver to a Unix socket, expose a stdout test payload, or run a sandbox-checked local script with retry/backoff and SHA-256 integrity metadata:

todos event-hooks set audit --event task.completed,run.failed --target file --file .todos/events.jsonl
todos event-hooks set notify --event task.blocked --target script --command "notify-send \"$TODOS_EVENT_TYPE\"" --sandbox codex --attempts 2
todos event-hooks test audit --event task.completed --payload '{"id":"demo"}' --json
todos event-hooks list --json

MCP clients can use set_local_event_hook, list_local_event_hooks, test_local_event_hook, and remove_local_event_hook. Hook delivery is local-only; it does not call hosted webhooks or cloud automation services.

Local Terminal Notifications

Terminal notification rules are local watch rules for agents that want concise event signals in a shell, tmux pane, or editor terminal. Rules match task, run, plan, approval, import, and export events by severity, agent, project, priority, status, and payload text, then render deterministic line or JSON notifications:

todos terminal-notifications set blocked --event task.blocked,task.failed --min-severity warning --agent codex --priority high --contains deploy --bell
todos terminal-notifications set due --event task.due,task.sla_breached --min-severity warning --quiet-hours 22:00-07:00
todos notifications check --emit-hooks --terminal --quiet-hours 22:00-07:00 --json
todos terminal-notifications test blocked --event task.failed --payload '{"id":"demo","title":"Deploy failed","agent_id":"codex","priority":"high"}' --json
todos terminal-notifications list --json

MCP clients can use set_terminal_notification_rule, list_terminal_notification_rules, test_terminal_notification_rule, evaluate_terminal_watch_rules, check_local_notifications, and remove_terminal_notification_rule. Notifications are evaluated from local event payloads, can respect quiet hours, and do not require a desktop notification daemon, hosted queue, or cloud webhook service.

Local Encryption Profiles

Encryption profiles are optional local config entries for sensitive fields and secure bridge exports. Profiles store algorithm metadata, a nonsecret salt, and the name of the environment variable that contains key material. The key itself is never written to config, bundles, artifacts, or logs:

export TODOS_ENCRYPTION_KEY="use a strong local passphrase from your secret manager"
todos encryption set default --key-env TODOS_ENCRYPTION_KEY
todos encryption status default --json
todos encryption test default --json
todos export --format bridge --encrypt --output todos-bridge.enc.json
todos bridge-import todos-bridge.enc.json --decrypt --json
todos bridge-import todos-bridge.enc.json --decrypt --apply

Plain bridge exports are still supported for compatibility, but the CLI prints a warning because bridge bundles may contain task metadata, evidence summaries, comments, and stored artifact content. MCP clients can use set_encryption_profile, list_encryption_profiles, get_encryption_status, encrypt_local_value, decrypt_local_value, and remove_encryption_profile for local-only encrypted field workflows.

Local Agent Run Queue

Agent run adapters and queue entries are local. Queueing a task creates a run ledger immediately, then run-next launches the configured command template with {task_id}, {run_id}, and {agent_id} placeholders. Dry-runs show the command without execution, and cancellation/retry are recorded in the same local run ledger:

todos agent-runs adapter-set codex --command "codex exec --task {task_id}" --sandbox codex
todos agent-runs queue <task-id> --adapter codex --agent codex --claim --json
todos agent-runs run-next --dry-run --json
todos agent-runs run-next --json
todos agent-runs retry <run-id>

MCP clients can use set_agent_run_adapter, queue_agent_run, list_agent_run_queue, run_next_agent_dispatch, cancel_agent_run_dispatch, and retry_agent_run_dispatch. These commands launch only local processes and do not call hosted runners.

Local Agent Replay Simulation

Replay simulation turns a recorded context pack or run fixture into a deterministic dry-run snapshot without opening the project database or mutating tasks. Use it to debug agent plans, verification commands, task transitions, failures, touched files, artifacts, and approval decisions offline:

todos context-pack <task-id> --format json > replay.json
todos runs simulate replay.json --agent codex --scenario parser-failure --json
todos runs simulate replay.json --format markdown

MCP clients can use simulate_agent_replay with a fixture object and optional agent_id or scenario. The simulator redacts fixture values before hashing or rendering, reports mutates_database: false, and emits stable command, approval, failure, file, artifact, and warning summaries for local debugging.

Local Dependency Workflows

Dependencies are stored in the local SQLite database and never require hosted services. Use them to keep agents from starting blocked work:

todos deps <task-id> --needs <blocking-task-id>
todos deps <task-id> --graph
todos blocked
todos ready

The same workflow is available to MCP clients through add_task_dependency, remove_task_dependency, get_task_dependencies, and get_blocked_tasks. Dependency writes reject cycles, ready omits locked or blocked pending tasks, and startup schema repair recreates the local dependency table for older databases.

Local Risk Register And Health

Risks are stored in local SQLite and can be linked to projects, plans, or tasks with an owner, mitigation, due date, severity, probability, tags, and metadata:

todos risks add "Release blocker" --plan 1234abcd --severity high --owner codex --mitigation "Ship fallback" --json
todos risks list --plan 1234abcd --json
todos risks score --plan 1234abcd --json
todos risks export --project my-project --json

Health reports score a plan or project from local evidence only: blocked tasks, overdue open work, failed verification records, failed run ledgers, dependency depth, and open risks. MCP clients get the same surface through create_risk, list_risks, update_risk, close_risk, score_plan_health, score_project_health, and export_risk_register.

Local Retrospectives

Retrospectives summarize a project or plan using local evidence: completed plans, missed estimates, repeated blockers, failed verification records, lessons learned, and suggested follow-up tasks.

todos retrospectives create --plan 1234abcd --json
todos retrospectives list --project my-project --json
todos retrospectives export --plan 1234abcd --format markdown

Use --create-followups to create the suggested follow-up tasks locally. MCP clients get the same reports through create_retrospective, list_retrospectives, and export_retrospectives.

Local Agent Reliability Scorecards

Reliability scorecards summarize each agent from local evidence only: completed and failed tasks, passed and failed verification records, failed run ledgers, stale task/resource locks, retry history, and handoff quality.

todos reliability show codex --json
todos reliability list --project my-project --json
todos reliability export --format markdown

MCP clients get the same summaries through get_agent_reliability_scorecard, export_agent_reliability_scorecards, and the todos://agents/reliability resource.

Local Agent Reports

Agent reports compose the local planning surfaces into one report for standups, handoffs, and agent run planning: ready tasks, blocked tasks, overdue work, plan progress, run outcomes, verification evidence, and per-agent summaries.

todos reports local --agent codex --format markdown
todos reports local --project <project-id> --json

MCP clients can list sections with list_local_report_types and build the same local-only local_report contract with build_local_report. The report uses the local SQLite store only and does not call hosted analytics or external services.

Local Agent Locking

Task claims and locks are local SQLite leases. Agents can claim the next ready task, renew their lock by re-locking it during long work, inspect stale work, and safely steal or redistribute stale tasks without hosted coordination:

todos claim codex
todos --agent codex lock <task-id>
todos stale --minutes 30
todos claim codex --steal-stale --stale-minutes 30
todos redistribute codex --max-age 60

MCP clients get the same local coordination through claim_next_task, lock_task, unlock_task, check_task_lock, and get_stale_tasks. claim_next_task can opt into stale recovery with steal_stale and stale_minutes.

Local Plan Templates

Reusable plan templates live in the local SQLite database. The package also ships a marketplace-free local library for bug fixes, feature implementation, security review, releases, migrations, incidents, docs refreshes, QA, and open source package bootstraps. Templates can create one task or a full ordered plan with dependencies, variables, priorities, tags, and descriptions:

todos template-library --json
todos template-library --write .todos/templates
todos template-init
todos template-preview <template-id> --var name=api
todos templates --use <template-id> --var name=api
todos template-export <template-id> > plan-template.json
todos template-import plan-template.json

todos template-library --write writes editable JSON files that use the same shape as todos template-import, so teams can fork a built-in workflow without contacting any hosted marketplace. todos templates --use creates every task in a multi-task template and wires its local dependency graph, so agents can immediately run todos ready, todos blocked, or todos deps <task-id> --graph against the generated plan. The same local-only workflow is available to MCP clients through list_template_library, write_template_library, init_templates, create_template, list_templates, create_task_from_template, preview_template, export_template, and import_template.

Local Git Traceability

Tasks can be linked to local git evidence without contacting hosted services:

todos link-commit <task-id> <sha> --message "fix parser" --files src/parser.ts
todos link-ref <task-id> task/parser-fix --type branch
todos link-ref <task-id> 42 --type pr --url https://github.com/hasna/todos/pull/42
todos record-verification <task-id> "bun test" --status passed --summary "1522 pass"
todos trace <task-id>
todos find-commit <sha-prefix>
todos find-ref <branch-or-pr>
todos blame src/parser.ts

MCP clients get the same local data through link_task_to_commit, find_task_by_commit, link_task_git_ref, find_tasks_by_git_ref, add_task_verification, and get_task_traceability, so agents can explain which task changed a commit, branch, PR, file, or verification command.

Local Mention Resolution

Agents can resolve task references before adding them to descriptions, plans, or handoffs. The resolver validates local files and line anchors, scans local source declarations for symbols, checks local git commits, branches, and fetched pull request refs, and resolves plans, runs, tasks, and agents from the local SQLite state:

todos references resolve file:src/index.ts:12 symbol:createTask branch:main --json
todos refs resolve plan:release run:abc123 agent:marcus --workspace .

The JSON output includes canonical reference keys and validated backlinks such as file:src/index.ts:12, symbol:createTask@src/index.ts:40, commit:<sha>, plan:<id>, and run:<id>. MCP clients can call resolve_mentions for the same local-only report; pull request refs are validated only when present in local git refs, and the resolver never calls hosted code search.

Local Branch-Safe Work Plans

Before an agent starts a branch, it can ask for a local branch work plan that checks the task or plan scope, planned files, active file conflicts, local git status, and suggested branch/traceability commands:

todos branch-plan 1234abcd --branch task/parser-fix --path src/parser.ts --json
todos branch-plan --plan <plan-id> --branch task/release-plan --no-git-status --json

MCP clients can call create_branch_work_plan with task_id or plan_id. The result is local-only: it does not create a branch, fetch from a remote, or contact hosted code review services. Agents can inspect safe_to_start, conflicts, reasons, and commands before running any git operation.

Local Release Notes

Generate changelogs from completed local tasks and their linked plans, commits, verification records, breaking-change notes, and migration notes:

todos release-notes --project . --format markdown
todos release-notes --tag release --since 2026-01-01T00:00:00.000Z --json

Tasks can add release metadata through metadata.breaking_change, metadata.breaking_changes, metadata.migration_note, or metadata.migration_notes. MCP clients use generate_release_notes for the same deterministic JSON or Markdown output without hosted release tooling.

Local Verification Providers

Optional provider adapters let agents standardize local verification without a hosted dependency. Providers can classify CI logs, verify browser/screenshot artifacts, or run explicitly configured command, script, and testbox-style commands with retry and redacted evidence capture:

todos verify-providers set local --kind command --command "bun test" --attempts 2 --json
todos verify-providers set ci --kind ci_log --json
todos verify-providers capabilities local --json
todos verify-providers run local --task <task-id> --agent codex --json
todos verify-providers run ci --task <task-id> --log-file /tmp/ci.log --json

Blacksmith/testbox-style providers are inert until a local command is explicitly configured, so the package never calls a cloud runner by default. MCP clients use set_verification_provider, list_verification_providers, get_verification_provider_capabilities, run_verification_provider, and remove_verification_provider for the same local-only workflow.

Local Agent Handoffs

Handoffs let one local agent leave continuation context for another without a hosted inbox. A handoff records the session, referenced tasks, relevant files, run ids, completed work, current blockers, and next steps. Readers can filter for unread handoffs and acknowledge them per agent:

todos handoff --create --agent codex --session codex-42 --summary "Parser work ready for review" --tasks <task-id> --files src/parser.ts --runs <run-id> --next "Review failing fixture" --json
todos handoff --unread-for claude --json
todos handoff --read <handoff-id> --json
todos handoff --ack <handoff-id> --agent claude --json
todos handoff --recover --agent codex --session codex-42 --json
todos handoff --export <handoff-id> --output handoff.json --json
todos handoff --import handoff.json --json
todos handoff --import handoff.json --apply --json

MCP clients can use create_handoff, list_handoffs, read_handoff, export_handoff, import_handoff, acknowledge_handoff, recover_stale_session_handoff, and get_latest_handoff. Recovery handoffs inspect local in-progress tasks, file links, and run evidence for the agent/session and create a deterministic continuation packet; no hosted queue or cloud service is involved. Handoff imports default to a dry-run preview; --apply writes the local handoff and preserves per-agent acknowledgement state.

Local Run Ledger

Agent runs can record local evidence without uploading artifacts or calling a hosted API:

RUN_ID=$(todos runs start <task-id> --agent codex --title "Parser fix" --claim --json | jq -r .id)
todos runs event "$RUN_ID" progress "writing regression tests"
todos runs command "$RUN_ID" "bun test src/parser.test.ts" --status passed --summary "14 pass"
todos runs file "$RUN_ID" src/parser.ts --status modified
todos runs artifact "$RUN_ID" logs/parser-test.txt --type log --description "focused test output" --require-file
todos runs artifact-verify "$RUN_ID"
todos runs finish "$RUN_ID" --status completed --summary "parser fixed and verified"
todos runs show "$RUN_ID"

Run command evidence is also mirrored into task verification evidence, file events are linked to task file tracking, and comments can be recorded into the task timeline. Sensitive-looking tokens, keys, passwords, and bearer values are redacted before evidence is stored. Artifact files are copied into a local content-addressed store beside the SQLite database, with SHA-256 integrity metadata, redaction status, retention metadata, and metadata-only fallback when the original path is unavailable. Use --no-store to record only artifact metadata.

Local Time Tracking

Manual time logs and focus sessions stay in the local SQLite database and roll up into task.actual_minutes for planning and retrospectives:

todos time log <task-id> 25 --agent codex --notes "reviewed parser"
SESSION=$(todos time start <task-id> --agent codex --idle-after 30 --json | jq -r .id)
todos time pause "$SESSION"
todos time resume "$SESSION"
todos time stop "$SESSION" --notes "implemented and tested"
todos time report --include-open --json

Focus sessions can be linked to tasks, plans, or run ledgers. Stopping a completed task-linked session writes a time log with the session id and run id, then recalculates actual minutes from all local logs. todos time idle and the get_idle_focus_prompts MCP tool report active sessions that exceeded their local idle threshold; no desktop notification service or hosted telemetry is required.

Local Capacity Forecasts

Capacity profiles give agents a local way to forecast whether a project or plan is realistic from task estimates, actual minutes, due dates, and available minutes per day:

todos capacity set codex --minutes-per-day 240 --days 1,2,3,4,5 --json
todos capacity forecast --plan <plan-id> --agent codex --start-date 2026-06-01 --json
todos capacity forecast --project <project-id> --format markdown
todos capacity list --json

Forecasts report remaining estimated minutes, logged actual minutes, forecast work days, projected completion date, missing estimates, overdue open tasks, and risk flags. MCP clients use set_capacity_profile, list_capacity_profiles, remove_capacity_profile, and get_planning_forecast.

Local Audit Ledger

Audit ledger checkpoints hash local evidence into a deterministic chain so an agent can seal task, run, verification, approval, and handoff records and verify later that the local evidence still matches:

todos audit-ledger show --task <task-id> --entries --json
todos audit-ledger seal release-checkpoint --task <task-id> --json
todos audit-ledger verify release-checkpoint --json
todos audit-ledger list --json

The ledger stores only local checkpoint metadata in config. It does not call a hosted service and it does not claim to prevent local deletion; it detects changes against a previously sealed root hash. MCP clients use get_audit_ledger, seal_audit_ledger, list_audit_ledger_checkpoints, and verify_audit_ledger.

Release Compatibility

Release compatibility checks give agents a local dry-run report before publish or update work. They verify the package stays @hasna/todos, public, pointed at hasna/todos, export-stable, migration-compatible from recent local schema levels, and ready for Bun global install smoke tests:

todos release-compat check --json
todos release-compat check --format markdown

The report also includes changelog surfaces and rollback commands. MCP clients use check_release_compatibility for the same release_compatibility_report JSON contract.

Local Usage Ledger

Usage reports summarize local tasks, projects, runs, commands, durations, agent-provided token and cost metadata, and run artifact storage. Quota flags are simulated locally so agents can check free/pro limits or project budgets without sending data anywhere:

todos usage report --agent codex --max-tasks 1000 --max-projects 10 --json
todos usage report --project <project-id> --format markdown

The report is aggregate-only: raw command strings and artifact paths are not included. MCP clients use get_usage_ledger for the same local_usage_ledger JSON contract.

Local Scale Hardening

Scale reports benchmark common local queries, count archive-ready terminal tasks, check expected SQLite indexes, run integrity diagnostics, and preview database compaction without network access:

todos scale report --older-than-days 30 --json
todos scale report --format markdown
todos scale compact --json

todos scale compact --apply runs PRAGMA optimize and VACUUM against the local SQLite database. The default is a dry run.

Local Activity Timeline

The timeline command gives agents one ordered, redacted view of local comments, task history, run events, command evidence, and artifacts:

todos timeline --task <task-id> --json
todos timeline --project <project-id> --limit 50
todos timeline --run <run-id> --order asc

MCP clients can call get_activity_timeline with entity_type, entity_id, limit, offset, since, and until. Timeline entries are derived from the local SQLite store and local bridge exports already include the underlying comments, runs, run evidence, files, commits, and verification records needed to rebuild the same timeline after import.

Local Scheduling and SLA Escalation

Tasks can carry local due dates, recurrence rules, and SLA thresholds without a hosted scheduler. Recurring tasks spawn their next local task from the previous scheduled due date, preserving cadence even when completion happens late:

todos add "Weekly review" --due 2026-06-01 --recurrence "every week" --sla-minutes 120 --json
todos update <task-id> --due 2026-06-08 --recurrence "every monday" --sla 90 --json
todos overdue --json
todos sla --json
todos notifications check --due-within-minutes 60 --stale-minutes 30 --terminal --json

todos overdue returns unfinished tasks past due_at. todos sla returns unfinished tasks that are past due_at or whose sla_minutes threshold has elapsed from started_at when present, otherwise created_at. MCP clients use create_task and update_task with deadline, recurrence_rule, and sla_minutes, and can call get_sla_breaches for the same local escalation view. todos notifications check turns due, due-soon, SLA, stale task, completed run, and local reminder records into redacted local alerts; it can emit configured file/socket/script/stdout event hooks, evaluate terminal watch rules, and suppress delivery during quiet hours without contacting an external notification service.

Local Task Fields

Tasks can carry local labels, severity, owner, area, and custom metadata while keeping canonical priority on the task itself:

todos fields set <task-id> --labels bug,cli --priority high --severity s1 --owner codex --area parser --field component=parser --json
todos fields show <task-id> --json
todos fields query --labels bug,cli --severity s1 --field component=parser --json

Custom values are redacted before storage, labels are mirrored into task tags for existing filters, and the metadata is included in local bridge exports. MCP clients use get_task_fields, set_task_fields, and query_tasks_by_fields for the same local-only workflow.

Local Workflow States

Projects can define local workflow states such as review, blocked, verifying, failed, or released while keeping storage compatible with the canonical task statuses:

todos workflow states --json
todos workflow set <task-id> review --json
todos workflow tasks review --json
todos workflow migrate --apply --json

Workflow states live in local config under workflow_states.states. Each state maps to a canonical canonical_status, can declare aliases, and can restrict allowed transitions. The selected local state is stored in task metadata and is included in local bridge exports. MCP clients use list_workflow_states, set_task_workflow_state, query_tasks_by_workflow_state, and migrate_workflow_states.

Local Calendar And ICS

Calendar events are derived from local tasks, SLA thresholds, run ledgers, and authored local reminders, milestones, or work blocks. Exported ICS files are deterministic and can be redacted before sharing:

todos calendar list --from 2026-06-01T00:00:00.000Z --json
todos calendar add "Release milestone" --kind milestone --start 2026-06-01T09:00:00.000Z --json
todos calendar export --redact --out todos.ics
todos calendar import team.ics --json

Recurring task rules are mapped into ICS RRULE values when possible, and task SLA thresholds appear as local calendar events without any Google Calendar, hosted API, or cloud sync dependency. MCP clients use create_calendar_item, list_calendar_events, export_calendar_ics, and import_calendar_ics.

Local Saved Search Views

Saved views are local SQLite records for repeatable task, project, plan, run, comment, and cross-entity searches. They can filter by query text, project, task list, plan, task, status, priority, assignee, agent, tags, local fields, dependency direction, and time windows:

todos views save active-cli --query parser --status pending,in_progress --tag cli --field-area parser --json
todos views list --json
todos views run active-cli --json
todos search parser --scope all --limit 50 --json

View output is stable JSON with { view, scope, filters, count, results }. Local bridge exports include saved views, so explicit backups and machine moves preserve the filters without any hosted service. MCP clients use save_search_view, list_search_views, run_search_view, and delete_search_view.

Local Kanban Boards

Boards are local SQLite records for task and plan workflow views. Lanes map to workflow statuses, can carry WIP limits, and render blocked/ready badges for agent planning:

todos board create local-flow --lane "Ready=pending" "Doing=in_progress:3" --json
todos board show local-flow
todos board tui local-flow --json
todos board move local-flow <task-id> --lane Doing --json
todos board export local-flow --json

Task boards render tasks; plan boards use --scope plans and render plans by plan status. Board snapshots include terminal key bindings for keyboard/TUI clients, but the state is still just local data and can be exported or imported without a hosted web UI. MCP clients use create_board, list_boards, get_board_snapshot, and move_board_card.

Local Duplicate Detection

Agents can scan local tasks for likely duplicates from imported issue URLs, stack traces, exact titles, and similar task text, then merge duplicate evidence without deleting either task record:

todos dedupe scan --threshold 0.8 --json
todos dedupe merge <primary-task-id> <duplicate-task-id> --reason "same imported issue" --json

Merges archive the duplicate as cancelled, add a duplicates relationship, and preserve comments, dependencies, dependents, run ledgers, files, inbox items, verification evidence, history, git refs, commits, and checklist rows on the primary task. MCP clients use find_duplicate_tasks and merge_duplicate_task for the same local-only workflow.

Local Agent Context Packs

Context packs create deterministic run-start bundles for Codex, Claude Code, Takumi, or any local agent. A pack selects task, project, plan, dependencies, acceptance criteria, recent comments, relevant files, verification history, traceability, and run-ledger evidence from the local SQLite database only:

todos context-pack <task-id> --profile codex --format markdown
todos context-pack <task-id> --profile claude --format json
todos context-pack <task-id> --profile takumi --run <run-id> --comments 12 --files 40
todos context-pack <task-id> --profile codex --token-budget 1800 --exclude runs --compact

MCP clients can call build_agent_context_pack with the same limits and choose JSON, Markdown, compact JSON, or compact Markdown output. Long text and evidence are redacted and size-limited, and stale or omitted local data is surfaced as warnings in the pack.

Budget-aware context packing is local and deterministic. Use --token-budget for an approximate character-based token budget, --include or --exclude to shape sections, and --summary-chars to cap the redacted summaries generated for omitted evidence. When the pack is too large, lower-priority evidence such as runs, traceability, comments, files, dependencies, and plan context is summarized in a stable context_budget block so agents still know what was left out.

Local External Issue Imports

Import issue records from pasted JSON, files, stdin, or explicit URLs without depending on any hosted Hasna service. Imports default to a dry-run preview; --apply creates local tasks, stores redacted source metadata, creates linked inbox evidence, and skips existing tasks that already have the same source URL, GitHub owner/repo/number, or external issue key:

todos issues import --file issues.json --provider github --json
todos issues import --file issues.json --provider github --apply --json
todos issues import --provider linear --apply < linear-export.json
todos issues import "Title: Fix parser\nURL: https://tracker.example/BUG-42" --apply --json

GitHub, Linear, Jira, and plain URL records are normalized into local task metadata and tags. Network access is off unless --allow-network is passed; for GitHub that explicitly shells out through the authenticated gh CLI, while offline files and pasted exports work without tokens. MCP clients use import_external_issues with the same dry-run, apply, inbox, and dedupe controls.

Local Inbox Intake

Paste failures, CI logs, GitHub issue URLs, files, or local git context into a deduped inbox and create a linked task:

todos inbox add "bun test failed: parser regression" --source-type ci_log
todos inbox add --file /tmp/ci.log --source-name "local CI"
todos inbox add https://github.com/hasna/todos/issues/42 --source-url https://github.com/hasna/todos/issues/42
todos inbox parse "Add task fix parser priority high @codex #cli due tomorrow" --json
todos inbox parse --file plan-notes.txt --apply --json
todos inbox git --diff
todos inbox list

Inbox bodies and metadata are redacted before storage. Repeated input resolves to the existing inbox item instead of creating duplicate tasks. Natural-language intake parsing is deterministic and local-only; it defaults to a dry-run preview and creates projects, plans, tasks, dependencies, and acceptance criteria only with --apply.

Bundled Onboarding Fixtures

The package ships deterministic local demo fixtures for first-run onboarding and agent integration tests. The default agent-project-demo fixture shows the simple flow used by the public demo: create a project, add todos, generate a plan, run an agent, record command/artifact/verification evidence, review the remaining task, and prove export/import with the local bridge bundle.

todos onboarding --json
todos onboarding --show agent-project-demo > agent-project-demo.bridge.json
todos onboarding --import agent-project-demo --json
todos onboarding --import agent-project-demo --apply

Fixtures are bundled with @hasna/todos, redacted, offline, and local-only. Imports default to dry-run mode and use the same bridge importer as normal exports, so CLI, MCP, and SDK consumers can test against the exact project, tasks, plan, run ledger, evidence, saved view, and board records.

MCP clients can read todos://onboarding/fixtures or todos://onboarding/demo, then use list_onboarding_fixtures, get_onboarding_fixture, and import_onboarding_fixture.

Local Agent Snapshots

Agents can refresh context through stable local snapshots for projects, tasks, plans, runs, dependencies, activity events, and evidence. Snapshots are redacted, deterministic, and include cursors plus fingerprints so MCP clients can poll for changes without a hosted event stream.

todos snapshots --json
todos snapshots --show tasks --json
todos snapshots --show evidence --markdown
todos snapshots --poll --types tasks,evidence --since 2026-05-22T00:00:00.000Z --json

MCP clients can read todos://snapshots/catalog and todos://snapshots/tasks through todos://snapshots/evidence, or use list_local_snapshots, get_local_snapshot, and poll_local_snapshots for JSON or Markdown payloads.

SDK Integration Fixtures

Downstream SDK, CLI JSON, MCP, and agent-adapter tests can generate a complete local fixture pack from the bundled demo project:

todos sdk-fixtures --json
todos sdk-fixtures --show > sdk-fixture-pack.json
todos sdk-fixtures --write .todos/sdk-integrations --json

The pack includes a local bridge fixture, stable JSON contract snapshots, project/task/plan/run/evidence snapshots, and a context pack. Copy-pasteable examples live in examples/sdk-integrations/, and the full guide is in docs/sdk-integrations.md.

Local Bridge Import/Export

Export a versioned local bridge bundle for migration, backup, or explicit hand-off to another local store:

todos export --format bridge --output todos-bridge.json
todos export --format bridge --encrypt --output todos-bridge.enc.json
todos bridge-import todos-bridge.json --json
todos bridge-import todos-bridge.json --apply
todos bridge-import todos-bridge.json --apply --resolve-conflicts

Bridge bundles include local projects, task lists, plans, tasks, dependencies, comments, run ledgers, command evidence, file evidence, artifacts, stored artifact contents, commits, refs, verification records, saved views, local board definitions, and local calendar items. Imports default to dry-run mode and report conflicts before writing. The package does not upload bundles or call hosted services; any hosted sync must consume the exported JSON explicitly.

For multi-machine local work, --resolve-conflicts performs a safe task merge instead of overwriting local edits. It fills blank local fields from the incoming bundle, unions tags, merges non-conflicting metadata keys, and records unresolved divergent fields in metadata.sync_conflicts for manual review. Local non-empty title, status, priority, and metadata values win when both sides changed.

Local Backups and Integrity

Create a checksum-protected local backup wrapper around the bridge bundle when you need a restorable snapshot with manifest counts and SQLite integrity metadata:

todos backup create --output todos-backup.json
todos backup verify todos-backup.json --json
todos backup restore todos-backup.json --json
todos backup restore todos-backup.json --apply --resolve-conflicts
todos backup integrity --json

Backups include the same local projects, task lists, plans, tasks, comments, runs, commands, files, commits, refs, verification records, saved views, boards, calendar items, and stored artifact contents as bridge exports. The backup manifest adds SHA-256 checksums for the full payload, embedded bridge bundle, and each bridge section. Restore defaults to dry-run mode and refuses corrupted or schema-incompatible bundles before importing.

todos.md Markdown Import/Export

todos.md files are readable Markdown checklists with an embedded local bridge bundle for lossless round trips. Export keeps the visible tasks, projects, and plans easy to inspect while preserving local ids, comments, run ledgers, dependencies, files, commits, and verification evidence in a hidden metadata block:

todos export --format todos.md --output todos.md
todos todos-md-import todos.md --json
todos todos-md-import todos.md --apply
todos todos-md-import todos.md --apply --resolve-conflicts

Existing plain checklists also import locally. Use # Project: Name, ## Plan: Name, checkbox items, optional priority: high, comment: ..., depends_on: Other task title, run: completed smoke, #tags, and @agent markers to migrate older files without a hosted service.

Local Doctor and Repair

todos doctor audits the local SQLite database without calling hosted services. By default it is a dry-run and reports schema/migration drift, orphaned rows, duplicate indexes, invalid JSON metadata, missing project roots, and unsafe database file permissions:

todos doctor
todos doctor --json

Safe repairs require explicit apply mode. Before any mutation, the command creates a local backup next to the database when the database is file-backed:

todos doctor --apply

Repairs are limited to local integrity fixes such as running the migration safety net, clearing missing parent references, pruning orphaned dependency/run rows, resetting invalid metadata JSON to {}, dropping duplicate non-primary indexes, and tightening database file permissions.

MCP Server

todos-mcp

HTTP mode

Shared Streamable HTTP transport for long-lived local MCP (stdio remains the default). MCP is mounted on the existing todos-serve HTTP server — no second server:

todos-mcp --http              # starts todos-serve with MCP mounted; or MCP_HTTP=1
todos serve --port 8842       # default MCP HTTP port 8842
  • Bind: 127.0.0.1 only

  • Health: GET /health{"status":"ok","name":"todos"}

  • MCP: POST /mcp on the same server as the dashboard/API (Streamable HTTP, stateless)

The MCP server defaults to the token-saving TODOS_PROFILE=minimal profile. Use TODOS_PROFILE=standard for broader task/project/resource tools, or TODOS_PROFILE=full when you explicitly need every tool. You can add groups with TODOS_TOOL_GROUPS=templates.

High-volume tools return compact payloads by default. Pass detail: "full" to MCP calls such as get_task, get_status, get_context, bootstrap, and task_context when you need full data.

REST API

todos-serve

Generate an API key before exposing the REST API to another app. Once at least one generated key exists, all /api/* requests require x-api-key or Authorization: Bearer.

todos api-keys create "My app"
todos-serve --host 0.0.0.0

Pass the generated key from your app as x-api-key or set TODOS_API_KEY for the SDK client.

Agent callers can trim REST responses with field selectors:

curl "http://localhost:19427/api/tasks?fields=id,title,status,priority"
curl "http://localhost:19427/api/tasks/<id>?fields=id,title,status"
curl "http://localhost:19427/api/tasks/<id>/history?limit=20"

Data Directory

Data is stored in ~/.hasna/todos/.

Local-Only Security Boundary

@hasna/todos is an open source, local-first package. The CLI, MCP server, SDK, and local dashboard read and write local state by default and do not require a hosted API, cloud account, billing provider, or remote model provider.

Release checks enforce that boundary before publishing:

  • package metadata must stay public and point at hasna/todos

  • install snippets must use bun install -g @hasna/todos

  • package dependencies and generated tarballs are scanned for private or hosted service coupling

  • public text surfaces and packed files are scanned for secret-like values

  • local runtime tests use a no-network fixture for local-only workflows

  • bun run verify:release builds, packs, validates provenance, and runs a clean Bun global install smoke test from the candidate tarball

  • the install smoke plan itself is covered by tests: it installs only with Bun, verifies todos, todos-mcp, and todos-serve, and rejects private or hosted endpoint references

License

Apache-2.0 -- see LICENSE

A
license - permissive license
-
quality - not tested
F
maintenance

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