New sidebar section showing rich analytics from the sessions database: - Overview grid: sessions, messages, tokens (input/output/cache), active time, avg session duration, avg messages per session - Model breakdown: sessions and total tokens per model - Platform breakdown: CLI vs Telegram etc with session/message counts - Top tools bar chart: ranked by call count with percentages - Activity patterns: day-of-week bars and hourly heatmap - Notable sessions: longest, most messages, most tokens, most tool calls with clickable links to open in Sessions browser - Time period selector: 7/30/90 days or all time Also adds ROADMAP.md documenting the full feature expansion plan. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Scarf
A native macOS companion app for the Hermes AI agent.
Full visibility into what Hermes is doing, when, and what it creates.
Features
- Dashboard — System health, token usage, recent sessions at a glance
- Sessions Browser — Full conversation history with message rendering, tool call inspection, and full-text search (FTS5)
- Activity Feed — Recent tool execution log with filtering by kind (read/edit/execute/fetch/browser) and detail inspector
- Live Chat — Embedded terminal running
hermes chatwith full ANSI color and Rich formatting via SwiftTerm - Memory Viewer/Editor — View and edit Hermes's MEMORY.md and USER.md with live refresh
- Skills Browser — Browse all installed skills by category with file content viewer
- Cron Manager — View scheduled jobs, their status, prompts, and output
- Log Viewer — Real-time tailing of error and gateway logs with level filtering
- Settings — Read-only config display with raw YAML viewer and Finder path links
- Menu Bar — Status icon showing Hermes running state with quick actions
Requirements
- macOS 26.2+
- Xcode 26.3+
- Hermes agent installed at
~/.hermes/
Building
git clone https://github.com/awizemann/scarf.git
cd scarf/scarf
open scarf.xcodeproj
Or from the command line:
xcodebuild -project scarf/scarf.xcodeproj -scheme scarf -configuration Debug build
Architecture
Scarf follows the MVVM-Feature pattern with zero external dependencies beyond SwiftTerm:
scarf/
Core/
Models/ Plain data structs (HermesSession, HermesMessage, HermesConfig, etc.)
Services/ Data access (SQLite reader, file I/O, log tailing, file watcher)
Features/ Self-contained feature modules
Dashboard/ System overview and stats
Sessions/ Conversation browser with detail view
Activity/ Tool execution feed with inspector
Chat/ Embedded terminal via SwiftTerm
Memory/ Memory viewer and editor
Skills/ Skill browser by category
Cron/ Scheduled job viewer
Logs/ Real-time log viewer
Settings/ Configuration display
Navigation/ AppCoordinator + SidebarView
Data Sources
Scarf reads Hermes data directly from ~/.hermes/:
| Source | Format | Access |
|---|---|---|
state.db |
SQLite (WAL mode) | Read-only |
config.yaml |
YAML | Read-only |
memories/*.md |
Markdown | Read/Write |
cron/jobs.json |
JSON | Read-only |
logs/*.log |
Text | Read-only |
gateway_state.json |
JSON | Read-only |
skills/ |
Directory tree | Read-only |
hermes chat |
Terminal subprocess | Interactive |
The app never writes to state.db — it opens in read-only mode to avoid WAL contention with Hermes.
Dependencies
| Package | Purpose |
|---|---|
| SwiftTerm | Terminal emulator for the Chat feature |
Everything else uses system frameworks: SQLite3 C API, Foundation JSON, AttributedString markdown, GCD file watching.
How It Works
Scarf is a passive observer. It watches ~/.hermes/ for file changes and polls the SQLite database for new sessions and messages. The Chat tab spawns hermes chat as a subprocess in a pseudo-terminal, giving you the full interactive Hermes CLI experience with proper ANSI rendering.
The app sandbox is disabled because Scarf needs direct access to ~/.hermes/ and the ability to spawn the Hermes binary.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome. Please open an issue to discuss what you'd like to change before submitting a PR.
- Fork the repo
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b feature/my-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -m 'Add my feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin feature/my-feature) - Open a Pull Request
Support
If you find Scarf useful, consider buying me a coffee.