* feat(cli): --server accepts a literal URL (RFC-011 Decision 2) `resolve_server_flag` now treats a `--server` value containing `://` as a literal base URL (trailing slash trimmed; `--graph` appends `/graphs/<id>`), bypassing the operator-config `servers:` registry; a bare name still resolves through the registry. This is the replacement the upcoming `--uri http(s)://` deprecation points at, and a small ergonomic win on its own (`--server https://host` with no config entry). Token resolution for a literal-URL server falls to the legacy OMNIGRAPH_BEARER_TOKEN chain, same as a positional URL today. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> * test(cli): address the parity-matrix arms with global --store/--server flags Prep for removing the positional-http→remote dispatch. The parity harness addressed both arms with a positional graph right after the verb (`omnigraph <verb> <addr> <args…>`), which only parses for top-level verbs — for nested subcommands (`schema show`, `branch list`, …) the address landed in the subcommand slot and BOTH arms failed identically, so the test passed vacuously (matching exit codes, never comparing output). Address both arms with the global flags instead — local `--store <graph>` (embedded), remote `--server <url>` (served) — appended after the verb + args, valid regardless of nesting. The previously-vacuous nested-verb parity checks now actually compare embedded vs remote (and pass — parity holds), and the remote arm no longer relies on the positional-URL dispatch that's about to be removed. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat(cli)!: --as on a served write is a hard error (was a silent no-op) A served write resolves the actor server-side from the bearer token, so `--as` could never set identity there — it was silently ignored. It now errors (in the remote write factory, before any HTTP call), pointing the user at removing `--as` or writing directly with `--store`. Reads don't carry `--as`, so this is write-path only. BREAKING for any script that passed `--as` to a remote write (it was a no-op, so behavior is unchanged except the now-explicit error). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat(cli)!: a positional/--uri http(s):// URL no longer dispatches to a server Remote graphs must be addressed with `--server <url>` (or a named server / a profile binding one). A positional or `--uri` `http(s)://` URL on a data verb now errors instead of silently routing to the remote HTTP client — the scheme no longer carries transport semantics. The discriminator is `via_server`: a remote URL produced by a server scope is fine; a remote URL from a positional/`--uri` source is rejected (`reject_positional_remote` in both GraphClient factories). Storage verbs are unaffected — they already reject remote URIs through `resolve_local_graph` with the existing "direct (storage-native)" error. Migrated the gh-host keyed-credential system test to `--server <url>` (the literal URL still prefix-matches the operator server for token resolution). BREAKING: scripts addressing a server by a bare URL must switch to `--server <url>`. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat(cli)!: remove the --target flag (use --store / --profile / --server) Removes the legacy named-graph flag and threads its parameter out of the whole resolver chain. `--target` resolved a graph name through `omnigraph.yaml`'s `graphs:` map; its replacements (`--store <uri>`, `--profile <name>`, `--server <name>`) all ship. - Drops the 22 `target` clap fields + the `--cluster` exclusion that named it. - Threads `target`/`cli_target` out of `resolve_uri`/`resolve_cli_graph`/ `resolve_local_graph`/`resolve_local_uri`/`resolve_storage_uri`/ `resolve_remote_bearer_token`/`apply_server_flag`/`execute_query_lint`/ `resolve_selected_graph`/`resolve_registry_selection_for_list`/ `execute_queries_{validate,list}`, the two `GraphClient` factories, and `ScopeFlags`/`ResolvedScope`. - Keeps the shared `OmnigraphConfig::resolve_target_uri` 3-arg (server boot uses it); the CLI passes None for the explicit-target arm. The `cli.graph` default (omnigraph.yaml bare-command fallback) is unchanged — its removal belongs to the omnigraph.yaml excision. - Operator/file aliases that bind a `graph` name still work: the name is now resolved to a URI inline (a positional URI wins). - Error messages and `--graph`/`--server`/`--store` help text no longer name `--target`; the queries-list selection hint points at `cli.graph`. BREAKING. Tests updated (named-target resolution rewritten onto `cli.graph`; positional-URI tests unchanged). Full omnigraph-cli suite green (228). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> * docs(cli): drop --target and positional-http addressing; --as-on-served is an error Update the user docs for the legacy data-plane addressing removals: - the CLI `--target` flag is gone — address graphs with a positional URI, `--store`, `--profile`, or `--server <name|url>`; - a positional `http(s)://` URI no longer dispatches to a server (use `--server`); - `--as` on a served write is now rejected (was a silent no-op). Touches cli/reference.md (addressing intro, capability table, error examples, scopes), cli/index.md (the remote-read example → --server), operations/maintenance + policy, and the cluster docs' data-plane load guidance. The server's own `--target` boot flag is unchanged (server.md untouched). Also fixes a pre-existing broken maintenance link in search/indexes.md. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix(cli): --store is loudly exclusive with a positional URI / --server; test graphs→Served Address two Greptile findings on the RFC-011 slices: - Slice A (P1): `--store` combined with a positional URI silently dropped the URI (`scope.rs` did `store.or(uri)`); `--store` + `--server` errored with a misleading "positional URI" message. Now both combinations fail loudly with a declared `--store is exclusive with a positional URI and --server` error. - Slice B (P2): the `command_capability` unit test never exercised the one Data→Served refinement (`graphs`); added the assertion so deleting that guard can't pass silently. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> --------- Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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CLI Reference (omnigraph)
A reference for the omnigraph binary's command surface and omnigraph.yaml schema. For a quick-start guide, see cli.md.
Top-level command families and subcommands. Graph-targeting commands accept a positional file:///s3:// URI, --server <name|url> (an operator-defined server from ~/.omnigraph/config.yaml by name, or a literal http(s):// URL, optionally with --graph <id> for multi-graph servers; exclusive with a positional URI), --store <uri> (a single graph's storage directly), or --profile <name> / $OMNIGRAPH_PROFILE (a named scope bundle; see Scopes & profiles); cluster commands use --config <dir>. A remote server is addressed only with --server — a positional http(s):// URI is rejected.
Top-level commands
| Command | Purpose |
|---|---|
init |
--schema <pg> → initialize a graph (no longer scaffolds omnigraph.yaml; start cluster configs from the cluster.md quick-start or config migrate) |
load |
bulk load a branch, local or remote (--mode overwrite|append|merge is required — overwrite is destructive, so there is no default). Without --from the target branch must exist; --from <base> forks a missing --branch from <base> first |
ingest |
deprecated alias of load --from <base> (defaults: --from main --mode merge); prints a one-line warning to stderr |
query (alias: read) |
run named read query; source via --query <path>, -e/--query-string <GQ>, or --alias <name> (exactly one). read is the deprecated previous name and prints a one-line warning to stderr |
mutate (alias: change) |
run mutation query; same --query / -e / --alias mutual-exclusion as query. change is the deprecated previous name and prints a one-line warning to stderr |
snapshot |
print current snapshot (per-table version + row count) |
export |
dump to JSONL on stdout (--type T, --table K filters) |
branch create | list | delete | merge |
branching ops |
commit list | show |
inspect commit graph |
schema plan | apply | show (alias: get) |
migrations |
lint (alias: check) |
offline / graph-backed query validation. Replaces query lint / query check, which are kept as deprecated argv-level shims that print a one-line warning and rewrite to omnigraph lint |
config migrate |
propose (or --write: apply) the split of a legacy omnigraph.yaml — team half → ready-to-review cluster.yaml, personal half → ~/.omnigraph/config.yaml (key-level merge, existing entries win), plus dropped-key reasons and manual steps |
cluster validate | plan | apply | approve | status | refresh | import | force-unlock |
declarative cluster control plane. validate checks a local cluster.yaml folder and referenced schema/query/policy files; plan diffs it against local JSON state at __cluster/state.json, annotates dispositions, and embeds real schema-migration previews; apply converges the cluster — stored-query/policy catalog writes (content-addressed under __cluster/resources/), graph creates, schema updates (soft drops only; --as records the actor), and graph deletes behind a digest-bound approval from cluster approve <resource> --as <actor> (apply/approve default the actor from the per-operator omnigraph.yaml's cli.actor when --as is omitted; nothing else in that file affects cluster commands); what apply converges is what an omnigraph-server --cluster <dir> deployment serves on its next restart (omnigraph.yaml deployments are unaffected); status reads the state ledger; refresh/import explicitly update local JSON state from read-only graph observations; force-unlock <LOCK_ID> manually removes a held local state lock by exact id |
optimize |
non-destructive Lance compaction (skips tables with Blob columns or uncovered drift; --json reports skipped) |
repair [--confirm] [--force] |
preview or explicitly publish uncovered manifest/head drift. --confirm heals verified maintenance drift and exits non-zero if suspicious/unverifiable drift is refused; --force --confirm publishes suspicious/unverifiable drift after operator review |
cleanup --keep N --older-than 7d --confirm |
destructive version GC |
embed |
offline JSONL embedding pipeline |
policy validate | test | explain |
Cedar tooling. Selects cli.graph, else server.graph, else top-level policy.file |
version / -v |
print omnigraph 0.3.x |
Command capabilities
Every command declares the capability it needs — what it requires to reach a graph — which determines the addressing flags that apply:
any—query,mutate,load,ingest,branch *,snapshot,export,commit *,schema show,schema apply. Run against a graph served (via a server) or embedded (direct against a store): accept a positionalfile:///s3://URI,--server <name|url>(+--graph <id>for multi-graph servers),--store <uri>, or--profile <name>. A remote server is addressed with--server— a positionalhttp(s)://URI does not dispatch to one.served—graphs list. Requires a server (accepts--server/--profile).direct—init,optimize,repair,cleanup,schema plan,queries validate,lint. Need direct storage access (file:///s3://), never through a server. They accept a positionalURI, but not--server/--graph, and a remote (http(s)://) URI is rejected.optimize/repair/cleanupalso accept--cluster <dir|s3://…> --cluster-graph <id>, which resolves the graph's storage URI from the served cluster state (so you needn't know the<storage>/graphs/<id>.omnilayout).control—cluster *. Operates on a cluster directory via--config <dir>.local—policy *,embed,login,logout,config,version,queries list. Address no graph.
These restrictions are enforced and reported, not silent:
- A served-graph flag (
--server/--graph) on a verb that doesn't reach a graph through a server fails loudly, e.g.:optimize is a direct (storage-native) command; --server/--graph address a served graph and do not apply. Pass a storage URI, or --cluster <dir> --cluster-graph <id>. - A
directverb pointed at a remote URI fails loudly, e.g.:optimize is a direct (storage-native) command and needs direct storage access; the resolved target is a remote server (https://…). Pass the graph's file:// or s3:// URI. - A data verb pointed at a positional
http(s)://URI fails loudly:a remote graph must be addressed with --server <url> — a positional (or --uri) http(s):// URL no longer dispatches to a server. initinto an established cluster's storage layout (<root>/graphs/<id>.omniwhere<root>holds__cluster/state.json) is refused — graphs in a cluster are created bycluster apply(which records ledger / recovery / approvals), notinit.
To maintain a server-backed graph, run the direct verbs from a host with storage access against the graph's storage URI (a positional URI, or --cluster … --cluster-graph …), out-of-band from the serving process — there are no server routes for optimize / repair / cleanup by design.
omnigraph --help lists commands with a capability legend at the bottom (any / served / direct / control / local).
Config surfaces
Two config surfaces with single owners, plus a zero-config tier:
| Surface | Owner | Location | Declares |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster config | the team, in a repo | cluster.yaml + checkout (cluster-config.md) |
what the system is: graphs, schemas, queries, policies, storage |
| Operator config | one person | ~/.omnigraph/config.yaml (override dir with $OMNIGRAPH_HOME) |
who I am: identity, ergonomics |
| Flags / env | per invocation | — | everything, explicitly |
omnigraph.yaml (below) is the legacy combined file — fully supported
today, slated for staged deprecation; its keys' future homes are
listed there.
~/.omnigraph/config.yaml (operator)
operator:
actor: act-andrew # default identity for every --as cascade:
# --as > legacy cli.actor > operator.actor > none
servers: # operator-owned endpoints; names key the credentials
prod:
url: https://graph.example.com # no tokens in this file, ever
defaults:
output: table # read format default, below --json/--format/alias/legacy
server: prod # the everyday scope when no address is given (RFC-011)
default_graph: knowledge # graph selected in a server/cluster scope
clusters: # admin-only: managed-cluster storage roots (RFC-011).
brain: # the ONLY place a storage root lives in this file.
root: s3://acme/clusters/brain
profiles: # named scope bundles (RFC-011); pick with --profile
staging: { server: staging, default_graph: knowledge } # a served scope
brain-admin: { cluster: brain, default_graph: knowledge } # a direct cluster scope
Absent file = empty layer. Unknown keys warn and load (a file written for a
newer CLI works on an older one). $OMNIGRAPH_CONFIG=<path> stands in for
--config (the flag wins) in both the CLI and the server.
Scopes & profiles (RFC-011)
A command resolves a scope — a server, a cluster, or a store — then selects a
graph in it; the served-vs-direct access path is derived from the scope, not
toggled. The scope comes from one of (highest precedence first): an explicit
address (a positional URI, --server, or --store <uri>); a named
--profile <name> (or $OMNIGRAPH_PROFILE); or the flat defaults.server +
defaults.default_graph. A profile binds exactly one of server / cluster
/ store plus an optional default graph — config data, not state: every command
resolves its scope fresh, there is no sticky "current" mode.
--store <uri>addresses a single graph's storage directly (ad-hoc / break-glass).- A
cluster-bound profile reachesoptimize/repair/cleanupfor a managed graph (resolving its storage root fromclusters:), the same as--cluster <root> --cluster-graph <id>. - A
server-bound scope on a maintenance verb, or acluster-bound scope on a data verb, is rejected with a message pointing at the right addressing.
--target and the positional-http(s)://→remote dispatch have been removed;
the remaining legacy surfaces (--cluster-graph, omnigraph.yaml's cli.graph
default) still work and an explicit address always wins.
Credentials keyed by server name
omnigraph login <name> stores a bearer token in
~/.omnigraph/credentials (created 0600; group/world-readable files are
refused). Token from --token, or — preferred, keeps it out of shell
history — one line on stdin: echo $TOKEN | omnigraph login prod.
omnigraph logout <name> removes it (idempotent).
Operator aliases — bindings, not content
An operator alias is a personal name for invoking a stored query on a named server — it carries no query content (the stored query in the catalog is the team's contract; the alias, its defaults, and its name are yours):
aliases:
triage:
server: intel-dev # names an entry under servers:
graph: spike # optional (multi-graph servers)
query: weekly_triage # the STORED query's name — never a file
args: [since] # positional args -> params, in order
params: { limit: 20 } # fixed defaults; positionals/--params win
format: table
omnigraph query --alias triage 2026-06-01 invokes
POST <server>/graphs/spike/queries/weekly_triage with the keyed
credential. A legacy omnigraph.yaml alias with the same name wins during
the deprecation window (with a warning).
A remote command whose URL prefix-matches an operator server's url (the
gh host model — no flags needed) resolves its token through:
| Order | Source |
|---|---|
| 1 | OMNIGRAPH_TOKEN_<NAME> env (prod → OMNIGRAPH_TOKEN_PROD) |
| 2 | [<name>] section in ~/.omnigraph/credentials |
| 3 | the legacy chain unchanged (bearer_token_env → OMNIGRAPH_BEARER_TOKEN → auth.env_file) |
A token is only ever sent to the server it is keyed to: URLs matching no operator server use the legacy chain alone.
omnigraph.yaml schema (legacy combined file)
Deprecated. Loading this file prints a per-key notice naming each present key's new home (suppress in CI with
OMNIGRAPH_SUPPRESS_YAML_DEPRECATION=1);omnigraph config migrateproduces the split. The file keeps working through the deprecation window. Migrated teams can setOMNIGRAPH_NO_LEGACY_CONFIG=1to turn any legacy-file load into a hard error (regression guard; the file's absence is always fine).
project: { name }
graphs:
<name>:
uri: <local|s3://|http(s)://>
bearer_token_env: <ENV_NAME>
queries: # per-graph stored-query registry (server-role; multi-graph mode)
<query-name>: # key MUST equal the `query <name>` symbol inside the .gq
file: <path-to-.gq> # relative to this config's directory
mcp:
expose: true # default true: listed in the MCP catalog (GET /queries); set false to hide (still HTTP-callable)
tool_name: <name> # optional MCP tool-name override (defaults to <query-name>;
# must be unique across exposed queries)
server:
graph: <name>
bind: <ip:port>
cli:
graph: <name>
branch: <name>
output_format: json|jsonl|csv|kv|table
table_max_column_width: 80
table_cell_layout: truncate|wrap
query:
roots: [<dir>, …] # search path for .gq files
auth:
env_file: .env.omni
aliases:
<alias>:
# accepted values: `read` / `query` (read alias), `change` / `mutate`
# (write alias). `query` and `mutate` are recommended; `read` and
# `change` remain accepted forever for back-compat.
command: read|change|query|mutate
query: <path-to-.gq>
name: <query-name>
args: [<positional-name>, …]
graph: <name>
branch: <name>
format: <output-format>
queries: # top-level registry — applies only to a bare-URI (anonymous) graph; a graph served by name uses its `graphs.<id>.queries`. Mirrors top-level `policy`.
<query-name>: { file: <path-to-.gq> } # mcp.expose defaults to true
policy:
file: policy.yaml
Cluster config preview
omnigraph cluster validate --config company-brain
omnigraph cluster plan --config company-brain --json
omnigraph cluster apply --config company-brain --json
omnigraph cluster approve graph.<id> --config company-brain --as <actor>
omnigraph cluster status --config company-brain --json
omnigraph cluster refresh --config company-brain --json
omnigraph cluster import --config company-brain --json
omnigraph cluster force-unlock <LOCK_ID> --config company-brain --json
--config is a directory containing cluster.yaml; it defaults to ..
Stage 3A accepts graphs, schemas, stored queries, and policy bundle file
references. cluster plan reads local JSON state from
<config-dir>/__cluster/state.json; a missing file means empty state. Plan,
apply, refresh, and import acquire __cluster/lock.json by default and release
it before returning. cluster apply executes only stored-query/policy catalog
writes (content-addressed under __cluster/resources/) and requires an
existing state.json; graph/schema changes are deferred with warnings, and
applied resources do not serve traffic — the server still boots from
omnigraph.yaml. cluster status reads state only and reports any existing
lock metadata. force-unlock removes a lock only when the supplied id exactly
matches the lock file. refresh requires an existing state.json; import
creates one only when it is missing. Both observe declared graphs read-only at
<config-dir>/graphs/<graph-id>.omni. External state backends, graph/schema
apply, automatic stale-lock breaking, plan --refresh, pipelines, UI specs,
embeddings, aliases, and bindings are reserved for later stages. See
cluster-config.md.
Output formats (query command, alias: read)
json— pretty-printed object with metadata + rowsjsonl— one metadata line then one JSON object per rowcsv— RFC 4180-ish quotingtable— fitted text table, honorstable_max_column_width+table_cell_layoutkv— grouped per-row key/value blocks
Param resolution
Precedence (high to low): explicit --params / --params-file, alias positional args, omnigraph.yaml defaults. JS-safe-integer handling is built in (is_js_safe_integer_i64, JS_MAX_SAFE_INTEGER_U64) so 64-bit ids round-trip safely through JSON clients.
Bearer token resolution (CLI)
graphs.<name>.bearer_token_envOMNIGRAPH_BEARER_TOKENglobal envauth.env_filereferenced.env
Duration parsing (cleanup)
s | m | h | d | w units, e.g. --older-than 7d.