* docs: audit pass — drop pre-0.7.0 release notes; scrub RFC refs from user docs
- Delete the pre-0.7.0 release-notes archive (v0.2.0 … v0.6.2); keep v0.7.0.
- Rewrite every inline "RFC-0NN" citation in docs/user/** into durable
plain language (the behavior is the contract, not the planning doc):
cli/index.md, cli/reference.md, clusters/index.md, operations/{maintenance,
policy,server}.md. Updated the in-page "Scopes & profiles" anchor to match
the de-RFC'd heading.
No sub-0.7.0 version caveats or stale Lance-version refs were present in
docs/user/**. Dev docs, AGENTS.md, and instruction files are out of scope for
this pass.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
* docs: second alignment pass — drop residual pre-cluster-only framing
- cli/reference.md: rewrite the server-scope graph-resolution rule — an
omnigraph-server is always cluster-backed, so GET /graphs always answers and
--graph is required; the bare-URL path is only the fallback for an
unavailable/non-omnigraph endpoint (was "a single-graph / flat server …
uses its bare URL as before").
- embeddings.md: "Direct single-graph serving" → "Direct (--store) access"
(there is no single-graph serving mode under cluster-only).
- clusters/{config,index}.md: drop the removed --target flag from the
"--cluster cannot combine with …" clauses.
Verified: no Linear tickets, no RFC refs, no single-graph-as-current, no
--target-as-combinable in docs/user/**.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
7.3 KiB
CLI Guide
Core Graph Flow
omnigraph init --schema schema.pg graph.omni
omnigraph load --data data.jsonl --mode overwrite graph.omni
omnigraph snapshot graph.omni --branch main --json
# Invoke a stored query BY NAME from the catalog (served — addressed by scope):
omnigraph query get_person --params '{"name":"Alice"}'
omnigraph mutate insert_person --params '{"name":"Mina","age":28}'
omnigraph query is the canonical read command (pairs with POST /query);
omnigraph mutate is the canonical write command (pairs with POST /mutate).
The positional argument is the stored-query name, invoked from the served
catalog — the graph is addressed by scope (--server / --profile
/ defaults), and the verb asserts the query's kind (query rejects a stored
mutation, and vice-versa). The previous names omnigraph read and
omnigraph change keep working as visible aliases — invocations emit a one-line
deprecation warning to stderr. See Deprecated names.
For ad-hoc reads and mutations (REPLs, AI agents, one-off scripts, local dev),
pass the GQ source with -e / --query-string (inline) or --query <path> (a
file), and address a graph's storage directly with --store. By-name catalog
invocation is served-only — a bare --store has no catalog, so it's the ad-hoc
lane:
omnigraph query --store graph.omni \
-e 'query find($name: String) { match { $p: Person { name: $name } } return { $p.name, $p.age } }' \
--params '{"name":"Alice"}'
omnigraph mutate --store graph.omni \
-e 'query add($name: String, $age: I32) { insert Person { name: $name, age: $age } }' \
--params '{"name":"Inline","age":42}'
# A multi-query file: the positional selects which query to run.
omnigraph query --store graph.omni --query queries.gq get_person --params '{"name":"Alice"}'
-e is mutually exclusive with --query <path>. With either, the positional
name (optional) selects which query in the source to run. The inline source
travels through the same parser, lint, params binding, and commit machinery as a
file-based query — only the source loader changes.
Branching And Reviewable Data Flows
omnigraph branch create --uri graph.omni --from main feature-x
omnigraph branch list --uri graph.omni
omnigraph branch merge --uri graph.omni feature-x --into main
omnigraph load --data batch.jsonl --branch review/import-2026-04-09 --from main --mode merge graph.omni
omnigraph export graph.omni --branch main --type Person > people.jsonl
omnigraph commit list graph.omni --branch main --json
omnigraph commit show --uri graph.omni <commit-id> --json
Remote Server Mode
Serve a cluster-applied graph:
omnigraph cluster apply --config ./company-brain
omnigraph-server --cluster ./company-brain --bind 127.0.0.1:8080
Read through the HTTP API — invoke a stored query by name from the catalog:
omnigraph query get_person \
--server http://127.0.0.1:8080 \
--params '{"name":"Alice"}'
A server is addressed with --server (a name from ~/.omnigraph/config.yaml or a
literal URL); a positional http(s):// URI is rejected. If the server requires
auth, set its bearer token and omnigraph login <server> (or
OMNIGRAPH_BEARER_TOKEN).
Multi-graph servers
A server boots from a cluster directory (omnigraph-server --cluster <dir>) and
serves every graph the cluster declares. Use omnigraph graphs list to enumerate
them. The cluster's server-level policy must allow graph_list; /graphs is
closed by default even when the server runs with --unauthenticated.
OMNIGRAPH_BEARER_TOKEN=admin-token \
omnigraph graphs list --server http://server.example.com --json
For an operator-defined server, store its token with omnigraph login <name> (or
OMNIGRAPH_TOKEN_<NAME>); the actor must be authorized by the cluster's
server-level policy.
list rejects local (--store) targets — it's for remote multi-graph servers only.
Runtime add/remove via API is not exposed. To add or remove a graph, edit the
cluster's cluster.yaml, run omnigraph cluster apply, then restart the server.
Per-graph addressing: select a graph on a multi-graph server with --graph:
omnigraph query get_person --server http://server.example.com --graph beta --params '{"name":"Ada"}'
Runs, Policy, And Diagnostics
omnigraph lint --query queries.gq --schema schema.pg --json
omnigraph check --query queries.gq graph.omni --json
omnigraph schema plan --schema next.pg graph.omni --json
omnigraph schema apply --schema next.pg graph.omni --json
omnigraph policy validate --cluster ./company-brain --graph knowledge
omnigraph policy test --cluster ./company-brain --graph knowledge --tests policy.tests.yaml
omnigraph policy explain --cluster ./company-brain --graph knowledge --actor act-alice --action read --branch main
omnigraph commit list graph.omni --json
omnigraph commit show --uri graph.omni <commit-id> --json
(Mutations and loads publish atomically; the commit graph (omnigraph commit list) is the audit surface.)
query lint and query check are the same command surface. In v1, graph-backed
lint uses local or s3:// graph URIs; HTTP targets are only supported when you
also pass --schema.
Config
Configuration has two surfaces with single owners (see the CLI reference for the full schema):
~/.omnigraph/config.yaml— your personal operator config: default actor (--as), named servers + credentials, clusters, profiles, aliases, and default scope (defaults.server/defaults.store/default_graph). It decides who you are and what you address by default.cluster.yaml(a team-owned cluster directory) — declares what the system is: graphs, schemas, stored queries, policies, and storage. A server boots from it (--cluster <dir>); see the cluster guide.
# ~/.omnigraph/config.yaml
operator:
actor: act-andrew
servers:
dev:
url: http://127.0.0.1:8080
defaults:
server: dev
default_graph: knowledge
When policy is enabled, schema apply is authorized through the
schema_apply action and is typically limited to admins on protected main.
Deprecated names
The CLI was renamed to align with the HTTP server's canonical endpoint
names (POST /query, POST /mutate) and the query keyword in the GQ
language. The previous spellings keep working forever; invocations emit a
one-line warning to stderr and otherwise behave identically.
| Old (deprecated) | New (canonical) | Migration |
|---|---|---|
omnigraph read |
omnigraph query |
Same flags and behavior. read is a visible clap alias. |
omnigraph change |
omnigraph mutate |
Same flags and behavior. change is a visible clap alias. |
omnigraph query lint |
omnigraph lint |
Same flags. The argv-level shim rewrites query lint to lint. |
omnigraph query check |
omnigraph check |
check is a visible alias of omnigraph lint. |
The command: field in aliases.<name> in ~/.omnigraph/config.yaml accepts
both read / change (legacy) and query / mutate (canonical); the two
spellings are interchangeable on the wire via serde aliases.