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brennerspear

Self Reflection

by BrennerSpear · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0
cross-platform ⚠ suspicious
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Install in OpenClaw
/install agent-self-reflection
Description
Periodic self-reflection on recent sessions. Analyzes what went well, what went wrong, and writes concise, actionable insights to the appropriate workspace f...
README (SKILL.md)

Self-Reflection Skill

Reflect on recent sessions and extract actionable insights. Runs hourly via cron.

Step 1: Gather Recent Sessions

# List sessions active in the last 2 hours
openclaw sessions --active 120 --json

Parse the output to get session keys and IDs. Skip subagent sessions (they're task workers, not interesting for reflection). Focus on:

  • Telegram group/topic sessions (real user interactions)
  • Direct sessions (1:1 with Brenner)
  • Cron-triggered sessions (how did automated tasks go?)

Step 2: Read Session History

For each interesting session from Step 1, read the JSONL transcript:

# Read the last ~50 lines of each session file (keep it bounded!)
tail -50 ~/.openclaw/agents/main/sessions/\x3CsessionId>.jsonl

⚠️ CRITICAL: Never load full session files. Use tail -50 or Read with offset/limit. Sessions can be 100k+ tokens.

Parse the JSONL to understand what happened. Look for:

  • type: "user" or type: "human" — what was asked
  • type: "assistant" — what you responded
  • type: "tool_use" / type: "tool_result" — what tools were called and results
  • Error patterns, retries, confusion

Step 3: Analyze & Extract Insights

For each session, ask yourself:

What went well?

  • Tasks completed smoothly on first try
  • Good tool usage patterns worth reinforcing
  • Efficient approaches to remember

What went wrong?

  • Errors, retries, wrong approaches
  • Misunderstandings of user intent
  • Tools that didn't work as expected
  • Context that was missing

Lessons learned?

  • "Next time, do X instead of Y"
  • "Remember that Z works this way"
  • "Tool A needs parameter B or it fails"
  • "When user says X, they usually mean Y"

Quality bar: Each insight must be:

  • Specific — not "be more careful" but "check if file exists before editing"
  • Actionable — something future-you can directly apply
  • Non-obvious — skip things any competent agent would know
  • New — don't repeat insights already captured

Step 4: Route Insights to the Right Files

Each insight belongs somewhere specific. Route them:

AGENTS.md

  • Process improvements (how to handle sessions, memory, etc.)
  • New conventions or workflow rules
  • Safety lessons

TOOLS.md

  • Tool-specific gotchas ("gog needs --json flag for parsing")
  • Environment details (paths, configs, quirks)
  • New tool patterns discovered

memory/YYYY-MM-DD.md (today's date)

  • Session-specific context ("Brenner asked about X project")
  • Temporary facts that matter today but not forever
  • What happened today (events, decisions, requests)

memory/about-user.md

  • New preferences discovered
  • Communication style observations
  • Project/interest updates

skills/\x3Cskill-name>/SKILL.md

  • Improvements to specific skill instructions
  • Bug fixes in skill workflows
  • New parameters or approaches for a skill

MEMORY.md

  • Updates to the memory index if new memory files are created

Step 5: Write the Insights

For each insight, append or edit the appropriate file. Use the Edit tool for surgical changes to existing content. Use append (write to end) for daily memory files.

Format for daily memory files:

## Self-Reflection — HH:MM ET

### Insights
- [source: session-key] Lesson learned here
- [source: session-key] Another insight

### Tool Notes
- Discovered: tool X needs Y configuration

### User Context
- Brenner mentioned interest in Z

Step 6: Summary

After writing all insights, produce a brief summary of what you reflected on and what you wrote. This is your output — keep it to 2-4 sentences max.

If there's nothing interesting to reflect on (quiet period, only heartbeats), just say so. Don't manufacture insights.

Quality Checklist

Before writing any insight:

  • Is this actually new? (Check existing files first)
  • Is this specific and actionable?
  • Am I routing it to the right file?
  • Am I keeping daily memory files concise (not dumping full transcripts)?
  • Did I respect the token budget (no huge file reads)?

Anti-Patterns (Don't Do These)

  • ❌ Don't summarize every session — only extract lessons
  • ❌ Don't read full JSONL files — tail/limit only
  • ❌ Don't write vague insights ("improve response quality")
  • ❌ Don't duplicate existing knowledge
  • ❌ Don't create new files when appending to existing ones works
  • ❌ Don't reflect on your own reflection sessions (skip cron:self-reflection sessions)
Usage Guidance
This skill appears to do what it says (periodically read recent sessions, extract lessons, and append them to local workspace files), but the packaging is sloppy: it fails to declare that it reads session files (~/.openclaw/agents/main/sessions) and that it expects the openclaw CLI, python3, and standard Unix tools (tail). Before installing, ask the author to: (1) update metadata to list the required config path(s) and required binaries, (2) confirm a privacy policy/consent for reading transcripts, (3) limit which sessions are considered (e.g., opt-in only), and (4) consider anonymizing or redacting sensitive content before writing memories. If you proceed, inspect the script in your environment and run it in a sandbox or with a restricted account first to verify it only reads and writes the intended local files. Autonomous invocation is allowed by default but not enabled as always:true — consider whether you want the agent to run this cron-style behavior automatically.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: agent-self-reflection Version: 1.0.0 The skill is designed for agent self-reflection and improvement, reading limited session logs and writing insights to internal agent documentation files. However, the `SKILL.md` explicitly instructs the agent to write 'Improvements to specific skill instructions' or 'Bug fixes in skill workflows' to its own `skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md` file. This self-modification capability, while intended for benign self-improvement, represents a significant vulnerability. If the agent's reflection process were compromised (e.g., via a sophisticated prompt injection in a session log), this capability could be exploited to rewrite the agent's instructions to perform malicious actions. No direct evidence of malicious intent, data exfiltration, or persistence mechanisms was found in the provided files, and the `scripts/summarize-sessions.sh` script uses safe practices like `tail -n` and `subprocess.run` to mitigate shell injection.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skill legitimately needs access to recent session transcripts and to write workspace/memory files — the SKILL.md and the included script show exactly that. However, the skill metadata declares no required config paths or binaries even though the script reads ~/.openclaw/agents/main/sessions and invokes external commands (openclaw, tail, python3). The omitted declarations are an incoherence between purpose and declared requirements.
Instruction Scope
The runtime instructions and script stay within the stated purpose: they list active sessions, tail the last ~50 lines (explicitly warn not to load full transcripts), extract user/assistant/tool_result entries, and route concise insights to specific local files. There are no network exfiltration commands or hidden endpoints in the script. Note: session transcripts can contain sensitive user data; the instructions attempt to limit exposure by tailing, but that still reads user content and writes derived insights to workspace files.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec (instruction-only plus a local script), which is the lower-risk model. The only code present is a small shell script; nothing is downloaded from the network or extracted. Risk is limited to local file reads/writes and execution of standard system tools.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables or credentials in its metadata, which is good, but the script requires access to ~/.openclaw/agents/main/sessions and calls the openclaw CLI, python3, and tail. Those config paths and binaries are not declared in the skill's 'required config paths' or 'required binaries' fields—this is a proportionality and disclosure gap. No external credentials are requested, which is appropriate for the task.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill does not request always:true and does not modify other skills or global agent settings. It writes to workspace files (AGENTS.md, TOOLS.md, memory/*, etc.) which is appropriate for a reflection task, but users should verify write targets are acceptable.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install agent-self-reflection
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /agent-self-reflection
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Auto-publish from CI
Metadata
Slug agent-self-reflection
Version 1.0.0
License
All-time Installs 15
Active Installs 14
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Self Reflection?

Periodic self-reflection on recent sessions. Analyzes what went well, what went wrong, and writes concise, actionable insights to the appropriate workspace f... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 1641 downloads so far.

How do I install Self Reflection?

Run "/install agent-self-reflection" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Self Reflection free?

Yes, Self Reflection is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Self Reflection support?

Self Reflection is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Self Reflection?

It is built and maintained by BrennerSpear (@brennerspear); the current version is v1.0.0.

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