Show HN: Hc: an agentless, multi-tenant shell history sink
Hacker News (score: 22)Description
The core mechanism wants to be a "zero-touch" capture that happens at the connection gateway level. Instead of installing logging agents or scripts on every target machine, the tool reconstructs your terminal sessions from raw recording files generated by the proxy you use to connect. This "in-flight" capture means you get a high-fidelity log of every keystroke and output without ever having to touch the configuration of the remote host. It’s a passive way to build a personal knowledge base while you work.
To handle the reality of context-switching, the tool is designed with a "multi-tenant" architecture. For an individual engineer, this isn't about managing different users, but about isolating project contexts. It automatically categorizes history based on the specific organization or project tags defined at the gateway. This keeps your work for different clients or personal side-projects in separate buckets, so you don't have to wade through unrelated noise when you're looking for a specific solution.
In true nerd fashion, the search interface stays exactly where you want it: in the command line. There is no bloated web UI to slow you down. The tool turns your entire professional history into a searchable, greppable database accessible directly from your terminal.
Please read the full story [here](https://carminatialessandro.blogspot.com/2026/01/hc-agentles...)
More from Hacker
Show HN: Ayder – HTTP-native durable event log written in C (curl as client)
Show HN: Ayder – HTTP-native durable event log written in C (curl as client) Hi HN,<p>I built Ayder — a single-binary, HTTP-native durable event log written in C. The wedge is simple: curl is the client (no JVM, no ZooKeeper, no thick client libs).<p>There’s a 2-minute demo that starts with an unclean SIGKILL, then restarts and verifies offsets + data are still there.<p>Numbers (3-node Raft, real network, sync-majority writes, 64B payload): ~50K msg/s sustained (wrk2 @ 50K req/s), client P99 ~3.46ms. Crash recovery after SIGKILL is ~40–50s with ~8M offsets.<p>Repo link has the video, benchmarks, and quick start. I’m looking for a few early design partners (any event ingestion/streaming workload).
Useful patterns for building HTML tools
Useful patterns for building HTML tools
Migrating to Positron, a next-generation data science IDE for Python and R
Migrating to Positron, a next-generation data science IDE for Python and R
Bonsai_term: A library for building dynamic terminal apps by Jane Street
Bonsai_term: A library for building dynamic terminal apps by Jane Street
No other tools from this source yet.