Terminal tells you nothing. This shows you everything.
A desktop app that reconstructs exactly what Claude Code did — every file path, every tool call, every token — from the raw session logs already on your machine.
No API keys. No configuration. Just download, open, and see everything Claude Code did.
--- ## Installation | Platform | Download | Notes | |----------|----------|-------| | **macOS** (Apple Silicon) | [`.dmg`](https://github.com/matt1398/claude-devtools/releases/latest) | Drag to Applications. On first launch: right-click → Open | | **Windows** | [`.exe`](https://github.com/matt1398/claude-devtools/releases/latest) | Standard installer. May trigger SmartScreen — click "More info" → "Run anyway" | The app reads session logs from `~/.claude/` — the data is already on your machine. No setup, no API keys, no login. --- ## Why This Exists ### Claude Code stopped telling you what it's doing. Recent Claude Code updates replaced detailed tool output with opaque summaries. `Read 3 files`. `Searched for 1 pattern`. `Edited 2 files`. No paths, no content, no line numbers. The context usage indicator became a three-segment progress bar with no breakdown. To get the details back, the only option is `--verbose` — which dumps raw JSON, internal system prompts, and thousands of lines of noise into your terminal. **There is no middle ground in the CLI.** You either see too little or too much. claude-devtools restores the information that was taken away — structured, searchable, and without a single modification to Claude Code itself. It reads the raw session logs from `~/.claude/` and reconstructs the full execution trace: every file path that was read, every regex that was searched, every diff that was applied, every token that was consumed — organized into a visual interface you can actually reason about. ### The wrapper problem. There are many GUI wrappers for Claude Code — Conductor, Craft Agents, Vibe Kanban, 1Code, ccswitch, and others. I tried them all. None of them solved the actual problem: **They wrap Claude Code.** They inject their own prompts, add their own abstractions, and change how Claude behaves. If you love the terminal — and I do — you don't want that. You want Claude Code exactly as it is. **They only show their own sessions.** Run something in the terminal? It doesn't exist in their UI. You can only see what was executed through *their* tool. The terminal and the GUI are two separate worlds. **You can't debug what went wrong.** A session failed — but why? The context filled up too fast — but what consumed it? A subagent spawned 5 child agents — but what did they do? Even in the terminal, scrolling back through a long session to reconstruct what happened is nearly impossible. **You can't monitor what matters.** Want to know when Claude reads `.env`? When a single tool call exceeds 4K tokens of context? When a teammate sends a shutdown request? You'd have to wire up hooks manually, every time, for every project. **claude-devtools takes a different approach.** It doesn't wrap or modify Claude Code at all. It reads the session logs that already exist on your machine (`~/.claude/`) and turns them into a rich, interactive interface — regardless of whether the session ran in the terminal, in an IDE, or through another tool. > Zero configuration. No API keys. Works with every session you've ever run. --- ## Key Features ### :mag: Visible Context Reconstruction Claude Code doesn't expose what's actually in the context window. claude-devtools reverse-engineers it. The engine walks each turn of the session and reconstructs the full set of context injections — **CLAUDE.md files** (broken down by global, project, and directory-level), **skill activations**, **@-mentioned files**, **tool call inputs and outputs**, **extended thinking**, **team coordination overhead**, and **user prompt text** — then accumulates them across turns with compaction awareness. **Compaction visualization.** When Claude Code hits its context limit, it silently compresses your conversation and continues. Most tools don't even notice. claude-devtools detects these compaction boundaries, measures the token delta before and after, and visualizes how your context fills, compresses, and refills over the course of a session. You can see exactly what was in the window at any point, and how the composition shifted after each compaction. The result is a per-turn breakdown of estimated token attribution across 7 categories, surfaced in three places: a **Context Badge** on each assistant response, a **Token Usage popover** with percentage breakdowns, and a dedicated **Session Context Panel** with drill-down into every injection across compaction boundaries. ### :hammer_and_wrench: Rich Tool Call Inspector Every tool call is paired with its result in an expandable card. Specialized viewers render each tool natively: - **Read** calls show syntax-highlighted code with line numbers - **Edit** calls show inline diffs with added/removed highlighting - **Bash** calls show command output - **Subagent** calls show the full execution tree, expandable in-place ### :bell: Custom Notification Triggers Define rules for when you want to receive **system notifications**. Match on regex patterns, assign colors, and filter your inbox by trigger. Built-in triggers catch common errors out of the box; add your own for project-specific patterns. ### :busts_in_silhouette: Team & Subagent Visualization Claude Code now spawns subagents via the Task tool and coordinates entire teams via `TeamCreate`, `SendMessage`, and `TaskUpdate`. In the terminal, all of this collapses into an unreadable stream. claude-devtools untangles it. - **Subagent sessions** are resolved from Task tool calls and rendered as expandable inline cards — each with its own tool trace, token metrics, duration, and cost. Nested subagents (agents spawning agents) render as a recursive tree. - **Teammate messages** — sent via `SendMessage` with color and summary metadata — are detected and rendered as distinct color-coded cards, separated from regular user messages. Each teammate is identified by name and assigned color. - **Team lifecycle** is fully visible: `TeamCreate` initialization, `TaskCreate`/`TaskUpdate` coordination, `SendMessage` direct messages and broadcasts, shutdown requests and responses, and `TeamDelete` teardown. - **Session summary** shows distinct teammate count separately from subagent count, so you can tell at a glance how many agents participated and how work was distributed. ### :zap: Command Palette & Cross-Session Search Hit **Cmd+K** for a Spotlight-style command palette. Search across all sessions in a project — results show context snippets with highlighted keywords. Navigate directly to the exact message. ### :globe_with_meridians: SSH Remote Sessions Connect to any remote machine over SSH and inspect Claude Code sessions running there — same interface, no compromise. claude-devtools parses your `~/.ssh/config` for host aliases, supports agent forwarding, private keys, and password auth, then opens an SFTP channel to stream session logs from the remote `~/.claude/` directory. Each SSH host gets its own isolated service context with independent caches, file watchers, and parsers. Switching between local and remote workspaces is instant — the app snapshots your current state to IndexedDB before the switch and restores it when you return, tabs and all. ### :bar_chart: Multi-Pane Layout Open multiple sessions side-by-side. Drag-and-drop tabs between panes, split views, and compare sessions in parallel — like a proper IDE for your AI conversations. --- ## What the CLI Hides vs. What claude-devtools Shows | What you see in the terminal | What claude-devtools shows you | |------------------------------|-------------------------------| | `Read 3 files` | Exact file paths, syntax-highlighted content with line numbers | | `Searched for 1 pattern` | The regex pattern, every matching file, and the matched lines | | `Edited 2 files` | Inline diffs with added/removed highlighting per file | | A three-segment context bar | Per-turn token attribution across 7 categories — CLAUDE.md breakdown, skills, @-mentions, tool I/O, thinking, teams, user text — with compaction visualization showing how context fills, compresses, and refills | | Subagent output interleaved with the main thread | Isolated execution trees per agent, expandable inline with their own metrics | | Teammate messages buried in session logs | Color-coded teammate cards with name, message, and full team lifecycle visibility | | `--verbose` JSON dump | Structured, filterable, navigable interface — no noise | --- ## Development