You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Build a local web-based UI (the "VRE Workstation") that allows users to interactively explore the epistemic graph — clicking nodes to inspect depths and relata, creating edges via drag-and-connect, tailing live trace activity, viewing and defining policies, and managing VRE networks. Launched via a new CLI command.
Problem Statement
The epistemic graph is currently operable only through code — the Python API, seed scripts, and the policy wizard CLI. There is no visual way to:
Explore the graph structure and understand how concepts relate
Inspect a node's depth levels, properties, and relata at a glance
Navigate relata as links to connected nodes
Watch grounding activity in real time as the agent operates
Define or modify policies on relata
For graph authors and integrators, this means understanding the graph requires reading Neo4j queries or printing EpistemicResult objects. For users reviewing agent behavior, there is no way to see what the agent knew (or didn't know) at a given point in time without parsing raw trace data.
Proposed Solution
A lightweight local web application served by FastAPI with WebSocket support:
Graph Visualization
Interactive node-link diagram of the epistemic graph
Visual encoding of depth levels (e.g. color intensity, node size) and provenance source
WebSocket-driven live updates: nodes "light up" in real time when the graph is queried during agent operation, giving users a live view of epistemic activity
Node Inspector Panel
Click a node to reveal a detail panel showing:
All depth levels with their properties
All relata (incoming and outgoing) with type, depth annotations, and links to target/source nodes
Drag-and-connect interaction to propose new relata between nodes
Form to specify relation type, source depth, and target depth
Persists to the graph via the repository layer
Live Trace Viewer
Tails the current day's JSONL trace log in real time via WebSocket
Each trace entry is a single-line summary: concepts queried, gaps encountered, learning outcomes, grounding result
Option to retrieve and browse previous days' trace files when available
Filtering by concept, result type, date
Policy Management
View policies attached to APPLIES_TO relata
Define new policies or modify existing ones through a form interface
Policy evaluation dry-run against current graph state
CLI Launch
New CLI command (e.g. vre workstation or vre ui) to start the local server
Configurable port, optional browser auto-open
Architecture
Backend: FastAPI with WebSocket endpoints for live graph activity and trace tailing
Frontend: lightweight SPA (technology TBD — could be vanilla JS, htmx, or a small framework)
Local-only: serves on localhost, no authentication required, no cloud dependency
Read-write: the workstation can modify the graph (edge creation, policy definition) through the same repository interface the engine uses
Prerequisite for VRE Networks: the workstation will serve as the management interface for VRE network configuration and monitoring
VRE Design Alignment
Inspectability: CLAUDE.md Section 8 lists inspectability as the first optimization criterion. A visual UI with live activity is the most direct expression of this value.
Epistemic honesty made visible: The workstation makes the agent's knowledge boundaries tangible — users can see exactly what the agent knows, at what depth, and why, in real time.
No VRE contract changes: The workstation is a UI layer over existing APIs. It does not modify the grounding contract, policy evaluation, or learning loop.
Minimal footprint: FastAPI + a lightweight frontend adds minimal dependencies. The UI is local-only and infrastructure-free.
Acceptance Criteria
FastAPI application with WebSocket support, launched via CLI command
Graph visualization displaying all primitives and relata
WebSocket-driven node highlighting when concepts are queried in real time
Node click reveals detail panel with depths, properties, relata (as navigable links), and provenance
Drag-and-connect edge creation with relation type and depth annotation
Live trace viewer tailing current day's JSONL with WebSocket updates
Option to load and browse previous days' trace logs
Policy viewer displaying policies on APPLIES_TO relata
Policy creation/modification form
Aggregate metrics displayed per node (when available)
Works with both Neo4j and future repository backends
Open Questions
What frontend technology? htmx keeps it simple and server-rendered; a JS framework (Svelte, React) enables richer interactivity but adds build complexity
Should the graph visualization use a specific library (e.g. d3-force, cytoscape.js, vis.js)?
Should the workstation support graph seeding/import (e.g. upload a seed script or JSON)?
Should there be a read-only mode for safe exploration vs. a write mode for graph authoring?
What WebSocket message format for live graph activity — just node IDs that were touched, or richer event payloads?
Summary
Build a local web-based UI (the "VRE Workstation") that allows users to interactively explore the epistemic graph — clicking nodes to inspect depths and relata, creating edges via drag-and-connect, tailing live trace activity, viewing and defining policies, and managing VRE networks. Launched via a new CLI command.
Problem Statement
The epistemic graph is currently operable only through code — the Python API, seed scripts, and the policy wizard CLI. There is no visual way to:
For graph authors and integrators, this means understanding the graph requires reading Neo4j queries or printing
EpistemicResultobjects. For users reviewing agent behavior, there is no way to see what the agent knew (or didn't know) at a given point in time without parsing raw trace data.Proposed Solution
A lightweight local web application served by FastAPI with WebSocket support:
Graph Visualization
Node Inspector Panel
Edge Creation
Live Trace Viewer
Policy Management
CLI Launch
vre workstationorvre ui) to start the local serverArchitecture
VRE Design Alignment
Acceptance Criteria
Open Questions
Dependencies