claude-team
Claude Team
Claude-team is an MCP server that lets you spawn and manage teams of Claude Code sessions via iTerm2. Each worker gets their own terminal pane, optional git worktree, and can be assigned beads issues.
Why Use Claude Team?
- Parallelism: Fan out work to multiple agents working simultaneously
- Context isolation: Each worker has fresh context, keeps coordinator context clean
- Visibility: Real Claude Code sessions you can watch, interrupt, or take over
- Git worktrees: Each worker can have an isolated branch for their work
⚠️ Important Rule
NEVER make code changes directly. Always spawn workers for code changes. This keeps your context clean and provides proper git workflow with worktrees.
Prerequisites
- macOS with iTerm2 (Python API enabled: Preferences → General → Magic → Enable Python API)
- claude-team MCP server configured in
~/.claude.json
Using via mcporter
All tools are called through mcporter call claude-team.<tool>:
mcporter call claude-team.list_workers
mcporter call claude-team.spawn_workers workers='[{"project_path":"/path/to/repo","bead":"cp-123"}]'
Core Tools
spawn_workers
Create new Claude Code worker sessions.
mcporter call claude-team.spawn_workers \
workers='[{
"project_path": "/path/to/repo",
"bead": "cp-123",
"annotation": "Fix auth bug",
"use_worktree": true,
"skip_permissions": true
}]' \
layout="auto"
Worker config fields:
project_path: Required. Path to repo or "auto" (uses CLAUDE_TEAM_PROJECT_DIR)bead: Optional beads issue ID — worker will follow beads workflowannotation: Task description (shown on badge, used in branch name)prompt: Additional instructions (if no bead, this is their assignment)use_worktree: Create isolated git worktree (default: true)skip_permissions: Start with --dangerously-skip-permissions (default: false)name: Optional worker name override (auto-picks from themed sets otherwise)
Layout options:
"auto": Reuse existing claude-team windows, split into available space"new": Always create fresh window (1-4 workers in grid layout)
list_workers
See all managed workers:
mcporter call claude-team.list_workers
mcporter call claude-team.list_workers status_filter="ready"
Status values: spawning, ready, busy, closed
message_workers
Send messages to one or more workers:
mcporter call claude-team.message_workers \
session_ids='["Groucho"]' \
message="Please also add unit tests" \
wait_mode="none"
wait_mode options:
"none": Fire and forget (default)"any": Return when any worker is idle"all": Return when all workers are idle
check_idle_workers / wait_idle_workers
Check or wait for workers to finish:
# Quick poll
mcporter call claude-team.check_idle_workers session_ids='["Groucho","Harpo"]'
# Blocking wait
mcporter call claude-team.wait_idle_workers \
session_ids='["Groucho","Harpo"]' \
mode="all" \
timeout=600
read_worker_logs
Get conversation history:
mcporter call claude-team.read_worker_logs \
session_id="Groucho" \
pages=2
examine_worker
Get detailed status including conversation stats:
mcporter call claude-team.examine_worker session_id="Groucho"
close_workers
Terminate workers when done:
mcporter call claude-team.close_workers session_ids='["Groucho","Harpo"]'
⚠️ Worktree cleanup: Workers with worktrees commit to ephemeral branches. After closing:
- Review commits on the worker's branch
- Merge or cherry-pick to a persistent branch
- Delete the branch:
git branch -D <branch-name>
bd_help
Quick reference for beads commands:
mcporter call claude-team.bd_help
Worker Identification
Workers can be referenced by any of:
- Internal ID: Short hex string (e.g.,
3962c5c4) - Terminal ID:
iterm:UUIDformat - Worker name: Human-friendly name (e.g.,
Groucho,Aragorn)
Workflow: Assigning a Beads Issue
# 1. Spawn worker with a bead assignment
mcporter call claude-team.spawn_workers \
workers='[{
"project_path": "/Users/phaedrus/Projects/myrepo",
"bead": "proj-abc",
"annotation": "Implement config schemas",
"use_worktree": true,
"skip_permissions": true
}]'
# 2. Worker automatically:
# - Creates worktree with branch named after bead
# - Runs `bd show proj-abc` to understand the task
# - Marks issue in_progress
# - Implements the work
# - Closes the issue
# - Commits with issue reference
# 3. Monitor progress
mcporter call claude-team.check_idle_workers session_ids='["Groucho"]'
mcporter call claude-team.read_worker_logs session_id="Groucho"
# 4. When done, close and merge
mcporter call claude-team.close_workers session_ids='["Groucho"]'
# Then: git merge or cherry-pick from worker's branch
Workflow: Parallel Fan-Out
# Spawn multiple workers for parallel tasks
mcporter call claude-team.spawn_workers \
workers='[
{"project_path": "auto", "bead": "cp-123", "annotation": "Auth module"},
{"project_path": "auto", "bead": "cp-124", "annotation": "API routes"},
{"project_path": "auto", "bead": "cp-125", "annotation": "Unit tests"}
]' \
layout="new"
# Wait for all to complete
mcporter call claude-team.wait_idle_workers \
session_ids='["Groucho","Harpo","Chico"]' \
mode="all"
# Review and close
mcporter call claude-team.close_workers \
session_ids='["Groucho","Harpo","Chico"]'
Best Practices
- Use beads: Assign
beadIDs so workers follow proper issue workflow - Use worktrees: Keeps work isolated, enables parallel commits
- Skip permissions: Workers need
skip_permissions: trueto write files - Monitor, don't micromanage: Let workers complete, then review
- Merge carefully: Review worker branches before merging to main
- Close workers: Always close when done to clean up worktrees
HTTP Mode (Streamable HTTP Transport)
For persistent server operation, claude-team can run as an HTTP server. This keeps the MCP server running continuously with persistent state, avoiding cold starts.
Starting the HTTP Server
Run the claude-team HTTP server directly:
# From the claude-team directory
uv run python -m claude_team_mcp --http --port 8766
# Or specify the directory explicitly
uv run --directory /path/to/claude-team python -m claude_team_mcp --http --port 8766
For automatic startup on login, use launchd (see the "launchd Auto-Start" section below).
mcporter.json Configuration
Once the HTTP server is running, configure mcporter to connect to it. Create ~/.mcporter/mcporter.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"claude-team": {
"transport": "streamable-http",
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8766/mcp",
"lifecycle": "keep-alive"
}
}
}
Benefits of HTTP Mode
- Persistent state: Worker registry survives across CLI invocations
- Faster responses: No Python environment startup on each call
- External access: Can be accessed by cron jobs, scripts, or other tools
- Session recovery: Server tracks sessions even if coordinator disconnects
Connecting from Claude Code
Update your .mcp.json to use HTTP transport:
{
"mcpServers": {
"claude-team": {
"transport": "streamable-http",
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8766/mcp"
}
}
}
launchd Auto-Start
To automatically start the claude-team server on login, use the bundled setup script.
Quick Setup
Run the setup script from the skill's assets directory:
# From the skill directory
./assets/setup.sh
# Or specify a custom claude-team location
CLAUDE_TEAM_DIR=/path/to/claude-team ./assets/setup.sh
What the Setup Does
The setup script:
- Detects your
uvinstallation path - Creates the log directory at
~/.claude-team/logs/ - Generates a launchd plist from
assets/com.claude-team.plist.template - Installs it to
~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.claude-team.plist - Loads the service to start immediately
The plist template uses uv run to start the HTTP server on port 8766, configured for iTerm2 Python API access (Aqua session type).
Managing the Service
# Stop the service
launchctl unload ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.claude-team.plist
# Restart (re-run setup)
./assets/setup.sh
# Check if running
launchctl list | grep claude-team
# View logs
tail -f ~/.claude-team/logs/stdout.log
tail -f ~/.claude-team/logs/stderr.log
Troubleshooting launchd
# Check for load errors
launchctl print gui/$UID/com.claude-team
# Force restart
launchctl kickstart -k gui/$UID/com.claude-team
# Remove and reload (if plist changed)
launchctl bootout gui/$UID/com.claude-team
launchctl bootstrap gui/$UID ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.claude-team.plist
Cron Integration
For background monitoring and notifications, claude-team supports cron-based worker tracking.
Worker Tracking File
Claude-team writes worker state to ~/.claude-team/memory/worker-tracking.json:
{
"workers": {
"Groucho": {
"session_id": "3962c5c4",
"bead": "cp-123",
"annotation": "Fix auth bug",
"status": "busy",
"project_path": "/Users/phaedrus/Projects/myrepo",
"started_at": "2025-01-05T10:30:00Z",
"last_activity": "2025-01-05T11:45:00Z"
},
"Harpo": {
"session_id": "a1b2c3d4",
"bead": "cp-124",
"annotation": "Add API routes",
"status": "idle",
"project_path": "/Users/phaedrus/Projects/myrepo",
"started_at": "2025-01-05T10:30:00Z",
"last_activity": "2025-01-05T11:50:00Z",
"completed_at": "2025-01-05T11:50:00Z"
}
},
"last_updated": "2025-01-05T11:50:00Z"
}
Cron Job for Monitoring Completions
Create a monitoring script at ~/.claude-team/scripts/check-workers.sh:
#!/bin/bash
# Check for completed workers and send notifications
TRACKING_FILE="$HOME/.claude-team/memory/worker-tracking.json"
NOTIFIED_FILE="$HOME/.claude-team/memory/notified-workers.json"
TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN="${TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN}"
TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID="${TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID}"
# Exit if tracking file doesn't exist
[ -f "$TRACKING_FILE" ] || exit 0
# Initialize notified file if needed
[ -f "$NOTIFIED_FILE" ] || echo '{"notified":[]}' > "$NOTIFIED_FILE"
# Find idle workers that haven't been notified
IDLE_WORKERS=$(jq -r '
.workers | to_entries[] |
select(.value.status == "idle") |
.key
' "$TRACKING_FILE")
for worker in $IDLE_WORKERS; do
# Check if already notified
ALREADY_NOTIFIED=$(jq -r --arg w "$worker" '.notified | index($w) != null' "$NOTIFIED_FILE")
if [ "$ALREADY_NOTIFIED" = "false" ]; then
# Get worker details
BEAD=$(jq -r --arg w "$worker" '.workers[$w].bead // "no-bead"' "$TRACKING_FILE")
ANNOTATION=$(jq -r --arg w "$worker" '.workers[$w].annotation // "no annotation"' "$TRACKING_FILE")
# Send Telegram notification
MESSAGE="🤖 Worker *${worker}* completed
📋 Bead: \`${BEAD}\`
📝 ${ANNOTATION}"
curl -s -X POST "https://api.telegram.org/bot${TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN}/sendMessage" \
-d chat_id="$TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID" \
-d text="$MESSAGE" \
-d parse_mode="Markdown" > /dev/null
# Mark as notified
jq --arg w "$worker" '.notified += [$w]' "$NOTIFIED_FILE" > "${NOTIFIED_FILE}.tmp"
mv "${NOTIFIED_FILE}.tmp" "$NOTIFIED_FILE"
fi
done
Make it executable:
chmod +x ~/.claude-team/scripts/check-workers.sh
Crontab Entry
Add to crontab (crontab -e):
# Check claude-team workers every 2 minutes
*/2 * * * * TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN="your-bot-token" TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID="your-chat-id" ~/.claude-team/scripts/check-workers.sh
Environment Setup
Set Telegram credentials in your shell profile (~/.zshrc):
export TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN="123456789:ABCdefGHIjklMNOpqrsTUVwxyz"
export TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID="-1001234567890"
Alternative: Using clawdbot for Notifications
If you have clawdbot configured, you can send notifications through it instead:
# In check-workers.sh, replace the curl command with:
clawdbot send --to "$TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID" --message "$MESSAGE" --provider telegram
Clearing Notification State
When starting a fresh batch of workers, clear the notified list:
echo '{"notified":[]}' > ~/.claude-team/memory/notified-workers.json