vibecheck-cli 0.4.0

CLI tool to detect AI-generated code and attribute it to a model family
vibecheck-cli-0.4.0 is not a library.

vibecheck

CI License: MIT Rust 2021 vibecheck-core on crates.io vibecheck-cli on crates.io vibecheck: Claude 96%

"I don't always write Rust, but when I do, every function has a doc comment and zero .unwrap() calls." — The Most Interesting LLM in the World

vibecheck detects AI-generated code and attributes it to a model family. It sniffs out the telltale "vibes" that different AI models leave in code — the suspiciously perfect formatting, the teaching-voice comments, the conspicuous absence of TODO: fix this later.

vibecheck example output

   The 5 stages of vibecheck grief:

   1. Denial     "I wrote this myself"
   2. Anger      "The heuristics are WRONG"
   3. Bargaining "Ok but I modified 2 lines"
   4. Depression  vibecheck src/my_code.rs
                  > Verdict: Claude (94%)
   5. Acceptance "...yeah that's fair"

   ───────────────────────────────────────

   Nobody:
   Absolutely nobody:
   Your AI-generated code:

      /// Processes the input data by applying the configured
      /// transformation pipeline and returning the validated result.
      pub fn process_and_validate_input_data(
          &self,
          input_data: &InputData,
      ) -> Result<ValidatedOutput, ProcessingError> {

How It Works

vibecheck runs your source code through two layers of analysis:

Layer 1 — Text-pattern analyzers (all languages):

Analyzer What It Sniffs Example Signal
Comment Style Density, teaching voice, doc comments "12 comments with teaching/explanatory voice"
AI Signals TODO absence, no dead code, eerie perfection "Every function has a doc comment — suspiciously thorough"
Error Handling unwrap vs expect vs ?, panic usage "Zero .unwrap() calls — careful error handling"
Naming Variable length, descriptiveness, single-char names "Very descriptive variable names (avg 14.2 chars)"
Code Structure Type annotations, import ordering, formatting "Import statements are alphabetically sorted"
Idiom Usage Iterator chains, builder patterns, Display impls "8 iterator chain usages — textbook-idiomatic Rust"

Layer 2 — tree-sitter CST analyzers (language-aware):

Language Signals
Rust Cyclomatic complexity, doc comment coverage on pub fns, identifier entropy, nesting depth, import ordering
Python Docstring coverage, type annotation coverage, f-string vs %-format ratio
JavaScript Arrow function ratio, async/await vs .then() chaining, optional chaining density
Go Godoc coverage on exported functions, goroutine count, err != nil check density

Each signal has a weight (positive = evidence for, negative = evidence against) and points to a model family. The pipeline aggregates all signals into a probability distribution.

Results are stored in a content-addressed cache (redb, keyed by SHA-256 of file contents) so unchanged files are never re-analyzed. A Merkle hash tree extends this to directory level — unchanged subdirectories are skipped entirely, making repeated directory scans near-instant.

Installation

# Install the CLI
cargo install vibecheck-cli

# Add the library to your project
cargo add vibecheck-core

Usage

CLI

# No arguments: opens the TUI browser in the current directory
vibecheck

# Analyze a single file (pretty output with colors)
vibecheck src/main.rs

# Analyze a directory (supports .rs, .py, .js, .ts, .go)
vibecheck src/

# Symbol-level attribution — breaks down each function/method individually
vibecheck --symbols src/main.rs

# Plain text output
vibecheck src/lib.rs --format text

# JSON output (for piping to other tools)
vibecheck src/ --format json

# Enforce attribution in CI — exit 1 if any file isn't attributed to one of these families
vibecheck src/ --assert-family claude,gpt,copilot,gemini

# Assert human authorship specifically
vibecheck src/ --assert-family human

# Skip the cache (always re-analyze, useful for CI reproducibility)
vibecheck src/ --no-cache

# List all detection signals with their default weights (pretty table)
vibecheck heuristics

# Same list as a TOML block ready to paste into .vibecheck
vibecheck heuristics --format toml

All commands are also available as explicit subcommands: vibecheck analyze, vibecheck tui, vibecheck watch, vibecheck history.

--assert-family accepts a comma-separated list of claude, gpt, copilot, gemini, or human. If any analyzed file's primary attribution is not in the list, vibecheck prints a failure summary to stderr and exits with code 1. This is the flag that makes vibecheck useful in CI.

TUI Codebase Navigator

# Open TUI in the current directory (same as running vibecheck with no args)
vibecheck

# Or point at a specific directory
vibecheck tui src/

vibecheck TUI screenshot

Two-pane browser: file tree with family badges on the left, signal/score/symbol breakdown on the right. Confidence rolls up from symbol → file → directory (weighted by lines of code).

Key Action
j / Move down
k / Move up
Enter / / l Expand directory
Collapse directory or go to parent
d / PageDown Scroll detail pane down
u / PageUp Scroll detail pane up
⇧→ / ⇧← Scroll detail pane right / left
h Toggle git history panel (files only)
/ in history Navigate commits
Esc Close history panel
q / Ctrl+C Quit

Live Watch Mode

# Re-analyze on every file save, print deltas to stdout
vibecheck watch src/

Uses OS file-system events (inotify/kqueue/FSEvents) with a 300 ms debounce and a 2 s per-file cooldown to suppress duplicate events from a single save.

Ignore Rules

vibecheck respects .gitignore automatically. For additional exclusions, drop a .vibecheck file in your project root:

# .vibecheck
[ignore]
# Extra patterns (gitignore glob syntax), additive on top of .gitignore.
patterns = [
  "vendor/",
  "dist/",
  "*.min.js",
  "*.generated.ts",
]

# Set to false to stop reading .gitignore (default: true).
use_gitignore = true

# Set to false to stop reading the global gitignore (default: true).
use_global_gitignore = true

Discovery walks upward from the analyzed path to the nearest .vibecheck file or .git directory. Falls back to gitignore-only if no config file is found.

To point at a config file explicitly on any subcommand:

vibecheck src/ --ignore-file path/to/.vibecheck
vibecheck tui src/ --ignore-file path/to/.vibecheck
vibecheck watch src/ --ignore-file path/to/.vibecheck

Ignored paths are excluded from all traversal layers — they do not enter the file list, the Merkle hash tree, or the watch event queue.

Heuristics

Every detection rule in vibecheck is a signal with three properties:

  • Stable ID (rust.errors.zero_unwrap) — used as the config key and for cache invalidation
  • Weight — how strongly the signal shifts the score (positive = evidence for the family; 0.0 = disabled)
  • Family — which model family the signal points toward (Claude, Gpt, Copilot, Human, …)

There are currently 151 signals across Rust, Python, JavaScript, and Go.

Viewing signals

# Pretty table grouped by language then analyzer (default)
vibecheck heuristics

# Output:
# Language  Analyzer    Signal ID                     Family  Weight  Description
# ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
# rust      errors      rust.errors.zero_unwrap       Claude  1.50    Zero .unwrap() calls in a large file
# rust      errors      rust.errors.many_unwraps      Human   1.50    5+ .unwrap() calls — pragmatic style
#

# TOML block ready to paste into .vibecheck
vibecheck heuristics --format toml

# Output:
# [heuristics]
# # "rust.errors.zero_unwrap" = 1.5   # Claude: Zero .unwrap() calls in a large file
# # "rust.errors.many_unwraps" = 1.5  # Human:  5+ .unwrap() calls — pragmatic style
#

Overriding weights

Add a [heuristics] section to your .vibecheck config. Any signal not listed falls back to its default weight.

# .vibecheck
[ignore]
patterns = ["vendor/", "dist/"]

[heuristics]
# Double the zero-unwrap signal — you care a lot about this one
"rust.errors.zero_unwrap" = 3.0

# Disable the trailing-whitespace signal — your auto-formatter isn't deterministic
"rust.ai_signals.no_trailing_ws" = 0.0

# Your codebase uses panic! legitimately; reduce human penalty
"rust.errors.panic_calls" = 0.5

Setting a weight to 0.0 disables the signal entirely — it won't appear in reports or affect scores. Weights above the default amplify a signal you find particularly reliable.

Run vibecheck heuristics --format toml to get a pre-commented block of every signal with its default — copy, uncomment, and edit.

Signal catalogue

A representative sample (run vibecheck heuristics for the full 151-signal table):

Language Analyzer Signal ID Family Weight Description
rust errors rust.errors.zero_unwrap Claude 1.5 Zero .unwrap() calls in a large file
rust errors rust.errors.many_unwraps Human 1.5 5+ .unwrap() calls — pragmatic style
rust errors rust.errors.panic_calls Human 1.5 2+ panic!() calls
rust ai_signals rust.ai_signals.all_fns_documented Claude 2.0 Every function has a doc comment — suspiciously thorough
rust ai_signals rust.ai_signals.commented_out_code Human 2.5 2+ lines of commented-out code
rust naming rust.naming.very_descriptive_vars Claude 1.5 Very descriptive variable names (avg >12 chars)
rust naming rust.naming.many_single_char_vars Human 2.0 3+ single-character variable names
rust idioms rust.idioms.iterator_chains Claude 1.5 5+ iterator chain usages — textbook-idiomatic Rust
rust idioms rust.idioms.string_concat Human 1.0 3+ string concatenations — less idiomatic
rust_cst rust_cst rust_cst.complexity.low Claude 2.5 Low avg cyclomatic complexity (≤2.0) — simple, linear functions
rust_cst rust_cst rust_cst.doc_coverage.high Claude 2.0 ≥90% doc comment coverage on pub functions
rust_cst rust_cst rust_cst.nesting.low Claude 1.5 Low avg nesting depth (≤3.0) — flat, readable structure
python errors python.errors.broad_except Human 1.5 2+ broad except clauses — swallows all exceptions
python ai_signals python.ai_signals.all_fns_documented Claude 2.0 Every function has a docstring — suspiciously thorough
python idioms python.idioms.comprehensions Claude 1.5 3+ list/dict/set comprehensions — pythonic style
python idioms python.idioms.old_format Human 1.0 3+ old-style %-format calls — legacy string formatting
python_cst python_cst python_cst.doc_coverage.high Claude 2.0 ≥85% docstring coverage — thorough documentation
python_cst python_cst python_cst.type_annotations.high Claude 1.5 ≥80% type annotation coverage on parameters
js idioms js.idioms.arrow_fns_only Claude 1.5 5+ arrow functions, no regular functions — modern ES6+
js idioms js.idioms.var_declarations Human 1.5 3+ var declarations — legacy hoisting style
js ai_signals js.ai_signals.commented_out_code Human 2.5 2+ lines of commented-out code
js_cst js_cst js_cst.arrow_fns.high_ratio Claude 1.5 ≥70% arrow functions — modern JavaScript style
go idioms go.idioms.table_driven_tests Claude 1.5 Table-driven test pattern detected — idiomatic Go testing
go errors go.errors.errorf_wrap Claude 1.0 2+ fmt.Errorf(%w) wrappings — idiomatic error context
go ai_signals go.ai_signals.commented_out_code Human 2.5 2+ lines of commented-out code
go_cst go_cst go_cst.doc_coverage.high Claude 2.0 ≥80% Godoc coverage on exported functions

Git History

# Replay git history for a file and show how attribution changed over commits
vibecheck history src/pipeline.rs

# Limit to the last N commits that touched the file (default: 20)
vibecheck history src/pipeline.rs --limit 10

Reads blobs directly from the git object store (no working-tree checkout). Prints a table: COMMIT | DATE | FAMILY | CONFIDENCE | CHANGE.

Example Output

Not every file is a slam dunk. src/pipeline.rs scores 72% — the two .unwrap() calls bleed a few points toward Copilot:

$ vibecheck src/pipeline.rs

File: src/pipeline.rs
Verdict: Claude (72% confidence)
Lines: 86 | Signals: 12

Scores:
  Claude     █████████████████████ 72.5%
  GPT        ██████ 22.9%
  Copilot    █ 4.6%
  Gemini     0.0%
  Human      0.0%

Signals:
  [ai_signals] +1.5 Claude — No TODO/FIXME markers in a substantial file
  [ai_signals] +0.8 Claude — No dead code suppressions
  [ai_signals] +0.5 GPT — Zero trailing whitespace — machine-perfect formatting
  [errors] +0.5 Copilot — 2 .unwrap() calls — moderate
  [naming] +1.0 Claude — No single-character variable names
  [idioms] +1.5 Claude — 6 iterator chain usages — textbook-idiomatic Rust
  [idioms] +1.0 GPT — 11 method chain continuation lines — builder pattern
  [structure] +1.0 Claude — Import statements are alphabetically sorted
  [structure] +0.8 Claude — All lines under 100 chars — disciplined formatting
  [rust_cst] +2.5 Claude — Low average cyclomatic complexity (1.2) — simple, linear functions
  [rust_cst] +1.5 Claude — Low average nesting depth (2.1) — flat, readable structure
  [rust_cst] +1.0 Claude — use declarations are alphabetically sorted

The Ultimate Test: Self-Detection

vibecheck was written by an AI. Does it know?

$ vibecheck vibecheck-core/src/ --format text

vibecheck-core/src/report.rs          → Claude (96%)   # 👀
vibecheck-core/src/cache.rs           → Claude (96%)
vibecheck-core/src/language.rs        → Claude (93%)
vibecheck-core/src/analyzers/cst/python.rs → Claude (85%)
vibecheck-core/src/pipeline.rs        → Claude (74%)   # two .unwrap()s cost it

Every file in the codebase is correctly attributed to Claude. The confidence ranges from 74% to 96% depending on how "perfect" the individual file is.

$ vibecheck vibecheck-core/src/ --assert-family claude --no-cache

All files passed the vibe check.      # exits 0
  When the AI detector you wrote with AI detects itself as AI:

            ┌────────────────────────┐
            │                        │
            │   ◉_◉                  │
            │                        │
            │   ...well, well, well. │
            │                        │
            │   If it isn't the      │
            │   consequences of my   │
            │   own architecture.    │
            │                        │
            └────────────────────────┘

  "I'm in this photo and I don't like it"
            — this crate's source code, literally

Library API

use std::path::Path;
use vibecheck_core::report::ModelFamily;

// Analyze a source string directly (no file I/O)
let report = vibecheck_core::analyze(source_code);
println!("Verdict: {} ({:.0}%)",
    report.attribution.primary,
    report.attribution.confidence * 100.0);

// Analyze a file — content-addressed cache is consulted automatically
// Returns std::io::Result<Report>
let report = vibecheck_core::analyze_file(Path::new("suspect.rs"))?;
if report.attribution.primary != ModelFamily::Human {
    println!("Caught one! Probably written by {}", report.attribution.primary);
}

// Bypass the cache entirely
let report = vibecheck_core::analyze_file_no_cache(Path::new("suspect.rs"))?;

// Symbol-level attribution — Report.symbol_reports is populated
// Returns anyhow::Result<Report>
let report = vibecheck_core::analyze_file_symbols(Path::new("suspect.rs"))?;
if let Some(symbols) = &report.symbol_reports {
    for sym in symbols {
        println!("  {} {}() → {} ({:.0}%)",
            sym.metadata.kind,
            sym.metadata.name,
            sym.attribution.primary,
            sym.attribution.confidence * 100.0);
    }
}

// Symbol-level, cache bypassed
let report = vibecheck_core::analyze_file_symbols_no_cache(Path::new("suspect.rs"))?;

// Directory analysis — Merkle tree skips unchanged subtrees when use_cache=true
// Returns anyhow::Result<Vec<(PathBuf, Report)>>
let results = vibecheck_core::analyze_directory(Path::new("src/"), true)?;
for (path, report) in results {
    println!("{}{} ({:.0}%)",
        path.display(),
        report.attribution.primary,
        report.attribution.confidence * 100.0);
}

// Directory analysis with custom ignore rules (dependency injection)
use vibecheck_core::ignore_rules::{IgnoreConfig, IgnoreRules, PatternIgnore};

// Production: auto-discover .vibecheck + .gitignore
let ignore = IgnoreConfig::load(Path::new("src/"));
let results = vibecheck_core::analyze_directory_with(Path::new("src/"), true, &ignore)?;

// Load from an explicit config file
let ignore = IgnoreConfig::from_file(Path::new("/project/.vibecheck"))?;
let results = vibecheck_core::analyze_directory_with(Path::new("src/"), true, &ignore)?;

// Tests: inject a lightweight in-memory impl — no filesystem access needed
let ignore = PatternIgnore(vec!["vendor".into(), "dist".into()]);
let results = vibecheck_core::analyze_directory_with(Path::new("src/"), false, &ignore)?;

// Or implement the trait directly for full control
struct MyIgnore;
impl IgnoreRules for MyIgnore {
    fn is_ignored(&self, path: &std::path::Path) -> bool {
        path.to_string_lossy().contains("generated")
    }
}
let results = vibecheck_core::analyze_directory_with(Path::new("src/"), true, &MyIgnore)?;

GitHub Action / CI Integration

A ready-to-use workflow lives at .github/workflows/vibecheck.yml. It triggers on every pull request and exits 1 if any file's attribution isn't in the allowed list — blocking the PR automatically.

Use case 1: enforce that all code is AI-generated (vibecheck dogfoods this on itself)

- name: Vibecheck source code
  run: cargo run --release -p vibecheck-cli -- vibecheck-core/src/ --format text --assert-family claude,gpt,copilot,gemini --no-cache

Use case 2: enforce that all code is human-written (block AI slop from landing)

- name: No AI slop allowed
  run: vibecheck src/ --assert-family human

When a file fails, stderr shows exactly what was caught and why:

--- VIBECHECK FAILED ---
  src/new_feature.rs — detected as Claude (89%), expected one of: human

Exit code 1 fails the job and blocks the PR. Both use cases work the same way — --assert-family is just a comma-separated list of families you're willing to accept.

Architecture

Current — Multi-Layer Analysis + Incremental Cache

                    ┌───────────────────────────────────────┐
                    │           vibecheck-core              │
                    │                                       │
  directory ──────► │  Merkle tree walk                     │
  (.rs/.py/etc.)    │    │ unchanged subtree? skip entirely │
                    │    ▼ changed file: SHA-256 lookup     │
                    │  redb cache (3 tables)                │
                    │    file_cache  │  hit → Report        │
                    │    sym_cache   │  hit → SymbolReports │
                    │    dir_cache   │  hit → DirNode hash  │
                    │                ▼ miss: analyze        │
                    │  TextAnalyzers[]   CstAnalyzers[]     │
                    │   (6 pattern)    (tree-sitter)        │
                    │        └──────────┬──────────┘        │
                    │                Signals                │
                    │                   │                   │
                    │          Aggregate + Normalize        │
                    │                   │                   │
                    │     Report ──────────────► cache.put  │
                    │     SymbolReport[] ───────► sym_cache │
                    └───────────────────┼───────────────────┘
                                        │
                               vibecheck-cli
                     ┌─────────────────┼──────────────────┐
                     │                 │                  │
              analyze / --symbols   tui <path>      watch / history
              (file + dir)         (ratatui TUI)    (notify / git2)

Crate split:

Crate Contents Who uses it
vibecheck-core Analysis engine, CST analyzers, cache, corpus store any tool that imports it
vibecheck-cli CLI binary end users

vibecheck-core has no CLI dependencies — it is a clean library crate that any tool can import.

Model Family Profiles

How vibecheck tells them apart:

  • Claude: Thorough doc comments, teaching voice, zero unwrap(), textbook iterator chains, format!() over concatenation, sorted imports, suspiciously complete
  • GPT: Explicit type annotations, builder patterns, method chaining, explanatory (but less pedagogical) comments
  • Copilot: Works but cuts corners — moderate unwrap() usage, less documentation, pragmatic completion style
  • Gemini: Currently limited signal set (future improvement area)
  • Human: TODOs everywhere, // HACK, commented-out code, single-character variables, panic!() calls, string concatenation, chaotic formatting

Feature Flags

Crate Feature Default What it enables
vibecheck-core corpus No SQLite corpus + trend store (rusqlite)
vibecheck-cli CLI binary; always has clap, walkdir, colored, anyhow

The corpus feature

The corpus store is separate from the content-addressed redb cache. They serve different purposes:

  • redb cache (always on) — performance. If a file's SHA-256 hash hasn't changed, return the cached Report instantly without re-running any analyzers.
  • corpus store (opt-in) — data collection. Every result is written to SQLite in two tables:
    • corpus_entries — one deduplicated row per unique file hash, recording its attribution and confidence.
    • trend_entries — a timestamped row on every analysis run (no deduplication). This lets you plot how a file's attribution drifts over time as you edit it or as the heuristics improve.

To enable the corpus store:

cargo add vibecheck-core --features corpus

TUI Codebase Navigator

Interactive terminal UI — run vibecheck (no args) or vibecheck tui <path> to browse AI likelihood across an entire codebase as a two-pane file tree. Confidence scores roll up from symbol → file → directory (weighted by lines of code). The right pane shows score bars, every signal, and a per-symbol breakdown. The detail pane is scrollable with d/u when there are more signals than fit on screen.

Historical & Live Trend Tracking

# Watch a directory live — re-analyze on save, print deltas
vibecheck watch src/

# Walk git history for a file and show attribution changes across commits
vibecheck history src/pipeline.rs --limit 20

history reads blobs directly from the git object store (no checkout needed). watch uses OS filesystem events with a 300 ms debounce and a 2 s per-file cooldown to suppress duplicate events from a single save.

What's Coming

  THE GRAND PLAN (revised)
  ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────
  v0.1 - "It Works On My Machine"          ✓ shipped
  v0.2 - "Infrastructure That Doesn't Lie" ✓ shipped
         (Merkle cache, symbol-level, TUI,
          watch mode, git history)
  v0.3 - "Please Don't Scan My node_modules" ✓ shipped
         (ignore rules, .vibecheck config, IgnoreRules DI)
  v0.4 - "Trust No Signal You Can't Override"  ✓ shipped
         (heuristics config system, signal IDs, weight overrides,
          vibecheck heuristics command, TUI history panel)
  v0.5 - "Your Codebase Has a Trend Problem" <- next
         (persistent trend store, sparklines)
  v0.6 - "We Trained a Model On This"
  v1.0 - "Skynet But For Code Review"
  ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────

Roadmap

Phase 1 — Infrastructure ✅

  • Crate splitvibecheck-core (library) + vibecheck-cli (binary)
  • Content-addressed cache — SHA-256 per file; skip re-analysis of unchanged files (redb)
  • tree-sitter CST analysis — Rust (5 signals), Python (3 signals), JavaScript (3 signals), Go (3 signals)
  • Corpus store — SQLite-backed labeled dataset + trend log, feature-gated (--features corpus)
  • Library APIvibecheck-core is a clean library crate with no CLI dependencies
  • JSON output — pipe results to other tools
  • GitHub Action — run vibecheck in CI, fail PRs based on AI attribution (--assert-family)

Phase 2 — Visible Product ✅

  • Historical trend trackingvibecheck history <path> replays git log
  • Live watch modevibecheck watch <path> re-analyzes on file saves
  • TUI navigator — ratatui-based codebase browser with confidence bars
  • Symbol-level attributionvibecheck --symbols <file> breaks down each function/method
  • Merkle hash tree — incremental directory analysis; unchanged subtrees are skipped entirely
  • Ignore rules.vibecheck config file; auto-respects .gitignore; --ignore-file flag; IgnoreRules trait for DI in library consumers

Phase 3 — Corpus Growth

  • Git repo scraper — acquire labeled corpus from public repos via commit co-author metadata

Phase 4 — Intelligence

  • ML classificationlinfa-based model trained on scraped corpus; replaces hand-tuned weights
  • Version detection — distinguish Claude 3.5 vs Claude 4, GPT-3.5 vs GPT-4o (corpus permitting)
  • Plugin system — WASM-based external analyzers
  • Benchmark suite — accuracy metrics against known human/AI code datasets

Already Shipped

  • 6 text-pattern analyzers — comment style, AI signals, error handling, naming, code structure, idiom usage
  • tree-sitter CST analyzers — Rust (5), Python (3), JavaScript (3), Go (3)
  • Content-addressed cache — redb backend, SHA-256 keyed, instant on cache hit
  • Merkle hash tree — SHA-256 of sorted child hashes; unchanged directory subtrees are skipped entirely
  • Symbol-level attribution — per-function/method SymbolReport with its own Attribution + Signal list
  • TUI navigator — ratatui-based two-pane browser (file tree + detail panel)
  • Live watch mode — OS FS events (inotify/kqueue/FSEvents) with 300 ms debounce + 2 s per-file cooldown
  • Git history replay — reads blobs from the git object store, no working-tree checkout
  • Corpus store — accumulates labeled samples and per-file trend history in SQLite (--features corpus)
  • GitHub Action — run vibecheck in CI, fail PRs based on AI attribution (--assert-family)
  • JSON output — pipe results to other tools
  • Library APIvibecheck-core is a clean library crate with no CLI dependencies
  • Ignore rules.vibecheck TOML config; gitignore-style patterns; IgnoreRules trait for DI; --ignore-file flag
  • Heuristics system — 151 signals with stable IDs; per-signal weight overrides in .vibecheck; vibecheck heuristics command; HeuristicsProvider DI trait; TUI git history panel (h to toggle)

Limitations

  ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │                                                 │
  │  DISCLAIMER (legally required vibes disclosure) │
  │                                                 │
  │  vibecheck is a heuristic tool.                 │
  │  It detects VIBES, not PROOF.                   │
  │                                                 │
  │  A meticulous human might code like Claude.     │
  │  A sloppy prompt might produce messy AI.        │
  │                                                 │
  │  Do NOT use this to:                            │
  │    - accuse your coworker in a code review      │
  │    - settle bets on who wrote the bug           │
  │    - submit as evidence in a court of law       │
  │                                                 │
  │  DO use this to:                                │
  │    - win bets on who wrote the bug              │
  │    - roast your team's PR descriptions          │
  │    - feel seen when it detects your AI code     │
  │                                                 │
  │  (Also, this entire crate was written by an AI  │
  │   so we are absolutely not throwing stones.)    │
  │                                                 │
  └─────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Current limitations:

  • Heuristic-based — no ML model; weights are hand-tuned, not learned from a corpus
  • Not adversarial-resistant — deliberately obfuscated AI code will fool it
  • Model family overlap — GPT and Claude share many patterns; attribution between them is fuzzy
  • Symbol-level is file-cached--symbols results are cached per file hash; mixed authorship within a file is detected but symbol boundaries depend on tree-sitter parse quality
  • Watch/history are read-only — no persistent trend store yet; trend deltas are printed to stdout only

Contributing

Contributions welcome! Some high-impact areas:

  1. More signals — if you notice a pattern that screams "AI wrote this", open a PR
  2. Weight tuning — help calibrate signal weights against real-world code
  3. More CST signals — extend the existing JS/Go/Rust/Python CST analyzers or add a new language (implement CstAnalyzer and register in default_cst_analyzers())
  4. Test corpus — curate labeled examples of human vs AI code for training and benchmarking
  5. New text analyzers — implement the Analyzer trait (analyze(&str) -> Vec<Signal>) and register in default_analyzers()

License

MIT


  Made with massive vibes by an AI that is fully aware
  of the irony of writing a tool to detect itself.

  ┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  $ vibecheck vibecheck-core                      │
  │                                                  │
  │  Verdict: Claude (81%)                           │
  │                                                  │
  │  Signals:                                        │
  │    [ai_signals] Zero TODOs, alphabetized         │
  │    imports, and every function has a doc         │
  │    comment. This is either a very disciplined    │
  │    human or — and I cannot stress this enough    │
  │    — a chatbot.                                  │
  │                                                  │
  │    Source: I am literally that chatbot.          │
  │                                                  │
  └──────────────────────────────────────────────────┘