leindex 1.5.2

High-performance semantic code search engine with INT8 quantization and HNSW indexing
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Rust License MCP

LeIndex

Understand large codebases instantly.

LeIndex is a semantic code search engine that lets you search code by meaning, not just keywords.

Instead of hunting through files with grep or hoping variable names match your query, you can ask things like:

  • "Where is authentication enforced?"
  • "Where are API tokens validated?"
  • "How does session management work?"

LeIndex surfaces the actual implementation — even if the words you're searching for never appear in the code.

Built in Rust. Built for developers and AI coding tools.


Demo: finding logic that grep and LLMs miss

Imagine a codebase where authentication is implemented like this:

fn validate_session(req: Request) -> Result<User> { ... }
fn verify_token(token: &str) -> bool { ... }
fn authorize_user(user: &User, action: Action) -> bool { ... }

None of these functions contain the word "authentication".

grep

grep -r "authentication" src/
# (no matches)

LeIndex

leindex search "where is authentication enforced"
src/security/session_validator.rs    validate_session    (0.92)
src/auth/token_verifier.rs           verify_token        (0.87)
src/middleware/auth_gate.rs           authorize_user      (0.84)

LeIndex finds the correct logic because it searches by semantic intent, not string matches.

It works across multiple repositories too:

leindex search "where are API rate limits enforced"
gateway/middleware/rate_limit.rs      throttle_request     (0.91)
api/server/request_throttle.go        limit_handler        (0.88)
auth/session_policy.rs                enforce_policy       (0.83)

90%+ Token Savings for AI Coding Tools

When an LLM reads your code with standard tools, it burns tokens on entire files just to understand one function. LeIndex returns only what matters — structured, context-aware results instead of raw file dumps.

Task Standard Tools LeIndex Savings
Understand a 500-line file ~2,000 tokens ~380 tokens 81%
Find all callers of a function ~5,800 tokens ~420 tokens 93%
Navigate project structure ~8,500 tokens ~650 tokens 92%
Cross-file symbol rename ~12,000 tokens ~340 tokens 97%

Every tool call is context-aware — not atomic. When you look up a symbol, you don't just get its definition. You get its callers, callees, data dependencies, and impact radius. When you summarize a file, you get cross-file relationships that Read can never provide at any token cost. One LeIndex call replaces chains of Grep → Read → Read → Read.

See full benchmarks for methodology and detailed comparisons.


Quick Start (2 minutes)

Install

Via cargo (recommended):

cargo install leindex

Via install script:

curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/scooter-lacroix/leindex/master/install.sh -o install-leindex.sh
bash install-leindex.sh

Environment Variables:

Name Required Description Default
LEINDEX_HOME No Override storage/index home directory ~/.leindex
LEINDEX_PORT No Override HTTP server port 47268

Index and search

# Index your project
leindex index /path/to/project

# Search by meaning
leindex search "authentication flow"

# Deep structural analysis
leindex analyze "how authorization is enforced"

That's it. You're searching by meaning.


What LeIndex Is Useful For

  • Understanding unfamiliar codebases — ask questions instead of reading every file
  • Onboarding new engineers — find relevant code without tribal knowledge
  • Exploring legacy systems — surface logic buried in decades of code
  • AI coding assistants — give LLMs real structural context via MCP
  • Cross-project search — query across multiple repositories simultaneously

Built for AI-Assisted Development

Modern AI coding tools struggle with large codebases because they lack global structural context.

LeIndex provides that missing layer.

It builds a semantic index of your repository that both developers and AI assistants can query to understand:

  • where logic lives
  • how components interact
  • what code paths enforce behavior

LeIndex runs as an MCP server, allowing tools like Claude Code, Cursor, and other MCP-compatible agents to explore your codebase with semantic understanding.

# Start MCP stdio mode (for Claude Code / Cursor)
leindex mcp

# Or run the HTTP MCP server
leindex serve --host 127.0.0.1 --port 47268
Claude: "Where is request validation implemented?"

LeIndex MCP → src/http/request_validator.rs
              src/middleware/input_guard.rs

How It Works

LeIndex builds a semantic index of your codebase using embeddings and structural analysis (tree-sitter parsing + program dependence graphs).

This allows queries to match:

  • code intent — what the code does, not what it's named
  • related logic paths — follow data flow and control flow
  • implementation patterns — structural similarity across files

Indexes can span multiple repositories, enabling cross-project search.

Codebase → Tree-sitter Parser → PDG Builder → Semantic Index → Query Engine → Results

Features

  • Semantic search — find code by meaning, not keywords
  • PDG analysis — program dependence graph for structural understanding
  • 5-phase analysis — additive multi-pass codebase analysis pipeline
  • Cross-project indexing — search across multiple repos at once
  • 16 MCP tools — read, analyze, edit preview/apply, rename, impact analysis
  • HTTP + WebSocket server — available through the unified leindex server modules and commands
  • Dashboard — Bun + React operational UI with project metrics and graph telemetry
  • Low resource mode — works on constrained hardware
  • Built in Rust — fast indexing, low memory, safe concurrency

Other Install Options

crates.io

cargo install leindex

From source

git clone https://github.com/scooter-lacroix/leindex.git
cd leindex
cargo build --release

Feature flags: Use --features to customize the build:

  • full (default) — Full library plus the leindex CLI binary
  • minimal — Library-focused parse/search build slice; does not produce the leindex binary by itself
  • cli — Required feature for the leindex binary target
  • server — Enables the HTTP/WebSocket server library modules; combine with cli for a runnable binary

MCP Server Integration

LeIndex runs as an MCP server for AI coding tools. First install LeIndex (via crates.io or source), then configure your tool:

Add to ~/.config/zed/settings.json:

{
  "context_servers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": {
        "path": "leindex",
        "args": ["mcp"]
      }
    }
  }
}

Add to Cursor settings (settings.json):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"],
      "env": {}
    }
  }
}

Requires the Model Context Protocol extension.

Configure in settings.json:

{
  "mcp.mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"]
    }
  }
}

Add to ~/.config/claude-code/mcp_servers.json:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"],
      "env": {}
    }
  }
}

Add to ~/.config/amp/settings.json:

{
  "amp.mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"]
    }
  }
}

Add to ~/.config/opencode/opencode.json:

{
  "mcp": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": ["leindex", "mcp"],
      "type": "local"
    }
  }
}

Add to ~/.qwen/settings.json:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"]
    }
  }
}

Add to ~/.iflow/settings.json:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"]
    }
  }
}

Add to ~/.factory/mcp.json (note: requires type: "stdio"):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "type": "stdio",
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"]
    }
  }
}

Add to ~/.gemini/settings.json:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"]
    }
  }
}

macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json Linux: ~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "leindex": {
      "command": "leindex",
      "args": ["mcp"]
    }
  }
}

Dashboard (optional)

cd dashboard
bun install
bun run build
leindex dashboard

CLI Reference

leindex index /path/to/project       # Index a project
leindex search "query"                # Semantic search
leindex analyze "query"               # Deep structural analysis
leindex phase --all --path /path      # 5-phase additive analysis
leindex diagnostics                   # System health check
leindex mcp                           # MCP stdio mode
leindex serve                         # HTTP/WebSocket server
leindex dashboard                     # Launch dashboard UI

MCP Tools (16)

Tool Purpose
leindex_index Index a project
leindex_search Semantic code search
leindex_deep_analyze Deep analysis with PDG traversal
leindex_context Expand context around a symbol
leindex_phase_analysis 5-phase additive analysis
leindex_file_summary Structural file analysis
leindex_symbol_lookup Symbol definition + callers/callees
leindex_project_map Annotated project structure
leindex_grep_symbols Structural symbol search
leindex_read_symbol Read symbol source with deps
leindex_edit_preview Preview edits with impact report
leindex_edit_apply Apply code edits
leindex_rename_symbol Rename across all references
leindex_impact_analysis Blast radius analysis
leindex_diagnostics Index health and stats
phase_analysis Alias for phase analysis

Unified Module Layout

LeIndex is now a single crate with feature-gated modules:

Module Role
parse Language parsing and signature extraction
graph Graph construction and traversal
search Retrieval, scoring, vector search
storage SQLite persistence + storage
phase Additive phase analysis pipeline
cli CLI + MCP protocol handlers
global Cross-project discovery/registry
server HTTP/WebSocket API server
edit Edit preview/apply support
validation Validation and guardrails

Legacy crate-style aliases remain available from leindex::leparse, leindex::legraphe, and similar compatibility re-exports.


Security

Database discovery (LEINDEX_DISCOVERY_ROOTS) is opt-in only. Sensitive directories (.ssh, .aws, .gnupg, etc.) are automatically excluded. All SQL operations use parameterized queries. See ARCHITECTURE.md for details.


Docs


License

MIT