AI tool comparison
Caddy vs Stash
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Infrastructure
Caddy
The ultimate server with automatic HTTPS
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Caddy is a web server written in Go with automatic HTTPS, reverse proxy, and simple configuration. The modern alternative to Nginx and Apache.
Infrastructure
Stash
Open-source memory layer that teaches AI agents to remember and learn
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Stash is an open-source persistent memory infrastructure for AI agents built on PostgreSQL and pgvector. Unlike retrieval-augmented generation, which searches static documents, Stash actively learns from agent experience — consolidating raw observations into facts, relationships, causal links, and higher-order patterns over time. The system exposes 28 MCP tools covering the full cognitive stack: episode storage, fact synthesis, entity graph management, goal tracking, failure pattern recognition, and self-correction when contradictions emerge. It deploys via Docker Compose in three steps and works with any OpenAI-compatible API — Claude, GPT, local models via Ollama. Hierarchical namespaces let agents keep user facts separate from project facts separate from self-knowledge. This fills a real gap in the agent ecosystem. Most agent frameworks treat each session as stateless, which means agents repeat the same mistakes and lose hard-won context. Stash gives agents a persistent cognitive layer that compounds. It surfaced on Hacker News this week to notable developer interest and is worth watching as MCP adoption accelerates.
Reviewer scorecard
“Automatic HTTPS and the Caddyfile syntax make web server config trivial. Reverse proxy setup is one line.”
“The 28 MCP tools are the right abstraction level — my Claude Desktop agents can now actually remember what I've told them across sessions without me writing my own memory layer. The Docker Compose setup is clean and the pgvector backend is production-ready.”
“Automatic HTTPS alone justifies switching from Nginx. The Caddyfile is infinitely more readable than nginx.conf.”
“The consolidation pipeline sounds elegant in theory but in practice you're letting an LLM synthesize 'causal links' and 'higher-order patterns' from raw observations. That's a recipe for hallucinated beliefs that compound over time. I'd want rigorous testing before trusting this in any production agent.”
“Caddy proves that web servers can be simple. Automatic HTTPS should have always been the default.”
“Persistent memory is the missing piece between 'AI assistant' and 'AI colleague.' Stash's self-correction and failure pattern recognition are early implementations of what agents will need to become genuinely reliable over long time horizons.”
“Finally an agent that remembers my brand guidelines, tone preferences, and past feedback without me repeating myself every session. The namespace hierarchy means I can have separate memories for different clients.”
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