Getting Started¶
This tutorial walks you through analyzing a Copilot session and reading the
output. It assumes you have installed copilot-session-usage — see
Installation if not.
Analyze the latest session¶
Run this after any VS Code Copilot chat session:
copilot-session-usage latest --format table
Sample output:
Session: f5cbde8a-ec40-466f-86e6-f95c343b6c58
Title: Implement new feature X
Started: 2026-07-02T09:14:21Z
Duration: 2847s (active: 312s)
Models: claude-sonnet-4.6, claude-haiku-4.5
Input: 487,203 tokens
Output: 8,941 tokens
Cached: 412,100 (85%)
LLM calls: 14
Est. cost: $0.4231
Each field:
Session / Title — the UUID and the workspace title VS Code stored for the session.
Duration / active — wall-clock duration vs. time with active LLM calls.
Models — all models called in this session, in call order.
Input / Output — total tokens billed.
Cached — input tokens served from the provider’s prompt cache (cheaper).
LLM calls — total requests across all models.
Est. cost — estimated USD, after applying cache discounts and any long-context tier.
Details Tables¶
--format controls the output type. Default is json:
# Just cost and model names
copilot-session-usage latest --format table
# Default: summary + per-subagent breakdown
copilot-session-usage latest --format detailed
Get JSON output¶
Use --format json when scripting or piping to jq:
copilot-session-usage latest --format json | jq '.estimated_cost_usd'
Save to a file:
copilot-session-usage latest --format json --output session.json
List recent sessions¶
See which sessions exist without computing costs (limit set to 20 by default):
copilot-session-usage list
# Limit to 5 sessions
copilot-session-usage list --limit 5
# Since a date
copilot-session-usage list --since 2026-07-01
Output:
2026-07-02T09:14Z Implement new feature X (id: f5cbde8a-...)
2026-07-01T18:03Z Debug failing CI pipeline (id: 3a91c012-...)
2026-07-01T11:22Z Code review and refactor (id: 9be4f330-...)
Find a session by name¶
copilot-session-usage find "feature X"
If exactly one session matches, it analyzes it immediately. If several match, it lists them so you can pick the right UUID.
Analyze a specific session by UUID¶
# Default json output
copilot-session-usage id f5cbde8a-ec40-466f-86e6-f95c343b6c58
# Human readable summary
copilot-session-usage id f5cbde8a-ec40-466f-86e6-f95c343b6c58 --format table
# Human readable details with per-subagent breakdown
copilot-session-usage id f5cbde8a-ec40-466f-86e6-f95c343b6c58 --format detailed
Analyze multiple sessions at once¶
# Last 10 sessions (json output)
copilot-session-usage batch 10
# Summary table for last 10 sessions
copilot-session-usage batch 10 --format table
Output includes a summary row with aggregate totals and a per-session table.
Next steps¶
How-To Guides — export to JSON, filter by date, WSL2 setup
CLI Reference — all commands and options
How Cost Estimation Works — pricing model details