dreamio/CLAUDE.md

9.6 KiB

Agent Instructions

This project uses bd (beads) for issue tracking. Run bd prime for full workflow context.

Architecture in one line: Issues live in a local Dolt database (.beads/dolt/); cross-machine sync uses bd dolt push/pull (a git-compatible protocol), stored under refs/dolt/data on your git remote — separate from refs/heads/* where your code lives. .beads/issues.jsonl is a passive export, not the wire protocol.

See SYNC_CONCEPTS.md for the one-screen overview and anti-patterns (don't treat JSONL as the source of truth; don't bd import during normal operation; don't reach for third-party Dolt hosting before trying the default).

Quick Reference

bd ready              # Find available work
bd show <id>          # View issue details
bd update <id> --claim  # Claim work atomically
bd close <id>         # Complete work
bd dolt push          # Push beads data to remote

Non-Interactive Shell Commands

ALWAYS use non-interactive flags with file operations to avoid hanging on confirmation prompts.

Shell commands like cp, mv, and rm may be aliased to include -i (interactive) mode on some systems, causing the agent to hang indefinitely waiting for y/n input.

Use these forms instead:

# Force overwrite without prompting
cp -f source dest           # NOT: cp source dest
mv -f source dest           # NOT: mv source dest
rm -f file                  # NOT: rm file

# For recursive operations
rm -rf directory            # NOT: rm -r directory
cp -rf source dest          # NOT: cp -r source dest

Other commands that may prompt:

  • scp - use -o BatchMode=yes for non-interactive
  • ssh - use -o BatchMode=yes to fail instead of prompting
  • apt-get - use -y flag
  • brew - use HOMEBREW_NO_AUTO_UPDATE=1 env var

Beads Issue Tracker

This project uses bd (beads) for issue tracking. Run bd prime to see full workflow context and commands.

Quick Reference

bd ready              # Find available work
bd show <id>          # View issue details
bd update <id> --claim  # Claim work
bd close <id>         # Complete work

Rules

  • Use bd for ALL task tracking — do NOT use TodoWrite, TaskCreate, or markdown TODO lists
  • Run bd prime for detailed command reference and session close protocol
  • Use bd remember for persistent knowledge — do NOT use MEMORY.md files

Architecture in one line: issues live in a local Dolt DB; sync uses refs/dolt/data on your git remote; .beads/issues.jsonl is a passive export. See https://github.com/gastownhall/beads/blob/main/docs/SYNC_CONCEPTS.md for details and anti-patterns.

Session Completion

When ending a work session, you MUST complete ALL steps below. Work is NOT complete until git push succeeds.

MANDATORY WORKFLOW:

  1. File issues for remaining work - Create issues for anything that needs follow-up
  2. Run quality gates (if code changed) - Tests, linters, builds
  3. Update issue status - Close finished work, update in-progress items
  4. PUSH TO REMOTE - This is MANDATORY:
    git pull --rebase
    git push
    git status  # MUST show "up to date with origin"
    
  5. Clean up - Clear stashes, prune remote branches
  6. Verify - All changes committed AND pushed
  7. Hand off - Provide context for next session

CRITICAL RULES:

  • Work is NOT complete until git push succeeds
  • NEVER stop before pushing - that leaves work stranded locally
  • NEVER say "ready to push when you are" - YOU must push
  • If push fails, resolve and retry until it succeeds

Required Turn Documentation

At the end of every completed implementation task, before final handoff, create a user-readable HTML document describing the work.

This documentation is mandatory whenever code, configuration, tests, or project files were changed.

Precedence and classification

Use this decision order before creating a turn document:

  1. Check the minor/trivial exemption checklist below first.
  2. If the task clearly matches an exemption, do not create a turn document.
  3. If the task is a clearly substantive implementation change, create a turn document.
  4. If classification is ambiguous or mixed, ask the user before creating a turn document.

The minor/trivial exemptions override the general mandatory turn-document rule.

For diff content in turn documentation (including "Code diffs" and "Relevant Diff Snippets"), use @pierre/diffs output by default. Do not run npx @pierre/diffs; the package is a rendering library and does not expose a CLI executable. Generate rendered diff HTML with @pierre/diffs/ssr, usually preloadPatchDiff, and insert that rendered output into the turn document. preloadPatchDiff expects exactly one file diff per call, so split multi-file diffs into one patch per file and concatenate the rendered HTML. If @pierre/diffs/ssr is unavailable because of a real tool or blocking error, use a clearly labeled plain diff/code block fallback and note why.

No turn document for minor/trivial checklist matches

Do not create a turn document when the change is minor/trivial and cleanly matches one of these categories:

  • AGENTS.md changes or other documentation-only changes
  • Syntax-only fixes
  • Refactor-only changes with no behavior change
  • PR/conflict reconciliation work
  • Issue-tracker-only updates such as beads/issues.json
  • Support-file changes that only accompany one of the exempt categories above (for example lockfile or manifest updates required for docs-workflow changes)

If a change does not cleanly fit either exempt or substantive buckets, ask the user before creating a turn document.

When making a minor update to a previous change, update the existing documentation instead of creating a new file. Use the following format:

"New Changes as of {time and date at which the change was made}"

  • Summary of changes
  • Why this change was made
  • Code diffs (use rendered @pierre/diffs/ssr output by default; do not use npx @pierre/diffs; if unavailable, include a clearly labeled plain diff/code block and note why)
  • Related issues or PRs

Additionally, add a note to each section explaining why the changes were made.

Location

Save the document in:

docs/turns/

Use a clear timestamped filename:

docs/turns/YYYY-MM-DD-short-task-name.html

Example:

docs/turns/2026-05-14-add-market-replay-controls.html

Format

Use the impeccable skill to structure and style the document as clean, readable HTML.

For this repository, impeccable is the styling and layout authority for turn documents when available. Do not apply global non-repo computer-task house styling to repository turn documents.

If the impeccable skill is unavailable or blocked by an actual tool/file error, still create a well-structured standalone HTML file with:

  • A concise summary at the top
  • A detailed explanation of what changed
  • Relevant context or background
  • Specific code snippets or examples when helpful
  • Issues, limitations, tradeoffs, or mitigations
  • Validation performed, including tests, builds, linters, or manual checks
  • Any remaining follow-up work, with corresponding Beads issue IDs when applicable

Required Sections

Each turn document must include these sections:

  1. Summary
  2. Changes Made
  3. Context
  4. Important Implementation Details
  5. Relevant Diff Snippets (render with @pierre/diffs/ssr output by default; do not use npx @pierre/diffs; if unavailable, include a clearly labeled plain diff/code block and note why)
  6. Expected Impact for End-Users
  7. Validation
  8. Issues, Limitations, and Mitigations
  9. Follow-up Work

Completion Rule

A task that requires a turn document is not complete until:

  1. The Beads workflow is updated
  2. The turn document is created in docs/turns
  3. Relevant quality gates have passed or failures are documented
  4. Changes are committed
  5. bd dolt push succeeds
  6. git push succeeds
  7. git status shows the branch is up to date with forgejo/<branch>

For tasks that do require turn documentation, the document may be brief when scope is small, but it must clearly explain what changed and how it was validated.

Plan Mode Documentation

When working in plan mode, do not modify implementation files.

At the end of plan mode, provide a concise summary of the plan and ask the user whether they want to proceed with implementation.

If the user asks to save the plan, create a user-readable HTML plan document in:

docs/plans/

Use a clear timestamped filename:

docs/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-short-plan-name.html

The plan document should be labeled clearly as a plan and should include:

  1. Plan Summary
  2. Goals
  3. Proposed Changes
  4. Relevant Context
  5. Implementation Steps
  6. Risks, Limitations, and Mitigations
  7. Open Questions

Always do the following when you finish a task, finish the beads workflow and and make a commit:

  • Document the changes in a user-readable format
  • Use the impeccable skill to structure the document as HTML
  • Create a clear, concise summary of the changes at the top, followed by a detailed description of the changes, including any relevant context or background as well as specific code snippets or examples.
  • Note any relevant issues or limitations that were addressed or mitigated by the changes.
  • The HTML file should be stored in the docs/turns directory. It should include the current date and time, as well as a brief explanation of changes. e.g. docs/turns/YYYY-MM-DD-{description}.html