agent-orchestrator/packages/core
Harshit Singh Bhandari 94981dc0fd
feat(web,core): "Launch Orchestrator (clean context)" button (#1904)
* feat(web,core): "Launch Orchestrator (clean context)" button

Adds a dashboard action that replaces the project's canonical
orchestrator with a fresh one — killing any existing orchestrator,
deleting its metadata, and spawning a new session with no carryover.

Why: users had no way to start an orchestrator with a clean slate from
the dashboard. Previous orchestrator context (conversation history,
stale state) silently carried over via the existing "Open Orchestrator"
flow, which only worked for first-time spawn anyway.

- core: new SessionManager.relaunchOrchestrator(config) that kills +
  deletes existing metadata then calls spawnOrchestrator. Ignores
  project.orchestratorSessionStrategy — replacement is the whole point.
  Coalesces concurrent calls via a dedicated relaunchOrchestratorPromises
  map (separate from ensureOrchestratorPromises since the semantics
  differ — a relaunch behind an ensure must not return the existing
  session).
- web: POST /api/orchestrators accepts { clean: true } to route to the
  new method. OrchestratorSelector renders a "Launch Orchestrator
  (clean context)" button that uses window.confirm() before discarding
  an existing orchestrator; no confirm when none exists.

Closes #1900, closes #1080.


* fix(core,web): address PR #1904 review

- core: cross-map race between ensureOrchestrator and relaunchOrchestrator.
  Each now awaits the other's in-flight promise (keyed by sessionId) before
  proceeding. Prevents (a) relaunch skipping the kill while ensure's
  spawnOrchestrator is mid-reservation, and (b) ensure returning a session
  that relaunch is about to kill. Adds two race regression tests.

- web: align handleSpawnNew with handleRelaunchClean via the void expression
  form; add "Launching..." in-progress label to the clean-context button and
  a test that asserts it renders during POST.


* refactor(web): rip out Orchestrator Selector page; relocate clean-launch action

There is only ever one orchestrator per project, so the /orchestrators
selector page is meaningless. Delete it along with its component, tests,
and the unused mapSessionsToOrchestrators util. Drop GET /api/orchestrators
(only consumer was the deleted page). Remove /orchestrators from project
revalidate lists.

The "Launch Orchestrator (clean context)" action that previously lived on
the deleted page now appears in two places:

- Dashboard header: a "Relaunch (clean)" button renders alongside the
  Orchestrator link whenever a project orchestrator exists. Uses
  window.confirm before discarding state.
- Orchestrator session page: a "Relaunch (clean)" button in the
  SessionDetailHeader for live orchestrator sessions, calling
  POST /api/orchestrators with clean:true and reloading the session view.

* refactor(web): remove Relaunch (clean) action from the Dashboard

Keep the clean-launch action only on the orchestrator session page —
that's where the user has the context to decide on a destructive
restart. The Dashboard header just links to the orchestrator (or shows
the existing Spawn Orchestrator button when none exists).

* fix(web): surface relaunch failures with an inline error banner

After confirm + POST /api/orchestrators with clean:true, the previous
implementation only logged failures to console.error — leaving the user
on a stale page with no signal that the destructive action partially
executed. relaunchOrchestrator kills before respawning, so a failed
respawn means the server has no orchestrator while the client still
renders the old session view.

Add local relaunchError state, set it on catch (parsed from the JSON
error response when available), and render a dismissible error banner
above the terminal area. The banner explicitly warns the user that the
previous orchestrator may already be terminated and points them at the
project dashboard to retry.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(web,core): address PR #1904 review from @i-trytoohard

- web: navigate to the new orchestrator's session path (from POST
  response) instead of window.location.reload(). Orchestrator session
  IDs are fixed per project so the path is the same in practice, but
  reading from the response is the right contract and a hard nav forces
  the terminal WebSocket to reconnect cleanly against the new tmux.

- web: remove the `!terminalEnded` gate on the Relaunch (clean) button
  in SessionDetailHeader. Terminated orchestrators are exactly when the
  user wants to relaunch — hiding the button there was wrong.

- core: log a warning instead of silently swallowing when an in-flight
  cross-map promise (ensure waiting on relaunch, or relaunch waiting on
  ensure) rejects before its caller proceeds. The catch-and-continue
  semantics are correct (the caller will re-check state anyway) but
  invisible failures were a debugging hazard.

Adds a regression test that the button stays visible on terminated
orchestrator sessions and that successful relaunch navigates via
window.location.href.
2026-05-17 21:16:25 +05:30
..
__tests__ refactor(core): storage redesign — projectId-based paths, JSON metadata (#1466) 2026-04-28 17:55:53 +05:30
src feat(web,core): "Launch Orchestrator (clean context)" button (#1904) 2026-05-17 21:16:25 +05:30
CHANGELOG.md fix(agent-plugins,lifecycle): distinguish indeterminate probe from "not found" + bump ps timeout (closes #1838) (#1839) 2026-05-14 21:50:39 +05:30
README.md feat(windows): complete Windows support (#1025) 2026-05-09 00:10:53 +05:30
package.json fix(agent-plugins,lifecycle): distinguish indeterminate probe from "not found" + bump ps timeout (closes #1838) (#1839) 2026-05-14 21:50:39 +05:30
rollup.config.ts refactor(core): storage redesign — projectId-based paths, JSON metadata (#1466) 2026-04-28 17:55:53 +05:30
tsconfig.build.json fix: align prompt asset test/build tooling 2026-04-14 00:20:11 +05:30
tsconfig.json fix: scope node types to node packages 2026-04-13 18:25:21 +05:30
vitest.config.ts build(core): bundle prompt templates with rollup 2026-04-13 14:55:01 +05:30

README.md

@aoagents/ao-core

Core services, types, and configuration for the Agent Orchestrator system.

What's Here

  • src/types.ts — All TypeScript interfaces (Runtime, Agent, Workspace, Tracker, SCM, Notifier, Terminal, Session, events)
  • src/services/ — Core services (SessionManager, LifecycleManager, PluginRegistry)
  • src/config.ts — Configuration loading + Zod schemas
  • src/utils/ — Shared utilities (shell escaping, metadata parsing, etc.)

Key Files

src/types.ts — The Source of Truth

Every interface the system uses is defined here. If you're working on any part of the orchestrator, start by reading this file.

Main interfaces:

  • Runtime — where sessions execute (tmux on Unix, process / ConPTY via node-pty on Windows, docker, k8s)
  • Agent — AI coding tool adapter (claude-code, codex, aider)
  • Workspace — code isolation (worktree, clone)
  • Tracker — issue tracking (GitHub Issues, Linear)
  • SCM — PR/CI/reviews (GitHub, GitLab)
  • Notifier — push notifications (desktop, Slack, webhook)
  • Terminal — human interaction UI (iTerm2, web)
  • Session — running agent instance (state, metadata, handles)
  • OrchestratorEvent — events emitted by lifecycle manager
  • PluginModule — what every plugin exports

src/services/session-manager.ts — Session CRUD

Handles session lifecycle:

  • spawn(config) — create new session (workspace + runtime + agent)
  • list(projectId?) — list all sessions
  • get(sessionId) — get session details
  • kill(sessionId) — terminate session
  • cleanup(projectId?) — kill completed/merged sessions
  • send(sessionId, message) — send message to agent

Data flow in spawn():

  1. Load project config
  2. Validate issue exists via Tracker.getIssue() (if issueId provided, fails-fast if not found)
  3. Reserve session ID
  4. Determine branch name
  5. Create workspace via Workspace.create()
  6. Generate prompt via Tracker.generatePrompt()
  7. Build layered worker prompt via buildPrompt() into systemPrompt + taskPrompt
  8. Persist systemPromptFile for the session and, for OpenCode workers, write OPENCODE_CONFIG
  9. Build launch command via Agent.getLaunchCommand()
  10. Create runtime session via Runtime.create()
  11. Run Agent.postLaunchSetup() (optional)
  12. Write metadata file
  13. Return Session object

Note: If issue validation fails (not found, auth error), spawn fails before creating any resources (no workspace, no runtime, no session ID). This prevents spawning sessions with broken issue references.
Worker sessions keep persistent instructions in the prompt file. OpenCode workers consume that file through OPENCODE_CONFIG, while OpenCode orchestrators continue to project their system prompt into workspace AGENTS.md.

src/services/lifecycle-manager.ts — State Machine + Reactions

Polls sessions, detects state changes, triggers reactions:

State machine:

spawning → working → pr_open → ci_failed/review_pending/approved → mergeable → merged

Reactions:

  • ci-failed → send fix prompt to agent
  • changes-requested → send review comments to agent
  • approved-and-green → notify human (or auto-merge)
  • agent-stuck → notify human

Polling loop:

  1. For each session: check agent activity state (Agent.getActivityState())
  2. If PR exists: check CI status (SCM.getCISummary()), review state (SCM.getReviewDecision())
  3. Update session status based on state
  4. Trigger reactions if state changed
  5. Emit events

src/services/plugin-registry.ts — Plugin Discovery + Loading

Loads plugins and provides access to them:

  • register(plugin, config?) — register a plugin instance
  • get<T>(slot, name) — get plugin by slot + name
  • list(slot) — list all plugins for a slot
  • loadBuiltins(config?) — load built-in plugins (runtime-tmux, agent-claude-code, etc.)
  • loadFromConfig(config) — load built-ins today; external plugin descriptors are the marketplace extension point

Built-in plugins (loaded by default):

  • runtime-tmux, runtime-process
  • agent-claude-code, agent-codex, agent-aider, agent-cursor, agent-kimicode, agent-opencode
  • workspace-worktree, workspace-clone
  • tracker-github, tracker-linear, tracker-gitlab
  • scm-github, scm-gitlab
  • notifier-desktop, notifier-discord, notifier-slack, notifier-composio, notifier-openclaw, notifier-webhook
  • terminal-iterm2, terminal-web

src/config.ts — Configuration Loading

Loads and validates agent-orchestrator.yaml:

Main config sections:

  • Runtime data paths are auto-derived from the config location under ~/.agent-orchestrator/{hash}-{projectId}/
  • port — web dashboard port (default 3000, set different values for multiple projects)
  • terminalPort — terminal WebSocket port (auto-detected if not set)
  • directTerminalPort — direct terminal WebSocket port (auto-detected if not set)
  • defaults — default plugins (runtime, agent, workspace, notifiers)
  • plugins — installer-managed external plugin descriptors (registry, npm, or local)
  • projects — per-project config (repo, path, branch, symlinks, reactions, agentRules)
  • notifiers — notification channel config (Slack webhooks, etc.)
  • notificationRouting — which notifiers get which priority events
  • reactions — auto-response config (ci-failed, changes-requested, approved-and-green, etc.)

Zod schemas validate all config at load time.

Common Tasks

Adding a Field to Session

  1. Edit src/types.tsSession interface
  2. Edit src/services/session-manager.ts → initialize field in spawn()
  3. Rebuild: pnpm --filter @aoagents/ao-core build

Adding an Event Type

  1. Edit src/types.tsEventType union
  2. Emit the event: eventEmitter.emit() in relevant service
  3. Add reaction handler (optional): src/services/lifecycle-manager.ts

Adding a Reaction

  1. Edit src/services/lifecycle-manager.ts → add handler function
  2. Wire it up in the polling loop
  3. Add config schema in src/config.ts if new reaction type

Feedback Tools (v1)

@aoagents/ao-core exports two structured feedback tool contracts:

  • bug_report
  • improvement_suggestion

Both share the same required input fields:

  • title
  • body
  • evidence (array of strings)
  • session
  • source
  • confidence (0..1)

Example:

import { FEEDBACK_TOOL_NAMES, FeedbackReportStore, getFeedbackReportsDir } from "@aoagents/ao-core";

const reportsDir = getFeedbackReportsDir(configPath, projectPath);
const store = new FeedbackReportStore(reportsDir);

const saved = store.persist(FEEDBACK_TOOL_NAMES.BUG_REPORT, {
  title: "SSO login loop",
  body: "Google SSO redirects back to /login repeatedly.",
  evidence: ["trace_id=abc123", "screenshot: login-loop.png"],
  session: "ao-22",
  source: "agent",
  confidence: 0.84,
});

Storage format:

  • Reports are persisted under ~/.agent-orchestrator/{hash}-{projectId}/feedback-reports
  • Each report is a typed key=value file (report_<timestamp>_<id>.kv) for easy inspection
  • A deterministic dedupe key (sha256, 16 hex chars) is generated from normalized tool+content

Migration notes:

  • No migration needed for existing AO installs
  • The feedback-reports directory is created lazily on first persisted report

Testing

# Run all core tests
pnpm --filter @aoagents/ao-core test

# Run in watch mode
pnpm --filter @aoagents/ao-core test -- --watch

# Run specific test
pnpm --filter @aoagents/ao-core test -- session-manager.test.ts

Tests are in src/__tests__/:

  • session-manager.test.ts — session CRUD, spawn, cleanup
  • lifecycle-manager.test.ts — state machine, reactions
  • plugin-registry.test.ts — plugin loading, resolution
  • tmux.test.ts — tmux utility functions (not a plugin test)
  • prompt-builder.test.ts — prompt generation utilities

Building

# Build core
pnpm --filter @aoagents/ao-core build

# Typecheck
pnpm --filter @aoagents/ao-core typecheck

This package is a dependency of all other packages. Build it first if working on the codebase.

Architecture Notes

Why flat metadata files?

  • Debuggability: cat ~/.agent-orchestrator/<hash>-my-app/sessions/app-3 shows full state
  • No database dependency (survives crashes, easy to inspect)
  • Backwards-compatible with bash script orchestrator

Why polling instead of webhooks?

  • Simpler (no webhook setup, no ngrok for local dev)
  • Works offline (CI/review state is fetched, not pushed)
  • Survives orchestrator restarts (no missed events)

Why plugin slots?

  • Swappability: use tmux on Linux/macOS, process (ConPTY) on Windows, docker in CI, k8s in prod — same agent/workspace stack across all of them
  • Testability: mock plugins for tests
  • Extensibility: users can add custom plugins (e.g., company-specific notifier)