agent-orchestrator/packages/core
prateek 59c490a3af
fix: dashboard config discovery + CLI service layer refactoring (#70)
* fix: config discovery, activity detection, and metadata port storage

- findConfigFile() checks AO_CONFIG_PATH env var (resolved to absolute path)
- loadConfig() delegates to findConfigFile() for consistent validation
- Pure Node.js readLastJsonlEntry (no external tail binary), safe for
  multi-byte UTF-8 at chunk boundaries
- Added "ready" activity state to agent plugins
- Store dashboardPort, terminalWsPort, directTerminalWsPort in session
  metadata so ao stop targets the correct processes
- Zod schema port default aligned with TypeScript interface

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: dashboard config discovery + CLI service layer refactoring

- Config discovery via AO_CONFIG_PATH env var
- Auto port detection with PortManager
- Activity detection with ready state, pure Node.js readLastLine
- 5 CLI services: ConfigService, PortManager, DashboardManager, MetadataService, ProcessManager
- Store all service ports in metadata for ao stop
- Set NEXT_PUBLIC_ env vars for frontend terminal components
- Multi-byte UTF-8 safe readLastJsonlEntry
- Tests for all new services and utils

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: address bugbot review comments (port fallback + systemPrompt)

1. Align port fallback to 3000 everywhere (matching Zod schema default):
   - start.ts: config.port ?? 3000
   - dashboard.ts: config.port ?? 3000
   - types.ts JSDoc: "defaults to 3000"
   - orchestrator-prompt.ts: already correct at 3000

2. Add --append-system-prompt to Claude Code plugin's getLaunchCommand
   so orchestrator context is actually passed to the Claude agent.
   Previously systemPrompt was generated but silently dropped.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: remove dead ConfigService mock from status test

The vi.mock for ConfigService.js referenced a deleted module.
Config mocking is already handled by the @composio/ao-core mock.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: extract shared buildDashboardEnv to eliminate duplication

Dashboard env construction (AO_CONFIG_PATH, PORT, NEXT_PUBLIC_*) was
duplicated between start.ts and dashboard.ts. Extracted into
buildDashboardEnv() in web-dir.ts (already shared by both commands).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-02-18 17:08:48 +05:30
..
__tests__ fix: dashboard config discovery + CLI service layer refactoring (#70) 2026-02-18 17:08:48 +05:30
src fix: dashboard config discovery + CLI service layer refactoring (#70) 2026-02-18 17:08:48 +05:30
README.md fix: activity detection — fix path encoding bug, add ready state (#71) 2026-02-18 03:48:19 +05:30
package.json feat: publish to npm under @composio scope (#32) 2026-02-15 04:28:57 +05:30
tsconfig.build.json feat: implement SCM and tracker plugins (github, linear) (#4) 2026-02-14 15:45:51 +05:30
tsconfig.json feat: implement SCM and tracker plugins (github, linear) (#4) 2026-02-14 15:45:51 +05:30
vitest.config.ts feat: seamless onboarding with enhanced documentation (#66) 2026-02-16 22:22:13 +05:30

README.md

@agent-orchestrator/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, 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 launch command via Agent.getLaunchCommand()
  8. Create runtime session via Runtime.create()
  9. Run Agent.postLaunchSetup() (optional)
  10. Write metadata file
  11. 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.

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 plugins from config (npm packages, local paths)

Built-in plugins (loaded by default):

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

src/config.ts — Configuration Loading

Loads and validates agent-orchestrator.yaml:

Main config sections:

  • dataDir — where session metadata lives (~/.agent-orchestrator)
  • worktreeDir — where workspaces are created (~/.worktrees)
  • port — web dashboard port (default 3000)
  • defaults — default plugins (runtime, agent, workspace, notifiers)
  • 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 @agent-orchestrator/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

Testing

# Run all core tests
pnpm --filter @agent-orchestrator/core test

# Run in watch mode
pnpm --filter @agent-orchestrator/core test -- --watch

# Run specific test
pnpm --filter @agent-orchestrator/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 @agent-orchestrator/core build

# Typecheck
pnpm --filter @agent-orchestrator/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/my-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 locally, docker in CI, k8s in prod
  • Testability: mock plugins for tests
  • Extensibility: users can add custom plugins (e.g., company-specific notifier)