* feat(cli): filter terminated sessions from ao session ls / ao status by default Closes #1310. Terminated sessions (killed/terminated/done/merged/errored/cleanup, plus lifecycle-driven terminal states) are now hidden from `ao session ls` and `ao status` by default. A dim footer reports how many were hidden and how to surface them. Pass `--include-terminated` to restore the full list. JSON output wraps into `{ data: [...], meta: { hiddenTerminatedCount } }` on both commands so text and machine-readable views tell the same story. This is a breaking change for script consumers of `--json`; `--include-terminated` is the escape hatch. Orthogonal to `-a, --all` (orchestrator visibility, unchanged). Restore of terminated sessions by id is unaffected — that path goes through `sm.get`, not `sm.list`. Docs (`SETUP.md`, `docs/CLI.md`) updated to match. Tests cover both the legacy status branch and the canonical lifecycle branch of `isTerminalSession`. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix(cli): drop unused `lc` param in lifecycle-alive test case ESLint's no-unused-vars rejects unprefixed unused args. The "alive — should remain visible" branch of the new lifecycle-driven filter test in `session.test.ts` took `lc` but never touched it. Switch to `()`. Matches the equivalent case in `status.test.ts`. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix(core): preserve pr.state=merged when legacy metadata lacks pr= URL Review blocker on PR #1340: a metadata file with `status=merged` but no `pr=` URL was still showing as active in `ao session ls` / `ao status` by default. Root cause: `synthesizePRState()` in lifecycle-state.ts short-circuited to `{ state: "none" }` whenever no PR URL was present, ignoring the fact that the legacy `status` column already encodes terminal truth. Once lifecycle was synthesized as `session.state="idle"` + `pr.state="none"`, `deriveLegacyStatus` returned `"idle"` and `isTerminalSession()` (lifecycle branch) returned false. The new CLI filter then let the session through. Fix: when legacy `status === "merged"` and no URL is available, synthesize `pr.state="merged", reason="merged"` with `number: null, url: null`. The terminal signal survives the flat-metadata → canonical-lifecycle round trip. Also: - Export `sessionFromMetadata` from the core barrel. CLI tests and external consumers need it to round-trip metadata through the canonical lifecycle. - Update CLI `buildSessionsFromDir` helpers to route through `sessionFromMetadata` so mocked `sm.list()` reflects production reconstruction (the old shortcut bypassed synthesis entirely and was the reason the bug slipped past the original test suite). - Add regression tests: one at the core level (`parseCanonicalLifecycle` for merged-without-URL) and one integration-style test per CLI command asserting the reviewer's exact repro produces the expected filtered output. - One pre-existing test expectation updated: when metadata has `status=working` and `pr=<url>`, the reconstructed status is `pr_open`, not `working`. That's what production `sm.list()` has always returned; the test was previously hiding behind the reconstruction shortcut. Changeset bumped to include ao-core (patch). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * test(cli): route review-check helper through sessionFromMetadata Last remaining test-fidelity shortcut flagged by codex on PR #1340. The `buildSessionsFromDir` helper in review-check.test.ts fabricated Session objects by hand, bypassing the canonical lifecycle reconstruction that production `sm.list()` runs. Doesn't affect review-check's actual behavior (which reads `session.metadata["pr"]` directly), but aligns this test with the equivalent helpers in session.test.ts and status.test.ts so future lifecycle changes don't silently skip this surface. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> --------- Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> |
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| artifacts | ||
| changelog | ||
| docs | ||
| examples | ||
| openclaw-plugin | ||
| packages | ||
| scripts | ||
| skills/agent-orchestrator | ||
| tests/integration | ||
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| .gitignore-template | ||
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| AGENTS.md | ||
| ARCHITECTURE.md | ||
| CLAUDE.md | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| DESIGN.md | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| README.md | ||
| SECURITY.md | ||
| SETUP.md | ||
| TROUBLESHOOTING.md | ||
| agent-orchestrator.yaml.example | ||
| eslint.config.js | ||
| package.json | ||
| pnpm-lock.yaml | ||
| pnpm-workspace.yaml | ||
| test-ao-config.yaml | ||
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README.md
Agent Orchestrator — The Orchestration Layer for Parallel AI Agents
Spawn parallel AI coding agents, each in its own git worktree. Agents autonomously fix CI failures, address review comments, and open PRs — you supervise from one dashboard.
Agent Orchestrator manages fleets of AI coding agents working in parallel on your codebase. Each agent gets its own git worktree, its own branch, and its own PR. When CI fails, the agent fixes it. When reviewers leave comments, the agent addresses them. You only get pulled in when human judgment is needed.
Agent-agnostic (Claude Code, Codex, Aider) · Runtime-agnostic (tmux, Docker) · Tracker-agnostic (GitHub, Linear)
Quick Start
Prerequisites: Node.js 20+, Git 2.25+, tmux,
ghCLI. Install tmux viabrew install tmux(macOS) orsudo apt install tmux(Linux).
Install
npm install -g @aoagents/ao
Permission denied? Install from source?
If npm install -g fails with EACCES, prefix with sudo or fix your npm permissions.
To install from source (for contributors):
git clone https://github.com/ComposioHQ/agent-orchestrator.git
cd agent-orchestrator && bash scripts/setup.sh
Start
Point it at any repo — it clones, configures, and launches the dashboard in one command:
ao start https://github.com/your-org/your-repo
Or from inside an existing local repo:
cd ~/your-project && ao start
That's it. The dashboard opens at http://localhost:3000 and the orchestrator agent starts managing your project.
Add more projects
ao start ~/path/to/another-repo
How It Works
- You start —
ao startlaunches the dashboard and an orchestrator agent - Orchestrator spawns workers — each issue gets its own agent in an isolated git worktree
- Agents work autonomously — they read code, write tests, create PRs
- Reactions handle feedback — CI failures and review comments are automatically routed back to the agent
- You review and merge — you only get pulled in when human judgment is needed
The orchestrator agent uses the AO CLI internally to manage sessions. You don't need to learn or use the CLI — the dashboard and orchestrator handle everything.
Configuration
ao start auto-generates agent-orchestrator.yaml with sensible defaults. You can edit it afterwards to customize behavior:
# agent-orchestrator.yaml
# Runtime data is auto-derived under ~/.agent-orchestrator/{hash}-{projectId}/
port: 3000
defaults:
runtime: tmux
agent: claude-code
workspace: worktree
notifiers: [desktop]
projects:
my-app:
repo: owner/my-app
path: ~/my-app
defaultBranch: main
sessionPrefix: app
reactions:
ci-failed:
auto: true
action: send-to-agent
retries: 2
changes-requested:
auto: true
action: send-to-agent
escalateAfter: 30m
approved-and-green:
auto: false # flip to true for auto-merge
action: notify
CI fails → agent gets the logs and fixes it. Reviewer requests changes → agent addresses them. PR approved with green CI → you get a notification to merge.
See agent-orchestrator.yaml.example for the full reference, or run ao config-help for the complete schema.
Remote Access
AO keeps your Mac awake while running, so you can access the dashboard remotely (e.g., via Tailscale from your phone) without the machine going to sleep.
How it works: On macOS, AO automatically holds an idle-sleep prevention assertion using caffeinate. When AO exits, the assertion is released.
# agent-orchestrator.yaml
power:
preventIdleSleep: true # Default on macOS, no-op on Linux
Set to false if you want to allow idle sleep while AO runs.
Lid-close limitation: macOS enforces lid-close sleep at the hardware level — no userspace assertion can override it. If you need remote access while traveling with the lid closed, use clamshell mode (external power + display + input device).
Plugin Architecture
Seven plugin slots. Lifecycle stays in core.
| Slot | Default | Alternatives |
|---|---|---|
| Runtime | tmux | process |
| Agent | claude-code | codex, aider, cursor, opencode |
| Workspace | worktree | clone |
| Tracker | github | linear, gitlab |
| SCM | github | gitlab |
| Notifier | desktop | slack, discord, composio, webhook, openclaw |
| Terminal | iterm2 | web |
All interfaces defined in packages/core/src/types.ts. A plugin implements one interface and exports a PluginModule. That's it.
Why Agent Orchestrator?
Running one AI agent in a terminal is easy. Running 30 across different issues, branches, and PRs is a coordination problem.
Without orchestration, you manually: create branches, start agents, check if they're stuck, read CI failures, forward review comments, track which PRs are ready to merge, clean up when done.
With Agent Orchestrator, you: ao start and walk away. The system handles isolation, feedback routing, and status tracking. You review PRs and make decisions — the rest is automated.
Documentation
| Doc | What it covers |
|---|---|
| Setup Guide | Detailed installation, configuration, and troubleshooting |
| CLI Reference | All ao commands (mostly used by the orchestrator agent) |
| Examples | Config templates (GitHub, Linear, multi-project, auto-merge) |
| Development Guide | Architecture, conventions, plugin pattern |
| Contributing | How to contribute, build plugins, PR process |
Development
pnpm install && pnpm build # Install and build all packages
pnpm test # Run tests (3,288 test cases)
pnpm dev # Start web dashboard dev server
See docs/DEVELOPMENT.md for code conventions and architecture details.
Contributing
Contributions welcome. The plugin system makes it straightforward to add support for new agents, runtimes, trackers, and notification channels. Every plugin is an implementation of a TypeScript interface — see CONTRIBUTING.md and the Development Guide for the pattern.
License
MIT