26 KiB
Beads Contributor Workflow Analysis
Date: 2025-11-03 Context: Design discussion on how to handle beads issues in PR/OSS contribution workflows
The Problem (from #207)
When contributing to OSS projects with beads installed:
- Git hooks automatically commit contributor's personal planning to PRs
- Contributor's experimental musings pollute the upstream project's issue tracker
- No clear ownership/permission model for external contributors
- Difficult to keep beads changes out of commits
Core tension: Beads is great for team planning (shared namespace), but breaks down for OSS contributions (hierarchical gatekeeping).
Key Insights from Discussion
Beads as "Moving Frontier"
Beads is not a traditional issue tracker. It captures the active working set - the sliding window of issues currently under attention:
- Work moves fast with AI agents (10x-50x acceleration)
- Completed work fades quickly (95% never revisited, should be pruned aggressively)
- Future work is mostly blocked (small frontier of ready tasks)
- The frontier is bounded by team size (dozens to hundreds of issues, not thousands)
Design principle: Beads should focus on the "what's next" cloud, not long-term planning or historical archive.
The Git Ledger is Fundamental
Beads achieves reliability despite being unreliable (merge conflicts, sync issues, data staleness) through:
A. Git is the ledger and immutable backstop for forensics B. AI is the ultimate arbiter and problem-solver when things go wrong
Any solution that removes the git ledger (e.g., gitignored contributor files) breaks this model entirely.
Requirements for Contributors
Contributors need:
- Git-backed persistence (multi-clone sync, forensics, AI repair)
- Isolated planning space (don't pollute upstream)
- Ability to propose selected issues upstream
- Support for multiple workers across multiple clones of the same repo
Proposed Solutions
Idea 1: Fork-Aware Hooks + Two-File System
Structure:
# Upstream repo
.beads/
beads.jsonl # Canonical frontier (committed)
.gitignore # Ignores local.jsonl
# Contributor's fork
.beads/
beads.jsonl # Synced from upstream (read-only)
local.jsonl # Contributor planning (committed to fork)
beads.db # Hydrated from both
Detection: Check for upstream remote to distinguish fork from canonical repo
Workflow:
# In fork
$ bd add "Experiment" # → local.jsonl (committed to fork)
$ bd sync # → Pulls upstream's beads.jsonl
$ bd show # → Shows both
$ bd propose bd-a3f8e9 # → Moves issue to beads.jsonl for PR
Pros:
- Git ledger preserved (local.jsonl committed to fork)
- Multi-clone sync works
- Upstream .gitignore prevents pollution
Cons:
- Fork detection doesn't help teams using branches (most common workflow)
- Two files to manage
- Requires discipline to use
bd propose
Idea 2: Ownership Metadata + Smart PR Filtering
Structure:
{"id":"bd-123","owner":"upstream","title":"Canonical issue",...}
{"id":"bd-456","owner":"stevey","title":"My planning",...}
Workflow:
$ bd add "Experiment" # → Creates with owner="stevey"
$ bd propose bd-456 # → Changes owner to "upstream"
$ bd clean-pr # → Filters commit to only upstream-owned issues
$ git push # → PR contains only proposed issues
Pros:
- Single file (simpler)
- Works with any git workflow (branch, fork, etc)
- Git ledger fully preserved
Cons:
- Requires discipline to run
bd clean-pr - Clean commit is awkward (temporarily removing data)
- Merge conflicts if upstream and contributor both modify beads.jsonl
Idea 3: Branch-Scoped Databases
Track which issues belong to which branch, filter at PR time.
Implementation: Similar to #2 but uses labels/metadata to track branch instead of owner.
Challenge: Complex with multiple feature branches, requires tracking branch scope.
Idea 4: Separate Planning Repo (Most Isolated)
Structure:
# Main project repos (many)
~/projects/beads/.beads/beads.jsonl
~/projects/foo/.beads/beads.jsonl
# Single planning repo (one)
~/.beads-planning/.beads/beads.jsonl
# Configuration links them
~/projects/beads/.beads/config.toml:
planning_repo = "~/.beads-planning"
Workflow:
$ cd ~/projects/beads
$ bd add "My idea" # → Commits to ~/.beads-planning/
$ bd show # → Shows beads canonical + my planning
$ bd propose bd-a3f8e9 # → Exports to beads repo for PR
Pros:
- Complete isolation (separate git histories, zero PR pollution risk)
- Git ledger fully preserved (both repos tracked)
- Multi-clone works perfectly (clone both repos)
- No special filtering/detection needed
- Scales better: One planning repo for all projects
Cons:
- Two repos to manage
- Less obvious for new users (where's my planning?)
Analysis: Fork vs Clone vs Branch
Clone: Local copy of a repo (git clone <url>)
originremote points to source- Push directly to origin (if you have write access)
Fork: Server-side copy on GitHub
- For contributors without write access
origin→ your fork,upstream→ original repo- Push to fork, then PR from fork → upstream
Branch: Feature branches in same repo
- Most common for teams with write access
- Push to same repo, PR from branch → main
Key insight: Branches are universal, forks are only for external contributors. Most teams work on branches in a shared repo.
Current Thinking: Idea 4 is Cleanest
After analysis, separate planning repo (#4) is likely the best solution because:
- Only solution that truly prevents PR pollution (separate git histories)
- Git ledger fully preserved (both repos tracked)
- Multi-clone works perfectly (just clone both)
- No complex filtering/detection needed (simple config)
- Better scaling: One planning repo across all projects you contribute to
The "managing two repos" concern is actually an advantage: your planning is centralized and project-agnostic.
Open Questions
About the Workflow
-
Where does PR pollution actually happen?
- Scenario A: Feature branch → upstream/main includes all beads changes from that branch?
- Scenario B: Something else?
-
Multi-clone usage pattern:
- Multiple clones on different machines?
- All push/pull to same remote?
- Workers coordinate via git sync?
- PRs created from feature branches?
About Implementation
-
Proposed issue IDs: When moving issue from planning → canonical, keep same ID? (Hash-based IDs are globally unique)
-
Upstream acceptance sync: If upstream accepts/modifies a proposal, how to sync back to contributor?
bd syncdetects accepted proposals- Moves from planning repo to project's canonical beads.jsonl
-
Multiple projects: One planning repo for all projects you contribute to, or one per project?
-
Backwards compatibility: Single-user projects unchanged (single beads.jsonl)
-
Discovery: How do users discover this feature? Auto-detect and prompt?
Next Steps
Need to clarify:
- User's actual multi-clone workflow (understand the real use case)
- Where exactly PR pollution occurs (branch vs fork workflow)
- Which solution best fits the "git ledger + multi-clone" requirements
- Whether centralized planning repo (#4) or per-project isolation (#1/#2) is preferred
Design Principles to Preserve
From the conversation, these are non-negotiable:
- Git as ledger: Everything must be git-tracked for forensics and AI repair
- Moving frontier: Focus on active work, aggressively prune completed work
- Multi-clone sync: Workers across clones must coordinate via git
- Small databases: Keep beads.jsonl small enough for agents to read (<25k)
- Simple defaults: Don't break single-user workflows
- Explicit over implicit: Clear boundaries between personal and canonical
Decision: Separate Repos (Solution #4)
Date: 2025-11-03 (continued discussion)
Why Separate Repos
After consideration, Solution #4 (Separate Planning Repos) is the chosen approach:
Key Rationale
-
Beads as a Separate Channel: Beads is fundamentally a separate communication channel that happens to use git/VCS for persistence, not a git-centric tool. It should work with any VCS (jujutsu, sapling, mercurial, etc.).
-
VCS-Agnostic Design: Solution #1 (fork detection) is too git-centric and wouldn't work with other version control systems. Separate repos work regardless of VCS.
-
Maximum Flexibility: Supports multiple workflows and personas:
- OSS contributor with personal planning
- Multi-phase development (different beads DBs for different stages)
- Multiple personas (architect, implementer, reviewer)
- Team vs personal planning separation
-
Zero PR Pollution Risk: Completely separate git histories guarantee no accidental pollution of upstream projects.
-
Proven Pain Point: Experience shows that accidental bulk commits (100k issues) can be catastrophic and traumatic to recover from. Complete isolation is worth the complexity.
Core Architecture Principles
1. Multi-Repo Support (N ≥ 1)
Configuration should support N repos, including N=1 for backward compatibility:
When N=1 (default), this is the current single-repo workflow - no changes needed. When N≥2, multiple repos are hydrated together.
# .beads/config.toml
# Default mode: single repo (backwards compatible)
mode = "single"
# Multi-repo mode
[repos]
# Primary repo: where canonical issues live
primary = "."
# Additional repos to hydrate into the database
additional = [
"~/.beads-planning", # Personal planning across all projects
"~/.beads-work/phase1", # Architecting phase
"~/.beads-work/phase2", # Implementation phase
"~/team-shared/.beads", # Shared team planning
]
# Routing: where do new issues go?
[routing]
mode = "auto" # auto | explicit
default = "~/.beads-planning" # Default for `bd add`
# Auto-detection: based on user permissions
[routing.auto]
maintainer = "." # If maintainer, use primary
contributor = "~/.beads-planning" # Otherwise use planning repo
2. Hydration Model
On bd show, bd list, etc., the database hydrates from multiple sources:
beads.db ← [
./.beads/beads.jsonl (primary, read-write if maintainer)
~/.beads-planning/beads.jsonl (personal, read-write)
~/team-shared/.beads/beads.jsonl (shared, read-write if team member)
]
Metadata tracking:
{
"id": "bd-a3f8e9",
"title": "Add dark mode",
"source_repo": "~/.beads-planning", # Which repo owns this issue
"visibility": "local", # local | proposed | canonical
...
}
3. Visibility States
Issues can be in different states of visibility:
- local: Personal planning, only in planning repo
- proposed: Exported for upstream consideration (staged for PR)
- canonical: In the primary repo (upstream accepted it)
4. VCS-Agnostic Operations
Beads should not assume git. Core operations:
- Sync:
bd syncshould work with git, jj, hg, sl, etc. - Ledger: Each repo uses whatever VCS it's under (or none)
- Transport: Issues move between repos via export/import, not git-specific operations
Workflow Examples
Use Case 1: OSS Contributor
# One-time setup
$ mkdir ~/.beads-planning
$ cd ~/.beads-planning
$ git init && bd init
# Contributing to upstream project
$ cd ~/projects/some-oss-project
$ bd config --add-repo ~/.beads-planning --routing contributor
# Work
$ bd add "Explore dark mode implementation"
# → Goes to ~/.beads-planning/beads.jsonl
# → Commits to planning repo (git tracked, forensic trail)
$ bd show
# → Shows upstream's canonical issues (read-only)
# → Shows my planning issues (read-write)
$ bd work bd-a3f8e9
$ bd status bd-a3f8e9 in-progress
# Ready to propose
$ bd propose bd-a3f8e9 --target upstream
# → Exports issue from planning repo
# → Creates issue in ./beads/beads.jsonl (staged for PR)
# → Marks as visibility="proposed" in planning repo
$ git add .beads/beads.jsonl
$ git commit -m "Propose: Add dark mode"
$ git push origin feature-branch
# → PR contains only the proposed issue, not all my planning
Use Case 2: Multi-Phase Development
# Setup phases
$ mkdir -p ~/.beads-work/{architecture,implementation,testing}
$ for dir in ~/.beads-work/*; do (cd $dir && git init && bd init); done
# Configure project
$ cd ~/my-big-project
$ bd config --add-repo ~/.beads-work/architecture
$ bd config --add-repo ~/.beads-work/implementation
$ bd config --add-repo ~/.beads-work/testing
# Architecture phase
$ bd add "Design authentication system" --repo ~/.beads-work/architecture
$ bd show --repo ~/.beads-work/architecture
# → Only architecture issues
# Implementation phase (later)
$ bd add "Implement JWT validation" --repo ~/.beads-work/implementation
# View all phases
$ bd show
# → Shows all issues from all configured repos
Use Case 3: Multiple Contributors on Same Project
# Team member Alice (maintainer)
$ cd ~/project
$ bd add "Fix bug in parser"
# → Goes to ./beads/beads.jsonl (she's maintainer)
# → Commits to project repo
# Team member Bob (contributor)
$ cd ~/project
$ bd add "Explore performance optimization"
# → Goes to ~/.beads-planning/beads.jsonl (he's contributor)
# → Does NOT pollute project repo
$ bd show
# → Sees Alice's canonical issue
# → Sees his own planning
$ bd propose bd-xyz
# → Proposes to Alice's canonical repo
Implementation Outline
Phase 1: Core Multi-Repo Support
Commands:
bd config --add-repo <path> # Add a repo to hydration
bd config --remove-repo <path> # Remove a repo
bd config --list-repos # Show all configured repos
bd config --routing <mode> # Set routing: single|auto|explicit
Config schema:
[repos]
primary = "."
additional = ["path1", "path2", ...]
[routing]
default = "path" # Where `bd add` goes by default
mode = "auto" # auto | explicit
Database changes:
- Add
source_repofield to issues - Hydration layer reads from multiple JSONLs
- Writes go to correct JSONL based on source_repo
Phase 2: Proposal Flow
Commands:
bd propose <issue-id> [--target <repo>] # Move issue to target repo
bd withdraw <issue-id> # Un-propose (move back)
bd accept <issue-id> # Maintainer accepts proposal
States:
visibility: local→ Personal planningvisibility: proposed→ Staged for PRvisibility: canonical→ Accepted by upstream
Phase 3: Routing Rules
Auto-detection:
- Detect if user is maintainer (git config, permissions)
- Auto-route to primary vs planning repo
Config-based routing (no new schema fields):
[routing]
mode = "auto" # auto | explicit
default = "~/.beads-planning" # Fallback for contributors
# Auto-detection rules
[routing.auto]
maintainer = "." # If user is maintainer, use primary repo
contributor = "~/.beads-planning" # Otherwise use planning repo
Explicit routing via CLI flag:
# Override auto-detection for specific issues
bd add "Design system" --repo ~/.beads-work/architecture
Discovered issue inheritance:
- Issues with parent_id automatically inherit parent's source_repo
- Keeps related work co-located
Phase 4: VCS-Agnostic Sync
Sync operations:
- Detect VCS type per repo (git, jj, hg, sl)
- Use appropriate sync commands
- Fall back to manual sync if no VCS
Example:
$ bd sync
# Auto-detects:
# - . is git → runs git pull
# - ~/.beads-planning is jj → runs jj git fetch && jj rebase
# - ~/other is hg → runs hg pull && hg update
Migration Path
Existing Users (Single Repo)
No changes required. Current workflow continues to work:
$ bd add "Task"
# → .beads/beads.jsonl (as before)
Opting Into Multi-Repo
# Create planning repo
$ mkdir ~/.beads-planning && cd ~/.beads-planning
$ git init && bd init
# Link to project
$ cd ~/my-project
$ bd config --add-repo ~/.beads-planning
$ bd config --routing auto # Auto-detect maintainer vs contributor
# Optionally migrate existing issues
$ bd migrate --move-to ~/.beads-planning --filter "author=me"
Teams Adopting Beads
# Maintainer sets up project
$ cd ~/team-project
$ bd init
$ git add .beads/ && git commit -m "Initialize beads"
# Contributors clone and configure
$ git clone team-project
$ cd team-project
$ mkdir ~/.beads-planning && cd ~/.beads-planning
$ git init && bd init
$ cd ~/team-project
$ bd config --add-repo ~/.beads-planning --routing contributor
Design Decisions (Resolved)
1. Namespace Collisions: Option B (Global Uniqueness)
Decision: Use globally unique hash-based IDs that include timestamp + random component.
Rationale (from VC feedback):
- Option C (allow collisions) breaks dependency references:
bd dep add bd-a3f8e9 bd-b7c2d1becomes ambiguous - Need to support cross-repo dependencies without repo-scoped namespacing
- Hash should be:
hash(title + description + timestamp_ms + random_4bytes) - Collision probability: ~1 in 10^12 (acceptable)
2. Cross-Repo Dependencies: Yes, Fully Supported
Decision: Dependencies work transparently across all repos.
Implementation:
- Hydrated database contains all issues from all repos
- Dependencies stored by ID only (no repo qualifier needed)
bd readychecks dependency graph across all repos- Writes route back to correct JSONL via
source_repometadata
3. Routing Mechanism: Config-Based, No Schema Changes
Decision: Use config-based routing + explicit --repo flag. No new schema fields.
Rationale:
IssueTypealready exists and is used semantically (bug, feature, task, epic, chore)- Labels are used semantically by VC (
discovered:blocker,no-auto-claim) - Routing is a storage concern, not issue metadata
- Simpler: auto-detect maintainer vs contributor from config
- Discovered issues inherit parent's
source_repoautomatically
4. Performance: Smart Caching with File Mtime Tracking
Decision: SQLite DB is the cache, JSONLs are source of truth.
Implementation:
type MultiRepoStorage struct {
repos []RepoConfig
db *sql.DB
repoMtimes map[string]time.Time // Track file modification times
}
func (s *MultiRepoStorage) GetReadyWork(ctx) ([]Issue, error) {
// Fast path: check if ANY JSONL changed
needSync := false
for repo, jsonlPath := range s.jsonlPaths() {
currentMtime := stat(jsonlPath).ModTime()
if currentMtime.After(s.repoMtimes[repo]) {
needSync = true
s.repoMtimes[repo] = currentMtime
}
}
// Only re-hydrate if something changed
if needSync {
s.rehydrate() // Expensive but rare
}
// Query is fast (in-memory SQLite)
return s.db.Query("SELECT * FROM issues WHERE ...")
}
Rationale: VC's polling loop (every 5-10 seconds) requires sub-second queries. File stat is microseconds, re-parsing only when needed.
5. Visibility Field: Optional, Backward Compatible
Decision: Add visibility as optional field, defaults to "canonical" if missing.
Schema:
type Issue struct {
// ... existing fields ...
Visibility *string `json:"visibility,omitempty"` // nil = canonical
}
States:
local: Personal planning onlyproposed: Staged for upstream PRcanonical: Accepted by upstream (or default for existing issues)
Orthogonality: Visibility and Status are independent:
status: in_progress, visibility: local→ Working on personal planningstatus: open, visibility: proposed→ Proposed to upstream, awaiting review
6. Library API Stability: Transparent Hydration
Decision: Hybrid approach - transparent by default, explicit opt-in available.
Backward Compatible:
// Existing code keeps working - reads config.toml automatically
store, err := beadsLib.NewSQLiteStorage(".beads/vc.db")
Explicit Override:
// Library consumers can override config
cfg := beadsLib.Config{
Primary: ".beads/vc.db",
Additional: []string{"~/.beads-planning"},
}
store, err := beadsLib.NewStorageWithConfig(cfg)
7. ACID Guarantees: Per-Repo File Locking
Decision: Use file-based locks per JSONL, atomic within single repo.
Implementation:
func (s *Storage) UpdateIssue(issue Issue) error {
sourceRepo := issue.SourceRepo
// Lock that repo's JSONL
lock := flock(sourceRepo + "/beads.jsonl.lock")
defer lock.Unlock()
// Read-modify-write
issues := s.readJSONL(sourceRepo)
issues.Update(issue)
s.writeJSONL(sourceRepo, issues)
// Update in-memory DB
s.db.Update(issue)
}
Limitation: Cross-repo transactions are NOT atomic (acceptable, rare use case).
Key Learnings from VC Feedback
The VC project (VibeCoder) provided critical feedback as a real downstream consumer that uses beads as a library. Key insights:
1. Two Consumer Models
Beads has two distinct consumer types:
- CLI users: Use
bdcommands directly - Library consumers: Use
beadsLibin Go/TypeScript/etc. (like VC)
Multi-repo must work transparently for both.
2. Performance is Critical for Automation
VC's executor polls GetReadyWork() every 5-10 seconds. Multi-repo hydration must:
- Use smart caching (file mtime tracking)
- Avoid re-parsing JSONLs on every query
- Keep queries sub-second (ideally <100ms)
3. Special Labels Must Work Across Repos
VC uses semantic labels that must work regardless of repo:
discovered:blocker- Auto-generated blocker issues (priority boost)discovered:related- Auto-generated related workno-auto-claim- Prevent executor from claimingbaseline-failure- Self-healing baseline failures
These are semantic labels, not routing labels. Don't overload labels for routing.
4. Discovered Issues Routing
When VC's analysis phase auto-creates issues with discovered:blocker label, they should:
- Inherit parent's
source_repoautomatically - Stay co-located with related work
- Not require manual routing decisions
5. Library API Stability is Non-Negotiable
VC's code uses beadsLib.NewSQLiteStorage(). Must not break. Solution:
- Read
.beads/config.tomlautomatically (transparent) - Provide
NewStorageWithConfig()for explicit override - Hydration happens at storage layer, invisible to library consumers
Remaining Open Questions
-
Sync semantics: When upstream accepts a proposed issue and modifies it, how to sync back?
- Option A: Mark as "accepted" in planning repo, keep both copies
- Option B: Delete from planning repo (it's now canonical)
- Option C: Keep in planning repo but mark as read-only mirror
-
Discovery: How do users learn about this feature?
- Auto-prompt when detecting fork/contributor status?
- Docs + examples?
bd init --contributorwizard?
-
Metadata fields: Should
source_repobe exposed in JSON export, or keep it internal to storage layer? -
Proposed issue lifecycle: What happens to proposed issues after PR is merged/rejected?
- Auto-delete from planning repo?
- Mark as "accepted" or "rejected"?
- Manual cleanup via
bd withdraw?
Success Metrics
How we'll know this works:
- Zero pollution: No contributor planning issues accidentally merged upstream
- Multi-clone sync: Workers on different machines see consistent state (via VCS sync)
- Flexibility: Users can configure for their workflow (personas, phases, etc.)
- Backwards compat: Existing single-repo users unaffected
- VCS-agnostic: Works with git, jj, hg, sl, or no VCS
Next Actions
Suggested epics/issues to create (can be done in follow-up session):
-
Epic: Multi-repo hydration layer
- Design schema for source_repo metadata
- Implement config parsing for repos.additional
- Build hydration logic (read from N JSONLs)
- Build write routing (write to correct JSONL)
-
Epic: Proposal workflow
- Implement
bd proposecommand - Implement
bd withdrawcommand - Implement
bd acceptcommand (maintainer only) - Design visibility state machine
- Implement
-
Epic: Auto-routing
- Detect maintainer vs contributor status
- Implement routing rules (label, priority, custom)
- Make
bd addroute to correct repo
-
Epic: VCS-agnostic sync
- Detect VCS type per repo
- Implement sync adapters (git, jj, hg, sl)
- Handle mixed-VCS multi-repo configs
-
Epic: Migration and onboarding
- Write migration guide
- Implement
bd migratecommand - Create init wizards for common scenarios
- Update documentation
Summary and Next Steps
This document represents the design evolution for multi-repo support in beads, driven by:
- Original problem (GitHub #207): Contributors' personal planning pollutes upstream PRs
- Core insight: Beads is a separate communication channel that happens to use VCS
- VC feedback: Real-world library consumer with specific performance and API stability needs
Final Architecture
Solution #4 (Separate Repos) with these refinements:
- N ≥ 1 repos: Single repo (N=1) is default, multi-repo is opt-in
- VCS-agnostic: Works with git, jj, hg, sapling, or no VCS
- Config-based routing: No schema changes, auto-detect maintainer vs contributor
- Smart caching: File mtime tracking, SQLite DB as cache layer
- Transparent hydration: Library API remains stable, config-driven
- Global namespace: Hash-based IDs with timestamp + random for uniqueness
- Cross-repo dependencies: Fully supported, transparent to users
- Discovered issues: Inherit parent's source_repo automatically
Why This Design Wins
- Zero PR pollution: Separate git histories = impossible to accidentally merge planning
- Git ledger preserved: All repos are VCS-tracked, full forensic capability
- Maximum flexibility: Supports OSS contributors, multi-phase dev, multi-persona workflows
- Backward compatible: Existing single-repo users unchanged
- Performance: Sub-second queries even with polling loops
- Library-friendly: Transparent to downstream consumers like VC
Related Documents
- Original issue: GitHub #207
- VC feedback:
./vc-feedback-on-multi-repo.md - Implementation tracking: TBD (epics to be created)
Status
Design: ✅ Complete (pending resolution of open questions) Implementation: ⏳ Not started Target: TBD
Last updated: 2025-11-03