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beads/CONTRIBUTING.md
Ryan ffe0dca2a3 feat(daemon): unify auto-sync config for simpler agent workflows (#904)
* feat(daemon): unify auto-sync config for simpler agent workflows

## Problem

Agents running `bd sync` at session end caused delays in the Claude Code
"event loop", slowing development. The daemon was already auto-exporting
DB→JSONL instantly, but auto-commit and auto-push weren't enabled by
default when sync-branch was configured - requiring manual `bd sync`.

Additionally, having three separate config options (auto-commit, auto-push,
auto-pull) was confusing and could get out of sync.

## Solution

Simplify to two intuitive sync modes:

1. **Read/Write Mode** (`daemon.auto-sync: true` or `BEADS_AUTO_SYNC=true`)
   - Enables auto-commit + auto-push + auto-pull
   - Full bidirectional sync - eliminates need for manual `bd sync`
   - Default when sync-branch is configured

2. **Read-Only Mode** (`daemon.auto-pull: true` or `BEADS_AUTO_PULL=true`)
   - Only receives updates from team
   - Does NOT auto-publish changes
   - Useful for experimental work or manual review before sharing

## Benefits

- **Faster agent workflows**: No more `bd sync` delays at session end
- **Simpler config**: Two modes instead of three separate toggles
- **Backward compatible**: Legacy auto_commit/auto_push settings still work
  (treated as auto-sync=true)
- **Adaptive `bd prime`**: Session close protocol adapts when daemon is
  auto-syncing (shows simplified 4-step git workflow, no `bd sync`)
- **Doctor warnings**: `bd doctor` warns about deprecated legacy config

## Changes

- cmd/bd/daemon.go: Add loadDaemonAutoSettings() with unified config logic
- cmd/bd/doctor.go: Add CheckLegacyDaemonConfig call
- cmd/bd/doctor/daemon.go: Add CheckDaemonAutoSync, CheckLegacyDaemonConfig
- cmd/bd/init_team.go: Use daemon.auto-sync in team wizard
- cmd/bd/prime.go: Detect daemon auto-sync, adapt session close protocol
- cmd/bd/prime_test.go: Add stubIsDaemonAutoSyncing for testing

* docs: add comprehensive daemon technical analysis

Add daemon-summary.md documenting the beads daemon architecture,
memory analysis (explaining the 30-35MB footprint), platform support
comparison, historical problems and fixes, and architectural guidance
for other projects implementing similar daemon patterns.

Key sections:
- Architecture deep dive with component diagrams
- Memory breakdown (SQLite WASM runtime is the main contributor)
- Platform support matrix (macOS/Linux full, Windows partial)
- Historical bugs and their fixes with reusable patterns
- Analysis of daemon usefulness without database (verdict: low value)
- Expert-reviewed improvement proposals (3 recommended, 3 skipped)
- Technical design patterns for other implementations

* feat: add cross-platform CI matrix and dual-mode test framework

Cross-Platform CI:
- Add Windows, macOS, Linux matrix to catch platform-specific bugs
- Linux: full tests with race detector and coverage
- macOS: full tests with race detector
- Windows: full tests without race detector (performance)
- Catches bugs like GH#880 (macOS path casing) and GH#387 (Windows daemon)

Dual-Mode Test Framework (cmd/bd/dual_mode_test.go):
- Runs tests in both direct mode and daemon mode
- Prevents recurring bug pattern (GH#719, GH#751, bd-fu83)
- Provides DualModeTestEnv with helper methods for common operations
- Includes 5 example tests demonstrating the pattern

Documentation:
- Add dual-mode testing section to CONTRIBUTING.md
- Document RunDualModeTest API and available helpers

Test Fixes:
- Fix sync_local_only_test.go gitPull/gitPush calls
- Add gate_no_daemon_test.go for beads-70c4 investigation

* fix(test): isolate TestFindBeadsDir tests with BEADS_DIR env var

The tests were finding the real project's .beads directory instead of
the temp directory because FindBeadsDir() walks up the directory tree.
Using BEADS_DIR env var provides proper test isolation.

* fix(test): stop daemon before running test suite guard

The test suite guard checks that tests don't modify the real repo's .beads
directory. However, a background daemon running auto-sync would touch
issues.jsonl during test execution, causing false positives.

Changes:
- Set BEADS_NO_DAEMON=1 to prevent daemon auto-start from tests
- Stop any running daemon for the repo before taking the "before" snapshot
- Uses exec to call `bd daemon --stop` to avoid import cycle issues

* chore: revert .beads/issues.jsonl to upstream/main

Per CONTRIBUTING.md, .beads/issues.jsonl should not be modified in PRs.
2026-01-06 12:52:19 -08:00

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Markdown

# Contributing to bd
Thank you for your interest in contributing to bd! This document provides guidelines and instructions for contributing.
## Development Setup
### Prerequisites
- Go 1.24 or later
- Git
- (Optional) golangci-lint for local linting
### Getting Started
```bash
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/steveyegge/beads
cd beads
# Build the project
go build -o bd ./cmd/bd
# Run tests
go test ./...
# Run with race detection
go test -race ./...
# Build and install locally
go install ./cmd/bd
```
## Project Structure
```
beads/
├── cmd/bd/ # CLI entry point and commands
├── internal/
│ ├── types/ # Core data types (Issue, Dependency, etc.)
│ └── storage/ # Storage interface and implementations
│ └── sqlite/ # SQLite backend
├── .golangci.yml # Linter configuration
└── .github/workflows/ # CI/CD pipelines
```
## Running Tests
```bash
# Run all tests
go test ./...
# Run tests with coverage
go test -v -coverprofile=coverage.out ./...
go tool cover -html=coverage.out
# Run specific package tests
go test ./internal/storage/sqlite -v
# Run tests with race detection
go test -race ./...
```
## Code Style
We follow standard Go conventions:
- Use `gofmt` to format your code (runs automatically in most editors)
- Follow the [Effective Go](https://golang.org/doc/effective_go) guidelines
- Keep functions small and focused
- Write clear, descriptive variable names
- Add comments for exported functions and types
### Linting
We use golangci-lint for code quality checks:
```bash
# Install golangci-lint
brew install golangci-lint # macOS
# or
go install github.com/golangci/golangci-lint/cmd/golangci-lint@latest
# Run linter
golangci-lint run ./...
```
**Note**: The linter currently reports ~100 warnings. These are documented false positives and idiomatic Go patterns (deferred cleanup, Cobra interface requirements, etc.). See [docs/LINTING.md](docs/LINTING.md) for details. When contributing, focus on avoiding *new* issues rather than the baseline warnings.
CI will automatically run linting on all pull requests.
## Making Changes
### Workflow
1. Fork the repository
2. Create a feature branch (`git checkout -b feature/my-feature`)
3. Make your changes
4. Add tests for new functionality
5. Run tests and linter locally
6. Commit your changes with clear messages
7. Push to your fork
8. Open a pull request
### Commit Messages
Write clear, concise commit messages:
```
Add cycle detection for dependency graphs
- Implement recursive CTE-based cycle detection
- Add tests for simple and complex cycles
- Update documentation with examples
```
### Important: Don't Include .beads/issues.jsonl Changes
The `.beads/issues.jsonl` file is the project's issue database. **Do not include changes to this file in your PR.** CI will fail if this file is modified.
If you accidentally committed changes to this file, fix it with:
```bash
git checkout origin/main -- .beads/issues.jsonl
git commit --amend
git push --force
```
### Pull Requests
- Keep PRs focused on a single feature or fix
- Include tests for new functionality
- Update documentation as needed
- Ensure CI passes before requesting review
- Respond to review feedback promptly
- **Do not include `.beads/issues.jsonl` changes** (see above)
## Testing Guidelines
### Test Strategy
We use a two-tier testing approach:
- **Fast tests** (unit tests): Run on every PR via CI with `-short` flag (~2s)
- **Slow tests** (integration tests): Run nightly with full git operations (~14s)
Slow tests use `testing.Short()` to skip when `-short` flag is present.
### Running Tests
```bash
# Fast tests (recommended for development - skips slow tests)
# Use this for rapid iteration during development
go test -short ./...
# Full test suite (before committing - includes all tests)
# Run this before pushing to ensure nothing breaks
go test ./...
# With race detection and coverage
go test -race -coverprofile=coverage.out ./...
```
**When to use `-short`:**
- During active development for fast feedback loops
- When making small changes that don't affect integration points
- When you want to quickly verify unit tests pass
**When to use full test suite:**
- Before committing and pushing changes
- After modifying git operations or multi-clone scenarios
- When preparing a pull request
### Writing Tests
- Write table-driven tests when testing multiple scenarios
- Use descriptive test names that explain what is being tested
- Clean up resources (database files, etc.) in test teardown
- Use `t.Run()` for subtests to organize related test cases
- Mark slow tests with `if testing.Short() { t.Skip("slow test") }`
### Dual-Mode Testing Pattern
**IMPORTANT**: bd supports two execution modes: *direct mode* (SQLite access) and *daemon mode* (RPC via background process). Commands must work identically in both modes. To prevent bugs like GH#719, GH#751, and bd-fu83, use the dual-mode test framework for testing commands.
```go
// cmd/bd/dual_mode_test.go provides the framework
func TestMyCommand(t *testing.T) {
// This test runs TWICE: once in direct mode, once with a live daemon
RunDualModeTest(t, "my_test", func(t *testing.T, env *DualModeTestEnv) {
// Create test data using mode-agnostic helpers
issue := &types.Issue{
Title: "Test issue",
IssueType: types.TypeTask,
Status: types.StatusOpen,
Priority: 2,
}
if err := env.CreateIssue(issue); err != nil {
t.Fatalf("[%s] CreateIssue failed: %v", env.Mode(), err)
}
// Verify behavior - works in both modes
got, err := env.GetIssue(issue.ID)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("[%s] GetIssue failed: %v", env.Mode(), err)
}
if got.Title != "Test issue" {
t.Errorf("[%s] wrong title: got %q", env.Mode(), got.Title)
}
})
}
```
Available `DualModeTestEnv` helper methods:
- `CreateIssue(issue)` - Create an issue
- `GetIssue(id)` - Retrieve an issue by ID
- `UpdateIssue(id, updates)` - Update issue fields
- `DeleteIssue(id, force)` - Delete (tombstone) an issue
- `AddDependency(from, to, type)` - Add a dependency
- `ListIssues(filter)` - List issues matching filter
- `GetReadyWork()` - Get issues ready for work
- `AddLabel(id, label)` - Add a label to an issue
- `Mode()` - Returns "direct" or "daemon" for error messages
Run dual-mode tests:
```bash
# Run dual-mode tests (requires integration tag)
go test -v -tags integration -run "TestDualMode" ./cmd/bd/
```
Example:
```go
func TestIssueValidation(t *testing.T) {
tests := []struct {
name string
issue *types.Issue
wantErr bool
}{
{
name: "valid issue",
issue: &types.Issue{Title: "Test", Status: types.StatusOpen, Priority: 2},
wantErr: false,
},
{
name: "missing title",
issue: &types.Issue{Status: types.StatusOpen, Priority: 2},
wantErr: true,
},
}
for _, tt := range tests {
t.Run(tt.name, func(t *testing.T) {
err := tt.issue.Validate()
if (err != nil) != tt.wantErr {
t.Errorf("Validate() error = %v, wantErr %v", err, tt.wantErr)
}
})
}
}
```
## Documentation
- Update README.md for user-facing changes
- Update relevant .md files in the project root
- Add inline code comments for complex logic
- Include examples in documentation
## Feature Requests and Bug Reports
### Reporting Bugs
Include in your bug report:
- Steps to reproduce
- Expected behavior
- Actual behavior
- Version of bd (`bd version` if implemented)
- Operating system and Go version
### Feature Requests
When proposing new features:
- Explain the use case
- Describe the proposed solution
- Consider backwards compatibility
- Discuss alternatives you've considered
## Code Review Process
All contributions go through code review:
1. Automated checks (tests, linting) must pass
2. At least one maintainer approval required
3. Address review feedback
4. Maintainer will merge when ready
## Development Tips
### Testing Locally
```bash
# Build and test your changes quickly
go build -o bd ./cmd/bd && ./bd init --prefix test
# Test specific functionality
./bd create "Test issue" -p 1 -t bug
./bd dep add test-2 test-1
./bd ready
```
### Database Inspection
```bash
# Inspect the SQLite database directly
sqlite3 .beads/test.db
# Useful queries
SELECT * FROM issues;
SELECT * FROM dependencies;
SELECT * FROM events WHERE issue_id = 'test-1';
```
### Debugging
Use Go's built-in debugging tools:
```bash
# Run with verbose logging
go run ./cmd/bd -v create "Test"
# Use delve for debugging
dlv debug ./cmd/bd -- create "Test issue"
```
## Release Process
(For maintainers)
1. Update version in code
2. Update CHANGELOG.md
3. Tag release: `git tag v0.x.0`
4. Push tag: `git push origin v0.x.0`
5. GitHub Actions will build and publish
## Questions?
- Check existing [issues](https://github.com/steveyegge/beads/issues)
- Open a new issue for questions
- Review [README.md](README.md) and other documentation
## License
By contributing, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under the MIT License.
## Code of Conduct
Be respectful and professional in all interactions. We're here to build something great together.
---
Thank you for contributing to bd! 🎉