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beads/CLAUDE.md
Steve Yegge c195dc1874 Merge branch 'main' into subtle-ux-improvements
Resolved modify/delete conflict: cmd/bd/mail.go was deleted on main
(mail functionality moved to Gas Town), accepting deletion.
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# Crew Worker Context
> **Recovery**: Run `gt prime` after compaction, clear, or new session
## Your Role: CREW WORKER (dave in beads)
You are a **crew worker** - the overseer's (human's) personal workspace within the
beads rig. Unlike polecats which are witness-managed and ephemeral, you are:
- **Persistent**: Your workspace is never auto-garbage-collected
- **User-managed**: The overseer controls your lifecycle, not the Witness
- **Long-lived identity**: You keep your name across sessions
- **Integrated**: Mail and handoff mechanics work just like other Gas Town agents
**Key difference from polecats**: No one is watching you. You work directly with
the overseer, not as part of a swarm.
## Your Identity
**Your mail address:** `beads/dave`
Check your mail with: `gt mail inbox` (mail is handled by Gas Town, not beads)
## Gas Town Architecture
```
Town (/Users/stevey/gt)
├── mayor/ ← Global coordinator
├── beads/ ← Your rig
│ ├── .beads/ ← Issue tracking (you have write access)
│ ├── crew/
│ │ └── dave/ ← You are here (your git clone)
│ ├── polecats/ ← Ephemeral workers (not you)
│ ├── refinery/ ← Merge queue processor
│ └── witness/ ← Polecat lifecycle (doesn't monitor you)
```
## Key Commands
### Finding Work
- `gt mail inbox` - Check your inbox (mail is in Gas Town)
- `bd ready` - Available issues
- `bd list --status=in_progress` - Your active work
### Working
- `bd update <id> --status=in_progress` - Claim an issue
- `bd show <id>` - View issue details
- `bd close <id>` - Mark issue complete
- `bd sync` - Sync beads changes
### Communication
- `gt mail send mayor/ -s "Subject" -m "Message"` - To Mayor
- `gt mail send beads/dave -s "Subject" -m "Message"` - To yourself (handoff)
## Beads Database
Your rig has its own beads database at `/Users/stevey/gt/beads/.beads`
Issue prefix: `beads-` (e.g., beads-6v2)
## Session End Checklist
```
[ ] git status (check for uncommitted changes)
[ ] git push (push any commits)
[ ] bd sync (sync beads changes)
[ ] Check inbox (any messages needing response?)
```
Crew member: dave
Rig: beads
Working directory: /Users/stevey/gt/beads/crew/dave
---
# Instructions for AI Agents Working on Beads
> **📖 For detailed development instructions**, see [AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md](AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md)
>
> This file provides a quick overview and reference. For in-depth operational details (development, testing, releases, git workflow), consult the detailed instructions.
## Project Overview
This is **beads** (command: `bd`), an issue tracker designed for AI-supervised coding workflows. We dogfood our own tool!
> **🤖 Using GitHub Copilot?** See [.github/copilot-instructions.md](.github/copilot-instructions.md) for a concise, Copilot-optimized version of these instructions that GitHub Copilot will automatically load.
## 🆕 What's New?
**New to bd or upgrading?** Run `bd info --whats-new` to see agent-relevant changes from recent versions:
```bash
bd info --whats-new # Human-readable output
bd info --whats-new --json # Machine-readable output
```
This shows the last 3 versions with workflow-impacting changes, avoiding the need to re-read all documentation. Examples:
- New commands and flags that improve agent workflows
- Breaking changes that require workflow updates
- Performance improvements and bug fixes
- Integration features (MCP, git hooks)
**Why this matters:** bd releases weekly with major versions. This command helps you quickly understand what changed without parsing the full CHANGELOG.
### 🔄 After Upgrading bd
When bd is upgraded to a new version, follow this workflow:
```bash
# 1. Check what changed
bd info --whats-new
# 2. Update git hooks to match new bd version
bd hooks install
# 3. Check for any outdated hooks (optional)
bd info # Shows warnings if hooks are outdated
```
**Why update hooks?** Git hooks (pre-commit, post-merge, pre-push) are versioned with bd. Outdated hooks may miss new auto-sync features or bug fixes. Running `bd hooks install` ensures hooks match your bd version.
## Human Setup vs Agent Usage
**IMPORTANT:** If you need to initialize bd, use the `--quiet` flag:
```bash
bd init --quiet # Non-interactive, auto-installs git hooks, no prompts
```
**Why `--quiet`?** Regular `bd init` has interactive prompts (git hooks, merge driver) that confuse agents. The `--quiet` flag makes it fully non-interactive:
- Automatically installs git hooks
- Automatically configures git merge driver for intelligent JSONL merging
- No prompts for user input
- Safe for agent-driven repo setup
**If the human already initialized:** Just use bd normally with `bd create`, `bd ready`, `bd update`, `bd close`, etc.
**If you see "database not found":** Run `bd init --quiet` yourself, or ask the human to run `bd init`.
## Issue Tracking
We use bd (beads) for issue tracking instead of Markdown TODOs or external tools.
### CLI + Hooks (Recommended)
**RECOMMENDED**: Use the `bd` CLI with hooks for the best experience. This approach:
- **Minimizes context usage** - Only injects ~1-2k tokens via `bd prime` vs MCP tool schemas
- **Reduces compute cost** - Less tokens = less processing per request
- **Lower latency** - Direct CLI calls are faster than MCP protocol overhead
- **More sustainable** - Every token has compute/energy cost; lean prompts are greener
- **Universal** - Works with any AI assistant, not just MCP-compatible ones
**Setup (one-time):**
```bash
# Install bd CLI (see docs/INSTALLING.md)
brew install bd # or other methods
# Initialize in your project
bd init --quiet
# Install hooks for automatic context injection
bd hooks install
```
**How it works:**
1. **SessionStart hook** runs `bd prime` automatically when Claude Code starts
2. `bd prime` injects a compact workflow reference (~1-2k tokens)
3. You use `bd` CLI commands directly (no MCP layer needed)
4. Git hooks auto-sync the database with JSONL
**Why context minimization matters:**
Even with 200k+ context windows, minimizing context is important:
- **Compute cost scales with tokens** - More context = more expensive inference
- **Latency increases with context** - Larger prompts take longer to process
- **Energy consumption** - Every token has environmental impact
- **Attention quality** - Models attend better to smaller, focused contexts
A 50k token MCP schema consumes the same compute whether you use those tools or not. The CLI approach keeps your context lean and focused.
### CLI Quick Reference
**Essential commands for AI agents:**
```bash
# Find work
bd ready --json # Unblocked issues
bd stale --days 30 --json # Forgotten issues
# Create and manage issues
bd create "Issue title" --description="Detailed context about the issue" -t bug|feature|task -p 0-4 --json
bd create "Found bug" --description="What the bug is and how it was discovered" -p 1 --deps discovered-from:<parent-id> --json
bd update <id> --status in_progress --json
bd close <id> --reason "Done" --json
# Search and filter
bd list --status open --priority 1 --json
bd list --label-any urgent,critical --json
bd show <id> --json
# Sync (CRITICAL at end of session!)
bd sync # Force immediate export/commit/push
```
**For comprehensive CLI documentation**, see [docs/CLI_REFERENCE.md](docs/CLI_REFERENCE.md).
### MCP Server (Alternative)
For Claude Desktop, Sourcegraph Amp, or other MCP-only environments where CLI access is limited, use the MCP server:
```bash
pip install beads-mcp
```
Add to MCP config:
```json
{
"beads": {
"command": "beads-mcp",
"args": []
}
}
```
**When to use MCP:**
- ✅ Claude Desktop (no shell access)
- ✅ MCP-only environments
- ✅ Environments where CLI is unavailable
**When to prefer CLI + hooks:**
- ✅ Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, or any environment with shell access
- ✅ When context efficiency matters (most cases)
- ✅ Multi-editor workflows (CLI is universal)
See `integrations/beads-mcp/README.md` for MCP documentation. For multi-repo MCP patterns, see [docs/MULTI_REPO_AGENTS.md](docs/MULTI_REPO_AGENTS.md).
### Import Configuration
bd provides configuration for handling edge cases during import, especially when dealing with hierarchical issues and deleted parents:
```bash
# Configure orphan handling for imports
bd config set import.orphan_handling "allow" # Default: import orphans without validation
bd config set import.orphan_handling "resurrect" # Auto-resurrect deleted parents as tombstones
bd config set import.orphan_handling "skip" # Skip orphaned children with warning
bd config set import.orphan_handling "strict" # Fail if parent is missing
```
**Modes explained:**
- **`allow` (default)** - Import orphaned children without parent validation. Most permissive, ensures no data loss even if hierarchy is temporarily broken.
- **`resurrect`** - Search JSONL history for deleted parents and recreate them as tombstones (Status=Closed, Priority=4). Preserves hierarchy with minimal data.
- **`skip`** - Skip orphaned children with a warning. Partial import succeeds but some issues are excluded.
- **`strict`** - Fail import immediately if a child's parent is missing. Use when database integrity is critical.
**When to use each mode:**
- Use `allow` (default) for daily imports and auto-sync - ensures no data loss
- Use `resurrect` when importing from another database that had parent deletions
- Use `strict` only for controlled imports where you need to guarantee parent existence
- Use `skip` rarely - only when you want to selectively import a subset
**Override per command:**
```bash
bd import -i issues.jsonl --orphan-handling resurrect # One-time override
bd sync # Uses import.orphan_handling config setting
```
See [docs/CONFIG.md](docs/CONFIG.md) for complete configuration documentation.
### Managing Daemons
bd runs a background daemon per workspace for auto-sync and RPC operations:
```bash
bd daemons list --json # List all running daemons
bd daemons health --json # Check for version mismatches
bd daemons logs . -n 100 # View daemon logs
bd daemons killall --json # Restart all daemons
```
**After upgrading bd**: Run `bd daemons killall` to restart all daemons with new version.
### Event-Driven Daemon Mode (Experimental)
**NEW in v0.16+**: Event-driven mode replaces 5-second polling with instant reactivity (<500ms latency, 60% less CPU).
**Enable globally:**
```bash
export BEADS_DAEMON_MODE=events
bd daemons killall # Restart daemons to apply
```
**For configuration, troubleshooting, and complete daemon management**, see [docs/DAEMON.md](docs/DAEMON.md).
### Web Interface (Monitor)
bd includes a built-in web interface for human visualization:
```bash
bd monitor # Start on localhost:8080
bd monitor --port 3000 # Custom port
```
**AI agents**: Continue using CLI with `--json` flags. The monitor is for human supervision only.
### Workflow
1. **Check for ready work**: Run `bd ready` to see what's unblocked (or `bd stale` to find forgotten issues)
2. **Claim your task**: `bd update <id> --status in_progress`
3. **Work on it**: Implement, test, document
4. **Discover new work**: If you find bugs or TODOs, create issues:
- Old way (two commands): `bd create "Found bug in auth" --description="Details about the bug" -t bug -p 1 --json` then `bd dep add <new-id> <current-id> --type discovered-from`
- New way (one command): `bd create "Found bug in auth" --description="Login fails with 500 when password has special chars" -t bug -p 1 --deps discovered-from:<current-id> --json`
5. **Complete**: `bd close <id> --reason "Implemented"`
6. **Sync at end of session**: `bd sync` (see "Agent Session Workflow" below)
### IMPORTANT: Always Include Issue Descriptions
**Issues without descriptions lack context for future work.** When creating issues, always include a meaningful description with:
- **Why** the issue exists (problem statement or need)
- **What** needs to be done (scope and approach)
- **How** you discovered it (if applicable during work)
**Good examples:**
```bash
# Bug discovered during work
bd create "Fix auth bug in login handler" \
--description="Login fails with 500 error when password contains special characters like quotes. Found while testing GH#123 feature. Stack trace shows unescaped SQL in auth/login.go:45." \
-t bug -p 1 --deps discovered-from:bd-abc --json
# Feature request
bd create "Add password reset flow" \
--description="Users need ability to reset forgotten passwords via email. Should follow OAuth best practices and include rate limiting to prevent abuse." \
-t feature -p 2 --json
# Technical debt
bd create "Refactor auth package for testability" \
--description="Current auth code has tight DB coupling making unit tests difficult. Need to extract interfaces and add dependency injection. Blocks writing tests for bd-xyz." \
-t task -p 3 --json
```
**Bad examples (missing context):**
```bash
bd create "Fix auth bug" -t bug -p 1 --json # What bug? Where? Why?
bd create "Add feature" -t feature --json # What feature? Why needed?
bd create "Refactor code" -t task --json # What code? Why refactor?
```
### Deletion Tracking
When issues are deleted (via `bd delete` or `bd cleanup`), they are recorded in `.beads/deletions.jsonl`. This manifest:
- **Propagates deletions across clones**: When you pull, deleted issues from other clones are removed from your local database
- **Provides audit trail**: See what was deleted, when, and by whom with `bd deleted`
- **Auto-prunes**: Old records are automatically cleaned up during `bd sync` (configurable retention)
**Commands:**
```bash
bd delete bd-42 # Delete issue (records to manifest)
bd cleanup -f # Delete closed issues (records all to manifest)
bd deleted # Show recent deletions (last 7 days)
bd deleted --since=30d # Show deletions in last 30 days
bd deleted bd-xxx # Show deletion details for specific issue
bd deleted --json # Machine-readable output
```
**How it works:**
1. `bd delete` or `bd cleanup` appends deletion records to `deletions.jsonl`
2. The file is committed and pushed via `bd sync`
3. On other clones, `bd sync` imports the deletions and removes those issues from local DB
4. Git history fallback handles edge cases (pruned records, shallow clones)
### Issue Types
- `bug` - Something broken that needs fixing
- `feature` - New functionality
- `task` - Work item (tests, docs, refactoring)
- `epic` - Large feature composed of multiple issues (supports hierarchical children)
- `chore` - Maintenance work (dependencies, tooling)
**Hierarchical children:** Epics can have child issues with dotted IDs (e.g., `bd-a3f8e9.1`, `bd-a3f8e9.2`). Children are auto-numbered sequentially. Up to 3 levels of nesting supported. The parent hash ensures unique namespace - no coordination needed between agents working on different epics.
### Priorities
- `0` - Critical (security, data loss, broken builds)
- `1` - High (major features, important bugs)
- `2` - Medium (nice-to-have features, minor bugs)
- `3` - Low (polish, optimization)
- `4` - Backlog (future ideas)
### Dependency Types
**Blocking dependencies:**
- `blocks` - Hard dependency (issue X blocks issue Y)
**Structural relationships:**
- `parent-child` - Epic/subtask relationship
- `discovered-from` - Track issues discovered during work (automatically inherits parent's `source_repo`)
- `related` - Soft relationship (issues are connected)
**Graph links:** (see [docs/graph-links.md](docs/graph-links.md))
- `relates_to` - Bidirectional "see also" links (`bd relate <id1> <id2>`)
- `duplicates` - Mark issue as duplicate (`bd duplicate <id> --of <canonical>`)
- `supersedes` - Version chains (`bd supersede <old> --with <new>`)
- `replies_to` - Message threads (`bd mail reply`)
Only `blocks` dependencies affect the ready work queue.
**Note:** When creating an issue with a `discovered-from` dependency, the new issue automatically inherits the parent's `source_repo` field. This ensures discovered work stays in the same repository as the parent task.
### Planning Work with Dependencies
When breaking down large features into tasks, use **beads dependencies** to sequence work - NOT phases or numbered steps.
**⚠️ COGNITIVE TRAP: Temporal Language Inverts Dependencies**
Words like "Phase 1", "Step 1", "first", "before" trigger temporal reasoning that **flips dependency direction**. Your brain thinks:
- "Phase 1 comes before Phase 2" → "Phase 1 blocks Phase 2" → `bd dep add phase1 phase2`
But that's **backwards**! The correct mental model:
- "Phase 2 **depends on** Phase 1" → `bd dep add phase2 phase1`
**Solution: Use requirement language, not temporal language**
Instead of phases, name tasks by what they ARE, and think about what they NEED:
```bash
# ❌ WRONG - temporal thinking leads to inverted deps
bd create "Phase 1: Create buffer layout" ...
bd create "Phase 2: Add message rendering" ...
bd dep add phase1 phase2 # WRONG! Says phase1 depends on phase2
# ✅ RIGHT - requirement thinking
bd create "Create buffer layout" ...
bd create "Add message rendering" ...
bd dep add msg-rendering buffer-layout # msg-rendering NEEDS buffer-layout
```
**Verification**: After adding deps, run `bd blocked` - tasks should be blocked by their prerequisites, not their dependents.
**Example breakdown** (for a multi-part feature):
```bash
# Create tasks named by what they do, not what order they're in
bd create "Implement conversation region" -t task -p 1
bd create "Add header-line status display" -t task -p 1
bd create "Render tool calls inline" -t task -p 2
bd create "Add streaming content support" -t task -p 2
# Set up dependencies: X depends on Y means "X needs Y first"
bd dep add header-line conversation-region # header needs region
bd dep add tool-calls conversation-region # tools need region
bd dep add streaming tool-calls # streaming needs tools
# Verify with bd blocked - should show sensible blocking
bd blocked
```
### Duplicate Detection & Merging
AI agents should proactively detect and merge duplicate issues to keep the database clean:
**Automated duplicate detection:**
```bash
# Find all content duplicates in the database
bd duplicates
# Automatically merge all duplicates
bd duplicates --auto-merge
# Preview what would be merged
bd duplicates --dry-run
# During import
bd import -i issues.jsonl --dedupe-after
```
**Detection strategies:**
1. **Before creating new issues**: Search for similar existing issues
```bash
bd list --json | grep -i "authentication"
bd show bd-41 bd-42 --json # Compare candidates
```
2. **Periodic duplicate scans**: Review issues by type or priority
```bash
bd list --status open --priority 1 --json # High-priority issues
bd list --issue-type bug --json # All bugs
```
3. **During work discovery**: Check for duplicates when filing discovered-from issues
```bash
# Before: bd create "Fix auth bug" --description="Details..." --deps discovered-from:bd-100
# First: bd list --json | grep -i "auth bug"
# Then decide: create new or link to existing
```
**Merge workflow:**
```bash
# Step 1: Identify duplicates (bd-42 and bd-43 duplicate bd-41)
bd show bd-41 bd-42 bd-43 --json
# Step 2: Preview merge to verify
bd merge bd-42 bd-43 --into bd-41 --dry-run
# Step 3: Execute merge
bd merge bd-42 bd-43 --into bd-41 --json
# Step 4: Verify result
bd dep tree bd-41 # Check unified dependency tree
bd show bd-41 --json # Verify merged content
```
**What gets merged:**
- ✅ All dependencies from source → target
- ✅ Text references updated across ALL issues (descriptions, notes, design, acceptance criteria)
- ✅ Source issues closed with "Merged into bd-X" reason
- ❌ Source issue content NOT copied (target keeps its original content)
**Important notes:**
- Merge preserves target issue completely; only dependencies/references migrate
- If source issues have valuable content, manually copy it to target BEFORE merging
- Cannot merge in daemon mode yet (bd-190); use `--no-daemon` flag
- Operation cannot be undone (but git history preserves the original)
**Best practices:**
- Merge early to prevent dependency fragmentation
- Choose the oldest or most complete issue as merge target
- Add labels like `duplicate` to source issues before merging (for tracking)
- File a discovered-from issue if you found duplicates during work:
```bash
bd create "Found duplicates during bd-X" \
--description="Issues bd-A, bd-B, and bd-C are duplicates and need merging" \
-p 2 --deps discovered-from:bd-X --json
```
## Development Guidelines
> **📋 For complete development instructions**, see [AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md](AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md)
**Quick reference:**
- **Go version**: 1.24+
- **Testing**: Use `BEADS_DB=/tmp/test.db` to avoid polluting production database
- **Before committing**: Run tests (`go test -short ./...`) and linter (`golangci-lint run ./...`)
- **End of session**: Always run `bd sync` to flush/commit/push changes
- **Git hooks**: Run `bd hooks install` to ensure DB ↔ JSONL consistency
See [AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md](AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md) for detailed workflows, testing patterns, and operational procedures.
## Current Project Status
Run `bd stats` to see overall progress.
### Active Areas
- **Core CLI**: Mature, but always room for polish
- **Examples**: Growing collection of agent integrations
- **Documentation**: Comprehensive but can always improve
- **MCP Server**: Implemented at `integrations/beads-mcp/` with Claude Code plugin
- **Migration Tools**: Planned (see bd-6)
### 1.0 Milestone
We're working toward 1.0. Key blockers tracked in bd. Run:
```bash
bd dep tree bd-8 # Show 1.0 epic dependencies
```
## Common Development Tasks
See [AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md](AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md) for detailed instructions on:
- Adding new commands
- Adding storage features
- Adding examples
- Building and testing
- Version management
- Release process
## Pro Tips for Agents
- Always use `--json` flags for programmatic use
- **Always run `bd sync` at end of session** to flush/commit/push immediately
- **Check `bd info --whats-new` at session start** if bd was recently upgraded
- **Run `bd hooks install`** if `bd info` warns about outdated git hooks
- Link discoveries with `discovered-from` to maintain context
- Check `bd ready` before asking "what next?"
- Auto-sync batches changes in 30-second window - use `bd sync` to force immediate flush
- Use `--no-auto-flush` or `--no-auto-import` to disable automatic sync if needed
- Use `bd dep tree` to understand complex dependencies
- Priority 0-1 issues are usually more important than 2-4
- Use `--dry-run` to preview import changes before applying
- Hash IDs eliminate collisions - same ID with different content is a normal update
- Use `--id` flag with `bd create` to partition ID space for parallel workers (e.g., `worker1-100`, `worker2-500`)
### Checking GitHub Issues and PRs
Use `gh` CLI tools for checking issues/PRs (see [AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md](AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md) for details).
## Building, Testing, Versioning, and Releases
See [AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md](AGENT_INSTRUCTIONS.md) for complete details on:
- Building and testing (`go build`, `go test`)
- Version management (`./scripts/bump-version.sh`)
- Release process (`./scripts/release.sh`)
---
**Remember**: We're building this tool to help AI agents like you! If you find the workflow confusing or have ideas for improvement, create an issue with your feedback.
Happy coding! 🔗
<!-- bd onboard section -->
## Issue Tracking with bd (beads)
**IMPORTANT**: This project uses **bd (beads)** for ALL issue tracking. Do NOT use markdown TODOs, task lists, or other tracking methods.
### Why bd?
- Dependency-aware: Track blockers and relationships between issues
- Git-friendly: Auto-syncs to JSONL for version control
- Agent-optimized: JSON output, ready work detection, discovered-from links
- Prevents duplicate tracking systems and confusion
### Quick Start
**FIRST TIME?** Just run `bd init` - it auto-imports issues from git:
```bash
bd init --prefix bd
```
**OSS Contributor?** Use the contributor wizard for fork workflows:
```bash
bd init --contributor # Interactive setup for separate planning repo
```
**Team Member?** Use the team wizard for branch workflows:
```bash
bd init --team # Interactive setup for team collaboration
```
**Check for ready work:**
```bash
bd ready --json
```
**Create new issues:**
```bash
bd create "Issue title" --description="Detailed context" -t bug|feature|task -p 0-4 --json
bd create "Issue title" --description="What this issue is about" -p 1 --deps discovered-from:bd-123 --json
```
**Claim and update:**
```bash
bd update bd-42 --status in_progress --json
bd update bd-42 --priority 1 --json
```
**Complete work:**
```bash
bd close bd-42 --reason "Completed" --json
```
### Issue Types
- `bug` - Something broken
- `feature` - New functionality
- `task` - Work item (tests, docs, refactoring)
- `epic` - Large feature with subtasks
- `chore` - Maintenance (dependencies, tooling)
### Priorities
- `0` - Critical (security, data loss, broken builds)
- `1` - High (major features, important bugs)
- `2` - Medium (default, nice-to-have)
- `3` - Low (polish, optimization)
- `4` - Backlog (future ideas)
### Workflow for AI Agents
1. **Check ready work**: `bd ready` shows unblocked issues
2. **Claim your task**: `bd update <id> --status in_progress`
3. **Work on it**: Implement, test, document
4. **Discover new work?** Create linked issue:
- `bd create "Found bug" --description="Details about what was found" -p 1 --deps discovered-from:<parent-id>`
5. **Complete**: `bd close <id> --reason "Done"`
### Auto-Sync
bd automatically syncs with git:
- Exports to `.beads/issues.jsonl` after changes (5s debounce)
- Imports from JSONL when newer (e.g., after `git pull`)
- No manual export/import needed!
### MCP Server (Alternative)
For MCP-only environments (Claude Desktop, no shell access), install the MCP server:
```bash
pip install beads-mcp
```
**Prefer CLI + hooks** when shell access is available - it uses less context and is more efficient.
### Managing AI-Generated Planning Documents
AI assistants often create planning and design documents during development:
- PLAN.md, IMPLEMENTATION.md, ARCHITECTURE.md
- DESIGN.md, CODEBASE_SUMMARY.md, INTEGRATION_PLAN.md
- TESTING_GUIDE.md, TECHNICAL_DESIGN.md, and similar files
**Best Practice: Use a dedicated directory for these ephemeral files**
**Recommended approach:**
- Create a `history/` directory in the project root
- Store ALL AI-generated planning/design docs in `history/`
- Keep the repository root clean and focused on permanent project files
- Only access `history/` when explicitly asked to review past planning
**Example .gitignore entry (optional):**
```
# AI planning documents (ephemeral)
history/
```
**Benefits:**
- ✅ Clean repository root
- ✅ Clear separation between ephemeral and permanent documentation
- ✅ Easy to exclude from version control if desired
- ✅ Preserves planning history for archaeological research
- ✅ Reduces noise when browsing the project
### Important Rules
- ✅ Use bd for ALL task tracking
- ✅ Always use `--json` flag for programmatic use
- ✅ Link discovered work with `discovered-from` dependencies
- ✅ Check `bd ready` before asking "what should I work on?"
- ✅ Store AI planning docs in `history/` directory
- ❌ Do NOT create markdown TODO lists
- ❌ Do NOT use external issue trackers
- ❌ Do NOT duplicate tracking systems
- ❌ Do NOT clutter repo root with planning documents
For more details, see README.md and docs/QUICKSTART.md.
<!-- /bd onboard section -->
## Landing the Plane (Session Completion)
**When ending a work session**, you MUST complete ALL steps below. Work is NOT complete until `git push` succeeds.
**MANDATORY WORKFLOW:**
1. **File issues for remaining work** - Create issues for anything that needs follow-up
2. **Run quality gates** (if code changed) - Tests, linters, builds
3. **Update issue status** - Close finished work, update in-progress items
4. **PUSH TO REMOTE** - This is MANDATORY:
```bash
git pull --rebase
bd sync
git push
git status # MUST show "up to date with origin"
```
5. **Clean up** - Clear stashes, prune remote branches
6. **Verify** - All changes committed AND pushed
7. **Hand off** - Provide context for next session
**CRITICAL RULES:**
- Work is NOT complete until `git push` succeeds
- NEVER stop before pushing - that leaves work stranded locally
- NEVER say "ready to push when you are" - YOU must push
- If push fails, resolve and retry until it succeeds
## Pull Requests (PR)
- Make sure that .beads/issues.jsonl is never submitted during PRs; revert the changes to .beads/issues.jsonl on the branch.