@chllming/wave-orchestration 0.9.9 → 0.9.10
This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
package/CHANGELOG.md
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# Changelog
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## 0.9.10 - 2026-04-07
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### Fixed
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- **Run-state history bloat**: The `run-state.json` history array grew unbounded, reaching 500MB+ in long-running repos. Each reconciliation cycle appended entries with full evidence objects (file hashes, status paths) that were never pruned. Fixed with:
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- History cap: max 200 total entries, max 20 per wave. Older entries are pruned on every write.
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- Evidence stripping: only the most recent history entry per wave retains its full evidence object; older entries have evidence set to null.
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- Improved dedup: the transition dedup check now ignores `completedAt` timestamps in status file evidence, preventing identical reconciliation cycles from creating duplicate entries.
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## 0.9.9 - 2026-04-07
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### Fixed
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package/docs/README.md
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@@ -56,9 +56,11 @@ The useful path is journey-first:
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- Want the practical `0.9.3` operating stance:
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Read [guides/recommendations-0.9.7
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- [0.9.8 Operating Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.8.md
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- [0.9.9 Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.9.md
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- [0.9.9 Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.9.md
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- [0.9.10 Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.10.md))).md](./guides/recommendations-0.9.7
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- [0.9.8 Operating Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.8.md
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- [0.9.9 Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.9.md
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- [0.9.9 Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.9.md
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- [0.9.10 Recommendations](guides/recommendations-0.9.10.md))).md) for the recommended default around relaxed blocker states, advisory turn budgets, and targeted recovery.
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- Want the concrete runtime module map:
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Read [plans/end-state-architecture.md](./plans/end-state-architecture.md) for the engine-by-engine architecture and artifact ownership model.
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- Want the CLI surface map:
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---
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title: "0.9.10 Recommendations"
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summary: "How to use 0.9.10's softer blocker states, advisory turn budgets, and targeted recovery without weakening proof and closure."
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---
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# 0.9.10 Recommendations
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Use this guide when you are adopting `0.9.10` and want one practical operating stance for the softer blocker states, advisory turn-budget behavior, and targeted recovery flow that the current package line ships.
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## Recommended Default
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For most repos, the safest `0.9.10` default is:
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- bound work with `budget.minutes`
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- leave generic `budget.turns` as advisory metadata
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- author non-proof follow-up as `soft`, `stale`, or `advisory` instead of silently treating every open record as a hard blocker
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- use `resolve-policy` when the answer already exists in repo policy or shipped docs
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- prefer targeted rerun or resume after timeout, max-turn, rate-limit, or missing-status outcomes instead of relaunching the whole wave
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- in short-lived sandboxes, prefer `wave submit`, `wave supervise`, `wave status`, and `wave wait` instead of binding the full run to one client shell
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- when a wave-gate dimension has a documented gap that is not an actionable blocker, use `gap` instead of `pass` or `blocked` — the runtime treats it as a conditional pass
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That recommendation matches the runtime:
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- executor launch metadata only emits hard turn-limit flags from `claude.maxTurns` or `opencode.steps`
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- open `stale` and `advisory` coordination records stay visible without reopening the active blocking edge
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- recoverable launcher failures queue targeted retry state instead of immediately escalating to broad terminal wave failure
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## 1. Budgets
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Treat the two budget knobs differently:
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- `budget.minutes` is the primary attempt budget
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- generic `budget.turns` is only a planning hint
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- `claude.maxTurns` or `opencode.steps` are the hard runtime ceilings when you actually want deterministic turn stopping
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Recommended pattern for synthesis-heavy implementation or closure work:
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```json
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{
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"executors": {
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"profiles": {
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"implementation-default": {
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"id": "claude",
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"model": "claude-sonnet-4-6",
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"budget": {
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"minutes": 35,
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"turns": 12
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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In that pattern, `35` minutes is real policy. `12` turns is only guidance for planning and preview metadata.
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Only set a hard runtime ceiling when you deliberately want the runtime itself to stop:
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```json
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{
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"executors": {
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"profiles": {
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"bounded-closure": {
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"id": "claude",
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"model": "claude-sonnet-4-6",
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"budget": {
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"minutes": 20
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},
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"claude": {
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"maxTurns": 6
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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## 2. Softer Coordination States
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`0.9.2` keeps “still visible” separate from “still blocking”.
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Use these states intentionally:
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| State | Use it for | What the runtime does |
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| --- | --- | --- |
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| `soft` | follow-up that still matters but should not be treated like proof failure | remains visible and may still drive repair or retry targeting |
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| `stale` | outdated clarification or blocker context kept for history | visible in control state, but does not reopen blocking by itself |
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| `advisory` | known issue, note, or human context that should stay visible without blocking closure | visible in control state, but does not own the active blocking edge |
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Practical command paths:
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```bash
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pnpm exec wave control task act defer --lane main --wave 10 --id blocker-doc-follow-up
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pnpm exec wave control task act mark-stale --lane main --wave 10 --id clarify-a7-rollout
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pnpm exec wave control task act mark-advisory --lane main --wave 10 --id request-clarify-a7-rollout
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pnpm exec wave control task act resolve-policy --lane main --wave 10 --id clarify-a7-rollout --detail "Policy already covered in the rollout guide."
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```
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Use them when the repo already knows the answer, the remaining item is informational, or the follow-up should stay visible for the next wave without holding the current wave hostage.
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## 3. What Should Stay Hard
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Do not relax everything.
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Keep these hard or closure-critical unless you are intentionally changing wave policy:
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- missing proof or required deliverables
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- failed integration, documentation, or cont-QA closure gates
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- real human-feedback or escalation requirements that block safe continuation
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- requests or clarifications that still represent unresolved ownership or policy ambiguity for the current wave
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Use `gap` in wave-gate markers when a dimension has a documented gap that is not actionable in the current wave. For example, `live=gap` is appropriate when an infrastructure topology constraint prevents full live validation but the constraint is known, documented, and does not represent a regression. Do not use `gap` to hide actual failures or unreviewed work.
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If the current wave cannot truthfully close without the answer, keep it blocking.
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## 4. Recovery Recommendation
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My recommendation after reviewing the current `0.9.10` code path is:
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- let timeout, max-turn, rate-limit, and missing-status failures go through the built-in targeted recovery path first
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- inspect the queued rerun or resume request before manually relaunching the whole wave
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- preserve reusable proof from successful sibling owners whenever the reducer already identified it as reusable
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That is the shape the launcher now prefers. It only broadens failure when the remaining blockers are still proof-critical or otherwise non-recoverable.
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## 5. Suggested Operator Policy
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For most repo-owned runbooks:
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- teach authors to use `budget.minutes` first
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- teach operators to downgrade only non-proof follow-up
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- treat `resolve-policy` as the preferred path when the answer already exists in docs or repo policy
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- escalate to a full-wave rerun only after targeted recovery proves insufficient
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If you want a single sentence policy:
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> Keep proof and closure strict, keep generic turns advisory, and keep non-proof context visible without letting it accidentally own wave closure.
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package/docs/plans/migration.md
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# Migration
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This page is the practical repo-upgrade guide for the current `0.9.
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This page is the practical repo-upgrade guide for the current `0.9.10` surface.
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Use it when you are:
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## What `0.9.4` Changes
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The current `0.9.
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The current `0.9.10` surface keeps everything from `0.9.2` and adds two focused improvements with no breaking changes.
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The practical changes are:
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## `0.9.4` Release Model
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The current `0.9.
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The current `0.9.10` surface combines these strands:
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- the gap-value wave-gate fix and first-time setup UX improvements released in `0.9.4`
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- the detached process-runner and sandbox supervisor hardening released in `0.9.2`
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- hybrid design stewards rejoin implementation when they explicitly own code
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- long-running prompts receive signal-state and ack paths when the repo uses the new waiting model
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## Upgrading From `0.9.9` To `0.9.10`
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Run-state history is now capped at 200 entries (20 per wave). Existing bloated run-state files will be automatically pruned on the next write. No config changes needed.
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## Upgrading From `0.9.8` To `0.9.9`
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Helper assignment barriers are now advisory in bootstrap gate mode. No config changes needed.
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## Upgrading From `0.8.3` To `0.9.
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## Upgrading From `0.8.3` To `0.9.10`
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Treat this as one move to the current `0.9.2` surface.
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- dry-run one design-steward wave if the repo wants the new authored surface
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- if the repo uses long-running watcher agents or shell automation, validate `scripts/wave-status.sh` and `scripts/wave-watch.sh` against a live or staged lane
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## Upgrading From `0.6.x` Or `0.7.x` To `0.9.
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## Upgrading From `0.6.x` Or `0.7.x` To `0.9.10`
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This is the main migration path for older adopted repos.
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## Summary
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The current `0.9.
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The current `0.9.10` surface keeps the same authority-set and phase-engine architecture, ships both the design-role starter surface and the signal-driven long-running-agent starter surface, keeps the `0.8.7` policy and routing hardening, and now also packages the practical operator recommendations guide inside the release line. For most repos already on `0.8.x`, the upgrade is package bump plus validation. For older adopted repos, the real work is syncing repo-owned prompts, skills, planner corpus, wrapper scripts, and runbooks so they describe the runtime the package now ships.
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package/package.json
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package/releases/manifest.json
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"schemaVersion": 1,
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"packageName": "@chllming/wave-orchestration",
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"releases": [
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{
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"version": "0.9.10",
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"date": "2026-04-07",
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"summary": "Fix run-state history bloat that caused 500MB+ JSON files and V8 string length crashes.",
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"features": [
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"Run-state history capped at 200 entries (20 per wave) with automatic pruning.",
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"Evidence objects stripped from older history entries to reduce size.",
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"Improved transition dedup ignores completedAt timestamps in evidence.",
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"planner-agentic bundle placeholder remains available for adopted repos."
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],
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"manualSteps": [],
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"breaking": false
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},
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"version": "0.9.9",
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"date": "2026-04-07",
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const RUN_STATE_MAX_HISTORY = 200;
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const RUN_STATE_MAX_HISTORY_PER_WAVE = 20;
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function nextRunStateSequence(history) {
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evidence && typeof evidence === "object" && !Array.isArray(evidence) ? evidence : null;
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const evidenceForCompare = (ev) => {
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if (!ev || typeof ev !== "object") return null;
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const { statusFiles, ...rest } = ev;
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// Strip completedAt from status files for comparison (changes every cycle)
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const normalizedFiles = Array.isArray(statusFiles)
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? statusFiles.map(({ completedAt, ...f }) => f)
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: statusFiles;
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return JSON.stringify({ ...rest, statusFiles: normalizedFiles });
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};
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if (
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previousEntry &&
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currentState === toState &&
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previousEntry.lastSource === source &&
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previousEntry.lastReasonCode === reasonCode &&
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previousEntry.lastDetail === effectiveDetail &&
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-
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evidenceForCompare(currentEvidence) === evidenceForCompare(effectiveEvidence)
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) {
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nextState.history = [...nextState.history, historyEntry];
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if (nextState.history.length > RUN_STATE_MAX_HISTORY) {
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const byWave = new Map();
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for (const entry of nextState.history) {
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|
+
const key = String(entry.wave ?? "");
|
|
2739
|
+
if (!byWave.has(key)) byWave.set(key, []);
|
|
2740
|
+
byWave.get(key).push(entry);
|
|
2741
|
+
}
|
|
2742
|
+
const kept = [];
|
|
2743
|
+
for (const [, entries] of byWave) {
|
|
2744
|
+
kept.push(...entries.slice(-RUN_STATE_MAX_HISTORY_PER_WAVE));
|
|
2745
|
+
}
|
|
2746
|
+
// Strip evidence from all but the last entry per wave to reduce size
|
|
2747
|
+
const lastPerWave = new Set();
|
|
2748
|
+
for (let i = kept.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
|
|
2749
|
+
const key = String(kept[i].wave ?? "");
|
|
2750
|
+
if (!lastPerWave.has(key)) {
|
|
2751
|
+
lastPerWave.add(key);
|
|
2752
|
+
} else {
|
|
2753
|
+
kept[i] = { ...kept[i], evidence: null };
|
|
2754
|
+
}
|
|
2755
|
+
}
|
|
2756
|
+
nextState.history = kept.sort((a, b) => (a.seq || 0) - (b.seq || 0));
|
|
2757
|
+
}
|
|
2720
2758
|
nextState.completedWaves = completedWavesFromStateEntries(nextState.waves);
|
|
2721
2759
|
return nextState;
|
|
2722
2760
|
}
|