@clarvis/agent-tools 0.1.0
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 +40 -0
- package/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md +117 -0
- package/CONTRIBUTING.md +78 -0
- package/LICENSE +21 -0
- package/README.md +203 -0
- package/SECURITY.md +58 -0
- package/SPEC.md +266 -0
- package/dist/config.d.ts +29 -0
- package/dist/config.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/config.js +145 -0
- package/dist/config.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/core.d.ts +13 -0
- package/dist/core.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/core.js +43 -0
- package/dist/core.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/errors.d.ts +9 -0
- package/dist/errors.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/errors.js +29 -0
- package/dist/errors.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/index.d.ts +20 -0
- package/dist/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/index.js +17 -0
- package/dist/index.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/atomic.d.ts +11 -0
- package/dist/lib/atomic.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/atomic.js +307 -0
- package/dist/lib/atomic.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/binary.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/lib/binary.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/binary.js +20 -0
- package/dist/lib/binary.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/files.d.ts +9 -0
- package/dist/lib/files.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/files.js +49 -0
- package/dist/lib/files.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/ignore.d.ts +5 -0
- package/dist/lib/ignore.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/ignore.js +106 -0
- package/dist/lib/ignore.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/log.d.ts +4 -0
- package/dist/lib/log.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/log.js +11 -0
- package/dist/lib/log.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/match-cascade.d.ts +10 -0
- package/dist/lib/match-cascade.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/match-cascade.js +153 -0
- package/dist/lib/match-cascade.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/output.d.ts +8 -0
- package/dist/lib/output.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/output.js +77 -0
- package/dist/lib/output.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/paths.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/lib/paths.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/paths.js +46 -0
- package/dist/lib/paths.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/rg.d.ts +22 -0
- package/dist/lib/rg.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/rg.js +285 -0
- package/dist/lib/rg.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/text.d.ts +18 -0
- package/dist/lib/text.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/text.js +129 -0
- package/dist/lib/text.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/textfile.d.ts +4 -0
- package/dist/lib/textfile.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/textfile.js +55 -0
- package/dist/lib/textfile.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/token.d.ts +2 -0
- package/dist/lib/token.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/lib/token.js +6 -0
- package/dist/lib/token.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/apply-patch.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/apply-patch.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/apply-patch.js +221 -0
- package/dist/tools/apply-patch.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/bash.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/bash.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/bash.js +179 -0
- package/dist/tools/bash.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/edit-file.d.ts +15 -0
- package/dist/tools/edit-file.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/edit-file.js +163 -0
- package/dist/tools/edit-file.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/glob.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/glob.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/glob.js +64 -0
- package/dist/tools/glob.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/grep.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/grep.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/grep.js +201 -0
- package/dist/tools/grep.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/list-dir.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/list-dir.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/list-dir.js +59 -0
- package/dist/tools/list-dir.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/multi-edit.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/multi-edit.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/multi-edit.js +86 -0
- package/dist/tools/multi-edit.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/read-file.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/read-file.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/read-file.js +102 -0
- package/dist/tools/read-file.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/registry.d.ts +6 -0
- package/dist/tools/registry.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/registry.js +28 -0
- package/dist/tools/registry.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/types.d.ts +9 -0
- package/dist/tools/types.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/types.js +2 -0
- package/dist/tools/types.js.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/write-file.d.ts +3 -0
- package/dist/tools/write-file.d.ts.map +1 -0
- package/dist/tools/write-file.js +61 -0
- package/dist/tools/write-file.js.map +1 -0
- package/package.json +70 -0
package/CHANGELOG.md
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# Changelog
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All notable changes to `@clarvis/agent-tools` are documented in this file.
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The format is based on [Keep a Changelog](https://keepachangelog.com/en/1.1.0/), and this project
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adheres to [Semantic Versioning](https://semver.org/spec/v2.0.0.html).
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## [Unreleased]
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## [0.1.0] - 2026-07-01
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Initial public release.
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### Added
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- **Nine coding tools** for driving an LLM agent over a workspace: `read_file`, `list_dir`, `glob`,
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`grep`, `write_file`, `edit_file`, `multi_edit`, `apply_patch`, and `bash`.
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- **Transport-agnostic library API** — `createAgentTools({ workspaceRoot })` plus the lower-level
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`dispatch` / `listTools` / `resolveConfig` / `buildConfig` and the raw `ToolDef` registry
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(`tools`, `readOnlyTools`, `getTool`, `selectSurface`).
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- **Uniform dispatch pipeline** — arguments validated against each tool's JSON Schema (ajv), handler
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run, output bounded, and errors serialized to a stable `{ error, message, ...fields }` envelope
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(`ToolError`, `serializeError`, `fsError`, the `ErrorCode` union).
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- **Workspace path confinement** (`confineToWorkspace`, default on) with `realpath` canonicalization
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and symlink-escape rejection (`path_escape`), plus write-through-symlink refusal.
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- **Read-only mode** (`readOnly`) exposing only `read_file`, `list_dir`, `glob`, and `grep`.
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- **Output bounding & spill** — every result capped to `maxOutputBytes` (UTF-8-safe); `bash` splits
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the budget across stdout/stderr, enforces a per-stream capture ceiling (`output_limit`), and spills
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full output to a `.clarvis/` file, swept by `sweepSpillDir`.
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- **Atomic writes** — temp-then-rename with fsync, mode preservation, per-path locking, and
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multi-file rollback for `apply_patch`.
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- **Text handling** — UTF-8 / UTF-16 (LE/BE) decoding, BOM and per-line EOL preservation on edits,
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NUL-byte binary rejection, and a `maxFileBytes` input ceiling (`too_large`).
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- **grep** backed by ripgrep when available, with a behaviorally consistent in-process fallback, both
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honoring `.gitignore`.
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- **VitePress documentation site** ([agent-tools.clarvis.dev](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev)) and
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the canonical per-tool [`SPEC.md`](SPEC.md).
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[Unreleased]: https://github.com/getclarvis/agent-tools/compare/v0.1.0...HEAD
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[0.1.0]: https://github.com/getclarvis/agent-tools/releases/tag/v0.1.0
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# Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct
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## Our Pledge
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We as members, contributors, and leaders pledge to make participation in our community a
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harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body size, visible or invisible
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disability, ethnicity, sex characteristics, gender identity and expression, level of experience,
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education, socio-economic status, nationality, personal appearance, race, caste, color, religion, or
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sexual identity and orientation.
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We pledge to act and interact in ways that contribute to an open, welcoming, diverse, inclusive, and
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healthy community.
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## Our Standards
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Examples of behavior that contributes to a positive environment for our community include:
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- Demonstrating empathy and kindness toward other people
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- Being respectful of differing opinions, viewpoints, and experiences
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- Giving and gracefully accepting constructive feedback
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- Accepting responsibility and apologizing to those affected by our mistakes, and learning from the
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experience
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- Focusing on what is best not just for us as individuals, but for the overall community
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Examples of unacceptable behavior include:
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- The use of sexualized language or imagery, and sexual attention or advances of any kind
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- Trolling, insulting or derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
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- Public or private harassment
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- Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or email address, without their
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explicit permission
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- Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a professional setting
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## Enforcement Responsibilities
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Community leaders are responsible for clarifying and enforcing our standards of acceptable behavior
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and will take appropriate and fair corrective action in response to any behavior that they deem
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inappropriate, threatening, offensive, or harmful.
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Community leaders have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject comments, commits,
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code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, and
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will communicate reasons for moderation decisions when appropriate.
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## Scope
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This Code of Conduct applies within all community spaces, and also applies when an individual is
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officially representing the community in public spaces. Examples of representing our community
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include using an official email address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as
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an appointed representative at an online or offline event.
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## Enforcement
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Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be reported to the community
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leaders responsible for enforcement at **conduct@clarvis.dev**. All complaints will be reviewed and
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investigated promptly and fairly.
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All community leaders are obligated to respect the privacy and security of the reporter of any
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incident.
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## Enforcement Guidelines
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Community leaders will follow these Community Impact Guidelines in determining the consequences for
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any action they deem in violation of this Code of Conduct:
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### 1. Correction
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**Community Impact**: Use of inappropriate language or other behavior deemed unprofessional or
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unwelcome in the community.
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**Consequence**: A private, written warning from community leaders, providing clarity around the
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nature of the violation and an explanation of why the behavior was inappropriate. A public apology
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may be requested.
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### 2. Warning
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**Community Impact**: A violation through a single incident or series of actions.
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**Consequence**: A warning with consequences for continued behavior. No interaction with the people
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involved, including unsolicited interaction with those enforcing the Code of Conduct, for a
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specified period of time. This includes avoiding interactions in community spaces as well as external
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channels like social media. Violating these terms may lead to a temporary or permanent ban.
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### 3. Temporary Ban
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behavior.
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**Consequence**: A temporary ban from any sort of interaction or public communication with the
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community for a specified period of time. No public or private interaction with the people involved,
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including unsolicited interaction with those enforcing the Code of Conduct, is allowed during this
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period. Violating these terms may lead to a permanent ban.
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### 4. Permanent Ban
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of classes of individuals.
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**Consequence**: A permanent ban from any sort of public interaction within the community.
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## Attribution
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This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage], version 2.1, available at
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[https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/2/1/code_of_conduct.html][v2.1].
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Community Impact Guidelines were inspired by
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[Mozilla's code of conduct enforcement ladder][mozilla coc].
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For answers to common questions about this code of conduct, see the FAQ at
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[https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq][faq]. Translations are available at
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[https://www.contributor-covenant.org/translations][translations].
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[homepage]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org
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[v2.1]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/2/1/code_of_conduct.html
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[mozilla coc]: https://github.com/mozilla/diversity
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[faq]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq
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[translations]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org/translations
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# Contributing to @clarvis/agent-tools
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Thanks for your interest in contributing! This document covers how to get set up, the quality gate,
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and the conventions this codebase follows. By participating you agree to abide by our
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[Code of Conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md).
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## Getting started
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```bash
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git clone https://github.com/getclarvis/agent-tools.git
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cd agent-tools
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npm install
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```
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Requires **Node.js >= 20**. [ripgrep](https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep) (`rg`) on `PATH` is
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optional — when present, `grep` uses it; otherwise an equivalent in-process backend runs, and the two
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are kept behaviorally consistent.
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## Development workflow
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```bash
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npm run build # emit dist/ (tsc, with .d.ts)
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npm test # full vitest suite (contract + integration)
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npm run typecheck # tsc --noEmit (strict)
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npm run lint # eslint
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npm run format # prettier --write (src + tests)
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```
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Before opening a pull request, make sure the quality gate is green:
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```bash
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npm run pre-commit # typecheck + format:check + test
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```
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CI runs `typecheck`, `lint`, `format:check`, `test`, and `build` on pushes and PRs targeting `main`
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and `develop`, across a Node matrix (`20.x`, `lts/*`, `current`). There is no separate coverage gate.
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## Project layout
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- `src/index.ts` — the public API (`createAgentTools`, `dispatch`, `listTools`, `resolveConfig`,
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`buildConfig`, the registry, and the error contract).
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- `src/core.ts` — the dispatch pipeline: validate (ajv) → run handler → bound output → serialize error.
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- `src/config.ts` — config resolution, defaults, and the argv/env builder.
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- `src/errors.ts` — `ToolError`, `serializeError`, `fsError`, and the `ErrorCode` union.
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- `src/tools/` — the nine tool handlers plus the registry (`registry.ts`) and `ToolDef` type.
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- `src/lib/` — the shared primitives: path confinement, text decode/encode, the edit match cascade,
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atomic writes, the two search backends, and output bounding/spill.
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- `tests/` — `contract/` (one file per tool) and `integration/` (cross-cutting) suites, with
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`helpers/fixtures.ts`.
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For the architecture and per-subsystem internals, see [`docs-internal/`](docs-internal/). User-facing
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docs live in [`docs/`](docs/) and the canonical per-tool contract in [`SPEC.md`](SPEC.md).
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## Guidelines
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- **Match the surrounding style.** The codebase is strict TypeScript with `noUncheckedIndexedAccess`;
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prefer explicit, narrow types over `any`/casts. **No JSDoc or inline comments** unless a
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lint/quality rule requires them.
|
|
59
|
+
- **Add tests** for behavior changes. `tests/contract/` guards each tool's input/output/error
|
|
60
|
+
contract; `tests/integration/` guards cross-cutting behavior (the public API, surface selection,
|
|
61
|
+
statelessness). Changing a tool contract means updating its contract test, [`SPEC.md`](SPEC.md), and
|
|
62
|
+
`docs/reference/tools.md` together.
|
|
63
|
+
- **Keep the two grep backends in agreement.** Any change to matching, context, or globbing must land
|
|
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|
+
in both the ripgrep and in-process paths and be covered by `tests/integration/grep-parity.test.ts`.
|
|
65
|
+
- **Security-sensitive changes** — anything touching path confinement, `bash` / subprocess spawning,
|
|
66
|
+
atomic writes, or spill files — deserve extra scrutiny. See [SECURITY.md](SECURITY.md).
|
|
67
|
+
- **Update docs** when you change a tool contract, a config option, or an observable behavior:
|
|
68
|
+
[`SPEC.md`](SPEC.md), the matching `docs/` reference page, and the matching
|
|
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+
[`docs-internal/internals/`](docs-internal/internals/) page.
|
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+
|
|
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|
+
## Reporting bugs and requesting features
|
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+
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+
Open a [GitHub issue](https://github.com/getclarvis/agent-tools/issues) using the provided templates.
|
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+
For security issues, follow the private process in [SECURITY.md](SECURITY.md) instead.
|
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|
+
|
|
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|
+
## License
|
|
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|
+
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+
By contributing, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under the [MIT License](LICENSE).
|
package/LICENSE
ADDED
|
@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
|
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1
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+
MIT License
|
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2
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+
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|
3
|
+
Copyright (c) 2026 getclarvis
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+
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+
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
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+
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
|
|
7
|
+
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
|
|
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|
+
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
|
|
9
|
+
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
|
|
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+
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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+
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+
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
|
|
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|
+
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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+
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+
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
|
|
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|
+
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
|
|
17
|
+
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
|
|
18
|
+
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
|
|
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|
+
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
|
|
20
|
+
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
|
|
21
|
+
SOFTWARE.
|
package/README.md
ADDED
|
@@ -0,0 +1,203 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
# @clarvis/agent-tools
|
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2
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+
|
|
3
|
+
A minimal, opinionated set of coding tools for driving an LLM agent over a
|
|
4
|
+
workspace, usable as a **plain library**. It gives an agent the primitives it
|
|
5
|
+
needs to read, search, edit, and run code: `read_file`, `list_dir`, `glob`,
|
|
6
|
+
`grep`, `write_file`, `edit_file`, `multi_edit`, `apply_patch`, and `bash`.
|
|
7
|
+
|
|
8
|
+
This package is **transport-agnostic**: it carries no built-in transport and no
|
|
9
|
+
agent loop — it is the tools, and nothing else. Advertise the surface, dispatch
|
|
10
|
+
the calls, and feed the results back from whatever agent loop or transport you
|
|
11
|
+
build around it.
|
|
12
|
+
|
|
13
|
+
> [!WARNING]
|
|
14
|
+
> These tools grant **read/write access to the workspace and arbitrary shell
|
|
15
|
+
> execution** with the privileges of the host process. Tool paths are **confined
|
|
16
|
+
> to the workspace root by default**, but `bash` runs arbitrary commands and is
|
|
17
|
+
> not sandboxed. Run it inside an OS-level sandbox. See [Security](#security).
|
|
18
|
+
|
|
19
|
+
## Requirements
|
|
20
|
+
|
|
21
|
+
- Node.js >= 20
|
|
22
|
+
- Optional: [ripgrep](https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep) (`rg`) on `PATH`.
|
|
23
|
+
When present, `grep` uses it; otherwise an equivalent in-process fallback is
|
|
24
|
+
used. Results are kept consistent between the two backends.
|
|
25
|
+
|
|
26
|
+
## Install
|
|
27
|
+
|
|
28
|
+
```sh
|
|
29
|
+
npm install @clarvis/agent-tools
|
|
30
|
+
```
|
|
31
|
+
|
|
32
|
+
## Library usage
|
|
33
|
+
|
|
34
|
+
The ergonomic entry point is `createAgentTools`. Give it a workspace root and it
|
|
35
|
+
resolves a config, then lets you list and call tools:
|
|
36
|
+
|
|
37
|
+
```ts
|
|
38
|
+
import { createAgentTools } from "@clarvis/agent-tools";
|
|
39
|
+
|
|
40
|
+
const tools = createAgentTools({ workspaceRoot: process.cwd() });
|
|
41
|
+
|
|
42
|
+
// Advertise the tool surface (name / description / JSON Schema) to your model:
|
|
43
|
+
tools.listTools();
|
|
44
|
+
|
|
45
|
+
// Call a tool by name with its arguments:
|
|
46
|
+
const res = await tools.callTool("read_file", { path: "package.json" });
|
|
47
|
+
if (res.isError) {
|
|
48
|
+
const err = JSON.parse(res.text) as { error: string; message: string };
|
|
49
|
+
console.error(err.error, err.message);
|
|
50
|
+
} else {
|
|
51
|
+
console.log(res.text);
|
|
52
|
+
}
|
|
53
|
+
```
|
|
54
|
+
|
|
55
|
+
`callTool` never throws for tool-level problems — it returns
|
|
56
|
+
`{ isError, text }`. On success `text` is the tool output (already bounded to
|
|
57
|
+
`maxOutputBytes`); on failure `text` is a JSON error envelope
|
|
58
|
+
(`{ "error": "<code>", "message": "..." , ... }`). Unknown or read-only-hidden
|
|
59
|
+
tools come back as an `isError` result with code `not_found`.
|
|
60
|
+
|
|
61
|
+
### Options
|
|
62
|
+
|
|
63
|
+
`createAgentTools(options)` / `resolveConfig(options)` accept:
|
|
64
|
+
|
|
65
|
+
| Option | Default | Meaning |
|
|
66
|
+
| -------------------- | ------------ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
67
|
+
| `workspaceRoot` | — (required) | Base directory; relative tool paths resolve against it. |
|
|
68
|
+
| `readOnly` | `false` | Expose only the non-mutating tools (`read_file`/`list_dir`/`glob`/`grep`). |
|
|
69
|
+
| `confineToWorkspace` | `true` | Reject paths that escape the workspace root (`path_escape`). |
|
|
70
|
+
| `maxOutputBytes` | `131072` | Per-result output cap (UTF-8 bytes); larger output is bounded. |
|
|
71
|
+
| `maxFileBytes` | `20000000` | Max size of an input file the text tools read; larger is rejected. |
|
|
72
|
+
| `bashTimeoutMs` | `120000` | Default `bash` timeout in milliseconds. |
|
|
73
|
+
| `bashTimeoutMaxMs` | `600000` | Hard ceiling a `bash` `timeout_ms` request may reach (≥ the default). |
|
|
74
|
+
| `probeRipgrep` | probes `rg` | Override ripgrep detection (e.g. `() => false` in tests). |
|
|
75
|
+
|
|
76
|
+
### Lower-level API
|
|
77
|
+
|
|
78
|
+
The building blocks are exported too, for custom transports:
|
|
79
|
+
|
|
80
|
+
```ts
|
|
81
|
+
import { resolveConfig, dispatch, listTools, tools, type ToolDef } from "@clarvis/agent-tools";
|
|
82
|
+
|
|
83
|
+
const config = resolveConfig({ workspaceRoot: process.cwd() });
|
|
84
|
+
const { isError, text } = await dispatch("grep", { pattern: "TODO" }, config);
|
|
85
|
+
```
|
|
86
|
+
|
|
87
|
+
- `dispatch(name, args, config)` — validate (ajv, against each tool's JSON
|
|
88
|
+
Schema), run the handler, bound the output, serialize errors. Returns
|
|
89
|
+
`{ isError, text }`.
|
|
90
|
+
- `listTools(config)` — the `{ name, description, inputSchema }[]` surface for the
|
|
91
|
+
active config (respects `readOnly`).
|
|
92
|
+
- `tools` / `readOnlyTools` / `getTool` / `selectSurface` — the raw `ToolDef`
|
|
93
|
+
registry.
|
|
94
|
+
- `buildConfig(argv, env)` — the argv/env config builder for a CLI or
|
|
95
|
+
long-running service (delegates to `resolveConfig`).
|
|
96
|
+
- `ToolError` / `serializeError` / `ErrorCode` — the structured error contract.
|
|
97
|
+
|
|
98
|
+
## Tools
|
|
99
|
+
|
|
100
|
+
| Tool | Mutating | Summary |
|
|
101
|
+
| ------------- | -------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
102
|
+
| `read_file` | no | Read a text file (UTF-8/UTF-16), with line numbers, paging, tail. |
|
|
103
|
+
| `list_dir` | no | List the entries of a directory. |
|
|
104
|
+
| `glob` | no | Find files by glob, most-recently-modified first. |
|
|
105
|
+
| `grep` | no | Search file contents by regular expression (optionally multiline).|
|
|
106
|
+
| `write_file` | yes | Create or overwrite a file (atomic). |
|
|
107
|
+
| `edit_file` | yes | Replace one exact occurrence of a string in a file. |
|
|
108
|
+
| `multi_edit` | yes | Apply several `edit_file`-style edits to one file atomically. |
|
|
109
|
+
| `apply_patch` | yes | Apply a unified diff (modify/create/delete/rename) atomically. |
|
|
110
|
+
| `bash` | yes | Run a shell command (`sh -c`) and capture stdout/stderr/exit. |
|
|
111
|
+
|
|
112
|
+
In read-only mode only `read_file`, `list_dir`, `glob`, and `grep` are exposed.
|
|
113
|
+
|
|
114
|
+
See [SPEC.md](./SPEC.md) for the full per-tool contract (inputs, behavior, and
|
|
115
|
+
error codes).
|
|
116
|
+
|
|
117
|
+
### Output bounding
|
|
118
|
+
|
|
119
|
+
Every tool result is capped to `maxOutputBytes` (truncated on a UTF-8 character
|
|
120
|
+
boundary, with a marker). `bash` additionally enforces a hard per-stream
|
|
121
|
+
in-memory ceiling while a command runs: a command that produces unbounded output
|
|
122
|
+
is killed and the call returns an `output_limit` error rather than exhausting
|
|
123
|
+
memory. When `bash` output overflows the display cap, the full captured output is
|
|
124
|
+
written to a `.clarvis/` spill file and the result points at it.
|
|
125
|
+
|
|
126
|
+
### Input bounding
|
|
127
|
+
|
|
128
|
+
The file-reading tools (`read_file`, `edit_file`, `multi_edit`, `apply_patch`,
|
|
129
|
+
and the in-process `grep` backend) refuse to load a file larger than
|
|
130
|
+
`maxFileBytes` (default 20 MB): the read/edit tools fail with `too_large`, and
|
|
131
|
+
`grep` skips the oversized file.
|
|
132
|
+
|
|
133
|
+
## Security
|
|
134
|
+
|
|
135
|
+
This is the most important property of these tools, so it is stated plainly:
|
|
136
|
+
|
|
137
|
+
- **Workspace-confined paths (default).** Every tool resolves paths against the
|
|
138
|
+
workspace root and, by default, refuses any path that escapes it: `../`
|
|
139
|
+
traversal, absolute paths outside the root, and symlinks inside the workspace
|
|
140
|
+
that resolve outside are rejected with `path_escape`. The existing portion of a
|
|
141
|
+
path is canonicalized with `realpath`, so symlink hops are caught. This guard
|
|
142
|
+
can be disabled with `confineToWorkspace: false`, which restores unrestricted
|
|
143
|
+
path resolution.
|
|
144
|
+
- **Arbitrary command execution.** `bash` runs `sh -c <command>` with the full
|
|
145
|
+
privileges of the host process. Path confinement does **not** constrain a shell
|
|
146
|
+
command — `bash` can read, modify, and execute anything the process can,
|
|
147
|
+
regardless of the confinement setting. It is an intentional escape hatch.
|
|
148
|
+
- **The threat model is the host.** Because the agent driving these tools can run
|
|
149
|
+
arbitrary commands, you must treat the process as having the same trust as the
|
|
150
|
+
code/agent connected to it. Path confinement is defense-in-depth for the file
|
|
151
|
+
tools, not a substitute for OS-level isolation.
|
|
152
|
+
|
|
153
|
+
**Run it inside an OS-level sandbox** — a container, a VM, a dedicated
|
|
154
|
+
low-privilege user, seccomp/AppArmor, or equivalent — scoped to the project you
|
|
155
|
+
intend the agent to work in. See [SECURITY.md](./SECURITY.md) for the full trust
|
|
156
|
+
model.
|
|
157
|
+
|
|
158
|
+
## Documentation
|
|
159
|
+
|
|
160
|
+
Full guides and reference live at
|
|
161
|
+
**[agent-tools.clarvis.dev](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev)** (source in
|
|
162
|
+
[`docs/`](docs/)):
|
|
163
|
+
|
|
164
|
+
- **Guide** — [getting started](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/getting-started),
|
|
165
|
+
[embed in an agent](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/guide/embed-in-an-agent),
|
|
166
|
+
[the core API](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/guide/the-core-api),
|
|
167
|
+
[read-only mode](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/guide/read-only-mode),
|
|
168
|
+
[limits & spill](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/guide/limits-and-spill).
|
|
169
|
+
- **Reference** — [tools](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/reference/tools),
|
|
170
|
+
[configuration](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/reference/configuration),
|
|
171
|
+
[createAgentTools](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/reference/create-agent-tools),
|
|
172
|
+
[core API](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/reference/core-api),
|
|
173
|
+
[error codes](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/reference/error-codes).
|
|
174
|
+
- **Concepts & operations** —
|
|
175
|
+
[how it works](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/explanation/how-it-works),
|
|
176
|
+
[path confinement](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/explanation/confinement),
|
|
177
|
+
[text & encoding](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/explanation/text-and-encoding),
|
|
178
|
+
[deploy securely](https://agent-tools.clarvis.dev/operations/deploy-securely).
|
|
179
|
+
|
|
180
|
+
The canonical per-tool contract (inputs, behavior, error codes) is
|
|
181
|
+
[SPEC.md](./SPEC.md).
|
|
182
|
+
|
|
183
|
+
## Development
|
|
184
|
+
|
|
185
|
+
```sh
|
|
186
|
+
npm run build # tsc -> dist/ (emits .d.ts)
|
|
187
|
+
npm test # vitest (contract + integration)
|
|
188
|
+
npm run typecheck
|
|
189
|
+
npm run lint
|
|
190
|
+
npm run format:check
|
|
191
|
+
npm run pre-commit # typecheck + format:check + test
|
|
192
|
+
```
|
|
193
|
+
|
|
194
|
+
## Contributing
|
|
195
|
+
|
|
196
|
+
Contributions are welcome. See [CONTRIBUTING.md](./CONTRIBUTING.md) for setup and
|
|
197
|
+
the quality gate, [`docs-internal/`](docs-internal/) for the architecture and
|
|
198
|
+
per-subsystem internals, and [CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md](./CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). Report
|
|
199
|
+
security issues privately per [SECURITY.md](./SECURITY.md).
|
|
200
|
+
|
|
201
|
+
## License
|
|
202
|
+
|
|
203
|
+
[MIT](./LICENSE) © Clarvis
|
package/SECURITY.md
ADDED
|
@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
# Security Policy
|
|
2
|
+
|
|
3
|
+
## Supported versions
|
|
4
|
+
|
|
5
|
+
This project is pre-1.0. Security fixes are applied to the latest published `0.x` release.
|
|
6
|
+
|
|
7
|
+
## Trust model
|
|
8
|
+
|
|
9
|
+
`@clarvis/agent-tools` is a **library** that gives an agent read/write access to a workspace and
|
|
10
|
+
**arbitrary shell execution** with the privileges of the host process. It carries no transport and no
|
|
11
|
+
sandbox of its own. Two boundaries matter:
|
|
12
|
+
|
|
13
|
+
- **File tools are workspace-confined by default.** `read_file`, `list_dir`, `glob`, `grep`,
|
|
14
|
+
`write_file`, `edit_file`, `multi_edit`, and `apply_patch` resolve every path against the workspace
|
|
15
|
+
root and, with `confineToWorkspace: true` (the default), reject any path that escapes it — `../`
|
|
16
|
+
traversal, an absolute path outside the root, or a symlink whose real target lies outside — with
|
|
17
|
+
`path_escape`. The existing prefix of a target path is canonicalized with `realpath`, so symlink
|
|
18
|
+
hops are caught. Writes additionally refuse to write **through** a symlink at the target itself,
|
|
19
|
+
regardless of the confinement setting.
|
|
20
|
+
- **`bash` is an intentional escape hatch.** It runs `sh -c <command>` (detached, in its own process
|
|
21
|
+
group) with the full privileges of the host process. Path confinement does **not** constrain a
|
|
22
|
+
shell command — `bash` can read, modify, and execute anything the process can, whatever
|
|
23
|
+
`confineToWorkspace` is set to. Only its working directory is validated.
|
|
24
|
+
|
|
25
|
+
Because the agent driving these tools can run arbitrary commands, the trust model is the **host**:
|
|
26
|
+
|
|
27
|
+
> **Run `@clarvis/agent-tools` inside an OS-level sandbox** — a container, a VM, a dedicated
|
|
28
|
+
> low-privilege user, seccomp/AppArmor, or equivalent — scoped to the project you intend the agent to
|
|
29
|
+
> work in. Path confinement is defense-in-depth for the file tools, not a substitute for OS-level
|
|
30
|
+
> isolation.
|
|
31
|
+
|
|
32
|
+
### Defense-in-depth notes
|
|
33
|
+
|
|
34
|
+
- **Output is bounded.** Every tool result is capped to `maxOutputBytes` (UTF-8-safe truncation). A
|
|
35
|
+
`bash` command that produces unbounded output on a single stream is killed at a per-stream capture
|
|
36
|
+
ceiling and returns `output_limit`, rather than exhausting memory.
|
|
37
|
+
- **Spill files stay in-workspace.** When `bash` output overflows the display cap, the full stream is
|
|
38
|
+
written to a `.clarvis/` spill file (auto-`.gitignore`d) inside the workspace and the result points
|
|
39
|
+
at it; nothing is written outside the workspace. `sweepSpillDir()` prunes old spill files.
|
|
40
|
+
- **Writes are atomic.** Mutating tools stage to a temp file, fsync, and rename, so a crash mid-write
|
|
41
|
+
never truncates the target; `apply_patch` rolls back a failed multi-file change and preserves the
|
|
42
|
+
original content in an adjacent backup if rollback itself fails.
|
|
43
|
+
- **Confinement is configurable.** `confineToWorkspace: false` (or `ALLOW_OUTSIDE_WORKSPACE=1`)
|
|
44
|
+
removes the path guard for the file tools. Only disable it when the process is already sandboxed and
|
|
45
|
+
you intend the tools to reach outside the workspace.
|
|
46
|
+
- **Errors don't leak internals.** A non-`ToolError` throw is logged to stderr and returned to the
|
|
47
|
+
caller only as an opaque `{ "error": "internal" }` envelope; coded `ToolError`s carry structured
|
|
48
|
+
fields (paths, sizes, bounded stdout/stderr) but no raw secrets.
|
|
49
|
+
|
|
50
|
+
## Reporting a vulnerability
|
|
51
|
+
|
|
52
|
+
Please report security issues **privately**. Do not open a public issue for a vulnerability.
|
|
53
|
+
|
|
54
|
+
- Use GitHub's [private vulnerability reporting](https://github.com/getclarvis/agent-tools/security/advisories/new), or
|
|
55
|
+
- email the maintainers at **security@clarvis.dev**.
|
|
56
|
+
|
|
57
|
+
We aim to acknowledge reports within a few business days and will coordinate a fix and disclosure
|
|
58
|
+
timeline with you.
|