bare-agent 0.16.0 → 0.16.2

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package/README.md CHANGED
@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ Every piece works alone — take what you need, ignore the rest.
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  | Component | What it does |
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  |---|---|
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- | **Loop** | Think → act → observe → repeat. Calls any LLM, executes your tools, loops until done. Returns estimated USD cost per run. Governance via `Loop({ policy })` wire bareguard's `Gate` through `wireGate(gate)` and every tool call (native, MCP, browsing, mobile) traverses one chokepoint with per-caller `ctx` routing. Bareguard owns the audit log, budget caps, and halt decisions; Loop respects the verdict. Context engineering via `Loop({ assemble })` a per-round `assemble(msgs, ctx)` chokepoint to recall/compress/trim the window sent to the model (the seam litectx plugs into); returns a view, the canonical transcript stays intact, fail-open. The exported `unitAssembler`/`toUnits`/`fromUnits` adapter lets a consumer work over a neutral unit `{id, role, content, kind, pinned, atomic, tokensApprox}` — bareagent owns the grammar (atomic tool-pair bundling, pinned system/task, a pairing seatbelt), the consumer owns content + relevance. The CE function reads its inputs from the per-run `ctx` — litectx's budget-fitter uses `ctx.budget` (and `ctx.task`), so you **must** populate it via `run(msgs, tools, { ctx })`: an unset `ctx.budget` means the fitter has no budget, keeps everything, and returns the window unchanged — a silent no-op, not a bug (see `examples/litectx-assemble.mjs`). For summary-window compaction the Loop also lends a provider-bound `ctx.summarize(excerpt) => Promise<string>` (R-C6): the consumer owns when/what to summarize and the splice, bareagent makes the one model call (counted against the budget via `onLlmResult`, tagged `kind:'summarize'`). For an unbounded long-running agent there's the **destructive** counterpart `Loop({ trim })` (RT-2) — a per-round bound on the canonical transcript that evicts old turns *after* harvesting them; wire it with the exported `unitTrimmer({ trim, onHarvest, policy })` over litectx's `trim` verb (harvest-before-evict, fail-open; `harvestKey` gives the stable upsert id), opt-in (requires a consumer on litectx ≥ 0.16.0). `onError` + `loop:error` surface every silent-ish failure (callback throw, Checkpoint timeout) |
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+ | **Loop** | Think → act → observe → repeat. Calls any LLM, runs your tools, loops until done, returns estimated USD cost per run. Three opt-in seams hook external libraries in without touching your code: **`policy`** (governance wire bareguard for one gated chokepoint over every tool call), **`assemble`** (context engineering — recall/compress/trim the window per round; the seam [litectx](https://npmjs.com/package/litectx) plugs into, transcript untouched), and **`trim`** (destructively bound the transcript for unbounded runs, harvesting turns before eviction). Each is a single chokepoint, fail-open, off by default. `onError` + `loop:error` surface every silent failure |
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  | **Planner** | Break a goal into a step DAG via LLM. Built-in caching (`cacheTTL`) |
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  | **assessComplexity** | Pure-code pre-planner (no LLM): rates a goal `simple`/`medium`/`complex`/`critical` from its text via keyword scoring + a critical safety override. `needsPlanning` gates whether to spend a Planner pass; `critical` flags security/production/compliance work for extra scrutiny. Free, instant, debuggable via `signals` |
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  | **runPlan** | Execute steps in parallel waves. Dependency-aware, failure propagation, per-step retry |
@@ -79,13 +79,13 @@ Every piece works alone — take what you need, ignore the rest.
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  | **Scheduler** | Cron (`0 9 * * 1-5`) or relative (`2h`, `30m`). Persisted jobs survive restarts |
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  | **Stream** | Structured event emitter. Pipe as JSONL, subscribe in-process, or custom transport |
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  | **Errors** | Typed hierarchy — `ProviderError`, `ToolError`, `TimeoutError`, `CircuitOpenError`, `ValidationError`. Halt decisions (turn cap, budget cap, content rules) come from bareguard, not Loop |
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- | **bareguard adapter** | `wireGate(gate)` returns `{ policy, onLlmResult, onToolResult, filterTools, formatDeny }` one-line wiring to bareguard's `Gate`. `policy` maps gate decisions to Loop's policy contract; `onLlmResult` + `onToolResult` forward every LLM and tool result to `gate.record` (so `budget.maxCostUsd` covers token-only workloads); `filterTools` drops denied tools from the catalog the LLM ever sees. Halt-severity decisions throw a typed `HaltError` and Loop exits cleanly never leaks `[HALT: ...]` to the LLM. `require('bare-agent/bareguard')` |
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+ | **bareguard adapter** | `wireGate(gate)` `{ policy, onLlmResult, onToolResult, filterTools, formatDeny }`: one-line wiring to bareguard's `Gate`. Routes every LLM + tool result through the gate so budget caps cover token-heavy workloads, drops denied tools before the LLM ever sees them, and turns halts into a clean exit. `require('bare-agent/bareguard')` |
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  | **Browsing** | Web navigation, clicking, typing, reading via `barebrowse` (17 tools). Two modes: library tools (inline snapshots, pass to Loop) or CLI session (disk-based snapshots, token-efficient for multi-step flows). Optional `assess` tool (privacy scan) when `wearehere` is installed |
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  | **Mobile** | Android + iOS device control via `baremobile`. Same two modes: library tools (`createMobileTools` — action tools auto-return snapshots) or CLI session (`baremobile` CLI — disk-based snapshots) |
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  | **Shell** | Cross-platform `shell_read`, `shell_grep`, `shell_run` (argv, no shell), `shell_exec` (raw shell). Pure Node — no `grep`/`rg`/`findstr` dependency. Injection-proof `shell_run` for policy-gated use |
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- | **MCP Bridge** | Auto-discover MCP servers from IDE configs (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.), expose as bareagent tools. Static allow/deny via `.mcp-bridge.json`, `systemContext` for LLM awareness. Runtime policy lives in `Loop({ policy })` — one hook for MCP + native tools alike. Returns both bulk `tools` (one per MCP tool) and `metaTools` (`mcp_discover` + `mcp_invoke` for token-thrifty access to large catalogs). Connecting runs a server's `command` (which may come from a cwd `.mcp.json`): pass `confirmServer` to vet each before it spawns — otherwise the bridge warns naming every command it runs. Every RPC is time-bounded (`timeout` for the handshake, `callTimeout` for `tools/call`), and a server that breaks its stdin pipe fails the connection instead of crashing the host. Zero deps |
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- | **Spawn** | Fork a child bareagent process as a specialist agent. LLM-callable form blocks until child exits; library form returns a handle (`wait`, `onLine`, `kill`). One JSONL channel per child — child stderr captured and re-emitted as `child:stderr` events on the parent stream. Threads `BAREGUARD_AUDIT_PATH` / `BAREGUARD_PARENT_RUN_ID` / `BAREGUARD_BUDGET_FILE` / `BAREGUARD_SPAWN_DEPTH` so the family stitches into one audit + budget. `bareguard ^0.2.0` adds `spawn.ratePerMinute` + `limits.maxDepth` per-family caps. `timeoutMs` is the wall-clock ceiling; opt-in `idleTimeoutMs` is a heartbeat watchdog that kills a child gone silent on both stdio streams (resets on each line, so slow-but-working children survive; result carries `idleKilled`) |
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- | **Defer** | Append a `{action, when}` record to a JSONL queue for a separate waker (cron / systemd timer / `examples/wake.sh`) to fire later. Two-phase governance: emit-time `gate.check` on the `defer` action; fire-time `gate.check` on the inner action when the waker re-invokes. `bareguard ^0.2.0` adds `defer.ratePerMinute` family-wide cap |
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+ | **MCP Bridge** | Auto-discover MCP servers from your $HOME/IDE configs (Claude Code, Cursor, ) and expose them as bareagent tools bulk (`tools`) or token-thrifty meta-tools (`mcp_discover` + `mcp_invoke`) for large catalogs. Same `Loop({ policy })` hook governs MCP and native tools alike. The project-cwd `.mcp.json` is **opt-in** (untrusted-repo safety); vet every server spawn with `confirmServer`; every RPC is time-bounded. Zero deps |
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+ | **Spawn** | Fork a child bareagent as a specialist agent LLM-callable (blocks until exit) or a library handle (`wait`, `onLine`, `kill`). The whole family stitches into one audit log + budget; `bareguard ^0.2.0` adds per-family rate + depth caps. `timeoutMs` caps wall-clock, opt-in `idleTimeoutMs` kills a child gone silent (slow-but-working children survive) |
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+ | **Defer** | Queue a `{action, when}` record for a separate waker (cron / `examples/wake.sh`) to fire later. Governed twice once when emitted, again when it fires. `bareguard ^0.2.0` adds a family-wide rate cap |
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  **Providers:** OpenAI-compatible (OpenAI, OpenRouter, Groq, vLLM, LM Studio), Anthropic, Ollama, CLIPipe (any CLI tool via stdin/stdout with real-time streaming), Fallback, or bring your own (one method: `generate`). All return the same shape — swap freely. The OpenAI provider warns if it would send your key over plaintext `http://` to a non-loopback host (use `https`, or drop `apiKey` for keyless local endpoints).
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@@ -95,6 +95,8 @@ Every piece works alone — take what you need, ignore the rest.
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  **Deps:** 1 required (`bareguard ^0.2.0` for governance — single-gate policy + audit + budget + per-family rate caps). Optional: `cron-parser` (cron expressions), `better-sqlite3` (SQLite store), `barebrowse` (web browsing), `baremobile` (Android + iOS device control), `wearehere` (privacy assessment via barebrowse).
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+ This table is the map, not the manual — per-component wiring and API detail live in the [Integration Guide](bareagent.context.md) and [Usage Guide](docs/02-features/usage-guide.md).
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+
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  ---
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  ## Recipes
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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  # bareagent — Integration Guide
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  > For AI assistants and developers wiring bareagent into a project.
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- > v0.16.0 | Node.js >= 18 | one required dep (`bareguard ^0.4.2`) | Apache 2.0
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+ > v0.16.2 | Node.js >= 18 | one required dep (`bareguard ^0.4.2`) | Apache 2.0
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  >
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  > Full human guide with composition examples, design philosophy, and recipes: [Usage Guide](docs/02-features/usage-guide.md)
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@@ -251,16 +251,19 @@ invoked tool name lives in `args.name`. To deny specific MCP tools when
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  using metaTools, use `tools.denyArgPatterns: { mcp_invoke: [/"name":"linear_admin_/] }`
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  or `content.denyPatterns` over the serialized action.
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- **Vetting server commands (v0.11.0).** Connecting to a server runs its
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- `command`, and discovery reads `.mcp.json` from the cwd (an untrusted
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- repo) as well as your home/IDE configs. Pass `confirmServer(name, def)
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- => boolean` to `createMCPBridge` to approve each server **before its
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- command is spawned** (return `false` to skip it; a throw fails closed).
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- Default trusts all discovered servers unchanged behavior. **When no
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- `confirmServer` is set, the bridge prints a one-time warning naming every
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- command it is about to spawn** (before the first spawn, discovery included),
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- so a cwd `.mcp.json` can't run a command unannounced `confirmServer` is
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- still how you actually *gate* it.
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+ **Vetting server commands (v0.11.0; cwd default tightened v0.16.1).** Connecting
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+ to a server runs its `command`. **Default discovery now scans only your
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+ $HOME/IDE configs NOT the project-cwd `./.mcp.json`** (v0.16.1): a checked-in
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+ config in an untrusted repo would otherwise auto-spawn arbitrary commands. To
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+ include the project config, pass `createMCPBridge({ includeProjectConfig: true })`,
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+ or a `confirmServer` hook (which implies it, since the hook vets every command).
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+ Explicitly-passed `configPaths` are honored verbatim. So you're not left guessing,
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+ discovery logs a one-line hint (v0.16.2) when a `./.mcp.json` is present but skipped —
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+ naming the opt-in rather than silently ignoring it. Pass `confirmServer(name,
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+ def) => boolean` to approve each server **before its command is spawned** (return
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+ `false` to skip it; a throw fails closed). When no `confirmServer` is set, the
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+ bridge still trusts all *discovered* servers and prints a one-time warning naming
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+ every command it is about to spawn — `confirmServer` is how you actually *gate* it.
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  **RPC timeouts (Unreleased).** Every JSON-RPC round-trip is now bounded, so a
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  server that never answers can't hang the bridge or the loop. `opts.timeout`
@@ -554,13 +557,13 @@ new CLIPipe({ command: 'claude', args: ['--print'], systemPromptFlag: '--system-
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  new CLIPipe({ command: 'ollama', args: ['run', 'llama3.2'] })
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  ```
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- All return `{ text, toolCalls, usage: { inputTokens, outputTokens } }`. CLIPipe always returns `toolCalls: []` and zero usage (CLI tools don't report tokens).
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+ All return `{ text, toolCalls, usage: { inputTokens, outputTokens }, model? }`. The optional `model` (v0.16.1+) is the id the response was produced by — Loop prefers it over `provider.model` for cost accounting. CLIPipe always returns `toolCalls: []` and zero usage (CLI tools don't report tokens), and omits `model`.
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  **Error body (v0.11.0):** on an HTTP error the OpenAI/Anthropic/Ollama providers throw a `ProviderError` whose `message` carries the upstream error string. The full parsed response is **not** attached to `err.body` by default (so an unexpected field can't leak through logs that dump the error object). Pass `{ exposeErrorBody: true }` to attach it for debugging.
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  **Plaintext-key warning (Unreleased):** the OpenAI provider's `baseUrl` accepts `http://` (for local/OpenAI-compatible endpoints), but a `Bearer` key sent over plaintext http to a **non-loopback** host is exposed on the wire. The provider now warns once when that happens. Loopback hosts (`localhost`/`127.0.0.0/8`/`::1` — local proxies, Ollama-style endpoints) stay silent, since that's the legitimate keyless-local case. The header is **not** stripped (some local proxies want a key), so use `https` for any remote endpoint, or drop `apiKey` when the local endpoint needs none.
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- **Cost estimation:** Loop automatically estimates USD cost per run based on model and token usage. The `cost` field appears in every `loop.run()` result and in `loop:done` stream events. Pricing covers OpenAI and Anthropic models; unknown models use a default average. To adjust rates, edit `COST_PER_1K` at the top of `src/loop.js`.
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+ **Cost estimation:** Loop automatically estimates USD cost per run based on model and token usage. The `cost` field appears in every `loop.run()` result and in `loop:done` stream events. Pricing covers OpenAI and Anthropic models; unknown models use a default average. To adjust rates, edit `COST_PER_1K` at the top of `src/loop.js`. The model is resolved as `result.model || provider.model` (v0.16.1+) — providers now echo the model in their `generate()` result, so cost accounting holds even when `provider.model` is absent or varies per response, e.g. behind `FallbackProvider` or `CircuitBreaker.wrapProvider` (the wrapper also preserves `model`/`name` passthrough props). Wire `onLlmResult` (via `wireGate`) and a `budget.maxCostUsd` cap then halts on token-heavy workloads too.
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  ## Store options
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@@ -642,7 +645,7 @@ All error classes extend `Error` — `instanceof Error` always works. The `retry
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  ## Key contracts
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  - Loop builds messages in OpenAI format internally. Each provider normalizes to its native format.
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- - `provider.generate(messages, tools, options)` must return `{ text, toolCalls, usage }`.
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+ - `provider.generate(messages, tools, options)` must return `{ text, toolCalls, usage }` (and may include `model` for accurate cost accounting).
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  - Store must implement `store(content, metadata) → id`, `search(query, options) → [{id, content, metadata, score}]`, `get(id)`, `delete(id)`.
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  - Components are independent: Memory doesn't know Loop, Scheduler doesn't know Planner. You compose them.
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package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  {
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  "name": "bare-agent",
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- "version": "0.16.0",
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+ "version": "0.16.2",
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  "files": [
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  "index.js",
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  "index.d.ts",
@@ -57,14 +57,18 @@ export class CircuitBreaker {
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  */
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  reset(key?: string): void;
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  /**
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- * Wrap a provider so generate() goes through the circuit breaker.
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- * @param {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any> }} provider - Provider with generate().
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+ * Wrap a provider so generate() goes through the circuit breaker. Passthrough props (e.g.
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+ * `model`, `name`) are preserved so Loop cost accounting which reads `provider.model`
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+ * keeps working through the wrapper.
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+ * @param {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any>, [k: string]: any }} provider - Provider with generate().
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  * @param {string} [key] - Circuit key.
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- * @returns {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any> }} Wrapped provider with generate().
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+ * @returns {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any>, [k: string]: any }} Wrapped provider.
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  */
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  wrapProvider(provider: {
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  generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any>;
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+ [k: string]: any;
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  }, key?: string): {
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  generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any>;
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+ [k: string]: any;
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  };
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  }
@@ -112,13 +112,16 @@ class CircuitBreaker {
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  }
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  /**
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- * Wrap a provider so generate() goes through the circuit breaker.
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- * @param {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any> }} provider - Provider with generate().
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+ * Wrap a provider so generate() goes through the circuit breaker. Passthrough props (e.g.
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+ * `model`, `name`) are preserved so Loop cost accounting which reads `provider.model`
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+ * keeps working through the wrapper.
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+ * @param {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any>, [k: string]: any }} provider - Provider with generate().
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  * @param {string} [key] - Circuit key.
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- * @returns {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any> }} Wrapped provider with generate().
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+ * @returns {{ generate: (...args: any[]) => Promise<any>, [k: string]: any }} Wrapped provider.
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  */
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  wrapProvider(provider, key) {
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  return {
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+ ...provider,
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  /** @param {...any} args */
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  generate: (...args) => this.call(() => provider.generate(...args), key),
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  };
package/src/loop.js CHANGED
@@ -331,7 +331,7 @@ class Loop {
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  const startedAt = Date.now();
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  const result = await loop.provider.generate(prompt, [], { temperature: 0, ...genOpts });
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  const usage = (result && result.usage) || null;
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- const model = loop.provider.model || null;
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+ const model = (result && result.model) || loop.provider.model || null;
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  const cost = estimateCost(model, usage);
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  if (cost !== null) totalCost += cost;
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  loop._safeEmit({ type: 'loop:summarize', data: { usage, costUsd: cost, durationMs: Date.now() - startedAt } });
@@ -421,7 +421,9 @@ class Loop {
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  }
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  lastUsage = result.usage || lastUsage;
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- const model = this.provider.model || null;
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+ // Prefer the model the response reports (robust when provider.model is absent or varies per
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+ // response — e.g. FallbackProvider, or a CircuitBreaker-wrapped provider that drops .model).
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+ const model = result.model || this.provider.model || null;
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  const roundCost = estimateCost(model, lastUsage);
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  if (roundCost !== null) totalCost += roundCost;
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@@ -74,7 +74,11 @@ export type RpcClient = {
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  *
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  * @param {object} [opts]
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  * @param {string} [opts.bridgePath] - Path to .mcp-bridge.json. Default: .mcp-bridge.json in cwd.
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- * @param {string[]} [opts.configPaths] - IDE config paths for discovery.
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+ * @param {string[]} [opts.configPaths] - Explicit config paths for discovery. When given, honored
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+ * verbatim. When omitted, only the trusted $HOME/IDE defaults are scanned (NOT `./.mcp.json`).
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+ * @param {boolean} [opts.includeProjectConfig=false] - Also scan the project-cwd `./.mcp.json`
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+ * during default discovery. Off by default: a project config in an untrusted repo can auto-spawn
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+ * arbitrary commands. Implied true when a `confirmServer` hook is present (it vets each command).
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  * @param {string[]} [opts.servers] - Limit to these server names.
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  * @param {number} [opts.timeout=15000] - Per-server handshake timeout in ms (initialize + tools/list).
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  * @param {number} [opts.callTimeout=120000] - Per-invocation timeout in ms for tools/call. Bounds a
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  * @param {boolean} [opts.refresh=false] - Force re-discovery regardless of TTL.
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  * @param {(name: string, def: ServerDef) => boolean | Promise<boolean>} [opts.confirmServer]
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  * Vet each discovered server BEFORE its `command` is spawned. Connecting to an
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- * MCP server runs its command, and discovery reads configs from the cwd (a
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- * `.mcp.json` in an untrusted repo) as well as the user's home/IDE configs.
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- * Return false to skip a server (its command is never executed). A throw is
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- * treated as a deny (fail-closed). Default: every discovered server is trusted
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- * (unchanged behavior) pass this to gate command execution.
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+ * MCP server runs its command. Return false to skip a server (its command is
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+ * never executed). A throw is treated as a deny (fail-closed). Default: every
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+ * discovered server is trusted pass this to gate command execution. Presence
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+ * of this hook also opts default discovery into the project-cwd `./.mcp.json`,
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+ * since each command is then vetted regardless of source.
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  * @returns {Promise<{tools: ToolDef[], metaTools?: ToolDef[], servers: string[], systemContext: string, denied: DeniedTool[], errors?: Array<{server: string, error: string}>, close: Function}>}
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  */
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  export function createMCPBridge(opts?: {
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  bridgePath?: string | undefined;
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  configPaths?: string[] | undefined;
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+ includeProjectConfig?: boolean | undefined;
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  timeout?: number | undefined;
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  callTimeout?: number | undefined;
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  close: Function;
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  }>;
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  /**
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+ * @param {string[]} [configPaths] - Explicit config paths. When given, honored verbatim (the
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+ * caller owns the choice). When omitted, the trusted $HOME/IDE defaults are scanned.
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+ * @param {{ includeProjectConfig?: boolean }} [opts] - When no explicit `configPaths` are given,
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+ * set `includeProjectConfig: true` to also scan `./.mcp.json`. Default false — see PROJECT_CONFIG_PATH.
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  * @returns {Map<string, ServerDef>}
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  */
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- export function discoverServers(configPaths?: string[]): Map<string, ServerDef>;
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+ export function discoverServers(configPaths?: string[], { includeProjectConfig }?: {
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+ includeProjectConfig?: boolean;
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+ }): Map<string, ServerDef>;
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  /**
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  * Build the LLM-callable meta-tool surface from a fully-connected bridge.
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  * Shares the underlying tool array and RPC clients with the bulk surface —
package/src/mcp-bridge.js CHANGED
@@ -62,8 +62,12 @@ const { ToolError } = require('./errors');
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  // --- Config discovery (from IDE configs) ---
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- () => join(process.cwd(), '.mcp.json'), // project
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+ // The project-cwd `.mcp.json` is the untrusted-repo vector: discovering it auto-spawns its
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+ // `command`, so cloning a hostile repo and running an agent inside it would be arbitrary code
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+ // execution. It is therefore NOT in the trusted defaults — these are user/IDE-authored configs
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+ // under $HOME, which the user owns. The project config is opt-in (see `includeProjectConfig`).
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+ const PROJECT_CONFIG_PATH = () => join(process.cwd(), '.mcp.json');
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+ const TRUSTED_CONFIG_PATHS = [
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  () => join(homedir(), '.mcp.json'), // home
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  () => join(homedir(), '.claude', 'mcp_servers.json'), // Claude Code
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  () => join(homedir(), '.config', 'Claude', 'claude_desktop_config.json'), // Claude Desktop
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  ];
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  /**
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- * @param {string[]} [configPaths]
78
+ * @param {string[]} [configPaths] - Explicit config paths. When given, honored verbatim (the
79
+ * caller owns the choice). When omitted, the trusted $HOME/IDE defaults are scanned.
80
+ * @param {{ includeProjectConfig?: boolean }} [opts] - When no explicit `configPaths` are given,
81
+ * set `includeProjectConfig: true` to also scan `./.mcp.json`. Default false — see PROJECT_CONFIG_PATH.
75
82
  * @returns {Map<string, ServerDef>}
76
83
  */
77
- function discoverServers(configPaths) {
78
- const paths = configPaths || DEFAULT_CONFIG_PATHS.map(fn => fn());
84
+ function discoverServers(configPaths, { includeProjectConfig = false } = {}) {
85
+ let paths;
86
+ if (configPaths) {
87
+ paths = configPaths;
88
+ } else {
89
+ paths = TRUSTED_CONFIG_PATHS.map(fn => fn());
90
+ // Project config kept at highest precedence (front) when explicitly opted in — preserves the
91
+ // historical "project overrides home" ordering for callers that want it.
92
+ if (includeProjectConfig) {
93
+ paths.unshift(PROJECT_CONFIG_PATH());
94
+ } else if (existsSync(PROJECT_CONFIG_PATH())) {
95
+ // Don't fail silently: a present-but-skipped project config is the common legitimate case
96
+ // (your own repo). Say so, and point at the opt-in — otherwise the servers just never appear
97
+ // and there's no on-screen reason why.
98
+ console.warn(
99
+ `[MCP Bridge] found ./.mcp.json but did not load it (untrusted-cwd default since v0.16.1). ` +
100
+ `Pass { includeProjectConfig: true } or a confirmServer hook to enable project-local servers.`,
101
+ );
102
+ }
103
+ }
79
104
  /** @type {Map<string, ServerDef>} */
80
105
  const servers = new Map();
81
106
 
@@ -594,7 +619,11 @@ function buildMetaTools(tools, discoveredAt) {
594
619
  *
595
620
  * @param {object} [opts]
596
621
  * @param {string} [opts.bridgePath] - Path to .mcp-bridge.json. Default: .mcp-bridge.json in cwd.
597
- * @param {string[]} [opts.configPaths] - IDE config paths for discovery.
622
+ * @param {string[]} [opts.configPaths] - Explicit config paths for discovery. When given, honored
623
+ * verbatim. When omitted, only the trusted $HOME/IDE defaults are scanned (NOT `./.mcp.json`).
624
+ * @param {boolean} [opts.includeProjectConfig=false] - Also scan the project-cwd `./.mcp.json`
625
+ * during default discovery. Off by default: a project config in an untrusted repo can auto-spawn
626
+ * arbitrary commands. Implied true when a `confirmServer` hook is present (it vets each command).
598
627
  * @param {string[]} [opts.servers] - Limit to these server names.
599
628
  * @param {number} [opts.timeout=15000] - Per-server handshake timeout in ms (initialize + tools/list).
600
629
  * @param {number} [opts.callTimeout=120000] - Per-invocation timeout in ms for tools/call. Bounds a
@@ -602,11 +631,11 @@ function buildMetaTools(tools, discoveredAt) {
602
631
  * @param {boolean} [opts.refresh=false] - Force re-discovery regardless of TTL.
603
632
  * @param {(name: string, def: ServerDef) => boolean | Promise<boolean>} [opts.confirmServer]
604
633
  * Vet each discovered server BEFORE its `command` is spawned. Connecting to an
605
- * MCP server runs its command, and discovery reads configs from the cwd (a
606
- * `.mcp.json` in an untrusted repo) as well as the user's home/IDE configs.
607
- * Return false to skip a server (its command is never executed). A throw is
608
- * treated as a deny (fail-closed). Default: every discovered server is trusted
609
- * (unchanged behavior) pass this to gate command execution.
634
+ * MCP server runs its command. Return false to skip a server (its command is
635
+ * never executed). A throw is treated as a deny (fail-closed). Default: every
636
+ * discovered server is trusted pass this to gate command execution. Presence
637
+ * of this hook also opts default discovery into the project-cwd `./.mcp.json`,
638
+ * since each command is then vetted regardless of source.
610
639
  * @returns {Promise<{tools: ToolDef[], metaTools?: ToolDef[], servers: string[], systemContext: string, denied: DeniedTool[], errors?: Array<{server: string, error: string}>, close: Function}>}
611
640
  */
612
641
  async function createMCPBridge(opts = {}) {
@@ -632,9 +661,10 @@ async function createMCPBridge(opts = {}) {
632
661
  catch { return false; }
633
662
  };
634
663
 
635
- // Connecting to a server EXECUTES its `command`, which can originate from a
636
- // cwd-relative .mcp.json in an untrusted repo (discoverServers reads project
637
- // configs). With no confirmServer hook, every discovered command runs unvetted.
664
+ // Connecting to a server EXECUTES its `command`. The project-cwd `.mcp.json` is excluded from
665
+ // default discovery (see TRUSTED_CONFIG_PATHS / includeProjectConfig), so the untrusted-repo
666
+ // path is closed by default; this warning covers the residual case where home/IDE configs (or an
667
+ // explicit opt-in) contribute commands and no confirmServer hook is present to vet them.
638
668
  // Warn ONCE per call, BEFORE the first spawn — and the first spawn is the
639
669
  // discovery phase on a cold/refresh run, not the main-connect phase below.
640
670
  let warnedUnvetted = false;
@@ -654,8 +684,11 @@ async function createMCPBridge(opts = {}) {
654
684
  const needsRefresh = opts.refresh || !config || isExpired(config);
655
685
 
656
686
  if (needsRefresh) {
657
- // Discover from IDE configs
658
- const discovered = discoverServers(opts.configPaths);
687
+ // Discover from IDE configs. The project-cwd `.mcp.json` is excluded by default (untrusted-repo
688
+ // RCE vector); it is scanned only on explicit opt-in, or when a `confirmServer` hook is present
689
+ // (which vets every command before it spawns, so cwd discovery is safe under it).
690
+ const includeProjectConfig = opts.includeProjectConfig === true || !!confirmServer;
691
+ const discovered = discoverServers(opts.configPaths, { includeProjectConfig });
659
692
 
660
693
  if (discovered.size === 0 && !config) {
661
694
  return { tools: [], servers: [], systemContext: '', denied: [], close: async () => {} };
@@ -83,6 +83,7 @@ class AnthropicProvider {
83
83
  return {
84
84
  text,
85
85
  toolCalls,
86
+ model: data.model || this.model,
86
87
  usage: {
87
88
  inputTokens: data.usage?.input_tokens || 0,
88
89
  outputTokens: data.usage?.output_tokens || 0,
@@ -60,6 +60,7 @@ class OllamaProvider {
60
60
  ? JSON.parse(tc.function.arguments)
61
61
  : tc.function.arguments,
62
62
  })),
63
+ model: data.model || this.model,
63
64
  usage: {
64
65
  inputTokens: data.prompt_eval_count || 0,
65
66
  outputTokens: data.eval_count || 0,
@@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ class OpenAIProvider {
72
72
  name: tc.function.name,
73
73
  arguments: JSON.parse(tc.function.arguments),
74
74
  })),
75
+ model: data.model || this.model,
75
76
  usage: {
76
77
  inputTokens: data.usage?.prompt_tokens || 0,
77
78
  outputTokens: data.usage?.completion_tokens || 0,
package/tools/defer.js CHANGED
@@ -133,16 +133,19 @@ async function readQueue(queuePath) {
133
133
  const path = resolveQueuePath(queuePath);
134
134
  try {
135
135
  const text = await fsp.readFile(path, 'utf8');
136
- /** @type {Record<string, Record<string, any>>} */
137
- const records = {};
136
+ // Fold append-only status lines by id (latest wins). A Map — not a plain object — so an
137
+ // attacker-influenced id from a tampered queue file (e.g. "__proto__", "constructor") is just
138
+ // an ordinary key and cannot reach the prototype-setter path. Also require a string id.
139
+ /** @type {Map<string, Record<string, any>>} */
140
+ const records = new Map();
138
141
  for (const line of text.split('\n')) {
139
142
  if (!line.trim()) continue;
140
143
  let r;
141
144
  try { r = JSON.parse(line); } catch { continue; }
142
- if (!r.id) continue;
143
- records[r.id] = { ...records[r.id], ...r };
145
+ if (typeof r.id !== 'string' || !r.id) continue;
146
+ records.set(r.id, { ...records.get(r.id), ...r });
144
147
  }
145
- return Object.values(records);
148
+ return [...records.values()];
146
149
  } catch (/** @type {any} */ err) {
147
150
  if (err.code === 'ENOENT') return [];
148
151
  throw err;
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
1
+ export {};
@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
1
+ 'use strict';
2
+
3
+ /**
4
+ * Worker thread for shell_grep's matching phase. Runs the (potentially expensive) regex search
5
+ * off the main thread so the parent can enforce a hard timeout via `worker.terminate()` — JS
6
+ * regex backtracking is uninterruptible on its own thread, so isolation is the only sound bound
7
+ * against catastrophic patterns that slip past the static guard. See tools/shell.js `grepPath`.
8
+ */
9
+
10
+ const { workerData, parentPort } = require('node:worker_threads');
11
+ const { _grepCore } = require('./shell.js');
12
+
13
+ // parentPort is non-null inside a worker, but the type is nullable for the main-thread case.
14
+ if (!parentPort) throw new Error('grep-worker.js must be run as a worker thread');
15
+ const port = parentPort;
16
+
17
+ _grepCore(workerData).then(
18
+ (result) => port.postMessage({ ok: true, result }),
19
+ (err) => port.postMessage({ ok: false, error: err && err.message ? err.message : String(err) }),
20
+ );
package/tools/shell.d.ts CHANGED
@@ -4,6 +4,12 @@ export type GrepArgs = {
4
4
  recursive?: boolean | undefined;
5
5
  maxMatches?: number | undefined;
6
6
  flags?: string | undefined;
7
+ /**
8
+ * - Hard wall-clock ceiling in ms (default 5000). The match runs in a
9
+ * worker thread; on overrun the worker is terminated and the call rejects, so a pattern that slips
10
+ * past `looksCatastrophic` can no longer hang the host event loop.
11
+ */
12
+ timeout?: number | undefined;
7
13
  };
8
14
  export type RunArgvArgs = {
9
15
  argv: string[];
@@ -29,3 +35,31 @@ export type ToolDef = import("../types").ToolDef;
29
35
  export function createShellTools(): {
30
36
  tools: ToolDef[];
31
37
  };
38
+ /**
39
+ * @typedef {object} GrepArgs
40
+ * @property {string} pattern
41
+ * @property {string} path
42
+ * @property {boolean} [recursive]
43
+ * @property {number} [maxMatches]
44
+ * @property {string} [flags]
45
+ * @property {number} [timeout] - Hard wall-clock ceiling in ms (default 5000). The match runs in a
46
+ * worker thread; on overrun the worker is terminated and the call rejects, so a pattern that slips
47
+ * past `looksCatastrophic` can no longer hang the host event loop.
48
+ */
49
+ /**
50
+ * The actual search: walk, skip binaries, regex-test each line. Runs in a worker thread (see
51
+ * grep-worker.js) so a runaway regex is killable via `worker.terminate()`. JS RegExp has no
52
+ * execution timeout and backtracking is uninterruptible on its own thread — isolation is the
53
+ * only sound bound (the static `looksCatastrophic` guard is a best-effort fast-reject, not a
54
+ * guarantee; a grounded bypass like `(a|a|a)*` passes it yet backtracks exponentially).
55
+ * @param {GrepArgs} args
56
+ */
57
+ export function _grepCore({ pattern, path: rawPath, recursive, maxMatches, flags }: GrepArgs): Promise<{
58
+ hits: {
59
+ file: string;
60
+ line: number;
61
+ text: string;
62
+ }[];
63
+ truncated: boolean;
64
+ fileCount: number;
65
+ }>;
package/tools/shell.js CHANGED
@@ -17,9 +17,11 @@
17
17
  const fs = require('node:fs/promises');
18
18
  const path = require('node:path');
19
19
  const { exec, execFile } = require('node:child_process');
20
+ const { Worker } = require('node:worker_threads');
20
21
 
21
22
  const DEFAULT_READ_MAX_BYTES = 256 * 1024; // 256 KB
22
23
  const DEFAULT_GREP_MAX_MATCHES = 200;
24
+ const DEFAULT_GREP_TIMEOUT_MS = 5_000; // hard ceiling on a single grep — bounds ReDoS
23
25
  const DEFAULT_EXEC_TIMEOUT_MS = 30_000;
24
26
  const DEFAULT_EXEC_MAX_BUFFER = 1024 * 1024; // 1 MB
25
27
 
@@ -137,18 +139,22 @@ function looksCatastrophic(pattern) {
137
139
  * @property {boolean} [recursive]
138
140
  * @property {number} [maxMatches]
139
141
  * @property {string} [flags]
142
+ * @property {number} [timeout] - Hard wall-clock ceiling in ms (default 5000). The match runs in a
143
+ * worker thread; on overrun the worker is terminated and the call rejects, so a pattern that slips
144
+ * past `looksCatastrophic` can no longer hang the host event loop.
140
145
  */
141
146
 
142
- /** @param {GrepArgs} args */
143
- async function grepPath({ pattern, path: rawPath, recursive = true, maxMatches, flags = 'i' }) {
147
+ /**
148
+ * The actual search: walk, skip binaries, regex-test each line. Runs in a worker thread (see
149
+ * grep-worker.js) so a runaway regex is killable via `worker.terminate()`. JS RegExp has no
150
+ * execution timeout and backtracking is uninterruptible on its own thread — isolation is the
151
+ * only sound bound (the static `looksCatastrophic` guard is a best-effort fast-reject, not a
152
+ * guarantee; a grounded bypass like `(a|a|a)*` passes it yet backtracks exponentially).
153
+ * @param {GrepArgs} args
154
+ */
155
+ async function _grepCore({ pattern, path: rawPath, recursive = true, maxMatches, flags = 'i' }) {
144
156
  const resolved = path.resolve(expandHome(rawPath));
145
157
  const cap = maxMatches || DEFAULT_GREP_MAX_MATCHES;
146
- if (looksCatastrophic(pattern)) {
147
- throw new Error(
148
- `shell_grep: pattern rejected — nested unbounded quantifier (e.g. "(a+)+") risks catastrophic ` +
149
- `backtracking that would block the process. Simplify the regex.`,
150
- );
151
- }
152
158
  let re;
153
159
  try {
154
160
  re = new RegExp(pattern, flags);
@@ -190,6 +196,53 @@ async function grepPath({ pattern, path: rawPath, recursive = true, maxMatches,
190
196
  return { hits, truncated, fileCount: files.length };
191
197
  }
192
198
 
199
+ /**
200
+ * Public grep entry. Fast-rejects obviously catastrophic patterns without paying for a worker,
201
+ * then runs the search in a worker thread bounded by a hard timeout — so even a pattern that
202
+ * defeats the static guard degrades to a bounded rejection instead of an event-loop hang.
203
+ * @param {GrepArgs} args
204
+ */
205
+ function grepPath(args) {
206
+ const { pattern, flags = 'i', timeout } = args;
207
+ if (looksCatastrophic(pattern)) {
208
+ return Promise.reject(new Error(
209
+ `shell_grep: pattern rejected — nested unbounded quantifier (e.g. "(a+)+") risks catastrophic ` +
210
+ `backtracking that would block the process. Simplify the regex.`,
211
+ ));
212
+ }
213
+ // Cheap up-front validation so a syntactically invalid regex fails clearly without a worker spin-up.
214
+ try {
215
+ new RegExp(pattern, flags);
216
+ } catch (/** @type {any} */ err) {
217
+ return Promise.reject(new Error(`shell_grep: invalid regex — ${err.message}`));
218
+ }
219
+
220
+ const budgetMs = timeout && timeout > 0 ? timeout : DEFAULT_GREP_TIMEOUT_MS;
221
+ return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
222
+ const worker = new Worker(path.join(__dirname, 'grep-worker.js'), { workerData: args });
223
+ let settled = false;
224
+ const done = (fn, val) => {
225
+ if (settled) return;
226
+ settled = true;
227
+ clearTimeout(timer);
228
+ worker.terminate();
229
+ fn(val);
230
+ };
231
+ const timer = setTimeout(() => {
232
+ done(reject, new Error(
233
+ `shell_grep: pattern exceeded ${budgetMs}ms time budget — likely catastrophic backtracking. ` +
234
+ `Simplify the regex.`,
235
+ ));
236
+ }, budgetMs);
237
+ timer.unref?.();
238
+ worker.once('message', (msg) => {
239
+ if (msg && msg.ok) done(resolve, msg.result);
240
+ else done(reject, new Error((msg && msg.error) || 'shell_grep: worker failed'));
241
+ });
242
+ worker.once('error', (err) => done(reject, err));
243
+ });
244
+ }
245
+
193
246
  /**
194
247
  * @typedef {object} RunArgvArgs
195
248
  * @property {string[]} argv
@@ -360,4 +413,4 @@ function createShellTools() {
360
413
  return { tools };
361
414
  }
362
415
 
363
- module.exports = { createShellTools };
416
+ module.exports = { createShellTools, _grepCore };
package/types/index.d.ts CHANGED
@@ -22,6 +22,8 @@ export interface GenerateResult {
22
22
  text: string;
23
23
  toolCalls: ToolCall[];
24
24
  usage: Usage;
25
+ /** Model id the response was produced by; preferred over Provider.model for cost accounting. */
26
+ model?: string | null;
25
27
  }
26
28
 
27
29
  /** A conversation message in OpenAI chat format. */