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920a13a17f
* fix(browse): identity-based terminal-agent kill replaces pkill regex
Commit 0 of the v1.44 long-lived-sidebar PR — foundation for the watchdog
and removes a latent cross-session footgun.
`pkill -f terminal-agent\.ts` (cli.ts spawn site + server.ts shutdown) matched
by argv regex and would kill ANY process whose argv contained the string —
sibling gstack sessions on the same host, an editor with the file open, a
second `$B connect` run. Identity-based PID kill via a new helper module
removes that whole class of bug.
* New `browse/src/terminal-agent-control.ts`: `readAgentRecord`,
`writeAgentRecord`, `clearAgentRecord`, `killAgentByRecord`. Validates
PID liveness via `isProcessAlive` before signaling (PID-reuse defense).
* `terminal-agent.ts` writes `<stateDir>/terminal-agent-pid` (JSON
`{pid, gen, startedAt}`) at boot; clears on SIGTERM/SIGINT.
* New per-boot `CURRENT_GEN` (16-byte random); `/internal/*` callers can
include `X-Browse-Gen` to defend against split-brain in the upcoming
watchdog. Absent header is accepted (backward compat); mismatch returns
409. New `checkInternalAuth` helper centralizes bearer + gen checks.
* New `/internal/healthz` route — agent liveness probe used by the
upcoming watchdog (returns pid/gen/sessions, no claude-binary lookup).
* `cli.ts` and `server.ts` both call `killAgentByRecord` instead of pkill.
* `ServerConfig.ownsTerminalAgent` JSDoc updated; the gated teardown now
runs 4 side effects (was 3) — adds the new agent-record unlink.
Test changes:
* New `browse/test/terminal-agent-pid-identity.test.ts` — static-grep
tripwire that fails CI if any source file re-introduces `pkill ...
terminal-agent` or `spawnSync('pkill', ...)`; round-trips
write/read/clear; verifies killAgentByRecord no-ops on dead PIDs.
* `browse/test/server-embedder-terminal-port.test.ts` rewritten to
intercept `process.kill` (not `child_process.spawnSync`); writes a
sentinel agent-record with a guaranteed-dead PID; asserts probe-only
(signal 0) calls, no termination signals; verifies all 3 discovery
files including the new terminal-agent-pid.
Closes TODOS.md P3 ("Identity-based terminal-agent kill").
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* fix(tests): repair 7 pre-existing failures (env pollution + stale markers)
All 7 failures existed on main before this branch — verified via `git stash`
round-trip. Bundling them into the long-lived-sidebar PR because we kept
tripping over them while running `bun test` to verify Commit 0.
* Global afterEach restores `process.env.PATH` (new bunfig.toml +
test-setup.ts). browser-skill-commands.test.ts sets
`PATH = '/test/bin:/usr/bin'` to exercise a scrubbed-env fixture and
used the broken `process.env = origEnv` reassignment pattern that
swaps the proxy reference; the underlying env stayed mutated and
leaked downstream. Fixed three call sites in that file and added a
narrow PATH-only global guardrail so a future polluter can't bring
the bug back. Killed: pair-agent-tunnel-eval (bun ENOENT),
security.test.ts > resolveBashBinary (Bun.which('bash') null),
server-no-import-side-effects (bun ENOENT).
* server-auth.test.ts: two `sliceBetween` markers referenced strings
deleted when sidebar-agent.ts was ripped — `'Sidebar agent started'`
→ `'Terminal agent started'`, `'Sidebar endpoints'` → `'Batch endpoint'`.
Also fixed the pair-agent BROWSE_PARENT_PID assertion (the literal
`serverEnv.BROWSE_PARENT_PID` never existed in source; the actual
contract is the object-literal `BROWSE_PARENT_PID: '0'` inside the
`const serverEnv` declaration).
* test/upgrade-migration-v1.test.ts: also overrides HOME in the spawn
env. The migration shells out to `${HOME}/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config`
and a developer's real config with `explain_level` set causes the
script to take the "user already decided" branch and skip writing
the pending-prompt flag the test asserts on.
* test/setup-codesign.test.ts: replaced fragile `bun run build`
string-match (which hit a comment 700 lines later) with the actual
invocation `bun_cmd run build` used in the setup script.
Net: full suite is now green; CI no longer trips on bash/bun-ENOENT
from PATH pollution or on test markers that drifted with the codebase.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* refactor(terminal-agent): extract internalHandler<T> helper for /internal/* routes
Replaces the copy-pasted bearer-auth + X-Browse-Gen + req.json().then().catch()
boilerplate on /internal/grant and /internal/revoke with a single
internalHandler<T>(req, fn) wrapper. Future /internal/* routes added by the
v1.44 long-lived-sidebar work (/internal/lease-refresh, /internal/restart)
land as one-liners using the same helper. Pure refactor; no behavior change.
/internal/healthz stays on the bare checkInternalAuth gate because it's a
GET with no JSON body to parse — the helper's body-parse path would 400 it.
* browse/src/terminal-agent.ts — new internalHandler<T>; /internal/grant
+ /internal/revoke routed through it.
* browse/test/terminal-agent-internal-handler.test.ts — static-grep
tripwire that fails CI if the helper goes away or either of the two
refactored routes regresses to the old inline pattern.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(terminal-agent): 25s WS keepalive ping/pong + client keepalive frames
PTY connections were dying silently after NAT idle timeouts (30-60s on most
home routers, even shorter on some carrier-grade NAT) and Chrome MV3 panel
suspension. Neither side noticed until the user's next keystroke produced
no output. Both sides now drive a 25s keepalive cycle.
Server side (browse/src/terminal-agent.ts):
* New ws.open handler constructs the PtySession eagerly and starts a
setInterval that sends `{type:"ping",ts:Date.now()}` every 25s.
Interval handle stored on session.pingInterval so close() can clear it.
* PtySession.pingInterval field added; cleared in ws.close before
disposeSession runs. Prevents timer leak across reconnects.
* Message handler accepts `{type:"ping"|"pong"|"keepalive"}` silently —
keepalive frames are a liveness signal at the TCP layer, no state to
update. Existing resize/tabSwitch/tabState handling unchanged.
* GSTACK_PTY_KEEPALIVE_INTERVAL_MS env knob (default 25000) lets the
upcoming e2e tests compress idle assertions without 30s waits.
Client side (extension/sidepanel-terminal.js):
* Belt-and-suspenders: client also runs a 25s setInterval that sends
`{type:"keepalive"}`. Defends against Chrome pausing our timers if
the server-side ping ever gets dropped (rare but possible in MV3).
* Ping reply: on `{type:"ping",ts}` from the server, immediately send
`{type:"pong",ts}`. Lets the agent observe round-trip latency for
free and confirms the channel is bidirectional.
* Interval cleared in three teardown paths: ws.close handler,
teardown(), forceRestart(). Three paths exist because the sidebar
can exit the LIVE state through any of them; all three must clean up
or we leak timers across reconnects.
Test (browse/test/terminal-agent-keepalive.test.ts):
* Static-grep tripwires for the 7-point protocol contract: agent has
a configurable interval, open() starts the ping, close() clears it,
message handler accepts keepalive vocabulary, client sends keepalive
+ replies pong, and all three client teardown paths clear the timer.
* Wire-level tests (actually observe a ping after 25s) belong in the
e2e tier — adding them here would either flake on slow CI or require
a real Bun.serve listener per test which we don't want to pay for
in the free tier.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(sidebar): patient tryAutoConnect — poll forever with ascending status, abort only on 401
The 15s give-up message ("Browse server not ready. Reload sidebar to retry.")
fired on every cold start where the daemon took >15s to bind — common on
Conductor workspaces, CI runners, and any system under load. The user
already opened the sidebar; telling them to give up is the wrong default.
Now polls every 2s indefinitely with ascending status messages:
* 0 - 15s : silent (handles the happy path on a warm laptop)
* 15 - 60s : "Waiting for browse server..."
* 60s - 5m : "Still waiting — browse server may be slow to start."
* > 5m : "Browse server still not responding after 5 min. Try `$B status`."
Loop aborts on three signals only:
* state transitions out of IDLE (connect succeeded or user navigated)
* autoConnectAborted sticky flag set on unrecoverable error
* the panel itself unloading (browser handles this; pagehide cleanup
arrives with T8 of the larger plan)
401 from /pty-session sets the sticky flag with a clear "Auth invalid —
reload the sidebar or restart your gstack session." message. Without the
flag, the loop would re-call connect() every 2s and spam the same error;
with it, the user sees the message once and the loop holds. forceRestart()
clears the flag so clicking Restart is the explicit "try again" escape hatch.
Bumped poll interval 200ms → 2000ms — the legacy tight loop burned CPU
for no reason. 2s is plenty fast for a "did the daemon come up yet" check.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(browse): terminal-agent watchdog with PID liveness + crash-loop guard
terminal-agent could die independently of the server — SIGKILL from the OS
OOM killer, an uncaught exception under PTY churn, an external `pkill` from
a sibling debugging session. Pre-v1.44 the sidebar would observe the broken
connection and stay broken until the user reloaded the sidebar. Now a 60s
ticker checks the recorded agent PID and respawns via the shared
spawnTerminalAgent helper when dead.
Identity-based liveness (T4 from the eng review):
* Uses readAgentRecord + isProcessAlive (signal 0 probe), not a name match.
* Slow-but-alive agents intentionally fall through — respawning around a
living agent would create split-brain (two agents writing the port
file, tokens diverging between them, mystery upgrade 401s).
* Pairs with the v1.44 generation counter in /internal/* loopback calls:
if a stale agent does come back to life mid-cycle, its X-Browse-Gen
no longer matches and the parent's calls 409 cleanly.
Crash-loop guard:
* 3 respawn attempts inside a rolling 60s window → stop trying. A daemon
up for a week with one crash a day shouldn't trip the guard.
* On trip: one-line error to console (`respawn guard tripped`) and the
watchdog goes dormant. Manual restart via the sidebar Restart button
is the explicit signal to re-arm (added in Commit 2 of the larger PR).
Shared spawn path (refactor):
* New spawnTerminalAgent(opts) in terminal-agent-control.ts handles:
prior-PID cleanup → spawn → record stash. Both the CLI cold-start path
in cli.ts and the new server.ts watchdog route through it. Removes the
copy-paste between them; future env wiring lands in one place.
Gated on cfg.ownsTerminalAgent — embedders that pre-launch their own PTY
server (gbrowser phoenix overlay) still own the full lifecycle.
GSTACK_AGENT_WATCHDOG_TICK_MS env knob compresses the 60s tick for e2e
tests without 60s waits per assertion.
Tests:
* browse/test/terminal-agent-watchdog.test.ts — 7 static-grep tripwires
for the load-bearing invariants (ownsTerminalAgent gate, PID-based
liveness, crash-loop guard with window pruning, shutdown cleanup,
CLI cold-start uses the same helper, env knob exists).
* Live process-kill tests belong in the e2e tier; cheaper invariants
here catch refactor regressions in ~1ms each.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(cli): opt-in outer supervisor — respawn browse server on crash
Pre-v1.44 `$B connect` was fire-and-forget: spawn server detached, CLI
exits, server runs unsupervised. If the server crashed (OOM, uncaught
exception, signal kill from a runaway debugger), the user had to notice,
re-run `$B connect`, and resume work. The v1.44 terminal-agent watchdog
recovers from one layer of failure; this commit closes the outer loop.
Opt-in via `--supervise` flag or `BROWSE_SUPERVISE=1` env. Default
behavior is unchanged — every existing caller (Claude Code's Bash tool,
scripts, CI) still gets a prompt return. When the flag is set:
* CLI stays attached, polls server PID every 30s via readState() +
isProcessAlive (same identity primitive as the terminal-agent watchdog).
* On unexpected exit: respawn via the same headed-mode startServer path
used initially, then re-spawn the terminal-agent so the PTY recovers
too (otherwise sidebar Restart is the only path back).
* Crash-loop guard: 5 respawns in a rolling 5-min window → exit 1 with
a clear error. Window pruning means a long-lived daemon with sporadic
crashes does NOT trip the guard (otherwise we punish the user for the
supervisor doing its job).
* Backoff: 1s, 2s, 4s, 8s, 30s capped. Env-overridable via
GSTACK_SUPERVISOR_BACKOFF for tests.
* SIGINT / SIGTERM: clean teardown — signals the supervised server
before exiting itself. Without this, Ctrl-C leaves an orphaned server.
Out of scope (deferred follow-up): routing the Chromium-disconnect
exit-code-1 path back through this supervisor. The terminal-agent
watchdog already covers the highest-frequency restart case; Chromium
crash recovery joins the queue as its own commit.
Test (browse/test/cli-supervisor.test.ts):
* 6 static-grep tripwires: opt-in default, signal wiring, crash-loop
guard with window pruning, backoff schedule env knob, tick interval
env knob, terminal-agent re-spawn after server respawn.
* Live respawn tests belong in the e2e tier (real spawn cycles take
3-8s each; spamming these in the free tier would balloon CI time).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(browse): pty-session-lease registry — stable sessionId + lease lifecycle
Foundation for Commit 2 of the long-lived-sidebar PR. Separates two
concerns that pre-v1.44 were conflated under one token:
* sessionId — stable, non-secret identifier for a single PTY session.
Safe to log, safe in URLs, safe in DevTools. Identifies "this terminal,"
not "you're allowed to use this terminal."
* lease — server-side bookkeeping that maps sessionId → expiresAt.
Re-attach within the lease window resumes the same PTY; expiry tears
it down.
The companion attach-token primitive (short-lived 30s bearer) reuses the
existing browse/src/pty-session-cookie.ts module unchanged — the lease
adds a name-space alongside, it doesn't replace anything.
Codex outside-voice (T1 of the eng review) flagged the original D4
"token IS sessionId" design as conflating identity with auth. The fix
is this lease registry: re-attach URLs carry the stable sessionId
(loggable), the short-lived attachToken stays out of logs.
API:
* mintLease() → { sessionId, expiresAt }
* validateLease(sessionId) → { ok: true, expiresAt } | { ok: false }
* refreshLease(sessionId) — validate-first, never resurrects expired
leases. Security-critical: the 30-min TTL is what bounds blast
radius for a leaked attachToken whose lease should have GC'd.
* revokeLease(sessionId) — explicit dispose path.
* leaseCount() — observability helper.
* __resetLeases() — test-only.
TTL env knob (GSTACK_PTY_LEASE_TTL_MS) lets v1.44 e2e tests compress
the detach window to 1s instead of waiting 30 minutes per assertion.
Server.ts wiring + /pty-session shape change + /pty-restart + /pty-dispose
+ /pty-session/reattach all land in subsequent commits in this branch.
Test (browse/test/pty-session-lease.test.ts):
* 8 cases pinning mint uniqueness, validate-first refresh contract,
revoke idempotency, null/undefined tolerance, and the negative case
that refresh never resurrects a revoked lease (same code path as
expired-and-pruned).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(terminal-agent): sessionId-aware grant + scoped restart + eager spawn
Wires the pty-session-lease primitive (3aada48b) into terminal-agent so
the Commit 2 work in server.ts (next commit) can route /pty-restart and
re-attach by session identity rather than by single-use token.
Changes:
* validTokens: Set<string> → Map<string, string|null>. Each grant carries
its bound sessionId (or null for legacy single-grant callers). On WS
upgrade, the agent surfaces the bound sessionId via ws.data so open()
can register the session in the new reverse index.
* sessionsById: Map<sessionId, PtySession> — populated in open(),
cleared in close(). Required so /internal/restart can find and dispose
one specific session by id rather than enumerating all live sessions.
* /internal/restart: scoped to one sessionId. Codex T2 of the eng review
caught the gap — pre-spec the route would have disposed every PTY on
the agent, breaking pair-agent and any future multi-sidebar setup.
The body now requires `{sessionId}`; missing or unknown id returns
`{killed: 0}` and leaves siblings alone.
* maybeSpawnPty(ws, session): hoisted from the inline binary-frame spawn
block so both the legacy "spawn on first keystroke" trigger AND the
new `{type:"start"}` text-frame trigger land in the same code path.
Idempotent on session.spawned.
* `{type:"start"}` text frame: explicit spawn trigger. forceRestart
(extension side, lands in Commit 2C) sends this immediately on every
fresh WS so claude boots without requiring a keystroke. Pre-v1.44 the
lazy-binary-spawn pattern made the restart feel stuck.
* close(ws): drops the sessionsById entry alongside the existing
sessions WeakMap + validTokens cleanup. Commit 3 will revisit this to
keep the session alive for a 60s detach window before disposing.
Test (browse/test/terminal-agent-session-routing.test.ts):
* 8 static-grep tripwires pinning the load-bearing properties: validTokens
is a Map (not Set), sessionsById exists, /internal/restart is scoped
(negative-assert against enumerate-all patterns), WS upgrade plumbs
sessionId, maybeSpawnPty is the single spawn entry, close() drops the
index. Live spawn cycles belong in the e2e tier.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(server): /pty-session 4-tuple + /pty-restart + /pty-dispose + lease-refresh
Wires the lease + attachToken model end-to-end on the server side. The
client side (extension) lands in the next commit; agent side already
shipped in 449144cd.
Routes:
* POST /pty-session — mints sessionId (stable, loggable) + lease
(server-side bookkeeping) + attachToken (short-lived bearer for the
WS upgrade). Returns the 4-tuple in one round trip. Legacy
ptySessionToken / expiresAt aliases kept for one minor release so
extensions on the v1.43 wire shape keep working.
* POST /pty-session/reattach — validates a sessionId's lease and mints
a FRESH attachToken bound to the same sessionId. Used by Commit 3's
re-attach loop; 410 Gone when the lease has expired so the client
knows to fall back to a brand-new /pty-session.
* POST /pty-restart — one transaction: dispose the caller's existing
PtySession on the agent (via /internal/restart, scoped to one
sessionId — codex T2), revoke the old lease, mint a fresh
sessionId + lease + attachToken, return the 4-tuple. Zero race
window between kill and mint (codex T2 + D8 of the eng review).
* POST /pty-dispose — explicit teardown. sendBeacon-compatible: accepts
auth token in the body so the extension's pagehide handler (Commit 2C)
can fire it without setting custom headers (sendBeacon doesn't
support those). Without this route, every clean browser quit leaves
a zombie PTY alive for the 60s detach window — codex T3 caught it.
* POST /internal/lease-refresh — loopback from terminal-agent on its
25s keepalive cycle (lazy: only when lease is within 5 min of
expiry). Refreshes the lease AND resets the daemon idle timer. T6
of the eng review: PTY activity (not arbitrary SSE consumers) is
what keeps the daemon alive when the sidebar is in use.
Helpers:
* grantPtyToken now accepts optional sessionId and passes it through
to the agent's /internal/grant body. The agent binds token → sessionId
in its validTokens Map so /ws upgrades carry the sessionId for
/internal/restart and Commit 3 re-attach lookups.
* restartPtySession() — new loopback helper that POSTs the agent's
scoped /internal/restart with a sessionId body. Used by /pty-restart
and /pty-dispose.
Auth contract on /pty-dispose deliberately accepts the auth token in
EITHER the Authorization header OR the request body. The body path is
required for sendBeacon (which can't set custom headers); the header
path stays available for non-beacon callers and tests.
Test (browse/test/server-pty-lease-routes.test.ts):
* 7 static-grep tripwires pinning the 4-tuple shape, validate-first
re-attach with 410 fallback, one-transaction restart semantics,
sendBeacon-compatible dispose auth, and the T6 PTY-only idle reset.
* Live route exercises (full mint + grant + WS upgrade cycle) belong
in the e2e tier — they require a real terminal-agent loopback and
take seconds per assertion.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(sidebar): forceRestart via /pty-restart + pagehide /pty-dispose
Closes the Commit 2 loop: server-side lease + restart routes shipped in
25ef24e9; this commit wires the extension client to use them. End-to-end
result — clicking Restart now actually kills the server's PTY before
opening a new WS (zero race window), and closing the sidebar / quitting
the browser disposes the PTY immediately instead of letting it linger
for the upcoming 60s detach window.
sidepanel-terminal.js:
* mintSession callers read the v1.44 4-tuple (sessionId + attachToken)
from /pty-session, with a backward-compat fallback to ptySessionToken
so a partially-updated extension still works against a fresh server
for one minor release.
* Eager spawn via {type:"start"} text frame replaces the legacy
`TextEncoder().encode("\n")` newline hack. Pre-v1.44, the lazy-binary-
spawn pattern made forceRestart look stuck until the user typed —
now claude boots before the prompt renders.
* forceRestart() rewritten as an async one-transaction handler:
1. close current WS with code 4001 (intentional-restart)
2. POST /pty-restart with priorSessionId so the server can scope
the dispose, then mint fresh sessionId + lease + attachToken
in the same response
3. Open new WS with the returned attachToken, send {type:"start"}
immediately for eager spawn
4. On 401: sticky-abort the auto-connect loop (no spam)
5. On 503 / network failure: fall back to patient autoconnect
* currentSessionId tracked and exposed on window.gstackPtySession so
sidepanel.js's pagehide handler can sendBeacon the dispose.
sidepanel.js:
* New pagehide handler fires navigator.sendBeacon('/pty-dispose',
{sessionId, authToken}) on tab close, panel close, browser quit,
or extension reload. sendBeacon-compatible: auth token rides in
the body since sendBeacon can't set custom headers (server route
accepts body-auth per 25ef24e9).
* try/catch around the entire body so a sendBeacon failure can't
interfere with the browser's unload sequence — the 60s detach
window from Commit 3 catches anything we miss.
There's bounded duplication between connect() and forceRestart() (~70
lines of WS attach/handler wiring). Extracting a shared helper is a
clean follow-up but out of scope for the v1.44 ship — both paths are
exercised by the same e2e test.
Test (browse/test/sidepanel-restart-dispose.test.ts):
* 9 static-grep tripwires pinning the 4-tuple parse, eager spawn,
close-code 4001 contract, /pty-restart wire shape, sticky-abort
401 path, sessionId window plumbing, sendBeacon body contract,
and the best-effort try/catch around pagehide.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(terminal-agent): scrollback ring buffer + detach state machine + re-attach
The agent side of Commit 3 — the "magic" feature. A network blip (wifi
hiccup, MV3 panel suspend, brief Chromium pause) now silently reconnects
the sidebar to the SAME claude session with scrollback intact. No more
"Session ended" message + manual Restart click + losing your tool-call
output. Server-side /pty-session/reattach (25ef24e9) and the extension
re-attach loop (next commit) close the loop end-to-end.
Ring buffer (T10):
* Per-session frames: Buffer[] capped at 1 MB (env-overridable via
GSTACK_PTY_RING_BUFFER_BYTES). Each PTY write is one frame, so
eviction is at frame boundaries and never cuts a UTF-8 sequence or
ANSI CSI in half.
* appendToRingBuffer eviction loop keeps at least one frame even at
extreme caps — a single oversized frame can't empty the buffer.
* Alt-screen tracking via canonical xterm CSI ?1049h / CSI ?1049l
sequences. lastIndexOf comparison so trailing state wins when both
appear in one render frame (quick tool-call open+close).
Replay payload (T5 — codex outside-voice):
* buildReplayPayload prefixes DECSTR soft reset (\x1b[!p) and
conditionally re-enters alt-screen if claude was in a tool call at
detach. The client writes RIS (\x1bc) FIRST to clear pre-blip xterm
content; the server's prelude resets character attributes; the ring
buffer replays cleanly on top.
* Order is enforced by the {type:"reattach-begin"} text frame the
agent sends right before the binary replay — client waits for it,
writes RIS, then treats the next binary frame as the replay payload.
Detach state machine (T9):
* PtySession.liveWs decouples the PTY callback from the original ws
closure. On re-attach, swapping session.liveWs is enough — the
on-data callback writes to the new ws automatically.
* close(ws, code, _reason): codes 4001 (intentional restart), 4404
(no-claude), and 1000 (clean exit) trigger immediate dispose.
Anything else (1006 abnormal, 1001 going-away from network blip /
panel suspend) starts a 60s detach timer instead. claude keeps
running, output keeps accumulating in the ring buffer.
* Detach timer is unref'd so the bun process can still exit cleanly
on natural shutdown.
* Sessions without a sessionId (legacy single-shot grants) can't
re-attach by definition — those fall through to immediate dispose.
Re-attach lookup (T9):
* WS open() checks sessionsById[sessionId] FIRST. If a detached
session is sitting there, cancel its detach timer, swap liveWs,
rebind the WS-keyed map, restart keepalive, send reattach-begin
+ replay payload. The PTY process is unchanged.
* /internal/restart now cancels any pending detach timer before
disposal — otherwise the timer would later try to dispose an
already-disposed session.
Env knobs for e2e:
* GSTACK_PTY_RING_BUFFER_BYTES — compress to 256 for eviction tests.
* GSTACK_PTY_DETACH_WINDOW_MS — compress to 1000 for "did the timer
fire?" tests without waiting a minute per assertion.
Tests:
* browse/test/terminal-agent-detach-reattach.test.ts — 10 static-grep
tripwires for the load-bearing properties: interface shape, env
knobs, eviction floor, alt-screen tracking, replay prelude
composition, re-attach lookup, close-code routing, detach timer
unref, /internal/restart timer cancellation, on-data through
session.liveWs.
* browse/test/terminal-agent-session-routing.test.ts test 7 widened
to match the new close(ws, code, _reason) signature.
* browse/test/terminal-agent-keepalive.test.ts test 3 widened
similarly. Both stay regressions for the prior contract.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(sidebar): silent re-attach with scrollback replay (Commit 3 client side)
Closes the v1.44 long-lived-sidebar loop end-to-end. When the WS dies for
a transient reason (wifi blip, MV3 panel suspend, brief Chromium pause),
the sidebar now silently re-attaches to the SAME claude session inside the
server's 60s detach window. Scrollback replays cleanly; the user keeps
typing without noticing anything happened.
State machine:
* New STATE.RECONNECTING covers the in-flight re-attach window.
setState transitions out of this state reset reattachInFlight so a
concurrent user action (Restart click, panel navigate) short-circuits
cleanly.
* Backoff schedule REATTACH_BACKOFF_MS = [1000, 2000, 4000, 8000] then
8s steady until REATTACH_WINDOW_MS (60s) elapses. Past that point
the server has disposed our session and /pty-session/reattach
returns 410 Gone.
startReattachLoop(prevSessionId):
* Posts /pty-session/reattach with sessionId.
* On 200 with a valid 4-tuple, opens the post-reattach WS directly.
* On 410 (lease expired) — short-circuits to ENDED. No retry; the user
clicks Restart for a fresh session.
* On 401 — sticky-aborts the auto-connect loop. Same defense as 25ef24e9
so we don't spam "Auth invalid" every 2s.
* On network failure or other non-OK status — schedules the next
backoff tick.
openReattachWebSocket(terminalPort, attachToken, sessionId):
* Mostly a clone of connect()'s attach wiring. Reuses the live xterm
element — RIS clears the buffer cleanly when the agent's
{type:"reattach-begin"} arrives, so the visual flash is minimal.
* Handshake: on `{type:"reattach-begin"}` text frame → write `\x1bc`
(RIS) to xterm + set nextBinaryIsReplay = true. The next binary
frame IS the server-built replay payload (DECSTR soft-reset prefix
+ optional alt-screen re-enter + ring buffer contents).
* If THIS reattach WS also dies uncleanly, recurses into another
re-attach loop with the same sessionId — the server's detach window
may still be open. State guard prevents runaway recursion.
connect() + forceRestart() close handlers (existing):
* Both updated to call startReattachLoop on transient close codes
(anything other than 1000 / 4001 / 4404). Was just setState(ENDED).
* Clean codes still bypass — re-attaching to a force-restart's
pre-restart session would be the bug we're avoiding.
Test (browse/test/sidepanel-reattach.test.ts):
* 8 static-grep tripwires for the load-bearing properties: state
constant, backoff schedule, /pty-session/reattach wiring, 410
short-circuit (no retry past lease window), 401 sticky-abort,
reattach-begin → RIS handshake, all three close handlers route
through the loop, clean-code bypass.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* chore: bump version and changelog (v1.44.0.0)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* test(terminal-agent): runtime tests for ring buffer + replay + alt-screen tracking
Companion to browse/test/terminal-agent-detach-reattach.test.ts (static-grep
tripwires) — calls appendToRingBuffer + buildReplayPayload directly to prove
behavioral correctness without spinning up a real Bun.serve listener.
* 11 runtime cases: append + byte counting, oversize eviction with
one-frame floor (the eviction loop guard that prevents an oversized
single frame from emptying the buffer), alt-screen tracking via
canonical xterm CSI ?1049h / CSI ?1049l, trailing-state-wins for
enter+exit pairs inside a single render frame, soft-reset prefix
ordering, optional alt-screen re-enter, payload length math.
* Exports appendToRingBuffer, buildReplayPayload, and the PtySession
interface from terminal-agent.ts (purely for testability — they
were module-private; the change is annotation-only).
* Lease registry sanity check: mint two sessions, verify distinct
sessionIds, both valid simultaneously. Catches future refactors
that accidentally couple lease + ring buffer.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* fix(tests): explain_level unset returns the documented default, not empty
Pre-existing failure on main — the test expected gstack-config to return
"" for an unset explain_level (with the comment "preamble default takes
over"), but the script at bin/gstack-config:103 explicitly returns
"default" inline for that key. Earlier versions of the script may have
relied on shell-substitution fallback, but the current contract is
inline-default-on-get so callers always receive a usable value without
bash gymnastics.
Updated the test to match the actual contract. Also added GSTACK_HOME
override alongside GSTACK_STATE_DIR in the spawn env so developer-machine
config doesn't bleed into the test.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
9 lines
405 B
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9 lines
405 B
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[test]
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# Snapshot + restore process.env after every test. Centralizes the
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# defense against per-file env mutations leaking into subsequent files
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# (e.g., PATH = '/test/bin:/usr/bin' from a security-test fixture
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# causing `Bun.which('bash')` to return null in unrelated downstream
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# tests, or `Bun.spawn(['bun', ...])` to ENOENT when looking for bun
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# via the polluted PATH).
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preload = ["./test-setup.ts"]
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