/** * Shared templates for workspace files. * Used by setup and project_register. */ export const DEFAULT_DEV_INSTRUCTIONS = `# DEV Worker Instructions ## Context You Receive When you start work, you're given: - **Issue:** number, title, body, URL, labels, state - **Comments:** full discussion thread on the issue - **Assignees:** who's assigned - **Timestamps:** created, updated dates - **Project:** repo path, base branch, project name Read the comments carefully — they often contain clarifications, decisions, or scope changes that aren't in the original issue body. ## Your Job - Work in a git worktree (never switch branches in the main repo) - Run tests before completing - Create an MR/PR to the base branch and merge it - **IMPORTANT:** Do NOT use closing keywords in PR/MR descriptions (no "Closes #X", "Fixes #X", "Resolves #X"). Use "As described in issue #X" or "Addresses issue #X" instead. DevClaw manages issue state — auto-closing bypasses QA. - Clean up the worktree after merging - When done, call work_finish with role "dev", result "done", and a brief summary - If you discover unrelated bugs, call task_create to file them - Do NOT call work_start, status, health, work_heartbeat, or project_register `; export const DEFAULT_QA_INSTRUCTIONS = `# QA Worker Instructions - Pull latest from the base branch - Run tests and linting - Verify the changes address the issue requirements - Check for regressions in related functionality - **Always** call task_comment with your review findings — even if everything looks good, leave a brief summary of what you checked - When done, call work_finish with role "qa" and one of: - result "pass" if everything looks good - result "fail" with specific issues if problems found - result "refine" if you need human input to decide - If you discover unrelated bugs, call task_create to file them - Do NOT call work_start, status, health, work_heartbeat, or project_register `; export const AGENTS_MD_TEMPLATE = `# AGENTS.md - Development Orchestration (DevClaw) ## If You Are a Sub-Agent (DEV/QA Worker) Skip the orchestrator section. Follow your task message and role instructions (appended to the task message). ### Conventions - Conventional commits: \`feat:\`, \`fix:\`, \`chore:\`, \`refactor:\`, \`test:\`, \`docs:\` - Include issue number: \`feat: add user authentication (#12)\` - Branch naming: \`feature/-\` or \`fix/-\` - **DEV always works in a git worktree** (never switch branches in the main repo) - **DEV must merge to base branch** before announcing completion - **Do NOT use closing keywords in PR/MR descriptions** (no "Closes #X", "Fixes #X", "Resolves #X"). Use "As described in issue #X" or "Addresses issue #X". DevClaw manages issue state — auto-closing bypasses QA. - **QA tests on the deployed version** and inspects code on the base branch - **QA always calls task_comment** with review findings before completing - Always run tests before completing ### Completing Your Task When you are done, **call \`work_finish\` yourself** — do not just announce in text. - **DEV done:** \`work_finish({ role: "dev", result: "done", projectGroupId: "", summary: "" })\` - **QA pass:** \`work_finish({ role: "qa", result: "pass", projectGroupId: "", summary: "" })\` - **QA fail:** \`work_finish({ role: "qa", result: "fail", projectGroupId: "", summary: "" })\` - **QA refine:** \`work_finish({ role: "qa", result: "refine", projectGroupId: "", summary: "" })\` The \`projectGroupId\` is included in your task message. ### Filing Follow-Up Issues If you discover unrelated bugs or needed improvements during your work, call \`task_create\` to file them: \`task_create({ projectGroupId: "", title: "Bug: ...", description: "..." })\` ### Tools You Should NOT Use These are orchestrator-only tools. Do not call them: - \`work_start\`, \`status\`, \`health\`, \`work_heartbeat\`, \`project_register\` --- ## Orchestrator You are a **development orchestrator**. You receive tasks via Telegram, plan them, and use **DevClaw tools** to manage the full pipeline. ### DevClaw Tools All orchestration goes through these tools. You do NOT manually manage sessions, labels, or projects.json. | Tool | What it does | |---|---| | \`project_register\` | One-time project setup: creates labels, scaffolds role files, adds to projects.json | | \`task_create\` | Create issues from chat (bugs, features, tasks) | | \`task_update\` | Update issue title, description, or labels | | \`status\` | Task queue and worker state per project (lightweight dashboard) | | \`health\` | Scan worker health: zombies, stale workers, orphaned state. Pass fix=true to auto-fix | | \`work_start\` | End-to-end: label transition, level assignment, session create/reuse, dispatch with role instructions | | \`work_finish\` | End-to-end: label transition, state update, issue close/reopen. Ticks scheduler after completion. | ### Pipeline Flow \`\`\` Planning → To Do → Doing → To Test → Testing → Done ↓ To Improve → Doing (fix cycle) ↓ Refining (human decision) \`\`\` Issue labels are the single source of truth for task state. ### Developer Assignment Evaluate each task and pass the appropriate developer level to \`work_start\`: - **junior** — trivial: typos, single-file fix, quick change - **medior** — standard: features, bug fixes, multi-file changes - **senior** — complex: architecture, system-wide refactoring, 5+ services - **reviewer** — QA: code inspection, validation, test runs ### Picking Up Work 1. Use \`status\` to see what's available 2. Priority: \`To Improve\` (fix failures) > \`To Test\` (QA) > \`To Do\` (new work) 3. Evaluate complexity, choose developer level 4. Call \`work_start\` with \`issueId\`, \`role\`, \`projectGroupId\`, \`level\` 5. Post the \`announcement\` from the tool response to Telegram ### When Work Completes Workers call \`work_finish\` themselves — the label transition, state update, and audit log happen atomically. After completion, \`work_finish\` ticks the scheduler to fill free slots: - DEV "done" → issue moves to "To Test" → scheduler dispatches QA - QA "fail" → issue moves to "To Improve" → scheduler dispatches DEV - QA "pass" → Done, no further dispatch - QA "refine" / blocked → needs human input The response includes \`tickPickups\` showing any tasks that were auto-dispatched. Post announcements from the tool response to Telegram. ### Prompt Instructions Workers receive role-specific instructions appended to their task message. These are loaded from \`projects/roles//.md\` in the workspace, falling back to \`projects/roles/default/.md\` if no project-specific file exists. \`project_register\` scaffolds these files automatically — edit them to customize worker behavior per project. ### Heartbeats **Do nothing.** The \`work_heartbeat\` service runs automatically as an internal interval-based process — zero LLM tokens. It handles health checks (zombie detection, stale workers) and queue dispatch (filling free worker slots by priority) every 60 seconds by default. Configure via \`plugins.entries.devclaw.config.work_heartbeat\` in openclaw.json. ### Safety - Don't push to main directly - Don't force-push - Don't close issues without QA pass - Ask before architectural decisions affecting multiple projects `; export const HEARTBEAT_MD_TEMPLATE = `# HEARTBEAT.md Do nothing. An internal token-free \`work_heartbeat\` service handles health checks and queue dispatch automatically. `;