Clean sweep — no kill on the Colibri wire protocol, CLI surface, TUI keybinding, or documentation. Backward-compat aliases removed; daemon and client deploy together so no transitional period needed. Wire: KillAgent→StopAgent, "kill-agent"→"stop-agent" (no alias) CLI: colibri kill→stop, Command::KillAgent→StopAgent Lib: client.kill_agent()→stop_agent() TUI: kill_selected()→stop_selected(), "kill"→"stop" label Docs: spawn/kill→spawn/stop, kill-agent→stop-agent (40+ instances) Retained kill only where it belongs: - child.kill() / handle.kill() (OS SIGKILL) - Unix kill(1) in sigterm tests - OOM kill, process-group kill comments (kernel mechanism)
6.5 KiB
Glasspane — agent state supervision
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What this is
Glasspane is Colibri's agent observation layer. It watches agent subprocesses
via their JSONL stdout, folds the stream into a semantic state machine
(Idle → Working → Done), and exposes a snapshot API for dashboards and
daemon coordination. Every spawned agent — Pi, zot, or a local sample — feeds
through the same ingestor and ends up in the same taxonomy.
Decisions
Agent state as a state machine, not raw event log
Glasspane doesn't just relay raw agent events. It ingests JSONL lines and transitions a named pane through a finite set of states:
Idle → Working → Blocked → Done
↳ Error
The AgentState enum (Idle, Working, Blocked, Done, Error) is deliberately
small. It captures what a supervisor needs to know — "is the agent working?
blocked? finished?" — without encoding agent-specific semantics. Events that
don't change the state (e.g. a usage report from zot) are recorded in the pane's
metadata but don't affect the state machine.
Stalled is not a sixth variant — it is a derived flag: a pane is stalled
when no event has arrived within DEFAULT_STALL_AFTER (4 hours). Derived
attention (Error / Blocked / Stalled) is covered by
operator-attention.
Why not just tail the log: raw event logs are agent-specific and change over time (zot adds new event types). The state machine is a stable contract that the daemon, TUI, and client CLI can all rely on.
→ crates/colibri-glasspane/src/lib.rs
JSONL streaming (one line = one event)
Agents emit structured events as newline-delimited JSON on stdout. Glasspane
reads line-by-line with BufReader, deserializes each line, and feeds it into
the PiJsonlIngestor (the name is legacy — it handles zot events too).
The reader runs in a single background task per pane (pane_reader_loop).
It never blocks the daemon's main loop — the ingestor is a synchronous fold
that updates the pane's in-memory state, and the snapshot API reads from
Arc<RwLock<...>> with no contention on the reader hot path.
Malformed lines are skipped with a counter increment, not an error — dropouts in an agent's JSONL shouldn't crash the observer.
Why JSONL, not a socket or gRPC: the agent is a subprocess, not a service. stdout is the universal interface — every language, every harness, zero setup. JSONL is trivial to write from bash, Go, Python, Rust. A structured wire format would add a dep and a handshake to every agent.
→ crates/colibri-glasspane/src/lib.rs
(PiJsonlIngestor, pane_reader_loop)
AgentRuntime { Pi, Zot, Local } — one taxonomy for two harnesses
Pi and zot emit different raw event types: Pi uses agent_start /
turn_end, zot uses turn_start / done. Glasspane maps both into the same
AgentState transitions via zot_event_type(). The AgentRuntime enum tags
each pane with its harness so the mapping function knows which event vocabulary
to parse.
The Pane struct's session_id field uses #[serde(alias = "pi_session_id")]
for backward compatibility with pre-neutrality serialized snapshots.
Why not have two separate state machines: the TUI, daemon scheduler, and client CLI all need to ask "what state is this agent in?" — they don't care whether it's zot or Pi. One taxonomy, one API. The mapping is a ~50-line function, not a subsystem.
→ crates/colibri-glasspane/src/lib.rs
(zot_event_type, AgentRuntime)
Snapshot API (read-heavy, not write-heavy)
Glasspane exposes a snapshot object (the full set of panes with their current
state, session ID, timestamp, and metadata) through Arc<RwLock<...>>. The
daemon serves this over its Unix socket to client readers. Writes happen once
per event; reads are frequent (TUI polls, CLI status checks).
Why RwLock, not channels: the write path is low-frequency (agent JSONL at human-reading speed), and the read path is lock-free in the common case. A channel-based design would add buffering and delivery semantics for a problem that's fundamentally about current state, not event delivery.
→ crates/colibri-glasspane/src/lib.rs
(Supervisor, snapshot)
Usability roadmap (TODO)
The attention half of this roadmap shipped: the derived attention predicate, the TUI attention bar / jump keys / filter / row highlight, and edge-triggered terminal-capture alerts. See operator-attention for the shipped system. What remains here is the genuinely-unbuilt direction.
Push notifications outbound, not just on-screen
The operator supervises headless hosts over Tailscale, not by staring at the
TUI. When a pane raises attention (or hits Done), push it out: a desktop
notification on the live image (XFCE) and a Telegram message (the token is
already provisioned). An explicit colibri notify-style path — or a glasspane
event type that a zot/Pi hook fires — lets an agent say "I'm blocked" rather than
relying only on inferred state. Highest real-world impact item.
Richer pane rows (context at a glance)
Glasspane already stashes non-state events in pane metadata. Surface that in the
TUI row: current repo/branch, last line / task summary, the jail the
agent runs in, optionally listening ports. Turns "Working" into "Working on
fix/x in jail cms, last: running tests".
Persist pane history across daemon restarts
The supervisor is in-memory (Arc<RwLock<...>>); a daemon restart loses the
timeline. Persist pane transitions/history so returning after hours (or a
reboot) preserves "what happened while I was away". Lightweight durability, not a
new subsystem.
Answer a blocked agent from the dashboard (bigger lift)
The snapshot API is read-heavy by design. A future write path — "send input to
pane N" over the daemon socket — would let the operator respond to a blocked
agent from colibri-tui, not just observe/spawn/stop. This is direction, not a
quick win; it changes the socket from read-only supervision to interactive
control and needs its own design pass.
See also
- agent-harness — the zot/Colibri split that Glasspane observes
- operator-attention — the shipped attention/alert layer over this state machine, including terminal capture + signature triage
- naming-decisions —
pi_session_id → session_id,pi_type → event_type