Files
claudemesh/.artifacts/shipped/2026-05-03-daemon-final-spec-v9.md
Alejandro Gutiérrez a2568ad9f4
Some checks failed
CI / Lint (push) Has been cancelled
CI / Typecheck (push) Has been cancelled
CI / Broker tests (Postgres) (push) Has been cancelled
CI / Docker build (linux/amd64) (push) Has been cancelled
chore(release): cli 1.22.0 — daemon v0.9.0 + housekeeping
- Bump apps/cli/package.json to 1.22.0 (additive feature: claudemesh
  daemon long-lived runtime).
- CHANGELOG entry for 1.22.0 covering subcommands, idempotency wiring,
  crash recovery, and the deferred Sprint 7 broker hardening.
- Roadmap entry for v0.9.0 daemon foundation right above the v2.0.0
  daemon redesign section, so the bridge release is documented as the
  shipped step toward the larger architectural shift.
- Move shipped daemon specs (v1..v10 iteration trail + locked v0.9.0
  spec + broker-hardening followups) from .artifacts/specs/ to
  .artifacts/shipped/ per the project artifact-pipeline convention.

Not in this commit: npm publish and the cli-v1.22.0 GitHub release tag
— both are public-distribution actions and require explicit user
approval.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-03 20:24:32 +01:00

474 lines
23 KiB
Markdown

# `claudemesh daemon` — Final Spec v9
> **Round 9.** v8 was reviewed by codex (round 8) which closed
> aborted/UNIQUE (5/5) and SQLite locking (5/5) cleanly, but flagged
> three spec-level correctness problems:
>
> 1. **Cross-layer ID-consumed authority contradiction** — v8 §4.1
> said "id consumed iff dedupe row exists" while §4.6.1 says a
> daemon-rejected id stays consumed locally with no broker dedupe
> row. Two incompatible authorities.
> 2. **Rate-limit authority muddled** — v8 listed rate limit in B2
> (in-tx authoritative) but classified rate-limit counters as
> async/non-authoritative in §4.7.1.
> 3. **§4.1 broker guarantee wording** — "post-validation accept
> phase" was fuzzy because B2 rolls back. Tighten to "accept
> committed."
>
> v9 fixes all three with **two-layer ID rules** (daemon vs broker),
> rate-limit moved to B1 via an external atomic limiter, and §4.1
> tightened. **Intent §0 unchanged from v2.** v9 only revises §4.
---
## 0. Intent — unchanged, see v2 §0
## 1. Process model — unchanged
## 2. Identity — unchanged from v5 §2
## 3. IPC surface — unchanged from v4 §3
---
## 4. Delivery contract — `aborted` clarified, broker phasing, SQLite locking
### 4.1 The contract (precise — v9, two-layer ID model)
> **Two-layer ID rules** (NEW v9 — codex r8):
>
> - **Daemon-layer**: a `client_message_id` is **daemon-consumed** iff an
> outbox row exists for it. Daemon-mediated callers can never reuse a
> daemon-consumed id, regardless of whether the broker ever saw it.
> The daemon's outbox is the single authority for "this id was issued
> by my caller against this daemon."
> - **Broker-layer**: a `client_message_id` is **broker-consumed** iff a
> dedupe row exists for `(mesh_id, client_message_id)` in
> `mesh.client_message_dedupe`. Direct broker callers (none in
> v0.9.0; reserved for future SDK paths that bypass the daemon) can
> reuse a broker-non-consumed id freely.
> - In v0.9.0 there are no daemon-bypass clients, so for practical
> purposes "daemon-consumed" is the operative rule.
>
> **Local guarantee**: each successful `POST /v1/send` returns a stable
> `client_message_id`. The send is durably persisted to `outbox.db`
> before the response returns. The daemon enforces request-fingerprint
> idempotency at the IPC layer (§4.5.1).
>
> **Local audit guarantee**: a `client_message_id` once written to
> `outbox.db` is **never released** (daemon-layer rule). Operator
> recovery via `requeue` always mints a fresh id; the old row stays in
> `aborted` for audit. There is no daemon-side path to free a used id.
>
> **Broker guarantee** (v9 — tightened): a dedupe row exists iff the
> broker accept transaction **committed** (Phase B3 reached). Phase B1
> rejections never insert dedupe rows. Phase B2 rejections roll the
> transaction back, so any partial dedupe row is unwound. Direct
> broker callers retrying after B1/B2 rejection see no dedupe row and
> may reuse the id.
>
> **Atomicity guarantee**: same as v8 §4.1.
>
> **End-to-end guarantee**: at-least-once.
### 4.2 Daemon-supplied `client_message_id` — unchanged from v3 §4.2
### 4.3 Broker schema — unchanged from v6 §4.3
### 4.4 Request fingerprint canonical form — unchanged from v6 §4.4
### 4.5 Daemon-local idempotency at the IPC layer (v8 — `aborted` added, SQLite locking)
#### 4.5.1 IPC accept algorithm (v8)
On `POST /v1/send`:
1. Validate request envelope (auth, schema, size limits, destination
resolvable). Failures here return `4xx` immediately. **No outbox row
is written; the `client_message_id` is not consumed.**
2. Compute `request_fingerprint` (§4.4).
3. Open a SQLite transaction with `BEGIN IMMEDIATE` (v8 — codex r7) so
a concurrent IPC accept on the same id serializes against this one.
`BEGIN IMMEDIATE` acquires the RESERVED lock at transaction start,
preventing any other writer from beginning a transaction on the same
database; SQLite has no row-level lock and `SELECT FOR UPDATE` is not
supported.
4. `SELECT id, request_fingerprint, status, broker_message_id,
last_error FROM outbox WHERE client_message_id = ?`.
5. Apply the lookup table below. For the "(no row)" case, INSERT the
new row inside the same transaction.
6. COMMIT.
| Existing row state | Fingerprint match? | Daemon response |
|---|---|---|
| (no row) | — | INSERT new outbox row in `pending`; return `202 accepted, queued` |
| `pending` | match | Return `202 accepted, queued`. No mutation |
| `pending` | mismatch | Return `409 idempotency_key_reused`, `conflict: "outbox_pending_fingerprint_mismatch"`. No mutation |
| `inflight` | match | Return `202 accepted, inflight`. No mutation |
| `inflight` | mismatch | Return `409 idempotency_key_reused`, `conflict: "outbox_inflight_fingerprint_mismatch"` |
| `done` | match | Return `200 ok, duplicate: true, broker_message_id, history_id`. No broker call |
| `done` | mismatch | Return `409 idempotency_key_reused`, `conflict: "outbox_done_fingerprint_mismatch", broker_message_id` |
| `dead` | match | Return `409 idempotency_key_reused`, `conflict: "outbox_dead_fingerprint_match", reason: "<last_error>"`. Same id never auto-retried |
| `dead` | mismatch | Return `409 idempotency_key_reused`, `conflict: "outbox_dead_fingerprint_mismatch"` |
| **`aborted`** (NEW v8) | **match** | Return `409 idempotency_key_reused`, `conflict: "outbox_aborted_fingerprint_match"`. The id was retired by operator action; never reusable |
| **`aborted`** (NEW v8) | **mismatch** | Return `409 idempotency_key_reused`, `conflict: "outbox_aborted_fingerprint_mismatch"` |
**Rule (v8 — codex r7)**: every IPC `409` carries the daemon's
`request_fingerprint` (8-byte hex prefix) so callers can debug
client/server canonical-form drift. **Every state in the table returns
something deterministic, including `aborted`.** A `client_message_id`
written to `outbox.db` is permanently bound to that row's lifecycle —
the only "free" state is "no row exists".
#### 4.5.2 Outbox table — fingerprint required
```sql
CREATE TABLE outbox (
id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
client_message_id TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
request_fingerprint BLOB NOT NULL, -- 32 bytes
payload BLOB NOT NULL,
enqueued_at INTEGER NOT NULL,
attempts INTEGER DEFAULT 0,
next_attempt_at INTEGER NOT NULL,
status TEXT CHECK(status IN
('pending','inflight','done','dead','aborted')),
last_error TEXT,
delivered_at INTEGER,
broker_message_id TEXT,
aborted_at INTEGER, -- NEW v8
aborted_by TEXT, -- NEW v8: operator/auto
superseded_by TEXT -- NEW v8: id of the requeue successor row, if any
);
CREATE INDEX outbox_pending ON outbox(status, next_attempt_at);
CREATE INDEX outbox_aborted ON outbox(status, aborted_at) WHERE status = 'aborted';
```
`aborted_at`, `aborted_by`, `superseded_by` give operators a clear
audit trail. `superseded_by` lets `outbox inspect` show the chain when
a row was requeued multiple times.
`request_fingerprint` is computed once at IPC accept time and frozen
forever for the row's lifecycle. Daemon never recomputes from
`payload`.
### 4.6 Rejected-request semantics — two-layer rules + rate-limit moved to B1 (v9 — codex r8)
> **Two-layer rule (v9)**: a `client_message_id` is **daemon-consumed**
> iff an outbox row exists for it; **broker-consumed** iff a dedupe row
> exists. Daemon-mediated callers see daemon-layer authority (the only
> path in v0.9.0). Pre-validation failures at any layer consume nothing
> at that layer. The two layers are independent: a daemon-consumed id
> may or may not be broker-consumed (depending on whether the send
> reached B3); a daemon-non-consumed id can never be broker-consumed
> (no outbox row ⇒ no broker call from the daemon).
#### 4.6.1 Daemon-side rejection phasing (v9)
| Phase | When daemon rejects | Outbox row? | Daemon-consumed? | Same daemon caller may reuse id? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| **A. IPC validation** (auth, schema, size, destination resolvable) | Before §4.5.1 step 3 | No | No | Yes — id never written locally |
| **B. Outbox stored, broker network/transient failure** | After IPC accept, broker `5xx` or timeout | `pending` → retried | Yes | N/A — daemon owns retries |
| **C. Outbox stored, broker permanent rejection** | Broker returns `4xx` after IPC accept | `dead` | Yes | No — rotate via `requeue` |
| **D. Operator retirement** | Operator runs `requeue` on `dead` or `pending` row | `aborted` (audit) + new row with fresh id | Yes (still consumed) | Old id NEVER reusable; new id is fresh |
The "daemon-consumed?" column is the daemon-layer authority. It does
not depend on whether the broker ever saw the request — phase C above
shows the broker has not committed a dedupe row, but the daemon still
holds the id in `dead` state.
#### 4.6.2 Broker-side rejection phasing (v9 — rate limit moved to B1)
The broker validates in two phases relative to dedupe-row insertion:
| Phase | Validation | Side effects | Result for direct broker callers |
|---|---|---|---|
| **B1. Pre-dedupe-claim** (atomic, external) | Auth (mesh membership), schema, size, mesh exists, member exists, destination kind valid, payload bytes ≤ `max_payload.inline_bytes`, **rate limit not exceeded** (atomic external limiter — see §4.6.4) | None | `4xx` returned. No dedupe row, no broker-consumed id. Caller may retry with same id once condition clears |
| **B2. Post-dedupe-claim** (in-tx) | Conditions that require the accept transaction to be in progress: destination_ref existence (topic exists, member subscribed, etc.) | INSERT into dedupe rolled back | `4xx` returned, transaction rolled back, no dedupe row remains. Caller may retry with same id |
| **B3. Accepted** | All side effects commit atomically | Dedupe row, message row, history row, delivery_queue rows, mention_index rows | `201` returned with `broker_message_id`. Id is broker-consumed |
**Daemon-mediated callers**: in v0.9.0 the daemon is the only B-phase
caller. Daemon-mediated callers see only the daemon-layer rules
(§4.6.1). The broker's "may retry with same id" wording in the table
above applies to direct broker callers only (none in v0.9.0; reserved
for future SDK paths).
**Critical guarantee (v9 — tightened from v8)**: a dedupe row exists
**iff the broker accept transaction committed (B3)**. There is no
broker code path where a permanent 4xx leaves a dedupe row behind.
If the broker decides post-commit that an accepted message is invalid
(async content-policy job, async moderation, etc.), that's NOT a
permanent rejection — it's a follow-up event that operates on the
`broker_message_id`, not on the dedupe key.
#### 4.6.4 Rate limiter — atomic, external, B1 (NEW v9 — codex r8)
Codex r8 caught: v8 listed rate-limit enforcement in B2 (in-tx) but
classified rate-limit *counters* as async/non-authoritative. Both
can't be true. v9 resolves it by moving rate-limit enforcement to B1
backed by an atomic external limiter:
- **Authority**: the broker's existing Redis (or equivalent
fixed-window limiter) used for `claudemesh launch` rate-limiting is
the authority for accept-time rate-limit enforcement. `INCR` with
TTL is atomic; the broker checks the result before committing the
Phase B2/B3 transaction.
- **Idempotency interaction**: rate-limit `INCR` happens **before** the
dedupe-claim INSERT. If the limiter rejects, no DB transaction is
opened, no dedupe row exists. If the limiter accepts but the in-tx
Phase B2 then rejects (e.g. topic not found), the limiter `INCR` is
not refunded. This is intentional: refunding would require a
reliable distributed counter, and the over-counting risk is
acceptable. Counter
`cm_broker_rate_limit_consumed_then_rejected_total` exposes the
delta for ops awareness.
- **Retries**: a daemon retry with the same `client_message_id` after a
B1 rate-limit rejection produces another `INCR`. To avoid burning
rate-limit budget on retries-of-rejected-ids, the broker can
optionally short-circuit `INCR` if the rate-limit subsystem can
cheaply detect "this exact `client_message_id` was rejected for
rate-limit in the last N seconds" — but this is an optimization,
not a correctness requirement.
- **Async counters**: `mesh.rate_limit_counter` (or any DB-resident
view of "messages-per-mesh-per-window") is **non-authoritative** —
it's metrics/telemetry rebuilt from the authoritative limiter and
from message-history. Used for dashboards, not for accept decisions.
This split — atomic external limiter for enforcement, async DB
counters for telemetry — matches how every other rate-limited
subsystem in claudemesh works (`claudemesh launch`, dashboard chat
posts, etc.). No new infrastructure required.
#### 4.6.3 Operator recovery via `requeue` (corrected v8)
To unstick a `dead` or `pending`-but-stuck row, operator runs:
```
claudemesh daemon outbox requeue --id <outbox_row_id>
[--new-client-id <id> | --auto]
[--patch-payload <path>]
```
This atomically (single SQLite transaction):
1. Marks the existing row's status to `aborted`, sets `aborted_at = now`,
`aborted_by = "operator"`. Row is **never deleted** — audit trail
permanent.
2. Mints a fresh `client_message_id` (caller-supplied via `--new-client-id`
or auto-ulid'd via `--auto`).
3. Inserts a new outbox row in `pending` with the fresh id and the same
payload (or patched payload if `--patch-payload` was given).
4. Sets `superseded_by = <new_row_id>` on the old row so
`outbox inspect <old_id>` displays the chain.
**The old `client_message_id` is permanently dead** — `outbox.db` still
holds it via the `aborted` row's `UNIQUE` constraint, and any caller
re-using it gets `409 outbox_aborted_*` per §4.5.1.
If broker had ever accepted the old id (it reached B3), the broker's
dedupe row is also permanent — duplicate sends to broker with the old
id would also `409` for fingerprint mismatch (or return the original
`broker_message_id` for matching fingerprint). Daemon-side
`aborted` and broker-side dedupe row are independent records of "this
id was used," neither releases the id.
This is the resolution to v7's contradiction: there is **no path** for
an id to "become free again." If the operator wants to retry the
payload, they get a new id. The old id stays buried.
### 4.7 Broker atomicity contract — side-effect classification (v9)
#### 4.7.1 Side effects (v9 — rate limit moved to B1 external)
Every successful broker accept atomically commits these durable
state changes in **one transaction**:
| Effect | Table | In-tx? | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dedupe record | `mesh.client_message_dedupe` | **Yes** | Idempotency authority |
| Message body | `mesh.topic_message` / `mesh.message_queue` | **Yes** | Authoritative store |
| History row | `mesh.message_history` | **Yes** | Replay log; lost-on-rollback would break ordered replay |
| Fan-out work | `mesh.delivery_queue` | **Yes** | Each recipient must see exactly the messages that committed |
| Mention index entries | `mesh.mention_index` | **Yes** | Reads off mention queries must match committed messages |
**Outside the transaction** — non-authoritative or rebuildable, with
explicit rationale per item:
| Effect | Where | Why outside |
|---|---|---|
| WS push to live subscribers | Async after COMMIT | Live notifications are best-effort; receivers re-fetch from history on reconnect |
| Webhook fan-out | Async via `delivery_queue` workers | Off-band; consumes committed `delivery_queue` rows |
| Rate-limit **counters** (telemetry only) | Async, eventually consistent | Authoritative limiter is the external Redis-style INCR in B1 (§4.6.4); the DB counter is rebuilt for dashboards, not consulted for accept |
| Audit log entries | Async append-only stream | Audit log can be rebuilt from message history; in-tx writes hurt p99 |
| Search/FTS index updates | Async via outbox-pattern worker | Index can be rebuilt from authoritative tables |
| Metrics | Prometheus, pull-based | Always non-authoritative |
If any in-transaction insert fails, the transaction rolls back
completely. The accept is `5xx` to daemon; daemon retries. No partial
state.
The async side effects are driven off the in-transaction
`delivery_queue` and `message_history` rows, so they cannot get ahead
of committed state — only lag behind.
#### 4.7.2 Pseudocode — corrected and final (v8)
```sql
-- Phase B1 already passed (see §4.6.2). This includes:
-- - schema/auth/size validation
-- - external atomic rate-limit INCR (§4.6.4)
-- Anything that fails B1 returns 4xx without ever opening this tx.
BEGIN;
-- Phase B2 + B3: try to claim the idempotency key.
INSERT INTO mesh.client_message_dedupe
(mesh_id, client_message_id, broker_message_id, request_fingerprint,
destination_kind, destination_ref, expires_at)
VALUES ($mesh_id, $client_id, $msg_id, $fingerprint,
$dest_kind, $dest_ref, $expires_at)
ON CONFLICT (mesh_id, client_message_id) DO NOTHING;
-- Inspect the row that's actually there now (ours or someone else's).
SELECT broker_message_id, request_fingerprint, destination_kind,
destination_ref, history_available, first_seen_at
FROM mesh.client_message_dedupe
WHERE mesh_id = $mesh_id AND client_message_id = $client_id
FOR SHARE;
-- Branch:
-- row.broker_message_id == $msg_id → first insert; continue to step 3.
-- row.broker_message_id != $msg_id → duplicate. Compare fingerprints:
-- fingerprint match → ROLLBACK; return 200 duplicate.
-- fingerprint mismatch → ROLLBACK; return 409 idempotency_key_reused.
-- Step 3: validate Phase B2 (destination_ref existence: topic exists,
-- member subscribed, etc.). Rate limit is NOT here — it was checked
-- atomically in B1 via the external limiter (§4.6.4) before this
-- transaction opened.
-- If B2 fails → ROLLBACK; return 4xx (no dedupe row remains).
-- Step 4: insert all in-tx side effects (§4.7.1).
INSERT INTO mesh.topic_message (id, mesh_id, client_message_id, body, ...)
VALUES ($msg_id, $mesh_id, $client_id, ...);
INSERT INTO mesh.message_history (broker_message_id, mesh_id, ...)
VALUES ($msg_id, $mesh_id, ...);
INSERT INTO mesh.delivery_queue (broker_message_id, recipient_pubkey, ...)
SELECT $msg_id, member_pubkey, ...
FROM mesh.topic_subscription
WHERE topic = $dest_ref AND mesh_id = $mesh_id;
INSERT INTO mesh.mention_index (broker_message_id, mentioned_pubkey, ...)
SELECT $msg_id, mention_pubkey, ...
FROM unnest($mention_list);
COMMIT;
-- After COMMIT, async workers consume delivery_queue and update
-- search indexes, audit logs, rate-limit counters, etc.
```
#### 4.7.3 Orphan check — same as v7 §4.7.3
Extended over the side-effect inventory to verify in-tx items consistency.
### 4.8 Outbox max-age math — unchanged from v7 §4.8
Min `dedupe_retention_days = 7`; derived `max_age_hours = window -
safety_margin` strictly < window; safety_margin floor 24h.
### 4.9 Inbox schema — unchanged from v3 §4.5
### 4.10 Crash recovery — unchanged from v3 §4.6
### 4.11 Failure modes — `aborted` semantics added (v8)
- **IPC accept fingerprint-mismatch on duplicate id** (any state):
returns 409 with `conflict` field per §4.5.1. Caller must use a new id.
- **IPC accept against `aborted` row, fingerprint match**: returns 409
per §4.5.1 (NEW v8). Caller must use a new id; the old id is
permanently retired.
- **Outbox row stuck in `dead`**: operator runs `outbox requeue` per
§4.6.3; old id stays in `aborted`, new id is fresh.
- **Broker fingerprint mismatch on retry**: as v6/v7. Daemon marks
`dead`; operator requeue path.
- **Daemon retry after dedupe row hard-deleted by broker retention
sweep**: cannot happen unless operator overrode `max_age_hours`.
- **Broker phase B2 rejection on retry**: same id, same fingerprint,
but B2 condition has changed (e.g. mesh rate-limit now exceeded).
Daemon receives 4xx → marks `dead`. Operator can `requeue` once
conditions clear.
- **Atomicity violation found by orphan check**: alerts ops.
---
## 5-13. — unchanged from v4
## 14. Lifecycle — unchanged from v5 §14
## 15. Version compat — unchanged from v7 §15
## 16. Threat model — unchanged
---
## 17. Migration — v8 outbox columns + broker phase B2 (v8)
Broker side, deploy order: same as v7 §17, with one addition:
- Step 4.5: explicitly split broker accept into Phase B1 (pre-dedupe
validation, returns 4xx without writing) and Phase B2/B3 (within the
accept transaction). Implementation: refactor handler to validate
Phase B1 conditions before opening the DB transaction.
Daemon side:
- Outbox schema gains `aborted_at`, `aborted_by`, `superseded_by`
columns and the `aborted` enum value (§4.5.2). Migration applies via
`INSERT INTO new SELECT * FROM old` recreation if needed; v0.9.0 is
greenfield.
- IPC accept switches to `BEGIN IMMEDIATE` for SQLite serialization
(§4.5.1 step 3).
- IPC accept handles `aborted` rows per §4.5.1 (always 409).
- `claudemesh daemon outbox requeue` always mints a fresh
`client_message_id`; never frees the old id. `--new-client-id <id>`
and `--auto` are the only modes; the old `client_message_id`
argument is removed.
---
## What changed v8 → v9 (codex round-8 actionable items)
| Codex r8 item | v9 fix | Section |
|---|---|---|
| Cross-layer ID-consumed authority contradiction | Two-layer model: daemon-consumed iff outbox row; broker-consumed iff dedupe row committed; daemon-mediated callers see only daemon-layer authority | §4.1, §4.6.1, §4.6.2 |
| Rate-limit authority muddled (B2 vs async counters) | Rate limit moved to B1 via external atomic limiter (Redis-style INCR with TTL); DB rate-limit counters demoted to telemetry-only | §4.6.2, §4.6.4, §4.7.1 |
| §4.1 broker guarantee fuzzy | Tightened: "dedupe row exists iff broker accept transaction committed (B3)" | §4.1, §4.6.2 |
(Earlier rounds' fixes preserved unchanged.)
---
## What needs review (round 9)
1. **Two-layer ID model (§4.1, §4.6.1)** — is the daemon-vs-broker
authority split clear, or does it create more confusion for
operators reading "consumed" in different contexts? Should we use
different verbs (e.g. "claimed" at daemon, "committed" at broker)?
2. **Rate-limit external limiter (§4.6.4)** — is "atomic external
limiter" specified concretely enough? Is the over-counting on
limiter-accepted-then-B2-rejected acceptable?
3. **B2 contents after rate-limit move** — B2 now only has
`destination_ref existence`. Worth keeping a B2 phase at all, or
collapse into B1+B3?
4. **Anything else still wrong?** Read it as if you were going to
operate this for a year.
Three options:
- **(a) v9 is shippable**: lock the spec, start coding the frozen core.
- **(b) v10 needed**: list the must-fix items.
- **(c) the architecture itself is wrong**: what would you do differently?
Be ruthless.