GFramework/AGENTS.md

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# AGENTS.md
This document is the single source of truth for coding behavior in this repository.
All AI agents and contributors must follow these rules when writing, reviewing, or modifying code in `GFramework`.
## Environment Capability Inventory
- Before choosing runtimes or CLI tools, read `@.ai/environment/tools.ai.yaml`.
- Use `@.ai/environment/tools.raw.yaml` only when you need the full collected facts behind the AI-facing hints.
- Prefer the project-relevant tools listed there instead of assuming every installed system tool is fair game.
- If the real environment differs from the inventory, use the project-relevant installed tool and report the mismatch.
- When working in WSL against this repository's Windows-backed worktree, prefer Windows Git from WSL (for example
`git.exe`) instead of the Linux `git` binary.
- If a Git command in WSL fails with a worktree-style “not a git repository” path translation error, rerun it with the
Windows Git executable and treat that as the repository-default Git path for the rest of the task.
- If the shell does not currently resolve `git.exe` to the host Windows Git installation, prepend that installation's
command directory to `PATH` and reset shell command hashing for the current session before continuing.
- After resolving the host Windows Git path, prefer an explicit session-local binding for subsequent commands so the
shell does not fall back to Linux `/usr/bin/git` later in the same WSL session.
## Subagent Usage Rules
- Use subagents only when the task is complex, the context is likely to grow too large, or the work can be split into
independent parallel subtasks.
- The main agent MUST identify the critical path first. Do not delegate the immediate blocking task if the next local
step depends on that result.
- Use `explorer` subagents for read-only discovery, comparison, tracing, and narrow codebase questions.
- Use `worker` subagents only for bounded implementation tasks with an explicit file or module ownership boundary.
- Every delegation MUST specify:
- the concrete objective
- the expected output format
- the files or subsystem the subagent owns
- any constraints about tests, diagnostics, or compatibility
- Subagents are not allowed to revert or overwrite unrelated changes from the user or other agents. They must adapt to
concurrent work instead of assuming exclusive ownership of the repository.
- Prefer lightweight models such as `gpt-5.1-codex-mini` for narrow exploration, indexing, and comparison tasks.
- Prefer stronger models such as `gpt-5.4` for cross-module design work, non-trivial refactors, and tasks that require
higher confidence reasoning.
- The main agent remains responsible for reviewing and integrating subagent output. Unreviewed subagent conclusions do
not count as final results.
## Commenting Rules (MUST)
All generated or modified code MUST include clear and meaningful comments where required by the rules below.
### XML Documentation (Required)
- All public, protected, and internal types and members MUST include XML documentation comments (`///`).
- Use `<summary>`, `<param>`, `<returns>`, `<exception>`, and `<remarks>` where applicable.
- Comments must explain intent, contract, and usage constraints instead of restating syntax.
- If a member participates in lifecycle, threading, registration, or disposal behavior, document that behavior
explicitly.
### Inline Comments
- Add inline comments for:
- Non-trivial logic
- Concurrency or threading behavior
- Performance-sensitive paths
- Workarounds, compatibility constraints, or edge cases
- Registration order, lifecycle sequencing, or generated code assumptions
- Avoid obvious comments such as `// increment i`.
### Architecture-Level Comments
- Core framework components such as Architecture, Module, System, Context, Registry, Service Module, and Lifecycle types
MUST include high-level explanations of:
- Responsibilities
- Lifecycle
- Interaction with other components
- Why the abstraction exists
- When to use it instead of alternatives
### Source Generator Comments
- Generated logic and generator pipelines MUST explain:
- What is generated
- Why it is generated
- The semantic assumptions the generator relies on
- Any diagnostics or fallback behavior
### Complex Logic Requirement
- Methods with non-trivial logic MUST document:
- The core idea
- Key decisions
- Edge case handling, if any
### Quality Rules
- Comments MUST NOT be trivial, redundant, or misleading.
- Prefer explaining `why` and `when`, not just `what`.
- Code should remain understandable without requiring external context.
- Prefer slightly more explanation over too little for framework code.
### Enforcement
- Missing required documentation is a coding standards violation.
- Code that does not meet the documentation rules is considered incomplete.
## Code Style
### Language and Project Settings
- Follow the repository defaults:
- `ImplicitUsings` disabled
- `Nullable` enabled
- `GenerateDocumentationFile` enabled for shipped libraries
- `LangVersion` is generally `preview` in the main libraries and abstractions
- Do not rely on implicit imports. Declare every required `using` explicitly.
- Write null-safe code that respects nullable annotations instead of suppressing warnings by default.
### Naming and Structure
- Use the namespace pattern `GFramework.{Module}.{Feature}` with PascalCase segments.
- Follow standard C# naming:
- Types, methods, properties, events, and constants: PascalCase
- Interfaces: `I` prefix
- Parameters and locals: camelCase
- Private fields: `_camelCase`
- Keep abstractions projects free of implementation details and engine-specific dependencies.
- Preserve existing module boundaries. Do not introduce new cross-module dependencies without clear architectural need.
### Formatting
- Use 4 spaces for indentation. Do not use tabs.
- Use Allman braces.
- Keep `using` directives at the top of the file and sort them consistently.
- Separate logical blocks with blank lines when it improves readability.
- Prefer one primary type per file unless the surrounding project already uses a different local pattern.
- Unless there is a clear and documented reason to keep a file large, keep a single source file under roughly 800-1000
lines.
- If a file grows beyond that range, contributors MUST stop and check whether responsibilities should be split before
continuing; treating oversized files as the default is considered a design smell.
- Keep line length readable. Around 120 characters is the preferred upper bound.
### C# Conventions
- Prefer explicit, readable code over clever shorthand in framework internals.
- Match existing async patterns and naming conventions (`Async` suffix for asynchronous methods).
- Avoid hidden side effects in property getters, constructors, and registration helpers.
- Preserve deterministic behavior in registries, lifecycle orchestration, and generated outputs.
- When adding analyzers or suppressions, keep them minimal and justify them in code comments if the reason is not
obvious.
### Analyzer and Validation Expectations
- The repository uses `Meziantou.Analyzer`; treat analyzer feedback as part of the coding standard.
- Treat SonarQube maintainability rules as part of the coding standard as well, especially cognitive complexity and
oversized parameter list findings.
- When a method approaches analyzer complexity limits, prefer extracting named helper methods by semantic phase
(parsing, normalization, validation, diagnostics) instead of silencing the warning or doing cosmetic reshuffles.
- When a constructor or method exceeds parameter count limits, choose the refactor that matches the shape of the API:
use domain-specific value objects or parameter objects for naturally grouped data, and prefer named factory methods
when the call site is really selecting between different creation modes.
- Do not add suppressions for complexity or parameter-count findings unless the constraint is externally imposed and the
reason is documented in code comments.
- Naming must remain compatible with `scripts/validate-csharp-naming.sh`.
## Testing Requirements
### Required Coverage
- Every non-trivial feature, bug fix, or behavior change MUST include tests or an explicit justification for why a test
is not practical.
- Public API changes must be covered by unit or integration tests.
- When a public API defines multiple contract branches, tests MUST cover the meaningful variants, including null,
empty, default, and filtered inputs when those branches change behavior.
- Regression fixes should include a test that fails before the fix and passes after it.
### Test Organization
- Mirror the source structure in test projects whenever practical.
- Reuse existing architecture test infrastructure when relevant:
- `ArchitectureTestsBase<T>`
- `SyncTestArchitecture`
- `AsyncTestArchitecture`
- Keep tests focused on observable behavior, not implementation trivia.
### Source Generator Tests
- Source generator changes MUST be covered by generator tests.
- Preserve snapshot-based verification patterns already used in the repository.
- When generator behavior changes intentionally, update snapshots together with the implementation.
### Validation Commands
Use the smallest command set that proves the change, then expand if the change is cross-cutting.
```bash
# Build the full solution
dotnet build GFramework.sln -c Release
# Run all tests
dotnet test GFramework.sln -c Release
# Run a single test project
dotnet test GFramework.Core.Tests -c Release
dotnet test GFramework.Game.Tests -c Release
dotnet test GFramework.SourceGenerators.Tests -c Release
dotnet test GFramework.Ecs.Arch.Tests -c Release
# Run a single NUnit test or test group
dotnet test GFramework.Core.Tests -c Release --filter "FullyQualifiedName~CommandExecutorTests.Execute"
# Validate naming rules used by CI
bash scripts/validate-csharp-naming.sh
```
### Test Execution Expectations
- Run targeted tests for the code you changed whenever possible.
- Run broader solution-level validation for changes that touch shared abstractions, lifecycle behavior, source
generators, or dependency wiring.
- Do not claim completion if required tests were skipped; state what was not run and why.
## Security Rules
- Validate external or user-controlled input before it reaches file system, serialization, reflection, code generation,
or process boundaries.
- Do not build command strings, file paths, type names, or generated code from untrusted input without strict validation
or allow-listing.
- Avoid logging secrets, tokens, credentials, or machine-specific sensitive data.
- Keep source generators deterministic and free of hidden environment or network dependencies.
- Prefer least-privilege behavior for file, process, and environment access.
- Do not introduce unsafe deserialization, broad reflection-based activation, or dynamic code execution unless it is
explicitly required and tightly constrained.
- When adding caching, pooling, or shared mutable state, document thread-safety assumptions and failure modes.
- Minimize new package dependencies. Add them only when necessary and keep scope narrow.
## Documentation Rules
### Code Documentation
- Any change to public API, lifecycle semantics, module behavior, or extension points MUST update the related XML docs.
- If a framework abstraction changes meaning or intended usage, update the explanatory comments in code as part of the
same change.
### Task Tracking
- When working from a tracked implementation plan, contributors MUST update the corresponding tracking document under
`local-plan/todos/` in the same change.
- Tracking updates MUST reflect completed work, newly discovered issues, validation results, and the next recommended
recovery point.
- Completing code changes without updating the active tracking document is considered incomplete work.
- For any multi-step refactor, migration, or cross-module task, contributors MUST create or adopt a dedicated recovery
document under `local-plan/todos/` before making substantive code changes.
- Recovery documents MUST record the current phase, the active recovery point identifier, known risks, and the next
recommended resume step so another contributor or subagent can continue the work safely.
- Contributors MUST maintain a matching execution trace under `local-plan/traces/` for complex work. The trace should
record the current date, key decisions, validation milestones, and the immediate next step.
- When a task spans multiple commits or is likely to exceed a single agent context window, update both the recovery
document and the trace at each meaningful milestone before pausing or handing work off.
- If subagents are used on a complex task, the main agent MUST capture the delegated scope and any accepted findings in
the active recovery document or trace before continuing implementation.
### Repository Documentation
- Update the relevant `README.md` or `docs/` page when behavior, setup steps, architecture guidance, or user-facing
examples change.
- The main documentation site lives under `docs/`, with Chinese content under `docs/zh-CN/`.
- Keep code samples, package names, and command examples aligned with the current repository state.
- Prefer documenting behavior and design intent, not only API surface.
- When a feature is added, removed, renamed, or substantially refactored, contributors MUST update or create the
corresponding user-facing integration documentation in `docs/zh-CN/` in the same change.
- For integration-oriented features such as the AI-First config system, documentation MUST cover:
- project directory layout and file conventions
- required project or package wiring
- minimal working usage example
- migration or compatibility notes when behavior changes
- If an existing documentation page no longer reflects the current implementation, fixing the code without fixing the
documentation is considered incomplete work.
- Do not rely on “the code is self-explanatory” for framework features that consumers need to adopt; write the
adoption path down so future users do not need to rediscover it from source.
### Documentation Preview
When documentation changes need local preview, use:
```bash
cd docs && bun install && bun run dev
```
## Review Standard
Before considering work complete, confirm:
- Required comments and XML docs are present
- Code follows repository style and naming rules
- Relevant tests were added or updated
- Sensitive or unsafe behavior was not introduced
- User-facing documentation is updated when needed
- Feature adoption docs under `docs/zh-CN/` were added or updated when functionality was added, removed, or refactored