Files
Keysat b6cc829f53 Land Phase 0 launch chain: SSH -> desktop Terminal -> claude -> phone
Phase 0 proven by hand (N=3) across multiple rooms.

- scripts/gui-launch.sh: open a desktop Terminal via osascript so claude runs in
  the GUI session (login Keychain + real TTY), avoiding a long-lived token (D11).
- scripts/launch-claude.sh: name the session `claude -n "<repo> - <topic>"` so
  Remote Control's phone conversation index is readable.
- .env.example: bot credential schema (real .env stays gitignored).
- AGENTS.md / ROADMAP.md: D11, Phase 0 results, Phase 1 carry-overs.
2026-06-15 13:58:15 -05:00

3.2 KiB
Raw Permalink Blame History

ROADMAP — matrix-bridge

Phased build plan. Near-term status lives in AGENTS.md## Current state; this file is the longer arc. Substance threshold is N = 3 real uses per phase — exits are falsifiable (it worked 3 real times), never checkboxes.

Phase 0 (the current first milestone) lives in AGENTS.md ## Current state; it writes no bot code — foundation + proving the manual chain by hand. The phases below are what comes after it.


Phase 1 — Single-room bot

  • matrix-nio bot in a container on the Spark, logged in as a bot Matrix user.
  • One hardcoded room → one repo. Any message in it spawns a session via the Mac wrapper.
  • Carry over from Phase 0's proven launch chain (ssh mac-bridge → gui-launch.sh → launch-claude.sh):
    • Bake the SSH key + mac-bridge config into the container (modelo's ~/.ssh won't exist there).
    • Named sessions for the phone app. Pass claude -n "<repo> — <topic>" so the Remote Control conversation index is readable (project + topic). Bot derives <topic> from the message; confirm whether the app labels off -n or --remote-control <name>. Plumb a name arg through the wrappers.
    • Quote-safe message passing. Bot builds the SSH command with shlex.quote; gui-launch.sh already isolates the osascript/shell layers via a %q temp script — stress-test with hostile text.
    • Fail loud, not silent. Detect a stalled launch (untrusted-repo trust gate, or a reset Terminal Automation grant) and report it back into the room instead of hanging.
  • Exit (falsifiable): 3 consecutive real messages each correctly launch a drivable session on the phone.

Phase 2 — Multi-room routing

  • Room → repo mapping table; the bot routes by room_id (config over code).
  • Exit (falsifiable): 3 real uses across ≥2 rooms, correct repo every time, zero wrong-directory launches.

Phase 3 — Spark Control integration

  • Bot container status surfaced on the Spark Control dashboard.
  • One-click update (pull + restart) wired the same way Spark Control drives the Sparks today (SSH/commands behind a button).
  • Exit (falsifiable): bot status is visible and the bot can be updated/restarted from the panel.

Phase 4+ — Future direction (documented, not yet scoped to build)

  • Intent-routing brain (D8). Qwen3 via Spark Control as a smart dispatcher: given knowledge of all repos/contexts, parse a freeform message and decide which repo/context applies and what context to inject — not a task-vs-session classifier. MUST run on a local model. Depends on the deterministic core (Phases 12) working first; the architecture must not foreclose it.
  • Thread-based session continuity. A Matrix thread = a distinct session/sub-context within a repo. The first natural extension after multi-room routing.
  • Nextcloud / CalDAV output integration. Routing Claude/bot outputs into Nextcloud (Matrix ↔ Claude ↔ Nextcloud). Real interest, unscoped — not until Nextcloud Tasks/CalDAV is actually in use.
  • E2EE (D9). Add matrix-nio end-to-end encryption (libolm) if the bot ever handles sensitive content over untrusted transport. Low priority while everything is WireGuard-local.