# CLAUDE.md This file provides guidance to Claude Code when working with the stack-orchestrator project. ## Some rules to follow NEVER speculate about the cause of something NEVER assume your hypotheses are true without evidence ALWAYS clearly state when something is a hypothesis ALWAYS use evidence from the systems your interacting with to support your claims and hypotheses ## Key Principles ### Development Guidelines - **Single responsibility** - Each component has one clear purpose - **Fail fast** - Let errors propagate, don't hide failures - **DRY/KISS** - Minimize duplication and complexity ## Development Philosophy: Conversational Literate Programming ### Approach This project follows principles inspired by literate programming, where development happens through explanatory conversation rather than code-first implementation. ### Core Principles - **Documentation-First**: All changes begin with discussion of intent and reasoning - **Narrative-Driven**: Complex systems are explained through conversational exploration - **Justification Required**: Every coding task must have a corresponding TODO.md item explaining the "why" - **Iterative Understanding**: Architecture and implementation evolve through dialogue ### Working Method 1. **Explore and Understand**: Read existing code to understand current state 2. **Discuss Architecture**: Workshop complex design decisions through conversation 3. **Document Intent**: Update TODO.md with clear justification before coding 4. **Explain Changes**: Each modification includes reasoning and context 5. **Maintain Narrative**: Conversations serve as living documentation of design evolution ### Implementation Guidelines - Treat conversations as primary documentation - Explain architectural decisions before implementing - Use TODO.md as the "literate document" that justifies all work - Maintain clear narrative threads across sessions - Workshop complex ideas before coding This approach treats the human-AI collaboration as a form of **conversational literate programming** where understanding emerges through dialogue before code implementation. ## External Stacks Preferred When creating new stacks for any reason, **use the external stack pattern** rather than adding stacks directly to this repository. External stacks follow this structure: ``` my-stack/ └── stack-orchestrator/ ├── stacks/ │ └── my-stack/ │ ├── stack.yml │ └── README.md ├── compose/ │ └── docker-compose-my-stack.yml └── config/ └── my-stack/ └── (config files) ``` ### Usage ```bash # Fetch external stack laconic-so fetch-stack github.com/org/my-stack # Use external stack STACK_PATH=~/cerc/my-stack/stack-orchestrator/stacks/my-stack laconic-so --stack $STACK_PATH deploy init --output spec.yml laconic-so --stack $STACK_PATH deploy create --spec-file spec.yml --deployment-dir deployment laconic-so deployment --dir deployment start ``` ### Examples - `zenith-karma-stack` - Karma watcher deployment - `urbit-stack` - Fake Urbit ship for testing - `zenith-desk-stack` - Desk deployment stack ## Insights and Observations ### Design Principles - **When something times out that doesn't mean it needs a longer timeout it means something that was expected never happened, not that we need to wait longer for it.** - **NEVER change a timeout because you believe something truncated, you don't understand timeouts, don't edit them unless told to explicitly by user.**