Shaheer Sarfaraz 179deffe13
Database backups (#75)
* initial commit

* test fix

* manual test

* copilot comments

* code quality skill

* comments

* fix types problem

* formatting

* tests now correct for new backup method

* UTC dates
2026-02-02 00:07:39 +00:00

5.4 KiB
Raw Blame History

name, description, license, compatibility, metadata
name description license compatibility metadata
orchestrator-code-quality Generate a code quality report for the orchestrator/ folder focusing on duplication, complexity hotspots, and error/logging consistency, using npm run check:all as the primary gate; report only (no code changes). MIT opencode
audience repo_area primary_command
maintainers orchestrator npm run check:all

What I do

  • Operate strictly within the orchestrator/ folder.
  • Produce a Markdown report describing:
    1. Duplication / near-duplication
    2. Over-complex functions / “god modules”
    3. Inconsistent error handling and logging
  • Use npm run check:all as the authoritative signal for tests + linting.
  • Do not change code, configuration, scripts, or dependencies. This skill outputs a report only.

When to use me

Use this when you want an evidence-driven code quality assessment and a prioritized plan for remediation without implementing changes yet.

Constraints

  • Work only in orchestrator/. Do not analyze or reference other folders except when required to understand imports into orchestrator/.
  • Do not propose changes to tooling. Assume npm run check:all is the existing gate.
  • Do not perform refactors. Do not open PRs. Do not rewrite files. Report findings and recommended fixes only.

Inputs I expect

  • Repository access with an orchestrator/ directory.
  • Ability to run npm run check:all from within orchestrator/.
  • (Optional but recommended) Output logs from npm run check:all if the environment cannot run commands.

Process

  1. Set working area

    • Ensure all investigation is scoped to orchestrator/.
  2. Execute quality gate

    • Run npm run check:all in orchestrator/.
    • Capture:
      • lint errors/warnings (rule IDs, counts, file paths)
      • failing tests (test names, stack traces, determinism vs flakiness indicators)
      • coverage output (if produced by the command)
  3. Assess duplication

    • Identify copy/paste and near-duplicate logic patterns in orchestrator/:
      • repeated parsing/validation
      • repeated error mapping and response shaping
      • repeated API call wrappers / fetch patterns
      • repeated UI hooks/components with minor differences (if applicable)
    • Prefer evidence:
      • “same structure appears in files A/B/C”
      • “multiple implementations differ only by X/Y flags”
    • If the repo already includes duplication tooling, use it; otherwise rely on code inspection and minimal search.
  4. Assess complexity hotspots

    • Identify functions/modules with:
      • deep nesting
      • long functions
      • mixed responsibilities (validation + IO + transformation + logging)
      • difficult-to-test implicit dependencies
    • Provide concrete hotspots (file paths, function names) and why theyre hotspots.
  5. Assess error handling and logging consistency

    • Check for:
      • multiple error shapes (different status codes/messages for same category)
      • swallowed errors vs raw throws
      • missing context/correlation fields in logs
      • potentially sensitive data in logs
    • Identify boundary points (handlers, adapters) where standardization should occur.
  6. Synthesize a fix plan

    • Provide a prioritized plan with blast radius assessment and test needs.
    • Do not implement. Do not request changes. Report recommended actions only.

Report output format

Create a single Markdown report containing these sections:

1. Scope and constraints

  • Confirm orchestrator/ scope and reliance on npm run check:all.

2. Evidence summary

  • npm run check:all outcome:
    • Lint: top rule IDs + counts + representative file paths
    • Tests: failing tests list + deterministic vs flaky notes
    • Coverage: summary if present

3. Whats wrong and why it matters

Include these subsections (at minimum):

3.1 Duplication and near-duplication

  • Symptoms observed (with file-level examples)
  • Why it matters in this repo
  • What should be done to fix it (safe refactor tactics + tests needed)

3.2 Over-complex functions and “god modules”

  • Hotspots (file paths + functions)
  • Risk explanation (bug surface, change friction)
  • What should be done (decomposition targets + boundaries + tests)

3.3 Inconsistent error handling and logging

  • Inconsistencies found (examples)
  • Operational/security impact
  • What should be done (standard error types/mapping + logging conventions)

4. Fix strategy (prioritized)

  • Phase 1 — Reduce duplication safely
  • Phase 2 — Decrease complexity in hotspots
  • Phase 3 — Standardize error handling and logging

Each phase must include:

  • Ordered list of actions
  • Expected blast radius (low/medium/high)
  • Required test additions (if any)
  • Validation steps (how to confirm improvement via npm run check:all)

5. Definition of done

  • npm run check:all passes reliably
  • Measurable reduction in targeted duplication clusters
  • Complexity hotspots reduced or isolated behind clear boundaries
  • Error/logging behavior consistent at boundaries
  • No coverage regressions (if coverage is tracked)

Quality bar for recommendations

  • Be specific: include file paths, function names, rule IDs, and observed patterns.
  • Be conservative: prefer small, behavior-preserving refactors in the plan.
  • Avoid “make it green” shortcuts:
    • do not recommend disabling lint rules/tests as a first move
    • if quarantining a flaky test is suggested, include a concrete follow-up requirement and deadline policy