The schedule_task MCP tool wrote routing fields (platform_id, channel_type,
thread_id) onto the outbound system message's row columns, but
handleSystemAction (src/delivery.ts) parses content JSON and forwards only
that to handlers. handleScheduleTask (src/modules/scheduling/actions.ts)
reads content.platformId/channelType/threadId — which the writer never
populated — so every kind='task' row landed in messages_in with all-null
routing.
When host-sweep wakes a scheduled task, dispatchResultText's fast path
requires routing on the message and bails when it's null, falling through
to the "Routing recovery" retry prompt. End-user delivery still works
because the agent can pick a destination from its destinations table on
retry — so the bug went undetected, silently costing one extra LLM turn
per scheduled-task wake. Sessions whose destinations table has no channel
row (e.g. agent-only destinations) fail outright with a recovery loop.
Fix: add the routing fields to the content JSON so the writer matches the
contract handleScheduleTask already expects. cancel/pause/resume/update_task
operate by id alone and don't need routing.
The agent needs to perceive times in the user's timezone, not UTC.
Dropping this in the v1→v2 port produced a class of bugs where the agent
would schedule tasks for the wrong hour, suggest dinner at midnight, etc.
This restores v1 parity.
Container side:
- New container/agent-runner/src/timezone.ts mirrors src/timezone.ts with
isValidTimezone / resolveTimezone / formatLocalTime, plus:
* TIMEZONE constant resolved at load from process.env.TZ (host sets this
from src/container-runner.ts:254)
* parseZonedToUtc(input, tz) — treats a naive ISO as wall-clock time in
`tz`, returns the corresponding UTC Date. Strings with Z or offset
are passed through.
- formatter.ts:
* formatMessages() now prepends <context timezone="IANA"/>\n — matches
v1 src/v1/router.ts:20-22
* formatSingleChat uses formatLocalTime(ts, TIMEZONE) instead of a
home-rolled HH:MM 24h formatter → outputs like "Jun 15, 2026, 8:00 AM"
* reply_to="<id>" attribute + <quoted_message from="X">Y</quoted_message>
element — matches v1 format exactly; old <reply-to/> shape is gone
* stripInternalTags() exported for the dispatch path to reuse
- poll-loop.ts uses the exported stripInternalTags() instead of inline regex.
- mcp-tools/scheduling.ts:
* schedule_task/update_task descriptions now explicitly document that
processAfter accepts either UTC or naive local time (interpreted in
the user's TZ from the context header)
* handlers normalize through parseZonedToUtc() and store a UTC ISO
Host side:
- src/modules/scheduling/recurrence.ts passes { tz: TIMEZONE } to
CronExpressionParser.parse. Without this, "0 9 * * *" fires at 09:00
UTC instead of 09:00 user-local — this was the v1 behavior
(src/v1/task-scheduler.ts:20-49).
Tests:
- container/agent-runner/src/timezone.test.ts — mirror of src/timezone.test.ts
+ new parseZonedToUtc cases
- container/agent-runner/src/formatter.test.ts — context header, reply_to,
quoted_message, XML escaping, stripInternalTags (ported from v1
formatting.test.ts)
- src/modules/scheduling/recurrence.test.ts — cron TZ respected, completed
rows only cloned when recurrence is set
Ref: docs/v1-vs-v2/ACTION-ITEMS.md item 18 + timezone-formatting-v1-recreation.md
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Additive change — existing code paths still run via inline fallbacks.
Prepares core for per-module extractions in PR #3 onward.
Four registries added with empty defaults:
- delivery action handlers (delivery.ts)
- router inbound gate (router.ts)
- response dispatcher (index.ts)
- MCP tool self-registration (container/agent-runner/src/mcp-tools/server.ts)
Default modules moved to src/modules/ for signaling:
- src/modules/typing/ (extracted from delivery.ts)
- src/modules/mount-security/ (moved from src/mount-security.ts)
Both are imported directly by core — no hook, no registry. Removal
requires editing core imports.
Migrator now keys applied rows by name (uniqueness) so module
migrations can pick arbitrary version numbers. Stored version column
is auto-assigned as an applied-order sequence.
sqlite_master guards added around core calls into module-owned tables
(user_roles, agent_destinations, pending_questions). No-ops today;
load-bearing after the owning modules are extracted.
MODULE-HOOK markers placed at scheduling's two skill-edit sites
(host-sweep.ts recurrence call, poll-loop.ts pre-task gate). PR #4
replaces the marked blocks when scheduling moves to its module.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
update_task lets the agent adjust prompt/recurrence/processAfter/script
on a live scheduled task without losing the series id the user already
knows. Empty string clears recurrence/script.
list_tasks now groups by series_id so recurring tasks show as one row
(the live pending/paused occurrence) instead of one per firing — the
id displayed is the stable series handle that update/cancel/pause/resume
all match against.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three features built on top of @onecli-sh/sdk 0.3.1, landed together because
they share wiring surfaces (session DB schema, delivery dispatcher, Chat SDK
bridge, channel adapter contract).
## OneCLI manual-approval handler
* `src/onecli-approvals.ts` — long-polls OneCLI via the SDK's
`configureManualApproval`; on each request, delivers an `ask_question` card
to the admin agent group's first messaging group, persists a
`pending_approvals` row, and waits on an in-memory Promise resolved by the
admin's button click or an expiry timer. Expired cards are edited to
"Expired (...)" and a startup sweep flushes any rows left over from a
previous process.
* Short 11-byte approval id (`oa-<8 base36>`) instead of the SDK's UUID so the
Telegram 64-byte `callback_data` limit is respected; the OneCLI UUID stays
in the persisted payload for audit.
* Migration 003 consolidated: `pending_approvals` now has the OneCLI-aware
columns from the start (`agent_group_id`, `channel_type`, `platform_id`,
`platform_message_id`, `expires_at`, `status`), `session_id` relaxed to
nullable so cross-session approvals fit.
* `handleQuestionResponse` in `src/index.ts` now routes OneCLI approvals
through `resolveOneCLIApproval` before falling back to the
session-bound approval path.
## Credential collection from chat
New `trigger_credential_collection` MCP tool — the agent researches a
third-party API, calls the tool with `{name, hostPattern, headerName,
valueFormat, description}`, and blocks until the host reports saved, rejected,
or failed. The credential value never enters the agent's context: the user
submits it into a Chat SDK Modal on the host side, the host writes it to
OneCLI via a thin facade (`src/onecli-secrets.ts` — shells out to
`onecli secrets create`, shape mirrors the SDK we expect upstream), and only
the status string flows back to the container via a system message.
* `src/credentials.ts` — host-side handler: delivers the card to the
conversation's own channel (not the admin channel — credential collection
is a user-facing flow, distinct from admin approval), persists a
`pending_credentials` row, drives the submit → `createSecret` → notify
pipeline. Falls back gracefully when the channel doesn't support modals.
* `src/db/credentials.ts` + migration 005: `pending_credentials` table.
* `src/channels/chat-sdk-bridge.ts`: renders a `credential_request` card,
handles the `nccr:` action prefix by opening a Modal with a TextInput,
registers an `onModalSubmit` handler for the `nccm:` callback prefix.
* `container/agent-runner/src/mcp-tools/credentials.ts`: the blocking MCP
tool, mirroring the `ask_user_question` polling pattern.
* `container/agent-runner/src/db/messages-in.ts`: `findCredentialResponse`
helper to pick up the system message the host writes back.
## Threaded adapter routing
The destination layer previously didn't carry thread context, so agent replies
to Discord always landed in the root channel regardless of which thread the
inbound came from.
* `ChannelAdapter.supportsThreads: boolean` — declared by every channel skill
at `createChatSdkBridge`. Threaded: Discord, Slack, Teams, Google Chat,
Linear, GitHub, Webex. Non-threaded: Telegram, WhatsApp Cloud, Matrix,
Resend, iMessage.
* `src/router.ts`: non-threaded adapters strip `threadId` at ingest (threads
collapse to channel-level sessions). Threaded adapters override the
wiring's `session_mode` to `'per-thread'` so each thread = a session
(except `agent-shared`, which is preserved as a cross-channel intent the
adapter can't know about).
* `session_routing` table in `inbound.db` — single-row default reply routing
written by the host on every container wake from
`session.messaging_group_id` + `session.thread_id`. Forward-compat
`CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS` handles older session DBs lazily.
* `container/agent-runner/src/db/session-routing.ts` — container-side reader.
* `send_message` / `send_file` / `ask_user_question` / `send_card` /
scheduling tools all default their routing (channel, platform, **and**
thread) from the session when no explicit `to` is given. Explicit `to`
uses the destination's channel with `thread_id = null` (cross-destination
sends start a new conversation elsewhere).
* `poll-loop.ts::sendToDestination` (the final-text single-destination
shortcut) now inherits `thread_id` from `RoutingContext` too — this was
the root cause of Discord replies landing in the root channel even after
`send_message` was wired correctly.
## Related cleanups
* `src/container-runner.ts`: OneCLI agent identifier switched from the lossy
folder-derived string to `agent_group.id`, making `getAgentGroup(externalId)`
a trivial reverse lookup for per-agent scoping.
* `wakeContainer` race fix via an in-flight promise map — concurrent wakes
during the async buildContainerArgs / OneCLI `applyContainerConfig` window
no longer double-spawn containers against the same session directory.
* `src/db/db-v2.test.ts`: dropped the brittle `expect(row.v).toBe(N)` schema
version assertion — it had to be bumped on every migration addition.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Eliminates SQLite write contention across the host-container mount
boundary by splitting the single session.db into two files, each with
exactly one writer:
inbound.db — host writes (messages_in, delivered tracking)
outbound.db — container writes (messages_out, processing_ack)
Key changes:
- Host uses even seq numbers, container uses odd (collision-free)
- Container heartbeat via file touch instead of DB UPDATE
- Scheduling MCP tools now emit system actions via messages_out
(host applies them to inbound.db during delivery)
- Host sweep reads processing_ack + heartbeat file for stale detection
- OneCLI ensureAgent() call added (was missing from v2, caused
applyContainerConfig to reject unknown agent identifiers)
Verified: tsc clean, 327 tests pass, real e2e through Docker works.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>