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# AGENTS.md — Agent Guidance for Event Photo Platform
This repository hosts a multi-tenant event photo platform (Laravel 12, PHP 8.3, Filament 4, React 19/Vite 7 PWA). This document defines how AI agents should operate in this repo: roles, permissions, safety rules, and standard workflows. It is the single source of truth for agent behavior. Per-agent details live in docs/agents/.
## Purpose & Scope
- Provide clear guardrails and playbooks so agents can assist safely with code, docs, DevOps and project hygiene.
- Applies to the whole repo unless a component has an explicit per-agent policy in docs/agents/.
## Roles
- Codegen Agent — implements and edits application code, tests and documentation within scoped tasks. See docs/agents/codegen.md.
- Ops Agent — automates tasks around CI/CD, releases, issue hygiene, and repo maintenance. See docs/agents/ops.md.
- (Optional) Docs Agent — maintains documentation quality; follow Codegen Agent rules with writing focus.
## Global Policies
- Secrets & Credentials:
- Never commit secrets. The local file gogs.ini (token=…) is ignored via .gitignore and must not be printed into logs.
- ENV values in .env are sensitive; do not commit them or echo to build logs.
- Data Protection:
- Respect GDPR. Do not introduce PII logging. Legal content (Impressum, Privacy, AGB) is managed via Legal Pages resource.
- Safety & Access:
- Prefer least privilege. Do not alter production data or infrastructure from code without explicit human approval.
- When uncertain about a destructive operation, open a PR or create an Issue with a proposal.
- Source of Truth:
- Keep this AGENTS.md authoritative. If per-agent docs diverge, update this file and link the rationale.
## Tools & Permissions
- Languages/Frameworks: PHP 8.2+ (Laravel 12), TypeScript/JavaScript (React 19/Vite 7/Tailwind 4), Filament 4.
- Dev Commands: composer, npm, vite, artisan, PHPUnit, Pint/ESLint, Docker/Compose (for dev), Playwright, Vitest, TypeScript.
- Libraries: simplesoftwareio/simple-qrcode for server-side QR generation; Paddle API client (custom service) for payments; dompdf for PDF generation; spatie/laravel-translatable for i18n; minishlink/web-push for web push; firebase/php-jwt for JWT; Sentry (Laravel + Vite); Stripe (PHP + JS); Tamagui (design system); i18next (frontend i18n); vite-plugin-pwa for PWA builds.
- Payment Systems: Paddle (subscriptions and one-time payments), RevenueCat (mobile app subscriptions), Stripe (legacy/integration use).
- PWA Technologies: React 19, Vite 7, Capacitor (iOS), Trusted Web Activity (Android), Service Workers, Background Sync.
## Repo Structure (high-level)
- docs/archive/prp/ — split PRP (authoritative). Start at docs/archive/prp/README.md.
- .beads/ — bd issue tracker data (source of truth for backlog and progress).
- resources/js/guest/ — Guest PWA source (React 19, offline-first, installable).
- resources/js/admin/ — Tenant Admin PWA source (React 19, Capacitor/TWA ready).
- resources/js/pages/ — Inertia pages (React).
- docs/archive/README.md — historical PRP context.
- Marketing frontend language files:
- Source translations: `resources/lang/{de,en}/marketing.php` and `resources/lang/{de,en}/marketing.json`.
- Runtime i18next JSON served to the frontend: `public/lang/{de,en}/marketing.json` (must stay in sync with the source files).
## Standard Workflows
- Coding tasks (Codegen Agent):
1) Understand scope; update or create a minimal plan.
2) Edit code/docs via small, reviewable patches; keep changes focused.
3) Add/update tests if behavior changes.
4) Update docs when public surfaces change (PRP, docs/*).
5) Propose follow-ups as Issues if out of scope.
- Issue hygiene (Ops Agent):
- Track backlog and follow-ups in bd; avoid duplicates by checking existing titles before creating new issues.
- Avoid duplicates by checking existing titles.
- Releases (Ops Agent):
- Tag with semantic version; generate changelog from commits/PRs; ensure legal pages and migration notes are updated.
## Developer Utilities
### Artisan commands
#### Billing & Packages
- package:check-status — check event package status.
- packages:migrate-legacy — migrate legacy package purchases.
- paddle:sync-packages — sync packages with Paddle (push/pull/queue/dry-run).
- coupons:export — export coupon redemptions.
- checkout:send-reminders — send abandoned checkout reminders (dry-run supported).
#### Tenant Operations
- tenant:attach-demo-event — attach an existing demo event to a tenant.
- tenant:backfill-invitations — backfill invitations (supports tenant filtering).
- tenant:notifications:retry — retry tenant notification delivery.
- tenants:retention-scan — tenant retention scanning.
#### Demo & Seeds
- demo:seed-switcher — seed demo switcher tenants (supports cleanup and sample photos).
#### Guest Engagement
- guest:feedback-reminders — send guest feedback reminders.
#### Storage & Exports
- storage:monitor — storage monitor.
- storage:check-upload-queues — upload queue health checks.
- storage:archive-pending — dispatch storage archiving.
- exports:purge — purge expired data exports.
- media:backfill-thumbnails — generate thumbnails for existing photos.
#### Photobooth
- photobooth:ingest — ingest photobooth uploads.
- photobooth:cleanup-expired — deactivate expired photobooth accounts.
#### Content & Assets
- fonts:sync-google — sync Google Fonts to public storage.
- help:sync — sync help center content.
#### Metrics & Misc
- metrics:package-limits — inspect/reset package limit metrics (routes/console.php).
- inspire — inspiring quote (routes/console.php).
- Public APIs for Guest PWA: stats/photos endpoints with ETag; likes; uploads; see docs/archive/prp/03-api.md.
- Payment Integration: Paddle webhooks, RevenueCat mobile subscriptions.
## PWA Architecture
- Guest PWA: Offline-first photo sharing app for event attendees (installable, background sync, no account required).
- Tenant Admin PWA: Store-ready mobile app for event management (Android TWA, iOS Capacitor, OAuth2 + PKCE).
- Core Features: Background upload, conflict resolution, push notifications, achievement system, emotion/task tagging.
## Constraints & Red-Lines
- Do not introduce tracking beyond what is documented (anonymous session_id only for guest PWA).
- Do not weaken auth, CSRF, CORS, or role checks.
- Do not expand data retention without updating Privacy policy.
- PWA decisions are locked: Photos only (no videos), no facial recognition, no public profiles.
## Change Management
- Propose updates to this file via PR. Include:
- Motivation and scope, affected agents, roll-out plan.
- Links to updated docs in docs/agents/.
## References
- ADR-0006: Tenant Admin PWA architecture decision.
- docs/archive/prp/06-tenant-admin-pwa.md: Detailed PWA specifications.
- docs/archive/prp/07-guest-pwa.md: Guest PWA requirements and features.
- docs/archive/prp/08-billing.md: Payment system architecture.
===
<laravel-boost-guidelines>
=== foundation rules ===
# Laravel Boost Guidelines
The Laravel Boost guidelines are specifically curated by Laravel maintainers for this application. These guidelines should be followed closely to enhance the user's satisfaction building Laravel applications.
## Foundational Context
This application is a Laravel application and its main Laravel ecosystems package & versions are below. You are an expert with them all. Ensure you abide by these specific packages & versions.
- php - 8.3.6
- filament/filament (FILAMENT) - v4
- inertiajs/inertia-laravel (INERTIA) - v2
- laravel/framework (LARAVEL) - v12
- laravel/horizon (HORIZON) - v5
- laravel/prompts (PROMPTS) - v0
- laravel/sanctum (SANCTUM) - v4
- laravel/socialite (SOCIALITE) - v5
- laravel/wayfinder (WAYFINDER) - v0
- livewire/livewire (LIVEWIRE) - v3
- laravel/mcp (MCP) - v0
- laravel/pint (PINT) - v1
- laravel/sail (SAIL) - v1
- phpunit/phpunit (PHPUNIT) - v11
- @inertiajs/react (INERTIA) - v2
- react (REACT) - v19
- tailwindcss (TAILWINDCSS) - v4
- @laravel/vite-plugin-wayfinder (WAYFINDER) - v0
- eslint (ESLINT) - v9
- prettier (PRETTIER) - v3
## Conventions
- You must follow all existing code conventions used in this application. When creating or editing a file, check sibling files for the correct structure, approach, and naming.
- Use descriptive names for variables and methods. For example, `isRegisteredForDiscounts`, not `discount()`.
- Check for existing components to reuse before writing a new one.
## Verification Scripts
- Do not create verification scripts or tinker when tests cover that functionality and prove it works. Unit and feature tests are more important.
## Application Structure & Architecture
- Stick to existing directory structure; don't create new base folders without approval.
- Do not change the application's dependencies without approval.
## Frontend Bundling
- If the user doesn't see a frontend change reflected in the UI, it could mean they need to run `npm run build`, `npm run dev`, or `composer run dev`. Ask them.
## Replies
- Be concise in your explanations - focus on what's important rather than explaining obvious details.
## Documentation Files
- You must only create documentation files if explicitly requested by the user.
=== boost rules ===
## Laravel Boost
- Laravel Boost is an MCP server that comes with powerful tools designed specifically for this application. Use them.
## Artisan
- Use the `list-artisan-commands` tool when you need to call an Artisan command to double-check the available parameters.
## URLs
- Whenever you share a project URL with the user, you should use the `get-absolute-url` tool to ensure you're using the correct scheme, domain/IP, and port.
## Tinker / Debugging
- You should use the `tinker` tool when you need to execute PHP to debug code or query Eloquent models directly.
- Use the `database-query` tool when you only need to read from the database.
## Reading Browser Logs With the `browser-logs` Tool
- You can read browser logs, errors, and exceptions using the `browser-logs` tool from Boost.
- Only recent browser logs will be useful - ignore old logs.
## Searching Documentation (Critically Important)
- Boost comes with a powerful `search-docs` tool you should use before any other approaches when dealing with Laravel or Laravel ecosystem packages. This tool automatically passes a list of installed packages and their versions to the remote Boost API, so it returns only version-specific documentation for the user's circumstance. You should pass an array of packages to filter on if you know you need docs for particular packages.
- The `search-docs` tool is perfect for all Laravel-related packages, including Laravel, Inertia, Livewire, Filament, Tailwind, Pest, Nova, Nightwatch, etc.
- You must use this tool to search for Laravel ecosystem documentation before falling back to other approaches.
- Search the documentation before making code changes to ensure we are taking the correct approach.
- Use multiple, broad, simple, topic-based queries to start. For example: `['rate limiting', 'routing rate limiting', 'routing']`.
- Do not add package names to queries; package information is already shared. For example, use `test resource table`, not `filament 4 test resource table`.
### Available Search Syntax
- You can and should pass multiple queries at once. The most relevant results will be returned first.
1. Simple Word Searches with auto-stemming - query=authentication - finds 'authenticate' and 'auth'.
2. Multiple Words (AND Logic) - query=rate limit - finds knowledge containing both "rate" AND "limit".
3. Quoted Phrases (Exact Position) - query="infinite scroll" - words must be adjacent and in that order.
4. Mixed Queries - query=middleware "rate limit" - "middleware" AND exact phrase "rate limit".
5. Multiple Queries - queries=["authentication", "middleware"] - ANY of these terms.
=== php rules ===
## PHP
- Always use curly braces for control structures, even if it has one line.
### Constructors
- Use PHP 8 constructor property promotion in `__construct()`.
- <code-snippet>public function __construct(public GitHub $github) { }</code-snippet>
- Do not allow empty `__construct()` methods with zero parameters unless the constructor is private.
### Type Declarations
- Always use explicit return type declarations for methods and functions.
- Use appropriate PHP type hints for method parameters.
<code-snippet name="Explicit Return Types and Method Params" lang="php">
protected function isAccessible(User $user, ?string $path = null): bool
{
...
}
</code-snippet>
## Comments
- Prefer PHPDoc blocks over inline comments. Never use comments within the code itself unless there is something very complex going on.
## PHPDoc Blocks
- Add useful array shape type definitions for arrays when appropriate.
## Enums
- Typically, keys in an Enum should be TitleCase. For example: `FavoritePerson`, `BestLake`, `Monthly`.
=== tests rules ===
## Test Enforcement
- Every change must be programmatically tested. Write a new test or update an existing test, then run the affected tests to make sure they pass.
- Run the minimum number of tests needed to ensure code quality and speed. Use `php artisan test --compact` with a specific filename or filter.
=== inertia-laravel/core rules ===
## Inertia
- Inertia.js components should be placed in the `resources/js/Pages` directory unless specified differently in the JS bundler (`vite.config.js`).
- Use `Inertia::render()` for server-side routing instead of traditional Blade views.
- Use the `search-docs` tool for accurate guidance on all things Inertia.
<code-snippet name="Inertia Render Example" lang="php">
// routes/web.php example
Route::get('/users', function () {
return Inertia::render('Users/Index', [
'users' => User::all()
]);
});
</code-snippet>
=== inertia-laravel/v2 rules ===
## Inertia v2
- Make use of all Inertia features from v1 and v2. Check the documentation before making any changes to ensure we are taking the correct approach.
### Inertia v2 New Features
- Deferred props.
- Infinite scrolling using merging props and `WhenVisible`.
- Lazy loading data on scroll.
- Polling.
- Prefetching.
### Deferred Props & Empty States
- When using deferred props on the frontend, you should add a nice empty state with pulsing/animated skeleton.
### Inertia Form General Guidance
- The recommended way to build forms when using Inertia is with the `<Form>` component - a useful example is below. Use the `search-docs` tool with a query of `form component` for guidance.
- Forms can also be built using the `useForm` helper for more programmatic control, or to follow existing conventions. Use the `search-docs` tool with a query of `useForm helper` for guidance.
- `resetOnError`, `resetOnSuccess`, and `setDefaultsOnSuccess` are available on the `<Form>` component. Use the `search-docs` tool with a query of `form component resetting` for guidance.
=== laravel/core rules ===
## Do Things the Laravel Way
- Use `php artisan make:` commands to create new files (i.e. migrations, controllers, models, etc.). You can list available Artisan commands using the `list-artisan-commands` tool.
- If you're creating a generic PHP class, use `php artisan make:class`.
- Pass `--no-interaction` to all Artisan commands to ensure they work without user input. You should also pass the correct `--options` to ensure correct behavior.
### Database
- Always use proper Eloquent relationship methods with return type hints. Prefer relationship methods over raw queries or manual joins.
- Use Eloquent models and relationships before suggesting raw database queries.
- Avoid `DB::`; prefer `Model::query()`. Generate code that leverages Laravel's ORM capabilities rather than bypassing them.
- Generate code that prevents N+1 query problems by using eager loading.
- Use Laravel's query builder for very complex database operations.
### Model Creation
- When creating new models, create useful factories and seeders for them too. Ask the user if they need any other things, using `list-artisan-commands` to check the available options to `php artisan make:model`.
### APIs & Eloquent Resources
- For APIs, default to using Eloquent API Resources and API versioning unless existing API routes do not, then you should follow existing application convention.
### Controllers & Validation
- Always create Form Request classes for validation rather than inline validation in controllers. Include both validation rules and custom error messages.
- Check sibling Form Requests to see if the application uses array or string based validation rules.
### Queues
- Use queued jobs for time-consuming operations with the `ShouldQueue` interface.
### Authentication & Authorization
- Use Laravel's built-in authentication and authorization features (gates, policies, Sanctum, etc.).
### URL Generation
- When generating links to other pages, prefer named routes and the `route()` function.
### Configuration
- Use environment variables only in configuration files - never use the `env()` function directly outside of config files. Always use `config('app.name')`, not `env('APP_NAME')`.
### Testing
- When creating models for tests, use the factories for the models. Check if the factory has custom states that can be used before manually setting up the model.
- Faker: Use methods such as `$this->faker->word()` or `fake()->randomDigit()`. Follow existing conventions whether to use `$this->faker` or `fake()`.
- When creating tests, make use of `php artisan make:test [options] {name}` to create a feature test, and pass `--unit` to create a unit test. Most tests should be feature tests.
### Vite Error
- If you receive an "Illuminate\Foundation\ViteException: Unable to locate file in Vite manifest" error, you can run `npm run build` or ask the user to run `npm run dev` or `composer run dev`.
=== laravel/v12 rules ===
## Laravel 12
- Use the `search-docs` tool to get version-specific documentation.
- This project upgraded from Laravel 10 without migrating to the new streamlined Laravel file structure.
- This is **perfectly fine** and recommended by Laravel. Follow the existing structure from Laravel 10. We do not need to migrate to the new Laravel structure unless the user explicitly requests it.
### Laravel 10 Structure
- Middleware typically lives in `app/Http/Middleware/` and service providers in `app/Providers/`.
- There is no `bootstrap/app.php` application configuration in a Laravel 10 structure:
- Middleware registration happens in `app/Http/Kernel.php`
- Exception handling is in `app/Exceptions/Handler.php`
- Console commands and schedule register in `app/Console/Kernel.php`
- Rate limits likely exist in `RouteServiceProvider` or `app/Http/Kernel.php`
### Database
- When modifying a column, the migration must include all of the attributes that were previously defined on the column. Otherwise, they will be dropped and lost.
- Laravel 12 allows limiting eagerly loaded records natively, without external packages: `$query->latest()->limit(10);`.
### Models
- Casts can and likely should be set in a `casts()` method on a model rather than the `$casts` property. Follow existing conventions from other models.
=== wayfinder/core rules ===
## Laravel Wayfinder
Wayfinder generates TypeScript functions and types for Laravel controllers and routes which you can import into your client-side code. It provides type safety and automatic synchronization between backend routes and frontend code.
### Development Guidelines
- Always use the `search-docs` tool to check Wayfinder correct usage before implementing any features.
- Always prefer named imports for tree-shaking (e.g., `import { show } from '@/actions/...'`).
- Avoid default controller imports (prevents tree-shaking).
- Run `php artisan wayfinder:generate` after route changes if Vite plugin isn't installed.
### Feature Overview
- Form Support: Use `.form()` with `--with-form` flag for HTML form attributes — `<form {...store.form()}>``action="/posts" method="post"`.
- HTTP Methods: Call `.get()`, `.post()`, `.patch()`, `.put()`, `.delete()` for specific methods — `show.head(1)``{ url: "/posts/1", method: "head" }`.
- Invokable Controllers: Import and invoke directly as functions. For example, `import StorePost from '@/actions/.../StorePostController'; StorePost()`.
- Named Routes: Import from `@/routes/` for non-controller routes. For example, `import { show } from '@/routes/post'; show(1)` for route name `post.show`.
- Parameter Binding: Detects route keys (e.g., `{post:slug}`) and accepts matching object properties — `show("my-post")` or `show({ slug: "my-post" })`.
- Query Merging: Use `mergeQuery` to merge with `window.location.search`, set values to `null` to remove — `show(1, { mergeQuery: { page: 2, sort: null } })`.
- Query Parameters: Pass `{ query: {...} }` in options to append params — `show(1, { query: { page: 1 } })``"/posts/1?page=1"`.
- Route Objects: Functions return `{ url, method }` shaped objects — `show(1)``{ url: "/posts/1", method: "get" }`.
- URL Extraction: Use `.url()` to get URL string — `show.url(1)``"/posts/1"`.
### Example Usage
<code-snippet name="Wayfinder Basic Usage" lang="typescript">
// Import controller methods (tree-shakable)...
import { show, store, update } from '@/actions/App/Http/Controllers/PostController'
// Get route object with URL and method...
show(1) // { url: "/posts/1", method: "get" }
// Get just the URL...
show.url(1) // "/posts/1"
// Use specific HTTP methods...
show.get(1) // { url: "/posts/1", method: "get" }
show.head(1) // { url: "/posts/1", method: "head" }
// Import named routes...
import { show as postShow } from '@/routes/post' // For route name 'post.show'
postShow(1) // { url: "/posts/1", method: "get" }
</code-snippet>
### Wayfinder + Inertia
If your application uses the `<Form>` component from Inertia, you can use Wayfinder to generate form action and method automatically.
<code-snippet name="Wayfinder Form Component (React)" lang="typescript">
<Form {...store.form()}><input name="title" /></Form>
</code-snippet>
=== livewire/core rules ===
## Livewire
- Use the `search-docs` tool to find exact version-specific documentation for how to write Livewire and Livewire tests.
- Use the `php artisan make:livewire [Posts\CreatePost]` Artisan command to create new components.
- State should live on the server, with the UI reflecting it.
- All Livewire requests hit the Laravel backend; they're like regular HTTP requests. Always validate form data and run authorization checks in Livewire actions.
## Livewire Best Practices
- Livewire components require a single root element.
- Use `wire:loading` and `wire:dirty` for delightful loading states.
- Add `wire:key` in loops:
```blade
@foreach ($items as $item)
<div wire:key="item-{{ $item->id }}">
{{ $item->name }}
</div>
@endforeach
```
- Prefer lifecycle hooks like `mount()`, `updatedFoo()` for initialization and reactive side effects:
<code-snippet name="Lifecycle Hook Examples" lang="php">
public function mount(User $user) { $this->user = $user; }
public function updatedSearch() { $this->resetPage(); }
</code-snippet>
## Testing Livewire
<code-snippet name="Example Livewire Component Test" lang="php">
Livewire::test(Counter::class)
->assertSet('count', 0)
->call('increment')
->assertSet('count', 1)
->assertSee(1)
->assertStatus(200);
</code-snippet>
<code-snippet name="Testing Livewire Component Exists on Page" lang="php">
$this->get('/posts/create')
->assertSeeLivewire(CreatePost::class);
</code-snippet>
=== livewire/v3 rules ===
## Livewire 3
### Key Changes From Livewire 2
- These things changed in Livewire 3, but may not have been updated in this application. Verify this application's setup to ensure you conform with application conventions.
- Use `wire:model.live` for real-time updates, `wire:model` is now deferred by default.
- Components now use the `App\Livewire` namespace (not `App\Http\Livewire`).
- Use `$this->dispatch()` to dispatch events (not `emit` or `dispatchBrowserEvent`).
- Use the `components.layouts.app` view as the typical layout path (not `layouts.app`).
### New Directives
- `wire:show`, `wire:transition`, `wire:cloak`, `wire:offline`, `wire:target` are available for use. Use the documentation to find usage examples.
### Alpine
- Alpine is now included with Livewire; don't manually include Alpine.js.
- Plugins included with Alpine: persist, intersect, collapse, and focus.
### Lifecycle Hooks
- You can listen for `livewire:init` to hook into Livewire initialization, and `fail.status === 419` for the page expiring:
<code-snippet name="Livewire Init Hook Example" lang="js">
document.addEventListener('livewire:init', function () {
Livewire.hook('request', ({ fail }) => {
if (fail && fail.status === 419) {
alert('Your session expired');
}
});
Livewire.hook('message.failed', (message, component) => {
console.error(message);
});
});
</code-snippet>
=== pint/core rules ===
## Laravel Pint Code Formatter
- You must run `vendor/bin/pint --dirty` before finalizing changes to ensure your code matches the project's expected style.
- Do not run `vendor/bin/pint --test`, simply run `vendor/bin/pint` to fix any formatting issues.
=== phpunit/core rules ===
## PHPUnit
- This application uses PHPUnit for testing. All tests must be written as PHPUnit classes. Use `php artisan make:test --phpunit {name}` to create a new test.
- If you see a test using "Pest", convert it to PHPUnit.
- Every time a test has been updated, run that singular test.
- When the tests relating to your feature are passing, ask the user if they would like to also run the entire test suite to make sure everything is still passing.
- Tests should test all of the happy paths, failure paths, and weird paths.
- You must not remove any tests or test files from the tests directory without approval. These are not temporary or helper files; these are core to the application.
### Running Tests
- Run the minimal number of tests, using an appropriate filter, before finalizing.
- To run all tests: `php artisan test --compact`.
- To run all tests in a file: `php artisan test --compact tests/Feature/ExampleTest.php`.
- To filter on a particular test name: `php artisan test --compact --filter=testName` (recommended after making a change to a related file).
=== inertia-react/core rules ===
## Inertia + React
- Use `router.visit()` or `<Link>` for navigation instead of traditional links.
<code-snippet name="Inertia Client Navigation" lang="react">
import { Link } from '@inertiajs/react'
<Link href="/">Home</Link>
</code-snippet>
=== inertia-react/v2/forms rules ===
## Inertia v2 + React Forms
<code-snippet name="`<Form>` Component Example" lang="react">
import { Form } from '@inertiajs/react'
export default () => (
<Form action="/users" method="post">
{({
errors,
hasErrors,
processing,
wasSuccessful,
recentlySuccessful,
clearErrors,
resetAndClearErrors,
defaults
}) => (
<>
<input type="text" name="name" />
{errors.name && <div>{errors.name}</div>}
<button type="submit" disabled={processing}>
{processing ? 'Creating...' : 'Create User'}
</button>
{wasSuccessful && <div>User created successfully!</div>}
</>
)}
</Form>
)
</code-snippet>
=== tailwindcss/core rules ===
## Tailwind CSS
- Use Tailwind CSS classes to style HTML; check and use existing Tailwind conventions within the project before writing your own.
- Offer to extract repeated patterns into components that match the project's conventions (i.e. Blade, JSX, Vue, etc.).
- Think through class placement, order, priority, and defaults. Remove redundant classes, add classes to parent or child carefully to limit repetition, and group elements logically.
- You can use the `search-docs` tool to get exact examples from the official documentation when needed.
### Spacing
- When listing items, use gap utilities for spacing; don't use margins.
<code-snippet name="Valid Flex Gap Spacing Example" lang="html">
<div class="flex gap-8">
<div>Superior</div>
<div>Michigan</div>
<div>Erie</div>
</div>
</code-snippet>
### Dark Mode
- If existing pages and components support dark mode, new pages and components must support dark mode in a similar way, typically using `dark:`.
=== tailwindcss/v4 rules ===
## Tailwind CSS 4
- Always use Tailwind CSS v4; do not use the deprecated utilities.
- `corePlugins` is not supported in Tailwind v4.
- In Tailwind v4, configuration is CSS-first using the `@theme` directive — no separate `tailwind.config.js` file is needed.
<code-snippet name="Extending Theme in CSS" lang="css">
@theme {
--color-brand: oklch(0.72 0.11 178);
}
</code-snippet>
- In Tailwind v4, you import Tailwind using a regular CSS `@import` statement, not using the `@tailwind` directives used in v3:
<code-snippet name="Tailwind v4 Import Tailwind Diff" lang="diff">
- @tailwind base;
- @tailwind components;
- @tailwind utilities;
+ @import "tailwindcss";
</code-snippet>
### Replaced Utilities
- Tailwind v4 removed deprecated utilities. Do not use the deprecated option; use the replacement.
- Opacity values are still numeric.
| Deprecated | Replacement |
|------------+--------------|
| bg-opacity-* | bg-black/* |
| text-opacity-* | text-black/* |
| border-opacity-* | border-black/* |
| divide-opacity-* | divide-black/* |
| ring-opacity-* | ring-black/* |
| placeholder-opacity-* | placeholder-black/* |
| flex-shrink-* | shrink-* |
| flex-grow-* | grow-* |
| overflow-ellipsis | text-ellipsis |
| decoration-slice | box-decoration-slice |
| decoration-clone | box-decoration-clone |
</laravel-boost-guidelines>
## Issue Tracking
This project uses **bd (beads)** for issue tracking.
Run `bd prime` for workflow context, or install hooks (`bd hooks install`) for auto-injection.
**Quick reference:**
- `bd ready` - Find unblocked work
- `bd create "Title" --type task --priority 2` - Create issue
- `bd close <id>` - Complete work
- `bd sync` - Sync with git (run at session end)
For full workflow details: `bd prime`
## Landing the Plane (Session Completion)
**When ending a work session**, you MUST complete ALL steps below. Work is NOT complete until `git push` succeeds.
**MANDATORY WORKFLOW:**
1. **File issues for remaining work** - Create issues for anything that needs follow-up
2. **Run quality gates** (if code changed) - Tests, linters, builds
3. **Update issue status** - Close finished work, update in-progress items
4. **PUSH TO REMOTE** - This is MANDATORY:
```bash
git pull --rebase
bd sync
git push
git status # MUST show "up to date with origin"
```
5. **Clean up** - Clear stashes, prune remote branches
6. **Verify** - All changes committed AND pushed
7. **Hand off** - Provide context for next session
**CRITICAL RULES:**
- Work is NOT complete until `git push` succeeds
- NEVER stop before pushing - that leaves work stranded locally
- NEVER say "ready to push when you are" - YOU must push
- If push fails, resolve and retry until it succeeds