Files
paperclip/doc/plugins/PLUGIN_AUTHORING_GUIDE.md
Dotta 8f45d12447 docs: update plugin authoring guide for managed resources (#6261)
## Thinking Path

<!--
Required. Trace your reasoning from the top of the project down to this
  specific change. Start with what Paperclip is, then narrow through the
  subsystem, the problem, and why this PR exists. Use blockquote style.
  Aim for 5-8 steps. See CONTRIBUTING.md for full examples.
-->

> - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies.
> - The plugin system is how optional capabilities extend the control
plane without adding hidden core behavior.
> - Plugin authors need accurate guidance for the current managed
capabilities model.
> - The existing docs under-described managed skills and the
routine-first pattern for durable plugin automation.
> - Content-oriented plugins such as LLM Wiki should model recurring
work with visible managed agents, projects, routines, and skills.
> - This pull request aligns the authoring guide, local development
guide, and longer plugin spec with that model.
> - The benefit is clearer plugin guidance that preserves Paperclip
visibility, budgets, pause controls, and audit trails.

## What Changed

<!-- Bullet list of concrete changes. One bullet per logical unit. -->

- Documented plugin-managed skills alongside managed agents, projects,
and routines.
- Added guidance for content-oriented plugins to use managed projects,
agents, skills, and routines instead of private daemon-like state.
- Updated the manifest/spec examples and capability lists for current
plugin-managed surfaces.
- Clarified when to use managed routines instead of plugin runtime jobs
for board-visible recurring work.
- Added a short local plugin development note pointing authors toward
routine-first automation.
- Addressed Greptile docs feedback by marking top-level `launchers` as
legacy and removing a redundant `slug` from the managed skill example.

## Verification

<!--
  How can a reviewer confirm this works? Include test commands, manual
  steps, or both. For UI changes, include before/after screenshots.
-->

- `git diff --check public-gh/master...HEAD`
- Reviewed `ROADMAP.md`; this is docs alignment for the completed plugin
system milestone and does not add roadmap-level core feature work.
- Greptile Review: success on the latest head; `3 files reviewed, 0
comments added` after follow-up fixes.
- GitHub PR checks are green on the latest head, including Build,
Typecheck + Release Registry, General tests, serialized server suites,
e2e, Canary Dry Run, policy, Snyk, and aggregate `verify`.

## Risks

<!--
  What could go wrong? Mention migration safety, breaking changes,
  behavioral shifts, or "Low risk" if genuinely minor.
-->

- Low risk: documentation-only changes.
- Main risk is documentation drift if the plugin API changes again
before these docs are reviewed.

> For core feature work, check [`ROADMAP.md`](ROADMAP.md) first and
discuss it in `#dev` before opening the PR. Feature PRs that overlap
with planned core work may need to be redirected - check the roadmap
first. See `CONTRIBUTING.md`.

## Model Used

<!--
  Required. Specify which AI model was used to produce or assist with
  this change. Be as descriptive as possible - include:
    • Provider and model name (e.g., Claude, GPT, Gemini, Codex)
• Exact model ID or version (e.g., claude-opus-4-6,
gpt-4-turbo-2024-04-09)
    • Context window size if relevant (e.g., 1M context)
• Reasoning/thinking mode if applicable (e.g., extended thinking,
chain-of-thought)
• Any other relevant capability details (e.g., tool use, code execution)
  If no AI model was used, write "None — human-authored".
-->

- OpenAI Codex, GPT-5 coding agent with shell and GitHub connector tool
use.

## Checklist

- [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context
to this change
- [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability
details)
- [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate
planned core work
- [x] I have run tests locally and they pass
- [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable
- [x] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after
screenshots
- [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes
- [x] I have considered and documented any risks above
- [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before
requesting merge

---------

Co-authored-by: Paperclip <noreply@paperclip.ing>
2026-05-18 10:14:27 -05:00

563 lines
20 KiB
Markdown

# Plugin Authoring Guide
This guide describes the current, implemented way to create a Paperclip plugin in this repo.
It is intentionally narrower than [PLUGIN_SPEC.md](./PLUGIN_SPEC.md). The spec includes future ideas; this guide only covers the alpha surface that exists now.
> **New to plugins?** Start with the short [Local Plugin Development guide](./LOCAL_PLUGIN_DEVELOPMENT.md) — it walks the CLI happy path (`plugin init` → `pnpm dev` → `plugin install <path>`) end to end. Come back here for the full manifest surface, worker capabilities, and UI components.
## Current reality
- Treat plugin workers and plugin UI as trusted code.
- Plugin UI runs as same-origin JavaScript inside the main Paperclip app.
- Worker-side host APIs are capability-gated.
- Plugin UI is not sandboxed by manifest capabilities.
- Plugin database migrations are restricted to a host-derived plugin namespace.
- Plugin-managed surfaces are first-class records (agents, projects, routines, and
skills) rather than private plugin-only state.
- Plugin-owned JSON API routes must be declared in the manifest and are mounted
only under `/api/plugins/:pluginId/api/*`.
- The host provides a small shared React component kit through
`@paperclipai/plugin-sdk/ui`; use it for common Paperclip controls before
building custom versions.
- `ctx.assets` is not supported in the current runtime.
## Scaffold a plugin
Use the CLI scaffold command:
```bash
paperclipai plugin init @yourscope/plugin-name --output /absolute/path/to/plugin-repos
```
That creates `<output>/plugin-name/` with:
- `src/manifest.ts`
- `src/worker.ts`
- `src/ui/index.tsx`
- `tests/plugin.spec.ts`
- `esbuild.config.mjs`
- `rollup.config.mjs`
Inside this monorepo, the scaffold uses `workspace:*` for `@paperclipai/plugin-sdk`.
Outside this monorepo, the scaffold snapshots `@paperclipai/plugin-sdk` from the local Paperclip checkout into a `.paperclip-sdk/` tarball so you can build and test a plugin without publishing anything to npm first. Pass `--sdk-path /absolute/path/to/paperclip/packages/plugins/sdk` if you have more than one Paperclip checkout.
## Local development workflow
See the short [Local Plugin Development guide](./LOCAL_PLUGIN_DEVELOPMENT.md) for the full happy path (`pnpm dev``paperclipai plugin install <absolute-path>``paperclipai plugin list`) and reload semantics.
Minimum verification from the generated plugin folder:
```bash
pnpm install
pnpm typecheck
pnpm test
pnpm build
```
## Supported alpha surface
Worker:
- config
- events
- jobs
- launchers
- http
- secrets
- activity
- state
- database namespace via `ctx.db`
- scoped JSON API routes declared with `apiRoutes`
- entities
- projects, project workspaces, and plugin-managed projects
- companies
- issues, comments, namespaced `plugin:<pluginKey>` origins, blocker relations, checkout assertions, assignment wakeups, and orchestration summaries
- agents, plugin-managed agents, and agent sessions
- plugin-managed routines
- plugin-managed skills
- goals
- data/actions
- streams
- tools
- metrics
- logger
### Plugin database declarations
First-party or otherwise trusted orchestration plugins can declare:
```ts
database: {
migrationsDir: "migrations",
coreReadTables: ["issues"],
}
```
Required capabilities are `database.namespace.migrate` and
`database.namespace.read`; add `database.namespace.write` for runtime mutations.
The host derives `ctx.db.namespace`, runs SQL files in filename order before the
worker starts, records checksums in `plugin_migrations`, and rejects changed
already-applied migrations.
Migration SQL may create or alter objects only inside `ctx.db.namespace`. It may
reference whitelisted `public` core tables for foreign keys or read-only views,
but may not mutate/alter/drop/truncate public tables, create extensions,
triggers, untrusted languages, or runtime multi-statement SQL. Runtime
`ctx.db.query()` is restricted to `SELECT`; runtime `ctx.db.execute()` is
restricted to namespace-local `INSERT`, `UPDATE`, and `DELETE`.
### Scoped plugin API routes
Plugins can expose JSON-only routes under their own namespace:
```ts
apiRoutes: [
{
routeKey: "initialize",
method: "POST",
path: "/issues/:issueId/smoke",
auth: "board-or-agent",
capability: "api.routes.register",
checkoutPolicy: "required-for-agent-in-progress",
companyResolution: { from: "issue", param: "issueId" },
},
]
```
The host resolves the plugin, checks that it is ready, enforces
`api.routes.register`, matches the declared method/path, resolves company access,
and applies checkout policy before dispatching to the worker's `onApiRequest`
handler. The worker receives sanitized headers, route params, query, parsed JSON
body, actor context, and company id. Do not use plugin routes to claim core
paths; they always remain under `/api/plugins/:pluginId/api/*`.
## Managed Paperclip resources
Plugins that provide durable Paperclip business objects should declare them in
the manifest and let the host create or relink the actual records per company.
Do this for plugin-owned agents, projects, routines, and skills.
Do not hide long-lived work behind private plugin state when it should be visible
to the board, scoped to a company, audited, budgeted, and assigned like normal
Paperclip work.
Content-oriented plugins, such as LLM Wiki-style ingestion or durable knowledge
systems, should use the same pattern: managed projects for operation issues,
managed agents plus managed skills for LLM work, and managed routines for
ingest, lint, refresh, or maintenance runs.
Use these surfaces:
- Managed agents: declare top-level `agents[]` and require
`agents.managed`. Use this when the plugin provides a named worker the board
should see in the org, budget, pause, invoke, and inspect. Managed agents are
normal Paperclip agents with plugin ownership metadata, not background plugin
workers.
- Managed projects: declare top-level `projects[]` and require
`projects.managed`. Use this when the plugin needs a stable company-scoped
project for its issues, routines, or workspace-oriented UI. Keep plugin work
in a project instead of scattering generated issues across unrelated projects.
- Managed routines: declare top-level `routines[]` and require
`routines.managed`. Use this for scheduled, webhook, or manually triggered
jobs that should create visible Paperclip issues. Prefer managed routines over
plugin `jobs[]` for recurring business work; plugin jobs are for plugin
runtime maintenance that does not need a board-visible task trail.
- Managed skills: declare top-level `skills[]` and require `skills.managed`.
Use this for reusable plugin capabilities that should be surfaced to operators and
synced into Paperclip managed agents.
Managed resources are resolved by stable plugin keys, not hardcoded database
ids. In a worker action or data handler, call `ctx.agents.managed.reconcile()`,
`ctx.projects.managed.reconcile()`, `ctx.routines.managed.reconcile()`, and
`ctx.skills.managed.reconcile()` for
the current `companyId`. `reconcile()` creates the missing resource, relinks a
recoverable binding, or returns the existing resource. `reset()` reapplies the
manifest defaults when the operator wants to restore the plugin's suggested
configuration.
Declare dependencies between managed resources with refs. A routine can point
at a managed agent through `assigneeRef` and at a managed project through
`projectRef`. Reconcile the referenced agent and project before reconciling the
routine; if a ref is still missing, the routine resolution reports
`missing_refs` instead of guessing.
```ts
import type { PaperclipPluginManifestV1 } from "@paperclipai/plugin-sdk";
const manifest: PaperclipPluginManifestV1 = {
id: "example.research-plugin",
apiVersion: 1,
version: "0.1.0",
displayName: "Research Plugin",
description: "Creates a managed research agent and scheduled research routine.",
author: "Example",
categories: ["automation"],
capabilities: [
"agents.managed",
"projects.managed",
"routines.managed",
"skills.managed",
"instance.settings.register",
],
entrypoints: {
worker: "./dist/worker.js",
ui: "./dist/ui",
},
agents: [
{
agentKey: "researcher",
displayName: "Researcher",
role: "research",
title: "Research Agent",
capabilities: "Runs recurring research briefs for this company.",
adapterPreference: ["codex_local", "claude_local", "process"],
instructions: {
content: "Follow the Paperclip heartbeat and produce concise research briefs.",
},
},
],
projects: [
{
projectKey: "research",
displayName: "Research",
description: "Recurring research work created by the Research Plugin.",
status: "in_progress",
},
],
routines: [
{
routineKey: "weekly-brief",
title: "Weekly research brief",
description: "Create a short research brief for the board.",
assigneeRef: { resourceKind: "agent", resourceKey: "researcher" },
projectRef: { resourceKind: "project", resourceKey: "research" },
priority: "medium",
triggers: [
{
kind: "schedule",
label: "Monday morning",
cronExpression: "0 9 * * 1",
timezone: "America/Chicago",
enabled: false,
},
],
},
],
skills: [
{
skillKey: "weekly-brief-skills",
displayName: "Weekly Briefer",
description: "Reusable skill for the managed research workflow.",
},
],
ui: {
slots: [
{
type: "settingsPage",
id: "settings",
displayName: "Research",
exportName: "SettingsPage",
},
],
},
};
export default manifest;
```
In the worker, expose a small setup action or settings-page action that
reconciles the resources for the selected company:
```ts
import { definePlugin } from "@paperclipai/plugin-sdk";
export default definePlugin({
setup(ctx) {
ctx.actions.register("setup-company", async (params) => {
const companyId = String(params.companyId ?? "");
if (!companyId) throw new Error("companyId is required");
const project = await ctx.projects.managed.reconcile("research", companyId);
const agent = await ctx.agents.managed.reconcile("researcher", companyId);
const routine = await ctx.routines.managed.reconcile("weekly-brief", companyId);
const skill = await ctx.skills.managed.reconcile("weekly-brief-skills", companyId);
return { project, agent, routine, skill };
});
},
});
```
Authoring rules:
- Keep keys stable once published. Renaming `agentKey`, `projectKey`,
`routineKey`, or `skillKey` creates a new managed resource from the host's
point of view.
- Use managed agents for plugin-provided labor. Use `ctx.agents.invoke()` or
`ctx.agents.sessions` only after you have a real agent id, either selected by
the operator or resolved from `ctx.agents.managed`.
- Use managed routines for recurring or externally triggered work that should
produce tasks. Schedule, webhook, and API triggers are visible routine
triggers, and each run has the normal Paperclip issue/audit trail.
- Use managed skills for reusable operator-visible capabilities that are shared
by managed agents. Reconcile skill declarations by `skillKey` and keep the
declared skill markdown and files in sync with agent behavior.
- Use managed projects to keep plugin-generated work organized and to give
project-scoped plugin UI a stable home. For filesystem access inside a
project, still resolve project workspaces through `ctx.projects`.
- Keep defaults conservative. Managed declarations are suggestions owned by the
plugin, but the resulting resources are normal Paperclip records that the
operator can inspect, pause, and adjust.
UI:
- `usePluginData`
- `usePluginAction`
- `usePluginStream`
- `usePluginToast`
- `useHostContext`
- typed slot props from `@paperclipai/plugin-sdk/ui`
Mount surfaces currently wired in the host include:
- `page`
- `settingsPage`
- `dashboardWidget`
- `sidebar`
- `routeSidebar`
- `sidebarPanel`
- `detailTab`
- `taskDetailView`
- `projectSidebarItem`
- `globalToolbarButton`
- `toolbarButton`
- `contextMenuItem`
- `commentAnnotation`
- `commentContextMenuItem`
## Shared host components
Use shared components from `@paperclipai/plugin-sdk/ui` when the plugin needs a
Paperclip-native control. The host owns the implementation, so plugins inherit
the board's current styling, ordering, recent selections, and dark-mode behavior
without importing `ui/src` internals.
Prefer shared components for common Paperclip UX patterns to reduce drift and
deprecation risk, especially for task/assignment flows and routine or sidebar-like
plugin screens.
Currently exposed components include:
- `MarkdownBlock` and `MarkdownEditor` for rendered and editable markdown.
- `FileTree` for serializable file and directory trees.
- `IssuesList` for a native company-scoped issue table.
- `AssigneePicker` for the same agent/user selector used in the new issue pane.
Use the controlled `value` format `agent:<id>`, `user:<id>`, or `""`.
- `ProjectPicker` for the same project selector used in the new issue pane.
Use the controlled project id value, or `""` for no project.
- `ManagedRoutinesList` for plugin-owned routine settings pages.
```tsx
import { AssigneePicker, ProjectPicker } from "@paperclipai/plugin-sdk/ui";
export function PluginAssignmentControls({ companyId }: { companyId: string }) {
const [assignee, setAssignee] = useState("");
const [projectId, setProjectId] = useState("");
return (
<>
<AssigneePicker
companyId={companyId}
value={assignee}
onChange={(value) => setAssignee(value)}
/>
<ProjectPicker
companyId={companyId}
value={projectId}
onChange={setProjectId}
/>
</>
);
}
```
## File and path UI
Plugin UI often needs to render a file tree, accept a folder path, or browse a
project workspace. There are three different surfaces for that, and they map to
different trust and data-flow boundaries. Pick the surface that matches the
data the plugin actually has.
### When to use the shared `FileTree`
Use `FileTree` from `@paperclipai/plugin-sdk/ui` whenever the plugin only needs
to render a serializable file/directory list and react to selection or
expand/collapse. The host owns the implementation, so plugin UI inherits the
board's icons, indent, focus ring, and dark-mode styling without importing host
internals.
```tsx
import {
FileTree,
type FileTreeNode,
} from "@paperclipai/plugin-sdk/ui";
const nodes: FileTreeNode[] = [
{ name: "AGENTS.md", path: "AGENTS.md", kind: "file", children: [] },
{
name: "wiki",
path: "wiki",
kind: "dir",
children: [
{ name: "index.md", path: "wiki/index.md", kind: "file", children: [] },
],
},
];
export function WikiTree() {
const [expanded, setExpanded] = useState<Set<string>>(() => new Set(["wiki"]));
const [selected, setSelected] = useState<string | null>(null);
return (
<FileTree
nodes={nodes}
selectedFile={selected}
expandedPaths={expanded}
onSelectFile={(path) => setSelected(path)}
onToggleDir={(path) =>
setExpanded((current) => {
const next = new Set(current);
next.has(path) ? next.delete(path) : next.add(path);
return next;
})
}
/>
);
}
```
Good fits:
- LLM Wiki page navigation in `packages/plugins/plugin-llm-wiki` builds a
`FileTreeNode[]` from worker query results and renders it through `FileTree`.
- The example `plugin-file-browser-example` lazily fetches a directory's
children through a `loadFileList` action when `onToggleDir` fires, then
merges the children into the local tree state — letting the shared component
handle rendering and selection.
Boundary rules:
- Keep the prop surface serializable (`nodes`, `expandedPaths`, `checkedPaths`,
`fileBadges`, `fileTones`). Do not pass arbitrary render functions across the
plugin/host boundary in v1; the supported escape hatches are
`fileBadges` (status pill keyed by path) and `fileTones` (row tone keyed by
path).
- Do not import the host's `FileTree.tsx` or any `ui/src/*` module. The SDK
declaration is the only supported import path for plugin UI.
- The shared `FileTree` is for rendering and selection. Plugin-specific editors,
ingest flows, query forms, and lint runs stay inside the plugin and do not
belong as `FileTree` props.
### When to declare `localFolders`
When the plugin needs operator-configured filesystem roots — typically for
trusted local plugins like wiki tooling — declare `localFolders[]` on the
manifest and add the `local.folders` capability. The host renders a settings
surface for the operator to set the absolute path, validates the path
server-side (containment, symlinks, required files/directories), and exposes
`ctx.localFolders.readText()` and `ctx.localFolders.writeTextAtomic()` in the
worker.
```ts
export const manifest = {
capabilities: ["local.folders"],
localFolders: [
{
folderKey: "content-root",
displayName: "Content root",
access: "readWrite",
requiredDirectories: ["sources", "pages"],
requiredFiles: ["schema.md"],
},
],
};
```
Use this when:
- The data lives outside any project workspace.
- Reads and writes need company-scoped configuration.
- The operator picks the path once in plugin settings and the worker resolves
files relative to that root.
Do not use `localFolders` to grant the UI direct browser-side access to the
filesystem — there is no such capability. The browser still goes through the
worker via `getData` / `performAction`, and the worker only exposes paths it
chose to expose.
### When to keep worker-mediated project workspace browsing
When the data lives inside an existing project workspace, keep the browsing
flow worker-mediated:
- The worker uses `ctx.projects.listWorkspaces()` to resolve the workspace
path, then reads its filesystem with normal Node APIs.
- The plugin UI calls a `getData` handler for the root listing and an action
for lazy children, then renders them through `FileTree`.
- The worker is the only side that touches the disk. The browser receives a
serializable tree and never sees raw absolute paths it can replay.
The example `plugin-file-browser-example` is the reference for this pattern:
the worker registers `fileList` (data) and `loadFileList` (action) over the
same handler, and the UI uses the action for on-toggle directory loading so the
shared `FileTree` stays the rendering surface.
### Mixing surfaces
A single plugin can use more than one of these. The LLM Wiki uses
`localFolders` for its content root, then renders the resulting page list
through `FileTree`. The file browser example uses `ctx.projects.listWorkspaces`
to pick a workspace and renders its on-disk tree through `FileTree` with lazy
loading. Pick the boundary per data source, not per plugin.
## Company routes
Plugins may declare a `page` slot with `routePath` to own a company route like:
```text
/:companyPrefix/<routePath>
```
Rules:
- `routePath` must be a single lowercase slug
- it cannot collide with reserved host routes
- it cannot duplicate another installed plugin page route
## Publishing guidance
- Use npm packages as the deployment artifact.
- Treat repo-local example installs as a development workflow only.
- Prefer keeping plugin UI self-contained inside the package.
- Do not rely on host design-system components or undocumented app internals.
- GitHub repository installs are not a first-class workflow today. For local development, use a checked-out local path. For production, publish to npm or a private npm-compatible registry.
## Verification before handoff
At minimum:
```bash
pnpm --filter <your-plugin-package> typecheck
pnpm --filter <your-plugin-package> test
pnpm --filter <your-plugin-package> build
```
If you changed host integration too, also run:
```bash
pnpm -r typecheck
pnpm test:run
pnpm build
```