# DanceLessonsCoach - AI Agent Documentation This file documents the AI agents, tools, and development workflow for the DanceLessonsCoach project. ## 🎯 Project Overview **DanceLessonsCoach** is a Go-based web service with CLI capabilities, featuring: - RESTful JSON API with Chi router - High-performance Zerolog logging - Interface-based architecture - Context-aware services - Comprehensive testing ## πŸ“‹ Development Timeline ### Phase 1: Foundation (Completed βœ…) - Go 1.26.1 environment setup - Project structure with `cmd/` and `pkg/` directories - Core Greet service implementation - CLI interface - Unit tests ### Phase 2: Web API (Completed βœ…) - Chi router integration - Versioned API endpoints (`/api/v1`) - Health endpoint (`/api/health`) - JSON responses with proper headers ### Phase 3: Logging & Architecture (Completed βœ…) - Zerolog integration with Trace level - Context-aware logging - Interface-based design patterns - Dependency injection ### Phase 4: Documentation & Testing (Completed βœ…) - Comprehensive AGENTS.md - README.md with usage instructions - Server management guide - API endpoint documentation ### Phase 5: Configuration Management (Completed βœ…) - Viper integration for configuration - Environment variable support with DLC_ prefix - Customizable server host/port - Configurable shutdown timeout - Configuration validation and logging - Example configuration file ## πŸ› οΈ Tools & Technologies | Component | Technology | Version | |-----------|------------|---------| | Language | Go | 1.26.1 | | Router | Chi | v5.2.5 | | Logging | Zerolog | v1.35.0 | | Configuration | Viper | v1.21.0 | | Testing | Standard Library | - | | Dependency Management | Go Modules | - | ## πŸ—ΊοΈ Project Structure ``` DanceLessonsCoach/ β”œβ”€β”€ cmd/ β”‚ β”œβ”€β”€ greet/ # CLI application β”‚ β”‚ └── main.go β”‚ └── server/ # Web server β”‚ └── main.go β”œβ”€β”€ pkg/ β”‚ β”œβ”€β”€ config/ # Configuration management β”‚ β”‚ └── config.go # Viper-based config β”‚ β”œβ”€β”€ greet/ # Core domain logic β”‚ β”‚ β”œβ”€β”€ api_v1.go # API handlers β”‚ β”‚ β”œβ”€β”€ greet.go # Service implementation β”‚ β”‚ └── greet_test.go # Unit tests β”‚ └── server/ # HTTP server β”‚ └── server.go β”œβ”€β”€ go.mod # Dependencies β”œβ”€β”€ go.sum # Dependency checksums β”œβ”€β”€ config.example.yaml # Configuration template β”œβ”€β”€ README.md # User documentation β”œβ”€β”€ AGENTS.md # This file └── .gitignore # Ignore patterns ``` ## πŸš€ Server Management ### Using the Server Control Script A convenient shell script is provided for managing the server lifecycle: ```bash # Navigate to project directory cd /Users/gabrielradureau/Work/Vibe/DanceLessonsCoach # Start the server ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Check server status ./scripts/start-server.sh status # Test API endpoints ./scripts/start-server.sh test # View server logs ./scripts/start-server.sh logs # Stop the server ./scripts/start-server.sh stop ``` **Server Control Script Commands:** - `start` - Start the server in background with proper logging - `stop` - Stop the server gracefully - `restart` - Restart the server - `status` - Check if server is running - `logs` - Show recent server logs - `test` - Test all API endpoints ### Manual Server Management If you prefer manual control: ```bash # Navigate to project directory cd /Users/gabrielradureau/Work/Vibe/DanceLessonsCoach # Run server in background using control script ./scripts/start-server.sh start ``` **Expected output:** ``` Server running on :8080 [INF] Starting HTTP server on :8080 [TRC] Registering greet routes [TRC] Greet routes registered ``` **Features:** - Context-aware server initialization - Graceful shutdown handling - Signal-based termination (SIGINT, SIGTERM) - 30-second shutdown timeout - Proper resource cleanup ### Configuration Management The server supports flexible configuration through environment variables with the `DLC_` prefix: **Available Configuration Options:** | Option | Environment Variable | Default Value | Description | |--------|---------------------|---------------|-------------| | Host | `DLC_SERVER_HOST` | `0.0.0.0` | Server bind address | | Port | `DLC_SERVER_PORT` | `8080` | Server listening port | | Shutdown Timeout | `DLC_SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT` | `30s` | Graceful shutdown timeout | | JSON Logging | `DLC_LOGGING_JSON` | `false` | Enable JSON format logging | | Log Output | `DLC_LOGGING_OUTPUT` | `""` | Log output file path (empty for stderr) | **Usage Examples:** ```bash # Custom port export DLC_SERVER_PORT=9090 ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Custom host and port export DLC_SERVER_HOST="127.0.0.1" export DLC_SERVER_PORT=8081 ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Custom shutdown timeout export DLC_SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT=45s ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Enable JSON logging export DLC_LOGGING_JSON=true ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Log to file export DLC_LOGGING_OUTPUT="server.log" ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Combined: JSON logging to file export DLC_LOGGING_JSON=true export DLC_LOGGING_OUTPUT="server.json.log" ./scripts/start-server.sh start ``` **Configuration File Support:** A `config.example.yaml` file is provided as a template. By default, the application looks for `config.yaml` in the current working directory. To specify a custom config file path, set the `DLC_CONFIG_FILE` environment variable: ```bash DLC_CONFIG_FILE="/path/to/config.yaml" go run ./cmd/server ``` Example `config.yaml`: ```yaml server: host: "0.0.0.0" port: 8080 shutdown: timeout: 30s logging: json: false ``` **Configuration Loading:** - **File-based configuration** takes highest precedence - **Environment variables** override defaults but are overridden by config file - **Default values** are used when no other configuration is provided - All configuration is validated on startup - Invalid configurations cause server startup failure - Configuration values and source are logged at startup **Verification:** ```bash # Test with custom configuration DLC_SERVER_PORT=9090 DLC_SERVER_HOST="127.0.0.1" ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Verify it's running on the custom port curl http://127.0.0.1:9090/api/health # Expected: {"status":"healthy"} ``` ### Checking Server Status ```bash # Check health endpoint curl -s http://localhost:8080/api/health # Check readiness endpoint curl -s http://localhost:8080/api/ready ``` **Expected responses:** - Health: `{"status":"healthy"}` - Readiness (normal): `{"ready":true}` - Readiness (during shutdown): `{"ready":false}` with HTTP 503 **Endpoint Differences:** - **Health endpoint** (`/api/health`): Indicates if the application is running and functional - **Readiness endpoint** (`/api/ready`): Indicates if the application is ready to accept traffic **Use Cases:** - **Health**: Used by load balancers to check if the app is alive - **Readiness**: Used by Kubernetes/service meshes to determine if the app can accept new requests **During Graceful Shutdown:** - Health endpoint continues to return `{"status":"healthy"}` - Readiness endpoint returns `{"ready":false}` with HTTP 503 Service Unavailable - This allows existing requests to complete while preventing new requests ### Stopping the Server To stop the server gracefully: ```bash # Send SIGTERM for graceful shutdown kill -TERM $(lsof -ti :8080) # Or send SIGINT (Ctrl+C equivalent) pkill -INT -f "go run" ``` **Graceful shutdown process:** 1. Server receives termination signal 2. Logs shutdown message 3. Stops accepting new connections 4. Waits up to 30 seconds for active requests to complete 5. Closes all connections cleanly 6. Exits with proper cleanup For force stop (if graceful shutdown hangs): ```bash kill -9 $(lsof -ti :8080) ``` **Verification:** ```bash curl -s http://localhost:8080/api/health # Should return connection refused ``` ## 🌐 API Endpoints ### Base URL ``` http://localhost:8080 ``` ### Health Check ```http GET /api/health ``` **Response:** ```json {"status":"healthy"} ``` ### Readiness Check ```http GET /api/ready ``` **Responses:** - Normal operation: `{"ready":true}` (HTTP 200) - During shutdown: `{"ready":false}` (HTTP 503 Service Unavailable) **Purpose:** Indicates whether the server is ready to accept new requests. Returns false during graceful shutdown to allow existing requests to complete while preventing new ones. ### Greet Service ```http GET /api/v1/greet/ GET /api/v1/greet/{name} ``` **Examples:** ```bash # Default greeting curl http://localhost:8080/api/v1/greet/ # Response: {"message":"Hello world!"} # Personalized greeting curl http://localhost:8080/api/v1/greet/John # Response: {"message":"Hello John!"} # Another example curl http://localhost:8080/api/v1/greet/Alice # Response: {"message":"Hello Alice!"} ``` ## πŸ”§ Development Workflow ### 1. Check Server Status ```bash curl -s http://localhost:8080/api/health ``` ### 2. Start Development Server ```bash cd /Users/gabrielradureau/Work/Vibe/DanceLessonsCoach ./scripts/start-server.sh start ``` ### 3. Test API Endpoints ```bash # Test all endpoints as shown above curl http://localhost:8080/api/v1/greet/YourName ``` ### 4. Run Tests ```bash # Run all tests go test ./... # Run specific package go test ./pkg/greet/ ``` ### 5. Build Binaries The project uses a build script to compile binaries into the `bin/` directory: ```bash # Build both server and greet binaries ./scripts/build.sh # This creates: # - ./bin/server - The web server binary # - ./bin/greet - The CLI greeting tool ``` **Binary Usage:** ```bash # Run the server ./bin/server # Use the greet CLI ./bin/greet # Output: Hello world! ./bin/greet John # Output: Hello John! ``` **The `bin/` directory is gitignored** to prevent binary files from being committed to the repository. ### 6. Make Changes - Edit source files in `pkg/` or `cmd/` - Follow existing patterns and interfaces - Add tests for new functionality ### 7. Stop and Restart ```bash ./scripts/start-server.sh restart ``` ## πŸ§ͺ Testing ### Unit Tests ```bash # Run all tests go test ./... # Run with verbose output go test -v ./... # Run specific test go test ./pkg/greet/ -run TestService_Greet ``` ### CLI Testing ```bash # Default greeting go run ./cmd/greet # Output: Hello world! # Personalized greeting go run ./cmd/greet John # Output: Hello John! ``` ### API Testing ```bash # Health check curl http://localhost:8080/api/health # Greet endpoints curl http://localhost:8080/api/v1/greet/John curl http://localhost:8080/api/v1/greet/ ``` ## πŸ“ Architecture Decisions ### Interface-Based Design ```go type Greeter interface { Greet(ctx context.Context, name string) string } ``` **Benefits:** - Easy mocking for tests - Dependency injection - Multiple implementations - Clear contracts ### Context-Aware Services ```go func (s *Service) Greet(ctx context.Context, name string) string { log.Trace().Ctx(ctx).Str("name", name).Msg("Greet function called") // ... } ``` **Benefits:** - Request tracing - Cancellation support - Deadline propagation - Metadata passing ### Server Context Management ```go // Root context with cancellation ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(context.Background()) defer cancel() // Server context with graceful shutdown serverCtx, serverStop := context.WithCancel(ctx) // HTTP server with context-aware shutdown srv := &http.Server{ Addr: ":8080", Handler: server.Router(), } // Graceful shutdown with timeout shutdownCtx, shutdownCancel := context.WithTimeout( context.Background(), 30*time.Second ) defer shutdownCancel() if err := srv.Shutdown(shutdownCtx); err != nil { log.Error().Err(err).Msg("Server shutdown failed") } ``` **Benefits:** - Graceful shutdown handling - Signal-based termination (SIGINT, SIGTERM) - 30-second timeout for active connections - Proper resource cleanup - Context propagation throughout server lifecycle ### Zerolog Logging ```go zerolog.SetGlobalLevel(zerolog.TraceLevel) log.Logger = log.Output(zerolog.ConsoleWriter{Out: os.Stderr}) ``` **Benefits:** - High performance - Structured logging - Trace level detail - Color output ### Versioned API ```go router.Route("/api/v1", func(r chi.Router) { // v1 endpoints }) ``` **Benefits:** - Backward compatibility - Clear versioning - Easy migration - Parallel versions ## πŸ” Troubleshooting ### Port Already in Use ```bash # Find and kill process using port 8080 kill -TERM $(lsof -ti :8080) ``` ### Server Not Responding ```bash # Check if running curl -s http://localhost:8080/api/health # Restart server using control script ./scripts/start-server.sh restart ``` ### Dependency Issues ```bash # Clean and rebuild go mod tidy go build ./... ``` ### Tests Failing ```bash # Run with verbose output go test -v ./... # Check specific test go test ./pkg/greet/ -run TestName ``` ## πŸ“š Code Examples ### Adding New API Endpoint ```go // 1. Add to interface func (h *apiV1GreetHandler) RegisterRoutes(router chi.Router) { router.Get("/", h.handleGreetQuery) router.Get("/{name}", h.handleGreetPath) router.Post("/custom", h.handleCustomGreet) // New endpoint } // 2. Implement handler func (h *apiV1GreetHandler) handleCustomGreet(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { // Parse request // Call service // Return JSON response } ``` ### Adding Logging ```go // Trace level logging log.Trace().Ctx(ctx).Str("key", "value").Msg("message") // Info level log.Info().Msg("Important event") // Error level log.Error().Err(err).Msg("Error occurred") ``` ### Using Context ```go // Pass context through calls func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { result := service.Greet(r.Context(), "John") // ... } // Create context with values ctx := context.WithValue(r.Context(), "key", "value") // Create context with timeout ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(r.Context(), 5*time.Second) defer cancel() ``` ## πŸŽ“ Best Practices ### Code Organization - Keep handlers thin, move logic to services - Use interfaces for dependencies - Separate route registration from handlers - Group related functionality ### Error Handling - Return proper HTTP status codes - Log errors with context - Don't expose internal errors to clients - Use structured error responses ### Performance - Use Zerolog's Trace level sparingly in production - Avoid allocations in hot paths - Use context timeouts for external calls - Batch database operations ### Testing - Test interfaces, not implementations - Use table-driven tests - Test error cases - Mock dependencies ## πŸ“ˆ Future Enhancements ### Potential Features - [ ] Configuration management - [ ] Database integration - [ ] Authentication/Authorization - [ ] Rate limiting - [ ] Metrics and monitoring - [ ] Docker containerization - [ ] CI/CD pipeline ### Architectural Improvements - [ ] Request validation middleware - [ ] OpenAPI/Swagger documentation - [ ] Graceful shutdown - [ ] Configuration hot reload - [ ] Circuit breakers ## πŸ“ Changelog ### 2026-04-03 - Current Version - βœ… Zerolog integration with Trace level - βœ… Context-aware Greet service - βœ… Fixed route structure `/api/v1/greet/*` - βœ… Comprehensive server management guide - βœ… Verified all API endpoints working - βœ… Updated documentation ### 2026-04-02 - Web API Implementation - βœ… Chi router integration - βœ… Versioned API endpoints - βœ… JSON responses - βœ… Health endpoint - βœ… Interface-based design ### 2026-04-01 - Foundation - βœ… Go 1.26.1 setup - βœ… Project structure - βœ… Core Greet service - βœ… CLI interface - βœ… Unit tests ## πŸ€– AI Agent Information **Agent:** Mistral Vibe CLI Agent **Version:** devstral-2 **Role:** Development Assistant **Capabilities:** - Code generation and refactoring - Test creation - Documentation - Architecture guidance - Best practices enforcement ## πŸ“‹ Quick Reference ### Common Commands ```bash # Start server ./scripts/start-server.sh start # Test API curl http://localhost:8080/api/v1/greet/John # Run tests go test ./... # Stop server pkill -f "go" # CLI usage go run ./cmd/greet John ``` ### Project Structure ``` cmd/ # Entry points pkg/ # Core logic greet/ # Domain services server/ # HTTP server go.mod # Dependencies README.md # User docs AGENTS.md # This file ``` ### Key Interfaces ```go type Greeter interface { Greet(ctx context.Context, name string) string } type ApiV1Greet interface { RegisterRoutes(router chi.Router) } ``` ## πŸ“ Commit Conventions **Follow Conventional Commits for clear communication:** **Core Types:** - `feat`: New user-facing feature - `fix`: Bug fix for users - `docs`: Documentation changes - `style`: Code formatting (no functional change) - `refactor`: Code structure changes - `perf`: Performance improvements - `test`: Test additions/corrections - `chore`: Build process, dependencies, maintenance **Examples:** ```bash # New feature git commit -m "feat: add user authentication" # Bug fix git commit -m "fix: prevent race condition in cache" # Documentation git commit -m "docs: add API endpoint documentation" # Maintenance git commit -m "chore: update dependencies" # Refactoring git commit -m "refactor: extract user service from controller" ``` **Optional Emoji Support:** - Use [gitmoji](https://gitmoji.dev) for visual commit messages - Example: `git commit -m "✨ feat: add new API endpoint"` **Common Gitmoji Reference:** | Emoji | Code | Type | Description | |-------|------|------|-------------| | ✨ | `:sparkles:` | feat | New feature | | πŸ› | `:bug:` | fix | Bug fix | | πŸ“ | `:memo:` | docs | Documentation | | 🎨 | `:art:` | style | Code formatting | | πŸ”§ | `:wrench:` | chore | Build/config changes | | ♻️ | `:recycle:` | refactor | Code refactoring | | πŸš€ | `:rocket:` | perf | Performance improvements | | πŸ”’ | `:lock:` | security | Security fixes | | πŸ“¦ | `:package:` | dependencies | Dependency changes | | πŸ”₯ | `:fire:` | remove | Remove code/files | | 🐧 | `:penguin:` | linux | Linux-specific changes | | 🍎 | `:apple:` | macos | macOS-specific changes | | πŸͺŸ | `:window:` | windows | Windows-specific changes | | πŸ€– | `:robot:` | ci | CI/CD changes | | πŸ§ͺ | `:test_tube:` | test | Tests | | πŸ“ˆ | `:chart_with_upwards_trend:` | analytics | Analytics/SEO | | 🌐 | `:globe_with_meridians:` | i18n | Internationalization | | ⚑ | `:zap:` | performance | Performance improvements | **Benefits:** - Clear communication of change types - Better git history readability - Tool compatibility (changelog generators, etc.) - Consistent project history - Visual scanning of commit history ## πŸ“ž Support For issues or questions: 1. Check this documentation 2. Review test cases 3. Examine existing implementations 4. Consult Go and Chi documentation 5. Ask the AI agent for guidance This documentation provides a complete guide to developing, testing, and maintaining the DanceLessonsCoach project using the established patterns and best practices.