3.3 KiB
3.3 KiB
Existing Project Agent Workflow
Use this file when an existing repository should become easier for Codex agents to maintain.
Objective
Add a Codex-friendly repository baseline without flattening the project's existing structure, README voice, or release process.
Rules
- Preserve existing application code.
- Preserve existing README knowledge.
- Do not rename files or folders unless the project already requires it.
- Do not replace a working CI pipeline wholesale.
- Add missing structure gradually.
- Prefer documenting current reality over inventing a new process.
Steps
1. Inspect First
Run:
git status --short
Read:
README*
package.json / pyproject.toml / Cargo.toml / go.mod / *.csproj
.github/workflows/*
.gitea/workflows/*
docs/*
Identify:
- stack,
- package manager,
- build command,
- test command,
- lint command,
- audit command,
- release artifacts,
- current CI,
- existing release notes or changelog,
- security-sensitive behavior.
2. Add Agent Context
Add AGENTS.md first. Keep it short and factual.
Then add .codex/project.md with:
- project purpose,
- authoritative commands,
- artifact locations,
- release process,
- security constraints.
3. Add Documentation Files
Add only missing files:
SECURITY.md
CHANGELOG.md
docs/security-review.md
docs/release-checklist.md
If equivalent files already exist, update those instead of duplicating them.
4. README Generator Decision
Use README blueprint generation only when it helps.
Use it when:
- README is large enough to benefit from structure,
- project has downloads or release artifacts,
- repeated README updates are expected.
Avoid it when:
- README is tiny,
- project has a strong existing documentation system,
- generator output would erase project-specific style.
If converting:
- Copy the current README content into
blueprint.md. - Add
blueprint.json. - Add a
readmecommand. - Generate
README.md. - Compare the diff carefully.
5. CI Retrofit
If CI already exists:
- add missing audit/check steps,
- keep existing runner labels,
- keep existing artifact names unless they are broken,
- avoid changing deployment behavior.
If CI does not exist:
- add
.gitea/workflows/build.ymlfrom the template, - remove stack-specific steps that do not apply,
- keep publishing disabled until credentials and artifact names are known.
6. Security Review
Fill docs/security-review.md with known facts.
At minimum check for:
eval
dynamic Function
unsafe HTML injection
shell execution
external network calls
file writes
secret persistence
committed .env files
Use the stack-native audit command when possible:
| Stack | Audit command |
|---|---|
| Node | npm audit --omit=dev --audit-level=high |
| Python | pip-audit or uv pip audit |
| Rust | cargo audit |
| Go | govulncheck ./... |
| .NET | dotnet list package --vulnerable |
7. Finish
Before final response:
- run
git diff --check, - run the smallest reliable verification command,
- if using Gitea Actions, check the pushed workflow run; for private
git.wilkensxl.derepositories, use a locally setGITEA_TOKENfor read-only API status checks when available, - list files changed,
- mention any skipped checks,
- do not create a release unless explicitly requested.