Blog
Repo readiness, execution governance, and AI agent notes.
Browse product notes, engineering notes, field notes, and release essays about contract-first onboarding, CI alignment, and agent-safe repository operations.
Pressure-testing Ota on Strapi: structured Yarn hydration and truthful contributor verification
How Strapi proved a strong current Ota contributor-readiness shape: structured Yarn hydration, aggregate verification, command-owned task bodies, and contract-driven CI install truth.
AGENTS.md Is Not Enough for Safe AI Agent Execution
AGENTS.md can guide an AI coding agent, but it cannot by itself make execution safe, verifiable, or reviewable. Repos also need declared safe commands, canonical verification paths, and receipts that show what actually ran.
Ota v1.6.22 Now available
Ota v1.6.22 expands execution governance across workspace orchestration, structured setup, Compose ownership, workflow instances, and semantic contract evidence.
npm test passed. Ota still caught missing repo setup truth.
A passing `npm test` run does not prove a repo is ready. This technical demo shows how Ota catches missing env, service, generated-file, and workflow setup truth that unit tests alone never prove.
Pressure-testing Ota on Backstage: repo-managed tool probes, Yarn 4 hydration, and Docker-backed contributor proof
How Backstage forced Ota to tighten repo-managed release-asset tool probing, prove a narrow Yarn 4 contributor slice honestly, and keep Docker-backed runtime ownership explicit instead of hiding it in shell glue.
Your GitHub Repository Isn't Ready for New Contributors: A Practical Onboarding Checklist
Most onboarding advice focuses on documentation. The harder problem is making a repository executable, verifiable, and governable from the first command.
How Ota Explains Contract Drift Against New Failures
Ota can now archive semantic contract truth, diff normalized assumptions, and explain whether new blockers are likely related to contract drift without pretending every failure has one certain cause.
Pressure-testing Ota on Outline: keeping lean verification truthful in a service-heavy repo
How Outline helped prove that Ota’s newer structured dependency hydration, aggregate verification, and workflow intent surfaces can keep default verification honest in a service-heavy Node repo without pretending every path should be part of the default proof lane.