Establishes the framework's foundation as a multi-site adoptable platform. ADRs (migrations/adr/): - ADR-001 (ACCEPTED): Asset is the platform contract; Machine retires. Three relationship types (partof, controls, connectedto) with free-text label, position-resolution chain (asset > related > location), hierarchical locations, sibling-bay propagation. - ADR-002 (ACCEPTED): Plugin contract semver via __contract_version__. - ADR-003 (ACCEPTED): Hybrid plugin distribution (in-tree bundled + filesystem-based external). - ADR-004 (ACCEPTED): Per-site instances, not multi-tenant. - ADR-005 (ACCEPTED): Equipment plugin (manufacturing) split from measuringtools plugin (metrology). Subtype-table pattern for protocol data (FOCAS, CLM, MTConnect). - ADR-006 (ACCEPTED): Plugin collector contract via get_collector_schema hook with API-key auth and identity-based upsert. Naming convention v1 (CONTRIBUTING.md): - DB tables/columns: lowercase concatenated, no underscores or dashes - DB-mirrored Python/JS variables match column names exactly; pure code follows host-language convention (PEP 8 / camelCase) - Closed acronym allowlist (universal + shop-floor domain), banned shorthand list with suffix exception (printers_bp etc allowed) - Plain ASCII everywhere: chat, docs, comments, string literals Style enforcement (scripts/check-naming-and-style.sh): - Pre-commit-runnable check script: non-ASCII, banned shorthand, snake_case DB names, snake_case API params in frontend - Fixes 14 violations across 11 files (Unicode arrows, snake_case params, ctx -> canvasContext, res -> response, req -> request_obj) Project state (CLAUDE.md, README.md, frontend/CLAUDE.md): - De-staled CLAUDE.md to reflect actual current state - README unifies DB story (MySQL canonical, SQLite test-only) - frontend/CLAUDE.md points at root convention Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
3.8 KiB
ADR-002: Plugin contract versioning
- Status: ACCEPTED
- Date: 2026-05-08
- Deciders: cproudlock
- Supersedes: none
Context
Once sister sites start writing their own plugins (or pulling community plugins), the framework's plugin contract becomes a public API. Without a versioning story, any change to BasePlugin or the core platform models can silently break installed plugins at remote sites.
The existing BasePlugin and PluginMeta already declare a core_version field (default ">=1.0.0"), but it is not enforced anywhere. The plugin loader does not check it before instantiation.
Decision
The framework adopts semantic versioning for the plugin contract, declared in two places:
- Framework version (
shopdb/__init__.py): a single__contract_version__constant. This is the version of the platform contract as defined in ADR-001. Bumped according to semver:- Major: breaking change to
BasePluginABC,PluginMetaschema, or any model in the platform contract (Asset,AssetType,AssetStatus,AssetRelationship,Vendor,Location,BusinessUnit,Model,OperatingSystem). - Minor: additive change (new optional hook, new field on a contract model with default).
- Patch: bug fix, no contract surface change.
- Major: breaking change to
- Plugin requirement (
plugins/<name>/manifest.json): the existingcore_versionfield, expressed as a semver range (e.g.,">=1.0.0,<2.0.0").
The plugin loader (shopdb/plugins/loader.py) checks core_version against __contract_version__ at load time. Mismatch in dev = re-raise (fail loud). Mismatch in prod = log error, mark plugin as incompatible, exclude from registration.
The __contract_version__ starts at 1.0.0 when ADR-001 is accepted and the Machine retirement migration is complete (whichever comes later). Until then, the framework is pre-1.0; plugins should declare core_version: ">=0.1.0,<1.0.0".
Consequences
Positive
- Sister sites can pin a known-good framework version. They will not be silently broken when the framework is upgraded.
- Plugin authors know what counts as a breaking change because the contract surface is enumerated in ADR-001.
- The loader fails predictably: a mismatched plugin is reported, not silently disabled.
Negative / cost
- Discipline required: every change to the contract surface must be classified (major / minor / patch). Adding a
version-bumpskill (or a check in code review) reduces the chance of mis-classification. __contract_version__becomes a coupling point. Forgetting to bump it after a breaking change means downstream plugins crash silently at runtime instead of failing at install.
Neutral
- Existing plugins (
plugins/printers/, etc.) ship as part of the framework, so theircore_versionis always the current__contract_version__. The discipline matters mostly for external / sister-site plugins.
Alternatives considered
- No versioning, just trust. Works for an in-tree-only world. Fails the moment a sister site ships its own plugin. Rejected.
- Calendar versioning (e.g.,
2026.05.0). Easier to bump, harder to communicate breaking changes. Rejected; semver is the industry standard for library-like contracts. - Per-hook versioning. Each hook has its own version. Too granular; plugins still couple to multiple hooks. Rejected.
Open questions
- When does the framework declare
1.0.0? Tied to ADR-001 (Asset retirement of Machine) and the framework being deemed "ready for sister sites". Best-effort target: end of Phase 5 in the refactor plan. - Should
core_versionaccept commercial-grade ranges (^1.0.0) or stick to PEP 440 / npm-style ranges? Recommend pip-style (>=,<) to match Python ecosystem.
References
shopdb/plugins/base.py(PluginMeta declaration)shopdb/plugins/loader.py(where the version check belongs)- ADR-001 (defines what is in the contract)