Desktop sessions were missing a visible request_access approval path and could
mis-detect their own app window as an unapproved frontmost target, which caused
Computer Use clicks to fail even after opening the intended app. On macOS, text
entry was also split across inconsistent clipboard and keystroke paths, making
Electron inputs unreliable for Chinese and short strings.
This change adds a desktop approval bridge over the existing session websocket,
renders a dedicated desktop approval modal, threads the real desktop bundle id
into the Computer Use executor, and switches macOS clipboard typing onto the
native pasteboard plus system paste shortcut path. It also makes tool error
results expandable in the desktop chat UI so frontmost-gate failures are fully
visible during debugging.
Constraint: Desktop sessions run the CLI over the SDK websocket path, so Ink tool JSX dialogs are not visible there
Constraint: macOS IME and Electron text inputs are unreliable with pyautogui.write and generic hotkey synthesis
Rejected: Reuse CLI setToolJSX dialogs in desktop mode | no transport for mid-call Ink UI over the SDK bridge
Rejected: Keep shell pbcopy/pbpaste for clipboard typing | inconsistent with NSPasteboard path and less reliable for Chinese text
Confidence: medium
Scope-risk: moderate
Reversibility: clean
Directive: Keep desktop Computer Use approvals and macOS text-entry behavior on a single bridge/path; avoid reintroducing separate CLI-only and desktop-only codepaths for the same action
Tested: python3 -m unittest runtime/test_helpers.py
Tested: bun test src/utils/computerUse/permissions.test.ts src/server/__tests__/conversation-service.test.ts
Tested: cd desktop && bun run test ComputerUsePermissionModal chatStore
Tested: cd desktop && bun run test chatBlocks
Tested: cd desktop && bun run lint
Not-tested: End-to-end manual Computer Use interaction against a live Electron target app on macOS
This bundles the pending desktop/server team-session fixes with the local adapter recovery changes already in the worktree. The team path now keeps teammate membership stable under concurrent spawns, surfaces real teammate identities in the desktop UI, and allows direct interaction with member transcripts. The adapter changes recover automatically when stale thinking signatures invalidate an existing session.
Constraint: Team config writes can happen concurrently while multiple reviewers spawn in parallel
Constraint: Desktop member views must follow mailbox/transcript semantics rather than hijacking teammate runtime sessions
Rejected: Keep relying on config.json alone for member discovery | in-process teammates can be lost after concurrent writes
Rejected: Open teammate sessionIds as normal desktop sessions | would attach a second CLI instead of the running teammate
Confidence: medium
Scope-risk: moderate
Reversibility: clean
Directive: Preserve locked team-file mutation for any future teammate registration path and keep teammate labels sourced from member names before agent types
Tested: bun test src/server/__tests__/teams.test.ts src/server/__tests__/team-watcher.test.ts
Tested: cd desktop && bun run test --run src/stores/chatStore.test.ts src/pages/ActiveSession.test.tsx
Tested: cd desktop && bun run lint
Tested: cd desktop && bun run build
Not-tested: Manual end-to-end validation against a live Agent Teams run in the desktop app
- security: XSS sanitization with DOMPurify in Markdown/Mermaid/PermissionDialog;
path whitelist in filesystem API; fake keys in test/config files
- perf: fine-grained Zustand selectors in Sidebar/StatusBar/ContentRouter;
50ms throttle on streaming deltas; React.memo + useMemo in MessageList;
useRef for frequent keyboard shortcut state; AbortController 30s timeout
- leaks: WS session TTL timers (5-min cleanup on close); batch splice for
sdkMessages/stderrLines; folderPath validation in cronScheduler
- quality: optimistic update rollback in settingsStore; error state in
providerStore/teamStore; i18n for all hardcoded English strings
- docs: desktop architecture and features docs updated; VitePress nav fixed
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The desktop app now keeps the composer stable while turns are active,
reduces low-signal tool noise in the transcript, restores project context
under the composer after session creation, and relies on the CLI's own
permission requests instead of injecting broader desktop-side Bash asks.
This also brings in the supporting desktop app source tree and the server
routes/session metadata needed for git info, filesystem browsing, session
resume, slash commands, and SDK-backed permission bridging so the UI can
operate as a coherent feature instead of a partial patch.
Constraint: Desktop transcript needs to stay usable during long multi-tool sessions without hiding file-change diffs
Constraint: Permission prompts must mirror CLI behavior closely enough that read-only commands do not get desktop-only prompts
Rejected: Keep rendering Read/Bash bodies inline | too noisy and unlike the intended transcript model
Rejected: Commit only the touched desktop files | would leave the newly introduced desktop app incomplete in git history
Confidence: medium
Scope-risk: broad
Reversibility: messy
Directive: Treat non-writing tools as summary-first transcript events; do not re-expand them by default without validating the UX against long sessions
Tested: cd desktop && bun run lint
Tested: cd desktop && bun run test -- --run
Tested: bun test src/server/__tests__/conversations.test.ts
Not-tested: Manual visual regression against the exact screenshots in a live desktop session
Not-tested: Full root TypeScript check (repository still has unrelated extracted-native parse failures)