This introduces a persisted light/dark appearance setting, maps the desktop shell onto semantic theme tokens, and reworks the highest-traffic chat/settings surfaces so the new dark mode is usable without regressing the original light theme.
The same pass tightens markdown rendering for chat replies by improving inline code, table overflow handling, and safe external-link behavior so dark-mode content stays legible in real conversations.
Constraint: Preserve the existing light theme while adding a user-selectable dark theme in Settings > General
Constraint: Avoid introducing new dependencies for styling or markdown handling
Rejected: Replacing the light palette with a single dual-purpose palette | would risk broad visual regressions across the existing desktop UI
Rejected: Implementing dark mode only for shell chrome | leaves chat markdown, diffs, and permission flows visually broken
Confidence: high
Scope-risk: moderate
Reversibility: clean
Directive: New desktop UI should use semantic theme variables instead of hard-coded color literals so both themes stay aligned
Tested: bun run lint; bun run test; bun run build; browser review of theme switching, provider/permission states, and chat surfaces
Not-tested: Prototype-style pages with remaining hard-coded colors (scheduled/session control mock surfaces) were not fully normalized in this change
- 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>
This folds together the desktop-side fixes needed before broader rollout.
Session resume no longer deadlocks waiting on init, Mermaid and inline image
output render inside chat, task and sub-agent state stay visible during
execution, local build/release paths are safer, and Feishu/Telegram now expose
lightweight mobile commands (/help, /status, /clear) without adding a new
adapter-specific protocol.
Constraint: Desktop releases must publish updater artifacts from non-draft GitHub releases
Constraint: IM commands need short, phone-friendly responses and low operational complexity
Rejected: Add a dedicated IM command API surface | re-used existing slash commands and session/task REST endpoints to keep adapters thin
Rejected: Wait for task_update push events in WebUI | added low-risk polling because the current frontend ignores that event path
Confidence: medium
Scope-risk: broad
Reversibility: clean
Directive: Keep IM command replies terse and mobile-first, and merge local fallback slash commands when server-provided lists are partial
Tested: cd desktop && bun x vitest run src/components/chat/MermaidRenderer.test.tsx src/components/markdown/MarkdownRenderer.test.tsx
Tested: cd desktop && bun x vitest run src/components/chat/composerUtils.test.ts src/pages/ActiveSession.test.tsx src/stores/chatStore.test.ts
Tested: cd desktop && bun run lint
Tested: bun test src/server/__tests__/conversations.test.ts --test-name-pattern "SDK init arrives only after the first user turn" --timeout 60000
Tested: cd adapters && bun test common/ feishu/ telegram/
Tested: cd adapters && bunx tsc --noEmit
Not-tested: Full GitHub Actions release run on all three desktop platforms
Not-tested: Local DMG packaging end-to-end on Apple Silicon
Not-tested: Real Feishu/Telegram device sessions against a live adapter process
Improve the desktop Skills browser so SKILL.md metadata renders cleanly and the settings view uses space like a real document browser. Add coverage for the new detail, markdown, and i18n behavior.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
The desktop chat view flattened Agent tool activity, which made sub-agent work
hard to follow and separated key evidence from the main conversation. This
change threads parent tool linkage through the server bridge and desktop store,
renders dispatched sub-agents as grouped cards with nested tool activity, and
moves long final outputs into a markdown preview dialog so the main transcript
stays readable on narrow layouts.
Constraint: Existing sessions and live websocket events both needed to preserve parent-child relationships
Rejected: Add brand-new subagent websocket event types | unnecessary protocol expansion when parent linkage already existed upstream
Rejected: Inline full sub-agent markdown in the card body | too cramped for narrow desktop chat layouts
Confidence: medium
Scope-risk: moderate
Reversibility: clean
Directive: Keep Agent card summaries compact; route long-form sub-agent output through the preview dialog unless the main chat layout is widened substantially
Tested: cd desktop && bun run test -- MessageList.test.tsx chatStore.test.ts
Tested: cd desktop && bun run lint
Tested: bun test src/server/__tests__/sessions.test.ts -t should\ reconstruct\ parent\ agent\ tool\ linkage\ from\ parentUuid\ chains
Not-tested: Full end-to-end visual verification against live CLI sessions with sub-agent text/thinking nested inline
- highlightAuto was misdetecting plain text (file trees, command output) as
code and applying wrong syntax colors (red keywords, green tags, etc.)
- Now only highlights when language is explicitly specified and known to hljs
- Code blocks without a specified language render as clean plain text
- Line numbers hidden for plain text blocks (only shown for actual code)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <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)