TenantAtlas/apps/platform/.pnpm-store/v10/files/98/a1277c6463fbfeba14123e72ae8e6548b1948a2d0192a055ff39eff40aa9429a0591175252132487e5c04b24e2124d695375a7aeba0e99a12a72eba65f06a5
ahmido 1fec9c6f9d
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feat: compress governance operator outcomes (#253)
## Summary
- introduce surface-aware compressed governance outcomes and reuse the shared truth/explanation seams for operator-first summaries
- apply the compressed outcome hierarchy across baseline, evidence, review, review-pack, canonical review/evidence, and artifact-oriented operation-run surfaces
- expand spec 214 fixtures and Pest coverage, and fix tenant-panel route assertions by generating explicit tenant-panel URLs in the affected Filament tests

## Validation
- `cd apps/platform && ./vendor/bin/sail bin pint --dirty --format agent`
- focused governance compression suite from `specs/214-governance-outcome-compression/quickstart.md` passed (`68` tests, `445` assertions)
- `cd apps/platform && ./vendor/bin/sail artisan test --compact tests/Feature/Filament/InventoryItemResourceTest.php tests/Feature/Filament/BackupSetUiEnforcementTest.php tests/Feature/Filament/RestoreRunUiEnforcementTest.php` passed (`18` tests, `81` assertions)

Co-authored-by: Ahmed Darrazi <ahmed.darrazi@live.de>
Reviewed-on: #253
2026-04-19 12:30:36 +00:00

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# Output Control
concurrently offers a few ways to control a command's output.
## Hiding
A command's outputs (and all its events) can be hidden by using the `--hide` flag.
```bash
$ concurrently --hide 0 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!'
[1] General Kenobi!
[1] echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0
```
## Grouping
It might be useful at times to make sure that the commands outputs are grouped together, while running them in parallel.<br/>
This can be done with the `--group` flag.
```bash
$ concurrently --group 'echo Hello there && sleep 2 && echo General Kenobi!' 'echo hi Star Wars fans'
[0] Hello there
[0] General Kenobi!
[0] echo Hello there && sleep 2 && echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0
[1] hi Star Wars fans
[1] echo hi Star Wars fans exited with code 0
```
## No Colors
When piping concurrently's outputs to another command or file, you might want to force it to not use colors, as these can break the other command's parsing, or reduce the legibility of the output in non-terminal environments.
```bash
$ concurrently -c red,blue --no-color 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!'
```