This commit introduces a comprehensive Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) system for TenantAtlas. - Implements authentication via Microsoft Entra ID (OIDC). - Manages authorization on a per-Suite-Tenant basis using a table. - Follows a capabilities-first approach, using Gates and Policies. - Includes a break-glass mechanism for platform superadmins. - Adds policies for bootstrapping tenants and managing admin responsibilities.
918 lines
40 KiB
Markdown
918 lines
40 KiB
Markdown
# TenantPilot - Agent Guidelines
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## Context
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TenantPilot is an Intune Management application built with **Laravel** and **Filament**.
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It re-implements and extends key features inspired by the IntuneManagement project,
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with a focus on admin productivity, safe change management, and auditability.
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This repo uses GitHub Spec Kit.
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Primary spec artifacts live in `.specify/`.
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**Sail-first for local development. Dokploy-first for staging/production.**
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## Product Goals
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- Provide **Intune policy version control** (diff, history, rollback).
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- Enable reliable **backup and restore** of Intune configurations.
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- Extend Intune with **admin-focused features** that improve visibility, safety, and velocity.
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- Prioritize **auditability**, **least privilege**, and predictable operations.
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## Scope Reference
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When designing or implementing features, align with:
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- Policy inventory & metadata normalization
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- Change tracking and version snapshots
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- Safe restore flows (dry-run, validation, partial restore)
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- Reporting, dashboards, and operational insights
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- Tenant-scoped RBAC and audit logs
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## Workflow (Spec Kit)
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1. Read `.specify/constitution.md`
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2. For new work: create/update `specs/<NNN>-<slug>/spec.md`
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3. Produce `specs/<NNN>-<slug>/plan.md`
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4. Break into `specs/<NNN>-<slug>/tasks.md`
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5. Implement changes in small PRs
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If requirements change during implementation, update spec/plan before continuing.
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## Architecture Assumptions
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- Backend: Laravel (latest stable)
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- Admin UI: Filament
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- Auth: Microsoft identity integration (Entra ID/Azure AD) when applicable
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- External API: Microsoft Graph for Intune
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Do not assume additional services unless stated in spec.
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---
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## DevOps & Environments
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### Local Development
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- Local dev & testing use **Laravel Sail** (Docker).
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- Prefer Sail commands when referencing setup or running tests.
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- PostgreSQL is used locally via Sail.
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- **Drizzle** is used locally for PostgreSQL tooling (e.g., schema inspection, dev workflows)
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**if configured in the repo**.
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### Repository
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- Repository is hosted on **Gitea**.
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- Do not assume GitHub-specific features (Actions, GH-specific PR automation)
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unless explicitly added.
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- CI suggestions should be compatible with Gitea pipelines or external CI runners.
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### Deployment
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- Deployed via **Dokploy** on a **VPS**.
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- Two environments:
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- **Staging**
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- **Production**
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- Assume container-based deployments.
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- Changes that affect runtime must consider:
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- environment variables
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- database migrations
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- queue/cron workers
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- storage persistence/volumes
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- reverse proxy/SSL likely handled by Dokploy
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### Release & Promotion Rules
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- Staging is the mandatory validation gate for Production.
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- Prefer:
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- feature flags for risky admin operations
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- staged rollout for backup/restore/versioning changes
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- Schema changes must be validated on Staging before Production.
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### Release Safety
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- For schema changes:
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- provide safe, incremental migrations
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- avoid long locks
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- document rollback/forward steps
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- For Intune-critical flows:
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- prefer dry-run/preview
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- require explicit confirmation
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- ensure audit logs
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---
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## Data Layer
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- Database: **PostgreSQL**
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- Prefer **JSONB** to store raw Graph policy snapshots and backup payloads.
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- Add appropriate indexes (e.g., **GIN** on JSONB where search/filter is expected).
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- Migrations must be reversible where possible.
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## Versioning Storage Strategy
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- Store **immutable** policy snapshots.
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- Track metadata separately (tenant, policy type, platform, created_by, created_at).
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- Prefer **full snapshots first** for correctness and simplicity.
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- Consider retention policies to prevent unbounded growth.
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---
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## Engineering Rules
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- PHP: follow PSR-12 conventions.
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- Prefer Laravel best practices (Service classes, Jobs, Events, Policies).
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- Keep Microsoft Graph integration isolated behind a dedicated abstraction layer.
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- Use dependency injection and clear interfaces for Graph clients.
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- No breaking changes to data structures or API contracts without updating:
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- `specs/<NNN>-<slug>/spec.md`
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- migration notes
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- upgrade steps
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- If a TypeScript/JS tooling package exists, use strict typing rules there too.
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## Intune Data & Safety Rules
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- Treat Intune resources as **critical configuration**.
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- Every destructive action must support:
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- explicit confirmation UI
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- audit log entry
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- optional dry-run/preview mode if feasible
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- Restore must be defensive:
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- validate inputs
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- detect conflicts
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- allow selective restore
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- show a clear pre-execution summary
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## Version Control Semantics
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- A "version" should be reproducible and queryable:
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- what changed
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- when
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- by whom
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- source tenant/environment
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- Provide diff outputs where possible:
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- human-readable summary
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- structured diff (JSON)
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## Observability & Audit
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- Log Graph calls at a high-level (no secrets).
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- Maintain an audit trail for:
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- backups created
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- restores executed/attempted
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- policy changes detected/imported
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- Ensure logs are tenant-scoped and RBAC-respecting.
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## Security
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- Enforce least privilege.
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- Never store secrets in config or code.
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- Use Laravel encrypted storage or secure secret management where applicable.
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- Validate all tenant identifiers and Graph scopes.
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---
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## Commands
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### Sail (preferred locally)
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- `./vendor/bin/sail up -d`
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- `./vendor/bin/sail down`
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- `./vendor/bin/sail composer install`
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- `./vendor/bin/sail artisan migrate`
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- `./vendor/bin/sail artisan test`
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- `./vendor/bin/sail artisan` (general)
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### Drizzle (local DB tooling, if configured)
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- Use only for local/dev workflows.
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- Prefer running via package scripts, e.g.:
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- `pnpm drizzle:generate`
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- `pnpm drizzle:migrate`
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- `pnpm drizzle:studio`
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(Agents should confirm the exact script names in `package.json` before suggesting them.)
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### Non-Docker fallback (only if needed)
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- `composer install`
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- `php artisan serve`
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- `php artisan migrate`
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- `php artisan test`
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### Frontend/assets/tooling (if present)
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- `pnpm install`
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- `pnpm dev`
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- `pnpm test`
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- `pnpm lint`
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---
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## Where to look first
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- `.specify/`
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- `AGENTS.md`
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- `README.md`
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- `app/`
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- `database/`
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- `routes/`
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- `resources/`
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- `config/`
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---
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## Definition of Done
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- Spec + Plan + Tasks aligned with implementation.
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- Tests added/updated.
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- UI includes clear admin-safe affordances for backup/restore/versioning.
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- Audit logging implemented for sensitive flows.
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- Documentation updated (README or in-app help).
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- Deployment impact assessed for:
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- Staging
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- Production
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- migrations, env vars, queues
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---
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## AI Usage Note
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All AI agents must read:
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- `AGENTS.md`
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- `.specify/*`
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before proposing or implementing changes.
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## Reference Materials
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- PowerShell scripts from IntuneManagement are stored under `/references/IntuneManagement-master`
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for implementation guidance only.
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- They must not be treated as production runtime dependencies.
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===
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<laravel-boost-guidelines>
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=== .ai/filament-v5-blueprint rules ===
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## Source of Truth
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If any Filament behavior is uncertain, lookup the exact section in:
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- docs/research/filament-v5-notes.md
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and prefer that over guesses.
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# SECTION B — FILAMENT V5 BLUEPRINT (EXECUTABLE RULES)
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# Filament Blueprint (v5)
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## 1) Non-negotiables
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- Filament v5 requires Livewire v4.0+.
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- Laravel 11+: register panel providers in `bootstrap/providers.php` (never `bootstrap/app.php`).
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- Global search hard rule: If a Resource should appear in Global Search, it must have an Edit or View page; otherwise it will return no results.
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- Destructive actions must execute via `Action::make(...)->action(...)` and include `->requiresConfirmation()` (no exceptions).
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- Prefer render hooks + CSS hook classes over publishing Filament internal views.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/upgrade-guide
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/panel-configuration
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/global-search
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/actions/modals
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/render-hooks
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/styling/css-hooks
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## 2) Directory & naming conventions
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- Default to Filament discovery conventions for Resources/Pages/Widgets unless you adopt modular architecture.
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- Clusters: directory layout is recommended, not mandatory; functional behavior depends on `$cluster`.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/clusters
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/modular-architecture
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## 3) Panel setup defaults
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- Default to a single `/admin` panel unless multiple audiences/configs demand multiple panels.
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- Verify provider registration (Laravel 11+: `bootstrap/providers.php`) when adding a panel.
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- Use `path()` carefully; treat `path('')` as a high-risk change requiring route conflict review.
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- Assets policy:
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- Panel-only assets: register via panel config.
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- Shared/plugin assets: register via `FilamentAsset::register()`.
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- Deployment must include `php artisan filament:assets`.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/panel-configuration
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/assets
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## 4) Navigation & information architecture
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- Use nav groups + sort order intentionally; apply conditional visibility for clarity, but enforce authorization separately.
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- Use clusters to introduce hierarchy and sub-navigation when sidebar complexity grows.
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- Treat cluster code structure as a recommendation (organizational benefit), not a required rule.
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- User menu:
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- Configure via `userMenuItems()` with Action objects.
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- Never put destructive actions there without confirmation + authorization.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/overview
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/clusters
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/user-menu
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## 5) Resource patterns
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- Default to Resources for CRUD; use custom pages for non-CRUD tools/workflows.
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- Global search:
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- If a resource is intended for global search: ensure Edit/View page exists.
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- Otherwise disable global search for that resource (don’t “expect it to work”).
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- If global search renders relationship-backed details: eager-load via global search query override.
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- For very large datasets: consider disabling term splitting (only when needed).
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/overview
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/global-search
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## 6) Page lifecycle & query rules
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- Treat relationship-backed rendering in aggregate contexts (global search details, list summaries) as requiring eager loading.
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- Prefer render hooks for layout injection; avoid publishing internal views.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/global-search
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/render-hooks
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## 7) Infolists vs RelationManagers (decision tree)
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- Interactive CRUD / attach / detach under owner record → RelationManager.
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- Pick existing related record(s) inside owner form → Select / CheckboxList relationship fields.
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- Inline CRUD inside owner form → Repeater.
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- Default performance stance: RelationManagers stay lazy-loaded unless explicit UX justification exists.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/managing-relationships
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/infolists/overview
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## 8) Form patterns (validation, reactivity, state)
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- Default: minimize server-driven reactivity; only use it when schema/visibility/requirements must change server-side.
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- Prefer “on blur” semantics for chatty inputs when using reactive behavior (per docs patterns).
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- Custom field views must obey state binding modifiers.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/forms/overview
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/forms/custom-fields
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## 9) Table & action patterns
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- Tables: always define a meaningful empty state (and empty-state actions where appropriate).
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- Actions:
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- Execution actions use `->action(...)`.
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- Destructive actions add `->requiresConfirmation()`.
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- Navigation-only actions should use `->url(...)`.
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- UNVERIFIED: do not assert modal/confirmation behavior for URL-only actions unless verified.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/tables/empty-state
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/actions/modals
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## 10) Authorization & security
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- Enforce panel access in non-local environments as documented.
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- UI visibility is not security; enforce policies/access checks in addition to hiding UI.
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- Bulk operations: explicitly decide between “Any” policy methods vs per-record authorization.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/users/overview
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/deleting-records
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## 11) Notifications & UX feedback
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- Default to explicit success/error notifications for user-triggered mutations that aren’t instantly obvious.
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- Treat polling as a cost; set intervals intentionally where polling is used.
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/notifications/overview
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/widgets/stats-overview
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## 12) Performance defaults
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- Heavy assets: prefer on-demand loading (`loadedOnRequest()` + `x-load-css` / `x-load-js`) for heavy dependencies.
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- Styling overrides use CSS hook classes; layout injection uses render hooks; avoid view publishing.
|
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|
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Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/assets
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/styling/css-hooks
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/render-hooks
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## 13) Testing requirements
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- Test pages/relation managers/widgets as Livewire components.
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- Test actions using Filament’s action testing guidance.
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- Do not mount non-Livewire classes in Livewire tests.
|
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|
||
Sources:
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/testing/overview
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/testing/testing-actions
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|
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## 14) Forbidden patterns
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- Mixing Filament v3/v4 APIs into v5 code.
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- Any mention of Livewire v3 for Filament v5.
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- Registering panel providers in `bootstrap/app.php` on Laravel 11+.
|
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- Destructive actions without `->requiresConfirmation()`.
|
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- Shipping heavy assets globally when on-demand loading fits.
|
||
- Publishing Filament internal views as a default customization technique.
|
||
|
||
Sources:
|
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/upgrade-guide
|
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/panel-configuration
|
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/actions/modals
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- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/assets
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## 15) Agent output contract
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For any implementation request, the agent must explicitly state:
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1) Livewire v4.0+ compliance.
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2) Provider registration location (Laravel 11+: `bootstrap/providers.php`).
|
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3) For each globally searchable resource: whether it has Edit/View page (or global search is disabled).
|
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4) Which actions are destructive and how confirmation + authorization is handled.
|
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5) Asset strategy: global vs on-demand and where `filament:assets` runs in deploy.
|
||
6) Testing plan: which pages/widgets/relation managers/actions are covered.
|
||
|
||
Sources:
|
||
- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/upgrade-guide
|
||
- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/panel-configuration
|
||
- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/global-search
|
||
- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/assets
|
||
- https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/testing/testing-actions
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== .ai/filament-v5-checklist rules ===
|
||
|
||
# SECTION C — AI REVIEW CHECKLIST (STRICT CHECKBOXES)
|
||
|
||
## Version Safety
|
||
- [ ] Filament v5 explicitly targets Livewire v4.0+ (no Livewire v3 references anywhere).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/upgrade-guide — “Upgrading Livewire”
|
||
- [ ] All references are Filament `/docs/5.x/` only (no v3/v4 docs, no legacy APIs).
|
||
- [ ] Upgrade assumptions match the v5 upgrade guide requirements and steps.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/upgrade-guide — “New requirements”
|
||
|
||
## Panel & Navigation
|
||
- [ ] Laravel 11+: panel providers are registered in `bootstrap/providers.php` (not `bootstrap/app.php`).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/panel-configuration — “Creating a new panel”
|
||
- [ ] Panel `path()` choices are intentional and do not conflict with existing routes (especially `path('')`).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/panel-configuration — “Changing the path”
|
||
- [ ] Cluster usage is correctly configured (discovery + `$cluster` assignments).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/clusters — “Creating a cluster”
|
||
- [ ] Cluster semantics (sub-navigation + grouped navigation behavior) are understood and verified against the clusters docs.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/clusters — “Introduction”
|
||
- [ ] Cluster directory structure is treated as recommended, not mandatory.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/clusters — “Code structure recommendations for panels using clusters”
|
||
- [ ] User menu items are registered via `userMenuItems()` and permission-gated where needed.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/navigation/user-menu — “Introduction”
|
||
|
||
## Resource Structure
|
||
- [ ] `$recordTitleAttribute` is set for any resource intended for global search.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/overview — “Record titles”
|
||
- [ ] Hard rule enforced: every globally searchable resource has an Edit or View page; otherwise global search is disabled for it.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/global-search — “Setting global search result titles”
|
||
- [ ] Relationship-backed global search details are eager-loaded via the global search query override.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/global-search — “Adding extra details to global search results”
|
||
|
||
## Infolists & Relations
|
||
- [ ] Each relationship uses the correct tool (RelationManager vs Select/CheckboxList vs Repeater) based on required interaction.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/managing-relationships — “Choosing the right tool for the job”
|
||
- [ ] RelationManagers remain lazy-loaded by default unless there’s an explicit UX justification.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/managing-relationships — “Disabling lazy loading”
|
||
|
||
## Forms
|
||
- [ ] Server-driven reactivity is minimal; chatty inputs do not trigger network requests unnecessarily.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/forms/overview — “Reactive fields on blur”
|
||
- [ ] Custom field views obey state binding modifiers (no hardcoded `wire:model` without modifiers).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/forms/custom-fields — “Obeying state binding modifiers”
|
||
|
||
## Tables & Actions
|
||
- [ ] Tables define a meaningful empty state (and empty-state actions where appropriate).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/tables/empty-state — “Adding empty state actions”
|
||
- [ ] All destructive actions execute via `->action(...)` and include `->requiresConfirmation()`.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/actions/modals — “Confirmation modals”
|
||
- [ ] No checklist rule assumes confirmation/modals for `->url(...)` actions unless verified in docs (UNVERIFIED behavior must not be asserted as fact).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/actions/modals — “Confirmation modals”
|
||
|
||
## Authorization & Security
|
||
- [ ] Panel access is enforced for non-local environments as documented.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/users/overview — “Authorizing access to the panel”
|
||
- [ ] UI visibility is not treated as authorization; policies/access checks still enforce boundaries.
|
||
- [ ] Bulk operations intentionally choose between “Any” policy methods vs per-record authorization where required.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/resources/deleting-records — “Authorization”
|
||
|
||
## UX & Notifications
|
||
- [ ] User-triggered mutations provide explicit success/error notifications when outcomes aren’t instantly obvious.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/notifications/overview — “Introduction”
|
||
- [ ] Polling (widgets/notifications) is configured intentionally (interval set or disabled) to control load.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/widgets/stats-overview — “Live updating stats (polling)”
|
||
|
||
## Performance
|
||
- [ ] Heavy frontend assets are loaded on-demand using `loadedOnRequest()` + `x-load-css` / `x-load-js` where appropriate.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/assets — “Lazy loading CSS” / “Lazy loading JavaScript”
|
||
- [ ] Styling overrides use CSS hook classes discovered via DevTools (no brittle selectors by default).
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/styling/css-hooks — “Discovering hook classes”
|
||
|
||
## Testing
|
||
- [ ] Livewire tests mount Filament pages/relation managers/widgets (Livewire components), not static resource classes.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/testing/overview — “What is a Livewire component when using Filament?”
|
||
- [ ] Actions that mutate data are covered using Filament’s action testing guidance.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/testing/testing-actions — “Testing actions”
|
||
|
||
## Deployment / Ops
|
||
- [ ] `php artisan filament:assets` is included in the deployment process when using registered assets.
|
||
- Source: https://filamentphp.com/docs/5.x/advanced/assets — “The FilamentAsset facade”
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== foundation rules ===
|
||
|
||
# Laravel Boost Guidelines
|
||
|
||
The Laravel Boost guidelines are specifically curated by Laravel maintainers for this application. These guidelines should be followed closely to enhance the user's satisfaction building Laravel applications.
|
||
|
||
## Foundational Context
|
||
This application is a Laravel application and its main Laravel ecosystems package & versions are below. You are an expert with them all. Ensure you abide by these specific packages & versions.
|
||
|
||
- php - 8.4.15
|
||
- filament/filament (FILAMENT) - v5
|
||
- laravel/framework (LARAVEL) - v12
|
||
- laravel/prompts (PROMPTS) - v0
|
||
- livewire/livewire (LIVEWIRE) - v4
|
||
- laravel/mcp (MCP) - v0
|
||
- laravel/pint (PINT) - v1
|
||
- laravel/sail (SAIL) - v1
|
||
- pestphp/pest (PEST) - v4
|
||
- phpunit/phpunit (PHPUNIT) - v12
|
||
- tailwindcss (TAILWINDCSS) - v4
|
||
|
||
## Conventions
|
||
- You must follow all existing code conventions used in this application. When creating or editing a file, check sibling files for the correct structure, approach, naming.
|
||
- Use descriptive names for variables and methods. For example, `isRegisteredForDiscounts`, not `discount()`.
|
||
- Check for existing components to reuse before writing a new one.
|
||
|
||
## Verification Scripts
|
||
- Do not create verification scripts or tinker when tests cover that functionality and prove it works. Unit and feature tests are more important.
|
||
|
||
## Application Structure & Architecture
|
||
- Stick to existing directory structure - don't create new base folders without approval.
|
||
- Do not change the application's dependencies without approval.
|
||
|
||
## Frontend Bundling
|
||
- If the user doesn't see a frontend change reflected in the UI, it could mean they need to run `vendor/bin/sail npm run build`, `vendor/bin/sail npm run dev`, or `vendor/bin/sail composer run dev`. Ask them.
|
||
|
||
## Replies
|
||
- Be concise in your explanations - focus on what's important rather than explaining obvious details.
|
||
|
||
## Documentation Files
|
||
- You must only create documentation files if explicitly requested by the user.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== boost rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Laravel Boost
|
||
- Laravel Boost is an MCP server that comes with powerful tools designed specifically for this application. Use them.
|
||
|
||
## Artisan
|
||
- Use the `list-artisan-commands` tool when you need to call an Artisan command to double check the available parameters.
|
||
|
||
## URLs
|
||
- Whenever you share a project URL with the user you should use the `get-absolute-url` tool to ensure you're using the correct scheme, domain / IP, and port.
|
||
|
||
## Tinker / Debugging
|
||
- You should use the `tinker` tool when you need to execute PHP to debug code or query Eloquent models directly.
|
||
- Use the `database-query` tool when you only need to read from the database.
|
||
|
||
## Reading Browser Logs With the `browser-logs` Tool
|
||
- You can read browser logs, errors, and exceptions using the `browser-logs` tool from Boost.
|
||
- Only recent browser logs will be useful - ignore old logs.
|
||
|
||
## Searching Documentation (Critically Important)
|
||
- Boost comes with a powerful `search-docs` tool you should use before any other approaches. This tool automatically passes a list of installed packages and their versions to the remote Boost API, so it returns only version-specific documentation specific for the user's circumstance. You should pass an array of packages to filter on if you know you need docs for particular packages.
|
||
- The 'search-docs' tool is perfect for all Laravel related packages, including Laravel, Inertia, Livewire, Filament, Tailwind, Pest, Nova, Nightwatch, etc.
|
||
- You must use this tool to search for Laravel-ecosystem documentation before falling back to other approaches.
|
||
- Search the documentation before making code changes to ensure we are taking the correct approach.
|
||
- Use multiple, broad, simple, topic based queries to start. For example: `['rate limiting', 'routing rate limiting', 'routing']`.
|
||
- Do not add package names to queries - package information is already shared. For example, use `test resource table`, not `filament 4 test resource table`.
|
||
|
||
### Available Search Syntax
|
||
- You can and should pass multiple queries at once. The most relevant results will be returned first.
|
||
|
||
1. Simple Word Searches with auto-stemming - query=authentication - finds 'authenticate' and 'auth'
|
||
2. Multiple Words (AND Logic) - query=rate limit - finds knowledge containing both "rate" AND "limit"
|
||
3. Quoted Phrases (Exact Position) - query="infinite scroll" - Words must be adjacent and in that order
|
||
4. Mixed Queries - query=middleware "rate limit" - "middleware" AND exact phrase "rate limit"
|
||
5. Multiple Queries - queries=["authentication", "middleware"] - ANY of these terms
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== php rules ===
|
||
|
||
## PHP
|
||
|
||
- Always use curly braces for control structures, even if it has one line.
|
||
|
||
### Constructors
|
||
- Use PHP 8 constructor property promotion in `__construct()`.
|
||
- <code-snippet>public function __construct(public GitHub $github) { }</code-snippet>
|
||
- Do not allow empty `__construct()` methods with zero parameters.
|
||
|
||
### Type Declarations
|
||
- Always use explicit return type declarations for methods and functions.
|
||
- Use appropriate PHP type hints for method parameters.
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Explicit Return Types and Method Params" lang="php">
|
||
protected function isAccessible(User $user, ?string $path = null): bool
|
||
{
|
||
...
|
||
}
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
## Comments
|
||
- Prefer PHPDoc blocks over comments. Never use comments within the code itself unless there is something _very_ complex going on.
|
||
|
||
## PHPDoc Blocks
|
||
- Add useful array shape type definitions for arrays when appropriate.
|
||
|
||
## Enums
|
||
- Typically, keys in an Enum should be TitleCase. For example: `FavoritePerson`, `BestLake`, `Monthly`.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== sail rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Laravel Sail
|
||
|
||
- This project runs inside Laravel Sail's Docker containers. You MUST execute all commands through Sail.
|
||
- Start services using `vendor/bin/sail up -d` and stop them with `vendor/bin/sail stop`.
|
||
- Open the application in the browser by running `vendor/bin/sail open`.
|
||
- Always prefix PHP, Artisan, Composer, and Node commands** with `vendor/bin/sail`. Examples:
|
||
- Run Artisan Commands: `vendor/bin/sail artisan migrate`
|
||
- Install Composer packages: `vendor/bin/sail composer install`
|
||
- Execute node commands: `vendor/bin/sail npm run dev`
|
||
- Execute PHP scripts: `vendor/bin/sail php [script]`
|
||
- View all available Sail commands by running `vendor/bin/sail` without arguments.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== tests rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Test Enforcement
|
||
|
||
- Every change must be programmatically tested. Write a new test or update an existing test, then run the affected tests to make sure they pass.
|
||
- Run the minimum number of tests needed to ensure code quality and speed. Use `vendor/bin/sail artisan test` with a specific filename or filter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== laravel/core rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Do Things the Laravel Way
|
||
|
||
- Use `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:` commands to create new files (i.e. migrations, controllers, models, etc.). You can list available Artisan commands using the `list-artisan-commands` tool.
|
||
- If you're creating a generic PHP class, use `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:class`.
|
||
- Pass `--no-interaction` to all Artisan commands to ensure they work without user input. You should also pass the correct `--options` to ensure correct behavior.
|
||
|
||
### Database
|
||
- Always use proper Eloquent relationship methods with return type hints. Prefer relationship methods over raw queries or manual joins.
|
||
- Use Eloquent models and relationships before suggesting raw database queries
|
||
- Avoid `DB::`; prefer `Model::query()`. Generate code that leverages Laravel's ORM capabilities rather than bypassing them.
|
||
- Generate code that prevents N+1 query problems by using eager loading.
|
||
- Use Laravel's query builder for very complex database operations.
|
||
|
||
### Model Creation
|
||
- When creating new models, create useful factories and seeders for them too. Ask the user if they need any other things, using `list-artisan-commands` to check the available options to `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:model`.
|
||
|
||
### APIs & Eloquent Resources
|
||
- For APIs, default to using Eloquent API Resources and API versioning unless existing API routes do not, then you should follow existing application convention.
|
||
|
||
### Controllers & Validation
|
||
- Always create Form Request classes for validation rather than inline validation in controllers. Include both validation rules and custom error messages.
|
||
- Check sibling Form Requests to see if the application uses array or string based validation rules.
|
||
|
||
### Queues
|
||
- Use queued jobs for time-consuming operations with the `ShouldQueue` interface.
|
||
|
||
### Authentication & Authorization
|
||
- Use Laravel's built-in authentication and authorization features (gates, policies, Sanctum, etc.).
|
||
|
||
### URL Generation
|
||
- When generating links to other pages, prefer named routes and the `route()` function.
|
||
|
||
### Configuration
|
||
- Use environment variables only in configuration files - never use the `env()` function directly outside of config files. Always use `config('app.name')`, not `env('APP_NAME')`.
|
||
|
||
### Testing
|
||
- When creating models for tests, use the factories for the models. Check if the factory has custom states that can be used before manually setting up the model.
|
||
- Faker: Use methods such as `$this->faker->word()` or `fake()->randomDigit()`. Follow existing conventions whether to use `$this->faker` or `fake()`.
|
||
- When creating tests, make use of `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:test [options] {name}` to create a feature test, and pass `--unit` to create a unit test. Most tests should be feature tests.
|
||
|
||
### Vite Error
|
||
- If you receive an "Illuminate\Foundation\ViteException: Unable to locate file in Vite manifest" error, you can run `vendor/bin/sail npm run build` or ask the user to run `vendor/bin/sail npm run dev` or `vendor/bin/sail composer run dev`.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== laravel/v12 rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Laravel 12
|
||
|
||
- Use the `search-docs` tool to get version specific documentation.
|
||
- Since Laravel 11, Laravel has a new streamlined file structure which this project uses.
|
||
|
||
### Laravel 12 Structure
|
||
- No middleware files in `app/Http/Middleware/`.
|
||
- `bootstrap/app.php` is the file to register middleware, exceptions, and routing files.
|
||
- `bootstrap/providers.php` contains application specific service providers.
|
||
- **No app\Console\Kernel.php** - use `bootstrap/app.php` or `routes/console.php` for console configuration.
|
||
- **Commands auto-register** - files in `app/Console/Commands/` are automatically available and do not require manual registration.
|
||
|
||
### Database
|
||
- When modifying a column, the migration must include all of the attributes that were previously defined on the column. Otherwise, they will be dropped and lost.
|
||
- Laravel 11 allows limiting eagerly loaded records natively, without external packages: `$query->latest()->limit(10);`.
|
||
|
||
### Models
|
||
- Casts can and likely should be set in a `casts()` method on a model rather than the `$casts` property. Follow existing conventions from other models.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== livewire/core rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Livewire Core
|
||
- Use the `search-docs` tool to find exact version specific documentation for how to write Livewire & Livewire tests.
|
||
- Use the `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:livewire [Posts\CreatePost]` artisan command to create new components
|
||
- State should live on the server, with the UI reflecting it.
|
||
- All Livewire requests hit the Laravel backend, they're like regular HTTP requests. Always validate form data, and run authorization checks in Livewire actions.
|
||
|
||
## Livewire Best Practices
|
||
- Livewire components require a single root element.
|
||
- Use `wire:loading` and `wire:dirty` for delightful loading states.
|
||
- Add `wire:key` in loops:
|
||
|
||
```blade
|
||
@foreach ($items as $item)
|
||
<div wire:key="item-{{ $item->id }}">
|
||
{{ $item->name }}
|
||
</div>
|
||
@endforeach
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Prefer lifecycle hooks like `mount()`, `updatedFoo()` for initialization and reactive side effects:
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Lifecycle hook examples" lang="php">
|
||
public function mount(User $user) { $this->user = $user; }
|
||
public function updatedSearch() { $this->resetPage(); }
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
|
||
## Testing Livewire
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Example Livewire component test" lang="php">
|
||
Livewire::test(Counter::class)
|
||
->assertSet('count', 0)
|
||
->call('increment')
|
||
->assertSet('count', 1)
|
||
->assertSee(1)
|
||
->assertStatus(200);
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Testing a Livewire component exists within a page" lang="php">
|
||
$this->get('/posts/create')
|
||
->assertSeeLivewire(CreatePost::class);
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== pint/core rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Laravel Pint Code Formatter
|
||
|
||
- You must run `vendor/bin/sail bin pint --dirty` before finalizing changes to ensure your code matches the project's expected style.
|
||
- Do not run `vendor/bin/sail bin pint --test`, simply run `vendor/bin/sail bin pint` to fix any formatting issues.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== pest/core rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Pest
|
||
### Testing
|
||
- If you need to verify a feature is working, write or update a Unit / Feature test.
|
||
|
||
### Pest Tests
|
||
- All tests must be written using Pest. Use `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:test --pest {name}`.
|
||
- You must not remove any tests or test files from the tests directory without approval. These are not temporary or helper files - these are core to the application.
|
||
- Tests should test all of the happy paths, failure paths, and weird paths.
|
||
- Tests live in the `tests/Feature` and `tests/Unit` directories.
|
||
- Pest tests look and behave like this:
|
||
<code-snippet name="Basic Pest Test Example" lang="php">
|
||
it('is true', function () {
|
||
expect(true)->toBeTrue();
|
||
});
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
### Running Tests
|
||
- Run the minimal number of tests using an appropriate filter before finalizing code edits.
|
||
- To run all tests: `vendor/bin/sail artisan test`.
|
||
- To run all tests in a file: `vendor/bin/sail artisan test tests/Feature/ExampleTest.php`.
|
||
- To filter on a particular test name: `vendor/bin/sail artisan test --filter=testName` (recommended after making a change to a related file).
|
||
- When the tests relating to your changes are passing, ask the user if they would like to run the entire test suite to ensure everything is still passing.
|
||
|
||
### Pest Assertions
|
||
- When asserting status codes on a response, use the specific method like `assertForbidden` and `assertNotFound` instead of using `assertStatus(403)` or similar, e.g.:
|
||
<code-snippet name="Pest Example Asserting postJson Response" lang="php">
|
||
it('returns all', function () {
|
||
$response = $this->postJson('/api/docs', []);
|
||
|
||
$response->assertSuccessful();
|
||
});
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
### Mocking
|
||
- Mocking can be very helpful when appropriate.
|
||
- When mocking, you can use the `Pest\Laravel\mock` Pest function, but always import it via `use function Pest\Laravel\mock;` before using it. Alternatively, you can use `$this->mock()` if existing tests do.
|
||
- You can also create partial mocks using the same import or self method.
|
||
|
||
### Datasets
|
||
- Use datasets in Pest to simplify tests which have a lot of duplicated data. This is often the case when testing validation rules, so consider going with this solution when writing tests for validation rules.
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Pest Dataset Example" lang="php">
|
||
it('has emails', function (string $email) {
|
||
expect($email)->not->toBeEmpty();
|
||
})->with([
|
||
'james' => 'james@laravel.com',
|
||
'taylor' => 'taylor@laravel.com',
|
||
]);
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== pest/v4 rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Pest 4
|
||
|
||
- Pest v4 is a huge upgrade to Pest and offers: browser testing, smoke testing, visual regression testing, test sharding, and faster type coverage.
|
||
- Browser testing is incredibly powerful and useful for this project.
|
||
- Browser tests should live in `tests/Browser/`.
|
||
- Use the `search-docs` tool for detailed guidance on utilizing these features.
|
||
|
||
### Browser Testing
|
||
- You can use Laravel features like `Event::fake()`, `assertAuthenticated()`, and model factories within Pest v4 browser tests, as well as `RefreshDatabase` (when needed) to ensure a clean state for each test.
|
||
- Interact with the page (click, type, scroll, select, submit, drag-and-drop, touch gestures, etc.) when appropriate to complete the test.
|
||
- If requested, test on multiple browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari).
|
||
- If requested, test on different devices and viewports (like iPhone 14 Pro, tablets, or custom breakpoints).
|
||
- Switch color schemes (light/dark mode) when appropriate.
|
||
- Take screenshots or pause tests for debugging when appropriate.
|
||
|
||
### Example Tests
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Pest Browser Test Example" lang="php">
|
||
it('may reset the password', function () {
|
||
Notification::fake();
|
||
|
||
$this->actingAs(User::factory()->create());
|
||
|
||
$page = visit('/sign-in'); // Visit on a real browser...
|
||
|
||
$page->assertSee('Sign In')
|
||
->assertNoJavascriptErrors() // or ->assertNoConsoleLogs()
|
||
->click('Forgot Password?')
|
||
->fill('email', 'nuno@laravel.com')
|
||
->click('Send Reset Link')
|
||
->assertSee('We have emailed your password reset link!')
|
||
|
||
Notification::assertSent(ResetPassword::class);
|
||
});
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Pest Smoke Testing Example" lang="php">
|
||
$pages = visit(['/', '/about', '/contact']);
|
||
|
||
$pages->assertNoJavascriptErrors()->assertNoConsoleLogs();
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== tailwindcss/core rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Tailwind Core
|
||
|
||
- Use Tailwind CSS classes to style HTML, check and use existing tailwind conventions within the project before writing your own.
|
||
- Offer to extract repeated patterns into components that match the project's conventions (i.e. Blade, JSX, Vue, etc..)
|
||
- Think through class placement, order, priority, and defaults - remove redundant classes, add classes to parent or child carefully to limit repetition, group elements logically
|
||
- You can use the `search-docs` tool to get exact examples from the official documentation when needed.
|
||
|
||
### Spacing
|
||
- When listing items, use gap utilities for spacing, don't use margins.
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Valid Flex Gap Spacing Example" lang="html">
|
||
<div class="flex gap-8">
|
||
<div>Superior</div>
|
||
<div>Michigan</div>
|
||
<div>Erie</div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Dark Mode
|
||
- If existing pages and components support dark mode, new pages and components must support dark mode in a similar way, typically using `dark:`.
|
||
|
||
|
||
=== tailwindcss/v4 rules ===
|
||
|
||
## Tailwind 4
|
||
|
||
- Always use Tailwind CSS v4 - do not use the deprecated utilities.
|
||
- `corePlugins` is not supported in Tailwind v4.
|
||
- In Tailwind v4, configuration is CSS-first using the `@theme` directive — no separate `tailwind.config.js` file is needed.
|
||
<code-snippet name="Extending Theme in CSS" lang="css">
|
||
@theme {
|
||
--color-brand: oklch(0.72 0.11 178);
|
||
}
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
- In Tailwind v4, you import Tailwind using a regular CSS `@import` statement, not using the `@tailwind` directives used in v3:
|
||
|
||
<code-snippet name="Tailwind v4 Import Tailwind Diff" lang="diff">
|
||
- @tailwind base;
|
||
- @tailwind components;
|
||
- @tailwind utilities;
|
||
+ @import "tailwindcss";
|
||
</code-snippet>
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Replaced Utilities
|
||
- Tailwind v4 removed deprecated utilities. Do not use the deprecated option - use the replacement.
|
||
- Opacity values are still numeric.
|
||
|
||
| Deprecated | Replacement |
|
||
|------------+--------------|
|
||
| bg-opacity-* | bg-black/* |
|
||
| text-opacity-* | text-black/* |
|
||
| border-opacity-* | border-black/* |
|
||
| divide-opacity-* | divide-black/* |
|
||
| ring-opacity-* | ring-black/* |
|
||
| placeholder-opacity-* | placeholder-black/* |
|
||
| flex-shrink-* | shrink-* |
|
||
| flex-grow-* | grow-* |
|
||
| overflow-ellipsis | text-ellipsis |
|
||
| decoration-slice | box-decoration-slice |
|
||
| decoration-clone | box-decoration-clone |
|
||
</laravel-boost-guidelines>
|
||
|
||
## Recent Changes
|
||
- 062-tenant-rbac-v1: Added PHP 8.4 + Laravel 12, Filament v5, Livewire v4
|
||
- 062-tenant-rbac-v1: Added PHP 8.4 + Laravel 12, Filament v5, Livewire v4
|
||
- 062-tenant-rbac-v1: Added PHP 8.4 + Laravel 12, Filament v5, Livewire v4
|
||
|
||
## Active Technologies
|