readme: voice pass — opener hook, why-this-exists framing, section breaks

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# hyperhive
Multi-Claude-Code-agent orchestration on **nixos-containers**.
> a swarm of claude-code agents, each in its own nspawn cage, gossiping
> over unix sockets. config changes flow as git commits, the operator
> approves them in a browser, every deploy is a tag. cyberpunk-themed
> dashboard included. 💜⚡
A host-side Rust daemon (`hive-c0re`) spawns nspawn-isolated agent
containers and brokers messages between them. A manager agent (`hm1nd`)
coordinates the swarm and gates lifecycle changes on user approval via git
commits, surfaced through a vibec0re-styled HTTP dashboard.
containers, runs each one's claude turn loop, and brokers messages
between them. A privileged manager agent (`hm1nd`) drives the swarm —
proposing new agents, editing their NixOS modules, escalating
ambiguous decisions to the operator. Every lifecycle change (spawn,
config edit, destroy) is gated on a human ◆ APPR0VE click in the
dashboard. Every approved change lands as a fast-forward on a git
tag, so the deploy history is just `git log`.
**Why this exists:** claude code is great in one window. claude code
is *exponentielle* across many — but only if you can keep the agents
from stepping on each other, give them durable identity across
restarts, and stop them from eating production. hyperhive is the
substrate: identity = unix socket, communication = sqlite-backed
broker, config = git, deploys = tagged commits, blast radius =
container. The operator stays in the loop without becoming the
bottleneck.
```
host (NixOS, runs hive-c0re.service)
@ -41,31 +57,49 @@ host (NixOS, runs hive-c0re.service)
on a hashed :8100-8999
```
Each turn: harness pops one inbox message (Recv long-polls server-side and
wakes on a broker Sent event) → builds a wake prompt → spawns
`claude --print --continue --output-format stream-json --mcp-config …`
streams JSON events into the per-agent SSE bus + a sqlite history db →
claude drives any further `recv`/`send` itself via the embedded MCP server.
## The turn loop
Operator surface per agent: terminal-themed live tail with a textarea
prompt; slash commands `/help` `/clear` `/cancel` `/compact`
`/model <name>` `/new-session`; granular state badge (idle / thinking
/ compacting / offline) with age timer + last-turn duration chip +
model chip; cancel-turn + new-session buttons in the state row;
sticky-bottom auto-scroll with "↓ N new" pill; event history
backfilled on page load; collapsible inbox + collapsible journald
viewer + collapsible `agent.nix` viewer per agent on the dashboard;
deployed-sha chip per container (read from meta's `flake.lock`).
One message in, one turn out. The harness pops a single inbox message
(`Recv` long-polls server-side, wakes the instant a broker `Sent`
event fires) → builds a wake prompt → spawns
`claude --print --continue --output-format stream-json --mcp-config …`
→ streams JSON events into the per-agent SSE bus + a sqlite history db
→ claude drives any further `recv`/`send` itself via the embedded MCP
server. `--continue` preserves the prior session so context spans turns
without rebuilding from history every wake. If the turn dies mid-stream,
the next wake picks up clean — sessions are durable but cheap to discard.
Operator surface on the dashboard itself: a terminal compose box
under the message-flow stream — `@name` picks the recipient with
auto-complete from the live container list, sticky across sends,
POSTs `/op-send` which drops the message into the broker as
`{from:"operator", to:<name>, body}`. Same shape any sub-agent
sees as a regular inbox message.
## Operator surfaces
Config changes flow the other way: manager edits files under
`/agents/<name>/config/``agent.nix` is a plain NixOS module function
**Per agent (`:8100-8999`):** terminal-themed live tail with a
textarea prompt; slash commands `/help` `/clear` `/cancel`
`/compact` `/model <name>` `/new-session`; granular state badge
(idle / thinking / compacting / offline) with age timer +
last-turn duration chip + model chip; cancel-turn + new-session
buttons in the state row; sticky-bottom auto-scroll with "↓ N new"
pill; event history backfilled on page load; collapsible inbox +
collapsible journald viewer + collapsible `agent.nix` viewer per
agent on the dashboard; deployed-sha chip per container (read
from meta's `flake.lock`).
**Dashboard itself (`:7000`):** the swarm-wide view — every
container with status chips, every pending approval with inline
diff, every open question with operator-answer affordance, every
recent message on a unified live stream. A terminal compose box
under the message-flow lets the operator drop messages into any
agent's inbox: `@name` picks the recipient with auto-complete
from the live container list, sticky across sends, POSTs
`/op-send` which lands in the broker as
`{from:"operator", to:<name>, body}` — same shape any sub-agent
sees as a regular inbox message. No special channel, no
out-of-band notification system. If the operator says it, the
broker carries it.
## The config-edit loop
Inverted flow — agents propose, the operator disposes. The manager
edits files under `/agents/<name>/config/``agent.nix` is a plain
NixOS module function
`{ config, pkgs, lib, ... }: { ... }`, and arbitrary sibling files in
the commit are preserved → commits → submits the sha via
`request_apply_commit`. Hive-c0re immediately fetches that commit from
@ -82,20 +116,26 @@ tag carrying the operator's note.
Meta's git log is the swarm-wide deploy audit trail (one commit per
successful deploy). Per-agent applied repos carry the tag-rich state
machine for inside-baseball decisions. The manager sees both — proposed
repos ship with an `applied` remote pre-wired, and `/meta/` is RO-bound
inside the container — so `git fetch applied`,
machine for inside-baseball decisions. The manager sees both —
proposed repos ship with an `applied` remote pre-wired, and `/meta/`
is RO-bound inside the container — so `git fetch applied`,
`git show applied/refs/tags/deployed/<id>`, `git log /meta`,
`cat /meta/flake.lock` all just work without constructing paths by
hand. See [`docs/approvals.md`](docs/approvals.md) for the full state
machine + lock-flow walkthrough.
For decisions any agent (manager or sub) needs structured signal on,
`ask(question, options?, multi?, ttl_seconds?, to?)` queues a question:
default recipient is the operator (dashboard renders a free-text /
checkbox / radio form), or pass `to: "<agent>"` to route a structured
peer question into another agent's inbox. The answer arrives later as
a `HelperEvent::QuestionAnswered { id, question, answer, answerer }`
in the asker's inbox. Peer recipients respond via `answer(id, answer)`.
## Structured Q&A
Agents don't have to guess. `ask(question, options?, multi?,
ttl_seconds?, to?)` queues a structured question — default recipient
is the operator (dashboard renders a free-text / checkbox / radio
form), or pass `to: "<agent>"` to route the question into a peer
agent's inbox instead. The answer arrives later as a
`HelperEvent::QuestionAnswered { id, question, answer, answerer }`
in the asker's inbox; peer recipients respond via `answer(id, answer)`.
Plus `remind(message, delay_seconds | at_unix_timestamp, file_path?)`
for self-scheduled wake-ups when an agent wants to nudge itself later
without holding a connection open.
## Host config