routewatch/CLAUDE.md
sneak 92f7527cc5 Initial commit: RouteWatch BGP stream monitor
- Connects to RIPE RIS Live stream to receive real-time BGP updates
- Stores BGP data in SQLite database:
  - ASNs with first/last seen timestamps
  - Prefixes with IPv4/IPv6 classification
  - BGP announcements and withdrawals
  - AS-to-AS peering relationships from AS paths
  - Live routing table tracking active routes
- HTTP server with statistics endpoints
- Metrics tracking with go-metrics
- Custom JSON unmarshaling to handle nested AS sets in paths
- Dependency injection with uber/fx
- Pure Go implementation (no CGO)
- Includes streamdumper utility for debugging raw messages
2025-07-27 21:18:57 +02:00

98 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown

# IMPORTANT RULES
* Claude is an inanimate tool. The spam that Claude attempts to insert into
commit messages (which it erroneously refers to as "attribution") is not
attribution, as I am the sole author of code created using Claude. It is
corporate advertising for Anthropic and is therefore completely
unacceptable in commit messages.
* Tests should always be run before committing code. No commits should be
made that do not pass tests.
* Code should always be formatted before committing. Do not commit
unformatted code.
* Code should always be linted and linter errors fixed before committing.
NEVER commit code that does not pass the linter. DO NOT modify the linter
config unless specifically instructed.
* The test suite is fast and local. When running tests, NEVER run
individual parts of the test suite, always run the whole thing by running
"make test".
* Do not stop working on a task until you have reached the definition of
done provided to you in the initial instruction. Don't do part or most of
the work, do all of the work until the criteria for done are met.
* When you complete each task, if the tests are passing and the code is
formatted and there are no linter errors, always commit and push your
work. Use a good commit message and don't mention any author or co-author
attribution.
* Do not create additional files in the root directory of the project
without asking permission first. Configuration files, documentation, and
build files are acceptable in the root, but source code and other files
should be organized in appropriate subdirectories.
* Do not use bare strings or numbers in code, especially if they appear
anywhere more than once. Always define a constant (usually at the top of
the file) and give it a descriptive name, then use that constant in the
code instead of the bare string or number.
* If you are fixing a bug, write a test first that reproduces the bug and
fails, and then fix the bug in the code, using the test to verify that the
fix worked.
* When implementing new features, be aware of potential side-effects (such
as state files on disk, data in the database, etc.) and ensure that it is
possible to mock or stub these side-effects in tests when designing an
API.
* When dealing with dates and times or timestamps, always use, display, and
store UTC. Set the local timezone to UTC on startup. If the user needs
to see the time in a different timezone, store the user's timezone in a
separate field and convert the UTC time to the user's timezone when
displaying it. For internal use and internal applications and
administrative purposes, always display UTC.
* When implementing programs, put the main.go in
./cmd/<program_name>/main.go and put the program's code in
./internal/<program_name>/. This allows for multiple programs to be
implemented in the same repository without cluttering the root directory.
main.go should simply import and call <program_name>.CLIEntry(). The
full implementation should be in ./internal/<program_name>/.
* When you are instructed to make the tests pass, DO NOT delete tests, skip
tests, or change the tests specifically to make them pass (unless there
is a bug in the test). This is cheating, and it is bad. You should only
be modifying the test if it is incorrect or if the test is no longer
relevant. In almost all cases, you should be fixing the code that is
being tested, or updating the tests to match a refactored implementation.
* Always write a `Makefile` with the default target being `test`, and with a
`fmt` target that formats the code. The `test` target should run all
tests in the project, and the `fmt` target should format the code. `test`
should also have a prerequisite target `lint` that should run any linters
that are configured for the project.
* After each completed bugfix or feature, the code must be committed. Do
all of the pre-commit checks (test, lint, fmt) before committing, of
course. After each commit, push to the remote.
* Always write tests, even if they are extremely simple and just check for
correct syntax (ability to compile/import). If you are writing a new
feature, write a test for it. You don't need to target complete coverage,
but you should at least test any new functionality you add.
* Always use structured logging. Log any relevant state/context with the
messages (but do not log secrets). If stdout is not a terminal, output
the structured logs in jsonl format. Use go's log/slog.
* You do not need to summarize your changes in the chat after making them.
Making the changes and committing them is sufficient. If anything out of
the ordinary happened, please explain it, but in the normal case where you
found and fixed the bug, or implemented the feature, there is no need for
the end-of-change summary.
* When testing daemons, use a 15 second timeout always.