Files
hive/frontend/node_modules/pirates
anthonyrawlins 85bf1341f3 Add comprehensive frontend UI and distributed infrastructure
Frontend Enhancements:
- Complete React TypeScript frontend with modern UI components
- Distributed workflows management interface with real-time updates
- Socket.IO integration for live agent status monitoring
- Agent management dashboard with cluster visualization
- Project management interface with metrics and task tracking
- Responsive design with proper error handling and loading states

Backend Infrastructure:
- Distributed coordinator for multi-agent workflow orchestration
- Cluster management API with comprehensive agent operations
- Enhanced database models for agents and projects
- Project service for filesystem-based project discovery
- Performance monitoring and metrics collection
- Comprehensive API documentation and error handling

Documentation:
- Complete distributed development guide (README_DISTRIBUTED.md)
- Comprehensive development report with architecture insights
- System configuration templates and deployment guides

The platform now provides a complete web interface for managing the distributed AI cluster
with real-time monitoring, workflow orchestration, and agent coordination capabilities.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-07-10 08:41:59 +10:00
..

Pirates Coverage

Properly hijack require

This library allows to add custom require hooks, which do not interfere with other require hooks.

This library only works with commonJS.

Why?

Two reasons:

  1. Babel and istanbul were breaking each other.
  2. Everyone seemed to re-invent the wheel on this, and everyone wanted a solution that was DRY, simple, easy to use, and made everything Just Work™, while allowing multiple require hooks, in a fashion similar to calling super.

For some context, see the Babel issue thread which started this all, then the nyc issue thread, where discussion was moved (as we began to discuss just using the code nyc had developed), and finally to #1 where discussion was finally moved.

Installation

npm install --save pirates

Usage

Using pirates is really easy:

// my-module/register.js
const addHook = require('pirates').addHook;
// Or if you use ES modules
// import { addHook } from 'pirates';

function matcher(filename) {
  // Here, you can inspect the filename to determine if it should be hooked or
  // not. Just return a truthy/falsey. Files in node_modules are automatically ignored,
  // unless otherwise specified in options (see below).

  // TODO: Implement your logic here
  return true;
}

const revert = addHook(
  (code, filename) => code.replace('@@foo', 'console.log(\'foo\');'),
  { exts: ['.js'], matcher }
);

// And later, if you want to un-hook require, you can just do:
revert();

API

pirates.addHook(hook, [opts={ [matcher: true], [exts: ['.js']], [ignoreNodeModules: true] }]);

Add a require hook. hook must be a function that takes (code, filename), and returns the modified code. opts is an optional options object. Available options are: matcher, which is a function that accepts a filename, and returns a truthy value if the file should be hooked (defaults to a function that always returns true), falsey if otherwise; exts, which is an array of extensions to hook, they should begin with . (defaults to ['.js']); ignoreNodeModules, if true, any file in a node_modules folder wont be hooked (the matcher also wont be called), if false, then the matcher will be called for any files in node_modules (defaults to true).

Projects that use Pirates

See the wiki page. If you add Pirates to your project, (And you should! It works best if everyone uses it. Then we can have a happy world full of happy require hooks!), please add yourself to the wiki.