feat(templates): install-time {{PROJECT_DIR}} substitution in cron prompts

Hermes doesn't set a working directory when firing cron jobs, so any
relative path in a template's cron prompt (`.scarf/config.json`,
`status-log.md`, etc.) resolves against whatever dir Hermes happens
to be in — NOT the installed project. Practical effect: site-status-
checker's cron job fires, agent runs with relative paths, finds
nothing to read, silently bails. User sees "Run now" complete with
zero output and nothing updated on disk.

Fix: the installer now substitutes template-author placeholders in
cron prompts at install time, before calling `hermes cron create`.
The registered cron job carries a fully-qualified, CWD-independent
prompt.

Supported tokens (deliberately few — each is part of the template
format contract from now on):

- `{{PROJECT_DIR}}` — absolute path of the installed project dir.
  The one that was motivating this fix; required for any cron prompt
  that reads or writes project files.
- `{{TEMPLATE_ID}}` — the `owner/name` from the manifest, for
  templates that want to tag delivery payloads or log lines.
- `{{TEMPLATE_SLUG}}` — the sanitised slug used by the installer for
  dir name + skills namespace, for templates that want to reference
  their skills install path.

Implemented as a static `ProjectTemplateInstaller.substituteCronTokens`
so it's testable as a pure function. Unsupported placeholders pass
through verbatim — template authors notice in testing that their
token didn't get replaced and either use a supported one or file
a request.

Site Status Checker v1.1.0 updated to use the tokens:
- cron/jobs.json prompt now opens with "Run the site status check
  for the Scarf project at {{PROJECT_DIR}}" and references
  {{PROJECT_DIR}}/.scarf/config.json, {{PROJECT_DIR}}/status-log.md,
  and {{PROJECT_DIR}}/.scarf/dashboard.json explicitly.
- AGENTS.md gains a note explaining that the cron-registered prompt
  carries absolute paths (installer substitutes at install time),
  while interactive-chat agents can keep using relative paths.
- bundle rebuilt, catalog regenerated.

templates/CONTRIBUTING.md documents the three supported tokens under
the cron/jobs.json bullet so future authors don't have to discover
this by hitting the same CWD bug.

Tests:
- ProjectTemplateExampleTemplateTests.siteStatusCheckerParsesAndPlans
  extended to assert the bundled prompt contains {{PROJECT_DIR}}
  UNRESOLVED. If someone accidentally bakes an absolute path into
  the template (their install dir), every user of that template
  would get the wrong path — this test catches that.
- Four new substitution tests in ProjectTemplateInstallerTests:
  resolves PROJECT_DIR / resolves ID + SLUG / leaves unknown tokens
  untouched / substitutes repeated occurrences. All go through the
  static helper directly; no install round-trip needed.

57/57 Swift tests + 24/24 Python tests pass. Catalog check clean.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
Alan Wizemann
2026-04-23 15:11:19 +02:00
parent 3af99d9d9c
commit 03bf5262bb
7 changed files with 103 additions and 9 deletions
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ No `sites.txt` anymore — sites come from `.scarf/config.json`.
## What to do when the cron job fires
The cron job runs this project's "Check site status" prompt. When invoked:
The cron prompt Scarf registers for this project carries **absolute paths** (the installer substitutes `{{PROJECT_DIR}}` at install time) — you don't need to figure out the project's location yourself. Use whatever absolute paths appear in the prompt you received; if you're working in the project's interactive chat instead, the paths below are relative to the project root.
1. Read `.scarf/config.json`. Extract `values.sites` (array of URLs) and `values.timeout_seconds` (number). If `sites` is empty or missing, write a `status-log.md` entry noting "no sites configured — open Configuration to add some" and leave the dashboard untouched.
2. For each URL in `sites`, make an HTTP GET request with the configured timeout. Follow up to 3 redirects. Treat any 2xx or 3xx response as **up**, anything else (including timeouts and DNS failures) as **down**.
@@ -2,6 +2,6 @@
{
"name": "Check site status",
"schedule": "0 9 * * *",
"prompt": "Run the site status check for this project. Follow the instructions in AGENTS.md: read .scarf/config.json to get values.sites (the URL list) and values.timeout_seconds, HTTP GET each URL with the configured timeout, prepend a results section to status-log.md (creating it with the stub header if it doesn't exist yet), and update the three stat widgets plus the Watched Sites list items in .scarf/dashboard.json. When done, reply with a one-line summary like '3 up, 1 down — example.com timed out'."
"prompt": "Run the site status check for the Scarf project at {{PROJECT_DIR}}. Read {{PROJECT_DIR}}/.scarf/config.json to get `values.sites` (the URL list) and `values.timeout_seconds` (the per-URL HTTP timeout). HTTP GET each URL with that timeout, following up to 3 redirects; treat 2xx/3xx as up and anything else (including timeouts and DNS failures) as down. Prepend a new timestamped results section to {{PROJECT_DIR}}/status-log.md create the file with a one-line header if it doesn't exist yet. Update {{PROJECT_DIR}}/.scarf/dashboard.json: set the Sites Up / Sites Down / Last Checked stat widgets' `value` fields, and replace the 'Watched Sites' list widget's `items` array with one entry per URL (text = URL, status = \"up\" or \"down\"). Preserve every other field in dashboard.json as-is. Reply with a one-line summary like '3 up, 1 down — example.com timed out'."
}
]