118 lines
4.9 KiB
Markdown
118 lines
4.9 KiB
Markdown
# Copilot Instructions for Lutra
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Use these standards when generating or modifying code in this repository.
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## Project overview
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- Target framework: .NET 10 (`net10.0`)
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- Architecture: Clean Architecture
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- Solution layers:
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- `Lutra.Domain`
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- `Lutra.Application`
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- `Lutra.Infrastructure.Sql`
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- `Lutra.API`
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- `Lutra.AppHost`
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- `Lutra.Infrastructure.Migrator`
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- Database: PostgreSQL via EF Core
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- Orchestration: .NET Aspire
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- Messaging pattern: `Cortex.Mediator` for CQRS handling
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## General standards
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- Prefer small, focused changes.
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- Follow existing naming, formatting, and folder conventions.
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- Keep dependencies pointing inward:
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- Domain depends on nothing
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- Application depends on Domain
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- Infrastructure depends on Application and Domain
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- API depends on Application and Infrastructure
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- AppHost and Migrator are host projects only
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- Use nullable reference types correctly and keep implicit usings compatible with the project style.
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## Clean Architecture guidance
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Use Jason Taylor’s CleanArchitecture project as a reference for intent and structure, but adapt to this codebase’s actual implementation.
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Where the reference template uses MediatR, this project uses `Cortex.Mediator`.
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Add FluentValidation, AutoMapper, NUnit, Shouldly, Moq, or Respawn only if the repository already uses them or the change clearly requires them.
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## Domain layer rules
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- Keep entities simple and focused on business state.
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- Use `BaseEntity` as the shared base type when appropriate.
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- Preserve the current entity style:
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- `Id` as `Guid`
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- audit fields like `CreatedAt`, `ModifiedAt`, `DeletedAt`
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- `IsDeleted` as a derived property
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- Keep validation and persistence concerns out of Domain unless they are intrinsic business rules.
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## Application layer rules
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- Put use cases in feature folders.
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- Follow the existing CQRS split:
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- `FeatureName.cs` as the partial entry point
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- `FeatureName.Query.cs` or `FeatureName.Command.cs`
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- `FeatureName.Handler.cs`
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- `FeatureName.Response.cs`
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- Use `Cortex.Mediator` request and handler interfaces.
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- Keep handlers focused on orchestration and application logic.
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- Use `ILutraDbContext` rather than referencing the concrete DbContext directly when possible.
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## Infrastructure rules
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- Put EF Core implementation, migrations, and database wiring in `Lutra.Infrastructure.Sql`.
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- Keep the DbContext implementation aligned with `ILutraDbContext`.
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- If package versions must be pinned for runtime compatibility, pin them explicitly in the infrastructure project.
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- Be cautious with `PrivateAssets="all"` on design-time packages because they do not flow dependency constraints to downstream projects.
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## API layer rules
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- Keep controllers thin.
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- Controllers should delegate to Application use cases through `IMediator`.
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- Keep `Program.cs` focused on DI and middleware setup.
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## Aspire and migration rules
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- Keep `Lutra.AppHost` responsible for orchestration only.
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- Preserve the persistent PostgreSQL container setup unless a change explicitly requires otherwise.
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- Keep the migrator as a one-shot project that applies migrations on startup.
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- Ensure migration-related changes do not break runtime assembly/version consistency.
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## Naming and code style
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- Use English for general code names (variables, method names, namespaces, folders) and use Dutch only for domain-specific enums, types, and files that reflect business concepts (e.g., `Verspakketten`, `Supermarkt`, `Beoordeling`).
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- Keep class and file names consistent with the feature name.
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- Use sealed types where the project already does.
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- Prefer explicit `required` members where the current codebase uses them.
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- Preserve current indentation and brace style in each file.
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## Testing guidance
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- If tests exist, update or add tests alongside behavior changes.
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- Follow the reference template’s intent for test coverage:
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- unit tests for business logic
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- integration tests for infrastructure and data access
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- functional tests for API behavior
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- Keep tests readable and focused on behavior.
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## When making changes
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- Read the relevant file before editing.
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- Make the smallest change that solves the problem.
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- Reuse existing patterns from the repo instead of inventing new ones.
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- Run or request a build/test verification after changes when appropriate.
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- Avoid broad refactors unless the user asks for them.
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## Available agents
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Specialist agents for common tasks are in `.github/agents/`. Invoke them when the task matches:
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| Agent file | When to use |
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|---|---|
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| `csharp-expert.agent.md` | C# code quality, async patterns, LINQ, nullability, records, performance |
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| `dotnet-expert.agent.md` | .NET architecture, CQRS, DI, SOLID, general engineering guidance |
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| `security-reviewer.agent.md` | API security review, OWASP Top 10, access control, injection risks |
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| `debug.agent.md` | Diagnosing and fixing bugs systematically |
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| `postgresql-dba.agent.md` | PostgreSQL queries, schema, migrations, performance |
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| `test-generator.agent.md` | Generating unit, integration, or functional tests for any layer |
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