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Contributing to @agentruntimecontrolprotocol/sdk

Thanks for your interest in improving the TypeScript SDK for ARCP. This document covers how to report issues, propose changes, and get a change merged.

Be respectful — assume good intent, keep critique focused on the work, and flag conduct issues to the maintainers.

Where changes belong

ARCP is two things in two places, and a change belongs to exactly one of them:

  • The protocol — the wire format, message semantics, lease rules, error taxonomy, feature flags. These live in the specification repository. If your idea changes what goes on the wire or what a conformant runtime must do, it is a spec change — open it there, not here. This SDK implements the spec; it does not define it.
  • This SDK — how the protocol is expressed idiomatically in TypeScript: bugs, ergonomics, performance, missing-but-specified features, docs, tests. Those belong here.

When in doubt, open an issue here and we'll redirect if it's really a protocol question.

The golden rule: conform, don't extend

A change to this SDK must keep it a faithful client of ARCP v1.1 (draft). Concretely:

  • Don't invent wire behavior. No envelope fields, event kinds, error codes, or feature flags that the spec doesn't define. If you need one, it's a spec proposal first.
  • Negotiate honestly. Only advertise a feature flag in session.hello once the SDK actually implements it. The feature matrix in the README must match what the code negotiates — a row marked Supported is a promise.
  • Respect the semantics. Sequence numbers stay gap-free and monotonic; LEASE_EXPIRED and BUDGET_EXHAUSTED stay non-retryable; the effective feature set is the intersection of client and runtime advertisements. Tests must not paper over a semantic the spec requires.
  • Stay layered. This SDK controls runtimes. It does not expose tools (that's MCP) or export telemetry (that's OpenTelemetry). PRs that blur those layers will be asked to move the logic out.

Reporting bugs

Open an issue with: the SDK version and TypeScript version, the runtime you connected to, a minimal reproduction (the smallest program that triggers it), what you expected, and what happened. A failing test is the best possible bug report. Wire-level traces (the envelopes exchanged) help enormously for protocol behavior — redact any auth.token or provisioned-credential value first.

Proposing a change

For anything beyond a small fix, open an issue describing the problem before writing code, so we can agree on the approach. Small, focused PRs review faster than large ones; if a change is big, say so early and we'll help break it down.

Development setup

This repo is a pnpm workspace containing the @agentruntimecontrolprotocol/* packages (core, client, runtime, sdk, and the middleware/* adapters). You need Node.js >= 22 and pnpm 9.15.0 (the version pinned via packageManager in the root package.json; corepack enable will pick it up automatically). Clone the repo, install once, and build all packages:

git clone https://github.com/agentruntimecontrolprotocol/typescript-sdk.git
cd typescript-sdk
corepack enable
pnpm install
pnpm build

A simple-git-hooks pre-commit hook runs Biome lint, tsc, and the test suite; it is installed automatically on pnpm install.

Tests and conformance

Two layers must pass before a PR merges:

  • Unit tests — this SDK's own suite:

    pnpm test
  • Conformance — the SDK's behavior against the reference runtime. New protocol-facing code (session negotiation, event sequencing, lease handling, error mapping) needs a test that exercises the real exchange, not a mock that assumes the answer. Because this SDK ships both @agentruntimecontrolprotocol/client and @agentruntimecontrolprotocol/runtime (it is the reference implementation), conformance tests run in-process by wiring the client to the runtime over the bundled MemoryTransport; the per-section spec mapping lives in CONFORMANCE.md, and the runnable end-to-end exchanges live under examples/ and can be pointed at any conformant runtime via the ARCP_DEMO_URL / ARCP_DEMO_TOKEN environment variables.

CI runs both on every PR. A PR that changes which feature flags the SDK negotiates must also update the README feature matrix in the same change.

Coding standards

This repo uses Biome (lint + format on source), ESLint (import / TSDoc / unicorn / n rules), Prettier (Markdown, JSON, YAML), and tsc for type checking. Run them via the workspace scripts:

pnpm lint          # biome lint . && eslint .
pnpm lint:fix      # auto-fix biome + eslint findings
pnpm format        # prettier --write .
pnpm format:check  # prettier --check . (CI)
pnpm typecheck     # tsc --noEmit across every workspace package
pnpm check:all     # lint + typecheck + test + cycle / attw / publint checks

Match the surrounding code. Public API changes need doc comments and an entry in the changelog. Prefer clarity over cleverness in a library others build on.

Commit and pull-request conventions

  • Write focused commits with present-tense, imperative subjects (add result_chunk reassembly, not added / adds).

  • Reference the issue a PR closes (Closes #123).

  • Keep the PR description honest about scope and any spec sections touched.

  • Rebase on the default branch and ensure CI is green before requesting review.

  • Sign off your commits to certify the Developer Certificate of Origin:

    git commit -s -m "your message"
  • User-visible changes need a changeset. Run pnpm changeset, pick the affected packages and bump level, and commit the generated .changeset/*.md with your PR — the release workflow uses it to compute version bumps and changelogs.

Releases

Releases are cut by maintainers. The workspace is managed with Changesets: merging changeset files to main opens a "Version Packages" PR that bumps versions and writes per-package CHANGELOG.md files, and merging that PR triggers the publish workflow which publishes every changed @agentruntimecontrolprotocol/* package to npm with provenance. The SDK is versioned with semantic versioning independently of the protocol version it speaks; a protocol version bump is noted in the changelog when the negotiated ARCP version changes.

License

By contributing, you agree that your contributions are licensed under the project's Apache-2.0 license.