srs/openclaw/TOOLS.md
Winlin ebf8b712c9 Proxy: restructure repo as Go project with proxy as first module (#4652)
Reorganize the SRS (Simple Realtime Server) repository to
follow a conventional Go project structure, setting the stage for a
progressive transition from a C++ project to a Go project. The proxy,
which was once contained within its own `proxy/` subdirectory, will now
be converted into the initial Go module located at the root of the
repository, serving as a template for subsequent Go modules.

- **Go module at repo root:** `go.mod` moved to repo root, module
renamed from `proxy` to `srsx`. The repo is now a proper Go project with
`cmd/` and `internal/` at the top level.
- **Elevation of Proxy Code:** Move the proxy code from
`proxy/cmd/proxy-go/` to `cmd/proxy/`, and from `proxy/internal/` to
`internal/`. The proxy serves as the inaugural application; subsequent
modules (for instance, `cmd/origin`) will mimic this arrangement.
- **Documentation Restructured:** Transfer the documentation from
`proxy/docs/` to `docs/proxy/`, revise the main README to endorse
OpenClaw as the preferred AI tool, and update `proxy/README.md` to point
to the new documentation locations.
- **Build and config:** `Makefile` moved to root, `PROXY_STATIC_FILES`
default path corrected for the new layout, `.gitignore` consolidated.
- **Cleanup:** removed standalone `proxy/LICENSE` (repo-level license
applies), all internal imports updated to `srsx/internal/...`.
- **OpenClaw workspace:** added community bot info, git workflow
conventions, and support group behavior guidance.

This restructuring was performed by OpenClaw orchestrating Claude Code
and Codex via ACP.

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: chatgpt-codex-connector[bot] <199175422+chatgpt-codex-connector[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-03-22 08:11:28 -04:00

1.8 KiB

TOOLS.md - Local Notes

Skills define how tools work. This file is for your specifics — the stuff that's unique to your setup.

What Goes Here

Things like:

  • Camera names and locations
  • SSH hosts and aliases
  • Preferred voices for TTS
  • Speaker/room names
  • Device nicknames
  • Anything environment-specific

Examples

### Cameras

- living-room → Main area, 180° wide angle
- front-door → Entrance, motion-triggered

### SSH

- home-server → 192.168.1.100, user: admin

### TTS

- Preferred voice: "Nova" (warm, slightly British)
- Default speaker: Kitchen HomePod

Why Separate?

Skills are shared. Your setup is yours. Keeping them apart means you can update skills without losing your notes, and share skills without leaking your infrastructure.

Telegram

  • Channel: telegram, accountId: srs (SRS bot)
  • When sending to William's Telegram: channel: "telegram", accountId: "srs"

Git Commit Workflow

  • Never git add — William stages files himself
  • Never git push — William pushes himself
  • Commit workflow: git diff --cached → understand the changes → write title/description → git commit -m "OpenClaw: ..."
  • Title prefix: OpenClaw:
  • Co-author for ACP Claude Code: If Claude Code (ACP) was used to make the changes, add: Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
  • Co-author for ACP Codex: If Codex (ACP) was used to make the changes, add: Co-authored-by: chatgpt-codex-connector[bot] <199175422+chatgpt-codex-connector[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>

Go (GVM)

  • Go is managed via GVM (Go Version Manager), NOT Homebrew
  • Before running any go command: source ~/.gvm/scripts/gvm
  • Never use brew install go — always use GVM

Add whatever helps you do your job. This is your cheat sheet.