tftsr-devops_investigation/node_modules/signal-exit/dist/cjs/index.d.ts
Shaun Arman 8839075805 feat: initial implementation of TFTSR IT Triage & RCA application
Implements Phases 1-8 of the TFTSR implementation plan.

Rust backend (Tauri 2.x, src-tauri/):
- Multi-provider AI: OpenAI-compatible, Anthropic, Gemini, Mistral, Ollama
- PII detection engine: 11 regex patterns with overlap resolution
- SQLCipher AES-256 encrypted database with 10 versioned migrations
- 28 Tauri IPC commands for triage, analysis, document, and system ops
- Ollama: hardware probe, model recommendations, pull/delete with events
- RCA and blameless post-mortem Markdown document generators
- PDF export via printpdf
- Audit log: SHA-256 hash of every external data send
- Integration stubs for Confluence, ServiceNow, Azure DevOps (v0.2)

Frontend (React 18 + TypeScript + Vite, src/):
- 9 pages: full triage workflow NewIssue→LogUpload→Triage→Resolution→RCA→Postmortem→History+Settings
- 7 components: ChatWindow, TriageProgress, PiiDiffViewer, DocEditor, HardwareReport, ModelSelector, UI primitives
- 3 Zustand stores: session, settings (persisted), history
- Type-safe tauriCommands.ts matching Rust backend types exactly
- 8 IT domain system prompts (Linux, Windows, Network, K8s, DB, Virt, HW, Obs)

DevOps:
- .woodpecker/test.yml: rustfmt, clippy, cargo test, tsc, vitest on every push
- .woodpecker/release.yml: linux/amd64 + linux/arm64 builds, Gogs release upload

Verified:
- cargo check: zero errors
- tsc --noEmit: zero errors
- vitest run: 13/13 unit tests passing

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-14 22:36:25 -05:00

48 lines
1.7 KiB
TypeScript

/// <reference types="node" />
import { signals } from './signals.js';
export { signals };
/**
* A function that takes an exit code and signal as arguments
*
* In the case of signal exits *only*, a return value of true
* will indicate that the signal is being handled, and we should
* not synthetically exit with the signal we received. Regardless
* of the handler return value, the handler is unloaded when an
* otherwise fatal signal is received, so you get exactly 1 shot
* at it, unless you add another onExit handler at that point.
*
* In the case of numeric code exits, we may already have committed
* to exiting the process, for example via a fatal exception or
* unhandled promise rejection, so it is impossible to stop safely.
*/
export type Handler = (code: number | null | undefined, signal: NodeJS.Signals | null) => true | void;
export declare const
/**
* Called when the process is exiting, whether via signal, explicit
* exit, or running out of stuff to do.
*
* If the global process object is not suitable for instrumentation,
* then this will be a no-op.
*
* Returns a function that may be used to unload signal-exit.
*/
onExit: (cb: Handler, opts?: {
alwaysLast?: boolean | undefined;
} | undefined) => () => void,
/**
* Load the listeners. Likely you never need to call this, unless
* doing a rather deep integration with signal-exit functionality.
* Mostly exposed for the benefit of testing.
*
* @internal
*/
load: () => void,
/**
* Unload the listeners. Likely you never need to call this, unless
* doing a rather deep integration with signal-exit functionality.
* Mostly exposed for the benefit of testing.
*
* @internal
*/
unload: () => void;
//# sourceMappingURL=index.d.ts.map