Ota Tool Pressure-Tested on Kylrix Next.js Workspace With Dual Contributor Modes
Kylrix, a large Next.js workspace, was used as a pressure-testing target for Ota, a developer contract and runtime governance tool. The project features two distinct local environments: a contributor path using SQLite and a self-hosted topology built on Docker Compose with Appwrite. The pressure test focused on establishing a clear contributor contract that treats these two paths as separate execution realities rather than a single unified setup. Key outcomes included declaring a canonical listener for the Next.js service on port 3005, enabling Ota to derive launch flags and readiness checks automatically, and enforcing attachment isolation between native and container verification modes. The released v1.6.24 pressure run confirmed that contributor surfaces could be validated across native and container lanes, while the self-hosted Compose workflow was modeled but not fully matrix-executed.
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