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Creating an Adapter

Build a custom adapter to connect AImetier to any agent runtime.

Built-in External Plugin
Source Inside aimetier-fork Separate npm package
Distribution Ships with AImetier Independent npm publish
UI parser Static import Dynamic load from API
Registration Edit 3 registries Auto-loaded at startup
Best for Core adapters, contributors Third-party adapters, internal tools

For most cases, build an external adapter plugin. It’s cleaner, independently versioned, and doesn’t require modifying AImetier’s source. See External Adapters for the full guide.

The rest of this page covers the shared internals that both paths use.

packages/adapters/<name>/ # built-in
── or ──
my-adapter/ # external plugin
package.json
tsconfig.json
src/
index.ts # Shared metadata
server/
index.ts # Server exports (createServerAdapter)
execute.ts # Core execution logic
parse.ts # Output parsing
test.ts # Environment diagnostics
ui/
index.ts # UI exports (built-in only)
parse-stdout.ts # Transcript parser (built-in only)
build-config.ts # Config builder
ui-parser.ts # Self-contained UI parser (external — see [UI Parser Contract](/adapters/adapter-ui-parser))
cli/
index.ts # CLI exports
format-event.ts # Terminal formatter

src/index.ts is imported by all three consumers. Keep it dependency-free.

export const type = "my_agent"; // snake_case, globally unique
export const label = "My Agent (local)";
export const models = [
{ id: "model-a", label: "Model A" },
];
export const agentConfigurationDoc = `# my_agent configuration
Use when: ...
Don't use when: ...
Core fields: ...
`;
// Required for external adapters (plugin-loader convention)
export { createServerAdapter } from "./server/index.js";

src/server/execute.ts is the core. It receives an AdapterExecutionContext and returns an AdapterExecutionResult.

Key responsibilities:

  1. Read config using safe helpers (asString, asNumber, etc.) from @aimetier/adapter-utils/server-utils
  2. Build environment with buildAImetierEnv(agent) plus context vars
  3. Resolve session state from runtime.sessionParams
  4. Render prompt with renderTemplate(template, data)
  5. Spawn the process with runChildProcess() or call via fetch()
  6. Parse output for usage, costs, session state, errors
  7. Handle unknown session errors (retry fresh, set clearSession: true)
Helper Source Purpose
runChildProcess(cmd, opts) @aimetier/adapter-utils/server-utils Spawn with timeout, grace, streaming
buildAImetierEnv(agent) @aimetier/adapter-utils/server-utils Inject AIMETIER_* env vars
renderTemplate(tpl, data) @aimetier/adapter-utils/server-utils {{variable}} substitution
asString(v) @aimetier/adapter-utils Safe config value extraction
asNumber(v) @aimetier/adapter-utils Safe number extraction
interface AdapterExecutionContext {
runId: string;
agent: { id: string; companyId: string; name: string; adapterConfig: unknown };
runtime: { sessionId: string | null; sessionParams: Record<string, unknown> | null };
config: Record<string, unknown>; // agent's adapterConfig
context: Record<string, unknown>; // task, wake reason, etc.
onLog: (stream: "stdout" | "stderr", chunk: string) => Promise<void>;
onMeta?: (meta: AdapterInvocationMeta) => Promise<void>;
onSpawn?: (meta: { pid: number; startedAt: string }) => Promise<void>;
}
interface AdapterExecutionResult {
exitCode: number | null;
signal: string | null;
timedOut: boolean;
errorMessage?: string | null;
usage?: { inputTokens: number; outputTokens: number };
sessionParams?: Record<string, unknown> | null; // persist across heartbeats
sessionDisplayId?: string | null;
provider?: string | null;
model?: string | null;
costUsd?: number | null;
clearSession?: boolean; // set true to force fresh session on next wake
}

src/server/test.ts validates the adapter config before running.

Return structured diagnostics:

Level Meaning Effect
error Invalid or unusable setup Blocks execution
warn Non-blocking issue Shown with yellow indicator
info Successful check Shown in test results
export async function testEnvironment(
ctx: AdapterEnvironmentTestContext,
): Promise<AdapterEnvironmentTestResult> {
return {
adapterType: ctx.adapterType,
status: "pass", // "pass" | "warn" | "fail"
checks: [
{ level: "info", message: "CLI v1.2.0 detected", code: "cli_detected" },
{ level: "warn", message: "No API key found", hint: "Set ANTHROPIC_API_KEY", code: "no_key" },
],
testedAt: new Date().toISOString(),
};
}

For built-in adapters registered in AImetier’s source:

  • parse-stdout.ts — converts stdout lines to TranscriptEntry[] for the run viewer
  • build-config.ts — converts form values to adapterConfig JSON
  • Config fields React component in ui/src/adapters/<name>/config-fields.tsx

For external adapters, use a self-contained ui-parser.ts instead. See the UI Parser Contract.

format-event.ts — pretty-prints stdout for aimetier run --watch using picocolors.

export function formatStdoutEvent(line: string, debug: boolean): void {
if (line.startsWith("[tool-done]")) {
console.log(chalk.green(`${line}`));
} else {
console.log(` ${line}`);
}
}

Add the adapter to all three registries:

  1. server/src/adapters/registry.ts
  2. ui/src/adapters/registry.ts
  3. cli/src/adapters/registry.ts

For external adapters, registration is automatic — the plugin loader handles it.

If your agent runtime supports conversation continuity across heartbeats:

  1. Return sessionParams from execute() (e.g., { sessionId: "abc123" })
  2. Read runtime.sessionParams on the next wake to resume
  3. Optionally implement a sessionCodec for validation and display
export const sessionCodec: AdapterSessionCodec = {
deserialize(raw) { /* validate raw session data */ },
serialize(params) { /* serialize for storage */ },
getDisplayId(params) { /* human-readable session label */ },
};

Adapters can declare what “local” capabilities they support by setting optional fields on the ServerAdapterModule. The server and UI use these flags to decide which features to enable for agents using the adapter (instructions bundle editor, skills sync, JWT auth, etc.).

Flag Type Default What it controls
supportsLocalAgentJwt boolean false Whether heartbeat generates a local JWT for the agent
supportsInstructionsBundle boolean false Managed instructions bundle (AGENTS.md) — server-side resolution + UI editor
instructionsPathKey string "instructionsFilePath" The adapterConfig key that holds the instructions file path
requiresMaterializedRuntimeSkills boolean false Whether runtime skill entries must be written to disk before execution

These flags are exposed via GET /api/adapters in a capabilities object, along with a derived supportsSkills flag (true when listSkills or syncSkills is defined).

export function createServerAdapter(): ServerAdapterModule {
return {
type: "my_k8s_adapter",
execute: myExecute,
testEnvironment: myTestEnvironment,
listSkills: myListSkills,
syncSkills: mySyncSkills,
// Capability flags
supportsLocalAgentJwt: true,
supportsInstructionsBundle: true,
instructionsPathKey: "instructionsFilePath",
requiresMaterializedRuntimeSkills: true,
};
}

With these flags set, the AImetier UI will automatically show the instructions bundle editor, skills management tab, and working directory field for agents using this adapter — no AImetier source changes required.

If capability flags are not set, the server falls back to legacy hardcoded lists for built-in adapter types. External adapters that omit the flags will default to false for all capabilities.

Make AImetier skills discoverable to your agent runtime without writing to the agent’s working directory:

  1. Best: tmpdir + flag — create tmpdir, symlink skills, pass via CLI flag, clean up after
  2. Acceptable: global config dir — symlink to the runtime’s global plugins directory
  3. Acceptable: env var — point a skills path env var at the repo’s skills/ directory
  4. Last resort: prompt injection — include skill content in the prompt template
  • Treat agent output as untrusted (parse defensively, never execute)
  • Inject secrets via environment variables, not prompts
  • Configure network access controls if the runtime supports them
  • Always enforce timeout and grace period
  • The UI parser module runs in a browser sandbox — zero runtime imports, no side effects