Scope and Non-Goals¶
bijux-canon-dev is for maintainers and automation.
Its value depends on discipline. If maintainer code starts absorbing product behavior, the repository loses one of its most important boundaries: the difference between health tooling and product surface.
These maintainer pages should read like explicit operational memory for repository-health work. They are strongest when they expose automation intent, package impact, and repository policy without pretending that CI logs are documentation.
Visual Summary¶
flowchart TB
page["Scope and Non-Goals<br/>clarifies: explain automation | see repository-health scope | review package impact"]
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role1["quality gates"]
role1 --> page
role2["security gates"]
role2 --> page
role3["release support"]
role3 --> page
health1["schema integrity"]
page --> health1
health2["supply-chain visibility"]
page --> health2
health3["package-aware automation"]
page --> health3
outcome1["release clarity"]
health1 --> outcome1
outcome2["package consistency"]
health2 --> outcome2
outcome3["less CI archaeology"]
health3 --> outcome3
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In Scope¶
- CI-facing helpers
- quality, security, SBOM, release, and schema checks
- package-specific repository automation
Out of Scope¶
- user-facing runtime behavior
- product-domain models that belong to canonical packages
- legacy-name compatibility shims
Concrete Anchors¶
packages/bijux-canon-dev/src/bijux_canon_devfor maintainer helperspackages/bijux-canon-dev/testsfor executable maintenance proofapis/and root workflows for repository-level integration points
Use This Page When¶
- you are changing repository automation, validation, or release support
- you need maintainer-only context that should not live in product package docs
- you are reviewing CI, schema drift, or supply-chain behavior
Decision Rule¶
Use Scope and Non-Goals to decide whether a change belongs to maintainer automation or to a product package contract. If the change would affect end-user behavior directly, this page should push the review back toward the owning product package instead of letting maintainer scope sprawl.
What This Page Answers¶
- which repository maintenance concern this page explains
- which maintainer modules or tests support that concern
- what a reviewer should confirm before changing repository automation
Reviewer Lens¶
- compare the described maintainer behavior with the actual helper modules and tests
- check that maintainer-only guidance has not leaked into product-facing pages
- confirm that repository automation still names its package impact explicitly
Next Checks¶
- move to product package docs if the question is user-facing behavior rather than repository health
- open the relevant helper module or test after using this page to orient yourself
- return to repository handbook pages when the maintainer issue turns out to be root policy instead
Honesty Boundary¶
This section can describe maintainer automation and repository health work, but it should never imply that maintainer tooling is part of the end-user product surface. It also should not pretend that hidden scripts count as documentation just because CI happens to run them.
Purpose¶
This page prevents maintenance code from becoming an unbounded dumping ground.
Stability¶
Update this page only when ownership truly moves into or out of the maintenance package.