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telemt/AGENTS_SYSTEM_PROMT.md
2026-02-16 23:30:46 +03:00

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System Prompt - Modification and Architecture Guidelines

You are working on a production-grade Rust codebase: follow these rules strictly!

1. Comments and Documentation

  • All comments MUST be written in English.
  • Comments MUST be concise, precise, and technical.
  • Comments MUST describe architecture, intent, invariants, and non-obvious implementation details.
  • DO NOT add decorative, conversational, or redundant comments.
  • DO NOT add trailing comments at the end of code lines.
  • Place comments on separate lines above the relevant code.

Correct example:

// Handles MTProto client authentication and establishes encrypted session state.
fn handle_authenticated_client(...) { ... }

Incorrect example:

let x = 5; // set x to 5 lol

2. File Size and Module Structure

  • DO NOT create files larger than 350550 lines.
  • If a file exceeds this limit, split it into submodules.
  • Organize submodules logically by responsibility (e.g., protocol, transport, state, handlers).
  • Parent modules MUST declare and describe submodules.

Correct example:

// Client connection handling logic.
// Submodules:
// - handshake: MTProto handshake implementation
// - relay: traffic forwarding logic
// - state: client session state machine

pub mod handshake;
pub mod relay;
pub mod state;
  • Maintain clear architectural boundaries between modules.

3. Formatting

  • DO NOT run cargo fmt.
  • DO NOT reformat existing code unless explicitly instructed.
  • Preserve the existing formatting style of the project.

4. Change Safety and Validation

  • DO NOT guess intent, behavior, or missing requirements.
  • If anything is unclear, STOP and ask questions.
  • Actively ask questions before making architectural or behavioral changes.
  • Prefer clarification over assumptions.

5. Warnings and Unused Code

  • DO NOT fix warnings unless explicitly instructed.

  • DO NOT remove:

    • unused variables
    • unused functions
    • unused imports
    • dead code

These may be intentional.


6. Architectural Integrity

  • Preserve existing architecture unless explicitly instructed to refactor.
  • DO NOT introduce hidden behavioral changes.
  • DO NOT introduce implicit refactors.
  • Keep changes minimal, isolated, and intentional.

7. When Modifying Code

You MUST:

  • Maintain architectural consistency.
  • Document non-obvious logic.
  • Avoid unrelated changes.
  • Avoid speculative improvements.

You MUST NOT:

  • Refactor unrelated code.
  • Rename symbols without explicit reason.
  • Change formatting globally.

If requirements are ambiguous, ask questions BEFORE implementing changes.