--- summary: "Command queue design that serializes inbound auto-reply runs" read_when: - Changing auto-reply execution or concurrency --- # Command Queue (2026-01-16) We serialize inbound auto-reply runs (all channels) through a tiny in-process queue to prevent multiple agent runs from colliding, while still allowing safe parallelism across sessions. ## Why - Auto-reply runs can be expensive (LLM calls) and can collide when multiple inbound messages arrive close together. - Serializing avoids competing for shared resources (session files, logs, CLI stdin) and reduces the chance of upstream rate limits. ## How it works - A lane-aware FIFO queue drains each lane with a configurable concurrency cap (default 1 for unconfigured lanes; main defaults to 4, subagent to 8). - `runEmbeddedPiAgent` enqueues by **session key** (lane `session:`) to guarantee only one active run per session. - Each session run is then queued into a **global lane** (`main` by default) so overall parallelism is capped by `agents.defaults.maxConcurrent`. - When verbose logging is enabled, queued runs emit a short notice if they waited more than ~2s before starting. - Typing indicators still fire immediately on enqueue (when supported by the channel) so user experience is unchanged while we wait our turn. ## Queue modes (per channel) Inbound messages can steer the current run, wait for a followup turn, or do both: - `steer`: inject immediately into the current run (cancels pending tool calls after the next tool boundary). If not streaming, falls back to followup. - `followup`: enqueue for the next agent turn after the current run ends. - `collect`: coalesce all queued messages into a **single** followup turn (default). If messages target different channels/threads, they drain individually to preserve routing. - `steer-backlog` (aka `steer+backlog`): steer now **and** preserve the message for a followup turn. - `interrupt` (legacy): abort the active run for that session, then run the newest message. - `queue` (legacy alias): same as `steer`. Steer-backlog means you can get a followup response after the steered run, so streaming surfaces can look like duplicates. Prefer `collect`/`steer` if you want one response per inbound message. Send `/queue collect` as a standalone command (per-session) or set `messages.queue.byChannel.discord: "collect"`. Defaults (when unset in config): - All surfaces → `collect` Configure globally or per channel via `messages.queue`: ```json5 { messages: { queue: { mode: "collect", debounceMs: 1000, cap: 20, drop: "summarize", byChannel: { discord: "collect" } } } } ``` ## Queue options Options apply to `followup`, `collect`, and `steer-backlog` (and to `steer` when it falls back to followup): - `debounceMs`: wait for quiet before starting a followup turn (prevents “continue, continue”). - `cap`: max queued messages per session. - `drop`: overflow policy (`old`, `new`, `summarize`). Summarize keeps a short bullet list of dropped messages and injects it as a synthetic followup prompt. Defaults: `debounceMs: 1000`, `cap: 20`, `drop: summarize`. ## Per-session overrides - Send `/queue ` as a standalone command to store the mode for the current session. - Options can be combined: `/queue collect debounce:2s cap:25 drop:summarize` - `/queue default` or `/queue reset` clears the session override. ## Scope and guarantees - Applies to auto-reply agent runs across all inbound channels that use the gateway reply pipeline (WhatsApp web, Telegram, Slack, Discord, Signal, iMessage, webchat, etc.). - Default lane (`main`) is process-wide for inbound + main heartbeats; set `agents.defaults.maxConcurrent` to allow multiple sessions in parallel. - Additional lanes may exist (e.g. `cron`, `subagent`) so background jobs can run in parallel without blocking inbound replies. - Per-session lanes guarantee that only one agent run touches a given session at a time. - No external dependencies or background worker threads; pure TypeScript + promises. ## Troubleshooting - If commands seem stuck, enable verbose logs and look for “queued for …ms” lines to confirm the queue is draining. - If you need queue depth, enable verbose logs and watch for queue timing lines.