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# Contracts
The exact shapes that the refactor delivers. These are the things every
node converges on. Treat them as APIs.
Order: top-down — what a Node-RED user sees, what a node author writes,
what `generalFunctions` provides.
## 1. The Node-RED-visible contract per node
Every node exposes the same three Port shapes:
| Port | Direction | Carries |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | out | Process data — formatted via `outputUtils.formatMsg(..., 'process')` |
| 1 | out | InfluxDB telemetry — formatted via `outputUtils.formatMsg(..., 'influxdb')` |
| 2 | out | Registration / control plumbing |
| in | in | Commands routed by `msg.topic` through the `commands/` registry |
Every node also publishes a per-repo `CONTRACT.md` listing:
- Every `msg.topic` it accepts on Port 0 input, with the payload schema.
- Every `topic` shape it emits on Port 0/1/2.
- Every event its `measurements.emitter` fires for parents to subscribe.
- Every position label it expects from children.
This file is generated from the node's `commands/` module + a small
hand-written events section.
### Topic naming — canonical from Phase 1
`msg.topic` always uses one of these prefixes. `<noun>` and `<verb>`
are kebab-case after the dot (`set.flow-setpoint`, not
`set.flowSetpoint`).
#### Inputs — topics the node accepts on Port-0 input
| Prefix | Meaning | Idempotent? | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| `set.<noun>` | **Setter.** Replaces a state value with the supplied payload. Repeating with the same payload does nothing extra. | Yes | `set.mode`, `set.scaling`, `set.demand`, `set.inflow` |
| `cmd.<verb>` | **Imperative action.** Triggers a transition or sequence. Repeating triggers it again (or is rejected). | No | `cmd.startup`, `cmd.shutdown`, `cmd.estop`, `cmd.calibrate` |
| `data.<noun>` | **Bulk data input.** Sensor readings, measurement values, raw streams. The node consumes them. | n/a — values flow | `data.measurement`, `data.flow`, `data.pressure` |
| `child.<verb>` | **Parent/child plumbing.** Registration handshakes routed via Port 2. | n/a | `child.register`, `child.unregister` |
| `query.<noun>` | **Synchronous query.** The node responds on the same `msg` (or a sibling output). Used for read-only debug queries from a dashboard. | Yes (read-only) | `query.curves`, `query.cog`, `query.snapshot` |
#### Outputs — topics the node EMITS
| Prefix | Meaning | Where it appears |
|---|---|---|
| `evt.<noun>` | **Event.** A fact about something that just happened. Other nodes/dashboards subscribe to react. The node fires-and-forgets — no consumer is required. | `msg.topic` on Port 0 output, also fired internally on `this.emitter` so sibling modules can listen. |
`evt.*` is *one-way*: the node says "this happened", consumers can do
whatever they like with it. Examples: `evt.state-change` (state machine
moved), `evt.alarm` (a safety threshold tripped), `evt.calibrated`
(calibration completed). If you find yourself wanting to send a
command via `evt.*`, you actually want `set.*` or `cmd.*`.
The default measurement output (the delta-compressed payload from
`outputUtils.formatMsg`) keeps `msg.topic = config.general.name` per
the existing convention. `evt.*` is for *additional* event-shaped
emissions, not for the per-tick measurement stream.
#### Aliases for legacy names
Each `commands/index.js` declares the canonical name as `topic` and
lists pre-refactor names in `aliases`. The first time an alias fires,
the runtime logs a one-time deprecation warning. Aliases are removed
in Phase 7 after one release cycle.
#### Why these prefixes (the reasoning)
Today's topics mix `setMode` (verb-noun, no separator), `q_in`
(snake-case, abbreviation), `Qd` (PascalCase abbreviation),
`changemode` (lowercase joined), `execSequence` (verb-noun, camel).
A reader can't tell from the topic name whether it's a setter, an
action, or an event. The prefix system says it explicitly:
- `set.x` means "I'm replacing the value of x". Safe to retry.
- `cmd.x` means "I'm asking you to do x once". Don't retry blindly.
- `data.x` means "here's a value I'm pushing into your stream".
- `query.x` means "tell me what x is right now".
- `child.x` means "plumbing — only the parent/child machinery cares".
- `evt.x` (output only) means "this happened, do what you want".
## 2. `BaseNodeAdapter` — the shape of every nodeClass
Lives in `generalFunctions/src/nodered/BaseNodeAdapter.js`. Each node's
`nodeClass.js` extends it.
```js
const { BaseNodeAdapter } = require('generalFunctions');
const Domain = require('./specificClass');
const commands = require('./commands');
class nodeClass extends BaseNodeAdapter {
// The domain class to instantiate.
static DomainClass = Domain;
// The command registry — see section 4.
static commands = commands;
// Opt-in periodic tick. Default null = event-driven (domain emits
// 'output-changed' when output should refresh). Set to ms only when
// the domain genuinely needs a time-based heartbeat.
// Example reason (above the line): "needs delta-time for predicted
// volume integrator".
static tickInterval = null;
// Always-on status badge poll. Required for Node-RED's editor
// refresh. Set to 0 only in headless environments.
static statusInterval = 1000;
// Build the domain-specific config slice from the Node-RED uiConfig.
// Base config (general, asset, functionality, logging) is built by
// BaseNodeAdapter via configManager.buildConfig.
buildDomainConfig(uiConfig, nodeId) {
return {
basin: { volume: uiConfig.basinVolume, height: uiConfig.basinHeight, ... },
hydraulics: { ... },
control: { ... },
safety: { ... },
};
}
}
module.exports = nodeClass;
```
### Lifecycle (provided by base, do not reimplement)
In order, in the constructor:
1. Build merged config (`configManager.buildConfig` + `buildDomainConfig`).
2. Instantiate `DomainClass` with that config; store as `this.source`,
also as `this.node.source` for sibling-node lookup.
3. Send Port 2 registration message (after a 100 ms delay).
4. **Output strategy** — pick one based on `static tickInterval`:
- `tickInterval = N` (ms): start a periodic timer that calls
`this.source.tick?.()`, then formats and sends outputs.
- `tickInterval = null`: subscribe to `'output-changed'` on
`this.source.emitter`. Whenever the domain fires that event, the
adapter formats and sends outputs.
In both modes, `outputUtils.formatMsg` does delta compression — a
send only emits changed fields.
5. Start the status loop at `static statusInterval` ms:
- Call `this.source.getStatusBadge()` (see section 7), apply via
`node.status(...)`.
6. Attach the `input` handler — dispatches by `msg.topic` through the
commands registry.
7. Attach the `close` handler — clears timers, removes child
listeners, clears status.
### Event-driven is the default
A domain that doesn't need time-driven math fires
`this.emitter.emit('output-changed')` whenever its public state shifts
(e.g. after a measurement update, a state transition, a calibration).
The base adapter pushes outputs in response. No 1 Hz polling.
A domain that DOES need time-driven math (e.g. `pumpingStation`
integrating predicted volume) opts into a tick. The tick runs the
time-based update; if that update changes output state, the domain
emits `'output-changed'` and the same code path that handles
event-driven nodes pushes outputs.
This keeps the output pipeline single-shape regardless of which mode
the domain uses.
### Override hooks
A subclass may override:
| Hook | When |
|---|---|
| `buildDomainConfig(uiConfig, nodeId)` | Always — required. |
| `extraSetup()` | If a node needs custom wiring beyond the base. |
| `extraInputDispatch(msg, send, done)` | If commands registry can't express a topic. Avoid; prefer the registry. |
| `extraClose()` | Custom teardown beyond clearing intervals. |
### Forbidden in subclasses
- Re-implementing the tick or status loop. Use `getOutput()` /
`getStatusBadge()` on the domain.
- Calling `this.source._private`. Domain exposes a public surface.
- Importing from another node's `src/`.
## 3. `BaseDomain` — the shape of every specificClass
Lives in `generalFunctions/src/domain/BaseDomain.js`. Each node's
`specificClass.js` extends it.
```js
const { BaseDomain, UnitPolicy, ChildRouter } = require('generalFunctions');
class PumpingStation extends BaseDomain {
// Identifies the config in generalFunctions/src/configs/<name>.json.
static name = 'pumpingStation';
// Declarative unit policy — see section 6.
static unitPolicy = UnitPolicy.declare({
canonical: { flow: 'm3/s', pressure: 'Pa', power: 'W', temperature: 'K' },
output: { flow: 'm3/h', pressure: 'mbar', power: 'kW', temperature: 'C' },
});
// Run after BaseDomain has built emitter, config, logger, measurements,
// childRegistrationUtils. Wire concern-modules and any extra state.
configure() {
this.basin = new BasinGeometry(this.config, this.logger);
this.flowAggregator = new FlowAggregator(this.context());
this.safety = new SafetyController(this.context());
this.strategies = require('./control');
this.router = new ChildRouter(this)
.on('machinegroup', this._onMachineGroup)
.on('measurement', { type: 'pressure' }, this._onPressure)
.on('measurement', { type: 'level' }, this._onLevel);
}
// Per-tick — orchestration only, all real work is in modules.
tick() {
this.flowAggregator.update();
const safe = this.safety.evaluate();
if (safe.blocked) return;
this.strategies[this.mode]?.run(this.context());
}
// What goes on Port 0 / Port 1.
getOutput() {
return {
...this.measurements.getFlattenedOutput(),
...this.basin.snapshot(),
...this.flowAggregator.snapshot(),
};
}
// What the Node-RED status badge shows — see section 7.
// Aggregators (no clean state machine) use compose. State-machine
// nodes (rotatingMachine) use byState. Both return {fill, shape, text}.
getStatusBadge() {
const direction = this.flowAggregator.direction;
const vol = this.measurements.type('volume').variant('measured').position('atequipment').getCurrentValue('m3');
const pct = (vol / this.basin.maxVolAtOverflow * 100).toFixed(1);
const arrow = direction === 'filling' ? '⬆️' : direction === 'draining' ? '⬇️' : '⏸️';
return statusBadge.compose([
`${arrow} ${pct}%`,
`V=${vol.toFixed(2)}/${this.basin.maxVolAtOverflow.toFixed(2)} m³`,
]);
}
}
module.exports = PumpingStation;
```
### What `BaseDomain` provides (do not reimplement)
The base constructor sets up:
| Property | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| `this.emitter` | `EventEmitter` | Internal events. Fire `'output-changed'` here when public state shifts in event-driven nodes. |
| `this.configManager`, `this.configUtils`, `this.defaultConfig` | — | Wired from `static name`. |
| `this.config` | object | Validated config. |
| `this.logger` | logger | Named after `config.general.name`. |
| `this.measurements` | `MeasurementContainer` | Built from `static unitPolicy`. |
| `this.childRegistrationUtils` | child registry | The `child` dict is auto-created. |
Then it calls `this.configure()` — your hook. Then it calls
`this._init?.()` if defined.
### Named child accessors (registry-as-truth, readable in code)
Children live in `this.child[<softwareType>][<category>]` (the
registry, populated by `childRegistrationUtils`). For readable code,
each domain declares **named getters** in `configure()` that surface
the relevant slices:
```js
configure() {
// Reads as: ps.machines, ps.machineGroups, ps.stations.
this.declareChildGetter('machines', 'machine');
this.declareChildGetter('machineGroups', 'machinegroup');
this.declareChildGetter('stations', 'pumpingstation');
}
```
`declareChildGetter(name, softwareType, category?)` (provided by
BaseDomain) installs a getter that flattens
`this.child[softwareType]` into one object keyed by child id (across
all categories) — or filters by `category` if given.
The registry is the source of truth; the getters keep call sites
readable. `Object.values(this.machines).forEach(...)` works exactly
like before; assignments like `this.machines[id] = child` no longer
work — registration goes through `this.router` (or `registerChild`).
### Two output strategies — domain decides
| Strategy | When to pick | What domain does | What adapter does |
|---|---|---|---|
| **Event-driven** (default) | Domain reacts to incoming events (measurements, state changes, commands) and has no genuinely time-driven math. | Fire `this.emitter.emit('output-changed')` whenever the public output state shifts. | Subscribes to `'output-changed'`; on each fire, calls `getOutput()` and pushes the delta-compressed message. |
| **Tick-driven** (opt-in) | Domain has time-driven math that can't be expressed as a reaction to events (integrators, simulators, time-based thresholds). | Implement `tick()`. Fire `'output-changed'` from inside it whenever the tick changes output state. | Calls `tick()` every `static tickInterval` ms (set on the nodeClass subclass). Listens to `'output-changed'` the same as event-driven nodes. |
Both strategies funnel into the same `'output-changed'``getOutput()`
`formatMsg``node.send` pipeline. The only difference is what
fires the event.
### `this.context()`
Returns a frozen view passed to concern-modules so they don't reach into
`this`. Default shape:
```js
{
config: this.config,
logger: this.logger,
measurements: this.measurements,
emitter: this.emitter,
child: this.child,
unitPolicy: this.unitPolicy,
}
```
A node may override `context()` to add domain-specific keys (e.g.
`pumpingStation` adds `basin`).
### `getOutput()` and `getStatusBadge()` are the only required methods
Everything else is configuration. If a domain can be expressed without a
custom `tick()` (e.g. a passive aggregator), don't define one.
## 4. The commands registry
Each node has `src/commands/index.js` that exports an array of command
descriptors:
```js
const handlers = require('./handlers');
module.exports = [
{
topic: 'set.mode',
aliases: ['setMode', 'changemode'], // legacy names
payloadSchema: { type: 'string' },
description: 'Switch the node between auto and manual control modes.',
handler: handlers.setMode,
},
{
topic: 'cmd.startup',
aliases: ['execSequence:startup'],
payloadSchema: { type: 'object', properties: { source: { type: 'string' } } },
handler: handlers.startup,
},
{
topic: 'cmd.calibrate',
payloadSchema: { type: 'none' },
description: 'Trigger a one-shot calibration. Payload is ignored.',
handler: handlers.calibrate,
},
...
];
```
### `payloadSchema.type` values
| Type | Meaning |
|---|---|
| `'string'` | `typeof payload === 'string'`. |
| `'number'` | `typeof payload === 'number'`. |
| `'boolean'` | `typeof payload === 'boolean'`. |
| `'object'` | Non-null object. Optional `properties: { key: 'typeName' }` enforces per-key `typeof` (missing keys allowed). |
| `'any'` | Anything passes. Use when the handler accepts heterogeneous payloads. |
| `'none'` | **Trigger-only.** Handler is invoked regardless of payload. If `msg.payload` is anything other than `undefined`/`null`, the registry logs a `warn` (`"<topic>: payload ignored — this is a trigger-only topic"`) and still invokes the handler. Use for pure triggers (`cmd.calibrate`, `cmd.estop`, `set.simulator`, ...) — strict alternative to `'any'`. |
### Optional `description` field
A descriptor may include a free-text 1-line `description` string. It is surfaced by `.list()` (the docs surface) and consumed by `wikiGen`'s topic-contract auto-gen. Example:
```js
{ topic: 'cmd.calibrate', payloadSchema: { type: 'none' }, description: 'Trigger a one-shot calibration.', handler: handlers.calibrate }
```
### Optional `units` field — pre-dispatch unit normalisation
A descriptor for a numeric setter / data topic may declare:
```js
units: { measure: '<measureName>', default: '<unitAbbr>' }
```
- `measure`: a `convert`-recognised measure name (`volumeFlowRate`, `pressure`, `power`, `temperature`, `volume`, `length`, …).
- `default`: the unit the handler always receives. Operator-friendly (e.g. `m3/h`, `mbar`, `kW`, `C`).
Validation: if `units` is present, both fields must be non-empty strings. The registry throws at construction otherwise.
At dispatch time, **before** the handler runs and **before** payload-schema validation, the registry normalises the incoming msg:
1. Extract value + unit. Three accepted shapes:
- `msg.payload` is a number → `value = msg.payload`, `unit = msg.unit`.
- `msg.payload = { value: <number>, unit?: <string> }` → use those (falls back to `msg.unit` if `payload.unit` is absent).
- Anything else (string, object without `value`, missing payload, …) → normalisation is skipped; the handler receives the raw msg unchanged. No crash.
2. Determine the unit-of-record:
- **No unit supplied** → silently assume `units.default`.
- **Unit recognised + correct measure** → `convert(value).from(unit).to(default)`.
- **Unit recognised but wrong measure** → log `warn` with the topic, the actual measure, the expected measure, and the accepted-unit list. Fall through with the supplied value assumed to already be in `default`.
- **Unit unrecognised** → log `warn` with the topic, the unknown unit, and the accepted-unit list. Fall through with the supplied value assumed to already be in `default`.
3. Rewrite the msg so the handler sees uniform inputs:
- `msg.payload` becomes the normalised number in `units.default` (the object form `{value, unit}` is flattened to a number).
- `msg.unit` is set to `units.default`.
Accepted-unit lists come from `convert.possibilities(measure)`. If that helper is unavailable, the warn falls back to `(see convert docs)`.
The `units` field is surfaced by `.list()` (so wikiGen + `query.units` can render the contract) and is `null` for descriptors that don't declare it.
Example:
```js
{
topic: 'set.demand',
units: { measure: 'volumeFlowRate', default: 'm3/h' },
payloadSchema: { type: 'number' },
description: 'Operator demand setpoint.',
handler: handlers.setDemand,
}
```
A handler is a pure function:
```js
// handlers.js
exports.setMode = (source, msg, ctx) => {
source.setMode(msg.payload);
};
exports.startup = async (source, msg, ctx) => {
await source.handleInput(msg.payload?.source ?? 'parent', 'execSequence', 'startup');
};
```
The `BaseNodeAdapter` builds a `Map<topic-or-alias, descriptor>` at
construction time. Dispatch is one lookup. Aliases log a one-time
deprecation warning the first time each fires.
### Why declarative?
- Auto-generates `CONTRACT.md` per node.
- Lets us add cross-node static checks (no two nodes use the same
`set.x` for different things).
- Replaces the per-node 100-line input switch with a 5-line dispatch.
## 5. `ChildRouter` — declarative parent registration
Lives in `generalFunctions/src/domain/ChildRouter.js`. Built on top of
the existing `childRegistrationUtils`.
```js
this.router = new ChildRouter(this)
// Register a callback when a child of a given software type registers.
.onRegister('machinegroup', (child) => this._onMachineGroupRegistered(child))
// Subscribe to a measurement event from any child of a given softwareType.
// The third arg filters by emit-side position.
.onMeasurement('measurement', { type: 'pressure', position: 'upstream' }, (data, child) => {
this._onPressure('upstream', data.value, data);
})
// Subscribe to predicted-flow events from any group/machine child.
.onPrediction('machinegroup', { type: 'flow', position: 'downstream' }, (data, child) => {
this._onPredictedFlow(child, data);
});
```
`ChildRouter` owns:
- The handler maps (`onRegister`, `onMeasurement`, `onPrediction`).
- Listener attachment + teardown (called from `BaseDomain` on close).
- Software-type alias resolution (already in `childRegistrationUtils`).
Per-node `registerChild` boilerplate disappears. The base
`childRegistrationUtils.registerChild` calls `this.mainClass.registerChild`
which delegates to `this.router.dispatchRegister(child, softwareType)`.
## 6. `UnitPolicy`
Lives in `generalFunctions/src/domain/UnitPolicy.js`. Replaces the
duplicated `_buildUnitPolicy` / `_resolveUnitOrFallback` /
`_convertUnitValue` in `rotatingMachine` and `machineGroupControl`.
```js
static unitPolicy = UnitPolicy.declare({
canonical: { flow: 'm3/s', pressure: 'Pa', power: 'W', temperature: 'K' },
output: { flow: 'm3/h', pressure: 'mbar', power: 'kW', temperature: 'C' },
curve: { flow: 'm3/h', pressure: 'mbar', power: 'kW', control: '%' }, // optional
// Types whose values must always carry a unit on write.
requireUnitForTypes: ['flow', 'pressure', 'power', 'temperature'],
});
```
Methods on the resulting policy:
| Method | Purpose |
|---|---|
| `policy.canonical(type)` | Canonical unit for a measurement type. |
| `policy.output(type)` | Display / IO unit for a measurement type. |
| `policy.curve(type)` | Curve-input unit for a measurement type (returns `null` if no `curve` was declared). |
| `policy.resolve(candidate, expectedMeasure, fallback, label)` | Validate a user-supplied unit, fall back if invalid (logs `warn`). |
| `policy.convert(value, fromUnit, toUnit, contextLabel)` | Strict conversion. |
| `policy.containerOptions()` | Returns the option bag for a `MeasurementContainer`. |
### Dual access shape (method OR frozen property bag)
`canonical`, `output`, and `curve` each work both as a method call AND as a
frozen own-property map. They are functions with `Object.defineProperty`-installed
non-writable, non-configurable own properties, frozen via `Object.freeze`:
```js
policy.canonical('flow') // 'm3/s' (method)
policy.canonical.flow // 'm3/s' (property)
policy.output.pressure // 'mbar' (property)
policy.curve.control // '%' (property)
policy.canonical.flow = 'tampered'; // TypeError in strict mode
delete policy.canonical.pressure; // TypeError
Object.isFrozen(policy.canonical); // true
```
The property-bag form is preferred in hot paths and tight inner loops (one
lookup vs one function call). The method form is preferred when the type is
itself dynamic (`policy.canonical(typeName)`). Both forms are first-class
parts of the contract — call sites may use whichever reads best.
This replaces the per-node `_unitView` / `unitPolicyView` mirror that
pre-dated the dual-shape accessor — domains read `this.unitPolicy` directly.
`BaseDomain` reads `static unitPolicy` and passes
`policy.containerOptions()` straight into `new MeasurementContainer(...)`.
## 7. `getStatusBadge()` shape
Every domain returns the standard Node-RED status object:
```js
{
fill: 'green' | 'yellow' | 'red' | 'blue' | 'grey',
shape: 'dot' | 'ring',
text: string, // ≤ 60 chars in the Node-RED editor; aim for ≤ 50.
}
```
Helpers in `generalFunctions/src/nodered/statusBadge.js`:
```js
const { statusBadge } = require('generalFunctions');
statusBadge.compose(['🟢 OK', `flow=${flow.toFixed(1)} m³/h`]) // joins with ' | '
statusBadge.error(message) // {fill:'red', shape:'ring', text:`⚠ ${message}`}
statusBadge.idle(label) // {fill:'blue', shape:'dot', text:`⏸️ ${label}`}
```
The badge is computed in **domain**, not in `nodeClass`. nodeClass just
calls `this.source.getStatusBadge()` once per second.
## 8. `LatestWinsGate`
Extracted from MGC's `_dispatchInFlight` + `_delayedCall` pattern. Used
anywhere a parent fires commands faster than children can absorb them.
```js
const { LatestWinsGate } = require('generalFunctions');
this.demandGate = new LatestWinsGate(async (demand) => {
await this._dispatchDemandToChildren(demand);
});
// Fire-and-forget — never blocks. The latest demand always wins.
this.demandGate.fire(demand);
// Await the per-fire settlement.
const result = await this.demandGate.fireAndWait(demand);
if (result && result.superseded === true) {
// A later fire/fireAndWait overwrote this one in the pending slot.
}
```
Guarantees:
- At most one `dispatch` running at a time per gate.
- If a new value arrives while one is running, only the latest is
enqueued; intermediate ones are dropped.
- After the in-flight call settles, the latest pending value fires.
### `fire(value)` vs `fireAndWait(value)`
| Method | Returns | Settles when |
|---|---|---|
| `fire(value)` | `void` | n/a — caller never awaits. |
| `fireAndWait(value)` | `Promise<result \| SUPERSEDED \| undefined>` | THIS specific fire's dispatch settles. If a later fire (plain or awaited) overwrites this one in the pending slot, the returned promise **resolves** with the frozen sentinel `LatestWinsGate.SUPERSEDED = { superseded: true }`. If the dispatch itself throws, the promise still resolves (with `undefined`) and the error is recorded on `gate.lastError` — callers don't need try/catch. |
The supersede-resolves-with-sentinel choice (rather than rejecting with
`'superseded'`) means consumers branch on a value:
```js
const r = await gate.fireAndWait(v);
if (r && r.superseded) return; // dropped by a later fire
// ... otherwise r is the dispatch's return value
```
`drain()` remains the right tool for "wait until idle" (returns one
promise regardless of how many fires landed); `fireAndWait` is per-fire.
## 9. `HealthStatus`
A standardised shape for nodes that compute prediction quality / drift
(today: `rotatingMachine.predictionHealth`, future: `MGC`, `pumpingStation`
volume confidence).
```js
{
level: 0 | 1 | 2 | 3, // 0 = fine, 3 = unusable
flags: string[], // machine-readable tags, e.g. 'no_pressure_input'
message: string, // single-line human summary
source: string | null, // free-text origin tag
}
```
Helpers compose multiple sub-statuses (e.g. flow drift + power drift +
pressure init) into one node-level status.
## 10. Output port payload conventions
Already documented in `.claude/rules/telemetry.md` — kept here only as a
pointer:
- Port 0: process data, formatter chosen by `config.output.process`.
- Port 1: InfluxDB line-protocol, formatter chosen by
`config.output.dbase`.
- Port 2: registration / control plumbing.
- `outputUtils.formatMsg` does delta compression — only changed fields
are sent. Consumers must cache + merge.