sessions

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Agents window architecture — covers the agents-first app, layering, folder structure, chat widget, menus, contributions, entry points, and development guidelines. Use when implementing features or fixing issues in the Agents window.

microsoft By microsoft schedule Updated 6/17/2026

name: sessions description: Agents window architecture — covers the agents-first app, layering, folder structure, chat widget, menus, contributions, entry points, and development guidelines. Use when implementing features or fixing issues in the Agents window.

Before Making Any Changes

MANDATORY: Before writing or modifying any code in src/vs/sessions/, you must read these documents:

  1. .github/instructions/coding-guidelines.instructions.md — Naming conventions, code style, string localization, disposable management, and DI patterns.
  2. .github/instructions/source-code-organization.instructions.md — Layers, target environments, dependency injection, and folder structure conventions.

Then read the relevant spec for the area you are changing (see table below). If you modify the implementation, you must update the corresponding spec to keep it in sync.

Specification Documents

Document Path When to read
Layer rules src/vs/sessions/LAYERS.md Before adding any cross-module imports. Defines the internal layer hierarchy (coreservicescontribproviders) with ESLint-enforced import restrictions. Key rule: contrib/* must NOT import from contrib/providers/*.
Layout spec src/vs/sessions/LAYOUT.md Before changing any part, grid structure, titlebar, or CSS. Documents the fixed grid layout (Sidebar | ChatBar | AuxiliaryBar), part positions, the modal editor system, per-session layout state persistence, and the titlebar's three-section design.
Layout controller spec src/vs/sessions/LAYOUT_CONTROLLER.md Before changing LayoutController or per-session layout state. Details how the auxiliary bar, panel, and editor working sets are captured/restored when switching sessions, multi-session suppression, the auto-reveal-on-changes flow, workspace-folder ordering, and storage/migration.
Sessions spec src/vs/sessions/SESSIONS.md Before changing session/provider interfaces or data flow. Covers the pluggable provider model (ISessionsProviderISessionsProvidersServiceISessionsManagementService), ISession/IChat interfaces, observable state propagation, workspace/folder model, and session type system.
Sessions list spec src/vs/sessions/SESSIONS_LIST.md Before changing the sessions sidebar list. Covers the tree widget (WorkbenchObjectTree), renderers, grouping (workspace/date), filtering (type/status/archived/read), pinning, read/unread state, workspace capping, mobile adaptations, storage keys, and registered actions.
Mobile spec src/vs/sessions/MOBILE.md Before adding any phone-specific UI. Covers the mobile part subclass architecture, viewport classification (phone < 640px), MobileTitlebarPart, drawer-based sidebar, MobilePickerSheet, view/action gating with IsPhoneLayoutContext, and the desktop → mobile component mapping.
AI Customizations src/vs/sessions/AI_CUSTOMIZATIONS.md Before working on the customization editor or tree view. Documents the management editor (in vs/workbench) and the tree view/overview (in vs/sessions/contrib/aiCustomizationTreeView).

Common Pitfalls

  • Wrong menu IDs: Never use MenuId.* from vs/platform/actions for Agents window UI. Always use Menus.* from browser/menus.ts.
  • Events instead of observables: Session state must flow through IObservable, not Event. Use autorun/derived for reactive UI, not onDid* event listeners.
  • Importing from providers: Non-provider contrib/* code must never import from contrib/providers/*. Extract shared interfaces to services/ or common/.
  • IAgentSessionsService in shared code: IAgentSessionsService (vs/workbench/contrib/chat/browser/agentSessions/agentSessionsService) is a Copilot-provider internal and may be imported only by the Copilot chat sessions provider (contrib/providers/copilotChatSessions/). Shared sessions code (core/services/non-provider contribs, e.g. the sessions list or visible-sessions grid) must stay provider-agnostic and go through ISession/ISessionsManagementService — never reach into model.observeSession(...) etc. for lazy loading. This is enforced by an ESLint no-restricted-imports ban scoped to src/vs/sessions/** (Copilot provider exempted).
  • Missing entry point import: New contribution files must be imported in the appropriate sessions.*.main.ts entry point to be loaded (for example sessions.common.main.ts, sessions.desktop.main.ts, sessions.web.main.ts, or sessions.web.main.internal.ts).
  • Modifying workbench code: Prefer extending/wrapping workbench classes in the sessions layer over modifying shared workbench components.
  • Timeouts as fixes: Never use setTimeout/disposableTimeout/arbitrary delays to fix bugs or implement behaviour. They are race-prone guesses that mask the real ordering/state problem. Drive logic off deterministic signals instead — observables (autorun/derived), explicit events (onDidChange*), lifecycle phases, or awaiting the actual async operation.
  • Stashed state read back later (side-channels): Never stash a value on a service during one method call and read it back from a separate query later, assuming it is still valid (e.g. a Set/flag set in openSession and consumed by a shouldX() pull-API). This is fragile temporal coupling. Instead, make it reactive state that is set atomically together with its source of truth and consumed reactively. Example: per-activation intent like "open in background / preserve focus" is exposed as an IObservable set in the same transaction as activeSession (via a single internal setter so it can never go stale), and read with .read(reader) in the consumer's autorun — never via a consume-once getter.
  • Blocking on a "pending/waiting" state instead of creating + upgrading: When an entity (e.g. a draft session) depends on something that registers asynchronously, don't withhold creation behind a pending/waiting state. Prefer creating immediately with the best available data, then replace/upgrade it once the awaited dependency arrives (driven by an onDidChange*/observable signal), cancelling the upgrade if the user changes the inputs meanwhile. Do not bound the upgrade with a timeout or even a lifecycle milestone like LifecyclePhase.Eventually — an agent host connects lazily and can surface its session types arbitrarily late, which would lock in the wrong fallback. Let the upgrade listener live for the consumer's lifetime instead.

Capturing Feedback (meta-rule)

Whenever the user flags a wrong pattern, rejects an approach, or gives design/rules feedback, automatically add it as a concise pitfall/learning to this Common Pitfalls section (or the most relevant spec doc) in the same change — without being asked again. Keep each entry 1–3 sentences: the anti-pattern, why it is wrong, and the preferred pattern.

Validating Changes

You must run these checks before declaring work complete:

  1. npm run compile-check-ts-native — TypeScript compilation check. Do not run tsc directly.
  2. npm run valid-layers-checkMANDATORY. Catches layering violations. If this fails, fix the imports before proceeding.
  3. scripts/test.sh --grep <pattern> — unit tests for affected areas
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/microsoft/vscode --skill sessions
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