The intro page's "zddc-server" link previously pointed at a Codeberg
blob URL (which uses /src/branch/main/, not GitHub's /blob/main/, so
the link 404'd anyway). Replace with a hand-edited concept page on
the website itself.
The page is structured around two access modes:
- Local directory mode — open a tool, point it at a folder, work
via the File System Access API. No upload, no server.
- Online mode — take that same local directory and put it behind
any web server (nginx, Caddy, Apache, even python -m http.server).
The Archive Browser tool works against the server's directory
listings the same way it works against a local folder.
zddc-server is then introduced as a Go binary that gives you online
mode out of the box, plus four conveniences a generic web server
can't: ACL via .zddc YAML files (gated on email-header trust),
virtual /.archive/ URL space, per-request access logging, and the
mundane glue (TLS, ETags, conditional GET, CORS).
Closing section: the on-disk layout is the same in both modes — the
server doesn't transform the archive, it serves it. Stop the server
and the directory is still a valid ZDDC archive. The "Zero Day"
promise: server is convenience, not lock-in.
Also:
- Add Server nav link to website/index.html and reference.html.
- Fix the bootstrap/README.md link that used GitHub's /blob/main/
pattern (Codeberg uses /src/branch/main/).
- Update ARCHITECTURE.md doc-ownership table: new row for the concept
page, clarify that zddc/README.md is the operations reference.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
22 KiB
ZDDC Architecture
This document is the single authoritative reference for how ZDDC tools are designed and built. It covers the shared single-file HTML application pattern, the build system, tool-specific architectural decisions, and contribution guidelines.
Why Single-File HTML Applications
Every ZDDC tool compiles to a single self-contained .html file — no servers, no installers, no subscriptions.
| Principle | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Reliability | Opens in any modern Chromium-based browser without network access or external services |
| Portability | Can be emailed, archived, or deployed to air-gapped environments with no tooling |
| Auditability | Source, embedded data, and output travel together, satisfying ZDDC traceability requirements |
| Longevity | Static assets remain functional long after build environments have changed |
| Simplicity | A single .html file eliminates deployment steps and brittle dependency chains |
Repository Structure
Every HTML tool follows the same directory layout:
tool/
README.md # Feature scope, UI design, domain rules, help content
css/ # Logically separated stylesheets (one responsibility per file)
js/ # Vanilla ES modules (one responsibility per file)
template.html # Shell markup with {{PLACEHOLDER}} markers for development
build.sh # Inlines css/ and js/ into dist/tool.html
dist/
tool.html # Generated output — never edit this manually
Website files (what zddc.varasys.io serves) are organized by channel:
website/
index.html # current stable landing tool (root URL)
releases/
<tool>_v<X>.<Y>.<Z>.html # immutable stable release archives
<tool>_latest.html -> ... # symlink to the highest-versioned stable
<tool>_alpha.html # mutable: overwritten on every --release alpha
<tool>_beta.html # mutable: overwritten on every --release beta
install.zip # current-stable HTMLs + project bootstrap stubs
track-{alpha,beta,latest}.zip # level-2 channel-tracking stubs
There is no website/dev/. To preview a build locally, open dist/tool.html directly via the dev server. To publish on zddc.varasys.io, cut a release.
Vendor dependencies (bundled third-party libraries) live in tool/vendor/ if present. The build script is responsible for inlining them into the output.
Documentation ownership
Each topic has exactly one authoritative home; everything else links to it.
| Topic | Single home | Linked from |
|---|---|---|
| What ZDDC is + tool channel links + install bundles | website/index.html (hand-edited intro for zddc.varasys.io/) |
repo README.md, bootstrap/README.md |
| File-naming convention spec (status codes, modifiers, folder format) | website/reference.html |
repo README.md, in-tool help text |
Local-mode vs online-mode concept; what zddc-server adds |
website/zddc-server.html |
website intro |
Customer-deployment install (install.zip, level-1/2 stubs, ?v=, audit) |
bootstrap/README.md |
website intro, zddc/README.md, zddc-server.html |
zddc-server operations: env vars, ACL syntax, .archive URLs, container vs binary |
zddc/README.md |
AGENTS.md, bootstrap/README.md, zddc-server.html |
| Build / release / channel commands | AGENTS.md |
repo README.md ("see AGENTS.md") |
| Architecture & internal patterns | ARCHITECTURE.md (this file) |
AGENTS.md |
| Per-tool internal design quirks | <tool>/README.md |
(linked from website intro tool cards) |
website/index.html is hand-edited static content (analogous to reference.html), not the landing-tool output. The landing tool ships only via website/releases/landing_v<X>.html and install.zip — install.zip copies landing_latest.html to <deployment-root>/index.html for customer sites where the project picker UI is actually useful (it queries zddc-server for the project list). The public website at zddc.varasys.io/ has nothing to pick, so its root URL is the introduction page.
When updating documentation, prefer linking over duplicating. If you find yourself rewriting the file-naming convention in a tool's README, link to reference.html instead.
Build System
How It Works
Each tool's build.sh:
- Reads CSS files in declaration order, concatenates them
- Reads JS files in declaration order, concatenates them
- Processes
template.htmlwithawk, replacing{{PLACEHOLDER}}markers with the concatenated content and stripping CDN<script>/<link>tags - Writes the result to
dist/tool.html - If
--release <channel-or-version>was passed, callspromote_releaseto write the appropriate file underwebsite/releases/
The top-level build.sh at the repository root calls all five tool build scripts in sequence and then regenerates the bootstrap zips (install.zip, track-{alpha,beta,latest}.zip) so they always match what's in releases/.
Channels
Three release channels:
- Stable — versioned, immutable.
--release [version]writeswebsite/releases/<tool>_v<version>.html, refreshes the<tool>_latest.htmlsymlink, and tags<tool>-v<version>in git. Skips automatically when there is no source change since the last tag. - Beta — mutable.
--release betaoverwriteswebsite/releases/<tool>_beta.htmlin place. No git tag; the on-page label isbeta · <date> · <sha>so the source is recoverable from git history via the SHA. - Alpha — mutable, analogous to beta.
Stable releases do not automatically clobber <tool>_alpha.html / <tool>_beta.html — those keep whatever was last built into them. To freshen alpha to current stable, git checkout v<X>.<Y>.<Z> && sh tool/build.sh --release alpha.
The on-page {{BUILD_LABEL}} is rendered red+bold for dev/alpha/beta builds (is_red=1) and black for stable releases. The label format is:
| Build | Label |
|---|---|
| dev | Built: 2026-04-27 14:00:00 BETA |
| alpha | alpha · 2026-04-27 · abc1234 |
| beta | beta · 2026-04-27 · abc1234 |
| stable | v0.0.5 |
Two-level bootstrap
Customer deployments under zddc-server use a two-level bootstrap pattern that keeps tool installation decoupled from publishing. See bootstrap/README.md for the full story; in short:
- Level 1: per-project stub at
<project>/<tool>.htmlthat fetches../<tool>.html(always same-origin). One file per project per tool, never edited after install. - Level 2 (optional): site admin replaces
<deployment-root>/<tool>.htmlwith a stub fetchinghttps://zddc.varasys.io/releases/<tool>_<channel>.html— switches the whole site to a channel. Without it,<deployment-root>/<tool>.htmlis just the actual built tool HTML (self-contained install).
document.write() chains across both levels; origin stays at the deployment domain throughout. CORS only matters at level 2 (cross-origin to zddc.varasys.io); level 1 is same-origin.
The stubs are generated from bootstrap/level{1,2}.html.tmpl by the root build.sh and packaged into install.zip and track-<channel>.zip.
Build Script Requirements
Every build.sh must:
- Begin with
#!/bin/shandset -eu(POSIX sh, not bash) - Source
shared/build-lib.shfirst (providesensure_exists,concat_files,build_timestamp,compute_build_label,promote_release) - Fail immediately on missing source files (
ensure_existspattern) - Clean up temp files on exit (use
trap cleanup EXIT) - Accept
--release [<version>|alpha|beta]— explicit version or channel name; otherwise produce a dev build
HTML Embedding Safety
When inlining JavaScript into a <script> block, the HTML parser scans for the exact string </script> to terminate the block — backslash escaping (<\/script>) does not prevent termination. Any JS source file or vendor library that contains </tag> sequences inside string literals or template literals will break the inline <script> block.
The rule is:
All
</sequences in inlined JavaScript must be escaped as<\/usingsed.
Both the app JS concatenation step and any vendor JS bundling step must run through:
sed 's#</#<\\/#g' "$input_js" > "$safe_js"
Then use </script> (not <\/script>) to close the <script> block, since the content no longer contains any </ sequences that the parser could misread.
This is already enforced for mdedit's vendor bundling. It is the contributor's responsibility to ensure new tools follow this pattern.
Vendor Dependencies
Some tools bundle third-party libraries. These live in tool/vendor/ and are committed to the repository. The build script inlines them into dist/tool.html.
Current vendor files:
| Tool | Library | File | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| mdedit | Toast UI Editor v3.2.2 | vendor/toastui-editor-all.min.js |
Markdown editor with live preview |
| mdedit | Toast UI Editor CSS | vendor/toastui-editor.min.css |
Editor stylesheet |
| transmittal | jszip, docx-preview, xlsx | CDN at runtime | Optional preview features; tool works without them |
Runtime CDN loading exception: The transmittal tool loads jszip, docx-preview, and xlsx from CDN at runtime via loadLibrary() forDOCX/XLSX preview functionality. These are optional enhancements—core transmittal functionality (JSON payload communication) works without them. This exception is documented here because:
- The core transmittal features (creating, signing, verifying SHA-256 digests) do not depend on these libraries
- Preview functionality gracefully degrades if libraries fail to load
- Bundling would significantly increase file size for rarely-used features
Rule: Runtime CDN loading is allowed only when:
- Features are strictly optional (graceful degradation)
- Core functionality works without the external library
- Library is clearly documented as non-essential
template.html for tools with vendor deps loads those deps from CDN for convenient local development. The build script replaces CDN tags with the bundled vendor files in the output.
Development vs Production
| Context | Tailwind / Vendor | How to run |
|---|---|---|
| Development | CDN (live, from template.html) |
Open template.html directly in Chromium |
| Production | Bundled / Static CSS | Run bash tool/build.sh, open dist/tool.html |
For mdedit specifically: template.html loads Toast UI from CDN and uses Tailwind Play CDN. The build replaces Toast UI with the bundled vendor file and replaces the Tailwind CDN script with the static css/tailwind-utils.css subset.
JavaScript Architecture
Vanilla JS Only
All tools use plain JavaScript — no TypeScript, no frameworks, no bundlers. Dependencies are managed manually via vendor files.
Module Pattern
Each JS file wraps its code in an IIFE or module-scope block and registers its API on window.app.modules:
// js/mymodule.js
(function() {
function doSomething() { ... }
window.app.modules.mymodule = { doSomething };
})();
Two top-level globals:
window.app— per-tool app state, modules, and debug surface (every tool)window.zddc— shared filename/folder/revision parsers fromshared/zddc.js(every tool)
No other globals. Never expose implementation internals beyond what's needed for testing.
Module Load Order
JS files are concatenated in the order declared in build.sh. Each file can assume earlier files' modules are available on window.app. Circular dependencies are not permitted — modules must be layered.
Typical ordering:
app.js ← Declares window.app and top-level state
utils.js ← Stateless helpers (no dependencies)
store.js ← State management (depends on app.js)
[domain].js ← Feature modules (depend on store/utils)
main.js ← Initialization (depends on all modules)
State Management
Tools manage state in one of two patterns:
1. Direct state on window.app (archive, classifier, mdedit)
window.app = { files: [], selectedFolders: new Set(), modules: {}, ... };
State is read directly; mutations trigger explicit re-render calls. Classifier additionally layers a small pub-sub on top via store.js (store.on('files', render)).
2. Proxy-based reactive state (transmittal)
const state = createReactiveState({ mode: 'edit', published: false });
state.subscribe((prop, newVal) => { /* auto-update UI */ });
state.mode = 'view'; // Proxy notifies all subscribers automatically
Use reactive state when the same property drives multiple independent UI elements. Use direct state when the data flow is simple and unidirectional.
Tool-Specific Architecture
Archive Browser
Pattern: Direct mutation of window.app.{directories, files, filteredFiles, selectedFiles, ...}, helper modules namespaced under window.app.modules.{events, table, urlState, source, ...}. Supports two source modes (window.app.sourceMode): 'local' (File System Access API) and 'http' (zddc-server JSON browse).
Two-level directory structure required:
root-directory/
transmittal-folder/ ← "grouping folder" — must be a subdirectory
123456-EL-SPC-0001_A (IFC) - Spec.pdf
...
Files at the root level are ignored. The grouping folder list and transmittal folder list are populated from the first two levels of the selected directory. Files are only counted in filteredFiles after ZDDC filename parsing succeeds.
Key DOM IDs: #addDirectoryBtn, #noDirectoryMessage, .main-container, #filesTableBody, #fileCount, #selectedCount, #selectAllGroupingCheckbox.
Document Classifier
Pattern: Event-driven store (store.js) with notify() / on() pub-sub, spreadsheet rendering on 'files' events.
File object shape (as produced by scanner.js):
{
trackingNumber: '123456-EL-SPC-2623',
title: 'Specification',
revision: 'A',
status: 'IFC',
extension: 'pdf', // no leading dot
originalFilename: '...', // filename without extension
name: '...', // full filename with extension
path: 'folder/filename.pdf',
size: 45000,
isDirectory: false,
manualFilename: null // set if user overrides computed name
}
computeNewFilename(file) (in utils.js) returns file.originalFilename + '.' + file.extension if any required field is missing.
Main app panel (#mainApp) stays hidden (class hidden) until a real directory is opened via showDirectoryPicker. State can be injected via store.setFolderTree() + store.setSelectedFolders() for testing without triggering the picker.
Markdown Editor (mdedit)
Pattern: Global functions (window.updateToc), editor instances managed per file-path in a Map, File System Access API for direct file read/write.
Dependencies: Toast UI Editor v3.2.2 (bundled), Tailwind utility subset (static CSS).
Toast UI availability check:
if (typeof toastui === 'undefined') {
// Graceful degradation — show error message
}
const editor = new toastui.Editor({ el: container, ... });
Key DOM IDs: #app, #select-directory, #welcome-screen, #file-tree, #content-container.
File tree: Populated after showDirectoryPicker() resolves. File items are rendered as DOM children of #file-tree. Clicking a file opens it in the editor panel.
Transmittal Creator
Pattern: Proxy-based reactive state, two-phase hydration, ECDSA digital signatures, SHA-256 file integrity.
Two-phase hydration:
populateStatic()— called before publishing. Fills all form fields and the file table into the HTML so the output is readable without JavaScript (progressive enhancement for SharePoint, email clients, etc.).hydrate()— called on page load of a published transmittal. Hides the "Not Validated" static warning, runs signature verification, and enables interactive features.
Progressive enhancement matrix:
| Feature | No JavaScript | With JavaScript |
|---|---|---|
| Content display | ✅ Full | ✅ Full |
| File table | ✅ Shown | ✅ Shown |
| Digest / signatures | ✅ Listed | ✅ Listed + cryptographically verified |
| Validation status | ⚠️ "Not Validated" badge | ✅ "Verified" / ❌ "Invalid" |
| Editing | ❌ Disabled | ✅ Enabled (if draft) |
| Column filtering | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
Data store: A <script id="transmittal-data" type="application/json"> element embedded in the published HTML holds the full transmittal payload. On load, data.js reads and parses it; all UI state derives from this JSON.
Reactive state:
// app.state is a Proxy — assignments auto-notify subscribers
app.state.mode = 'view'; // Triggers UI updates automatically
Subscribe for cross-cutting concerns:
app.state.subscribe((property, newValue) => {
if (property === 'mode') updateModeToggleLabel(newValue);
});
Security model: ECDSA P-256 signing of the SHA-256 digest. Signatures are stored in the JSON payload. Any number of signers can co-sign. Verification runs client-side in the browser's Web Crypto API — no server required.
Key module globals: window.transmittalApp exposes app.data, app.state, and app.modules for debugging and testing.
CSS Architecture
All tools use vanilla CSS. No frameworks at build time (mdedit's Tailwind utilities are pre-generated static CSS).
Common conventions:
- CSS variables for theme colors and spacing in
base.css - Component-scoped class names (no global utilities except where Tailwind provides them)
.hiddenclass usesdisplay: none !importantfor JavaScript show/hide- Print styles in a separate
print.css
mdedit Tailwind subset:
css/tailwind-utils.css contains only the ~80 Tailwind v3 utility classes actually used in template.html. If a new utility class is needed in the template, add it here. Classes follow Tailwind v3 naming and values exactly.
Testing
Tests use Playwright with Chromium only (File System Access API requires it).
Running Tests
npm test # all tools
npx playwright test archive # single tool
npx playwright test --debug # debug mode
Test Structure
Each tool has a spec file in tests/:
tests/
archive.spec.js ← 2 tests: load + directory scan
classifier.spec.js ← 2 tests: load + store injection
mdedit.spec.js ← 2 tests: load + file tree render
transmittal.spec.js ← 2 tests: paste round-trip + filesystem round-trip
fixtures/
mock-fs-api.js ← Reusable File System Access API mock
transmittal-data.js
zddc-filenames.js
Mock File System API
MOCK_FS_INIT_SCRIPT (from tests/fixtures/mock-fs-api.js) overrides showDirectoryPicker, showOpenFilePicker, and showSaveFilePicker. Inject it via page.addInitScript before navigating.
// Flat directory
window.__setMockDirectory('name', [{ name: 'file.pdf', content: '...', size: 100 }]);
// Nested directory tree
window.__setMockDirectoryTree('name', {
'subfolder': { 'file.pdf': 'content' },
'root-file.md': 'content',
});
Writing Tests
Follow the pattern in tests/transmittal.spec.js:
- Use ESM
importsyntax - Inject
MOCK_FS_INIT_SCRIPTintest.beforeEachfor any test that navigates to a tool page - Use
waitUntil: 'domcontentloaded'or'load'(not'networkidle'— the bundled scripts may keep the network active) - Prefer
page.waitForFunctionoverpage.waitForSelectorfor app-state readiness - Assert through the store/module API for tests that don't need visible DOM
Code Standards
| Rule | Rationale |
|---|---|
No </script> or any </tag> in JS string literals |
Breaks inline HTML embedding — escape with '<' + '/tag>' or use <\/ in sed at build time |
| No external dependencies at runtime | Self-contained output requirement |
| No TypeScript, no bundlers | Keeps the build system auditable and simple |
Only window.app and window.zddc are global |
Keeps the global namespace clean; expose only what's needed for debugging |
| Defensive input validation | File System API handles and user-pasted data are untrusted |
| Update README.md when features ship | Documentation parity is a delivery requirement, not optional |
Git Workflow
Branching: short-lived feature branches (feature/<name>, bugfix/<name>, hotfix/<name>), squash-merged to main and immediately deleted. Quick fixes (typos, one-liners) go direct to main.
Commit messages: Conventional Commits — <type>(<scope>): <description>. Types: feat, fix, docs, style, refactor, perf, test, chore. See AGENTS.md for the full table and examples.
Releases: Tag the commit after confirming dist/ is current. Format: {project}-v{version} (e.g. archive-v1.0.0). Semantic versioning applies. There is no CI/CD — the built .html file is already committed to the repo.
bash tool/build.sh # rebuild dist/
git add -f tool/dist/tool.html # stage if needed
git commit -m "chore(tool): rebuild for vX.Y.Z"
git tag tool-vX.Y.Z
git push origin main --tags
git tag -l "archive-v*" # list releases
git push origin :refs/tags/tag-name # delete a remote tag
Adding a New Tool
- Create
tool/with the standard directory layout - Write
template.htmlwith{{CSS_PLACEHOLDER}}and{{JS_PLACEHOLDER}}markers - Write
tool/build.shfollowing the pattern of an existing tool - Add
bash "$SCRIPT_DIR/tool/build.sh"to the rootbuild.sh - Add a test project entry to
playwright.config.js - Create a stub
tests/tool.spec.js - Force-add the dist output:
git add -f tool/dist/tool.html
If the tool requires vendor dependencies, download them to tool/vendor/, add them to .gitignore exclusions if appropriate, and update build.sh to inline them (with the </ escaping step).