Files
RedBear-OS/local/docs/PROJECT-DOCUMENTATION-ASSESSMENT.md
T
2026-04-15 12:57:07 +01:00

9.0 KiB
Raw Blame History

Project Documentation Assessment

Purpose

This document assesses the current Red Bear OS documentation set after the repository-model and WIP ownership policy updates.

The goal is not only to list documents. The goal is to answer:

  • which docs are canonical and current
  • which docs are still useful but historical
  • which areas are well-covered
  • which areas still have duplication, stale wording, or split ownership

Executive Summary

The documentation set is now directionally strong and much clearer than before about Red Bears relationship to upstream Redox. The repository-level model is now visible in the root docs, implementation plan, overlay guide, and relibc-specific planning notes.

The strongest documentation theme is now the overlay discipline:

  • RedBearOS is documented as an overlay distribution on top of Redox
  • upstream-owned sources are documented as refreshable working copies
  • durable Red Bear state is documented as living in local/patches/, local/recipes/, local/docs/, and tracked Red Bear configs
  • fast-moving upstream components such as relibc are documented with an upstream-first rule
  • upstream WIP is now documented as a local-project trigger for Red Bear until upstream promotes it

That is the right long-term maintenance model.

The main remaining weakness is documentation fragmentation. There is now enough good material, but some topics are spread across too many files, and some older public docs still speak in a more fork-oriented or historically WIP-oriented voice than the newer overlay model.

Strong Areas

1. Repository ownership model

This is now one of the strongest-documented parts of the project.

The model is visible in:

  • AGENTS.md
  • local/AGENTS.md
  • docs/07-RED-BEAR-OS-IMPLEMENTATION-PLAN.md
  • docs/README.md

The key message is now consistent: Red Bear is an overlay on top of Redox, not a permanent fork of every upstream-owned source tree.

2. relibc maintenance logic

The relibc docs are much stronger than before because they now document both:

  • the technical completeness story
  • the preservation/reapply story

The most important improvement is that relibc work is no longer described only as source changes in recipes/core/relibc/source/. It is now also described as a patch-carrier workflow under local/patches/relibc/, which is the right long-term maintenance framing.

3. Subsystem planning depth

USB, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, IRQ/low-level controller work, relibc IPC, and AMD/graphics all have substantial focused planning material under local/docs/.

This is good. These are the areas where Red Bear differs most strongly from upstream, so deep local planning documents are appropriate.

4. Public implementation plan

docs/07-RED-BEAR-OS-IMPLEMENTATION-PLAN.md is now doing the right job as the canonical public execution-order and repository-model document. It no longer reads like only a historical hardware roadmap.

Weak Areas

1. Historical docs still bleed into current-state reading

The older docs/01docs/05 files still contain valuable architecture and rationale, but some of them still carry old assumptions such as:

  • “WIP means upstream ownership is good enough”
  • “missing / not started” wording for areas that are now partially or substantially implemented
  • public-facing framing that predates the current overlay-policy language

They are no longer wrong in all details, but they are not all equally safe as current-state guides.

2. WIP ownership policy is newly documented, but not yet propagated everywhere

The new WIP rule is now present in the repository model and WIP-specific guide, but there are still older docs and notes that talk about recipes/wip/ as if it were simply the place where future shipping work lives.

That is no longer the full policy. For Red Bear, upstream WIP should now be read as:

  • useful upstream input
  • not yet a stable shipping source of truth
  • candidate for local takeover until upstream promotes it

This wording should be propagated further over time, especially in older public roadmap docs.

3. Script awareness is documented more than enforced

The scripts now explain the overlay/WIP model better, but some of them are still operationally neutral. They do not yet encode every policy distinction automatically.

Examples:

  • fetch-all-sources.sh documents the rule, but still fetches upstream WIP sources as raw inputs
  • sync-upstream.sh documents the rule, but its conflict checks are still strongest for build-system patches, not all subsystem overlays
  • apply-patches.sh documents the rule, but its actual symlink/application logic is still strongest for the established overlay paths and not for all possible future WIP-local migrations

This is acceptable for now, but it means “policy-aware” is currently stronger in docs than in full automation.

4. No single canonical doc-index for current-vs-historical status

docs/README.md helps, but there is still no one-page matrix saying, for every major document:

  • canonical current-state source
  • architectural rationale only
  • historical plan
  • Red Bear overlay-specific supplement

That would reduce confusion significantly.

Canonicality Assessment

Canonical current-state / policy docs

  • AGENTS.md
  • local/AGENTS.md
  • docs/07-RED-BEAR-OS-IMPLEMENTATION-PLAN.md
  • docs/README.md
  • subsystem plans under local/docs/ that cover active Red Bear-owned workstreams

Canonical technical local overlays for active subsystems

  • local/docs/RELIBC-COMPLETENESS-AND-ENHANCEMENT-PLAN.md
  • local/docs/RELIBC-IPC-ASSESSMENT-AND-IMPROVEMENT-PLAN.md
  • local/docs/QT6-PORT-STATUS.md
  • local/docs/USB-IMPLEMENTATION-PLAN.md
  • local/docs/WIFI-IMPLEMENTATION-PLAN.md
  • local/docs/BLUETOOTH-IMPLEMENTATION-PLAN.md
  • local/docs/IRQ-AND-LOWLEVEL-CONTROLLERS-ENHANCEMENT-PLAN.md

Valuable but partially historical docs

  • docs/01-REDOX-ARCHITECTURE.md
  • docs/02-GAP-ANALYSIS.md
  • docs/03-WAYLAND-ON-REDOX.md
  • docs/04-LINUX-DRIVER-COMPAT.md
  • docs/05-KDE-PLASMA-ON-REDOX.md

These should still be treated as useful references, but their top-level status notes must continue to warn readers when current implementation has moved ahead of the original text.

Documentation Gaps Still Worth Fixing

Gap 1 — Canonical document-status matrix

Status: addressed.

The repo now has a visible document-status matrix in docs/README.md that marks the major docs as:

  • current policy
  • current subsystem plan
  • architecture reference
  • historical roadmap

Gap 2 — WIP migration ledger

Status: addressed.

The repo now has a compact WIP ownership ledger in local/docs/WIP-MIGRATION-LEDGER.md that tracks which major areas are currently in which state:

  • still consumed directly from upstream WIP
  • mirrored locally and shipped from local/recipes/
  • promoted upstream again, so Red Bear prefers upstream

This is especially useful for Qt/KDE/Wayland-adjacent work.

Gap 3 — Script behavior matrix

Status: addressed.

The repo now has a concise script behavior matrix in local/docs/SCRIPT-BEHAVIOR-MATRIX.md covering:

  • what sync-upstream.sh does and does not handle
  • what apply-patches.sh applies and what it only symlinks
  • what build-redbear.sh assumes about local overlays
  • what fetch-all-sources.sh means for upstream WIP versus local recipes

This behavior is now centralized instead of being only inferable from scripts.

Gap 4 — Public/current Qt and Wayland split

Status: addressed.

Qt and Wayland status is still spread across multiple detailed docs, but the repo now has a canonical current-state summary in local/docs/DESKTOP-STACK-CURRENT-STATUS.md to anchor the current build/runtime truth while the older public docs remain useful as history/rationale:

  • docs/03-WAYLAND-ON-REDOX.md
  • docs/05-KDE-PLASMA-ON-REDOX.md
  • local/docs/QT6-PORT-STATUS.md
  • recipe-local notes
  1. Continue pruning local relibc overlays when upstream truly covers them — but only after the fresh-source reapply + rebuild path proves it.
  2. Keep the WIP migration ledger current as upstream WIP areas are promoted or replaced.
  3. Extend the same upstream-first cleanup discipline to other fast-moving system packages, especially the desktop stack.
  4. Periodically re-check older public roadmap docs to ensure their historical notes remain visible and accurate.

Bottom Line

The project documentation is now fundamentally pointed in the right direction.

Its strongest improvement is conceptual clarity: Red Bear is now documented as an overlay on top of Redox, not as a permanently hand-maintained fork of every moving part. The relibc work in particular now has both a technical story and a preservation story.

The biggest remaining weakness is not missing information; it is distribution of information. There is enough good documentation now, but some of it still needs a cleaner canonical index and a more explicit split between current policy, current subsystem plans, and historical roadmaps.