gemini-3: default thinkingLevel to medium + restrict eager prep to frozen install (#663)

* gemini-3: default thinkingLevel to medium + don't `npm ci` without a lockfile

upstream opencode hardcodes `thinkingLevel: "high"` for every gemini-3 model on
the direct google SDK (see `packages/opencode/src/provider/transform.ts`
`options()`). that added 30-60s of pre-tool-call TTFT and 5-46s of post-tool
jabber per turn, which is overkill for the tool-routing decisions that dominate
agentic loops — and the variance caused the `providers-live (google/gemini-pro)`
smoke job to time out at 4 minutes (see job 75405504847 on run 25684766415).

three changes:

- inject `provider.google.models.<api-id>.options.thinkingConfig.thinkingLevel = "medium"`
  for the two curated gemini-3 slugs in `buildSecurityConfig`. deep-merges over
  the upstream default; explicit `--variant high` / user opencode config still
  wins. flash stays at medium too — low-effort flash is visibly worse and the
  latency win isn't meaningful (flash is already fast).
- bump the `providers-live` harness step from 4 → 6 minutes. the job-level
  8-minute cap stays as the upper bound, but gemini's intrinsic TTFT variance
  was eating most of the 4-minute slack on its own.
- in `installNodeDependencies`, pick `frozen` only when a lockfile was actually
  detected. previously a package.json-only repo (like the smoke fixture's
  `pullfrog/test-repo`) always triggered `npm ci` and emitted a noisy
  `EUSAGE` error before falling through.

* prep: skip eager install when neither lockfile nor `packageManager` field present

the previous commit changed the no-lockfile path from `npm ci` (always errored
`EUSAGE`, never wrote any artifact) to a successful `npm install`, which had
an unintended side effect: it generated `package-lock.json` in the working
tree, tripping the post-run dirty-tree gate. the agent then committed the
lockfile and opened a real PR — and in the openai/gpt smoke run on PR #663,
the agent overwrote the `SMOKE TEST PASSED` output with the PR URL, failing
the smoke validator.

a repo with `package.json` but no lockfile and no `packageManager` field has
not committed dependency state. eagerly installing produces state the repo
doesn't track, which is the dirty-tree problem above. skip the eager install
entirely in that case; the agent can opt in via `await_dependency_installation`
when it actually needs deps. repos with a lockfile or a `packageManager` field
keep the existing frozen-install behavior unchanged.

* post-run: suppress dirty-tree gate in non-committing modes (Review / IncrementalReview / Plan)

the dirty-tree post-run gate currently fires for every mode and tells the agent
to commit and push whatever is in the working tree. that's wrong for modes
that complete by submitting a review (`Review` / `IncrementalReview`) or
posting a Plan comment (`Plan`) — those modes never touch files as part of
their contract, so any tree dirt at end-of-run is incidental tool noise on an
ephemeral worktree. nudging the agent to commit it can produce a spurious PR,
as seen in the openai/gpt smoke run on PR #663 where a stray
`package-lock.json` from `npm install` led the agent to open
pullfrog/test-repo#32 and overwrite the smoke output.

introduce `NON_COMMITTING_MODES` in `action/modes.ts` and consult it in
`collectPostRunIssues`. when the selected mode is read-only, log the
suppression for visibility but skip populating `issues.dirtyTree`. modes that
legitimately commit (`Build`, `AddressReviews`, `Fix`, `ResolveConflicts`,
`Task`) keep the existing nudge.

* prep: restore eager frozen-install, drop non-frozen fallback

eager dependency prep is non-mutating by contract — it runs before the agent
starts and any artifact it leaves in the tree (e.g. a generated
`package-lock.json`) trips the dirty-tree post-run gate and can lead the agent
to open a spurious PR (seen on the openai/gpt smoke run earlier in this PR).

revert the previous skip-when-no-lockfile branch: that was the wrong layer to
enforce the invariant. instead, run `frozen` (`npm ci` / `pnpm install
--frozen-lockfile` / etc.) unconditionally and drop the `|| install` fallback
that could silently mutate the tree when `frozen` is missing. frozen commands
fail cleanly without writing artifacts when there's no lockfile, which is
exactly the safety contract we want. repos that need a real install must opt
in explicitly via a `setup` lifecycle hook.

* review nits: single getGitStatus call, tighten gemini-3 override scope comment

addresses two inline nits from the PR review:

- `collectPostRunIssues` was calling `getGitStatus()` (spawns `git status
  --porcelain`) in both branches of the mode check. lift the call above the
  conditional and branch on the result; same behavior, one git invocation.
- the JSDoc on `GEMINI_3_DIRECT_API_IDS` said the override applies "across
  the board," but the constant only covers the two curated slugs in
  `action/models.ts`. tighten the wording to call out that other gemini-3
  ids in models.dev keep the upstream "high" default.

skipped the bot's yarn-1 concern after reading yarn 1's `install.js`:
`bailout()` (lines 461-465) throws `frozenLockfileError` when
`frozenLockfile && (!lockfileClean || missingPatterns.length > 0)`, which
fires before `linker.init()` writes node_modules or runs lifecycle scripts.
the existing comment's claim that frozen commands fail without artifacts
holds for yarn 1 too.
This commit is contained in:
Colin McDonnell
2026-05-11 22:04:19 +00:00
committed by pullfrog[bot]
parent cf94773bf0
commit a4a5010441
4 changed files with 74 additions and 4 deletions
+15
View File
@@ -433,3 +433,18 @@ ${PR_SUMMARY_FORMAT}`,
// static export for UI display — uses opencode format as the readable default
export const modes: Mode[] = computeModes("opencode");
/**
* modes that legitimately never modify the working tree. used by the post-run
* dirty-tree gate to suppress the "commit and push" nudge — those modes
* complete by submitting a review (`Review` / `IncrementalReview`) or by
* posting a Plan comment (`Plan`), not by touching files. any leftover in the
* tree at end-of-run is incidental tool noise (e.g. a `node_modules/` from a
* stray install attempt) on an ephemeral worktree; nudging the agent to
* commit it would produce a spurious PR.
*/
export const NON_COMMITTING_MODES: ReadonlySet<string> = new Set([
"Review",
"IncrementalReview",
"Plan",
]);