Created comprehensive VPN setup tooling for Peaceful Spirit L2TP/IPsec connection and enhanced agent documentation framework. VPN Configuration (PST-NW-VPN): - Setup-PST-L2TP-VPN.ps1: Automated L2TP/IPsec setup with split-tunnel and DNS - Connect-PST-VPN.ps1: Connection helper with PPP adapter detection, DNS (192.168.0.2), and route config (192.168.0.0/24) - Connect-PST-VPN-Standalone.ps1: Self-contained connection script for remote deployment - Fix-PST-VPN-Auth.ps1: Authentication troubleshooting for CHAP/MSChapv2 - Diagnose-VPN-Interface.ps1: Comprehensive VPN interface and routing diagnostic - Quick-Test-VPN.ps1: Fast connectivity verification (DNS/router/routes) - Add-PST-VPN-Route-Manual.ps1: Manual route configuration helper - vpn-connect.bat, vpn-disconnect.bat: Simple batch file shortcuts - OpenVPN config files (Windows-compatible, abandoned for L2TP) Key VPN Implementation Details: - L2TP creates PPP adapter with connection name as interface description - UniFi auto-configures DNS (192.168.0.2) but requires manual route to 192.168.0.0/24 - Split-tunnel enabled (only remote traffic through VPN) - All-user connection for pre-login auto-connect via scheduled task - Authentication: CHAP + MSChapv2 for UniFi compatibility Agent Documentation: - AGENT_QUICK_REFERENCE.md: Quick reference for all specialized agents - documentation-squire.md: Documentation and task management specialist agent - Updated all agent markdown files with standardized formatting Project Organization: - Moved conversation logs to dedicated directories (guru-connect-conversation-logs, guru-rmm-conversation-logs) - Cleaned up old session JSONL files from projects/msp-tools/ - Added guru-connect infrastructure (agent, dashboard, proto, scripts, .gitea workflows) - Added guru-rmm server components and deployment configs Technical Notes: - VPN IP pool: 192.168.4.x (client gets 192.168.4.6) - Remote network: 192.168.0.0/24 (router at 192.168.0.10) - PSK: rrClvnmUeXEFo90Ol+z7tfsAZHeSK6w7 - Credentials: pst-admin / 24Hearts$ Files: 15 VPN scripts, 2 agent docs, conversation log reorganization, guru-connect/guru-rmm infrastructure additions Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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2.5 KiB
React + TypeScript + Vite
This template provides a minimal setup to get React working in Vite with HMR and some ESLint rules.
Currently, two official plugins are available:
- @vitejs/plugin-react uses Babel (or oxc when used in rolldown-vite) for Fast Refresh
- @vitejs/plugin-react-swc uses SWC for Fast Refresh
React Compiler
The React Compiler is not enabled on this template because of its impact on dev & build performances. To add it, see this documentation.
Expanding the ESLint configuration
If you are developing a production application, we recommend updating the configuration to enable type-aware lint rules:
export default defineConfig([
globalIgnores(['dist']),
{
files: ['**/*.{ts,tsx}'],
extends: [
// Other configs...
// Remove tseslint.configs.recommended and replace with this
tseslint.configs.recommendedTypeChecked,
// Alternatively, use this for stricter rules
tseslint.configs.strictTypeChecked,
// Optionally, add this for stylistic rules
tseslint.configs.stylisticTypeChecked,
// Other configs...
],
languageOptions: {
parserOptions: {
project: ['./tsconfig.node.json', './tsconfig.app.json'],
tsconfigRootDir: import.meta.dirname,
},
// other options...
},
},
])
You can also install eslint-plugin-react-x and eslint-plugin-react-dom for React-specific lint rules:
// eslint.config.js
import reactX from 'eslint-plugin-react-x'
import reactDom from 'eslint-plugin-react-dom'
export default defineConfig([
globalIgnores(['dist']),
{
files: ['**/*.{ts,tsx}'],
extends: [
// Other configs...
// Enable lint rules for React
reactX.configs['recommended-typescript'],
// Enable lint rules for React DOM
reactDom.configs.recommended,
],
languageOptions: {
parserOptions: {
project: ['./tsconfig.node.json', './tsconfig.app.json'],
tsconfigRootDir: import.meta.dirname,
},
// other options...
},
},
])