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Biz.Dev is the namespace for business development (duh). Here we define the
tools and infrastructure for internal dev work.

# Goals of the workflow

- have minimal ceremony
- default to asynchrony, but allow for synchronous work when necessary
- automate the boring stuff
- standardize environments, tooling, and versions to minimize friction
  while collaborating
- support the longevity and self-sustainability of the project

Ideally, each contributor should be able to go off grid for a day or a
week or more, continue working offline, submit their work when finished,
and have no or minimal conflicts. This also refers to the resilience of
the production systems.

We should never need "out of office" email auto-replies, or urgent
contact. No pager duty, no daily stand-ups. Yes, this policy will affect
what code we write, not just how we write it; that is by design.

# Getting started

Jump into a development shell:

    nix-shell

Then run  `help` to see the dev commands.

# Repository organization

The source tree maps to the module namespace, and roughly follows the
Haskell namespace hierarchy (although nothing is enforced). The root namespace
for all code that we own is `Biz`; proprietary applications, products, and
infrastructure lives under there. Stuff that can be open sourced or otherwise
externalized should be outside of `Biz`.

Development aspects should be localized to their sub-namespaces as much
as possible. Only after sufficient iteration such that interfaces are
solidified and functionality is well-established should some code be
promoted up the namespace hierarchy.

Start with small namespaces: use `Biz/Thing.hs` before `Biz/Thing/Service.hs`.
Try to keep all related code in one spot for as long as possible.

Boundaries and interfaces between namespaces should be singular and
well-defined. Likewise, the functionality and purpose of a particular
namespace should be singular and well-defined. Follow the unix principle
of "do one thing and do it well."

Namespaces are always capitalized. I would prefer always lowercase, but
`ghc` _really_ wants capitalized files, so we appeas `ghc`. In Scheme
this actually translates quite well and helps distinguish between types
and values.

File extensions denote _type_ and indicate to the build system how to
handle the file. So for example:

- `.hs` is Haskell source code, the build system compiles it
- `.scm` is Scheme source code, ditto
- `.org` is an organizational text document, the build system ignores
  this, but we use them to make plans and such
- `.jnl` is a journal for accounting, the build system will check our
  balances, make sure we're profitable

# Setting up remote builds

The Biz.Dev machine acts as a remote build server and Nix cache. To use it from
your local machine, your public key must be at `Biz/Keys/$USER.pub` and your
user added to `Biz/Users.nix`, then bild will automatically use your key to run
builds on Biz.Dev.

To use distributed builds for all nix commands, add the following to your NixOS
configuration:

    nix = {
      distributedBuilds = true;
      buildMachines = [
        {
          hostName = "dev.simatime.com";
          sshUser = "yourUserName";
          sshKey = "/path/to/your/private/key";
          system = "x86_64-linux";
        }
      ];
    };