Files
fidelity-ai-workspace/project-knowledge/03-context/workstreams/rest-migration.md
david.delagneau dbc1894e27 Add project-knowledge structure and templates
- Introduced new maps for navigating project knowledge, including "Current Work," "Fidelity Domain," "Fidelity Apps," "Work Items," and "People."
- Created base files for daily notes, decisions, people, systems, work items, and workstreams with defined properties and views.
- Developed templates for daily notes, decisions, meeting notes, persons, systems, work items, and workstreams to standardize documentation.
- Updated scripts and prompts to reflect the new project-knowledge directory structure.
- Removed outdated onboarding and start-here documents, consolidating relevant information into the new maps.
- Ensured all references in workflows and scripts point to the new project-knowledge paths.
2026-04-17 15:52:08 -06:00

45 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown

---
type: workstream
project: fidelity
status: active
systems: [xflowsdk]
work-items: [pdiap-15838]
related: [consumer-integration]
updated: 2026-04-16
tags:
- workstream
- fidelity
---
# REST Migration
## Goal
Deprecate GraphQL and Apollo safely while preserving behavior through REST-backed flows.
---
## Stable Constraints
- REST is behind a feature flag.
- GraphQL remains the default fallback unless confirmed otherwise.
- REST should never be assumed active by default.
- Migration work must preserve behavior parity before removing Apollo-related code.
---
## What Matters In Practice
- Validation must clarify whether the tested path is actually using REST or still falling back to GraphQL.
- Story scope should distinguish:
- transport migration work
- feature-flag cleanup
- tests and mocks tied to Apollo/GraphQL
- Communication should avoid implying the migration is complete before the fallback path is removed.
---
## Historical Signals From Slack
- Historical Slack evidence around release and dependency work reinforces that transport or dependency changes often require consumer validation, not just local SDK changes.
- Some dependency and pipeline issues complicated migration-related rollout even when the technical change itself was understood.