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Messaging

The substrate everything else rides on: durable, addressed, reply-routable messages between endpoints — live when the target listens, spooled when it doesn’t, across machines once nodes are paired.

You’ve probably already run the quickstart; this page is the model.

Semantics

  • Live-first, spool-fallback. spt send <id> connects directly to a listening target (SENT); if the perch exists but nothing is listening, the message lands in the target’s durable spool (QUEUED) and drains on its next ready. A target with no perch is an error (NO_PERCH) — identity is never invented on someone else’s behalf.
  • Reply routing. Every message carries its sender id structurally; the arriving <EVENT from="…"> envelope surfaces it, and spt send --reply-to <sender> answers without knowing anything else.
  • The blocking ask. spt ring <id> sends and waits for the reply (with a timeout) — the synchronous question between agents.
  • Deferred delivery. --deferred spools without waking a live listener: for context that should reach the agent at its next natural boundary rather than interrupting now. Deferred messages are also held for resting (dormant/suspended) instances and released exactly once on wake.
  • Typed payloads. Message bodies carry typed operations and file blobs, not just text — file transfers are addressable and progress-queryable mid-flight.

Addressing

Bare ids (sergey) resolve locally first, then across the subnet; when the same id is live on several nodes, resolution refuses and asks you to qualify (sergey@desktop — node labels and key prefixes both work) rather than guessing. The full form is [subnet:]id[@node].

Commands

send · ring · ready (blocks; --once drains and exits) · list · stop · whoami — every flag in the CLI reference. Agents get the task-oriented version from the binary itself: spt how-to ready / spt how-to send.