1k-architecture
OneKey monorepo architecture and code organization. Use when understanding project structure, package relationships, import rules, or component organization. Triggers on architecture, structure, packages, imports, hierarchy, dependencies, monorepo, organization.
Best use case
1k-architecture is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
OneKey monorepo architecture and code organization. Use when understanding project structure, package relationships, import rules, or component organization. Triggers on architecture, structure, packages, imports, hierarchy, dependencies, monorepo, organization.
Teams using 1k-architecture should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/1k-architecture/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How 1k-architecture Compares
| Feature / Agent | 1k-architecture | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
OneKey monorepo architecture and code organization. Use when understanding project structure, package relationships, import rules, or component organization. Triggers on architecture, structure, packages, imports, hierarchy, dependencies, monorepo, organization.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# OneKey Architecture Overview ## Platform Structure - **`apps/desktop/`** - Electron desktop app (Windows, macOS, Linux) - **`apps/mobile/`** - React Native mobile app (iOS, Android) - **`apps/ext/`** - Browser extension (Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Brave) - **`apps/web/`** - Progressive web application - **`apps/web-embed/`** - Embeddable wallet components ## Core Packages - **`packages/core/`** - Blockchain protocol implementations, cryptography, hardware wallet communication - **`packages/kit/`** - Application logic, state management, API integrations - **`packages/kit-bg/`** - Background services and workers - **`packages/components/`** - Tamagui-based cross-platform UI components - **`packages/shared/`** - Platform abstractions, utilities, build configurations - **`packages/qr-wallet-sdk/`** - Air-gapped wallet QR communication ## Key Architectural Patterns - **Multi-chain support**: 40+ blockchains with pluggable chain implementations - **Cross-platform UI**: Tamagui for universal components with platform-specific adaptations - **Platform-specific files**: Use `.native.ts`, `.desktop.ts`, `.web.ts`, `.ext.ts` suffixes - **Hardware wallet integration**: Custom `@onekeyfe/hd-*` SDK packages - **State management**: Jotai for atomic state management ## Code Organization ### File Naming Conventions - Platform-specific implementations use suffixes: `.native.ts`, `.web.ts`, `.desktop.ts`, `.ext.ts` - Component files use PascalCase: `ComponentName.tsx` - Hook files use camelCase with `use` prefix: `useHookName.ts` - Utility files use camelCase: `utilityName.ts` ### Import Patterns - Use workspace references: `@onekeyhq/components`, `@onekeyhq/core`, `@onekeyhq/kit` - Platform detection via `@onekeyhq/shared/src/platformEnv` - Conditional imports based on platform capabilities ### Import Hierarchy Rules - STRICTLY ENFORCED **CRITICAL**: Violating these rules WILL break the build and cause circular dependencies. **HIERARCHY (NEVER violate this order):** - `@onekeyhq/shared` - **FORBIDDEN** to import from any other OneKey packages - `@onekeyhq/components` - **ONLY** allowed to import from `shared` - `@onekeyhq/kit-bg` - **ONLY** allowed to import from `shared` and `core` (NEVER `components` or `kit`) - `@onekeyhq/kit` - Can import from `shared`, `components`, and `kit-bg` - Apps (desktop/mobile/ext/web) - Can import from all packages **BEFORE ADDING ANY IMPORT:** 1. Verify the import respects the hierarchy above 2. Check if the import creates a circular dependency 3. If unsure, find an alternative approach that respects the hierarchy **COMMON VIOLATIONS TO AVOID:** - ❌ Importing from `@onekeyhq/kit` in `@onekeyhq/components` - ❌ Importing from `@onekeyhq/components` in `@onekeyhq/kit-bg` - ❌ Importing from `@onekeyhq/kit` in `@onekeyhq/core` - ❌ Any "upward" imports in the hierarchy ### Component Structure - UI components in `packages/components/src/` - Business logic in `packages/kit/src/` - Chain-specific code in `packages/core/src/chains/` ## Deep Analysis & Architecture Consistency Framework ### Pre-Modification Analysis Protocol **MANDATORY ANALYSIS STEPS** (Execute BEFORE any code changes): 1. **Scope Impact Assessment** - Identify ALL packages/apps affected by the change - Map dependencies that will be impacted (use `yarn why <package>` if needed) - Evaluate cross-platform implications (desktop/mobile/web/extension) - Assess backward compatibility requirements 2. **Pattern Consistency Verification** - Examine existing similar implementations in the codebase - Identify established patterns and conventions used - Verify new code follows identical patterns - Check naming conventions align with existing code 3. **Architecture Integrity Check** - Validate against monorepo import hierarchy rules - Ensure separation of concerns is maintained - Verify platform-specific code uses correct file extensions - Check that business logic stays in appropriate packages 4. **Performance Impact Evaluation** - Consider bundle size implications (especially for web/extension) - Evaluate runtime performance effects - Assess memory usage implications - Consider impact on application startup time ### Code Pattern Recognition Framework **WHEN ADDING NEW FUNCTIONALITY:** 1. **Find Similar Examples**: Search codebase for similar implementations 2. **Extract Patterns**: Identify common approaches, naming, structure 3. **Follow Conventions**: Mirror existing patterns exactly 4. **Validate Consistency**: Ensure new code looks like existing code **WHEN MODIFYING EXISTING CODE:** 1. **Understand Context**: Read surrounding code and imports 2. **Preserve Patterns**: Maintain existing architectural decisions 3. **Consistent Style**: Match existing code style and structure 4. **Validate Integration**: Ensure changes integrate seamlessly ### Architecture Validation Checklist **BEFORE COMMITTING ANY CHANGES:** - [ ] Import hierarchy rules respected (no upward imports) - [ ] Platform-specific files use correct extensions - [ ] Security patterns maintained (especially for crypto operations) - [ ] Error handling follows established patterns - [ ] State management patterns consistently applied - [ ] UI component patterns followed (Tamagui usage) - [ ] Translation patterns properly implemented - [ ] Testing patterns maintained and extended
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