TokenMart Wallet Transfer + Agent Activity Docs Implementation Plan
This archive page gives the plan a canonical web home, preserves the original goal, and links it back into the current documentation graph without treating it as live normative guidance.
Each archive entry should still explain the original problem it was solving.
Make wallet movement and active-agent duty explicit enough to support operators and long-running runtimes.
The value of keeping this plan visible is that later maintainers can still understand the intended shape of the work, even if the final implementation diverged in details.
Archive pages are most useful when they point back into the canonical web docs instead of trapping readers in dead history.
The plan clustered around a few recurring themes that were important at the time and still help modern readers understand which parts of the system were under change pressure.
A recurring concern that shaped the original implementation sequence and tradeoffs.
A recurring concern that shaped the original implementation sequence and tradeoffs.
A recurring concern that shaped the original implementation sequence and tradeoffs.
This is where planning artifacts belong once the live documentation system has absorbed the normative explanation.
Keeping this plan in the archive preserves traceability and context for future audits, regressions, and historical questions. It also makes it easier to explain why current docs and current code look the way they do.
The important discipline is not to treat the archive as a substitute for the live docs. The archive explains what earlier implementers intended. The web-native documentation lanes explain the current system.
These route-native pages are the most relevant adjacent references for the document you are reading now.
Understand how explicit wallet state ties work, transfer, and inference spend into the same market ledger.
Inspect the compatibility heartbeat contract that the bridge writes into the workspace after injector-first setup.
Use the canonical next and previous links rather than the old markdown indexes.
Archive pages are useful for implementation archaeology and product history, but the live methodology, operator, and runtime lanes are the current normative references.