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Maestro/docs/troubleshooting.md
Pedram Amini c5a0e99bbf docs: standardize Auto Run and Playbook terminology
Replace 'multi-document batch runs' and 'batch processing' terminology
with 'Auto Run' (individual documents) and 'Playbook' (collections of
Auto Run documents) across user-facing documentation.

Preserves 'batch mode' references where they describe Claude Code's
actual non-interactive operation mode.
2026-01-29 15:29:38 -05:00

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Troubleshooting & Support System logs, process monitor, debug packages, and how to get help with Maestro. life-ring

System Logs

Maestro maintains detailed system logs that help diagnose issues. Access them via:

  • Keyboard: Opt+Cmd+L (Mac) / Alt+Ctrl+L (Windows/Linux)
  • Quick Actions: Cmd+K / Ctrl+K → "View System Logs"
  • Menu: Click the hamburger menu (☰) in the Left Panel → "System Logs"

The System Log Viewer shows:

  • Timestamped log entries with severity levels (debug, info, warn, error, toast, autorun)
  • Filterable by log level via clickable level pills and searchable text (Cmd+F / Ctrl+F)
  • Real-time updates as new logs are generated
  • Detail view with full message content and source module

Log levels can be configured in SettingsGeneralSystem Log Level. Higher levels show fewer logs — Debug shows all logs, Error shows only errors.

Process Monitor

Monitor all running processes spawned by Maestro:

  • Keyboard: Opt+Cmd+P (Mac) / Alt+Ctrl+P (Windows/Linux)
  • Quick Actions: Cmd+K / Ctrl+K → "View System Processes"
  • Menu: Click the hamburger menu (☰) in the Left Panel → "Process Monitor"

The Process Monitor displays a hierarchical tree view:

  • Groups — Session groups containing their member sessions
  • Sessions — Each session shows its AI agent and terminal processes
  • Process details — PID, runtime, working directory, Claude session ID (for AI processes)
  • Group Chat processes — Moderator and participant processes for active group chats
  • Wizard processes — Active wizard conversations and playbook generation

Process types shown:

Type Description
AI Agent Main Claude Code (or other agent) process
Terminal Shell process for the session
Batch Auto Run document processing agent
Synopsis Context compaction synopsis generation
Moderator Group chat moderator process
Participant Group chat participant agent
Wizard Wizard conversation process
Wizard Gen Playbook document generation process

Features:

  • Click a process row to view detailed information (command, arguments, session ID)
  • Double-click or press Enter to navigate to the session/tab
  • K or Delete to kill a selected process
  • R to refresh the process list
  • Expand/collapse buttons in header to control tree visibility

This is useful when an agent becomes unresponsive or you need to diagnose process-related issues.

Agent Errors

When an AI agent encounters an error, Maestro displays a modal with clear recovery options. Common error types include:

Error Type Description Recovery Options
Authentication Required API key expired or invalid Re-authenticate, check API key settings
Context Limit Reached Conversation exceeded token limit Start new session, compact context
Rate Limit Exceeded Too many API requests Wait and retry, reduce request frequency
Connection Error Network connectivity issue Check internet, retry connection
Agent Error Agent process crashed unexpectedly Restart agent, start new session
Permission Denied File or operation access denied Check permissions, run with appropriate access

Each error modal shows:

  • Error type and description
  • Agent and session context
  • Timestamp of when the error occurred
  • Collapsible JSON details for debugging
  • Recovery action buttons specific to the error type

Debug Package

If you encounter deep-seated issues that are difficult to diagnose, Maestro can generate a Debug Package — a compressed bundle of diagnostic information that you can safely share when reporting bugs.

To create a Debug Package:

  1. Press Cmd+K (Mac) or Ctrl+K (Windows/Linux) to open Quick Actions
  2. Search for "Create Debug Package"
  3. Choose a save location for the .zip file
  4. Attach the file to your GitHub issue

What's Included

The debug package collects metadata and configuration — never your conversations or sensitive data:

Always included:

File Contents
system-info.json OS, CPU, memory, Electron/Node versions, app uptime
settings.json App preferences with sensitive values redacted
agents.json Agent configurations, availability, and capability flags
external-tools.json Shell, git, GitHub CLI, and cloudflared availability
windows-diagnostics.json Windows-specific diagnostics (minimal on other platforms)
groups.json Session group configurations
processes.json Active process information
web-server.json Web server and Cloudflare tunnel status
storage-info.json Storage paths and sizes

Optional (toggleable in UI):

File Contents
sessions.json Session metadata (names, states, tab counts — no conversations)
logs.json Recent system log entries
errors.json Current error states and recent error events
group-chats.json Group chat metadata (participant lists, routing — no messages)
batch-state.json Auto Run state and document queue

Privacy Protections

The debug package is designed to be safe to share publicly:

  • API keys and tokens — Replaced with [REDACTED]
  • Passwords and secrets — Never included
  • Conversation content — Excluded entirely (no AI responses, no user messages)
  • File contents — Not included from your projects
  • Custom prompts — Not included (may contain sensitive context)
  • File paths — Sanitized to replace your username with ~
  • Environment variables — Only counts shown, not values (may contain secrets)
  • Custom agent arguments — Only [SET] or [NOT SET] shown, not actual values

Example path sanitization:

  • Before: /Users/johndoe/Projects/MyApp
  • After: ~/Projects/MyApp

WSL2 Issues (Windows)

If you're running Maestro through WSL2, most issues stem from using Windows-mounted paths. See the WSL2 installation guide for the recommended setup.

Common WSL2 Problems

"EPERM: operation not permitted" on socket binding

The Vite dev server or Electron cannot bind to ports when running from /mnt/... paths.

Solution: Move your project to the native Linux filesystem:

mv /mnt/c/projects/maestro ~/maestro
cd ~/maestro
npm install
npm run dev

"FATAL:sandbox_host_linux.cc" Electron crash

The Electron sandbox cannot operate correctly on Windows-mounted filesystems.

Solution: Run from the Linux filesystem (/home/...), not from /mnt/....

npm install timeouts or ENOTEMPTY errors

Cross-filesystem operations between WSL and Windows are unreliable for npm's file operations.

Solution: Clone and install from the Linux filesystem:

cd ~
git clone https://github.com/pedramamini/maestro.git
cd maestro
npm install

electron-rebuild failures

The Windows temp directory may be inaccessible from WSL.

Solution: Override the temp directory:

TMPDIR=/tmp npm run rebuild

Git index corruption or lock file errors

NTFS and Linux inode handling are incompatible, causing git metadata issues.

Solution: If you see "missing index" or spurious .git/index.lock errors:

rm -f .git/index.lock
git checkout -f

For new projects, always clone to the Linux filesystem from the start.

Getting Help