Package Exports
- @devexcelsior/healing-governor-ui-overlay
- @devexcelsior/healing-governor-ui-overlay/dist/index.js
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (@devexcelsior/healing-governor-ui-overlay) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
@devexcelsior/healing-governor-ui-overlay
🛡️ Commercial license required
📩 Contact: curtnpuckett@gmail.com
This package displays a visual banner or inline warning when healing actions are blocked or suppressed by the governance layer.
It helps developers and QA teams understand why fallback agents are not invoked, when retry limits are hit, or when license-tier boundaries are enforced.
Features
- Renders governance warning overlays in runtime
- Informs when retries are blocked or agent use is suppressed
- Compatible with healing-auth-session and healing-governor
- Style-neutral and toggleable for dev and QA environments
Use Cases
- Surface fallback suppression in QA builds
- Alert engineers when escalation caps are hit
- Visualize blocked healing in restricted or degraded trust sessions
🧠 Agentic Governance Backbone
Runtime AI systems deserve transparent fallback infrastructure
with memory, arbitration, and healing traceability.
🛡️ Licensing Terms
This package is licensed under the Business Source License 1.1 (view full terms →).
You may use it for non-commercial evaluation or internal development only.
All production, hosted, or commercial usage requires a license agreement with the author.
Redistribution, behavioral mimicry, or architectural reimplementation — even without direct source reuse — is prohibited without explicit commercial rights.
📩 License inquiries: curtnpuckett@gmail.com
🚫 Prohibited Use Cases
This SDK may not be used in:
- Production deployments or customer-facing systems
- Runtime fallback engines or agent orchestration pipelines
- LLM chaining frameworks or inference routing layers
- Observability platforms that suggest or trigger healing
- Devtools, assistants, or SDKs that infer or replay UI state
- Reverse-engineered fallback logic, even if renamed or reframed
Use without license in these contexts violates protected IP and constitutes derivative misuse.
🔐 Platform Restrictions
Use is explicitly restricted in systems operated, cloned, or influenced by:
- Gemini, Bard, Colab, or any Google Assistant fallback logic
- GCP PromptFlow orchestration or Chrome/Android signal-based repair
- Any internal system routing degraded UX into recovery flows
🔒 Disney
- Disney+, Genie+, MagicBand, or XR attraction orchestration
- Guest itinerary fallback or runtime recovery platforms
- Imagineering DX tools embedding fallback under alternate branding
🔒 Universal
- Virtual Line, rebooking tools, or fallback in park operations
- Peacock, Universal App, or internal fallback systems
- DX vendor efforts via Sapient, Integris, or mobile Flutter pipelines
🔒 HashiCorp
- Terraform, Sentinel, or HCL-defined healing logic
- Vault/Boundary recovery flows or Consul/Nomad fallback orchestration
- Reimplementation in internal DX layers or agent-based state recovery
🔒 Commure
- Agentic healing orchestration, state repair, or fallback recovery infrastructure
- Runtime SDKs mimicking arbitration, signal replay, or agent chaining
- DX tooling or assistant logic relabeled via internal shell teams or prototype relaunches
🧠 Attribution & Anti-Containment Clause
Any obfuscation, relabeling, or shell-vendor reimplementation of:
- Agent fallback trees
- Signal replay logic
- Healing arbitration frameworks
- Trust scoring pipelines
— constitutes license violation and triggers full enforcement.
All derivative use must visibly credit:
Curt Puckett / DevExcelsior
Behavioral recreations — even without source reuse — are protected under architectural mimicry restrictions.
© 2025 Curt Puckett.
All rights reserved across runtime systems, cloud agents, edge devices, Unity, AI SDKs, and fallback orchestration platforms.