Aim Lock Config File Hot

She deployed to the three drones. Telemetry flooded in: stable heart rates, smooth trajectory corrections, and then, bleakly, one drone reported "lock mismatch: aim_lock_config.conf HOT". The canary refused the shadow config—the lock check happened locally before accepting any override.

Mira typed a diagnostic command: lslocks -t aim_lock_config.conf. The output listed a lock held by PID 0. Kernel-level, orphaned. Whoever had designed this locking mechanism had allowed a race between crash recovery and lock reclamation. A rare race—rare until you maintained thousands of endpoints and ran updates at scale. aim lock config file hot

Mira opened a new shell and began a manual orchestration: create a shadow config, replicate the exact parameters, and push changes to a small canary subset—three drones—leaving the rest untouched. If the canary behaved, she could roll the patch incrementally despite the lock. She crafted aim_lock_config_hotfix.conf, identical except for a timestamp and a safer update window flag. She deployed to the three drones

Mira scrolled to the top of the config, then to the comment line. She changed it—not the contents of the config, but the process: she added a small, defensive watchdog to Locksmith's startup sequence that checked for stale locks on boot and scheduled more aggressive garbage collection. She pushed the change and wrote a terse commit message: fix: reclaim stale locks on boot; reduce GC interval. Mira typed a diagnostic command: lslocks -t aim_lock_config