Docs Roadmap

Roadmap

Plumego is designed to be boring, stable, and long-lived.

The roadmap does not describe a flood of upcoming features.
Instead, it defines:

  • Where Plumego may evolve
  • Where it explicitly will not
  • What principles constrain all future changes

This page exists to prevent false expectations.


What the Roadmap Is

The Plumego roadmap is:

  • Directional, not tactical
  • Principle-driven, not feature-driven
  • Conservative by default
  • Explicit about non-goals

It helps you answer:

“If I build on Plumego today, will it still make sense in five years?”


What the Roadmap Is Not

The roadmap is not:

  • A release plan
  • A sprint backlog
  • A feature promise
  • A marketing page

If something is not implemented yet,
this page does not guarantee it ever will be.


Core Direction: Stability Over Expansion

The primary long-term goal of Plumego is:

To remain small, explicit, and stable.

This means:

  • Fewer core features over time
  • Slower release cadence
  • Higher bar for change
  • Strong backward compatibility

Growth happens at the edges, not in the core.


Areas of Intentional Stability

The following areas are considered largely complete:

  • Request lifecycle model
  • Context semantics
  • Middleware execution model
  • Routing model
  • HTTP server integration
  • Explicit dependency wiring philosophy

Changes here are extremely unlikely
outside of major-version releases.


Possible Areas of Evolution

These areas may evolve cautiously,
without violating core guarantees.

1. Ergonomic Improvements

  • Small API refinements
  • Better naming clarity
  • Reduced boilerplate helpers
  • Improved error messages

These changes must not introduce hidden behavior.


2. Documentation and Examples

  • More real-world examples
  • Expanded reference coverage
  • Better migration guides
  • Deeper operational documentation

Documentation is considered a first-class surface.


3. Optional Ecosystem Packages

Instead of growing the core, Plumego may gain:

  • Companion middleware packages
  • Optional adapters
  • Reference implementations
  • Example integrations

These live outside the core repository
and do not affect core stability.


4. Tooling and Developer Experience

Potential areas include:

  • Linting rules for Plumego usage
  • Project templates
  • Static analysis helpers
  • Debugging aids

Tooling must not require runtime framework changes.


Explicit Non-Goals

The following are deliberate non-goals.

Plumego will not become:

  • A full-stack framework
  • An ORM
  • A DI container
  • A background job framework
  • An API gateway
  • A service mesh
  • A policy engine
  • A configuration framework

If you need these, Plumego should integrate with them —
not replace them.


Feature Requests and the Roadmap

When evaluating new ideas, the guiding questions are:

  1. Does this preserve explicit control flow?
  2. Does this avoid hidden behavior?
  3. Does this belong in user code instead?
  4. Does this reduce long-term maintenance cost?

If the answer to any is “no”,
the feature likely does not belong in the core.


Versioning Philosophy

Plumego follows semantic versioning:

  • Patch releases: bug fixes only
  • Minor releases: additive, backward-compatible changes
  • Major releases: rare, deliberate, breaking changes

Major releases are expected to be infrequent.


Community Influence

Community input is welcome — but filtered through discipline.

Plumego prioritizes:

  • Long-term maintainability
  • Conceptual integrity
  • Architectural clarity

Popularity-driven decisions are explicitly avoided.


Migration and Longevity

Plumego is designed so that:

  • Old code continues to work
  • Upgrades are predictable
  • Large refactors are unnecessary
  • Knowledge remains transferable

Framework churn is treated as a failure mode.


Summary

The Plumego roadmap is defined by restraint.

  • Fewer features
  • Clearer boundaries
  • Slower change
  • Longer lifespan

If Plumego ever becomes exciting because of constant new features,
it has likely failed its original goal.


Next

From here, useful next reads include:

  • Changelog — what has actually changed
  • Migration Guides — when breaking changes occur
  • Contributing — how evolution decisions are made

The roadmap defines the future by defining its limits.

In this section

  • Design Principles
    The non-negotiable design principles that guide Plumego’s evolution and constrain all future decisions.
  • Planned Features
    Potential future features and evolutions of Plumego, explicitly framed as non-binding directions constrained by design principles.
  • Non-Goals
    Explicit non-goals of Plumego: what the framework intentionally refuses to provide, and why those refusals are essential to its longevity.
  • Versioning Policy
    Plumego versioning policy defining semantic versioning rules, compatibility guarantees, and how change is communicated.