Merge branch 'docs/issue-543-mcp-eof-recovery' into feat/issue-543-mcp-namespace-health-check

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# Recovering from `client is closing: EOF` on a Gitea MCP namespace (#543)
## Symptom
A tool call through a Gitea MCP namespace — `gitea-author`, `gitea-reviewer`,
`gitea-merger`, or the shared `gitea-tools` namespace — fails immediately with:
```
client is closing: EOF
```
Every subsequent call to that same namespace returns the same error, including
cheap read tools such as `gitea_whoami` and `gitea_list_profiles`. Other MCP
servers registered with the same client (for example `context7`) keep working,
so this is **not** a global MCP-client outage.
## Why this is not a code defect
This failure is a **transport-level** condition in the IDE / MCP client manager,
not a missing or broken tool:
- The tool can be present and registered in the Python `FastMCP` tool manager.
- Direct Python inspection of the server confirms the tool exists.
- Running the server manually and sending JSON-RPC over stdio works fine.
The client manager entered a closed state after the backing subprocess for that
namespace terminated (or was killed) behind its back. Once closed, the client
does **not** re-spawn the child on the next tool call — it just replays
`client is closing: EOF`. The OS process may even still be alive if a parent
language-server process is holding the stdio pipes open.
This is the canonical "registered in FastMCP ≠ callable through the namespace"
false-ready state. It is distinct from the **stale-runtime** family in #531 /
#544, where the process is reachable but running behind `master`; that case is
detected by the `ps`-based `_check_mcp_runtimes_diagnostics` in
`gitea_mcp_server.py`. The EOF case is a dead/closed transport, not a stale one,
so the `ps` check alone will not surface it.
## Recovery path
Do the steps in order. Stop as soon as a live namespace call succeeds.
1. **Confirm the blast radius.** Call a cheap read tool on the failing namespace
(`gitea_whoami` or `gitea_list_profiles`). Then call the same tool on a
different MCP server (e.g. `context7`).
- Only the Gitea namespace fails → single-namespace transport close. Continue.
- Every server fails → restart the whole MCP client, not just one namespace.
2. **Reconnect the namespace through the client, not the shell.** Use the IDE /
client MCP-reconnect action for that server entry (in Claude Code:
`/mcp` → reconnect the affected `gitea-*` server). Reconnecting forces the
client to spawn a fresh subprocess and re-open the pipe. This clears the
closed-client state that a bare `kill`/respawn from a terminal does **not**.
3. **Do not "fix" it by importing the server or poking the process.** Reaching
for `python -c 'import gitea_mcp_server ...'`, raw JSON-RPC from a shell, or
killing PIDs to force a respawn does not restore the *client's* view of the
namespace and violates the daemon-import guard (#558,
`docs/mcp-daemon-import-guard.md`). The only sanctioned repair is a client
reconnect / relaunch.
4. **Verify through the same path the workflow will use.** After reconnect, call
the specific tool the blocked workflow needs — not just any tool — through
the target namespace. For a merge that means calling the merger-authorized
adoption/merge tool through `gitea-merger`. A green `gitea_whoami` on one
namespace does **not** prove another namespace or another tool is callable.
5. **If reconnect does not clear it,** relaunch the client entirely, then repeat
step 4. If EOF persists after a full relaunch, the backing subprocess is
failing to start — inspect its stderr / launch config (command path, venv,
`*_MCP_CONFIG`, `*_MCP_PROFILE` env) rather than retrying the call.
## Diagnostics to capture when reporting EOF
Include all of these so the failure is actionable and reproducible:
- **Namespace name** that returned EOF (`gitea-author` / `gitea-reviewer` /
`gitea-merger` / `gitea-tools`).
- **Tool** that was called and the **exact** error string.
- **PID** of the backing process (if any) and whether it was still alive.
- **Profile / env** for that namespace (execution profile, `*_MCP_PROFILE`,
worktree binding such as `GITEA_AUTHOR_WORKTREE`).
- **Config path** the client launched the server from.
- Result of the **cross-server control** call (did `context7` succeed?).
## Reproducing the registered-vs-callable gap
`test_mcp_conn.py` performs a full JSON-RPC handshake
(`initialize``initialized``tools/list`) plus a direct tool call against a
namespace, which is what distinguishes "registered in FastMCP" from "callable
through the client." Use it to confirm a namespace is genuinely reachable after
a reconnect. It probes a namespace end-to-end; a namespace that returns EOF at
the client fails this handshake, while `ps`-only checks still report the process
as present.
## Do-not list during EOF recovery
- Do **not** retry a blocked merge/adoption until the required tool is confirmed
callable through the merger-authorized namespace (see #543 canonical handoff).
- Do **not** clean, reset, or rebind a **foreign** worktree to work around the
error.
- Do **not** bypass the namespace with direct imports, raw API/curl, or
in-memory state restoration.
## Related
- #531 / #544 — stale-runtime detection (`ps`-based); sibling failure mode.
- #558 / `docs/mcp-daemon-import-guard.md` — why shell imports are not a repair.
- `docs/mcp-client-registration.md` — per-server registration contract.