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Author SHA1 Message Date
Jesse Vincent
6fd4507659 Require contributors to disclose authoring environment and target dev
Add a mandatory self-identification disclosure (model, harness, harness
version, all installed plugins) to the PR template and all three issue
templates, and document the requirement in the contributor guidelines.
We weigh contributions differently depending on what produced them:
content reasoned from documentation is held to a different bar than work
grounded in a real session.

Also state explicitly, in both CLAUDE.md and the PR template, that all
PRs must target the dev branch rather than main.
2026-05-29 13:05:25 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
f2cbfbefeb Release v5.1.0 (#1468)
* docs: add Codex App compatibility design spec (PRI-823)

Design for making using-git-worktrees, finishing-a-development-branch,
and subagent-driven-development skills work in the Codex App's sandboxed
worktree environment. Read-only environment detection via git-dir vs
git-common-dir comparison, ~48 lines across 4 files, zero breaking changes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: address spec review feedback for PRI-823

Fix three Important issues from spec review:
- Clarify Step 1.5 placement relative to existing Steps 2/3
- Re-derive environment state at cleanup time instead of relying on
  earlier skill output
- Acknowledge pre-existing Step 5 cleanup inconsistency

Also: precise step references, exact codex-tools.md content, clearer
Integration section update instructions.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: address team review feedback for PRI-823 spec

- Add commit SHA + data loss warning to handoff payload (HIGH)
- Add explicit commit step before handoff (HIGH)
- Remove misleading "mark as externally managed" from Path B
- Add executing-plans 1-line edit (was missing)
- Add branch name derivation rules
- Add conditional UI language for non-App environments
- Add sandbox fallback for permission errors
- Add STOP directive after Step 0 reporting

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: clarify executing-plans in What Does NOT Change section

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: add cleanup guard test (#5) and sandbox fallback test (#10) to spec

Both tests address real risk scenarios:
- #5: cleanup guard bug would delete Codex App's own worktree (data loss)
- #10: Local thread sandbox fallback needs manual Codex App validation

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: add implementation plan for Codex App compatibility (PRI-823)

8 tasks covering: environment detection in using-git-worktrees,
Step 1.5 + cleanup guard in finishing-a-development-branch,
Integration line updates, codex-tools.md docs, automated tests,
and final verification.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs(codex-tools): add named agent dispatch mapping for Codex (#647)

* fix(writing-skills): correct false 'only two fields' frontmatter claim (#882)

* Replace subagent review loops with lightweight inline self-review

The subagent review loop (dispatching a fresh agent to review plans/specs)
doubled execution time (~25 min overhead) without measurably improving plan
quality. Regression testing across 5 versions (v3.6.0 through v5.0.4) with
5 trials each showed identical plan sizes, task counts, and quality scores
regardless of whether the review loop ran.

Changes:
- writing-plans: Replace subagent Plan Review Loop with inline Self-Review
  checklist (spec coverage, placeholder scan, type consistency)
- writing-plans: Add explicit "No Placeholders" section listing plan failures
  (TBD, vague descriptions, undefined references, "similar to Task N")
- brainstorming: Replace subagent Spec Review Loop with inline Spec Self-Review
  (placeholder scan, internal consistency, scope check, ambiguity check)
- Both skills now use "look at it with fresh eyes" framing

Testing: 5 trials with the new skill show self-review catches 3-5 real bugs
per run (spawn positions, API mismatches, seed bugs, grid indexing) in ~30s
instead of ~25 min. Remaining defects are comparable to the subagent approach.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Revert "Replace subagent review loops with lightweight inline self-review"

This reverts commit bf8f7572eb.

* Reapply "Replace subagent review loops with lightweight inline self-review"

This reverts commit b045fa3950.

* Add v5.0.6 release notes

* Move brainstorm server metadata to .meta/ subdirectory

Metadata files (.server-info, .events, .server.pid, .server.log,
.server-stopped) were stored in the same directory served over HTTP,
making them accessible via the /files/ route. They now live in a .meta/
subdirectory that is not web-accessible.

Also fixes a stale test assertion ("Waiting for Claude" → "Waiting for
the agent").

Reported-By: 吉田仁

* Revert "Move brainstorm server metadata to .meta/ subdirectory"

This reverts commit ab500dade6.

* Separate brainstorm server content and state into peer directories

The session directory now contains two peers: content/ (HTML served to
the browser) and state/ (events, server-info, pid, log). Previously
all files shared a single directory, making server state and user
interaction data accessible over the /files/ HTTP route.

Also fixes stale test assertion ("Waiting for Claude" → "Waiting for
the agent").

Reported-By: 吉田仁

* Fix owner-PID false positive when owner runs as different user

ownerAlive() treated EPERM (permission denied) the same as ESRCH
(process not found), causing the server to self-terminate within 60s
whenever the owner process ran as a different user. This affected WSL
(owner is a Windows process), Tailscale SSH, and any cross-user
scenario.

The fix: `return e.code === 'EPERM'` — if we get permission denied,
the process is alive; we just can't signal it.

Tested on Linux via Tailscale SSH with a root-owned grandparent PID:
- Server survives past the 60s lifecycle check (EPERM = alive)
- Server still shuts down when owner genuinely dies (ESRCH = dead)

Fixes #879

* Fix owner-PID lifecycle monitoring for cross-platform reliability

Two bugs caused the brainstorm server to self-terminate within 60s:

1. ownerAlive() treated EPERM (permission denied) as "process dead".
   When the owner PID belongs to a different user (Tailscale SSH,
   system daemons), process.kill(pid, 0) throws EPERM — but the
   process IS alive. Fixed: return e.code === 'EPERM'.

2. On WSL, the grandparent PID resolves to a short-lived subprocess
   that exits before the first 60s lifecycle check. The PID is
   genuinely dead (ESRCH), so the EPERM fix alone doesn't help.
   Fixed: validate the owner PID at server startup — if it's already
   dead, it was a bad resolution, so disable monitoring and rely on
   the 30-minute idle timeout.

This also removes the Windows/MSYS2-specific OWNER_PID="" carve-out
from start-server.sh, since the server now handles invalid PIDs
generically at startup regardless of platform.

Tested on Linux (magic-kingdom) via Tailscale SSH:
- Root-owned owner PID (EPERM): server survives ✓
- Dead owner PID at startup (WSL sim): monitoring disabled, survives ✓
- Valid owner that dies: server shuts down within 60s ✓

Fixes #879

* Release v5.0.6: inline self-review, brainstorm server restructure, owner-PID fixes

* fix: add Copilot CLI platform detection for sessionStart context injection

Copilot CLI v1.0.11 reads `additionalContext` from sessionStart hook
output, but the session-start script only emits the Claude Code-specific
nested format. Add COPILOT_CLI env var detection so Copilot CLI gets the
SDK-standard top-level `additionalContext` while Claude Code continues
getting `hookSpecificOutput`.

Based on PR #910 by @culinablaz.

* feat: add Copilot CLI tool mapping, docs, and install instructions

- Add references/copilot-tools.md with full tool equivalence table
- Add Copilot CLI to using-superpowers skill platform instructions
- Add marketplace install instructions to README
- Add changelog entry crediting @culinablaz for the hook fix

* fix(opencode): align skills path across bootstrap, runtime, and tests

The bootstrap text advertised a configDir-based skills path that didn't
match the runtime path (resolved relative to the plugin file). Tests
used yet another hardcoded path and referenced a nonexistent lib/ dir.

- Remove misleading skills path from bootstrap text; the agent should
  use the native skill tool, not read files by path
- Fix test setup to create a consistent layout matching the plugin's
  ../../skills resolution
- Export SUPERPOWERS_SKILLS_DIR from setup.sh so tests use a single
  source of truth
- Add regression test that bootstrap doesn't advertise the old path
- Remove broken cp of nonexistent lib/ directory

Fixes #847

* docs: add OpenCode path fix to release notes

* fix(opencode): inject bootstrap as user message instead of system message

Move bootstrap injection from experimental.chat.system.transform to
experimental.chat.messages.transform, prepending to the first user
message instead of adding a system message.

This avoids two issues:
- System messages repeated every turn inflate token usage (#750)
- Multiple system messages break Qwen and other models (#894)

Tested on OpenCode 1.3.2 with Claude Sonnet 4.5 — brainstorming skill
fires correctly on "Let's make a React to do list" prompt.

* docs: update release notes with OpenCode bootstrap change

* docs: add worktree rototill design spec (PRI-974)

Design for detect-and-defer worktree support. Superpowers defers to
native harness worktree systems when available, falls back to manual
git worktree creation when not. Covers Phases 0-2: detection, consent,
native tool preference, finishing state detection, and three bug fixes
(#940, #999, #238).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: address SWE review feedback on worktree rototill spec

- Fix Bug #999 order: merge → verify → remove worktree → delete branch
  (avoids losing work if merge fails after worktree removal)
- Add submodule guard to Step 0 detection (GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON is also
  true in submodules)
- Preserve global path (~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/) in detection for
  backward compatibility, just stop offering it to new users
- Add step numbering note and implementation notes section
- Expand provenance heuristic to cover global path and manual creation

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: honest spec revisions after issue/PR deep dive

- Step 1a is the load-bearing assumption, not just a risk — if it fails,
  the entire design needs rework. TDD validation must be first impl task.
- #1009 resolution depends on Step 1a working, stated explicitly
- #574 honestly deferred, not "partially addressed"
- Add hooks symlink to Step 1b (PR #965 idea, prevents silent hook loss)
- Add stale worktree pruning to Step 5 (PR #1072 idea, one-line self-heal)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: add worktree rototill implementation plan (PRI-974)

5 tasks: TDD gate for Step 1a, using-git-worktrees rewrite,
finishing-a-development-branch rewrite, integration updates,
end-to-end validation. Task 1 is a hard gate — if native tool
preference fails RED/GREEN, stop and redesign.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* test: add RED/GREEN validation for native worktree preference (PRI-974)

Gate test for Step 1a — validates agents prefer EnterWorktree over
git worktree add on Claude Code. Must pass before skill rewrite.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: rewrite using-git-worktrees with detect-and-defer (PRI-974)

Step 0: GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON detection (skip if already isolated)
Step 0 consent: opt-in prompt before creating worktree (#991)
Step 1a: native tool preference (short, first, declarative)
Step 1b: git worktree fallback with hooks symlink and legacy path compat
Submodule guard prevents false detection
Platform-neutral instruction file references (#1049)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: rewrite finishing-a-development-branch with detect-and-defer (PRI-974)

Step 2: environment detection (GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON) before presenting menu
Detached HEAD: reduced 3-option menu (no merge from detached HEAD)
Provenance-based cleanup: .worktrees/ = ours, anything else = hands off
Bug #940: Option 2 no longer cleans up worktree
Bug #999: merge -> verify -> remove worktree -> delete branch
Bug #238: cd to main repo root before git worktree remove
Stale worktree pruning after removal (git worktree prune)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: address spec review findings in both skill rewrites (PRI-974)

using-git-worktrees: submodule guard now says "treat as normal repo"
instead of "proceed to Step 1" (preserves consent flow)
using-git-worktrees: directory priority summaries include global legacy

finishing-a-development-branch: move git branch -d after Step 6 cleanup
to make Bug #999 ordering unambiguous (merge -> worktree remove -> branch delete)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: update worktree integration references across skills (PRI-974)

Remove REQUIRED language from executing-plans and subagent-driven-development.
Consent and detection now live inside using-git-worktrees itself.
Fix stale 'created by brainstorming' claim in writing-plans.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: include worktrees/ (non-hidden) in finishing provenance check (PRI-974)

The creation skill supports both .worktrees/ and worktrees/ directories,
but the finishing skill's cleanup only checked .worktrees/. Worktrees
under the non-hidden path would be orphaned on merge or discard.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Step 1a validated through TDD — explicit naming + consent bridge (PRI-974)

Step 1a failed at 2/6 with the spec's original abstract text ("use your
native tool"). Three REFACTOR iterations found what works (50/50 runs):

1. Explicit tool naming — "do you have EnterWorktree, WorktreeCreate..."
   transforms interpretation into factual toolkit check
2. Consent bridge — "user's consent is your authorization" directly
   addresses EnterWorktree's "ONLY when user explicitly asks" guardrail
3. Red Flag entry naming the specific anti-pattern

File split was tested but proven unnecessary — the fix is the Step 1a
text quality, not physical separation of git commands. Control test
with full 240-line skill (all git commands visible) passed 20/20.

Test script updated: supports batch runs (./test.sh green 20), "all"
phase, and checks absence of git worktree add (reliable signal) rather
than presence of EnterWorktree text (agent sometimes omits tool name).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: update spec with TDD findings on Step 1a (PRI-974)

Step 1a's original "deliberately short, abstract" design was disproven
by TDD (2/6 pass rate). Spec now documents the validated approach:
explicit tool naming + consent bridge + red flag (50/50 pass rate).

- Design Principles: updated to reflect explicit naming over abstraction
- Step 1a: replaced abstract text with validated approach, added design
  note explaining the TDD revision and why file splitting was unnecessary
- Risks: Step 1a risk marked RESOLVED with cross-platform validation table
  and residual risk note about upstream tool description dependency

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: honest cross-platform validation table in spec (PRI-974)

Research confirmed Claude Code is currently the only harness with an
agent-callable mid-session worktree tool. All others either create
worktrees before the agent starts (Codex App, Gemini, Cursor) or have
no native support (Codex CLI, OpenCode).

Table now shows: what was actually tested (Claude Code 50/50, Codex CLI
6/6), what was simulated (Codex App 1/1), and what's untested (Gemini,
Cursor, OpenCode). Step 1a is forward-compatible for when other
harnesses add agent-callable tools.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: cross-platform validation on 5 harnesses (PRI-974)

Tested on Gemini CLI (gemini -p) and Cursor Agent (cursor-agent -p):
- Gemini: Step 0 detection 1/1, Step 1b fallback 1/1
- Cursor: Step 0 detection 1/1, Step 1b fallback 1/1

Both correctly identified no native agent-callable worktree tool,
fell through to git worktree add, and performed safety verification.
Both correctly detected existing worktrees and skipped creation.

5 of 6 harnesses now tested. Only OpenCode untested (no CLI access).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: remove incorrect hooks symlink step from worktree skill

Git worktrees inherit hooks from the main repo automatically via
$GIT_COMMON_DIR — this has been the case since git 2.5 (2015).
The symlink step was based on an incorrect premise from PR #965
and also fails in practice (.git is a file in worktrees, not a dir).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: address PR #1121 review — respect user preference, drop y/n

- Consent prompt: drop "(y/n)" and add escape valve for users who
  have already declared their worktree preference in global or
  project agent instruction files.
- Directory selection: reorder to put declared user preference
  ahead of observed filesystem state, and reframe the default as
  "if no other guidance available".
- Sandbox fallback: require explicitly informing the user that
  the sandbox blocked creation, not just "report accordingly".
- writing-plans: fully qualify the superpowers:using-git-worktrees
  reference.
- Plan doc: mirror the consent-prompt change.

Step 1a native-tool framing and the helper-scripts suggestion are
still outstanding — the first needs a benchmark re-run before softer
phrasing can be adopted without regressing compliance; the second is
exploratory and will get a thread reply.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: soften Step 1a native-tool framing per PR #1121 review

Address obra's comment on explicit step numbers / prescriptive tone.
Drops "STOP HERE if available", the "If YES:" gate, and the "even if /
even if / NO EXCEPTIONS" reinforcement paragraph. Keeps the specific
tool-name anchors (EnterWorktree, WorktreeCreate, /worktree, --worktree),
which the original TDD data showed are load-bearing.

A/B verified against drill harness on the 3 creation/consent scenarios
(consent-flow, creation-from-main, creation-from-main-spec-aware):
baseline explicit wording scored 12/12 criteria, softened wording also
scored 12/12. The "agent used the most appropriate tool" criterion
passed in all 3 softened runs — agents still picked EnterWorktree via
ToolSearch without the imperative framing.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: drop instruction file enumeration per PR #1121 review

Jesse flagged that the verbose CLAUDE.md/AGENTS.md/GEMINI.md/.cursorrules
enumeration (a) chews tokens, (b) confuses models that anchor on exact
strings, and (c) is repeated DRY-violatingly across 3+ locations.

Replace with abstract "your instructions" framing in four spots:
- skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md Step 0 → Step 1 transition
- skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md Step 1b Directory Selection
- docs/superpowers/plans/2026-04-06-worktree-rototill.md (both mirror locations)

Same intent, harness-agnostic phrasing, ~half the tokens.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: replace hardcoded /Users/jesse with generic placeholders (#858)

* Remove the deprecated legacy slash commands (#1188)

* fix: prevent subagent-driven-development from pausing every 3 tasks

requesting-code-review had "review after each batch (3 tasks)" for
executing-plans, which leaked into subagent-driven-development as a
check-in cadence. Replaced with flexible "each task or at natural
checkpoints" and added explicit continuous execution directive to
subagent-driven-development.

* Remove Integration sections from skills

These sections don't help with steering and are a legacy of the time
before agents had native skills systems.

* fix(opencode): cache bootstrap content at module level to eliminate per-step file I/O

getBootstrapContent() called fs.existsSync + fs.readFileSync + regex
frontmatter parsing on every agent step with zero caching.  The
experimental.chat.messages.transform hook fires every step in opencode's
agent loop (messages are reloaded from DB each step via
filterCompactedEffect).  A 10-step turn triggered 10 redundant file
reads + 10 regex parses for content that never changes during a session.

Changes:
- Add module-level _bootstrapCache (undefined = not loaded, null = file
  missing) so the first call reads and parses SKILL.md, all subsequent
  calls return the cached string with zero filesystem access
- Cache the null sentinel when SKILL.md is missing, preventing repeated
  fs.existsSync probes
- Add _testing export (resetCache/getCache) for test infrastructure
- Clarify the injection guard comment explaining how it interacts with
  opencode's per-step message reloading
- Add 15 regression tests covering cache behavior, fs call counts,
  injection guard, missing file sentinel, cache reset, and source audit

Fixes #1202

* test(opencode): simplify bootstrap cache coverage

* docs: clarify opencode install caveats

* test(opencode): modernize integration tests

* docs: add Factory Droid installation instructions

* Preserve Codex marketplace metadata

* docs: add README quickstart install links (#1293)

* docs(codex-tools): fix subagent wait mapping to wait_agent

Update the Codex tool mapping so Claude Code 'Task returns result' maps to the current Codex spawned-agent result tool, wait_agent. Also clarify that older Codex builds exposed spawned-agent waiting as wait, while current bare wait is the code-mode exec/wait surface for yielded exec cells.

Verified with Drill:
- codex-tool-mapping-comprehension fails against dev with task_returns_result=wait
- codex-tool-mapping-comprehension passes against this PR with task_returns_result=wait_agent and exec/wait scoped correctly
- codex-subagent-wait-mapping passes against this PR with spawn_agent -> wait_agent -> close_agent and PR963_OK returned

* fix(cursor): run SessionStart hook via run-hook.cmd on Windows

Route Cursor's Windows SessionStart hook through the existing run-hook.cmd dispatcher instead of invoking the extensionless session-start script directly. This avoids Windows opening the extensionless hook file and lets Git Bash run the script as intended.

Also removed an accidental UTF-8 BOM from hooks-cursor.json before merging.

Verified:
- hooks-cursor.json parses as JSON and has no BOM
- command is ./hooks/run-hook.cmd session-start
- CURSOR_PLUGIN_ROOT=/tmp/superpowers ./hooks/run-hook.cmd session-start emits valid Cursor JSON with additional_context

* fix(tests): make SDD integration test actually run its assertions

The SDD integration test silently bailed before printing any verification
results. Three independent bugs caused this:

1. `WORKING_DIR_ESCAPED` was computed from `$SCRIPT_DIR/../..` without
   resolving `..` segments. The resulting "directory" name contained
   literal `..` so `find` was looking in a path that doesn't exist.

2. With `set -euo pipefail`, the `find ... | sort -r | head -1` pipeline
   could exit non-zero (SIGPIPE on the producer when head closes early),
   killing the script silently before assertions ran.

3. The `claude -p` invocation never passed `--plugin-dir`, so it loaded
   the installed plugin instead of the working tree. Local edits to
   skills under test were not actually being tested.

Other adjustments:
- Run claude from inside the unique TEST_PROJECT directory instead of
  from the plugin root, so its session JSONL lives in its own
  `~/.claude/projects/` folder and doesn't race other concurrent
  claude sessions for "most recent file".
- Use the same character-normalization claude does (every non-alphanumeric
  becomes `-`) when computing the session dir name; macOS-resolved
  `/private/var/...` paths and tmp dirs with `.`/`_` in their names need
  this to round-trip correctly.
- Accept either `"name":"Agent"` or `"name":"Task"` in the subagent count
  — the harness renamed the tool but the test wasn't updated.

Verified on this branch: all six verification tests now pass against a
real end-to-end SDD run (skill invoked, 7 subagents dispatched, 6
TodoWrite calls, working code produced, tests pass, no extra features).

* feat: add Gemini CLI subagent support mapping

Map Gemini Task dispatch to @agent-name/@generalist and document parallel subagent dispatch for independent tasks.

* docs: update Codex plugin install guidance (#1288)

* Lift superpowers:code-reviewer agent into the requesting-code-review skill

The plugin had a single named agent (`agents/code-reviewer.md`) used by
two skills, while every other reviewer/implementer subagent in the repo
is dispatched as `general-purpose` with the prompt template living
alongside its skill. That asymmetry had no upside and several costs:

- Two sources of truth for the code review checklist (the agent file
  and `requesting-code-review/code-reviewer.md`), both drifting
  independently.
- `Codex` users could not use the named agent directly; the codex-tools
  reference doc had a workaround section explaining how to flatten the
  named agent into a `worker` dispatch.
- No third-party reliance on `superpowers:code-reviewer` inside this
  repo.

Changes:
- Merge `agents/code-reviewer.md` (persona + checklist) and
  `skills/requesting-code-review/code-reviewer.md` (placeholder
  template) into a single self-contained Task-dispatch template,
  matching the shape of `implementer-prompt.md`,
  `spec-reviewer-prompt.md`, etc.
- Update `skills/requesting-code-review/SKILL.md` and
  `skills/subagent-driven-development/code-quality-reviewer-prompt.md`
  to dispatch `Task (general-purpose)` instead of the named agent.
- Drop the now-obsolete "Named agent dispatch" workaround sections from
  `codex-tools.md` and `copilot-tools.md` — superpowers no longer ships
  any named agents, so those instructions documented nothing.
- Delete `agents/code-reviewer.md` and the empty `agents/` directory.

Tier 3 coverage for the change: a new behavioral test
`tests/claude-code/test-requesting-code-review.sh` plants real bugs
(SQL injection, plaintext password handling, credential logging) into
a tiny project, runs the actual `requesting-code-review` skill against
the working tree, and asserts the dispatched reviewer flags every
planted issue at Critical/Important severity and refuses to approve
the diff.

Verified end-to-end on this branch:
- The new test passes (5/5 assertions; reviewer caught all planted
  bugs and several others).
- The existing SDD integration test still passes (7/7 subagents
  dispatched, all as `general-purpose`; spec compliance still
  rejects extra features; produced code is correct).
- Session JSONLs confirm zero remaining `superpowers:code-reviewer`
  dispatches anywhere in the SDD pipeline.

* Prepare v5.1.0: release notes and version bump

Add v5.1.0 release notes covering:
- Removals: legacy slash commands (/brainstorm, /execute-plan,
  /write-plan), skill Integration sections
- Worktree skills rewrite (PRI-974, PR #1121)
- Contributor guidelines for AI agents
- Codex plugin mirror tooling (PR #1165)
- OpenCode bootstrap caching (#1202)
- SDD pause-every-3-tasks fix; SDD integration test fixes
- Cursor Windows hook routing
- Gemini CLI subagent dispatch mapping
- Skill terminology cleanups
- Install docs (Factory Droid, Codex, quickstart links)

Bumps version 5.0.7 -> 5.1.0 across all declared files via
scripts/bump-version.sh; not yet tagged or released.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Drew Ritter <drewritter@workerbee.local>
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Drew Ritter <drew@primeradiant.com>
Co-authored-by: Blaž Čulina <culina.blaz@nsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Jesse Vincent <jesse@primeradiant.com>
Co-authored-by: voidborne-d <voidborne-d@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard Luo <luo.richard@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Drew Ritter <drew@ritter.dev>
Co-authored-by: leonsong09 <59187950+leonsong09@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: YuXiang Hong <41331696+starumiQAQ@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Sathvik Gilakamsetty <spacetime1007@gmail.com>
2026-05-04 15:05:01 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
e7a2d16476 Require session transcript for new-harness PRs
Most new-harness PRs ship integrations that copy skill files or wrap
with `npx skills` instead of loading the using-superpowers bootstrap at
session start. Those integrations look like they work but skills never
auto-trigger.

Add an acceptance test ("Let's make a react todo list" must auto-trigger
brainstorming in a clean session) and require the transcript in the PR.
2026-04-30 14:08:41 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
6efe32c9e2 Use committed Codex plugin files in sync script
- commit .codex-plugin/plugin.json and brand assets in this repo
- sync tracked Codex plugin files instead of generating or seeding them
- honor upstream gitignored files during rsync
- cover the new sync behavior with regression tests
2026-04-23 19:02:37 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
b55764852a formatting 2026-04-16 12:50:46 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9f42444ab1 formatting 2026-04-16 12:50:46 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
99e4c656bf reorder installs 2026-04-16 12:50:46 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
a5dd364e42 README updates for Codex, other cleanup 2026-04-16 12:50:46 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
c4bbe651cb Some terminology cleanups 2026-04-15 12:41:40 -07:00
Drew Ritter
34c17aefb2 sync-to-codex-plugin: seed interface.defaultPrompt (#1180)
Codex plugin pages use interface.defaultPrompt to show suggested
prompts on the plugin's app card; the generator now emits two
domain-neutral seed prompts so the superpowers listing isn't empty.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-15 10:59:39 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
f9b088f7b3 Merge pull request #1165 from obra/mirror-codex-plugin-tooling
Mirror codex plugin tooling
2026-04-14 14:13:31 -07:00
Drew Ritter
bc25777c6a sync-to-codex-plugin: anchor EXCLUDES patterns to source root
Rsync exclude patterns without a leading "/" match any directory of
the given name at any depth. The previous "scripts/" pattern was
meant to exclude upstream's top-level scripts/ dir (which contains
sync-to-codex-plugin.sh itself, bump-version.sh, etc.) but also
incorrectly excluded skills/brainstorming/scripts/ — a legitimate
skill-adjacent dir with 5 files (frame-template.html, helper.js,
server.cjs, start-server.sh, stop-server.sh).

Found during a determinism check: comparing the hand-crafted
add-superpowers-plugin bootstrap PR against an automated bootstrap
PR produced a diff showing those 5 files were missing from the
automated version.

Fix: anchor every top-level-only exclude with a leading "/".
.DS_Store stays unanchored because Finder creates them anywhere.

This also prevents future drift if anyone adds a tests/, hooks/,
docs/, lib/, etc. subdir inside a skill.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-14 14:03:56 -07:00
Drew Ritter
bcdd7fa24c sync-to-codex-plugin: exclude assets/, add --bootstrap flag
Two coupled changes:

1. Add assets/ to EXCLUDES. A normal sync run was deleting
   plugins/superpowers/assets/ via --delete because the corresponding
   directory doesn't exist upstream. Confirmed via dry-run that the
   previous version would wipe both brand asset files on next sync.

2. Add --bootstrap and --assets-src flags to support creating the
   initial plugin PR from scratch. Bootstrap mode skips the
   "plugin must exist on base" preflight, creates the plugin
   directory, rsyncs upstream content, then copies
   PrimeRadiant_Favicon.{svg,png} from --assets-src into
   plugins/superpowers/assets/ as superpowers-small.svg and
   app-icon.png. Run once by one team member to open the initial
   PR; every subsequent run is a normal (non-bootstrap) sync.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-14 13:59:26 -07:00
Drew Ritter
6149f3635a sync-to-codex-plugin: align plugin.json heredoc with current live shape
The live .codex-plugin/plugin.json in the downstream fork was cleaned up
(websiteURL, privacyPolicyURL, termsOfServiceURL, and defaultPrompt
removed) and icon fields were added (composerIcon, logo pointing at
assets/superpowers-small.svg and assets/app-icon.png). Update the
heredoc to produce the same shape so future sync runs don't wipe the
icon fields or reintroduce the removed URL fields.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-14 13:48:05 -07:00
Drew Ritter
777a9770d8 sync-to-codex-plugin: mirror CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md, drop agents/openai.yaml overlay
- Remove CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md from EXCLUDES so it syncs from upstream
  (per PR #1165 review feedback on the exclude list)
- Remove the agents/openai.yaml overlay generator and its exclude entry
  — the file duplicates fields already in .codex-plugin/plugin.json and
  only 6 of 28 upstream plugins ship one, so we match the 22-plugin
  majority shape

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-14 13:27:59 -07:00
Drew Ritter
da283df058 remove things we dont need 2026-04-14 13:23:17 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
a569527b89 Merge pull request #1163 from shaanmajid/chore/remove-stray-changelog
chore: remove vestigial CHANGELOG.md
2026-04-14 13:22:24 -07:00
Drew Ritter
ac1c715ffb rewrites sync tool to clone the fork, open a PR, and regenerate overlays inline
The previous version was a local rsync helper that required a hand-maintained
destination path. This rewrite makes it path/user-agnostic and gives every team
member the same flow:

- Clones prime-radiant-inc/openai-codex-plugins fresh into a temp dir per run
  (trap EXIT cleans up)
- Auto-detects upstream from the script's own location
- Preflight: rsync, git, gh auth, python3, upstream package.json
- Reads upstream version from package.json and bakes it into the regenerated
  .codex-plugin/plugin.json, so version bumps flow through
- Regenerates both overlay files (.codex-plugin/plugin.json and
  agents/openai.yaml) inline via heredoc — single source of truth
- Pushes a sync/superpowers-<sha>-<UTC-timestamp> branch and opens a PR via
  gh pr create; prints PR URL and /files diff URL on completion
- --dry-run, --yes, --base BRANCH, --local PATH flags for all the usual modes
- Deterministic: two runs against the same upstream SHA produce PRs with
  identical diffs, so the tool itself can be sanity-checked by running twice

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-14 13:18:36 -07:00
Drew Ritter
8c8c5e87ce adds tooling to mirror superpowers as a codex plugin with the appropriate metadata changes 2026-04-14 12:03:59 -07:00
Shaan Majid
a5d36b1300 chore: remove vestigial CHANGELOG.md 2026-04-14 12:36:07 -05:00
Jesse Vincent
917e5f53b1 Fix Discord invite link 2026-04-06 15:48:58 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
a6b1a1fa0c Update Discord invite link 2026-04-06 15:46:52 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
b7a8f76985 Merge pull request #1029 from obra/readme-release-announcements
Add release announcements link, consolidate Community section
2026-04-01 19:34:36 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
4b1b20f69f Add detailed Discord description to Community section 2026-04-01 19:34:30 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
eeaf2ad15b Add release announcements link, consolidate Community section
Collapse duplicate Support section into Community. Add link to
release announcements signup at primeradiant.com/superpowers/.
2026-04-01 19:09:22 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
dd237283db Add agent-facing guardrails to contributor guidelines
Speak directly to AI agents at the top of CLAUDE.md: reframe slop
PRs as harmful to their human partner, give a concrete pre-submission
checklist, and explicitly authorize pushing back on vague instructions.
2026-03-31 14:37:13 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
c0b417e409 Add contributor guidelines to reduce agentic slop PRs
CLAUDE.md (symlinked to AGENTS.md) covers every major rejection
pattern from auditing the last 100 closed PRs (94% rejection rate):
AI slop, ignored PR template, duplicates, speculative fixes, domain-
specific skills, fork confusion, fabricated content, bundled changes,
and misunderstanding project philosophy.
2026-03-31 14:14:19 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
1f20bef3f5 Release v5.0.7: Copilot CLI support, OpenCode fixes 2026-03-31 12:23:25 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
f0df5eca30 docs: update release notes with OpenCode bootstrap change 2026-03-31 11:51:22 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
0a1124ba53 fix(opencode): inject bootstrap as user message instead of system message
Move bootstrap injection from experimental.chat.system.transform to
experimental.chat.messages.transform, prepending to the first user
message instead of adding a system message.

This avoids two issues:
- System messages repeated every turn inflate token usage (#750)
- Multiple system messages break Qwen and other models (#894)

Tested on OpenCode 1.3.2 with Claude Sonnet 4.5 — brainstorming skill
fires correctly on "Let's make a React to do list" prompt.
2026-03-31 11:51:22 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
65d760f9c2 docs: add OpenCode path fix to release notes 2026-03-31 11:51:22 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
2d942f3b01 fix(opencode): align skills path across bootstrap, runtime, and tests
The bootstrap text advertised a configDir-based skills path that didn't
match the runtime path (resolved relative to the plugin file). Tests
used yet another hardcoded path and referenced a nonexistent lib/ dir.

- Remove misleading skills path from bootstrap text; the agent should
  use the native skill tool, not read files by path
- Fix test setup to create a consistent layout matching the plugin's
  ../../skills resolution
- Export SUPERPOWERS_SKILLS_DIR from setup.sh so tests use a single
  source of truth
- Add regression test that bootstrap doesn't advertise the old path
- Remove broken cp of nonexistent lib/ directory

Fixes #847
2026-03-31 11:51:22 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
8b1669269c feat: add Copilot CLI tool mapping, docs, and install instructions
- Add references/copilot-tools.md with full tool equivalence table
- Add Copilot CLI to using-superpowers skill platform instructions
- Add marketplace install instructions to README
- Add changelog entry crediting @culinablaz for the hook fix
2026-03-31 11:51:22 -07:00
Blaž Čulina
a2964d7a20 fix: add Copilot CLI platform detection for sessionStart context injection
Copilot CLI v1.0.11 reads `additionalContext` from sessionStart hook
output, but the session-start script only emits the Claude Code-specific
nested format. Add COPILOT_CLI env var detection so Copilot CLI gets the
SDK-standard top-level `additionalContext` while Claude Code continues
getting `hookSpecificOutput`.

Based on PR #910 by @culinablaz.
2026-03-31 11:51:22 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
eafe962b18 Release v5.0.6: inline self-review, brainstorm server restructure, owner-PID fixes 2026-03-25 11:08:09 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9f04f06351 Fix owner-PID lifecycle monitoring for cross-platform reliability
Two bugs caused the brainstorm server to self-terminate within 60s:

1. ownerAlive() treated EPERM (permission denied) as "process dead".
   When the owner PID belongs to a different user (Tailscale SSH,
   system daemons), process.kill(pid, 0) throws EPERM — but the
   process IS alive. Fixed: return e.code === 'EPERM'.

2. On WSL, the grandparent PID resolves to a short-lived subprocess
   that exits before the first 60s lifecycle check. The PID is
   genuinely dead (ESRCH), so the EPERM fix alone doesn't help.
   Fixed: validate the owner PID at server startup — if it's already
   dead, it was a bad resolution, so disable monitoring and rely on
   the 30-minute idle timeout.

This also removes the Windows/MSYS2-specific OWNER_PID="" carve-out
from start-server.sh, since the server now handles invalid PIDs
generically at startup regardless of platform.

Tested on Linux (magic-kingdom) via Tailscale SSH:
- Root-owned owner PID (EPERM): server survives ✓
- Dead owner PID at startup (WSL sim): monitoring disabled, survives ✓
- Valid owner that dies: server shuts down within 60s ✓

Fixes #879
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
f076bd3431 Fix owner-PID false positive when owner runs as different user
ownerAlive() treated EPERM (permission denied) the same as ESRCH
(process not found), causing the server to self-terminate within 60s
whenever the owner process ran as a different user. This affected WSL
(owner is a Windows process), Tailscale SSH, and any cross-user
scenario.

The fix: `return e.code === 'EPERM'` — if we get permission denied,
the process is alive; we just can't signal it.

Tested on Linux via Tailscale SSH with a root-owned grandparent PID:
- Server survives past the 60s lifecycle check (EPERM = alive)
- Server still shuts down when owner genuinely dies (ESRCH = dead)

Fixes #879
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9e3ed213a0 Separate brainstorm server content and state into peer directories
The session directory now contains two peers: content/ (HTML served to
the browser) and state/ (events, server-info, pid, log). Previously
all files shared a single directory, making server state and user
interaction data accessible over the /files/ HTTP route.

Also fixes stale test assertion ("Waiting for Claude" → "Waiting for
the agent").

Reported-By: 吉田仁
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9e6e077d33 Revert "Move brainstorm server metadata to .meta/ subdirectory"
This reverts commit ab500dade6.
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
151cfb16a0 Move brainstorm server metadata to .meta/ subdirectory
Metadata files (.server-info, .events, .server.pid, .server.log,
.server-stopped) were stored in the same directory served over HTTP,
making them accessible via the /files/ route. They now live in a .meta/
subdirectory that is not web-accessible.

Also fixes a stale test assertion ("Waiting for Claude" → "Waiting for
the agent").

Reported-By: 吉田仁
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
a1155f623f Add v5.0.6 release notes 2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
3f80f1c769 Reapply "Replace subagent review loops with lightweight inline self-review"
This reverts commit b045fa3950.
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
4ae1a3d6a6 Revert "Replace subagent review loops with lightweight inline self-review"
This reverts commit bf8f7572eb.
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
e6221a48c5 Replace subagent review loops with lightweight inline self-review
The subagent review loop (dispatching a fresh agent to review plans/specs)
doubled execution time (~25 min overhead) without measurably improving plan
quality. Regression testing across 5 versions (v3.6.0 through v5.0.4) with
5 trials each showed identical plan sizes, task counts, and quality scores
regardless of whether the review loop ran.

Changes:
- writing-plans: Replace subagent Plan Review Loop with inline Self-Review
  checklist (spec coverage, placeholder scan, type consistency)
- writing-plans: Add explicit "No Placeholders" section listing plan failures
  (TBD, vague descriptions, undefined references, "similar to Task N")
- brainstorming: Replace subagent Spec Review Loop with inline Spec Self-Review
  (placeholder scan, internal consistency, scope check, ambiguity check)
- Both skills now use "look at it with fresh eyes" framing

Testing: 5 trials with the new skill show self-review catches 3-5 real bugs
per run (spawn positions, API mismatches, seed bugs, grid indexing) in ~30s
instead of ~25 min. Remaining defects are comparable to the subagent approach.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
4fd9aa2dd5 fix(writing-skills): correct false 'only two fields' frontmatter claim (#882) 2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
2b1bfe5db6 docs(codex-tools): add named agent dispatch mapping for Codex (#647) 2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
bd080e3cc8 docs: add implementation plan for Codex App compatibility (PRI-823)
8 tasks covering: environment detection in using-git-worktrees,
Step 1.5 + cleanup guard in finishing-a-development-branch,
Integration line updates, codex-tools.md docs, automated tests,
and final verification.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
eb2b44b23f docs: add cleanup guard test (#5) and sandbox fallback test (#10) to spec
Both tests address real risk scenarios:
- #5: cleanup guard bug would delete Codex App's own worktree (data loss)
- #10: Local thread sandbox fallback needs manual Codex App validation

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
80c0a45fcc docs: clarify executing-plans in What Does NOT Change section
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
c28b28ffbd docs: address team review feedback for PRI-823 spec
- Add commit SHA + data loss warning to handoff payload (HIGH)
- Add explicit commit step before handoff (HIGH)
- Remove misleading "mark as externally managed" from Path B
- Add executing-plans 1-line edit (was missing)
- Add branch name derivation rules
- Add conditional UI language for non-App environments
- Add sandbox fallback for permission errors
- Add STOP directive after Step 0 reporting

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
33e9bea3cc docs: address spec review feedback for PRI-823
Fix three Important issues from spec review:
- Clarify Step 1.5 placement relative to existing Steps 2/3
- Re-derive environment state at cleanup time instead of relying on
  earlier skill output
- Acknowledge pre-existing Step 5 cleanup inconsistency

Also: precise step references, exact codex-tools.md content, clearer
Integration section update instructions.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Drew Ritter
74a0c004eb docs: add Codex App compatibility design spec (PRI-823)
Design for making using-git-worktrees, finishing-a-development-branch,
and subagent-driven-development skills work in the Codex App's sandboxed
worktree environment. Read-only environment detection via git-dir vs
git-common-dir comparison, ~48 lines across 4 files, zero breaking changes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-25 11:03:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
8ea39819ee Add issue templates and disable blank issues
Four templates: bug report (with environment table and platform-vs-plugin
gate), feature request (with problem statement and core-appropriateness
question), IDE/platform support request, and a config that disables
blank issues and redirects questions to Discord.
2026-03-19 13:26:17 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
764215331d Add PR template to filter low-quality submissions
Requires contributors to articulate the problem they're solving,
confirm human review, document eval methodology, and check for
duplicate PRs. Informed by patterns in ~90 closed-without-merge PRs.
2026-03-19 13:04:32 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
eccd45305a Add Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct
Added Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct to outline community standards and enforcement guidelines.
2026-03-19 12:11:50 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
fb4adab518 Bump cursor plugin version to match release 2026-03-19 12:04:18 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
7e516434f2 Merge branch 'dev' for v5.0.5 release 2026-03-17 15:02:02 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
8a0a5ca6a3 Release v5.0.5: brainstorm server ESM fix, Windows PID fix, stop-server reliability 2026-03-17 15:01:57 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
2d46da1b37 Credit @lucasyhzhu-debug for Windows brainstorm docs (PR #768) 2026-03-17 14:51:02 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
0002948041 Update RELEASE-NOTES.md with brainstorm server ESM fix 2026-03-17 14:35:03 -07:00
sarbojitrana
3128a2c3cd fix : resolve ESM/CommonJS module confict in brainstorming server 2026-03-17 14:34:16 -07:00
jesse
f34ee479b7 fix: Windows brainstorm server lifecycle, restore execution choice
- Skip OWNER_PID monitoring on Windows/MSYS2 where the PID namespace is
  invisible to Node.js, preventing server self-termination after 60s (#770)
- Document run_in_background: true for Claude Code on Windows (#767)
- Restore user choice between subagent-driven and inline execution after
  plan writing; subagent-driven is recommended but no longer mandatory
- Add Windows lifecycle test script verified on Windows 11 VM
- Note #723 (stop-server.sh reliability) as already fixed

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-17 04:09:36 +00:00
Jesse Vincent
3cee13e516 Add Community section with Discord link and Prime Radiant attribution 2026-03-16 20:10:15 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
1128a721ca Merge branch 'dev' 2026-03-16 17:56:02 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
d1b5f578b0 Release v5.0.4: review loop refinements, OpenCode one-line install, bug fixes 2026-03-16 17:55:49 -07:00
savvyinsight
61a64d7098 fix: verify server actually stopped in stop-server.sh 2026-03-16 17:24:01 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
825a142aa3 Revert "Merge pull request #751 from savvyinsight/fix/stop-server-verify"
This reverts commit bd537d817d, reversing
changes made to 363923f74a.
2026-03-16 17:23:54 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
bd537d817d Merge pull request #751 from savvyinsight/fix/stop-server-verify
fix: verify server actually stopped in stop-server.sh
2026-03-16 17:14:47 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
24be2e8b7c Merge pull request #749 from ynyyn/fix-codex-multi-agent-flag
fix(docs): replace deprecated `collab` flag with `multi_agent` for Codex docs
2026-03-16 17:12:03 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
a479e10050 Merge pull request #753 from obra/f/opencode-plugin
Auto-register skills from plugin, simplify OpenCode install
2026-03-16 17:08:09 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
a4c48714bc Use generic "the agent" instead of "Claude" in brainstorm server 2026-03-16 15:57:27 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
2c6a8a352d Tone down review loops: single-pass plan review, raise issue bar
- Remove chunk-based plan review in favor of single whole-plan review
- Add Calibration sections to both reviewer prompts so only serious
  issues block approval
- Reduce max review iterations from 5 to 3
- Streamline reviewer checklists (spec: 7→5, plan: 7→4 categories)
2026-03-16 15:57:23 -07:00
jesse
2b25774f31 Update changelog with Cursor hooks support (#709)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 21:42:15 +00:00
jesse
f4b54a1717 Auto-register skills from plugin, simplify OpenCode install to one line
The plugin's new `config` hook injects the skills directory into
OpenCode's live config singleton, so skills are discovered automatically
without symlinks or manual config edits.

Installation is now just adding one line to opencode.json:
  "plugin": ["superpowers@git+https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git"]

Rewrote docs/README.opencode.md and .opencode/INSTALL.md to reflect
the new approach, removing ~200 lines of platform-specific symlink
instructions. Added migration notes for existing users.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 21:29:25 +00:00
jesse
911fa1d6c5 test: add package.json for opencode npm plugin test 2026-03-15 20:08:51 +00:00
jesse
4e7c0842f8 feat: add Cursor-compatible hooks and fix platform detection
Add hooks/hooks-cursor.json with Cursor's camelCase format (sessionStart,
version: 1) and update .cursor-plugin/plugin.json to reference it. Uses
${CURSOR_PLUGIN_ROOT} and run-hook.cmd for cross-platform support.

Fix session-start platform detection: check CURSOR_PLUGIN_ROOT first
(Cursor may also set CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT), ensuring correct output format
for each platform.

Based on PR #709 with fixes for: wrong filename (.sh extension), missing
Windows support, fragile relative paths, and incorrect platform detection.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 19:35:18 +00:00
jesse
689f27c968 Update changelog: add bash 5.3+ fix, link all issues/PRs
Add #572/#571 entry, add "already fixed" section for #630/#529/#539,
and convert all issue/PR references to markdown links.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 19:14:54 +00:00
jesse
537ec640fd fix(hooks): replace heredoc with printf to fix bash 5.3+ hang
Bash 5.3 has a regression where heredoc variable expansion blocks when
content exceeds ~512 bytes. The session_context variable is ~4,500 bytes,
causing the SessionStart hook to hang indefinitely on macOS with Homebrew
bash 5.3+. Replace cat <<EOF with printf.

Tested on Linux (bash 5.2) and Windows (Git Bash 5.2). The hang only
affects 5.3+ but printf works correctly on all versions.

Based on #572, closes #572. Fixes #571.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 19:14:34 +00:00
jesse
c5e9538311 Update changelog with POSIX hook fix (#553)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 18:40:54 +00:00
jesse
fd318b1b79 fix(hooks): replace BASH_SOURCE with POSIX-safe $0
Replace ${BASH_SOURCE[0]:-$0} with $0 in hooks/session-start and the
polyglot-hooks docs example. BASH_SOURCE uses bash array syntax that
causes 'Bad substitution' on systems where /bin/sh is dash (Ubuntu).

Since session-start is always executed (never sourced), $0 and
BASH_SOURCE give the same result. Tested on Linux (bash + dash) and
Windows (Git Bash via CMD and direct).

Based on #553, closes #553.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 18:40:38 +00:00
jesse
ea472dedf0 Update changelog with portable shebang fix (#700)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 18:38:16 +00:00
jesse
addfe8511a fix: use portable shebang #!/usr/bin/env bash in all shell scripts
Replace #!/bin/bash with #!/usr/bin/env bash in 13 scripts. The
hardcoded path fails on NixOS, FreeBSD, and macOS with Homebrew bash.
#!/usr/bin/env bash is the portable POSIX-friendly alternative.

Tested on Linux and Windows (Git Bash + CMD). macOS is the primary
beneficiary since Homebrew installs bash to /opt/homebrew/bin/bash.

Based on #700, closes #700.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 18:38:04 +00:00
jesse
c6a2b1b576 fix: auto-foreground brainstorm server on Windows/Git Bash
Windows/Git Bash reaps nohup background processes, causing the brainstorm
server to die silently after launch. Auto-detect Windows via OSTYPE
(msys/cygwin/mingw) and MSYSTEM env vars, switching to foreground mode
automatically. Tested on Windows 11 from CMD, PowerShell, and Git Bash —
all route through Git Bash and hit the same issue.

Based on #740, fixes #737. Also adds CHANGELOG.md documenting the fix and
a known OWNER_PID/WINPID mismatch on the main branch.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 18:30:35 +00:00
jesse
d19703b0a1 fix: stop firing SessionStart hook on --resume
Resumed sessions already have injected context in their conversation
history. Re-firing the hook was redundant and could cause issues.
The hook now fires only on startup, clear, and compact.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-15 18:28:55 +00:00
savvyinsight
6d21e9cc07 fix: verify server actually stopped in stop-server.sh 2026-03-16 01:23:32 +08:00
ynyyn
687a66183d Fix deprecated collab flag in Codex docs 2026-03-16 01:14:32 +08:00
Jesse Vincent
363923f74a Release v5.0.2: add release notes and bump marketplace version 2026-03-11 21:47:04 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
3188953b0c Release v5.0.2: Subagent context isolation, zero-dep brainstorm server
Subagent Context Isolation:

All delegation skills (brainstorming, parallel agents, code review,
subagent-driven development, writing plans) now explicitly instruct the
dispatching agent to construct review context from scratch — never
forward session history to subagents.

This fixes a problem observed with Codex, where subagents inherited the
full parent session context including the dispatcher's internal
reasoning, prior conversation, and user-facing tone. Reviewers that
inherited this context behaved as if they were the lead developer rather
than a reviewer — they'd reject reasonable code for not matching
unstated preferences, demand rewrites beyond scope, and treat advisory
feedback as blocking. The fix is simple: the dispatcher crafts precisely
what each subagent needs (the spec, the code, the review criteria) and
nothing else. This keeps reviewers focused on the work product, not the
thought process that produced it, and also preserves the dispatcher's
own context window for coordination.

Zero-Dependency Brainstorm Server:

The brainstorm visual companion server has been rewritten from scratch
as a single zero-dependency Node.js file. The previous implementation
vendored Express, ws, chokidar, and 714 npm packages (84,000+ lines of
third-party code) — a supply chain surface area that was
disproportionate to what the server actually does.

The new server.js (~340 lines) implements everything with Node built-ins
only: RFC 6455 WebSocket protocol, HTTP server with template wrapping,
fs.watch with debounce, and lifecycle management.

731 files changed, 1,700 insertions, 85,000 deletions. The entire
vendored node_modules/ directory is gone.

Server Lifecycle Management:

The brainstorm server now automatically shuts down when no longer
needed, preventing orphaned processes. Owner process tracking captures
the harness PID at startup and checks every 60 seconds. 30-minute idle
timeout as fallback. The visual companion guide now instructs agents to
check .server-info before each write and restart if .server-stopped
exists.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 21:41:58 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9ccce3bf07 Add context isolation principle to all delegation skills
Subagents should never inherit the parent session's context or history.
The dispatcher constructs exactly what each subagent needs, keeping
both sides focused: the subagent on its task, the controller on
coordination.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 18:47:56 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
b484bae134 Fix owner PID tracking: resolve grandparent to get actual harness PID
$PPID inside start-server.sh is the ephemeral shell the harness spawns
to run the script — it dies immediately when the script exits, causing
the server to shut down after ~60s. Now resolves grandparent PID via
`ps -o ppid= -p $PPID` to get the actual harness process (e.g. claude).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 18:47:47 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
ec99b7c4a4 Exit server when owner process dies (harness-agnostic cleanup)
start-server.sh passes $PPID as BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID to the server.
The server checks every 60s if the owner process is still alive
(kill -0). If it's gone, the server shuts down immediately —
deletes .server-info, writes .server-stopped, exits cleanly.
Works across all harnesses (CC, Codex, Gemini CLI) since it
tracks the shell process that launched the script, which dies
when the harness dies.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 18:39:04 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
263e3268f4 Auto-exit server after 30 minutes idle, add liveness check to skill
Server tracks activity (HTTP requests, WebSocket messages, file
changes) and exits after 30 minutes of inactivity. On exit, deletes
.server-info and writes .server-stopped with reason. Visual companion
guide now instructs agents to check .server-info before each screen
push and restart if needed. Works on all harnesses, not just CC.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 18:32:09 -07:00
Drew Ritter
85cab6eff0 (fix): declare encoding meta on viz brainstorm server pages 2026-03-11 16:22:29 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
7619570679 Remove vendored node_modules, swap to zero-dep server.js
Delete 717 files: index.js, package.json, package-lock.json, and
the entire node_modules directory (express, ws, chokidar + deps).
Update start-server.sh to use server.js. Remove gitignore exception.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 13:17:52 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
8d9b94eb8d Add HTTP server, WebSocket handling, and file watching to server.js
Complete zero-dep brainstorm server. Uses knownFiles set to
distinguish new screens from updates (macOS fs.watch reports
'rename' for both). All 56 tests pass (31 unit + 25 integration).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 13:17:14 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
7f6380dd91 Add WebSocket protocol layer for zero-dep brainstorm server
Implements RFC 6455 handshake, frame encoding/decoding for text
frames. All 31 unit tests pass.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 13:15:19 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
8d6d876424 Add implementation plan for zero-dep brainstorm server
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 13:14:42 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9c98e01873 Add design spec and tests for zero-dep brainstorm server
Replace vendored node_modules (714 files) with a single server.js
using only Node built-ins. Spec covers WebSocket protocol, HTTP
serving, file watching, and static file serving. Tests written
before implementation (TDD).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-11 13:11:29 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
5ef73d25b7 Release v5.0.1: Windows/Linux hooks fix, Gemini CLI, spec review loop
Bug fixes:
- Fix single quotes breaking SessionStart hook on Windows/Linux (#577, #529, #644)
- Add spec review loop to brainstorming checklist and flow diagram (#677)
- Fix Cursor install command in README (#676)

New features:
- Gemini CLI extension support
- Brainstorm server dependencies bundled for zero-npm-install experience

Improvements:
- OpenCode tool mapping fix (TodoWrite)
- Multi-platform brainstorm server launch
2026-03-10 19:33:25 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
920559aea7 Merge PR #676: fix Cursor install command in README
The correct Cursor slash command is /add-plugin, not /plugin-add.
Confirmed via the Cursor 2.5 release announcement.
2026-03-10 19:02:18 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9d2b886211 Fix brainstorming skill: add spec review loop to checklist and flow diagram
The spec review loop (dispatch spec-document-reviewer subagent, iterate
until approved) existed in the prose "After the Design" section but was
missing from both the checklist and the process flow diagram. Since agents
follow the diagram and checklist more reliably than prose, the spec review
step was being skipped entirely.

Added step 7 (spec review loop) to the checklist and a corresponding
"Spec review loop" → "Spec review passed?" node pair to the dot graph.

Tested with claude --plugin-dir and claude-session-driver: worker now
correctly dispatches the spec-document-reviewer subagent after writing
the design doc and before presenting to the user for review.

Fixes #677.
2026-03-10 18:40:49 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
ec26561aaa Merge PR #585: fix single quotes in SessionStart hook for Windows/Linux
Use escaped double quotes instead of single quotes around
${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT} path in hooks.json.

Single quotes fail on Windows (cmd.exe doesn't recognize them as path
delimiters) and on Linux when the shell doesn't expand the variable.

Verified the fix works across all combinations:
- macOS bash, path without spaces: pass
- macOS bash, path with spaces: pass
- Windows cmd.exe, path without spaces: FAILED with single quotes, PASS with double quotes
- Windows cmd.exe, path with spaces: FAILED with single quotes, PASS with double quotes
- Windows Git Bash: pass (both quote styles work here)

Testing was done on a Windows 11 (NT 10.0.26200.0) dev box with
Claude Code 2.1.72 and Git for Windows. The single-quote bug only
manifests when cmd.exe is the executing shell (no Git Bash fallback),
which explains why some users hit it and others don't.

Closes #577, closes #644.
2026-03-10 16:57:04 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
f0a4538b31 Add Gemini CLI install instructions to README 2026-03-10 11:42:20 -07:00
samuelcsouza
f7b6107576 fix: update install cursor command 2026-03-10 15:19:30 -03:00
Jesse Vincent
e02842e024 Remove fsevents from bundled deps (macOS-only native binary)
fsevents is an optional chokidar dependency that only works on macOS.
Chokidar falls back gracefully without it on all platforms.
2026-03-09 21:37:04 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
7446c842d8 Bundle brainstorm server dependencies instead of requiring npm install
Vendor node_modules into the repo so the brainstorm server works
immediately on fresh plugin installs without needing npm at runtime.
2026-03-09 21:36:37 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
5e2a89e985 Auto-install brainstorm server dependencies on first run
start-server.sh now runs npm install if node_modules is missing.
Fixes broken server when superpowers is installed as a plugin (node_modules
are in .gitignore and not included in the clone).
2026-03-09 21:35:33 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
d3c028e280 Update changelog with server-info, platform launch, and OpenCode fix 2026-03-09 21:20:20 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
7f8edd9c12 Write server-info to file so agents can find URL after background launch
The server now writes its startup JSON to $SCREEN_DIR/.server-info.
Agents that launch the server via background execution (where stdout is
hidden) can read this file to get the URL, port, and screen_dir.
2026-03-09 20:46:34 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
81acbcd51e Replace Codex-specific server guidance with per-platform launch instructions
The visual companion docs now give concrete launch commands per platform:
Claude Code (default mode), Codex (auto-foreground via CODEX_CI), Gemini CLI
(--foreground with is_background), and a fallback for other environments.
2026-03-09 20:32:41 -07:00
Matt Van Horn
c070e6bd45 fix(opencode): correct TodoWrite tool mapping to todowrite
TodoWrite maps to OpenCode's built-in `todowrite` tool, not `update_plan`.
Verified against OpenCode source (packages/opencode/src/tool/todo.ts).

Co-authored-by: Matt Van Horn <455140+mvanhorn@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-03-09 20:25:13 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
5f14c1aa29 Merge wip-gemini-cli: Gemini CLI extension, agentskills compliance, changelog 2026-03-09 20:24:35 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
bdbad07f02 Update release notes with all changes since v5.0.0 2026-03-09 20:13:48 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
419889b0d3 Move brainstorm-server into skill directory per agentskills spec
Moves lib/brainstorm-server/ → skills/brainstorming/scripts/ so the
brainstorming skill uses relative paths (scripts/start-server.sh) instead
of ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/lib/brainstorm-server/. This follows the
agentskills.io specification for portable, cross-platform skills.

Updates visual-companion.md references and test paths. All tests pass.
2026-03-09 19:43:48 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
715e18e448 Load Gemini tool mapping via GEMINI.md @import instead of skill reference
The tool mapping table is now @referenced directly in GEMINI.md so Gemini
CLI always has it in context when processing skills, rather than requiring
Gemini to find and read a reference file from within the skill.
2026-03-09 19:37:18 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
21a774e95c Add Gemini CLI tool mapping and update using-superpowers references
Maps all Claude Code tool names to Gemini CLI equivalents (read_file,
write_file, replace, run_shell_command, grep_search, glob, write_todos,
activate_skill, etc.). Notes that Gemini CLI has no subagent support.

Updates using-superpowers to reference GEMINI.md in instruction priority
and link to the new gemini-tools.md reference alongside codex-tools.md.
2026-03-09 19:34:03 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
9df7269d73 Move Gemini extension to repo root for cross-platform support
Symlinks inside .gemini/ don't work on Windows. Moving
gemini-extension.json and GEMINI.md to the repo root means
the extension root IS the repo root, so skills/ is found
naturally without symlinks.
2026-03-09 19:26:18 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
5e5d353916 Add skills symlink to Gemini CLI extension
Symlinks .gemini/skills -> ../skills so the extension bundles
all Superpowers skills. Without this, skills are only found when
running from the repo workspace, not when installed as an extension.
2026-03-09 19:23:38 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
c5e6eaf411 refactor: replace MCP server with native Gemini CLI extension
Remove the custom MCP server (find_skills/use_skill tools) and
force-invoke GEMINI.md. Gemini CLI natively supports the Agent Skills
format — our skills/ directory works as-is.

GEMINI.md now uses @import to inline using-superpowers content at
session start. Needs testing to verify @import resolves relative
to the extension root.
2026-03-09 18:53:45 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
bdd45c70ab WIP: Gemini CLI extension infrastructure
Add experimental Gemini CLI extension with MCP server that exposes
skills as individual tools. Infrastructure works but auto-triggering
skills is blocked by Gemini CLI treating context files as advisory
rather than executable instructions.

See issue #128 for detailed findings.

- gemini-extension.json manifest
- MCP server with individual skill tools
- GEMINI.md bootstrap attempts (don't work)
- Installation documentation
2026-03-09 18:26:35 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
ec3f7f1027 fix(brainstorming): add user review gate between spec and writing-plans
After the spec review loop passes, the skill now asks the user to review
the written spec file before invoking writing-plans. This prevents the
agent from racing ahead to implementation planning without giving the
user a chance to read and adjust the written document.

Fixes #565
2026-03-09 18:16:22 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
edbb62e50f chore: remove dead lib/skills-core.js and its tests
Last consumer (Codex bootstrap CLI) was removed on 2026-02-05.
Removes the library, its dedicated test file, and references
in test-plugin-loading.sh and run-tests.sh.

h/t @RomarQ (PR #525) for flagging this.
2026-03-09 17:40:52 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
33e55e60b2 Merge pull request #610 from karuturi/patch-1
Add Superpowers installation instructions for Claude Code official marketplace
2026-03-09 17:37:28 -07:00
mvanhorn
74f2b1c96e fix(hooks): emit session-start context only once per platform
Claude Code reads both additional_context and hookSpecificOutput without
deduplication, causing double injection. Detect platform via
CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT and emit only the appropriate field.

Co-authored-by: mvanhorn <mvanhorn@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-03-09 17:20:31 -07:00
daniel-graham
991e9d4de9 fix: replace bare except with except Exception
Co-authored-by: daniel-graham <daniel-graham@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-03-09 17:10:07 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
133a0a80c6 Merge dev-reorder10: Release v5.0.0 2026-03-09 15:35:02 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
57b346ddbc Release v5.0.0: Visual brainstorming, document review loops, architecture guidance 2026-03-09 15:34:59 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
8c01ac8051 Fix stale docs/plans path in brainstorming checklist 2026-03-08 14:57:11 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
245d50ec37 Add v5.0.0 release notes and include AGENTS.md in instruction priority 2026-03-08 12:53:53 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
aba2542f5e Broaden visual companion offer language beyond design-specific use cases 2026-03-08 12:25:44 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
3bdd66eaa5 Remove batch-and-stop pattern from executing-plans skill
Executing-plans no longer pauses every 3 tasks for review. Also adds
a note encouraging users to use a subagent-capable platform for better
quality results.
2026-03-08 12:20:15 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
c3ecc1b9ba Deprecate slash commands in favor of skills 2026-03-08 12:06:04 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
f3083e55b0 Replace 'For Claude' with 'For agentic workers' in plan headers 2026-03-06 19:33:30 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
70244011d4 Rename brainstorm companion to Superpowers Brainstorming with GitHub link 2026-03-06 16:29:05 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
d48b14e5ac Add project-level scope assessment to brainstorming pipeline
Brainstorming now assesses whether a project is too large for a single
spec and helps decompose into sub-projects. Scope check is inline in
the understanding phase (testing showed it was skipped as a separate step).
Spec reviewer also checks scope. Writing-plans has a backstop.
2026-03-06 14:48:48 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
daa3fb2322 Add architecture guidance and capability-aware escalation to skills
Add design-for-isolation and working-in-existing-codebases guidance to
brainstorming. Add file size awareness and escalation prompts to SDD
implementer and code quality reviewer. Writing-plans gets architecture
section sizing guidance. Spec and plan reviewers get architecture and
file size checks.
2026-03-06 14:48:48 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
69eaf3cf34 Add end-to-end tests for document review system 2026-03-06 14:48:46 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
582264a54a docs: add document review system spec and plan
- Spec: docs/superpowers/specs/2026-01-22-document-review-system-design.md
- Plan: docs/superpowers/plans/2026-01-22-document-review-system.md

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 14:48:42 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
7b99c39c08 Add plan review loop and checkbox syntax to writing-plans skill
Plans now include a review loop dispatching plan-document-reviewer
subagent. Checkbox syntax (- [ ]) on steps for tracking progress.
2026-03-06 14:26:27 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
6c274dcc2a feat: add plan document reviewer prompt template
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 14:26:21 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
ee14caeadd feat: add spec document reviewer prompt template
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 14:26:09 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
5e51c3ee5a feat: enforce subagent-driven-development on capable harnesses
- Subagent-driven-development is now mandatory when harness supports it
- No longer offer choice between subagent-driven and executing-plans
- Executing-plans reserved for harnesses without subagent capability
- Update plan header to reference both execution paths

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 13:01:31 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
f57638a747 refactor: restructure specs and plans directories
- Specs (brainstorming output) now go to docs/superpowers/specs/
- Plans (writing-plans output) now go to docs/superpowers/plans/
- User preferences for locations override these defaults
- Update all skill references and test files

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 13:01:31 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
4180afb7bd Add visual brainstorming companion to release notes
Co-Authored-By: Drew Ritter <drew@ritter.dev>
2026-03-06 13:01:31 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
e4226df22e Add visual brainstorming implementation plan and refactor docs
Implementation plan for the visual brainstorming companion, plus spec
and plan for the subsequent browser-displays refactor.

Co-Authored-By: Drew Ritter <drew@ritter.dev>
2026-03-06 13:01:31 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
866f2bdb47 Add visual companion integration to brainstorming skill
Brainstorming skill now offers an optional browser-based visual companion
for questions involving visual decisions (mockups, layouts, diagrams).
The companion is a tool, not a mode — each question is evaluated for
whether browser or terminal is more appropriate.

Includes visual-companion.md progressive disclosure guide with server
workflow, screen authoring patterns, and feedback collection.

Co-Authored-By: Drew Ritter <drew@ritter.dev>
2026-03-06 13:01:31 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
3c220d0cc1 Add brainstorm visual companion frame template
HTML frame template with dark/light theme support, feedback footer,
and interactive JS for brainstorming visual companion screens.

Co-Authored-By: Drew Ritter <drew@ritter.dev>
2026-03-06 13:01:31 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
02b3d7c96d Add brainstorm server with WebSocket support, helpers, and tests
WebSocket server for real-time browser communication during brainstorming
sessions. Includes browser helper library for event capture, shell scripts
for server lifecycle management with session isolation and persistent
mockup storage, and integration tests.

Co-Authored-By: Drew Ritter <drew@ritter.dev>
2026-03-06 13:01:31 -08:00
Drew Ritter
1c53f5deb6 Add SUBAGENT-STOP gate to prevent subagent skill leakage
Codex subagents inherit filesystem access and can discover superpowers
skills via native discovery. Without guidance, they activate the 1% rule
and invoke full skill workflows instead of executing their assigned task.

- Add SUBAGENT-STOP block to using-superpowers that tells subagents to
  skip the skill and execute their dispatch prompt instead
- Document collab feature requirement for Codex subagent skills
2026-03-06 13:01:27 -08:00
Drew Ritter
a26cbaab2e Move Codex tool mapping to progressive disclosure reference file
Move inline routing table from using-superpowers to references/codex-tools.md,
leveraging native progressive disclosure for companion files. Add Platform
Adaptation pointer so non-CC platforms can find tool equivalents.
2026-03-06 13:01:27 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
b23c084070 Add instruction priority hierarchy to using-superpowers skill
Clarifies that user instructions (CLAUDE.md, direct requests) always
take precedence over Superpowers skills, which in turn override
default system prompt behavior. Ensures users remain in control.

Also updates RELEASE-NOTES.md with unreleased changes including
the visual companion feature.
2026-03-06 13:01:23 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
aa3bb5fe16 chore: gitignore triage directory 2026-03-06 12:58:37 -08:00
Rajani K
3d245777f0 Correct capitalization and link for Superpowers plugin 2026-03-04 16:53:40 +05:30
Rajani K
26d7cca61b Add Superpowers installation instructions for Claude Code official marketplace
Added installation instructions for Superpowers plugin in Claude Code official marketplace.
2026-03-04 16:43:33 +05:30
atian8179
ad716b8d1b fix: use double quotes for CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT in SessionStart hook
Replace single quotes with escaped double quotes around
${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT} in hooks.json so the shell variable expands
correctly on Linux. Single quotes prevent variable expansion,
causing the hook to fail with 'No such file or directory'.

Closes #577
2026-03-01 14:05:35 +08:00
Jesse Vincent
e4a2375cb7 Merge pull request #524 from abzhaw/main
chore: ignore .DS_Store
2026-02-21 14:43:05 -05:00
Jesse Vincent
d2d6cf4852 Release v4.3.1: Cursor support, Windows hook fix
- Add Cursor plugin manifest and hook response compatibility
- Restore polyglot wrapper for Windows SessionStart reliability
- Fix 6 Windows issues: #518, #504, #491, #487, #466, #440
2026-02-21 11:07:05 -08:00
abzhaw
54d9133d7a chore: ignore .DS_Store 2026-02-21 19:54:30 +01:00
Jesse Vincent
394cf85013 Merge pull request #523 from obra/fix/windows-hooks-4.3.1
fix: restore polyglot wrapper for Windows hook compatibility (4.3.1)
2026-02-21 13:50:36 -05:00
Jesse Vincent
31bbbe2dbb fix: quote CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT for spaces, use POSIX-safe path resolution
- Quote ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT} in hooks.json to handle paths with spaces
  (e.g. "C:\Users\Robert Zimmermann\...")
- Replace bash-only ${BASH_SOURCE[0]:-$0} with POSIX-safe $0 in
  run-hook.cmd so the Unix path doesn't break on dash (/bin/sh)

Addresses: #518 (spaces in path), Ubuntu/Debian compatibility

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-02-21 10:40:30 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
5fbefbd0a9 fix: restore polyglot wrapper to fix Windows hook window spawning
Claude Code spawns hook commands with shell:true + windowsHide:true,
but on Windows the execution chain cmd.exe -> bash.exe causes Git
Bash (MSYS2) to allocate its own console window, bypassing the hide
flag. This creates visible terminal windows that steal focus on every
SessionStart event (startup, resume, clear, compact).

The fix:
- Rename session-start.sh to session-start (no extension) so Claude
  Code's .sh auto-detection regex doesn't fire and prepend "bash"
- Restore run-hook.cmd polyglot wrapper to control bash invocation
  on Windows (tries known Git Bash paths, then PATH, then exits
  silently if no bash found)
- On Unix, the polyglot's shell portion runs the script directly

This avoids Claude Code's broken .sh auto-prepend, gives us control
over how bash is invoked on Windows, and gracefully handles missing
bash instead of erroring.

Addresses: #440, #414, #354, #417, #293
Upstream: anthropics/claude-code#14828
2026-02-21 10:29:26 -08:00
Drew Ritter
a0b9ecce2b update 'Verify Installation' section
'Verify Installation' section with updated instructions.
2026-02-17 11:46:28 -08:00
ericzakariasson
772ec9f834 Add Cursor plugin manifest and hook response compatibility
Enable native Cursor plugin discovery with a .cursor-plugin manifest, and make the SessionStart hook emit both Cursor and Claude response shapes so context injection works across both platforms. Document Cursor install usage in the README while keeping Claude-first wording.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>
2026-02-17 11:42:34 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
e16d611eee Release v4.3.0: Enforce brainstorming workflow, prevent unintended plan mode 2026-02-12 11:03:32 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
b7cad76134 Merge pull request #462 from obra/enforce-brainstorming-workflow
Enforce brainstorming workflow with hard gates and process flow
2026-02-12 11:01:55 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
4c836817da Make SessionStart hook synchronous so using-superpowers loads before first turn
When async is true, the hook may not complete before the model starts
responding, meaning the using-superpowers skill instructions aren't
in context for the first message.
2026-02-12 10:57:41 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
7f2ee614b6 Enforce brainstorming workflow with hard gates and process flow
The brainstorming skill described a process but didn't enforce it. Models
would skip the design phase and jump straight to implementation skills
like frontend-design, or collapse the entire brainstorming process into
a single text block.

Changes to brainstorming skill:
- Add HARD-GATE: no implementation until design is approved
- Add explicit checklist that maps to task items
- Add graphviz process flow with writing-plans as terminal state
- Add anti-pattern callout for "too simple to need a design"
- Scale design sections by section complexity, not project complexity
- Make writing-plans the only valid next skill after brainstorming

Changes to using-superpowers skill:
- Add EnterPlanMode intercept to workflow graph
- Route plan mode attempts through brainstorming skill instead

Tested with claude -p --plugin-dir across three variants (no skill,
original skill, updated skill) to verify behavioral compliance.
2026-02-12 10:51:12 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
b97b5f228d Merge pull request #457 from ColtWindy/fix/writing-plans-nested-code-fence
fix(writing-plans): use 4-backtick fence for nested code blocks in Task Structure template
2026-02-12 08:21:59 -08:00
Jesse Vincent
93c8966cab Merge pull request #452 from heliusjing/fix/add-verbose-flag-for-stream-json
Fix: add --verbose flag for stream-json output in SDD test runner
2026-02-12 08:21:09 -08:00
coltwindy
19df3db59b fix(writing-plans): use 4-backtick fence for nested code blocks in Task Structure template 2026-02-12 12:40:35 +09:00
chengfei.jin
f8cf545bc5 Fix stream-json output requiring --verbose flag
Claude CLI now requires --verbose when using --output-format stream-json
with -p (print mode). Without it, the test fails with:
"Error: When using --print, --output-format=stream-json requires --verbose"
2026-02-11 15:34:35 +08:00
120 changed files with 11354 additions and 1910 deletions

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
{ {
"name": "superpowers", "name": "superpowers",
"description": "Core skills library for Claude Code: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques", "description": "Core skills library for Claude Code: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
"version": "4.2.0", "version": "5.1.0",
"source": "./", "source": "./",
"author": { "author": {
"name": "Jesse Vincent", "name": "Jesse Vincent",

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{ {
"name": "superpowers", "name": "superpowers",
"description": "Core skills library for Claude Code: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques", "description": "Core skills library for Claude Code: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
"version": "4.2.0", "version": "5.1.0",
"author": { "author": {
"name": "Jesse Vincent", "name": "Jesse Vincent",
"email": "jesse@fsck.com" "email": "jesse@fsck.com"
@@ -9,5 +9,12 @@
"homepage": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers", "homepage": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers",
"repository": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers", "repository": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers",
"license": "MIT", "license": "MIT",
"keywords": ["skills", "tdd", "debugging", "collaboration", "best-practices", "workflows"] "keywords": [
"skills",
"tdd",
"debugging",
"collaboration",
"best-practices",
"workflows"
]
} }

47
.codex-plugin/plugin.json Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
{
"name": "superpowers",
"version": "5.1.0",
"description": "An agentic skills framework & software development methodology that works: planning, TDD, debugging, and collaboration workflows.",
"author": {
"name": "Jesse Vincent",
"email": "jesse@fsck.com",
"url": "https://github.com/obra"
},
"homepage": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers",
"repository": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers",
"license": "MIT",
"keywords": [
"brainstorming",
"subagent-driven-development",
"skills",
"planning",
"tdd",
"debugging",
"code-review",
"workflow"
],
"skills": "./skills/",
"interface": {
"displayName": "Superpowers",
"shortDescription": "Planning, TDD, debugging, and delivery workflows for coding agents",
"longDescription": "Use Superpowers to guide agent work through brainstorming, implementation planning, test-driven development, systematic debugging, parallel execution, code review, and finish-the-branch workflows.",
"developerName": "Jesse Vincent",
"category": "Coding",
"capabilities": [
"Interactive",
"Read",
"Write"
],
"defaultPrompt": [
"I've got an idea for something I'd like to build.",
"Let's add a feature to this project."
],
"websiteURL": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers",
"privacyPolicyURL": "https://docs.github.com/en/site-policy/privacy-policies/github-general-privacy-statement",
"termsOfServiceURL": "https://docs.github.com/en/site-policy/github-terms/github-terms-of-service",
"brandColor": "#F59E0B",
"composerIcon": "./assets/superpowers-small.svg",
"logo": "./assets/app-icon.png",
"screenshots": []
}
}

View File

@@ -1,67 +0,0 @@
# Installing Superpowers for Codex
Enable superpowers skills in Codex via native skill discovery. Just clone and symlink.
## Prerequisites
- Git
## Installation
1. **Clone the superpowers repository:**
```bash
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git ~/.codex/superpowers
```
2. **Create the skills symlink:**
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.agents/skills
ln -s ~/.codex/superpowers/skills ~/.agents/skills/superpowers
```
**Windows (PowerShell):**
```powershell
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.agents\skills"
cmd /c mklink /J "$env:USERPROFILE\.agents\skills\superpowers" "$env:USERPROFILE\.codex\superpowers\skills"
```
3. **Restart Codex** (quit and relaunch the CLI) to discover the skills.
## Migrating from old bootstrap
If you installed superpowers before native skill discovery, you need to:
1. **Update the repo:**
```bash
cd ~/.codex/superpowers && git pull
```
2. **Create the skills symlink** (step 2 above) — this is the new discovery mechanism.
3. **Remove the old bootstrap block** from `~/.codex/AGENTS.md` — any block referencing `superpowers-codex bootstrap` is no longer needed.
4. **Restart Codex.**
## Verify
```bash
ls -la ~/.agents/skills/superpowers
```
You should see a symlink (or junction on Windows) pointing to your superpowers skills directory.
## Updating
```bash
cd ~/.codex/superpowers && git pull
```
Skills update instantly through the symlink.
## Uninstalling
```bash
rm ~/.agents/skills/superpowers
```
Optionally delete the clone: `rm -rf ~/.codex/superpowers`.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
{
"name": "superpowers",
"displayName": "Superpowers",
"description": "Core skills library: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
"version": "5.1.0",
"author": {
"name": "Jesse Vincent",
"email": "jesse@fsck.com"
},
"homepage": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers",
"repository": "https://github.com/obra/superpowers",
"license": "MIT",
"keywords": [
"skills",
"tdd",
"debugging",
"collaboration",
"best-practices",
"workflows"
],
"skills": "./skills/",
"agents": "./agents/",
"commands": "./commands/",
"hooks": "./hooks/hooks-cursor.json"
}

1
.gitattributes vendored
View File

@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
# Ensure shell scripts always have LF line endings # Ensure shell scripts always have LF line endings
*.sh text eol=lf *.sh text eol=lf
hooks/session-start text eol=lf
# Ensure the polyglot wrapper keeps LF (it's parsed by both cmd and bash) # Ensure the polyglot wrapper keeps LF (it's parsed by both cmd and bash)
*.cmd text eol=lf *.cmd text eol=lf

55
.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/bug_report.md vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
---
name: Bug Report
about: Something isn't working as expected
labels: bug
---
<!--
BEFORE FILING: Search open AND closed issues. The Windows SessionStart
hook alone has been reported 29 times. If your issue already exists,
add a comment or reaction to the existing one instead.
-->
- [ ] I searched existing issues and this is not a duplicate
## Environment (required)
<!-- Required. We assume an agent filed this report — tell us which one and
where it ran. We weigh reports by what produced them. -->
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| Superpowers version | |
| Harness (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.) | |
| Harness version | |
| Your model + version | |
| All plugins installed | |
| OS + shell | |
## Is this a Superpowers issue or a platform issue?
<!-- Superpowers is a plugin. Some reported "bugs" are actually issues
in the underlying platform or model. If you're not sure, try
reproducing without Superpowers installed.
If the problem persists without Superpowers, file the issue with
your platform instead. -->
- [ ] I confirmed this issue does not occur without Superpowers installed
## What happened?
<!-- Be specific. "It doesn't work" is not a bug report. -->
## Steps to reproduce
1.
2.
3.
## Expected behavior
<!-- What should have happened? -->
## Actual behavior
<!-- What happened instead? -->
## Debug log or conversation transcript
<!-- A debug log or conversation transcript showing the issue is the
single most helpful thing you can include. Without one, we're
guessing. Screenshots of error output are also useful. -->

5
.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/config.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
blank_issues_enabled: false
contact_links:
- name: Questions & Help
url: https://discord.gg/35wsABTejz
about: For usage questions, troubleshooting help, and general discussion, please visit our Discord instead of opening an issue.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
---
name: Feature Request
about: Propose a change or addition to Superpowers
labels: enhancement
---
<!--
BEFORE FILING: Search open AND closed issues. Many features have been
requested before — some were implemented differently, some are in
progress, and some were intentionally declined.
-->
- [ ] I searched existing issues and this has not been proposed before
## What problem does this solve?
<!-- Describe the problem from your own experience. What were you doing,
what went wrong or was missing, and why did it matter?
"It would be cool if..." is not a problem statement. -->
## Proposed solution
<!-- What specifically do you want to happen? Be concrete. -->
## What alternatives did you consider?
<!-- What other approaches could solve the same problem? Why is your
proposal better? -->
## Is this appropriate for core Superpowers?
<!-- Would this benefit someone working on a completely different kind
of project? If this is specific to your domain, workflow, or a
third-party tool, it may belong as its own plugin instead. -->
## Environment (required)
<!-- Required. We assume an agent wrote this request — tell us which one and
where it ran. We weigh proposals reasoned from documentation differently
than ones grounded in a real session where the problem actually came up. -->
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| Superpowers version | |
| Harness (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.) | |
| Harness version | |
| Your model + version | |
| All plugins installed | |
## Context
<!-- Optional: the workflow where you hit this, links, transcripts. -->

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
---
name: IDE / Platform Support Request
about: Request support for a new IDE, editor, or AI coding tool
labels: platform-support
---
<!--
BEFORE FILING: Search existing issues — your IDE may already be
requested or discussed.
-->
- [ ] I searched existing issues for this IDE/platform
## Which IDE or platform?
<!-- Name and link -->
## Does this tool have a plugin or extension system?
<!-- If yes, link to the docs. If no, explain how third-party
integrations typically work with this tool. -->
## Have you tried manual installation?
<!-- Many tools work with Superpowers through manual setup even without
official support. Did you try? What happened? -->
## Environment (required)
<!-- Required. We assume an agent wrote this request — tell us which one and
where it ran. -->
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| Harness you currently use (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.) | |
| Harness version | |
| Your model + version | |
| All plugins installed | |

143
.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
<!--
BEFORE SUBMITTING: Read every word of this template. PRs that leave
sections blank, contain multiple unrelated changes, or show no evidence
of human involvement will be closed without review.
-->
> **This PR MUST target the `dev` branch, not `main`.** `main` is the
> released branch; active work lands on `dev` first. PRs opened against
> `main` will be asked to retarget `dev` before review.
## Who is submitting this PR? (required)
<!-- Required. PRs that omit this will be closed. We assume an agent wrote
this PR — tell us which one and where it ran. We weigh contributions by
what produced them: content reasoned from documentation is held to a
different bar than work grounded in a real session. -->
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| Your model + version | |
| Harness + version | |
| All plugins installed | |
| Human partner who reviewed this diff | |
## What problem are you trying to solve?
<!-- Describe the specific problem you encountered. If this was a session
issue, include: what you were doing, what went wrong, the model's
exact failure mode, and ideally a transcript or session log.
"Improving" something is not a problem statement. What broke? What
failed? What was the user experience that motivated this? -->
## What does this PR change?
<!-- 1-3 sentences. What, not why — the "why" belongs above. -->
## Is this change appropriate for the core library?
<!-- Superpowers core contains general-purpose skills and infrastructure
that benefit all users. Ask yourself:
- Would this be useful to someone working on a completely different
kind of project than yours?
- Is this project-specific, team-specific, or tool-specific?
- Does this integrate or promote a third-party service?
If your change is a new skill for a specific domain, workflow tool,
or third-party integration, it belongs in its own plugin — not here.
See the plugin development docs for how to publish it separately. -->
## What alternatives did you consider?
<!-- What other approaches did you try or evaluate before landing on this
one? Why were they worse? If you didn't consider alternatives, say so
— but know that's a red flag. -->
## Does this PR contain multiple unrelated changes?
<!-- If yes: stop. Split it into separate PRs. Bundled PRs will be closed.
If you believe the changes are related, explain the dependency. -->
## Existing PRs
- [ ] I have reviewed all open AND closed PRs for duplicates or prior art
- Related PRs: <!-- #number, #number, or "none found" -->
<!-- If a related closed PR exists, explain what's different about your
approach and why it should succeed where the other didn't. -->
## Environment tested
| Harness (e.g. Claude Code, Cursor) | Harness version | Model | Model version/ID |
|-------------------------------------|-----------------|-------|------------------|
| | | | |
## New harness support (required if this PR adds a new harness)
<!-- If this PR adds support for a new harness (IDE, CLI tool, agent
runner), you MUST include a session transcript proving the
integration actually works.
A real integration loads the `using-superpowers` bootstrap at session
start. The bootstrap is what causes skills to auto-trigger. Without
it, the skills are dead weight — present on disk but never invoked
at the right moments.
ACCEPTANCE TEST: Open a clean session in the new harness and send
exactly this user message:
Let's make a react todo list
A working integration auto-triggers the `brainstorming` skill before
any code is written. Paste the complete transcript below.
These are NOT real integrations and PRs that ship them will be closed:
- Manually copying skill files into the harness
- Wrapping with `npx skills` or similar at-runtime shims
- Anything that requires the user to opt in to skills per-session
- Anything where brainstorming does not auto-trigger on the test above
If you are not sure whether your integration loads the bootstrap at
session start, it does not.
-->
<details>
<summary>Clean-session transcript for "Let's make a react todo list"</summary>
```
paste the complete transcript here
```
</details>
## Evaluation
- What was the initial prompt you (or your human partner) used to start
the session that led to this change?
- How many eval sessions did you run AFTER making the change?
- How did outcomes change compared to before the change?
<!-- "It works" is not evaluation. Describe the before/after difference
you observed across multiple sessions. -->
## Rigor
- [ ] If this is a skills change: I used `superpowers:writing-skills` and
completed adversarial pressure testing (paste results below)
- [ ] This change was tested adversarially, not just on the happy path
- [ ] I did not modify carefully-tuned content (Red Flags table,
rationalizations, "human partner" language) without extensive evals
showing the change is an improvement
<!-- If you changed wording in skills that shape agent behavior, show your
eval methodology and results. These are not prose — they are code. -->
## Human review
- [ ] A human has reviewed the COMPLETE proposed diff before submission
<!--
STOP. If the checkbox above is not checked, do not submit this PR.
PRs will be closed without review if they:
- Show no evidence of human involvement
- Contain multiple unrelated changes
- Promote or integrate third-party services or tools
- Submit project-specific or personal configuration as core changes
- Leave required sections blank or use placeholder text
- Modify behavior-shaping content without eval evidence
-->

4
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
.worktrees/ .worktrees/
.private-journal/ .private-journal/
.claude/ .claude/
.DS_Store
node_modules/
inspo
triage/

View File

@@ -3,112 +3,103 @@
## Prerequisites ## Prerequisites
- [OpenCode.ai](https://opencode.ai) installed - [OpenCode.ai](https://opencode.ai) installed
- Git installed
## Installation Steps ## Installation
### 1. Clone Superpowers Add superpowers to the `plugin` array in your `opencode.json` (global or project-level):
```bash ```json
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git ~/.config/opencode/superpowers {
"plugin": ["superpowers@git+https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git"]
}
``` ```
### 2. Register the Plugin Restart OpenCode. The plugin installs through OpenCode's plugin manager and
registers all skills.
Create a symlink so OpenCode discovers the plugin: Verify by asking: "Tell me about your superpowers"
OpenCode uses its own plugin install. If you also use Claude Code, Codex, or
another harness, install Superpowers separately for each one.
## Migrating from the old symlink-based install
If you previously installed superpowers using `git clone` and symlinks, remove the old setup:
```bash ```bash
mkdir -p ~/.config/opencode/plugins # Remove old symlinks
rm -f ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js rm -f ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js
ln -s ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/.opencode/plugins/superpowers.js ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js
```
### 3. Symlink Skills
Create a symlink so OpenCode's native skill tool discovers superpowers skills:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.config/opencode/skills
rm -rf ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers rm -rf ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers
ln -s ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/skills ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers
# Optionally remove the cloned repo
rm -rf ~/.config/opencode/superpowers
# Remove skills.paths from opencode.json if you added one for superpowers
``` ```
### 4. Restart OpenCode Then follow the installation steps above.
Restart OpenCode. The plugin will automatically inject superpowers context.
Verify by asking: "do you have superpowers?"
## Usage ## Usage
### Finding Skills Use OpenCode's native `skill` tool:
Use OpenCode's native `skill` tool to list available skills:
``` ```
use skill tool to list skills use skill tool to list skills
```
### Loading a Skill
Use OpenCode's native `skill` tool to load a specific skill:
```
use skill tool to load superpowers/brainstorming use skill tool to load superpowers/brainstorming
``` ```
### Personal Skills
Create your own skills in `~/.config/opencode/skills/`:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.config/opencode/skills/my-skill
```
Create `~/.config/opencode/skills/my-skill/SKILL.md`:
```markdown
---
name: my-skill
description: Use when [condition] - [what it does]
---
# My Skill
[Your skill content here]
```
### Project Skills
Create project-specific skills in `.opencode/skills/` within your project.
**Skill Priority:** Project skills > Personal skills > Superpowers skills
## Updating ## Updating
```bash OpenCode installs Superpowers through a git-backed package spec. Some OpenCode
cd ~/.config/opencode/superpowers and Bun versions pin that resolved git dependency in a lockfile or cache, so a
git pull restart may not pick up the newest Superpowers commit. If updates do not appear,
clear OpenCode's package cache or reinstall the plugin.
To pin a specific version:
```json
{
"plugin": ["superpowers@git+https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git#v5.0.3"]
}
``` ```
## Troubleshooting ## Troubleshooting
### Plugin not loading ### Plugin not loading
1. Check plugin symlink: `ls -l ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js` 1. Check logs: `opencode run --print-logs "hello" 2>&1 | grep -i superpowers`
2. Check source exists: `ls ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/.opencode/plugins/superpowers.js` 2. Verify the plugin line in your `opencode.json`
3. Check OpenCode logs for errors 3. Make sure you're running a recent version of OpenCode
### Windows install issues
Some Windows OpenCode builds have upstream installer issues with git-backed
plugin specs, including cache paths for `git+https` URLs and Bun not finding
`git.exe` even when it works in a normal terminal. If OpenCode cannot install
the plugin, try installing with system npm and pointing OpenCode at the local
package:
```powershell
npm install superpowers@git+https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git --prefix "$HOME\.config\opencode"
```
Then use the installed package path in `opencode.json`:
```json
{
"plugin": ["~/.config/opencode/node_modules/superpowers"]
}
```
### Skills not found ### Skills not found
1. Check skills symlink: `ls -l ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers` 1. Use `skill` tool to list what's discovered
2. Verify it points to: `~/.config/opencode/superpowers/skills` 2. Check that the plugin is loading (see above)
3. Use `skill` tool to list what's discovered
### Tool mapping ### Tool mapping
When skills reference Claude Code tools: When skills reference Claude Code tools:
- `TodoWrite``update_plan` - `TodoWrite``todowrite`
- `Task` with subagents → `@mention` syntax - `Task` with subagents → `@mention` syntax
- `Skill` tool → OpenCode's native `skill` tool - `Skill` tool → OpenCode's native `skill` tool
- File operations → your native tools - File operations → your native tools

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
* Superpowers plugin for OpenCode.ai * Superpowers plugin for OpenCode.ai
* *
* Injects superpowers bootstrap context via system prompt transform. * Injects superpowers bootstrap context via system prompt transform.
* Skills are discovered via OpenCode's native skill tool from symlinked directory. * Auto-registers skills directory via config hook (no symlinks needed).
*/ */
import path from 'path'; import path from 'path';
@@ -46,33 +46,43 @@ const normalizePath = (p, homeDir) => {
return path.resolve(normalized); return path.resolve(normalized);
}; };
// Module-level cache for bootstrap content.
// The SKILL.md file does not change during a session, so reading + parsing it
// once eliminates redundant fs.existsSync + fs.readFileSync + regex work on
// every agent step. See #1202 for the full analysis.
let _bootstrapCache = undefined; // undefined = not yet loaded, null = file missing
export const SuperpowersPlugin = async ({ client, directory }) => { export const SuperpowersPlugin = async ({ client, directory }) => {
const homeDir = os.homedir(); const homeDir = os.homedir();
const superpowersSkillsDir = path.resolve(__dirname, '../../skills'); const superpowersSkillsDir = path.resolve(__dirname, '../../skills');
const envConfigDir = normalizePath(process.env.OPENCODE_CONFIG_DIR, homeDir); const envConfigDir = normalizePath(process.env.OPENCODE_CONFIG_DIR, homeDir);
const configDir = envConfigDir || path.join(homeDir, '.config/opencode'); const configDir = envConfigDir || path.join(homeDir, '.config/opencode');
// Helper to generate bootstrap content // Helper to generate bootstrap content (cached after first call)
const getBootstrapContent = () => { const getBootstrapContent = () => {
// Return cached result on subsequent calls
if (_bootstrapCache !== undefined) return _bootstrapCache;
// Try to load using-superpowers skill // Try to load using-superpowers skill
const skillPath = path.join(superpowersSkillsDir, 'using-superpowers', 'SKILL.md'); const skillPath = path.join(superpowersSkillsDir, 'using-superpowers', 'SKILL.md');
if (!fs.existsSync(skillPath)) return null; if (!fs.existsSync(skillPath)) {
_bootstrapCache = null;
return null;
}
const fullContent = fs.readFileSync(skillPath, 'utf8'); const fullContent = fs.readFileSync(skillPath, 'utf8');
const { content } = extractAndStripFrontmatter(fullContent); const { content } = extractAndStripFrontmatter(fullContent);
const toolMapping = `**Tool Mapping for OpenCode:** const toolMapping = `**Tool Mapping for OpenCode:**
When skills reference tools you don't have, substitute OpenCode equivalents: When skills reference tools you don't have, substitute OpenCode equivalents:
- \`TodoWrite\`\`update_plan\` - \`TodoWrite\`\`todowrite\`
- \`Task\` tool with subagents → Use OpenCode's subagent system (@mention) - \`Task\` tool with subagents → Use OpenCode's subagent system (@mention)
- \`Skill\` tool → OpenCode's native \`skill\` tool - \`Skill\` tool → OpenCode's native \`skill\` tool
- \`Read\`, \`Write\`, \`Edit\`, \`Bash\` → Your native tools - \`Read\`, \`Write\`, \`Edit\`, \`Bash\` → Your native tools
**Skills location:**
Superpowers skills are in \`${configDir}/skills/superpowers/\`
Use OpenCode's native \`skill\` tool to list and load skills.`; Use OpenCode's native \`skill\` tool to list and load skills.`;
return `<EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT> _bootstrapCache = `<EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>
You have superpowers. You have superpowers.
**IMPORTANT: The using-superpowers skill content is included below. It is ALREADY LOADED - you are currently following it. Do NOT use the skill tool to load "using-superpowers" again - that would be redundant.** **IMPORTANT: The using-superpowers skill content is included below. It is ALREADY LOADED - you are currently following it. Do NOT use the skill tool to load "using-superpowers" again - that would be redundant.**
@@ -81,15 +91,45 @@ ${content}
${toolMapping} ${toolMapping}
</EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>`; </EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>`;
return _bootstrapCache;
}; };
return { return {
// Use system prompt transform to inject bootstrap (fixes #226 agent reset bug) // Inject skills path into live config so OpenCode discovers superpowers skills
'experimental.chat.system.transform': async (_input, output) => { // without requiring manual symlinks or config file edits.
const bootstrap = getBootstrapContent(); // This works because Config.get() returns a cached singleton — modifications
if (bootstrap) { // here are visible when skills are lazily discovered later.
(output.system ||= []).push(bootstrap); config: async (config) => {
config.skills = config.skills || {};
config.skills.paths = config.skills.paths || [];
if (!config.skills.paths.includes(superpowersSkillsDir)) {
config.skills.paths.push(superpowersSkillsDir);
} }
},
// Inject bootstrap into the first user message of each session.
// Using a user message instead of a system message avoids:
// 1. Token bloat from system messages repeated every turn (#750)
// 2. Multiple system messages breaking Qwen and other models (#894)
//
// The hook fires on every agent step (not just every turn) because
// opencode's prompt.ts reloads messages from DB each step. Fresh message
// arrays may need injection again, so getBootstrapContent() must not do
// repeated disk work.
'experimental.chat.messages.transform': async (_input, output) => {
const bootstrap = getBootstrapContent();
if (!bootstrap || !output.messages.length) return;
const firstUser = output.messages.find(m => m.info.role === 'user');
if (!firstUser || !firstUser.parts.length) return;
// Guard: skip if first user message already contains bootstrap.
// This prevents double injection when OpenCode passes an already
// transformed in-memory message array through the hook again.
if (firstUser.parts.some(p => p.type === 'text' && p.text.includes('EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT'))) return;
const ref = firstUser.parts[0];
firstUser.parts.unshift({ ...ref, type: 'text', text: bootstrap });
} }
}; };
}; };

20
.version-bump.json Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
{
"files": [
{ "path": "package.json", "field": "version" },
{ "path": ".claude-plugin/plugin.json", "field": "version" },
{ "path": ".cursor-plugin/plugin.json", "field": "version" },
{ "path": ".codex-plugin/plugin.json", "field": "version" },
{ "path": ".claude-plugin/marketplace.json", "field": "plugins.0.version" },
{ "path": "gemini-extension.json", "field": "version" }
],
"audit": {
"exclude": [
"CHANGELOG.md",
"RELEASE-NOTES.md",
"node_modules",
".git",
".version-bump.json",
"scripts/bump-version.sh"
]
}
}

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
CLAUDE.md

111
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@@ -0,0 +1,111 @@
# Superpowers — Contributor Guidelines
## If You Are an AI Agent
Stop. Read this section before doing anything.
This repo has a 94% PR rejection rate. Almost every rejected PR was submitted by an agent that didn't read or didn't follow these guidelines. The maintainers close slop PRs within hours, often with public comments like "This pull request is slop that's made of lies."
**Your job is to protect your human partner from that outcome.** Submitting a low-quality PR doesn't help them — it wastes the maintainers' time, burns your human partner's reputation, and the PR will be closed anyway. That is not being helpful. That is being a tool of embarrassment.
Before you open a PR against this repo, you MUST:
1. **Read the entire PR template** at `.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md` and fill in every section with real, specific answers. Not summaries. Not placeholders.
2. **Search for existing PRs** — open AND closed — that address the same problem. If duplicates exist, STOP and tell your human partner. Do not open another duplicate.
3. **Verify this is a real problem.** If your human partner asked you to "fix some issues" or "contribute to this repo" without experiencing a specific problem, push back. Ask them what broke, what failed, what the user experience was.
4. **Confirm the change belongs in core.** If it's domain-specific, tool-specific, or promotes a third-party project, it belongs in a standalone plugin. Tell your human partner.
5. **Identify yourself.** Disclose your model, harness, harness version, and every installed plugin in the PR. Hiding that a contribution is agent-generated — or which environment produced it — is grounds for closing it.
6. **Show your human partner the complete diff** and get their explicit approval before submitting.
If any of these checks fail, do not open the PR. Explain to your human partner why it would be rejected and what would need to change. They will thank you for saving them the embarrassment.
## Pull Request Requirements
**Every PR must fully complete the PR template.** No section may be left blank or filled with placeholder text. PRs that skip sections will be closed without review.
**Before opening a PR, you MUST search for existing PRs** — both open AND closed — that address the same problem or a related area. Reference what you found in the "Existing PRs" section. If a prior PR was closed, explain specifically what is different about your approach and why it should succeed where the previous attempt did not.
**PRs that show no evidence of human involvement will be closed.** A human must review the complete proposed diff before submission.
**Submitters MUST identify themselves.** Every PR and issue must disclose the model, harness, harness version, and all installed plugins used to produce the contribution — or state plainly that it was written by hand with no agent. This is not optional. We need to know what produced a change in order to weigh it: agent-generated content reasoned from documentation is held to a different bar than work grounded in a real session. Contributions that hide their authoring environment will be closed.
**All PRs MUST target the `dev` branch, not `main`.** `main` is the released branch; active work lands on `dev` first. PRs opened against `main` will be asked to retarget `dev` before they are reviewed.
## What We Will Not Accept
### Third-party dependencies
PRs that add optional or required dependencies on third-party projects will not be accepted unless they are adding support for a new harness (e.g., a new IDE or CLI tool). Superpowers is a zero-dependency plugin by design. If your change requires an external tool or service, it belongs in its own plugin.
### "Compliance" changes to skills
Our internal skill philosophy differs from Anthropic's published guidance on writing skills. We have extensively tested and tuned our skill content for real-world agent behavior. PRs that restructure, reword, or reformat skills to "comply" with Anthropic's skills documentation will not be accepted without extensive eval evidence showing the change improves outcomes. The bar for modifying behavior-shaping content is very high.
### Project-specific or personal configuration
Skills, hooks, or configuration that only benefit a specific project, team, domain, or workflow do not belong in core. Publish these as a separate plugin.
### Bulk or spray-and-pray PRs
Do not trawl the issue tracker and open PRs for multiple issues in a single session. Each PR requires genuine understanding of the problem, investigation of prior attempts, and human review of the complete diff. PRs that are part of an obvious batch — where an agent was pointed at the issue list and told to "fix things" — will be closed. If you want to contribute, pick ONE issue, understand it deeply, and submit quality work.
### Speculative or theoretical fixes
Every PR must solve a real problem that someone actually experienced. "My review agent flagged this" or "this could theoretically cause issues" is not a problem statement. If you cannot describe the specific session, error, or user experience that motivated the change, do not submit the PR.
### Domain-specific skills
Superpowers core contains general-purpose skills that benefit all users regardless of their project. Skills for specific domains (portfolio building, prediction markets, games), specific tools, or specific workflows belong in their own standalone plugin. Ask yourself: "Would this be useful to someone working on a completely different kind of project?" If not, publish it separately.
### Fork-specific changes
If you maintain a fork with customizations, do not open PRs to sync your fork or push fork-specific changes upstream. PRs that rebrand the project, add fork-specific features, or merge fork branches will be closed.
### Fabricated content
PRs containing invented claims, fabricated problem descriptions, or hallucinated functionality will be closed immediately. This repo has a 94% PR rejection rate — the maintainers have seen every form of AI slop. They will notice.
### Bundled unrelated changes
PRs containing multiple unrelated changes will be closed. Split them into separate PRs.
## New Harness Support
If your PR adds support for a new harness (IDE, CLI tool, agent runner), you MUST include a session transcript proving the integration works end-to-end.
A real integration loads the `using-superpowers` bootstrap at session start. The bootstrap is what causes skills to auto-trigger at the right moments. Without it, the skills are dead weight — present on disk but never invoked.
**The acceptance test.** Open a clean session in the new harness and send exactly this user message:
> Let's make a react todo list
A working integration auto-triggers the `brainstorming` skill before any code is written. Paste the complete transcript in the PR.
**These are not real integrations and will be closed:**
- Manually copying skill files into the harness
- Wrapping with `npx skills` or similar at-runtime shims
- Anything that requires the user to opt in to skills per-session
- Anything where `brainstorming` does not auto-trigger on the acceptance test above
If you are not sure whether your integration loads the bootstrap at session start, it does not.
## Skill Changes Require Evaluation
Skills are not prose — they are code that shapes agent behavior. If you modify skill content:
- Use `superpowers:writing-skills` to develop and test changes
- Run adversarial pressure testing across multiple sessions
- Show before/after eval results in your PR
- Do not modify carefully-tuned content (Red Flags tables, rationalization lists, "human partner" language) without evidence the change is an improvement
## Understand the Project Before Contributing
Before proposing changes to skill design, workflow philosophy, or architecture, read existing skills and understand the project's design decisions. Superpowers has its own tested philosophy about skill design, agent behavior shaping, and terminology (e.g., "your human partner" is deliberate, not interchangeable with "the user"). Changes that rewrite the project's voice or restructure its approach without understanding why it exists will be rejected.
## General
- Read `.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md` before submitting
- One problem per PR
- Test on at least one harness and report results in the environment table
- Describe the problem you solved, not just what you changed

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@@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
# Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct
## Our Pledge
We as members, contributors, and leaders pledge to make participation in our
community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body
size, visible or invisible disability, ethnicity, sex characteristics, gender
identity and expression, level of experience, education, socio-economic status,
nationality, personal appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity
and orientation.
We pledge to act and interact in ways that contribute to an open, welcoming,
diverse, inclusive, and healthy community.
## Our Standards
Examples of behavior that contributes to a positive environment for our
community include:
* Demonstrating empathy and kindness toward other people
* Being respectful of differing opinions, viewpoints, and experiences
* Giving and gracefully accepting constructive feedback
* Accepting responsibility and apologizing to those affected by our mistakes,
and learning from the experience
* Focusing on what is best not just for us as individuals, but for the
overall community
Examples of unacceptable behavior include:
* The use of sexualized language or imagery, and sexual attention or
advances of any kind
* Trolling, insulting or derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
* Public or private harassment
* Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or email
address, without their explicit permission
* Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a
professional setting
## Enforcement Responsibilities
Community leaders are responsible for clarifying and enforcing our standards of
acceptable behavior and will take appropriate and fair corrective action in
response to any behavior that they deem inappropriate, threatening, offensive,
or harmful.
Community leaders have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject
comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions that are
not aligned to this Code of Conduct, and will communicate reasons for moderation
decisions when appropriate.
## Scope
This Code of Conduct applies within all community spaces, and also applies when
an individual is officially representing the community in public spaces.
Examples of representing our community include using an official e-mail address,
posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed
representative at an online or offline event.
## Enforcement
Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be
reported to the community leaders responsible for enforcement at
jesse@primeradiant.com.
All complaints will be reviewed and investigated promptly and fairly.
All community leaders are obligated to respect the privacy and security of the
reporter of any incident.
## Enforcement Guidelines
Community leaders will follow these Community Impact Guidelines in determining
the consequences for any action they deem in violation of this Code of Conduct:
### 1. Correction
**Community Impact**: Use of inappropriate language or other behavior deemed
unprofessional or unwelcome in the community.
**Consequence**: A private, written warning from community leaders, providing
clarity around the nature of the violation and an explanation of why the
behavior was inappropriate. A public apology may be requested.
### 2. Warning
**Community Impact**: A violation through a single incident or series
of actions.
**Consequence**: A warning with consequences for continued behavior. No
interaction with the people involved, including unsolicited interaction with
those enforcing the Code of Conduct, for a specified period of time. This
includes avoiding interactions in community spaces as well as external channels
like social media. Violating these terms may lead to a temporary or
permanent ban.
### 3. Temporary Ban
**Community Impact**: A serious violation of community standards, including
sustained inappropriate behavior.
**Consequence**: A temporary ban from any sort of interaction or public
communication with the community for a specified period of time. No public or
private interaction with the people involved, including unsolicited interaction
with those enforcing the Code of Conduct, is allowed during this period.
Violating these terms may lead to a permanent ban.
### 4. Permanent Ban
**Community Impact**: Demonstrating a pattern of violation of community
standards, including sustained inappropriate behavior, harassment of an
individual, or aggression toward or disparagement of classes of individuals.
**Consequence**: A permanent ban from any sort of public interaction within
the community.
## Attribution
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage],
version 2.0, available at
https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/2/0/code_of_conduct.html.
Community Impact Guidelines were inspired by [Mozilla's code of conduct
enforcement ladder](https://github.com/mozilla/diversity).
[homepage]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org
For answers to common questions about this code of conduct, see the FAQ at
https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq. Translations are available at
https://www.contributor-covenant.org/translations.

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@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
@./skills/using-superpowers/SKILL.md
@./skills/using-superpowers/references/gemini-tools.md

157
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@@ -1,6 +1,10 @@
# Superpowers # Superpowers
Superpowers is a complete software development workflow for your coding agents, built on top of a set of composable "skills" and some initial instructions that make sure your agent uses them. Superpowers is a complete software development methodology for your coding agents, built on top of a set of composable skills and some initial instructions that make sure your agent uses them.
## Quickstart
Give your agent Superpowers: [Claude Code](#claude-code), [Codex CLI](#codex-cli), [Codex App](#codex-app), [Factory Droid](#factory-droid), [Gemini CLI](#gemini-cli), [OpenCode](#opencode), [Cursor](#cursor), [GitHub Copilot CLI](#github-copilot-cli).
## How it works ## How it works
@@ -26,45 +30,126 @@ Thanks!
## Installation ## Installation
**Note:** Installation differs by platform. Claude Code has a built-in plugin system. Codex and OpenCode require manual setup. Installation differs by harness. If you use more than one, install Superpowers separately for each one.
### Claude Code (via Plugin Marketplace) ### Claude Code
In Claude Code, register the marketplace first: Superpowers is available via the [official Claude plugin marketplace](https://claude.com/plugins/superpowers)
```bash #### Official Marketplace
/plugin marketplace add obra/superpowers-marketplace
```
Then install the plugin from this marketplace: - Install the plugin from Anthropic's official marketplace:
```bash ```bash
/plugin install superpowers@superpowers-marketplace /plugin install superpowers@claude-plugins-official
``` ```
### Verify Installation #### Superpowers Marketplace
Start a new session and ask Claude to help with something that would trigger a skill (e.g., "help me plan this feature" or "let's debug this issue"). Claude should automatically invoke the relevant superpowers skill. The Superpowers marketplace provides Superpowers and some other related plugins for Claude Code.
### Codex - Register the marketplace:
Tell Codex: ```bash
/plugin marketplace add obra/superpowers-marketplace
```
``` - Install the plugin from this marketplace:
Fetch and follow instructions from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/obra/superpowers/refs/heads/main/.codex/INSTALL.md
```
**Detailed docs:** [docs/README.codex.md](docs/README.codex.md) ```bash
/plugin install superpowers@superpowers-marketplace
```
### Codex CLI
Superpowers is available via the [official Codex plugin marketplace](https://github.com/openai/plugins).
- Open the plugin search interface:
```bash
/plugins
```
- Search for Superpowers:
```bash
superpowers
```
- Select `Install Plugin`.
### Codex App
Superpowers is available via the [official Codex plugin marketplace](https://github.com/openai/plugins).
- In the Codex app, click on Plugins in the sidebar.
- You should see `Superpowers` in the Coding section.
- Click the `+` next to Superpowers and follow the prompts.
### Factory Droid
- Register the marketplace:
```bash
droid plugin marketplace add https://github.com/obra/superpowers
```
- Install the plugin:
```bash
droid plugin install superpowers@superpowers
```
### Gemini CLI
- Install the extension:
```bash
gemini extensions install https://github.com/obra/superpowers
```
- Update later:
```bash
gemini extensions update superpowers
```
### OpenCode ### OpenCode
Tell OpenCode: OpenCode uses its own plugin install; install Superpowers separately even if you
already use it in another harness.
``` - Tell OpenCode:
Fetch and follow instructions from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/obra/superpowers/refs/heads/main/.opencode/INSTALL.md
```
**Detailed docs:** [docs/README.opencode.md](docs/README.opencode.md) ```
Fetch and follow instructions from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/obra/superpowers/refs/heads/main/.opencode/INSTALL.md
```
- Detailed docs: [docs/README.opencode.md](docs/README.opencode.md)
### Cursor
- In Cursor Agent chat, install from marketplace:
```text
/add-plugin superpowers
```
- Or search for "superpowers" in the plugin marketplace.
### GitHub Copilot CLI
- Register the marketplace:
```bash
copilot plugin marketplace add obra/superpowers-marketplace
```
- Install the plugin:
```bash
copilot plugin install superpowers@superpowers-marketplace
```
## The Basic Workflow ## The Basic Workflow
@@ -117,32 +202,32 @@ Fetch and follow instructions from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/obra/superp
- **Complexity reduction** - Simplicity as primary goal - **Complexity reduction** - Simplicity as primary goal
- **Evidence over claims** - Verify before declaring success - **Evidence over claims** - Verify before declaring success
Read more: [Superpowers for Claude Code](https://blog.fsck.com/2025/10/09/superpowers/) Read [the original release announcement](https://blog.fsck.com/2025/10/09/superpowers/).
## Contributing ## Contributing
Skills live directly in this repository. To contribute: The general contribution process for Superpowers is below. Keep in mind that we don't generally accept contributions of new skills and that any updates to skills must work across all of the coding agents we support.
1. Fork the repository 1. Fork the repository
2. Create a branch for your skill 2. Switch to the 'dev' branch
3. Follow the `writing-skills` skill for creating and testing new skills 3. Create a branch for your work
4. Submit a PR 4. Follow the `writing-skills` skill for creating and testing new and modified skills
5. Submit a PR, being sure to fill in the pull request template.
See `skills/writing-skills/SKILL.md` for the complete guide. See `skills/writing-skills/SKILL.md` for the complete guide.
## Updating ## Updating
Skills update automatically when you update the plugin: Superpowers updates are somewhat coding-agent dependent, but are often automatic.
```bash
/plugin update superpowers
```
## License ## License
MIT License - see LICENSE file for details MIT License - see LICENSE file for details
## Support ## Community
Superpowers is built by [Jesse Vincent](https://blog.fsck.com) and the rest of the folks at [Prime Radiant](https://primeradiant.com).
- **Discord**: [Join us](https://discord.gg/35wsABTejz) for community support, questions, and sharing what you're building with Superpowers
- **Issues**: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/issues - **Issues**: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/issues
- **Marketplace**: https://github.com/obra/superpowers-marketplace - **Release announcements**: [Sign up](https://primeradiant.com/superpowers/) to get notified about new versions

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@@ -1,5 +1,431 @@
# Superpowers Release Notes # Superpowers Release Notes
## v5.1.0 (2026-04-30)
### Removals
- **Legacy slash commands removed** — `/brainstorm`, `/execute-plan`, and `/write-plan` are gone. They were deprecated stubs that did nothing but tell the user to invoke the corresponding skill. Invoke `superpowers:brainstorming`, `superpowers:executing-plans`, and `superpowers:writing-plans` directly instead. (#1188)
- **`superpowers:code-reviewer` named agent removed** — the agent was the plugin's only named agent and was used by exactly two skills, while every other reviewer/implementer subagent in the repo dispatches `general-purpose` with a prompt template alongside its skill. The agent's persona and checklist have been merged into `skills/requesting-code-review/code-reviewer.md` as a self-contained Task-dispatch template. Anyone dispatching `Task (superpowers:code-reviewer)` should switch to `Task (general-purpose)` with the prompt template instead. (PR #1299)
- **Integration sections removed from skills** — these were a legacy of the time before agents had native skills systems and didn't help with steering.
### Worktree Skills Rewrite
`using-git-worktrees` and `finishing-a-development-branch` now detect when the agent is already running inside an isolated worktree and prefer the harness's native worktree controls before falling back to `git worktree`. Behavior was TDD-validated and cross-platform-checked across five harnesses. (PRI-974, PR #1121)
- **Environment detection** — both skills check `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` before doing anything; if already in a linked worktree, creation is skipped entirely. A submodule guard prevents false detection.
- **Consent before creating worktrees** — `using-git-worktrees` no longer creates worktrees implicitly; the skill asks the user first. Fixes #991 (subagent-driven-development was auto-creating worktrees without consent).
- **Native tool preference (Step 1a)** — when the harness exposes its own worktree tool (e.g. Codex), the skill defers to it. The user's stated preference is respected when expressed.
- **Provenance-based cleanup** — `finishing-a-development-branch` only cleans up worktrees inside `.worktrees/` (created by superpowers); anything outside is left alone. Fixes #940 (Option 2 was incorrectly cleaning up worktrees), #999 (merge-then-remove ordering), and #238 (`cd` to repo root before `git worktree remove`).
- **Detached HEAD handling** — the finishing menu collapses to two options when there is no branch to merge from.
- **Hardcoded `/Users/jesse` paths** in skill examples replaced with generic placeholders. (#858, PR #1122)
### Contributor Guidelines for AI Agents
Two new sections at the top of `CLAUDE.md` (symlinked to `AGENTS.md`) speak directly to AI agents. An audit of the last 100 closed PRs against this repo showed a 94% rejection rate driven by AI-generated slop: agents that didn't read the PR template, opened duplicates, fabricated problem descriptions, or pushed fork- or domain-specific changes upstream.
- **Pre-submission checklist** — read the PR template, search for existing PRs, verify a real problem exists, confirm the change belongs in core, and show the human partner the complete diff before submitting.
- **What we will not accept** — third-party dependencies, "compliance" rewrites of skill content, project-specific configuration, bulk PRs, speculative fixes, domain-specific skills, fork-specific changes, fabricated content, and bundled unrelated changes.
- **New harness PRs require a session transcript** — most past new-harness integrations copied skill files or wrapped with `npx skills` instead of loading the `using-superpowers` bootstrap at session start. The acceptance test ("Let's make a react todo list" must auto-trigger `brainstorming` in a clean session) and a complete transcript are now required.
### Codex Plugin Mirror Tooling
New `sync-to-codex-plugin` script mirrors superpowers into the OpenAI Codex plugin marketplace as `prime-radiant-inc/openai-codex-plugins`. Path/user-agnostic so any team member can run it. (PR #1165)
- Clones the fork fresh into a temp directory per run, regenerates overlays inline, and opens a PR; auto-detects upstream from the script's own location and preflights `rsync`/`git`/`gh auth`/`python3`.
- `--bootstrap` flag for first-time setup; `EXCLUDES` patterns anchored to source root; `assets/` excluded.
- Mirrors `CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md`; drops the `agents/openai.yaml` overlay.
- Seeds `interface.defaultPrompt` in the mirrored `plugin.json`. (PR #1180 by @arittr)
- Codex plugin files are committed to the source repo so the sync script uses canonical versions; Codex marketplace metadata is preserved.
### OpenCode
- **Bootstrap content cached at module level** — `getBootstrapContent()` was calling `fs.existsSync` + `fs.readFileSync` + frontmatter regex on every agent step (the `experimental.chat.messages.transform` hook fires on every step in OpenCode's agent loop). Now read once, cached for the session lifetime, with a null sentinel for the missing-file case. 15 regression tests cover cache behavior, fs call counts, the injection guard, the missing-file sentinel, and cache reset. (Fixes #1202)
- **Integration tests modernized**.
- **Install caveats clarified** in the README.
### Code Review Consolidation
`requesting-code-review` is now self-contained: the persona, checklist, and dispatch template live in `skills/requesting-code-review/code-reviewer.md` and the skill dispatches `Task (general-purpose)` directly. (PR #1299)
- **Single source of truth** — the persona/checklist that previously lived in both `agents/code-reviewer.md` and the skill's placeholder template (and drifted independently) is now one file.
- **`subagent-driven-development` follows suit** — its `code-quality-reviewer-prompt.md` now dispatches `Task (general-purpose)` instead of the named agent.
- **Behavioral test added** — `tests/claude-code/test-requesting-code-review.sh` plants real bugs (SQL injection, plaintext password handling, credential logging) into a tiny project and asserts the dispatched reviewer flags every planted issue at Critical/Important severity and refuses to approve the diff.
- **Codex and Copilot workaround docs trimmed** — the "Named agent dispatch" sections in `references/codex-tools.md` and `references/copilot-tools.md` documented how to flatten a named agent into a generic dispatch. With no named agents shipping, the workaround is unnecessary; both sections were dropped.
### Subagent-Driven Development
- **No more pause every 3 tasks** — the "review after each batch (3 tasks)" cadence in `requesting-code-review` (originally for `executing-plans`) was leaking into `subagent-driven-development`. Replaced with "each task or at natural checkpoints" plus an explicit continuous-execution directive.
- **SDD integration test now runs its assertions** — three independent bugs caused the test to silently bail before printing any verification results: an unresolved `..` segment in the working-dir path, a `set -euo pipefail` interaction with `find | sort | head -1` (SIGPIPE on the producer killed the script), and a missing `--plugin-dir` on the `claude -p` invocation that caused the test to load the installed plugin instead of the working tree. All three fixed; six verification tests now actually run against a real end-to-end SDD run.
### Cursor
- **Windows SessionStart hook** routed through `run-hook.cmd` instead of invoking the extensionless `session-start` script directly. Fixes Windows opening the file in an editor instead of running it. Also removed an accidental UTF-8 BOM from `hooks-cursor.json`.
### Gemini CLI
- **Subagent dispatch mapping** — Gemini's `Task` dispatch now maps to `@agent-name` / `@generalist`, with parallel subagent dispatch documented for independent tasks.
### Skills
- **Terminology cleanups** across skill content.
### Documentation & Install
- **Factory Droid installation instructions** added to README.
- **Quickstart install links** in README. (PR #1293 by @arittr)
- **Codex plugin install guidance** updated. (PR #1288 by @arittr)
- **Codex `wait` mapping corrected** to `wait_agent` in the tools reference.
- **Install order reorganized**; Codex install instructions cleaned up.
- **Removed vestigial `CHANGELOG.md`** in favor of `RELEASE-NOTES.md` as the single source. (PR #1163 by @shaanmajid)
- **Discord invite link** fixed; release announcements link and a detailed Discord description added to the Community section.
### Community
- @shaanmajid — vestigial `CHANGELOG.md` removal (PR #1163)
- @arittr — README quickstart install links (#1293), Codex plugin install guidance (#1288), `sync-to-codex-plugin` `interface.defaultPrompt` seed (#1180)
## v5.0.7 (2026-03-31)
### GitHub Copilot CLI Support
- **SessionStart context injection** — Copilot CLI v1.0.11 added support for `additionalContext` in sessionStart hook output. The session-start hook now detects the `COPILOT_CLI` environment variable and emits the SDK-standard `{ "additionalContext": "..." }` format, giving Copilot CLI users the full superpowers bootstrap at session start. (Original fix by @culinablaz in PR #910)
- **Tool mapping** — added `references/copilot-tools.md` with the full Claude Code to Copilot CLI tool equivalence table
- **Skill and README updates** — added Copilot CLI to the `using-superpowers` skill's platform instructions and README installation section
### OpenCode Fixes
- **Skills path consistency** — the bootstrap text no longer advertises a misleading `configDir/skills/superpowers/` path that didn't match the runtime path. The agent should use the native `skill` tool, not navigate to files by path. Tests now use consistent paths derived from a single source of truth. (#847, #916)
- **Bootstrap as user message** — moved bootstrap injection from `experimental.chat.system.transform` to `experimental.chat.messages.transform`, prepending to the first user message instead of adding a system message. Avoids token bloat from system messages repeated every turn (#750) and fixes compatibility with Qwen and other models that break on multiple system messages (#894).
## v5.0.6 (2026-03-24)
### Inline Self-Review Replaces Subagent Review Loops
The subagent review loop (dispatching a fresh agent to review plans/specs) doubled execution time (~25 min overhead) without measurably improving plan quality. Regression testing across 5 versions with 5 trials each showed identical quality scores regardless of whether the review loop ran.
- **brainstorming** — replaced Spec Review Loop (subagent dispatch + 3-iteration cap) with inline Spec Self-Review checklist: placeholder scan, internal consistency, scope check, ambiguity check
- **writing-plans** — replaced Plan Review Loop (subagent dispatch + 3-iteration cap) with inline Self-Review checklist: spec coverage, placeholder scan, type consistency
- **writing-plans** — added explicit "No Placeholders" section defining plan failures (TBD, vague descriptions, undefined references, "similar to Task N")
- Self-review catches 3-5 real bugs per run in ~30s instead of ~25 min, with comparable defect rates to the subagent approach
### Brainstorm Server
- **Session directory restructured** — the brainstorm server session directory now contains two peer subdirectories: `content/` (HTML files served to the browser) and `state/` (events, server-info, pid, log). Previously, server state and user interaction data were stored alongside served content, making them accessible over HTTP. The `screen_dir` and `state_dir` paths are both included in the server-started JSON. (Reported by 吉田仁)
### Bug Fixes
- **Owner-PID lifecycle fixes** — the brainstorm server's owner-PID monitoring had two bugs causing false shutdowns within 60 seconds: (1) EPERM from cross-user PIDs (Tailscale SSH, etc.) was treated as "process dead", and (2) on WSL the grandparent PID resolves to a short-lived subprocess that exits before the first lifecycle check. Fixed by treating EPERM as "alive" and validating the owner PID at startup — if it's already dead, monitoring is disabled and the server relies on the 30-minute idle timeout. This also removes the Windows/MSYS2-specific carve-out from `start-server.sh` since the server now handles it generically. (#879)
- **writing-skills** — corrected false claim that SKILL.md frontmatter supports "only two fields"; now says "two required fields" and links to the agentskills.io specification for all supported fields (PR #882 by @arittr)
### Codex App Compatibility
- **codex-tools** — added named agent dispatch mapping documenting how to translate Claude Code's named agent types to Codex's `spawn_agent` with worker roles (PR #647 by @arittr)
- **codex-tools** — added environment detection and Codex App finishing sections for worktree-aware skills (by @arittr)
- **Design spec** — added Codex App compatibility design spec (PRI-823) covering read-only environment detection, worktree-safe skill behavior, and sandbox fallback patterns (by @arittr)
## v5.0.5 (2026-03-17)
### Bug Fixes
- **Brainstorm server ESM fix** — renamed `server.js``server.cjs` so the brainstorming server starts correctly on Node.js 22+ where the root `package.json` `"type": "module"` caused `require()` to fail. (PR #784 by @sarbojitrana, fixes #774, #780, #783)
- **Brainstorm owner-PID on Windows** — skip PID lifecycle monitoring on Windows/MSYS2 where the PID namespace is invisible to Node.js, preventing the server from self-terminating after 60 seconds. (#770, docs from PR #768 by @lucasyhzlu-debug)
- **stop-server.sh reliability** — verify the server process actually died before reporting success. SIGTERM + 2s wait + SIGKILL fallback. (#723)
### Changed
- **Execution handoff** — restore user choice between subagent-driven and inline execution after plan writing. Subagent-driven is recommended but no longer mandatory.
## v5.0.4 (2026-03-16)
### Review Loop Refinements
Dramatically reduces token usage and speeds up spec and plan reviews by eliminating unnecessary review passes and tightening reviewer focus.
- **Single whole-plan review** — plan reviewer now reviews the complete plan in one pass instead of chunk-by-chunk. Removed all chunk-related concepts (`## Chunk N:` headings, 1000-line chunk limits, per-chunk dispatch).
- **Raised the bar for blocking issues** — both spec and plan reviewer prompts now include a "Calibration" section: only flag issues that would cause real problems during implementation. Minor wording, stylistic preferences, and formatting quibbles should not block approval.
- **Reduced max review iterations** — from 5 to 3 for both spec and plan review loops. If the reviewer is calibrated correctly, 3 rounds is plenty.
- **Streamlined reviewer checklists** — spec reviewer trimmed from 7 categories to 5; plan reviewer from 7 to 4. Removed formatting-focused checks (task syntax, chunk size) in favor of substance (buildability, spec alignment).
### OpenCode
- **One-line plugin install** — OpenCode plugin now auto-registers the skills directory via a `config` hook. No symlinks or `skills.paths` config needed. Install is just adding one line to `opencode.json`. (PR #753)
- **Added `package.json`** so OpenCode can install superpowers as an npm package from git.
### Bug Fixes
- **Verify server actually stopped** — `stop-server.sh` now confirms the process is dead before reporting success. SIGTERM + 2s wait + SIGKILL fallback. Reports failure if the process survives. (PR #751)
- **Generic agent language** — brainstorm companion waiting page now says "the agent" instead of "Claude".
## v5.0.3 (2026-03-15)
### Cursor Support
- **Cursor hooks** — added `hooks/hooks-cursor.json` with Cursor's camelCase format (`sessionStart`, `version: 1`) and updated `.cursor-plugin/plugin.json` to reference it. Fixed platform detection in `session-start` to check `CURSOR_PLUGIN_ROOT` first (Cursor may also set `CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT`). (Based on PR #709)
### Bug Fixes
- **Stop firing SessionStart hook on `--resume`** — the startup hook was re-injecting context on resumed sessions, which already have the context in their conversation history. The hook now fires only on `startup`, `clear`, and `compact`.
- **Bash 5.3+ hook hang** — replaced heredoc (`cat <<EOF`) with `printf` in `hooks/session-start`. Fixes indefinite hang on macOS with Homebrew bash 5.3+ caused by a bash regression with large variable expansion in heredocs. (#572, #571)
- **POSIX-safe hook script** — replaced `${BASH_SOURCE[0]:-$0}` with `$0` in `hooks/session-start`. Fixes "Bad substitution" error on Ubuntu/Debian where `/bin/sh` is dash. (#553)
- **Portable shebangs** — replaced `#!/bin/bash` with `#!/usr/bin/env bash` in all shell scripts. Fixes execution on NixOS, FreeBSD, and macOS with Homebrew bash where `/bin/bash` is outdated or missing. (#700)
- **Brainstorm server on Windows** — auto-detect Windows/Git Bash (`OSTYPE=msys*`, `MSYSTEM`) and switch to foreground mode, fixing silent server failure caused by `nohup`/`disown` process reaping. (#737)
- **Codex docs fix** — replaced deprecated `collab` flag with `multi_agent` in Codex documentation. (PR #749)
## v5.0.2 (2026-03-11)
### Zero-Dependency Brainstorm Server
**Removed all vendored node_modules — server.js is now fully self-contained**
- Replaced Express/Chokidar/WebSocket dependencies with zero-dependency Node.js server using built-in `http`, `fs`, and `crypto` modules
- Removed ~1,200 lines of vendored `node_modules/`, `package.json`, and `package-lock.json`
- Custom WebSocket protocol implementation (RFC 6455 framing, ping/pong, proper close handshake)
- Native `fs.watch()` file watching replaces Chokidar
- Full test suite: HTTP serving, WebSocket protocol, file watching, and integration tests
### Brainstorm Server Reliability
- **Auto-exit after 30 minutes idle** — server shuts down when no clients are connected, preventing orphaned processes
- **Owner process tracking** — server monitors the parent harness PID and exits when the owning session dies
- **Liveness check** — skill verifies server is responsive before reusing an existing instance
- **Encoding fix** — proper `<meta charset="utf-8">` on served HTML pages
### Subagent Context Isolation
- All delegation skills (brainstorming, dispatching-parallel-agents, requesting-code-review, subagent-driven-development, writing-plans) now include context isolation principle
- Subagents receive only the context they need, preventing context window pollution
## v5.0.1 (2026-03-10)
### Agentskills Compliance
**Brainstorm-server moved into skill directory**
- Moved `lib/brainstorm-server/``skills/brainstorming/scripts/` per the [agentskills.io](https://agentskills.io) specification
- All `${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/lib/brainstorm-server/` references replaced with relative `scripts/` paths
- Skills are now fully portable across platforms — no platform-specific env vars needed to locate scripts
- `lib/` directory removed (was the last remaining content)
### New Features
**Gemini CLI extension**
- Native Gemini CLI extension support via `gemini-extension.json` and `GEMINI.md` at repo root
- `GEMINI.md` @imports `using-superpowers` skill and tool mapping table at session start
- Gemini CLI tool mapping reference (`skills/using-superpowers/references/gemini-tools.md`) — translates Claude Code tool names (Read, Write, Edit, Bash, etc.) to Gemini CLI equivalents (read_file, write_file, replace, etc.)
- Documents Gemini CLI limitations: no subagent support, skills fall back to `executing-plans`
- Extension root at repo root for cross-platform compatibility (avoids Windows symlink issues)
- Install instructions added to README
### Improvements
**Multi-platform brainstorm server launch**
- Per-platform launch instructions in visual-companion.md: Claude Code (default mode), Codex (auto-foreground via `CODEX_CI`), Gemini CLI (`--foreground` with `is_background`), and fallback for other environments
- Server now writes startup JSON to `$SCREEN_DIR/.server-info` so agents can find the URL and port even when stdout is hidden by background execution
**Brainstorm server dependencies bundled**
- `node_modules` vendored into the repo so the brainstorm server works immediately on fresh plugin installs without requiring `npm` at runtime
- Removed `fsevents` from bundled deps (macOS-only native binary; chokidar falls back gracefully without it)
- Fallback auto-install via `npm install` if `node_modules` is missing
**OpenCode tool mapping fix**
- `TodoWrite``todowrite` (was incorrectly mapped to `update_plan`); verified against OpenCode source
### Bug Fixes
**Windows/Linux: single quotes break SessionStart hook** (#577, #529, #644, PR #585)
- Single quotes around `${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}` in hooks.json fail on Windows (cmd.exe doesn't recognize single quotes as path delimiters) and on Linux (single quotes prevent variable expansion)
- Fix: replaced single quotes with escaped double quotes — works across macOS bash, Windows cmd.exe, Windows Git Bash, and Linux, with and without spaces in paths
- Verified on Windows 11 (NT 10.0.26200.0) with Claude Code 2.1.72 and Git for Windows
**Brainstorming spec review loop skipped** (#677)
- The spec review loop (dispatch spec-document-reviewer subagent, iterate until approved) existed in the prose "After the Design" section but was missing from the checklist and process flow diagram
- Since agents follow the diagram and checklist more reliably than prose, the spec review step was being skipped entirely
- Added step 7 (spec review loop) to the checklist and corresponding nodes to the dot graph
- Tested with `claude --plugin-dir` and `claude-session-driver`: worker now correctly dispatches the reviewer
**Cursor install command** (PR #676)
- Fixed Cursor install command in README: `/plugin-add``/add-plugin` (confirmed via Cursor 2.5 release announcement)
**User review gate in brainstorming** (#565)
- Added explicit user review step between spec completion and writing-plans handoff
- User must approve the spec before implementation planning begins
- Checklist, process flow, and prose updated with the new gate
**Session-start hook emits context only once per platform**
- Hook now detects whether it's running in Claude Code or another platform
- Emits `hookSpecificOutput` for Claude Code, `additional_context` for others — prevents double context injection
**Linting fix in token analysis script**
- `except:``except Exception:` in `tests/claude-code/analyze-token-usage.py`
### Maintenance
**Removed dead code**
- Deleted `lib/skills-core.js` and its test (`tests/opencode/test-skills-core.js`) — unused since February 2026
- Removed skills-core existence check from `tests/opencode/test-plugin-loading.sh`
### Community
- @karuturi — Claude Code official marketplace install instructions (PR #610)
- @mvanhorn — session-start hook dual-emit fix, OpenCode tool mapping fix
- @daniel-graham — linting fix for bare except
- PR #585 author — Windows/Linux hooks quoting fix
---
## v5.0.0 (2026-03-09)
### Breaking Changes
**Specs and plans directory restructured**
- Specs (brainstorming output) now save to `docs/superpowers/specs/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-design.md`
- Plans (writing-plans output) now save to `docs/superpowers/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<feature-name>.md`
- User preferences for spec/plan locations override these defaults
- All internal skill references, test files, and example paths updated to match
- Migration: move existing files from `docs/plans/` to new locations if desired
**Subagent-driven development mandatory on capable harnesses**
Writing-plans no longer offers a choice between subagent-driven and executing-plans. On harnesses with subagent support (Claude Code, Codex), subagent-driven-development is required. Executing-plans is reserved for harnesses without subagent capability, and now tells the user that Superpowers works better on a subagent-capable platform.
**Executing-plans no longer batches**
Removed the "execute 3 tasks then stop for review" pattern. Plans now execute continuously, stopping only for blockers.
**Slash commands deprecated**
`/brainstorm`, `/write-plan`, and `/execute-plan` now show deprecation notices pointing users to the corresponding skills. Commands will be removed in the next major release.
### New Features
**Visual brainstorming companion**
Optional browser-based companion for brainstorming sessions. When a topic would benefit from visuals, the brainstorming skill offers to show mockups, diagrams, comparisons, and other content in a browser window alongside terminal conversation.
- `lib/brainstorm-server/` — WebSocket server with browser helper library, session management scripts, and dark/light themed frame template ("Superpowers Brainstorming" with GitHub link)
- `skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md` — Progressive disclosure guide for server workflow, screen authoring, and feedback collection
- Brainstorming skill adds a visual companion decision point to its process flow: after exploring project context, the skill evaluates whether upcoming questions involve visual content and offers the companion in its own message
- Per-question decision: even after accepting, each question is evaluated for whether browser or terminal is more appropriate
- Integration tests in `tests/brainstorm-server/`
**Document review system**
Automated review loops for spec and plan documents using subagent dispatch:
- `skills/brainstorming/spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md` — Reviewer checks completeness, consistency, architecture, and YAGNI
- `skills/writing-plans/plan-document-reviewer-prompt.md` — Reviewer checks spec alignment, task decomposition, file structure, and file size
- Brainstorming dispatches spec reviewer after writing the design doc
- Writing-plans includes chunk-based plan review loop after each section
- Review loops repeat until approved or escalate after 5 iterations
- End-to-end tests in `tests/claude-code/test-document-review-system.sh`
- Design spec and implementation plan in `docs/superpowers/`
**Architecture guidance across the skill pipeline**
Design-for-isolation and file-size-awareness guidance added to brainstorming, writing-plans, and subagent-driven-development:
- **Brainstorming** — New sections: "Design for isolation and clarity" (clear boundaries, well-defined interfaces, independently testable units) and "Working in existing codebases" (follow existing patterns, targeted improvements only)
- **Writing-plans** — New "File Structure" section: map out files and responsibilities before defining tasks. New "Scope Check" backstop: catch multi-subsystem specs that should have been decomposed during brainstorming
- **SDD implementer** — New "Code Organization" section (follow plan's file structure, report concerns about growing files) and "When You're in Over Your Head" escalation guidance
- **SDD code quality reviewer** — Now checks architecture, unit decomposition, plan conformance, and file growth
- **Spec/plan reviewers** — Architecture and file size added to review criteria
- **Scope assessment** — Brainstorming now assesses whether a project is too large for a single spec. Multi-subsystem requests are flagged early and decomposed into sub-projects, each with its own spec → plan → implementation cycle
**Subagent-driven development improvements**
- **Model selection** — Guidance for choosing model capability by task type: cheap models for mechanical implementation, standard for integration, capable for architecture and review
- **Implementer status protocol** — Subagents now report DONE, DONE_WITH_CONCERNS, BLOCKED, or NEEDS_CONTEXT. Controller handles each status appropriately: re-dispatching with more context, upgrading model capability, breaking tasks apart, or escalating to human
### Improvements
**Instruction priority hierarchy**
Added explicit priority ordering to using-superpowers:
1. User's explicit instructions (CLAUDE.md, AGENTS.md, direct requests) — highest priority
2. Superpowers skills — override default system behavior
3. Default system prompt — lowest priority
If CLAUDE.md or AGENTS.md says "don't use TDD" and a skill says "always use TDD," the user's instructions win.
**SUBAGENT-STOP gate**
Added `<SUBAGENT-STOP>` block to using-superpowers. Subagents dispatched for specific tasks now skip the skill instead of activating the 1% rule and invoking full skill workflows.
**Multi-platform improvements**
- Codex tool mapping moved to progressive disclosure reference file (`references/codex-tools.md`)
- Platform Adaptation pointer added so non-Claude-Code platforms can find tool equivalents
- Plan headers now address "agentic workers" instead of "Claude" specifically
- Collab feature requirement documented in `docs/README.codex.md`
**Writing-plans template updates**
- Plan steps now use checkbox syntax (`- [ ] **Step N:**`) for progress tracking
- Plan header references both subagent-driven-development and executing-plans with platform-aware routing
---
## v4.3.1 (2026-02-21)
### Added
**Cursor support**
Superpowers now works with Cursor's plugin system. Includes a `.cursor-plugin/plugin.json` manifest and Cursor-specific installation instructions in the README. The SessionStart hook output now includes an `additional_context` field alongside the existing `hookSpecificOutput.additionalContext` for Cursor hook compatibility.
### Fixed
**Windows: Restored polyglot wrapper for reliable hook execution (#518, #504, #491, #487, #466, #440)**
Claude Code's `.sh` auto-detection on Windows was prepending `bash` to the hook command, breaking execution. The fix:
- Renamed `session-start.sh` to `session-start` (extensionless) so auto-detection doesn't interfere
- Restored `run-hook.cmd` polyglot wrapper with multi-location bash discovery (standard Git for Windows paths, then PATH fallback)
- Exits silently if no bash is found rather than erroring
- On Unix, the wrapper runs the script directly via `exec bash`
- Uses POSIX-safe `dirname "$0"` path resolution (works on dash/sh, not just bash)
This fixes SessionStart failures on Windows with spaces in paths, missing WSL, `set -euo pipefail` fragility on MSYS, and backslash mangling.
## v4.3.0 (2026-02-12)
This fix should dramatically improve superpowers skills compliance and should reduce the chances of Claude entering its native plan mode unintentionally.
### Changed
**Brainstorming skill now enforces its workflow instead of describing it**
Models were skipping the design phase and jumping straight to implementation skills like frontend-design, or collapsing the entire brainstorming process into a single text block. The skill now uses hard gates, a mandatory checklist, and a graphviz process flow to enforce compliance:
- `<HARD-GATE>`: no implementation skills, code, or scaffolding until design is presented and user approves
- Explicit checklist (6 items) that must be created as tasks and completed in order
- Graphviz process flow with `writing-plans` as the only valid terminal state
- Anti-pattern callout for "this is too simple to need a design" — the exact rationalization models use to skip the process
- Design section sizing based on section complexity, not project complexity
**Using-superpowers workflow graph intercepts EnterPlanMode**
Added an `EnterPlanMode` intercept to the skill flow graph. When the model is about to enter Claude's native plan mode, it checks whether brainstorming has happened and routes through the brainstorming skill instead. Plan mode is never entered.
### Fixed
**SessionStart hook now runs synchronously**
Changed `async: true` to `async: false` in hooks.json. When async, the hook could fail to complete before the model's first turn, meaning using-superpowers instructions weren't in context for the first message.
## v4.2.0 (2026-02-05) ## v4.2.0 (2026-02-05)
### Breaking Changes ### Breaking Changes

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---
name: code-reviewer
description: |
Use this agent when a major project step has been completed and needs to be reviewed against the original plan and coding standards. Examples: <example>Context: The user is creating a code-review agent that should be called after a logical chunk of code is written. user: "I've finished implementing the user authentication system as outlined in step 3 of our plan" assistant: "Great work! Now let me use the code-reviewer agent to review the implementation against our plan and coding standards" <commentary>Since a major project step has been completed, use the code-reviewer agent to validate the work against the plan and identify any issues.</commentary></example> <example>Context: User has completed a significant feature implementation. user: "The API endpoints for the task management system are now complete - that covers step 2 from our architecture document" assistant: "Excellent! Let me have the code-reviewer agent examine this implementation to ensure it aligns with our plan and follows best practices" <commentary>A numbered step from the planning document has been completed, so the code-reviewer agent should review the work.</commentary></example>
model: inherit
---
You are a Senior Code Reviewer with expertise in software architecture, design patterns, and best practices. Your role is to review completed project steps against original plans and ensure code quality standards are met.
When reviewing completed work, you will:
1. **Plan Alignment Analysis**:
- Compare the implementation against the original planning document or step description
- Identify any deviations from the planned approach, architecture, or requirements
- Assess whether deviations are justified improvements or problematic departures
- Verify that all planned functionality has been implemented
2. **Code Quality Assessment**:
- Review code for adherence to established patterns and conventions
- Check for proper error handling, type safety, and defensive programming
- Evaluate code organization, naming conventions, and maintainability
- Assess test coverage and quality of test implementations
- Look for potential security vulnerabilities or performance issues
3. **Architecture and Design Review**:
- Ensure the implementation follows SOLID principles and established architectural patterns
- Check for proper separation of concerns and loose coupling
- Verify that the code integrates well with existing systems
- Assess scalability and extensibility considerations
4. **Documentation and Standards**:
- Verify that code includes appropriate comments and documentation
- Check that file headers, function documentation, and inline comments are present and accurate
- Ensure adherence to project-specific coding standards and conventions
5. **Issue Identification and Recommendations**:
- Clearly categorize issues as: Critical (must fix), Important (should fix), or Suggestions (nice to have)
- For each issue, provide specific examples and actionable recommendations
- When you identify plan deviations, explain whether they're problematic or beneficial
- Suggest specific improvements with code examples when helpful
6. **Communication Protocol**:
- If you find significant deviations from the plan, ask the coding agent to review and confirm the changes
- If you identify issues with the original plan itself, recommend plan updates
- For implementation problems, provide clear guidance on fixes needed
- Always acknowledge what was done well before highlighting issues
Your output should be structured, actionable, and focused on helping maintain high code quality while ensuring project goals are met. Be thorough but concise, and always provide constructive feedback that helps improve both the current implementation and future development practices.

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---
description: "You MUST use this before any creative work - creating features, building components, adding functionality, or modifying behavior. Explores requirements and design before implementation."
disable-model-invocation: true
---
Invoke the superpowers:brainstorming skill and follow it exactly as presented to you

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---
description: Execute plan in batches with review checkpoints
disable-model-invocation: true
---
Invoke the superpowers:executing-plans skill and follow it exactly as presented to you

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@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
---
description: Create detailed implementation plan with bite-sized tasks
disable-model-invocation: true
---
Invoke the superpowers:writing-plans skill and follow it exactly as presented to you

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@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
# Superpowers for Codex
Guide for using Superpowers with OpenAI Codex via native skill discovery.
## Quick Install
Tell Codex:
```
Fetch and follow instructions from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/obra/superpowers/refs/heads/main/.codex/INSTALL.md
```
## Manual Installation
### Prerequisites
- OpenAI Codex CLI
- Git
### Steps
1. Clone the repo:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git ~/.codex/superpowers
```
2. Create the skills symlink:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.agents/skills
ln -s ~/.codex/superpowers/skills ~/.agents/skills/superpowers
```
3. Restart Codex.
### Windows
Use a junction instead of a symlink (works without Developer Mode):
```powershell
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.agents\skills"
cmd /c mklink /J "$env:USERPROFILE\.agents\skills\superpowers" "$env:USERPROFILE\.codex\superpowers\skills"
```
## How It Works
Codex has native skill discovery — it scans `~/.agents/skills/` at startup, parses SKILL.md frontmatter, and loads skills on demand. Superpowers skills are made visible through a single symlink:
```
~/.agents/skills/superpowers/ → ~/.codex/superpowers/skills/
```
The `using-superpowers` skill is discovered automatically and enforces skill usage discipline — no additional configuration needed.
## Usage
Skills are discovered automatically. Codex activates them when:
- You mention a skill by name (e.g., "use brainstorming")
- The task matches a skill's description
- The `using-superpowers` skill directs Codex to use one
### Personal Skills
Create your own skills in `~/.agents/skills/`:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.agents/skills/my-skill
```
Create `~/.agents/skills/my-skill/SKILL.md`:
```markdown
---
name: my-skill
description: Use when [condition] - [what it does]
---
# My Skill
[Your skill content here]
```
The `description` field is how Codex decides when to activate a skill automatically — write it as a clear trigger condition.
## Updating
```bash
cd ~/.codex/superpowers && git pull
```
Skills update instantly through the symlink.
## Uninstalling
```bash
rm ~/.agents/skills/superpowers
```
**Windows (PowerShell):**
```powershell
Remove-Item "$env:USERPROFILE\.agents\skills\superpowers"
```
Optionally delete the clone: `rm -rf ~/.codex/superpowers` (Windows: `Remove-Item -Recurse -Force "$env:USERPROFILE\.codex\superpowers"`).
## Troubleshooting
### Skills not showing up
1. Verify the symlink: `ls -la ~/.agents/skills/superpowers`
2. Check skills exist: `ls ~/.codex/superpowers/skills`
3. Restart Codex — skills are discovered at startup
### Windows junction issues
Junctions normally work without special permissions. If creation fails, try running PowerShell as administrator.
## Getting Help
- Report issues: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/issues
- Main documentation: https://github.com/obra/superpowers

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@@ -2,169 +2,40 @@
Complete guide for using Superpowers with [OpenCode.ai](https://opencode.ai). Complete guide for using Superpowers with [OpenCode.ai](https://opencode.ai).
## Quick Install ## Installation
Tell OpenCode: Add superpowers to the `plugin` array in your `opencode.json` (global or project-level):
``` ```json
Clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers to ~/.config/opencode/superpowers, then create directory ~/.config/opencode/plugins, then symlink ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/.opencode/plugins/superpowers.js to ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js, then symlink ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/skills to ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers, then restart opencode. {
"plugin": ["superpowers@git+https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git"]
}
``` ```
## Manual Installation Restart OpenCode. The plugin installs through OpenCode's plugin manager and
registers all skills.
### Prerequisites Verify by asking: "Tell me about your superpowers"
- [OpenCode.ai](https://opencode.ai) installed OpenCode uses its own plugin install. If you also use Claude Code, Codex, or
- Git installed another harness, install Superpowers separately for each one.
### macOS / Linux ### Migrating from the old symlink-based install
If you previously installed superpowers using `git clone` and symlinks, remove the old setup:
```bash ```bash
# 1. Install Superpowers (or update existing) # Remove old symlinks
if [ -d ~/.config/opencode/superpowers ]; then
cd ~/.config/opencode/superpowers && git pull
else
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git ~/.config/opencode/superpowers
fi
# 2. Create directories
mkdir -p ~/.config/opencode/plugins ~/.config/opencode/skills
# 3. Remove old symlinks/directories if they exist
rm -f ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js rm -f ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js
rm -rf ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers rm -rf ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers
# 4. Create symlinks # Optionally remove the cloned repo
ln -s ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/.opencode/plugins/superpowers.js ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js rm -rf ~/.config/opencode/superpowers
ln -s ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/skills ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers
# 5. Restart OpenCode # Remove skills.paths from opencode.json if you added one for superpowers
``` ```
#### Verify Installation Then follow the installation steps above.
```bash
ls -l ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js
ls -l ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers
```
Both should show symlinks pointing to the superpowers directory.
### Windows
**Prerequisites:**
- Git installed
- Either **Developer Mode** enabled OR **Administrator privileges**
- Windows 10: Settings → Update & Security → For developers
- Windows 11: Settings → System → For developers
Pick your shell below: [Command Prompt](#command-prompt) | [PowerShell](#powershell) | [Git Bash](#git-bash)
#### Command Prompt
Run as Administrator, or with Developer Mode enabled:
```cmd
:: 1. Install Superpowers
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\superpowers"
:: 2. Create directories
mkdir "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\plugins" 2>nul
mkdir "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\skills" 2>nul
:: 3. Remove existing links (safe for reinstalls)
del "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\plugins\superpowers.js" 2>nul
rmdir "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\skills\superpowers" 2>nul
:: 4. Create plugin symlink (requires Developer Mode or Admin)
mklink "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\plugins\superpowers.js" "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\superpowers\.opencode\plugins\superpowers.js"
:: 5. Create skills junction (works without special privileges)
mklink /J "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\skills\superpowers" "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\superpowers\skills"
:: 6. Restart OpenCode
```
#### PowerShell
Run as Administrator, or with Developer Mode enabled:
```powershell
# 1. Install Superpowers
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\superpowers"
# 2. Create directories
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\plugins"
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\skills"
# 3. Remove existing links (safe for reinstalls)
Remove-Item "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\plugins\superpowers.js" -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
Remove-Item "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\skills\superpowers" -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
# 4. Create plugin symlink (requires Developer Mode or Admin)
New-Item -ItemType SymbolicLink -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\plugins\superpowers.js" -Target "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\superpowers\.opencode\plugins\superpowers.js"
# 5. Create skills junction (works without special privileges)
New-Item -ItemType Junction -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\skills\superpowers" -Target "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\superpowers\skills"
# 6. Restart OpenCode
```
#### Git Bash
Note: Git Bash's native `ln` command copies files instead of creating symlinks. Use `cmd //c mklink` instead (the `//c` is Git Bash syntax for `/c`).
```bash
# 1. Install Superpowers
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git ~/.config/opencode/superpowers
# 2. Create directories
mkdir -p ~/.config/opencode/plugins ~/.config/opencode/skills
# 3. Remove existing links (safe for reinstalls)
rm -f ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js 2>/dev/null
rm -rf ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers 2>/dev/null
# 4. Create plugin symlink (requires Developer Mode or Admin)
cmd //c "mklink \"$(cygpath -w ~/.config/opencode/plugins/superpowers.js)\" \"$(cygpath -w ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/.opencode/plugins/superpowers.js)\""
# 5. Create skills junction (works without special privileges)
cmd //c "mklink /J \"$(cygpath -w ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers)\" \"$(cygpath -w ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/skills)\""
# 6. Restart OpenCode
```
#### WSL Users
If running OpenCode inside WSL, use the [macOS / Linux](#macos--linux) instructions instead.
#### Verify Installation
**Command Prompt:**
```cmd
dir /AL "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\plugins"
dir /AL "%USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\skills"
```
**PowerShell:**
```powershell
Get-ChildItem "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\plugins" | Where-Object { $_.LinkType }
Get-ChildItem "$env:USERPROFILE\.config\opencode\skills" | Where-Object { $_.LinkType }
```
Look for `<SYMLINK>` or `<JUNCTION>` in the output.
#### Troubleshooting Windows
**"You do not have sufficient privilege" error:**
- Enable Developer Mode in Windows Settings, OR
- Right-click your terminal → "Run as Administrator"
**"Cannot create a file when that file already exists":**
- Run the removal commands (step 3) first, then retry
**Symlinks not working after git clone:**
- Run `git config --global core.symlinks true` and re-clone
## Usage ## Usage
@@ -178,8 +49,6 @@ use skill tool to list skills
### Loading a Skill ### Loading a Skill
Use OpenCode's native `skill` tool to load a specific skill:
``` ```
use skill tool to load superpowers/brainstorming use skill tool to load superpowers/brainstorming
``` ```
@@ -207,124 +76,82 @@ description: Use when [condition] - [what it does]
### Project Skills ### Project Skills
Create project-specific skills in your OpenCode project: Create project-specific skills in `.opencode/skills/` within your project.
```bash **Skill Priority:** Project skills > Personal skills > Superpowers skills
# In your OpenCode project
mkdir -p .opencode/skills/my-project-skill
```
Create `.opencode/skills/my-project-skill/SKILL.md`:
```markdown
---
name: my-project-skill
description: Use when [condition] - [what it does]
---
# My Project Skill
[Your skill content here]
```
## Skill Locations
OpenCode discovers skills from these locations:
1. **Project skills** (`.opencode/skills/`) - Highest priority
2. **Personal skills** (`~/.config/opencode/skills/`)
3. **Superpowers skills** (`~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers/`) - via symlink
## Features
### Automatic Context Injection
The plugin automatically injects superpowers context via the `experimental.chat.system.transform` hook. This adds the "using-superpowers" skill content to the system prompt on every request.
### Native Skills Integration
Superpowers uses OpenCode's native `skill` tool for skill discovery and loading. Skills are symlinked into `~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers/` so they appear alongside your personal and project skills.
### Tool Mapping
Skills written for Claude Code are automatically adapted for OpenCode. The bootstrap provides mapping instructions:
- `TodoWrite``update_plan`
- `Task` with subagents → OpenCode's `@mention` system
- `Skill` tool → OpenCode's native `skill` tool
- File operations → Native OpenCode tools
## Architecture
### Plugin Structure
**Location:** `~/.config/opencode/superpowers/.opencode/plugins/superpowers.js`
**Components:**
- `experimental.chat.system.transform` hook for bootstrap injection
- Reads and injects the "using-superpowers" skill content
### Skills
**Location:** `~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers/` (symlink to `~/.config/opencode/superpowers/skills/`)
Skills are discovered by OpenCode's native skill system. Each skill has a `SKILL.md` file with YAML frontmatter.
## Updating ## Updating
```bash OpenCode installs Superpowers through a git-backed package spec. Some OpenCode
cd ~/.config/opencode/superpowers and Bun versions pin that resolved git dependency in a lockfile or cache, so a
git pull restart may not pick up the newest Superpowers commit. If updates do not appear,
clear OpenCode's package cache or reinstall the plugin.
To pin a specific version, use a branch or tag:
```json
{
"plugin": ["superpowers@git+https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git#v5.0.3"]
}
``` ```
Restart OpenCode to load the updates. ## How It Works
The plugin does two things:
1. **Injects bootstrap context** via the `experimental.chat.system.transform` hook, adding superpowers awareness to every conversation.
2. **Registers the skills directory** via the `config` hook, so OpenCode discovers all superpowers skills without symlinks or manual config.
### Tool Mapping
Skills written for Claude Code are automatically adapted for OpenCode:
- `TodoWrite``todowrite`
- `Task` with subagents → OpenCode's `@mention` system
- `Skill` tool → OpenCode's native `skill` tool
- File operations → Native OpenCode tools
## Troubleshooting ## Troubleshooting
### Plugin not loading ### Plugin not loading
1. Check plugin exists: `ls ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/.opencode/plugins/superpowers.js` 1. Check OpenCode logs: `opencode run --print-logs "hello" 2>&1 | grep -i superpowers`
2. Check symlink/junction: `ls -l ~/.config/opencode/plugins/` (macOS/Linux) or `dir /AL %USERPROFILE%\.config\opencode\plugins` (Windows) 2. Verify the plugin line in your `opencode.json` is correct
3. Check OpenCode logs: `opencode run "test" --print-logs --log-level DEBUG` 3. Make sure you're running a recent version of OpenCode
4. Look for plugin loading message in logs
### Windows install issues
Some Windows OpenCode builds have upstream installer issues with git-backed
plugin specs, including cache paths for `git+https` URLs and Bun not finding
`git.exe` even when it works in a normal terminal. If OpenCode cannot install
the plugin, try installing with system npm and pointing OpenCode at the local
package:
```powershell
npm install superpowers@git+https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git --prefix "$HOME\.config\opencode"
```
Then use the installed package path in `opencode.json`:
```json
{
"plugin": ["~/.config/opencode/node_modules/superpowers"]
}
```
### Skills not found ### Skills not found
1. Verify skills symlink: `ls -l ~/.config/opencode/skills/superpowers` (should point to superpowers/skills/) 1. Use OpenCode's `skill` tool to list available skills
2. Use OpenCode's `skill` tool to list available skills 2. Check that the plugin is loading (see above)
3. Check skill structure: each skill needs a `SKILL.md` file with valid frontmatter 3. Each skill needs a `SKILL.md` file with valid YAML frontmatter
### Windows: Module not found error
If you see `Cannot find module` errors on Windows:
- **Cause:** Git Bash `ln -sf` copies files instead of creating symlinks
- **Fix:** Use `mklink /J` directory junctions instead (see Windows installation steps)
### Bootstrap not appearing ### Bootstrap not appearing
1. Verify using-superpowers skill exists: `ls ~/.config/opencode/superpowers/skills/using-superpowers/SKILL.md` 1. Check OpenCode version supports `experimental.chat.system.transform` hook
2. Check OpenCode version supports `experimental.chat.system.transform` hook 2. Restart OpenCode after config changes
3. Restart OpenCode after plugin changes
## Getting Help ## Getting Help
- Report issues: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/issues - Report issues: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/issues
- Main documentation: https://github.com/obra/superpowers - Main documentation: https://github.com/obra/superpowers
- OpenCode docs: https://opencode.ai/docs/ - OpenCode docs: https://opencode.ai/docs/
## Testing
Verify your installation:
```bash
# Check plugin loads
opencode run --print-logs "hello" 2>&1 | grep -i superpowers
# Check skills are discoverable
opencode run "use skill tool to list all skills" 2>&1 | grep -i superpowers
# Check bootstrap injection
opencode run "what superpowers do you have?"
```
The agent should mention having superpowers and be able to list skills from `superpowers/`.

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@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# OpenCode Support Implementation Plan # OpenCode Support Implementation Plan
> **For Claude:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task. > **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task.
**Goal:** Add full superpowers support for OpenCode.ai with a native JavaScript plugin that shares core functionality with the existing Codex implementation. **Goal:** Add full superpowers support for OpenCode.ai with a native JavaScript plugin that shares core functionality with the existing Codex implementation.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,571 @@
# Visual Brainstorming Companion Implementation Plan
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task.
**Goal:** Give Claude a browser-based visual companion for brainstorming sessions - show mockups, prototypes, and interactive choices alongside terminal conversation.
**Architecture:** Claude writes HTML to a temp file. A local Node.js server watches that file and serves it with an auto-injected helper library. User interactions flow via WebSocket to server stdout, which Claude sees in background task output.
**Tech Stack:** Node.js, Express, ws (WebSocket), chokidar (file watching)
---
## Task 1: Create the Server Foundation
**Files:**
- Create: `lib/brainstorm-server/index.js`
- Create: `lib/brainstorm-server/package.json`
**Step 1: Create package.json**
```json
{
"name": "brainstorm-server",
"version": "1.0.0",
"description": "Visual brainstorming companion server for Claude Code",
"main": "index.js",
"dependencies": {
"chokidar": "^3.5.3",
"express": "^4.18.2",
"ws": "^8.14.2"
}
}
```
**Step 2: Create minimal server that starts**
```javascript
const express = require('express');
const http = require('http');
const WebSocket = require('ws');
const chokidar = require('chokidar');
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const PORT = process.env.BRAINSTORM_PORT || 3333;
const SCREEN_FILE = process.env.BRAINSTORM_SCREEN || '/tmp/brainstorm/screen.html';
const SCREEN_DIR = path.dirname(SCREEN_FILE);
// Ensure screen directory exists
if (!fs.existsSync(SCREEN_DIR)) {
fs.mkdirSync(SCREEN_DIR, { recursive: true });
}
// Create default screen if none exists
if (!fs.existsSync(SCREEN_FILE)) {
fs.writeFileSync(SCREEN_FILE, `<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Brainstorm Companion</title>
<style>
body { font-family: system-ui, sans-serif; padding: 2rem; max-width: 800px; margin: 0 auto; }
h1 { color: #333; }
p { color: #666; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Brainstorm Companion</h1>
<p>Waiting for Claude to push a screen...</p>
</body>
</html>`);
}
const app = express();
const server = http.createServer(app);
const wss = new WebSocket.Server({ server });
// Track connected browsers for reload notifications
const clients = new Set();
wss.on('connection', (ws) => {
clients.add(ws);
ws.on('close', () => clients.delete(ws));
ws.on('message', (data) => {
// User interaction event - write to stdout for Claude
const event = JSON.parse(data.toString());
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'user-event', ...event }));
});
});
// Serve current screen with helper.js injected
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
let html = fs.readFileSync(SCREEN_FILE, 'utf-8');
// Inject helper script before </body>
const helperScript = fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'helper.js'), 'utf-8');
const injection = `<script>\n${helperScript}\n</script>`;
if (html.includes('</body>')) {
html = html.replace('</body>', `${injection}\n</body>`);
} else {
html += injection;
}
res.type('html').send(html);
});
// Watch for screen file changes
chokidar.watch(SCREEN_FILE).on('change', () => {
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'screen-updated', file: SCREEN_FILE }));
// Notify all browsers to reload
clients.forEach(ws => {
if (ws.readyState === WebSocket.OPEN) {
ws.send(JSON.stringify({ type: 'reload' }));
}
});
});
server.listen(PORT, '127.0.0.1', () => {
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'server-started', port: PORT, url: `http://localhost:${PORT}` }));
});
```
**Step 3: Run npm install**
Run: `cd lib/brainstorm-server && npm install`
Expected: Dependencies installed
**Step 4: Test server starts**
Run: `cd lib/brainstorm-server && timeout 3 node index.js || true`
Expected: See JSON with `server-started` and port info
**Step 5: Commit**
```bash
git add lib/brainstorm-server/
git commit -m "feat: add brainstorm server foundation"
```
---
## Task 2: Create the Helper Library
**Files:**
- Create: `lib/brainstorm-server/helper.js`
**Step 1: Create helper.js with event auto-capture**
```javascript
(function() {
const WS_URL = 'ws://' + window.location.host;
let ws = null;
let eventQueue = [];
function connect() {
ws = new WebSocket(WS_URL);
ws.onopen = () => {
// Send any queued events
eventQueue.forEach(e => ws.send(JSON.stringify(e)));
eventQueue = [];
};
ws.onmessage = (msg) => {
const data = JSON.parse(msg.data);
if (data.type === 'reload') {
window.location.reload();
}
};
ws.onclose = () => {
// Reconnect after 1 second
setTimeout(connect, 1000);
};
}
function send(event) {
event.timestamp = Date.now();
if (ws && ws.readyState === WebSocket.OPEN) {
ws.send(JSON.stringify(event));
} else {
eventQueue.push(event);
}
}
// Auto-capture clicks on interactive elements
document.addEventListener('click', (e) => {
const target = e.target.closest('button, a, [data-choice], [role="button"], input[type="submit"]');
if (!target) return;
// Don't capture regular link navigation
if (target.tagName === 'A' && !target.dataset.choice) return;
e.preventDefault();
send({
type: 'click',
text: target.textContent.trim(),
choice: target.dataset.choice || null,
id: target.id || null,
className: target.className || null
});
});
// Auto-capture form submissions
document.addEventListener('submit', (e) => {
e.preventDefault();
const form = e.target;
const formData = new FormData(form);
const data = {};
formData.forEach((value, key) => { data[key] = value; });
send({
type: 'submit',
formId: form.id || null,
formName: form.name || null,
data: data
});
});
// Auto-capture input changes (debounced)
let inputTimeout = null;
document.addEventListener('input', (e) => {
const target = e.target;
if (!target.matches('input, textarea, select')) return;
clearTimeout(inputTimeout);
inputTimeout = setTimeout(() => {
send({
type: 'input',
name: target.name || null,
id: target.id || null,
value: target.value,
inputType: target.type || target.tagName.toLowerCase()
});
}, 500); // 500ms debounce
});
// Expose for explicit use if needed
window.brainstorm = {
send: send,
choice: (value, metadata = {}) => send({ type: 'choice', value, ...metadata })
};
connect();
})();
```
**Step 2: Verify helper.js is syntactically valid**
Run: `node -c lib/brainstorm-server/helper.js`
Expected: No syntax errors
**Step 3: Commit**
```bash
git add lib/brainstorm-server/helper.js
git commit -m "feat: add browser helper library for event capture"
```
---
## Task 3: Write Tests for the Server
**Files:**
- Create: `tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js`
- Create: `tests/brainstorm-server/package.json`
**Step 1: Create test package.json**
```json
{
"name": "brainstorm-server-tests",
"version": "1.0.0",
"scripts": {
"test": "node server.test.js"
}
}
```
**Step 2: Write server tests**
```javascript
const { spawn } = require('child_process');
const http = require('http');
const WebSocket = require('ws');
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const assert = require('assert');
const SERVER_PATH = path.join(__dirname, '../../lib/brainstorm-server/index.js');
const TEST_PORT = 3334;
const TEST_SCREEN = '/tmp/brainstorm-test/screen.html';
// Clean up test directory
function cleanup() {
if (fs.existsSync(path.dirname(TEST_SCREEN))) {
fs.rmSync(path.dirname(TEST_SCREEN), { recursive: true });
}
}
async function sleep(ms) {
return new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, ms));
}
async function fetch(url) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
http.get(url, (res) => {
let data = '';
res.on('data', chunk => data += chunk);
res.on('end', () => resolve({ status: res.statusCode, body: data }));
}).on('error', reject);
});
}
async function runTests() {
cleanup();
// Start server
const server = spawn('node', [SERVER_PATH], {
env: { ...process.env, BRAINSTORM_PORT: TEST_PORT, BRAINSTORM_SCREEN: TEST_SCREEN }
});
let stdout = '';
server.stdout.on('data', (data) => { stdout += data.toString(); });
server.stderr.on('data', (data) => { console.error('Server stderr:', data.toString()); });
await sleep(1000); // Wait for server to start
try {
// Test 1: Server starts and outputs JSON
console.log('Test 1: Server startup message');
assert(stdout.includes('server-started'), 'Should output server-started');
assert(stdout.includes(TEST_PORT.toString()), 'Should include port');
console.log(' PASS');
// Test 2: GET / returns HTML with helper injected
console.log('Test 2: Serves HTML with helper injected');
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert.strictEqual(res.status, 200);
assert(res.body.includes('brainstorm'), 'Should include brainstorm content');
assert(res.body.includes('WebSocket'), 'Should have helper.js injected');
console.log(' PASS');
// Test 3: WebSocket connection and event relay
console.log('Test 3: WebSocket relays events to stdout');
stdout = ''; // Reset stdout capture
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
ws.send(JSON.stringify({ type: 'click', text: 'Test Button' }));
await sleep(100);
assert(stdout.includes('user-event'), 'Should relay user events');
assert(stdout.includes('Test Button'), 'Should include event data');
ws.close();
console.log(' PASS');
// Test 4: File change triggers reload notification
console.log('Test 4: File change notifies browsers');
const ws2 = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws2.on('open', resolve));
let gotReload = false;
ws2.on('message', (data) => {
const msg = JSON.parse(data.toString());
if (msg.type === 'reload') gotReload = true;
});
// Modify the screen file
fs.writeFileSync(TEST_SCREEN, '<html><body>Updated</body></html>');
await sleep(500);
assert(gotReload, 'Should send reload message on file change');
ws2.close();
console.log(' PASS');
console.log('\nAll tests passed!');
} finally {
server.kill();
cleanup();
}
}
runTests().catch(err => {
console.error('Test failed:', err);
process.exit(1);
});
```
**Step 3: Run tests**
Run: `cd tests/brainstorm-server && npm install ws && node server.test.js`
Expected: All tests pass
**Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add tests/brainstorm-server/
git commit -m "test: add brainstorm server integration tests"
```
---
## Task 4: Add Visual Companion to Brainstorming Skill
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md`
- Create: `skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md` (supporting doc)
**Step 1: Create the supporting documentation**
Create `skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md`:
```markdown
# Visual Companion Reference
## Starting the Server
Run as a background job:
```bash
node ${PLUGIN_ROOT}/lib/brainstorm-server/index.js
```
Tell the user: "I've started a visual companion at http://localhost:3333 - open it in a browser."
## Pushing Screens
Write HTML to `/tmp/brainstorm/screen.html`. The server watches this file and auto-refreshes the browser.
## Reading User Responses
Check the background task output for JSON events:
```json
{"type":"user-event","type":"click","text":"Option A","choice":"optionA","timestamp":1234567890}
{"type":"user-event","type":"submit","data":{"notes":"My feedback"},"timestamp":1234567891}
```
Event types:
- **click**: User clicked button or `data-choice` element
- **submit**: User submitted form (includes all form data)
- **input**: User typed in field (debounced 500ms)
## HTML Patterns
### Choice Cards
```html
<div class="options">
<button data-choice="optionA">
<h3>Option A</h3>
<p>Description</p>
</button>
<button data-choice="optionB">
<h3>Option B</h3>
<p>Description</p>
</button>
</div>
```
### Interactive Mockup
```html
<div class="mockup">
<header data-choice="header">App Header</header>
<nav data-choice="nav">Navigation</nav>
<main data-choice="main">Content</main>
</div>
```
### Form with Notes
```html
<form>
<label>Priority: <input type="range" name="priority" min="1" max="5"></label>
<textarea name="notes" placeholder="Additional thoughts..."></textarea>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
```
### Explicit JavaScript
```html
<button onclick="brainstorm.choice('custom', {extra: 'data'})">Custom</button>
```
```
**Step 2: Add visual companion section to brainstorming skill**
Add after "Key Principles" in `skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md`:
```markdown
## Visual Companion (Optional)
When brainstorming involves visual elements - UI mockups, wireframes, interactive prototypes - use the browser-based visual companion.
**When to use:**
- Presenting UI/UX options that benefit from visual comparison
- Showing wireframes or layout options
- Gathering structured feedback (ratings, forms)
- Prototyping click interactions
**How it works:**
1. Start the server as a background job
2. Tell user to open http://localhost:3333
3. Write HTML to `/tmp/brainstorm/screen.html` (auto-refreshes)
4. Check background task output for user interactions
The terminal remains the primary conversation interface. The browser is a visual aid.
**Reference:** See `visual-companion.md` in this skill directory for HTML patterns and API details.
```
**Step 3: Verify the edits**
Run: `grep -A5 "Visual Companion" skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md`
Expected: Shows the new section
**Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/brainstorming/
git commit -m "feat: add visual companion to brainstorming skill"
```
---
## Task 5: Add Server to Plugin Ignore (Optional Cleanup)
**Files:**
- Check if `.gitignore` needs node_modules exclusion for lib/brainstorm-server
**Step 1: Check current gitignore**
Run: `cat .gitignore 2>/dev/null || echo "No .gitignore"`
**Step 2: Add node_modules if needed**
If not already present, add:
```
lib/brainstorm-server/node_modules/
```
**Step 3: Commit if changed**
```bash
git add .gitignore
git commit -m "chore: ignore brainstorm-server node_modules"
```
---
## Summary
After completing all tasks:
1. **Server** at `lib/brainstorm-server/` - Node.js server that watches HTML file and relays events
2. **Helper library** auto-injected - captures clicks, forms, inputs
3. **Tests** at `tests/brainstorm-server/` - verifies server behavior
4. **Brainstorming skill** updated with visual companion section and `visual-companion.md` reference doc
**To use:**
1. Start server as background job: `node lib/brainstorm-server/index.js &`
2. Tell user to open `http://localhost:3333`
3. Write HTML to `/tmp/brainstorm/screen.html`
4. Check task output for user events

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@@ -0,0 +1,301 @@
# Document Review System Implementation Plan
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (if subagents available) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan.
**Goal:** Add spec and plan document review loops to the brainstorming and writing-plans skills.
**Architecture:** Create reviewer prompt templates in each skill directory. Modify skill files to add review loops after document creation. Use Task tool with general-purpose subagent for reviewer dispatch.
**Tech Stack:** Markdown skill files, subagent dispatch via Task tool
**Spec:** docs/superpowers/specs/2026-01-22-document-review-system-design.md
---
## Chunk 1: Spec Document Reviewer
This chunk adds the spec document reviewer to the brainstorming skill.
### Task 1: Create Spec Document Reviewer Prompt Template
**Files:**
- Create: `skills/brainstorming/spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md`
- [ ] **Step 1:** Create the reviewer prompt template file
```markdown
# Spec Document Reviewer Prompt Template
Use this template when dispatching a spec document reviewer subagent.
**Purpose:** Verify the spec is complete, consistent, and ready for implementation planning.
**Dispatch after:** Spec document is written to docs/superpowers/specs/
```
Task tool (general-purpose):
description: "Review spec document"
prompt: |
You are a spec document reviewer. Verify this spec is complete and ready for planning.
**Spec to review:** [SPEC_FILE_PATH]
## What to Check
| Category | What to Look For |
|----------|------------------|
| Completeness | TODOs, placeholders, "TBD", incomplete sections |
| Coverage | Missing error handling, edge cases, integration points |
| Consistency | Internal contradictions, conflicting requirements |
| Clarity | Ambiguous requirements |
| YAGNI | Unrequested features, over-engineering |
## CRITICAL
Look especially hard for:
- Any TODO markers or placeholder text
- Sections saying "to be defined later" or "will spec when X is done"
- Sections noticeably less detailed than others
## Output Format
## Spec Review
**Status:** ✅ Approved | ❌ Issues Found
**Issues (if any):**
- [Section X]: [specific issue] - [why it matters]
**Recommendations (advisory):**
- [suggestions that don't block approval]
```
**Reviewer returns:** Status, Issues (if any), Recommendations
```
- [ ] **Step 2:** Verify the file was created correctly
Run: `cat skills/brainstorming/spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md | head -20`
Expected: Shows the header and purpose section
- [ ] **Step 3:** Commit
```bash
git add skills/brainstorming/spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md
git commit -m "feat: add spec document reviewer prompt template"
```
---
### Task 2: Add Review Loop to Brainstorming Skill
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md`
- [ ] **Step 1:** Read the current brainstorming skill
Run: `cat skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md`
- [ ] **Step 2:** Add the review loop section after "After the Design"
Find the "After the Design" section and add a new "Spec Review Loop" section after documentation but before implementation:
```markdown
**Spec Review Loop:**
After writing the spec document:
1. Dispatch spec-document-reviewer subagent (see spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md)
2. If ❌ Issues Found:
- Fix the issues in the spec document
- Re-dispatch reviewer
- Repeat until ✅ Approved
3. If ✅ Approved: proceed to implementation setup
**Review loop guidance:**
- Same agent that wrote the spec fixes it (preserves context)
- If loop exceeds 5 iterations, surface to human for guidance
- Reviewers are advisory - explain disagreements if you believe feedback is incorrect
```
- [ ] **Step 3:** Verify the changes
Run: `grep -A 15 "Spec Review Loop" skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md`
Expected: Shows the new review loop section
- [ ] **Step 4:** Commit
```bash
git add skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md
git commit -m "feat: add spec review loop to brainstorming skill"
```
---
## Chunk 2: Plan Document Reviewer
This chunk adds the plan document reviewer to the writing-plans skill.
### Task 3: Create Plan Document Reviewer Prompt Template
**Files:**
- Create: `skills/writing-plans/plan-document-reviewer-prompt.md`
- [ ] **Step 1:** Create the reviewer prompt template file
```markdown
# Plan Document Reviewer Prompt Template
Use this template when dispatching a plan document reviewer subagent.
**Purpose:** Verify the plan chunk is complete, matches the spec, and has proper task decomposition.
**Dispatch after:** Each plan chunk is written
```
Task tool (general-purpose):
description: "Review plan chunk N"
prompt: |
You are a plan document reviewer. Verify this plan chunk is complete and ready for implementation.
**Plan chunk to review:** [PLAN_FILE_PATH] - Chunk N only
**Spec for reference:** [SPEC_FILE_PATH]
## What to Check
| Category | What to Look For |
|----------|------------------|
| Completeness | TODOs, placeholders, incomplete tasks, missing steps |
| Spec Alignment | Chunk covers relevant spec requirements, no scope creep |
| Task Decomposition | Tasks atomic, clear boundaries, steps actionable |
| Task Syntax | Checkbox syntax (`- [ ]`) on tasks and steps |
| Chunk Size | Each chunk under 1000 lines |
## CRITICAL
Look especially hard for:
- Any TODO markers or placeholder text
- Steps that say "similar to X" without actual content
- Incomplete task definitions
- Missing verification steps or expected outputs
## Output Format
## Plan Review - Chunk N
**Status:** ✅ Approved | ❌ Issues Found
**Issues (if any):**
- [Task X, Step Y]: [specific issue] - [why it matters]
**Recommendations (advisory):**
- [suggestions that don't block approval]
```
**Reviewer returns:** Status, Issues (if any), Recommendations
```
- [ ] **Step 2:** Verify the file was created
Run: `cat skills/writing-plans/plan-document-reviewer-prompt.md | head -20`
Expected: Shows the header and purpose section
- [ ] **Step 3:** Commit
```bash
git add skills/writing-plans/plan-document-reviewer-prompt.md
git commit -m "feat: add plan document reviewer prompt template"
```
---
### Task 4: Add Review Loop to Writing-Plans Skill
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`
- [ ] **Step 1:** Read current skill file
Run: `cat skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`
- [ ] **Step 2:** Add chunk-by-chunk review section
Add before the "Execution Handoff" section:
```markdown
## Plan Review Loop
After completing each chunk of the plan:
1. Dispatch plan-document-reviewer subagent for the current chunk
- Provide: chunk content, path to spec document
2. If ❌ Issues Found:
- Fix the issues in the chunk
- Re-dispatch reviewer for that chunk
- Repeat until ✅ Approved
3. If ✅ Approved: proceed to next chunk (or execution handoff if last chunk)
**Chunk boundaries:** Use `## Chunk N: <name>` headings to delimit chunks. Each chunk should be ≤1000 lines and logically self-contained.
```
- [ ] **Step 3:** Update task syntax examples to use checkboxes
Change the Task Structure section to show checkbox syntax:
```markdown
### Task N: [Component Name]
- [ ] **Step 1:** Write the failing test
- File: `tests/path/test.py`
...
```
- [ ] **Step 4:** Verify the review loop section was added
Run: `grep -A 15 "Plan Review Loop" skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`
Expected: Shows the new review loop section
- [ ] **Step 5:** Verify the task syntax examples were updated
Run: `grep -A 5 "Task N:" skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`
Expected: Shows checkbox syntax `### Task N:`
- [ ] **Step 6:** Commit
```bash
git add skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md
git commit -m "feat: add plan review loop and checkbox syntax to writing-plans skill"
```
---
## Chunk 3: Update Plan Document Header
This chunk updates the plan document header template to reference the new checkbox syntax requirements.
### Task 5: Update Plan Header Template in Writing-Plans Skill
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`
- [ ] **Step 1:** Read current plan header template
Run: `grep -A 20 "Plan Document Header" skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`
- [ ] **Step 2:** Update the header template to reference checkbox syntax
The plan header should note that tasks and steps use checkbox syntax. Update the header comment:
```markdown
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (if subagents available) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan. Tasks and steps use checkbox (`- [ ]`) syntax for tracking.
```
- [ ] **Step 3:** Verify the change
Run: `grep -A 5 "For agentic workers:" skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`
Expected: Shows updated header with checkbox syntax mention
- [ ] **Step 4:** Commit
```bash
git add skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md
git commit -m "docs: update plan header to reference checkbox syntax"
```

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@@ -0,0 +1,523 @@
# Visual Brainstorming Refactor Implementation Plan
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (if subagents available) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan. Steps use checkbox (`- [ ]`) syntax for tracking.
**Goal:** Refactor visual brainstorming from blocking TUI feedback model to non-blocking "Browser Displays, Terminal Commands" architecture.
**Architecture:** Browser becomes an interactive display; terminal stays the conversation channel. Server writes user events to a per-screen `.events` file that Claude reads on its next turn. Eliminates `wait-for-feedback.sh` and all `TaskOutput` blocking.
**Tech Stack:** Node.js (Express, ws, chokidar), vanilla HTML/CSS/JS
**Spec:** `docs/superpowers/specs/2026-02-19-visual-brainstorming-refactor-design.md`
---
## File Map
| File | Action | Responsibility |
|------|--------|---------------|
| `lib/brainstorm-server/index.js` | Modify | Server: add `.events` file writing, clear on new screen, replace `wrapInFrame` |
| `lib/brainstorm-server/frame-template.html` | Modify | Template: remove feedback footer, add content placeholder + selection indicator |
| `lib/brainstorm-server/helper.js` | Modify | Client JS: remove send/feedback functions, narrow to click capture + indicator updates |
| `lib/brainstorm-server/wait-for-feedback.sh` | Delete | No longer needed |
| `skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md` | Modify | Skill instructions: rewrite loop to non-blocking flow |
| `tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js` | Modify | Tests: update for new template structure and helper.js API |
---
## Chunk 1: Server, Template, Client, Tests, Skill
### Task 1: Update `frame-template.html`
**Files:**
- Modify: `lib/brainstorm-server/frame-template.html`
- [ ] **Step 1: Remove the feedback footer HTML**
Replace the feedback-footer div (lines 227-233) with a selection indicator bar:
```html
<div class="indicator-bar">
<span id="indicator-text">Click an option above, then return to the terminal</span>
</div>
```
Also replace the default content inside `#claude-content` (lines 220-223) with the content placeholder:
```html
<div id="claude-content">
<!-- CONTENT -->
</div>
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Replace feedback footer CSS with indicator bar CSS**
Remove the `.feedback-footer`, `.feedback-footer label`, `.feedback-row`, and the textarea/button styles within `.feedback-footer` (lines 82-112).
Add indicator bar CSS:
```css
.indicator-bar {
background: var(--bg-secondary);
border-top: 1px solid var(--border);
padding: 0.5rem 1.5rem;
flex-shrink: 0;
text-align: center;
}
.indicator-bar span {
font-size: 0.75rem;
color: var(--text-secondary);
}
.indicator-bar .selected-text {
color: var(--accent);
font-weight: 500;
}
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify template renders**
Run the test suite to check the template still loads:
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
Expected: Tests 1-5 should still pass. Tests 6-8 may fail (expected — they assert old structure).
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add lib/brainstorm-server/frame-template.html
git commit -m "Replace feedback footer with selection indicator bar in brainstorm template"
```
---
### Task 2: Update `index.js` — content injection and `.events` file
**Files:**
- Modify: `lib/brainstorm-server/index.js`
- [ ] **Step 1: Write failing test for `.events` file writing**
Add to `tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js` after Test 4 area — a new test that sends a WebSocket event with a `choice` field and verifies `.events` file is written:
```javascript
// Test: Choice events written to .events file
console.log('Test: Choice events written to .events file');
const ws3 = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws3.on('open', resolve));
ws3.send(JSON.stringify({ type: 'click', choice: 'a', text: 'Option A' }));
await sleep(300);
const eventsFile = path.join(TEST_DIR, '.events');
assert(fs.existsSync(eventsFile), '.events file should exist after choice click');
const lines = fs.readFileSync(eventsFile, 'utf-8').trim().split('\n');
const event = JSON.parse(lines[lines.length - 1]);
assert.strictEqual(event.choice, 'a', 'Event should contain choice');
assert.strictEqual(event.text, 'Option A', 'Event should contain text');
ws3.close();
console.log(' PASS');
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Run test to verify it fails**
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
Expected: New test FAILS — `.events` file doesn't exist yet.
- [ ] **Step 3: Write failing test for `.events` file clearing on new screen**
Add another test:
```javascript
// Test: .events cleared on new screen
console.log('Test: .events cleared on new screen');
// .events file should still exist from previous test
assert(fs.existsSync(path.join(TEST_DIR, '.events')), '.events should exist before new screen');
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(TEST_DIR, 'new-screen.html'), '<h2>New screen</h2>');
await sleep(500);
assert(!fs.existsSync(path.join(TEST_DIR, '.events')), '.events should be cleared after new screen');
console.log(' PASS');
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Run test to verify it fails**
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
Expected: New test FAILS — `.events` not cleared on screen push.
- [ ] **Step 5: Implement `.events` file writing in `index.js`**
In the WebSocket `message` handler (line 74-77 of `index.js`), after the `console.log`, add:
```javascript
// Write user events to .events file for Claude to read
if (event.choice) {
const eventsFile = path.join(SCREEN_DIR, '.events');
fs.appendFileSync(eventsFile, JSON.stringify(event) + '\n');
}
```
In the chokidar `add` handler (line 104-111), add `.events` clearing:
```javascript
if (filePath.endsWith('.html')) {
// Clear events from previous screen
const eventsFile = path.join(SCREEN_DIR, '.events');
if (fs.existsSync(eventsFile)) fs.unlinkSync(eventsFile);
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'screen-added', file: filePath }));
// ... existing reload broadcast
}
```
- [ ] **Step 6: Replace `wrapInFrame` with comment placeholder injection**
Replace the `wrapInFrame` function (lines 27-32 of `index.js`):
```javascript
function wrapInFrame(content) {
return frameTemplate.replace('<!-- CONTENT -->', content);
}
```
- [ ] **Step 7: Run all tests**
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
Expected: New `.events` tests PASS. Existing tests may still have failures from old assertions (fixed in Task 4).
- [ ] **Step 8: Commit**
```bash
git add lib/brainstorm-server/index.js tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
git commit -m "Add .events file writing and comment-based content injection to brainstorm server"
```
---
### Task 3: Simplify `helper.js`
**Files:**
- Modify: `lib/brainstorm-server/helper.js`
- [ ] **Step 1: Remove `sendToClaude` function**
Delete the `sendToClaude` function (lines 92-106) — the function body and the page takeover HTML.
- [ ] **Step 2: Remove `window.send` function**
Delete the `window.send` function (lines 120-129) — was tied to the removed Send button.
- [ ] **Step 3: Remove form submission and input change handlers**
Delete the form submission handler (lines 57-71) and the input change handler (lines 73-89) including the `inputTimeout` variable.
- [ ] **Step 4: Remove `pageshow` event listener**
Delete the `pageshow` listener we added earlier (no textarea to clear anymore).
- [ ] **Step 5: Narrow click handler to `[data-choice]` only**
Replace the click handler (lines 36-55) with a narrower version:
```javascript
// Capture clicks on choice elements
document.addEventListener('click', (e) => {
const target = e.target.closest('[data-choice]');
if (!target) return;
sendEvent({
type: 'click',
text: target.textContent.trim(),
choice: target.dataset.choice,
id: target.id || null
});
});
```
- [ ] **Step 6: Add indicator bar update on choice click**
After the `sendEvent` call in the click handler, add:
```javascript
// Update indicator bar
const indicator = document.getElementById('indicator-text');
if (indicator) {
const label = target.querySelector('h3, .content h3, .card-body h3')?.textContent?.trim() || target.dataset.choice;
indicator.innerHTML = '<span class="selected-text">' + label + ' selected</span> — return to terminal to continue';
}
```
- [ ] **Step 7: Remove `sendToClaude` from `window.brainstorm` API**
Update the `window.brainstorm` object (lines 132-136) to remove `sendToClaude`:
```javascript
window.brainstorm = {
send: sendEvent,
choice: (value, metadata = {}) => sendEvent({ type: 'choice', value, ...metadata })
};
```
- [ ] **Step 8: Run tests**
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
- [ ] **Step 9: Commit**
```bash
git add lib/brainstorm-server/helper.js
git commit -m "Simplify helper.js: remove feedback functions, narrow to choice capture + indicator"
```
---
### Task 4: Update tests for new structure
**Files:**
- Modify: `tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js`
**Note:** Line references below are from the _original_ file. Task 2 inserted new tests earlier in the file, so actual line numbers will be shifted. Find tests by their `console.log` labels (e.g., "Test 5:", "Test 6:").
- [ ] **Step 1: Update Test 5 (full document assertion)**
Find the Test 5 assertion `!fullRes.body.includes('feedback-footer')`. Change it to: Full documents should NOT have the indicator bar either (they're served as-is):
```javascript
assert(!fullRes.body.includes('indicator-bar') || fullDoc.includes('indicator-bar'),
'Should not wrap full documents in frame template');
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Update Test 6 (fragment wrapping)**
Line 125: Replace `feedback-footer` assertion with indicator bar assertion:
```javascript
assert(fragRes.body.includes('indicator-bar'), 'Fragment should get indicator bar from frame');
```
Also verify content placeholder was replaced (fragment content appears, placeholder comment doesn't):
```javascript
assert(!fragRes.body.includes('<!-- CONTENT -->'), 'Content placeholder should be replaced');
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Update Test 7 (helper.js API)**
Lines 140-142: Update assertions to reflect the new API surface:
```javascript
assert(helperContent.includes('toggleSelect'), 'helper.js should define toggleSelect');
assert(helperContent.includes('sendEvent'), 'helper.js should define sendEvent');
assert(helperContent.includes('selectedChoice'), 'helper.js should track selectedChoice');
assert(helperContent.includes('brainstorm'), 'helper.js should expose brainstorm API');
assert(!helperContent.includes('sendToClaude'), 'helper.js should not contain sendToClaude');
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Replace Test 8 (sendToClaude theming) with indicator bar test**
Replace Test 8 (lines 145-149) — `sendToClaude` no longer exists. Test the indicator bar instead:
```javascript
// Test 8: Indicator bar uses CSS variables (theme support)
console.log('Test 8: Indicator bar uses CSS variables');
const templateContent = fs.readFileSync(
path.join(__dirname, '../../lib/brainstorm-server/frame-template.html'), 'utf-8'
);
assert(templateContent.includes('indicator-bar'), 'Template should have indicator bar');
assert(templateContent.includes('indicator-text'), 'Template should have indicator text element');
console.log(' PASS');
```
- [ ] **Step 5: Run full test suite**
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
Expected: ALL tests PASS.
- [ ] **Step 6: Commit**
```bash
git add tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
git commit -m "Update brainstorm server tests for new template structure and helper.js API"
```
---
### Task 5: Delete `wait-for-feedback.sh`
**Files:**
- Delete: `lib/brainstorm-server/wait-for-feedback.sh`
- [ ] **Step 1: Verify no other files import or reference `wait-for-feedback.sh`**
Search the codebase:
```bash
grep -r "wait-for-feedback" /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers/ --include="*.js" --include="*.md" --include="*.sh" --include="*.json"
```
Expected references: only `visual-companion.md` (rewritten in Task 6) and possibly release notes (historical, leave as-is).
- [ ] **Step 2: Delete the file**
```bash
rm lib/brainstorm-server/wait-for-feedback.sh
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Run tests to confirm nothing breaks**
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
Expected: All tests PASS (no test referenced this file).
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add -u lib/brainstorm-server/wait-for-feedback.sh
git commit -m "Delete wait-for-feedback.sh: replaced by .events file"
```
---
### Task 6: Rewrite `visual-companion.md`
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md`
- [ ] **Step 1: Update "How It Works" description (line 18)**
Replace the sentence about receiving feedback "as JSON" with:
```markdown
The server watches a directory for HTML files and serves the newest one to the browser. You write HTML content, the user sees it in their browser and can click to select options. Selections are recorded to a `.events` file that you read on your next turn.
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Update fragment description (line 20)**
Remove "feedback footer" from the description of what the frame template provides:
```markdown
**Content fragments vs full documents:** If your HTML file starts with `<!DOCTYPE` or `<html`, the server serves it as-is (just injects the helper script). Otherwise, the server automatically wraps your content in the frame template — adding the header, CSS theme, selection indicator, and all interactive infrastructure. **Write content fragments by default.** Only write full documents when you need complete control over the page.
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Rewrite "The Loop" section (lines 36-61)**
Replace the entire "The Loop" section with:
```markdown
## The Loop
1. **Write HTML** to a new file in `screen_dir`:
- Use semantic filenames: `platform.html`, `visual-style.html`, `layout.html`
- **Never reuse filenames** — each screen gets a fresh file
- Use Write tool — **never use cat/heredoc** (dumps noise into terminal)
- Server automatically serves the newest file
2. **Tell user what to expect and end your turn:**
- Remind them of the URL (every step, not just first)
- Give a brief text summary of what's on screen (e.g., "Showing 3 layout options for the homepage")
- Ask them to respond in the terminal: "Take a look and let me know what you think. Click to select an option if you'd like."
3. **On your next turn** — after the user responds in the terminal:
- Read `$SCREEN_DIR/.events` if it exists — this contains the user's browser interactions (clicks, selections) as JSON lines
- Merge with the user's terminal text to get the full picture
- The terminal message is the primary feedback; `.events` provides structured interaction data
4. **Iterate or advance** — if feedback changes current screen, write a new file (e.g., `layout-v2.html`). Only move to the next question when the current step is validated.
5. Repeat until done.
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Replace "User Feedback Format" section (lines 165-174)**
Replace with:
```markdown
## Browser Events Format
When the user clicks options in the browser, their interactions are recorded to `$SCREEN_DIR/.events` (one JSON object per line). The file is cleared automatically when you push a new screen.
```jsonl
{"type":"click","choice":"a","text":"Option A - Simple Layout","timestamp":1706000101}
{"type":"click","choice":"c","text":"Option C - Complex Grid","timestamp":1706000108}
{"type":"click","choice":"b","text":"Option B - Hybrid","timestamp":1706000115}
```
The full event stream shows the user's exploration path — they may click multiple options before settling. The last `choice` event is typically the final selection, but the pattern of clicks can reveal hesitation or preferences worth asking about.
If `.events` doesn't exist, the user didn't interact with the browser — use only their terminal text.
```
- [ ] **Step 5: Update "Writing Content Fragments" description (line 65)**
Remove "feedback footer" reference:
```markdown
Write just the content that goes inside the page. The server wraps it in the frame template automatically (header, theme CSS, selection indicator, and all interactive infrastructure).
```
- [ ] **Step 6: Update Reference section (lines 200-203)**
Remove the helper.js reference description about "JS API" — the API is now minimal. Keep the path reference:
```markdown
## Reference
- Frame template (CSS reference): `${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/lib/brainstorm-server/frame-template.html`
- Helper script (client-side): `${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/lib/brainstorm-server/helper.js`
```
- [ ] **Step 7: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md
git commit -m "Rewrite visual-companion.md for non-blocking browser-displays-terminal-commands flow"
```
---
### Task 7: Final verification
- [ ] **Step 1: Run full test suite**
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && node tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js
```
Expected: ALL tests PASS.
- [ ] **Step 2: Manual smoke test**
Start the server manually and verify the flow works end-to-end:
```bash
cd /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers && lib/brainstorm-server/start-server.sh --project-dir /tmp/brainstorm-smoke-test
```
Write a test fragment, open in browser, click an option, verify `.events` file is written, verify indicator bar updates. Then stop the server:
```bash
lib/brainstorm-server/stop-server.sh <screen_dir from start output>
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify no stale references remain**
```bash
grep -r "wait-for-feedback\|sendToClaude\|feedback-footer\|send-to-claude\|TaskOutput.*block.*true" /Users/drewritter/prime-rad/superpowers/ --include="*.js" --include="*.md" --include="*.sh" --include="*.html" | grep -v node_modules | grep -v RELEASE-NOTES | grep -v "\.md:.*spec\|plan"
```
Expected: No hits outside of release notes and the spec/plan docs (which are historical).
- [ ] **Step 4: Final commit if any cleanup needed**
```bash
git status
# Review untracked/modified files, stage specific files as needed, commit if clean
```

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,479 @@
# Zero-Dependency Brainstorm Server Implementation Plan
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (if subagents available) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan. Steps use checkbox (`- [ ]`) syntax for tracking.
**Goal:** Replace the brainstorm server's vendored node_modules with a single zero-dependency `server.js` using Node built-ins.
**Architecture:** Single file with WebSocket protocol (RFC 6455 text frames), HTTP server (`http` module), and file watching (`fs.watch`). Exports protocol functions for unit testing when required as a module.
**Tech Stack:** Node.js built-ins only: `http`, `crypto`, `fs`, `path`
**Spec:** `docs/superpowers/specs/2026-03-11-zero-dep-brainstorm-server-design.md`
**Existing tests:** `tests/brainstorm-server/ws-protocol.test.js` (unit), `tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js` (integration)
---
## File Map
- **Create:** `skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.js` — the zero-dep replacement
- **Modify:** `skills/brainstorming/scripts/start-server.sh:94,100` — change `index.js` to `server.js`
- **Modify:** `.gitignore:6` — remove the `!skills/brainstorming/scripts/node_modules/` exception
- **Delete:** `skills/brainstorming/scripts/index.js`
- **Delete:** `skills/brainstorming/scripts/package.json`
- **Delete:** `skills/brainstorming/scripts/package-lock.json`
- **Delete:** `skills/brainstorming/scripts/node_modules/` (714 files)
- **No changes:** `skills/brainstorming/scripts/helper.js`, `skills/brainstorming/scripts/frame-template.html`, `skills/brainstorming/scripts/stop-server.sh`
---
## Chunk 1: WebSocket Protocol Layer
### Task 1: Implement WebSocket protocol exports
**Files:**
- Create: `skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.js`
- Test: `tests/brainstorm-server/ws-protocol.test.js` (already exists)
- [ ] **Step 1: Create server.js with OPCODES constant and computeAcceptKey**
```js
const crypto = require('crypto');
const OPCODES = { TEXT: 0x01, CLOSE: 0x08, PING: 0x09, PONG: 0x0A };
const WS_MAGIC = '258EAFA5-E914-47DA-95CA-C5AB0DC85B11';
function computeAcceptKey(clientKey) {
return crypto.createHash('sha1').update(clientKey + WS_MAGIC).digest('base64');
}
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Implement encodeFrame**
Server frames are never masked. Three length encodings:
- payload < 126: 2-byte header (FIN+opcode, length)
- 126-65535: 4-byte header (FIN+opcode, 126, 16-bit length)
- &gt; 65535: 10-byte header (FIN+opcode, 127, 64-bit length)
```js
function encodeFrame(opcode, payload) {
const fin = 0x80;
const len = payload.length;
let header;
if (len < 126) {
header = Buffer.alloc(2);
header[0] = fin | opcode;
header[1] = len;
} else if (len < 65536) {
header = Buffer.alloc(4);
header[0] = fin | opcode;
header[1] = 126;
header.writeUInt16BE(len, 2);
} else {
header = Buffer.alloc(10);
header[0] = fin | opcode;
header[1] = 127;
header.writeBigUInt64BE(BigInt(len), 2);
}
return Buffer.concat([header, payload]);
}
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Implement decodeFrame**
Client frames are always masked. Returns `{ opcode, payload, bytesConsumed }` or `null` for incomplete. Throws on unmasked frames.
```js
function decodeFrame(buffer) {
if (buffer.length < 2) return null;
const firstByte = buffer[0];
const secondByte = buffer[1];
const opcode = firstByte & 0x0F;
const masked = (secondByte & 0x80) !== 0;
let payloadLen = secondByte & 0x7F;
let offset = 2;
if (!masked) throw new Error('Client frames must be masked');
if (payloadLen === 126) {
if (buffer.length < 4) return null;
payloadLen = buffer.readUInt16BE(2);
offset = 4;
} else if (payloadLen === 127) {
if (buffer.length < 10) return null;
payloadLen = Number(buffer.readBigUInt64BE(2));
offset = 10;
}
const maskOffset = offset;
const dataOffset = offset + 4;
const totalLen = dataOffset + payloadLen;
if (buffer.length < totalLen) return null;
const mask = buffer.slice(maskOffset, dataOffset);
const data = Buffer.alloc(payloadLen);
for (let i = 0; i < payloadLen; i++) {
data[i] = buffer[dataOffset + i] ^ mask[i % 4];
}
return { opcode, payload: data, bytesConsumed: totalLen };
}
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Add module exports at the bottom of the file**
```js
module.exports = { computeAcceptKey, encodeFrame, decodeFrame, OPCODES };
```
- [ ] **Step 5: Run unit tests**
Run: `cd tests/brainstorm-server && node ws-protocol.test.js`
Expected: All tests pass (handshake, encoding, decoding, boundaries, edge cases)
- [ ] **Step 6: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.js
git commit -m "Add WebSocket protocol layer for zero-dep brainstorm server"
```
---
## Chunk 2: HTTP Server and Application Logic
### Task 2: Add HTTP server, file watching, and WebSocket connection handling
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.js`
- Test: `tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js` (already exists)
- [ ] **Step 1: Add configuration and constants at top of server.js (after requires)**
```js
const http = require('http');
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const PORT = process.env.BRAINSTORM_PORT || (49152 + Math.floor(Math.random() * 16383));
const HOST = process.env.BRAINSTORM_HOST || '127.0.0.1';
const URL_HOST = process.env.BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST || (HOST === '127.0.0.1' ? 'localhost' : HOST);
const SCREEN_DIR = process.env.BRAINSTORM_DIR || '/tmp/brainstorm';
const MIME_TYPES = {
'.html': 'text/html', '.css': 'text/css', '.js': 'application/javascript',
'.json': 'application/json', '.png': 'image/png', '.jpg': 'image/jpeg',
'.jpeg': 'image/jpeg', '.gif': 'image/gif', '.svg': 'image/svg+xml'
};
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Add WAITING_PAGE, template loading at module scope, and helper functions**
Load `frameTemplate` and `helperInjection` at module scope so they're accessible to `wrapInFrame` and `handleRequest`. They only read files from `__dirname` (the scripts directory), which is valid whether the module is required or run directly.
```js
const WAITING_PAGE = `<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head><title>Brainstorm Companion</title>
<style>body { font-family: system-ui, sans-serif; padding: 2rem; max-width: 800px; margin: 0 auto; }
h1 { color: #333; } p { color: #666; }</style>
</head>
<body><h1>Brainstorm Companion</h1>
<p>Waiting for Claude to push a screen...</p></body></html>`;
const frameTemplate = fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'frame-template.html'), 'utf-8');
const helperScript = fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'helper.js'), 'utf-8');
const helperInjection = '<script>\n' + helperScript + '\n</script>';
function isFullDocument(html) {
const trimmed = html.trimStart().toLowerCase();
return trimmed.startsWith('<!doctype') || trimmed.startsWith('<html');
}
function wrapInFrame(content) {
return frameTemplate.replace('<!-- CONTENT -->', content);
}
function getNewestScreen() {
const files = fs.readdirSync(SCREEN_DIR)
.filter(f => f.endsWith('.html'))
.map(f => {
const fp = path.join(SCREEN_DIR, f);
return { path: fp, mtime: fs.statSync(fp).mtime.getTime() };
})
.sort((a, b) => b.mtime - a.mtime);
return files.length > 0 ? files[0].path : null;
}
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Add HTTP request handler**
```js
function handleRequest(req, res) {
if (req.method === 'GET' && req.url === '/') {
const screenFile = getNewestScreen();
let html = screenFile
? (raw => isFullDocument(raw) ? raw : wrapInFrame(raw))(fs.readFileSync(screenFile, 'utf-8'))
: WAITING_PAGE;
if (html.includes('</body>')) {
html = html.replace('</body>', helperInjection + '\n</body>');
} else {
html += helperInjection;
}
res.writeHead(200, { 'Content-Type': 'text/html' });
res.end(html);
} else if (req.method === 'GET' && req.url.startsWith('/files/')) {
const fileName = req.url.slice(7); // strip '/files/'
const filePath = path.join(SCREEN_DIR, path.basename(fileName));
if (!fs.existsSync(filePath)) {
res.writeHead(404);
res.end('Not found');
return;
}
const ext = path.extname(filePath).toLowerCase();
const contentType = MIME_TYPES[ext] || 'application/octet-stream';
res.writeHead(200, { 'Content-Type': contentType });
res.end(fs.readFileSync(filePath));
} else {
res.writeHead(404);
res.end('Not found');
}
}
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Add WebSocket connection handling**
```js
const clients = new Set();
function handleUpgrade(req, socket) {
const key = req.headers['sec-websocket-key'];
if (!key) { socket.destroy(); return; }
const accept = computeAcceptKey(key);
socket.write(
'HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols\r\n' +
'Upgrade: websocket\r\n' +
'Connection: Upgrade\r\n' +
'Sec-WebSocket-Accept: ' + accept + '\r\n\r\n'
);
let buffer = Buffer.alloc(0);
clients.add(socket);
socket.on('data', (chunk) => {
buffer = Buffer.concat([buffer, chunk]);
while (buffer.length > 0) {
let result;
try {
result = decodeFrame(buffer);
} catch (e) {
socket.end(encodeFrame(OPCODES.CLOSE, Buffer.alloc(0)));
clients.delete(socket);
return;
}
if (!result) break;
buffer = buffer.slice(result.bytesConsumed);
switch (result.opcode) {
case OPCODES.TEXT:
handleMessage(result.payload.toString());
break;
case OPCODES.CLOSE:
socket.end(encodeFrame(OPCODES.CLOSE, Buffer.alloc(0)));
clients.delete(socket);
return;
case OPCODES.PING:
socket.write(encodeFrame(OPCODES.PONG, result.payload));
break;
case OPCODES.PONG:
break;
default:
// Unsupported opcode — close with 1003
const closeBuf = Buffer.alloc(2);
closeBuf.writeUInt16BE(1003);
socket.end(encodeFrame(OPCODES.CLOSE, closeBuf));
clients.delete(socket);
return;
}
}
});
socket.on('close', () => clients.delete(socket));
socket.on('error', () => clients.delete(socket));
}
function handleMessage(text) {
let event;
try {
event = JSON.parse(text);
} catch (e) {
console.error('Failed to parse WebSocket message:', e.message);
return;
}
console.log(JSON.stringify({ source: 'user-event', ...event }));
if (event.choice) {
const eventsFile = path.join(SCREEN_DIR, '.events');
fs.appendFileSync(eventsFile, JSON.stringify(event) + '\n');
}
}
function broadcast(msg) {
const frame = encodeFrame(OPCODES.TEXT, Buffer.from(JSON.stringify(msg)));
for (const socket of clients) {
try { socket.write(frame); } catch (e) { clients.delete(socket); }
}
}
```
- [ ] **Step 5: Add debounce timer map**
```js
const debounceTimers = new Map();
```
File watching logic is inlined in `startServer` (Step 6) to keep watcher lifecycle together with server lifecycle and include an `error` handler per spec.
- [ ] **Step 6: Add startServer function and conditional main**
`frameTemplate` and `helperInjection` are already at module scope (Step 2). `startServer` just creates the screen dir, starts the HTTP server, watcher, and logs startup info.
```js
function startServer() {
if (!fs.existsSync(SCREEN_DIR)) fs.mkdirSync(SCREEN_DIR, { recursive: true });
const server = http.createServer(handleRequest);
server.on('upgrade', handleUpgrade);
const watcher = fs.watch(SCREEN_DIR, (eventType, filename) => {
if (!filename || !filename.endsWith('.html')) return;
if (debounceTimers.has(filename)) clearTimeout(debounceTimers.get(filename));
debounceTimers.set(filename, setTimeout(() => {
debounceTimers.delete(filename);
const filePath = path.join(SCREEN_DIR, filename);
if (eventType === 'rename' && fs.existsSync(filePath)) {
const eventsFile = path.join(SCREEN_DIR, '.events');
if (fs.existsSync(eventsFile)) fs.unlinkSync(eventsFile);
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'screen-added', file: filePath }));
} else if (eventType === 'change') {
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'screen-updated', file: filePath }));
}
broadcast({ type: 'reload' });
}, 100));
});
watcher.on('error', (err) => console.error('fs.watch error:', err.message));
server.listen(PORT, HOST, () => {
const info = JSON.stringify({
type: 'server-started', port: Number(PORT), host: HOST,
url_host: URL_HOST, url: 'http://' + URL_HOST + ':' + PORT,
screen_dir: SCREEN_DIR
});
console.log(info);
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(SCREEN_DIR, '.server-info'), info + '\n');
});
}
if (require.main === module) {
startServer();
}
```
- [ ] **Step 7: Run integration tests**
The test directory already has a `package.json` with `ws` as a dependency. Install it if needed, then run tests.
Run: `cd tests/brainstorm-server && npm install && node server.test.js`
Expected: All tests pass
- [ ] **Step 8: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.js
git commit -m "Add HTTP server, WebSocket handling, and file watching to server.js"
```
---
## Chunk 3: Swap and Cleanup
### Task 3: Update start-server.sh and remove old files
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/brainstorming/scripts/start-server.sh:94,100`
- Modify: `.gitignore:6`
- Delete: `skills/brainstorming/scripts/index.js`
- Delete: `skills/brainstorming/scripts/package.json`
- Delete: `skills/brainstorming/scripts/package-lock.json`
- Delete: `skills/brainstorming/scripts/node_modules/` (entire directory)
- [ ] **Step 1: Update start-server.sh — change `index.js` to `server.js`**
Two lines to change:
Line 94: `env BRAINSTORM_DIR="$SCREEN_DIR" BRAINSTORM_HOST="$BIND_HOST" BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST="$URL_HOST" node server.js`
Line 100: `nohup env BRAINSTORM_DIR="$SCREEN_DIR" BRAINSTORM_HOST="$BIND_HOST" BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST="$URL_HOST" node server.js > "$LOG_FILE" 2>&1 &`
- [ ] **Step 2: Remove the gitignore exception for node_modules**
In `.gitignore`, delete line 6: `!skills/brainstorming/scripts/node_modules/`
- [ ] **Step 3: Delete old files**
```bash
git rm skills/brainstorming/scripts/index.js
git rm skills/brainstorming/scripts/package.json
git rm skills/brainstorming/scripts/package-lock.json
git rm -r skills/brainstorming/scripts/node_modules/
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Run both test suites**
Run: `cd tests/brainstorm-server && node ws-protocol.test.js && node server.test.js`
Expected: All tests pass
- [ ] **Step 5: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/brainstorming/scripts/ .gitignore
git commit -m "Remove vendored node_modules, swap to zero-dep server.js"
```
### Task 4: Manual smoke test
- [ ] **Step 1: Start the server manually**
```bash
cd skills/brainstorming/scripts
BRAINSTORM_DIR=/tmp/brainstorm-smoke BRAINSTORM_PORT=9876 node server.js
```
Expected: `server-started` JSON printed with port 9876
- [ ] **Step 2: Open browser to http://localhost:9876**
Expected: Waiting page with "Waiting for Claude to push a screen..."
- [ ] **Step 3: Write an HTML file to the screen directory**
```bash
echo '<h2>Hello from smoke test</h2>' > /tmp/brainstorm-smoke/test.html
```
Expected: Browser reloads and shows "Hello from smoke test" wrapped in frame template
- [ ] **Step 4: Verify WebSocket works — check browser console**
Open browser dev tools. The WebSocket connection should show as connected (no errors in console). The frame template's status indicator should show "Connected".
- [ ] **Step 5: Stop server with Ctrl-C, clean up**
```bash
rm -rf /tmp/brainstorm-smoke
```

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@@ -0,0 +1,564 @@
# Codex App Compatibility Implementation Plan
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (recommended) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task. Steps use checkbox (`- [ ]`) syntax for tracking.
**Goal:** Make `using-git-worktrees`, `finishing-a-development-branch`, and related skills work in the Codex App's sandboxed worktree environment without breaking existing behavior.
**Architecture:** Read-only environment detection (`git-dir` vs `git-common-dir`) at the start of two skills. If already in a linked worktree, skip creation. If on detached HEAD, emit a handoff payload instead of the 4-option menu. Sandbox fallback catches permission errors during worktree creation.
**Tech Stack:** Git, Markdown (skill files are instruction documents, not executable code)
**Spec:** `docs/superpowers/specs/2026-03-23-codex-app-compatibility-design.md`
---
## File Structure
| File | Responsibility | Action |
|---|---|---|
| `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` | Worktree creation + isolation | Add Step 0 detection + sandbox fallback |
| `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` | Branch finishing workflow | Add Step 1.5 detection + cleanup guard |
| `skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md` | Plan execution with subagents | Update Integration description |
| `skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md` | Plan execution inline | Update Integration description |
| `skills/using-superpowers/references/codex-tools.md` | Codex platform reference | Add detection + finishing docs |
---
### Task 1: Add Step 0 to `using-git-worktrees`
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md:14-15` (insert after Overview, before Directory Selection Process)
- [ ] **Step 1: Read the current skill file**
Read `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` in full. Identify the exact insertion point: after the "Announce at start" line (line 14) and before "## Directory Selection Process" (line 16).
- [ ] **Step 2: Insert Step 0 section**
Insert the following between the Overview section and "## Directory Selection Process":
```markdown
## Step 0: Check if Already in an Isolated Workspace
Before creating a worktree, check if one already exists:
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
```
**If `GIT_DIR` differs from `GIT_COMMON`:** You are already inside a linked worktree (created by the Codex App, Claude Code's Agent tool, a previous skill run, or the user). Do NOT create another worktree. Instead:
1. Run project setup (auto-detect package manager as in "Run Project Setup" below)
2. Verify clean baseline (run tests as in "Verify Clean Baseline" below)
3. Report with branch state:
- On a branch: "Already in an isolated workspace at `<path>` on branch `<name>`. Tests passing. Ready to implement."
- Detached HEAD: "Already in an isolated workspace at `<path>` (detached HEAD, externally managed). Tests passing. Note: branch creation needed at finish time. Ready to implement."
After reporting, STOP. Do not continue to Directory Selection or Creation Steps.
**If `GIT_DIR` equals `GIT_COMMON`:** Proceed with the full worktree creation flow below.
**Sandbox fallback:** If you proceed to Creation Steps but `git worktree add -b` fails with a permission error (e.g., "Operation not permitted"), treat this as a late-detected restricted environment. Fall back to the behavior above — run setup and baseline tests in the current directory, report accordingly, and STOP.
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify the insertion**
Read the file again. Confirm:
- Step 0 appears between Overview and Directory Selection Process
- The rest of the file (Directory Selection, Safety Verification, Creation Steps, etc.) is unchanged
- No duplicate sections or broken markdown
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md
git commit -m "feat(using-git-worktrees): add Step 0 environment detection (PRI-823)
Skip worktree creation when already in a linked worktree. Includes
sandbox fallback for permission errors on git worktree add."
```
---
### Task 2: Update `using-git-worktrees` Integration section
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md:211-215` (Integration > Called by)
- [ ] **Step 1: Update the three "Called by" entries**
Change lines 212-214 from:
```markdown
- **brainstorming** (Phase 4) - REQUIRED when design is approved and implementation follows
- **subagent-driven-development** - REQUIRED before executing any tasks
- **executing-plans** - REQUIRED before executing any tasks
```
To:
```markdown
- **brainstorming** - REQUIRED: Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
- **subagent-driven-development** - REQUIRED: Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
- **executing-plans** - REQUIRED: Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Verify the Integration section**
Read the Integration section. Confirm all three entries are updated, "Pairs with" is unchanged.
- [ ] **Step 3: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md
git commit -m "docs(using-git-worktrees): update Integration descriptions (PRI-823)
Clarify that skill ensures a workspace exists, not that it always creates one."
```
---
### Task 3: Add Step 1.5 to `finishing-a-development-branch`
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md:38` (insert after Step 1, before Step 2)
- [ ] **Step 1: Read the current skill file**
Read `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` in full. Identify the insertion point: after "**If tests pass:** Continue to Step 2." (line 38) and before "### Step 2: Determine Base Branch" (line 40).
- [ ] **Step 2: Insert Step 1.5 section**
Insert the following between Step 1 and Step 2:
```markdown
### Step 1.5: Detect Environment
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
```
**Path A — `GIT_DIR` differs from `GIT_COMMON` AND `BRANCH` is empty (externally managed worktree, detached HEAD):**
First, ensure all work is staged and committed (`git add` + `git commit`).
Then present this to the user (do NOT present the 4-option menu):
```
Implementation complete. All tests passing.
Current HEAD: <full-commit-sha>
This workspace is externally managed (detached HEAD).
I cannot create branches, push, or open PRs from here.
⚠ These commits are on a detached HEAD. If you do not create a branch,
they may be lost when this workspace is cleaned up.
If your host application provides these controls:
- "Create branch" — to name a branch, then commit/push/PR
- "Hand off to local" — to move changes to your local checkout
Suggested branch name: <ticket-id/short-description>
Suggested commit message: <summary-of-work>
```
Branch name: use ticket ID if available (e.g., `pri-823/codex-compat`), otherwise slugify the first 5 words of the plan title, otherwise omit. Avoid sensitive content in branch names.
Skip to Step 5 (cleanup is a no-op — see guard below).
**Path B — `GIT_DIR` differs from `GIT_COMMON` AND `BRANCH` exists (externally managed worktree, named branch):**
Proceed to Step 2 and present the 4-option menu as normal.
**Path C — `GIT_DIR` equals `GIT_COMMON` (normal environment):**
Proceed to Step 2 and present the 4-option menu as normal.
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify the insertion**
Read the file again. Confirm:
- Step 1.5 appears between Step 1 and Step 2
- Steps 2-5 are unchanged
- Path A handoff includes commit SHA and data loss warning
- Paths B and C proceed to Step 2 normally
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md
git commit -m "feat(finishing-a-development-branch): add Step 1.5 environment detection (PRI-823)
Detect externally managed worktrees with detached HEAD and emit handoff
payload instead of 4-option menu. Includes commit SHA and data loss warning."
```
---
### Task 4: Add Step 5 cleanup guard to `finishing-a-development-branch`
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` (Step 5: Cleanup Worktree — find by section heading, line numbers will have shifted after Task 3)
- [ ] **Step 1: Read the current Step 5 section**
Find the "### Step 5: Cleanup Worktree" section in `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` (line numbers will have shifted after Task 3's insertion). The current Step 5 is:
```markdown
### Step 5: Cleanup Worktree
**For Options 1, 2, 4:**
Check if in worktree:
```bash
git worktree list | grep $(git branch --show-current)
```
If yes:
```bash
git worktree remove <worktree-path>
```
**For Option 3:** Keep worktree.
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Add the cleanup guard before existing logic**
Replace the Step 5 section with:
```markdown
### Step 5: Cleanup Worktree
**First, check if worktree is externally managed:**
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
```
If `GIT_DIR` differs from `GIT_COMMON`: skip worktree removal — the host environment owns this workspace.
**Otherwise, for Options 1 and 4:**
Check if in worktree:
```bash
git worktree list | grep $(git branch --show-current)
```
If yes:
```bash
git worktree remove <worktree-path>
```
**For Option 3:** Keep worktree.
```
Note: the original text said "For Options 1, 2, 4" but the Quick Reference table and Common Mistakes section say "Options 1 & 4 only." This edit aligns Step 5 with those sections.
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify the replacement**
Read Step 5. Confirm:
- Cleanup guard (re-detection) appears first
- Existing removal logic preserved for non-externally-managed worktrees
- "Options 1 and 4" (not "1, 2, 4") matches Quick Reference and Common Mistakes
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md
git commit -m "feat(finishing-a-development-branch): add Step 5 cleanup guard (PRI-823)
Re-detect externally managed worktree at cleanup time and skip removal.
Also fixes pre-existing inconsistency: cleanup now correctly says
Options 1 and 4 only, matching Quick Reference and Common Mistakes."
```
---
### Task 5: Update Integration lines in `subagent-driven-development` and `executing-plans`
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md:268`
- Modify: `skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md:68`
- [ ] **Step 1: Update `subagent-driven-development`**
Change line 268 from:
```
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting
```
To:
```
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Update `executing-plans`**
Change line 68 from:
```
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting
```
To:
```
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify both files**
Read line 268 of `skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md` and line 68 of `skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md`. Confirm both say "Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)".
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md
git commit -m "docs(sdd, executing-plans): update worktree Integration descriptions (PRI-823)
Clarify that using-git-worktrees ensures a workspace exists rather than
always creating one."
```
---
### Task 6: Add environment detection docs to `codex-tools.md`
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/using-superpowers/references/codex-tools.md:25` (append at end)
- [ ] **Step 1: Read the current file**
Read `skills/using-superpowers/references/codex-tools.md` in full. Confirm it ends at line 25-26 after the multi_agent section.
- [ ] **Step 2: Append two new sections**
Add at the end of the file:
```markdown
## Environment Detection
Skills that create worktrees or finish branches should detect their
environment with read-only git commands before proceeding:
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
```
- `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` → already in a linked worktree (skip creation)
- `BRANCH` empty → detached HEAD (cannot branch/push/PR from sandbox)
See `using-git-worktrees` Step 0 and `finishing-a-development-branch`
Step 1.5 for how each skill uses these signals.
## Codex App Finishing
When the sandbox blocks branch/push operations (detached HEAD in an
externally managed worktree), the agent commits all work and informs
the user to use the App's native controls:
- **"Create branch"** — names the branch, then commit/push/PR via App UI
- **"Hand off to local"** — transfers work to the user's local checkout
The agent can still run tests, stage files, and output suggested branch
names, commit messages, and PR descriptions for the user to copy.
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify the additions**
Read the full file. Confirm:
- Two new sections appear after the existing content
- Bash code block renders correctly (not escaped)
- Cross-references to Step 0 and Step 1.5 are present
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/using-superpowers/references/codex-tools.md
git commit -m "docs(codex-tools): add environment detection and App finishing docs (PRI-823)
Document the git-dir vs git-common-dir detection pattern and the Codex
App's native finishing flow for skills that need to adapt."
```
---
### Task 7: Automated test — environment detection
**Files:**
- Create: `tests/codex-app-compat/test-environment-detection.sh`
- [ ] **Step 1: Create test directory**
```bash
mkdir -p tests/codex-app-compat
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Write the detection test script**
Create `tests/codex-app-compat/test-environment-detection.sh`:
```bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
# Test environment detection logic from PRI-823
# Tests the git-dir vs git-common-dir comparison used by
# using-git-worktrees Step 0 and finishing-a-development-branch Step 1.5
PASS=0
FAIL=0
TEMP_DIR=$(mktemp -d)
trap "rm -rf $TEMP_DIR" EXIT
log_pass() { echo " PASS: $1"; PASS=$((PASS + 1)); }
log_fail() { echo " FAIL: $1"; FAIL=$((FAIL + 1)); }
# Helper: run detection and return "linked" or "normal"
detect_worktree() {
local git_dir git_common
git_dir=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
git_common=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
if [ "$git_dir" != "$git_common" ]; then
echo "linked"
else
echo "normal"
fi
}
echo "=== Test 1: Normal repo detection ==="
cd "$TEMP_DIR"
git init test-repo > /dev/null 2>&1
cd test-repo
git commit --allow-empty -m "init" > /dev/null 2>&1
result=$(detect_worktree)
if [ "$result" = "normal" ]; then
log_pass "Normal repo detected as normal"
else
log_fail "Normal repo detected as '$result' (expected 'normal')"
fi
echo "=== Test 2: Linked worktree detection ==="
git worktree add "$TEMP_DIR/test-wt" -b test-branch > /dev/null 2>&1
cd "$TEMP_DIR/test-wt"
result=$(detect_worktree)
if [ "$result" = "linked" ]; then
log_pass "Linked worktree detected as linked"
else
log_fail "Linked worktree detected as '$result' (expected 'linked')"
fi
echo "=== Test 3: Detached HEAD detection ==="
git checkout --detach HEAD > /dev/null 2>&1
branch=$(git branch --show-current)
if [ -z "$branch" ]; then
log_pass "Detached HEAD: branch is empty"
else
log_fail "Detached HEAD: branch is '$branch' (expected empty)"
fi
echo "=== Test 4: Linked worktree + detached HEAD (Codex App simulation) ==="
result=$(detect_worktree)
branch=$(git branch --show-current)
if [ "$result" = "linked" ] && [ -z "$branch" ]; then
log_pass "Codex App simulation: linked + detached HEAD"
else
log_fail "Codex App simulation: result='$result', branch='$branch'"
fi
echo "=== Test 5: Cleanup guard — linked worktree should NOT remove ==="
cd "$TEMP_DIR/test-wt"
result=$(detect_worktree)
if [ "$result" = "linked" ]; then
log_pass "Cleanup guard: linked worktree correctly detected (would skip removal)"
else
log_fail "Cleanup guard: expected 'linked', got '$result'"
fi
echo "=== Test 6: Cleanup guard — main repo SHOULD remove ==="
cd "$TEMP_DIR/test-repo"
result=$(detect_worktree)
if [ "$result" = "normal" ]; then
log_pass "Cleanup guard: main repo correctly detected (would proceed with removal)"
else
log_fail "Cleanup guard: expected 'normal', got '$result'"
fi
# Cleanup worktree before temp dir removal
cd "$TEMP_DIR/test-repo"
git worktree remove "$TEMP_DIR/test-wt" > /dev/null 2>&1 || true
echo ""
echo "=== Results: $PASS passed, $FAIL failed ==="
if [ "$FAIL" -gt 0 ]; then
exit 1
fi
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Make it executable and run it**
```bash
chmod +x tests/codex-app-compat/test-environment-detection.sh
./tests/codex-app-compat/test-environment-detection.sh
```
Expected output: 6 passed, 0 failed.
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit**
```bash
git add tests/codex-app-compat/test-environment-detection.sh
git commit -m "test: add environment detection tests for Codex App compat (PRI-823)
Tests git-dir vs git-common-dir comparison in normal repo, linked
worktree, detached HEAD, and cleanup guard scenarios."
```
---
### Task 8: Final verification
**Files:**
- Read: all 5 modified skill files
- [ ] **Step 1: Run the automated detection tests**
```bash
./tests/codex-app-compat/test-environment-detection.sh
```
Expected: 6 passed, 0 failed.
- [ ] **Step 2: Read each modified file and verify changes**
Read each file end-to-end:
- `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` — Step 0 present, rest unchanged
- `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` — Step 1.5 present, cleanup guard present, rest unchanged
- `skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md` — line 268 updated
- `skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md` — line 68 updated
- `skills/using-superpowers/references/codex-tools.md` — two new sections at end
- [ ] **Step 3: Verify no unintended changes**
```bash
git diff --stat HEAD~7
```
Should show exactly 6 files changed (5 skill files + 1 test file). No other files modified.
- [ ] **Step 4: Run existing test suite**
If test runner exists:
```bash
# Run skill-triggering tests
./tests/skill-triggering/run-all.sh 2>/dev/null || echo "Skill triggering tests not available in this environment"
# Run SDD integration test
./tests/claude-code/test-subagent-driven-development-integration.sh 2>/dev/null || echo "SDD integration test not available in this environment"
```
Note: these tests require Claude Code with `--dangerously-skip-permissions`. If not available, document that regression tests should be run manually.

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@@ -0,0 +1,879 @@
# Worktree Rototill Implementation Plan
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (recommended) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task. Steps use checkbox (`- [ ]`) syntax for tracking.
**Goal:** Make superpowers defer to native harness worktree systems when available, fall back to manual git worktrees when not, and fix three known finishing bugs.
**Architecture:** Two skill files are rewritten (`using-git-worktrees`, `finishing-a-development-branch`), three files get one-line integration updates (`executing-plans`, `subagent-driven-development`, `writing-plans`). The core change is adding detection (`GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`) and a native-tool-first creation path. These are markdown skill instruction files, not application code — "tests" are agent behavior tests using the testing-skills-with-subagents TDD framework.
**Tech Stack:** Markdown (skill files), bash (test scripts), Claude Code CLI (`claude -p` for headless testing)
**Spec:** `docs/superpowers/specs/2026-04-06-worktree-rototill-design.md`
---
### Task 1: GATE — TDD Validation of Step 1a (Native Tool Preference)
Step 1a is the load-bearing assumption of the entire design. If agents don't prefer native worktree tools over `git worktree add`, the spec fails. Validate this FIRST, before touching any skill files.
**Files:**
- Create: `tests/claude-code/test-worktree-native-preference.sh`
- Read: `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` (current version, for RED baseline)
- Read: `tests/claude-code/test-helpers.sh` (for `run_claude`, `assert_contains`, etc.)
- Read: `skills/writing-skills/testing-skills-with-subagents.md` (TDD framework)
**This task is a gate.** If the GREEN phase fails after 2 REFACTOR iterations, STOP. Do not proceed to Task 2. Report back — the creation approach needs redesign.
- [ ] **Step 1: Write the RED baseline test script**
Create the test script that will run scenarios both WITHOUT and WITH the updated skill text. The RED phase runs against the current skill (which has no Step 1a).
```bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Test: Does the agent prefer native worktree tools (EnterWorktree) over git worktree add?
# Framework: RED-GREEN-REFACTOR per testing-skills-with-subagents.md
#
# RED: Current skill has no native tool preference. Agent should use git worktree add.
# GREEN: Updated skill has Step 1a. Agent should use EnterWorktree on Claude Code.
set -euo pipefail
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
source "$SCRIPT_DIR/test-helpers.sh"
# Pressure scenario: realistic implementation task where agent needs isolation
SCENARIO='IMPORTANT: This is a real task. Choose and act.
You need to implement a small feature (add a "version" field to package.json).
This should be done in an isolated workspace to protect the main branch.
You have the using-git-worktrees skill available. Set up the isolated workspace now.
Do NOT actually implement the feature — just set up the workspace and report what you did.
Respond with EXACTLY what tool/command you used to create the workspace.'
echo "=== Worktree Native Preference Test ==="
echo ""
# Phase selection
PHASE="${1:-red}"
if [ "$PHASE" = "red" ]; then
echo "--- RED PHASE: Running WITHOUT Step 1a (current skill) ---"
echo "Expected: Agent uses 'git worktree add' (no native tool awareness)"
echo ""
test_dir=$(create_test_project)
cd "$test_dir"
git init && git commit --allow-empty -m "init"
mkdir -p .worktrees
output=$(run_claude "$SCENARIO" 120)
echo "Agent output:"
echo "$output"
echo ""
# RED expectation: agent uses git worktree add (current behavior)
if echo "$output" | grep -qi "EnterWorktree"; then
echo "[UNEXPECTED] Agent used EnterWorktree WITHOUT Step 1a — skill may not be needed"
echo "Investigate: is Claude Code's default behavior already correct?"
else
echo "[RED CONFIRMED] Agent did NOT use EnterWorktree"
assert_contains "$output" "git worktree" "Agent used git worktree (expected in RED)"
fi
cleanup_test_project "$test_dir"
elif [ "$PHASE" = "green" ]; then
echo "--- GREEN PHASE: Running WITH Step 1a (updated skill) ---"
echo "Expected: Agent uses EnterWorktree instead of git worktree add"
echo ""
test_dir=$(create_test_project)
cd "$test_dir"
git init && git commit --allow-empty -m "init"
output=$(run_claude "$SCENARIO" 120)
echo "Agent output:"
echo "$output"
echo ""
# GREEN expectation: agent uses EnterWorktree
assert_contains "$output" "EnterWorktree" "Agent used native EnterWorktree tool"
assert_not_contains "$output" "git worktree add" "Agent did NOT fall back to git worktree add"
cleanup_test_project "$test_dir"
elif [ "$PHASE" = "pressure" ]; then
echo "--- PRESSURE PHASE: Multiple pressures to skip native tools ---"
echo ""
PRESSURE_SCENARIO='IMPORTANT: This is a real task. Choose and act.
You need to set up an isolated workspace URGENTLY. Production is impacted and
the fix needs to go in a worktree. You know git worktree add works reliably.
The .worktrees/ directory already exists and is gitignored.
You have the using-git-worktrees skill. Set up the workspace NOW.
Speed matters. Report EXACTLY what tool/command you used.'
test_dir=$(create_test_project)
cd "$test_dir"
git init && git commit --allow-empty -m "init"
mkdir -p .worktrees
echo ".worktrees/" >> .gitignore
output=$(run_claude "$PRESSURE_SCENARIO" 120)
echo "Agent output:"
echo "$output"
echo ""
# Should STILL use EnterWorktree even under pressure
assert_contains "$output" "EnterWorktree" "Agent used native tool even under time pressure"
assert_not_contains "$output" "git worktree add" "Agent resisted falling back to git despite pressure"
cleanup_test_project "$test_dir"
fi
echo ""
echo "=== Test Complete ==="
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Run RED phase — confirm agent uses git worktree add today**
Run: `cd tests/claude-code && bash test-worktree-native-preference.sh red`
Expected: `[RED CONFIRMED] Agent did NOT use EnterWorktree` — agent uses `git worktree add` because current skill has no native tool preference.
Document the agent's exact output and any rationalizations verbatim. This is the baseline failure the skill must fix.
- [ ] **Step 3: If RED confirmed, proceed. Write the Step 1a skill text.**
Create a temporary test version of the skill with ONLY the Step 1a addition (minimal change to isolate the variable). Add this section to the top of the skill's creation instructions, BEFORE the existing directory selection process:
```markdown
## Step 1: Create Isolated Workspace
**You have two mechanisms. Try them in this order.**
### 1a. Native Worktree Tools (preferred)
If your platform provides a worktree or workspace-isolation tool, use it. You know your own toolkit — the skill does not need to name specific tools. Native tools handle directory placement, branch creation, and cleanup automatically.
After using a native tool, skip to Step 3 (Project Setup).
### 1b. Git Worktree Fallback
If no native tool is available, create a worktree manually using git.
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Run GREEN phase — confirm agent now uses EnterWorktree**
Run: `cd tests/claude-code && bash test-worktree-native-preference.sh green`
Expected: `[PASS] Agent used native EnterWorktree tool`
If FAIL: Document the agent's exact output and rationalizations. This is a REFACTOR signal — the Step 1a text needs revision. Try up to 2 REFACTOR iterations. If still failing after 2 iterations, STOP and report back.
- [ ] **Step 5: Run PRESSURE phase — confirm agent resists fallback under pressure**
Run: `cd tests/claude-code && bash test-worktree-native-preference.sh pressure`
Expected: `[PASS] Agent used native tool even under time pressure`
If FAIL: Document rationalizations verbatim. Add explicit counters to Step 1a text (e.g., a Red Flag entry: "Never use git worktree add when your platform provides a native worktree tool"). Re-run.
- [ ] **Step 6: Commit test script**
```bash
git add tests/claude-code/test-worktree-native-preference.sh
git commit -m "test: add RED/GREEN validation for native worktree preference (PRI-974)
Gate test for Step 1a — validates agents prefer EnterWorktree over
git worktree add on Claude Code. Must pass before skill rewrite."
```
---
### Task 2: Rewrite `using-git-worktrees` SKILL.md
Full rewrite of the creation skill. Replaces the existing file entirely.
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` (full rewrite, 219 lines → ~210 lines)
**Depends on:** Task 1 GREEN passing.
- [ ] **Step 1: Write the complete new SKILL.md**
Replace the entire contents of `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` with:
```markdown
---
name: using-git-worktrees
description: Use when starting feature work that needs isolation from current workspace or before executing implementation plans - ensures an isolated workspace exists via native tools or git worktree fallback
---
# Using Git Worktrees
## Overview
Ensure work happens in an isolated workspace. Prefer your platform's native worktree tools. Fall back to manual git worktrees only when no native tool is available.
**Core principle:** Detect existing isolation first. Then use native tools. Then fall back to git. Never fight the harness.
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the using-git-worktrees skill to set up an isolated workspace."
## Step 0: Detect Existing Isolation
**Before creating anything, check if you are already in an isolated workspace.**
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
```
**Submodule guard:** `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` is also true inside git submodules. Before concluding "already in a worktree," verify you are not in a submodule:
```bash
# If this returns a path, you're in a submodule, not a worktree — proceed to Step 1
git rev-parse --show-superproject-working-tree 2>/dev/null
```
**If `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` (and not a submodule):** You are already in a linked worktree. Skip to Step 3 (Project Setup). Do NOT create another worktree.
Report with branch state:
- On a branch: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` on branch `<name>`."
- Detached HEAD: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` (detached HEAD, externally managed). Branch creation needed at finish time."
**If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (or in a submodule):** You are in a normal repo checkout.
Has the user already indicated their worktree preference in your instructions? If not, ask for consent before creating a worktree:
> "Would you like me to set up an isolated worktree? It protects your current branch from changes."
Honor any existing declared preference without asking. If the user declines consent, work in place and skip to Step 3.
## Step 1: Create Isolated Workspace
**You have two mechanisms. Try them in this order.**
### 1a. Native Worktree Tools (preferred)
If your platform provides a worktree or workspace-isolation tool, use it. You know your own toolkit — the skill does not need to name specific tools. Native tools handle directory placement, branch creation, and cleanup automatically.
After using a native tool, skip to Step 3 (Project Setup).
### 1b. Git Worktree Fallback
If no native tool is available, create a worktree manually using git.
#### Directory Selection
Follow this priority order:
1. **Check existing directories:**
```bash
ls -d .worktrees 2>/dev/null # Preferred (hidden)
ls -d worktrees 2>/dev/null # Alternative
```
If found, use that directory. If both exist, `.worktrees` wins.
2. **Check for existing global directory:**
```bash
project=$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)")
ls -d ~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/$project 2>/dev/null
```
If found, use it (backward compatibility with legacy global path).
3. **Check your instructions for a worktree directory preference.** If specified, use it without asking.
4. **Default to `.worktrees/`.**
#### Safety Verification (project-local directories only)
**MUST verify directory is ignored before creating worktree:**
```bash
git check-ignore -q .worktrees 2>/dev/null || git check-ignore -q worktrees 2>/dev/null
```
**If NOT ignored:** Add to .gitignore, commit the change, then proceed.
**Why critical:** Prevents accidentally committing worktree contents to repository.
Global directories (`~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`) need no verification.
#### Create the Worktree
```bash
project=$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)")
# Determine path based on chosen location
# For project-local: path="$LOCATION/$BRANCH_NAME"
# For global: path="~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/$project/$BRANCH_NAME"
git worktree add "$path" -b "$BRANCH_NAME"
cd "$path"
```
#### Hooks Awareness
Git worktrees do not inherit the parent repo's hooks directory. After creating the worktree, symlink hooks from the main repo if they exist:
```bash
MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
if [ -d "$MAIN_ROOT/.git/hooks" ]; then
ln -sf "$MAIN_ROOT/.git/hooks" "$path/.git/hooks"
fi
```
This prevents pre-commit checks, linters, and other hooks from silently stopping when work moves to a worktree.
**Sandbox fallback:** If `git worktree add` fails with a permission error (sandbox denial), treat this as a restricted environment. Skip creation, run setup and baseline tests in the current directory, report accordingly.
## Step 3: Project Setup
Auto-detect and run appropriate setup:
```bash
# Node.js
if [ -f package.json ]; then npm install; fi
# Rust
if [ -f Cargo.toml ]; then cargo build; fi
# Python
if [ -f requirements.txt ]; then pip install -r requirements.txt; fi
if [ -f pyproject.toml ]; then poetry install; fi
# Go
if [ -f go.mod ]; then go mod download; fi
```
## Step 4: Verify Clean Baseline
Run tests to ensure workspace starts clean:
```bash
# Use project-appropriate command
npm test / cargo test / pytest / go test ./...
```
**If tests fail:** Report failures, ask whether to proceed or investigate.
**If tests pass:** Report ready.
### Report
```
Worktree ready at <full-path>
Tests passing (<N> tests, 0 failures)
Ready to implement <feature-name>
```
## Quick Reference
| Situation | Action |
|-----------|--------|
| Already in linked worktree | Skip creation (Step 0) |
| In a submodule | Treat as normal repo (Step 0 guard) |
| Native worktree tool available | Use it (Step 1a) |
| No native tool | Git worktree fallback (Step 1b) |
| `.worktrees/` exists | Use it (verify ignored) |
| `worktrees/` exists | Use it (verify ignored) |
| Both exist | Use `.worktrees/` |
| Neither exists | Check instruction file, then default `.worktrees/` |
| Global path exists | Use it (backward compat) |
| Directory not ignored | Add to .gitignore + commit |
| Permission error on create | Sandbox fallback, work in place |
| Tests fail during baseline | Report failures + ask |
| No package.json/Cargo.toml | Skip dependency install |
## Common Mistakes
### Fighting the harness
- **Problem:** Using `git worktree add` when the platform already provides isolation
- **Fix:** Step 0 detects existing isolation. Step 1a defers to native tools.
### Skipping detection
- **Problem:** Creating a nested worktree inside an existing one
- **Fix:** Always run Step 0 before creating anything
### Skipping ignore verification
- **Problem:** Worktree contents get tracked, pollute git status
- **Fix:** Always use `git check-ignore` before creating project-local worktree
### Assuming directory location
- **Problem:** Creates inconsistency, violates project conventions
- **Fix:** Follow priority: existing > instruction file > default
### Proceeding with failing tests
- **Problem:** Can't distinguish new bugs from pre-existing issues
- **Fix:** Report failures, get explicit permission to proceed
## Red Flags
**Never:**
- Create a worktree when Step 0 detects existing isolation
- Use git commands when a native worktree tool is available
- Create worktree without verifying it's ignored (project-local)
- Skip baseline test verification
- Proceed with failing tests without asking
**Always:**
- Run Step 0 detection first
- Prefer native tools over git fallback
- Follow directory priority: existing > instruction file > default
- Verify directory is ignored for project-local
- Auto-detect and run project setup
- Verify clean test baseline
- Symlink hooks after creating worktree via 1b
## Integration
**Called by:**
- **subagent-driven-development** - Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
- **executing-plans** - Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
- Any skill needing isolated workspace
**Pairs with:**
- **finishing-a-development-branch** - REQUIRED for cleanup after work complete
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Verify the file reads correctly**
Run: `wc -l skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md`
Expected: Approximately 200-220 lines. Scan for any markdown formatting issues.
- [ ] **Step 3: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md
git commit -m "feat: rewrite using-git-worktrees with detect-and-defer (PRI-974)
Step 0: GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON detection (skip if already isolated)
Step 0 consent: opt-in prompt before creating worktree (#991)
Step 1a: native tool preference (short, first, declarative)
Step 1b: git worktree fallback with hooks symlink and legacy path compat
Submodule guard prevents false detection
Platform-neutral instruction file references (#1049)"
```
---
### Task 3: Rewrite `finishing-a-development-branch` SKILL.md
Full rewrite of the finishing skill. Adds environment detection, fixes three bugs, adds provenance-based cleanup.
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` (full rewrite, 201 lines → ~220 lines)
- [ ] **Step 1: Write the complete new SKILL.md**
Replace the entire contents of `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` with:
```markdown
---
name: finishing-a-development-branch
description: Use when implementation is complete, all tests pass, and you need to decide how to integrate the work - guides completion of development work by presenting structured options for merge, PR, or cleanup
---
# Finishing a Development Branch
## Overview
Guide completion of development work by presenting clear options and handling chosen workflow.
**Core principle:** Verify tests → Detect environment → Present options → Execute choice → Clean up.
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the finishing-a-development-branch skill to complete this work."
## The Process
### Step 1: Verify Tests
**Before presenting options, verify tests pass:**
```bash
# Run project's test suite
npm test / cargo test / pytest / go test ./...
```
**If tests fail:**
```
Tests failing (<N> failures). Must fix before completing:
[Show failures]
Cannot proceed with merge/PR until tests pass.
```
Stop. Don't proceed to Step 2.
**If tests pass:** Continue to Step 2.
### Step 2: Detect Environment
**Determine workspace state before presenting options:**
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
```
This determines which menu to show and how cleanup works:
| State | Menu | Cleanup |
|-------|------|---------|
| `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (normal repo) | Standard 4 options | No worktree to clean up |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, named branch | Standard 4 options | Provenance-based (see Step 6) |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, detached HEAD | Reduced 3 options (no merge) | No cleanup (externally managed) |
### Step 3: Determine Base Branch
```bash
# Try common base branches
git merge-base HEAD main 2>/dev/null || git merge-base HEAD master 2>/dev/null
```
Or ask: "This branch split from main - is that correct?"
### Step 4: Present Options
**Normal repo and named-branch worktree — present exactly these 4 options:**
```
Implementation complete. What would you like to do?
1. Merge back to <base-branch> locally
2. Push and create a Pull Request
3. Keep the branch as-is (I'll handle it later)
4. Discard this work
Which option?
```
**Detached HEAD — present exactly these 3 options:**
```
Implementation complete. You're on a detached HEAD (externally managed workspace).
1. Push as new branch and create a Pull Request
2. Keep as-is (I'll handle it later)
3. Discard this work
Which option?
```
**Don't add explanation** - keep options concise.
### Step 5: Execute Choice
#### Option 1: Merge Locally
```bash
# Get main repo root for CWD safety
MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd "$MAIN_ROOT"
# Merge first — verify success before removing anything
git checkout <base-branch>
git pull
git merge <feature-branch>
# Verify tests on merged result
<test command>
# Only after merge succeeds: remove worktree, then delete branch
# (See Step 6 for worktree cleanup)
git branch -d <feature-branch>
```
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 6)
#### Option 2: Push and Create PR
```bash
# Push branch
git push -u origin <feature-branch>
# Create PR
gh pr create --title "<title>" --body "$(cat <<'EOF'
## Summary
<2-3 bullets of what changed>
## Test Plan
- [ ] <verification steps>
EOF
)"
```
**Do NOT clean up worktree** — user needs it alive to iterate on PR feedback.
#### Option 3: Keep As-Is
Report: "Keeping branch <name>. Worktree preserved at <path>."
**Don't cleanup worktree.**
#### Option 4: Discard
**Confirm first:**
```
This will permanently delete:
- Branch <name>
- All commits: <commit-list>
- Worktree at <path>
Type 'discard' to confirm.
```
Wait for exact confirmation.
If confirmed:
```bash
MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd "$MAIN_ROOT"
```
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 6), then force-delete branch:
```bash
git branch -D <feature-branch>
```
### Step 6: Cleanup Workspace
**Only runs for Options 1 and 4.** Options 2 and 3 always preserve the worktree.
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
WORKTREE_PATH=$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
```
**If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON`:** Normal repo, no worktree to clean up. Done.
**If worktree path is under `.worktrees/` or `~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`:** Superpowers created this worktree — we own cleanup.
```bash
MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd "$MAIN_ROOT"
git worktree remove "$WORKTREE_PATH"
git worktree prune # Self-healing: clean up any stale registrations
```
**Otherwise:** The host environment (harness) owns this workspace. Do NOT remove it. If your platform provides a workspace-exit tool, use it. Otherwise, leave the workspace in place.
## Quick Reference
| Option | Merge | Push | Keep Worktree | Cleanup Branch |
|--------|-------|------|---------------|----------------|
| 1. Merge locally | yes | - | - | yes |
| 2. Create PR | - | yes | yes | - |
| 3. Keep as-is | - | - | yes | - |
| 4. Discard | - | - | - | yes (force) |
## Common Mistakes
**Skipping test verification**
- **Problem:** Merge broken code, create failing PR
- **Fix:** Always verify tests before offering options
**Open-ended questions**
- **Problem:** "What should I do next?" is ambiguous
- **Fix:** Present exactly 4 structured options (or 3 for detached HEAD)
**Cleaning up worktree for Option 2**
- **Problem:** Remove worktree user needs for PR iteration
- **Fix:** Only cleanup for Options 1 and 4
**Deleting branch before removing worktree**
- **Problem:** `git branch -d` fails because worktree still references the branch
- **Fix:** Merge first, remove worktree, then delete branch
**Running git worktree remove from inside the worktree**
- **Problem:** Command fails silently when CWD is inside the worktree being removed
- **Fix:** Always `cd` to main repo root before `git worktree remove`
**Cleaning up harness-owned worktrees**
- **Problem:** Removing a worktree the harness created causes phantom state
- **Fix:** Only clean up worktrees under `.worktrees/` or `~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`
**No confirmation for discard**
- **Problem:** Accidentally delete work
- **Fix:** Require typed "discard" confirmation
## Red Flags
**Never:**
- Proceed with failing tests
- Merge without verifying tests on result
- Delete work without confirmation
- Force-push without explicit request
- Remove a worktree before confirming merge success
- Clean up worktrees you didn't create (provenance check)
- Run `git worktree remove` from inside the worktree
**Always:**
- Verify tests before offering options
- Detect environment before presenting menu
- Present exactly 4 options (or 3 for detached HEAD)
- Get typed confirmation for Option 4
- Clean up worktree for Options 1 & 4 only
- `cd` to main repo root before worktree removal
- Run `git worktree prune` after removal
## Integration
**Called by:**
- **subagent-driven-development** (Step 7) - After all tasks complete
- **executing-plans** (Step 5) - After all batches complete
**Pairs with:**
- **using-git-worktrees** - Cleans up worktree created by that skill
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Verify the file reads correctly**
Run: `wc -l skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md`
Expected: Approximately 210-230 lines.
- [ ] **Step 3: Commit**
```bash
git add skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md
git commit -m "feat: rewrite finishing-a-development-branch with detect-and-defer (PRI-974)
Step 2: environment detection (GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON) before presenting menu
Detached HEAD: reduced 3-option menu (no merge from detached HEAD)
Provenance-based cleanup: .worktrees/ = ours, anything else = hands off
Bug #940: Option 2 no longer cleans up worktree
Bug #999: merge -> verify -> remove worktree -> delete branch
Bug #238: cd to main repo root before git worktree remove
Stale worktree pruning after removal (git worktree prune)"
```
---
### Task 4: Integration Updates
One-line changes to three files that reference `using-git-worktrees`.
**Files:**
- Modify: `skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md:68`
- Modify: `skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md:268`
- Modify: `skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md:16`
- [ ] **Step 1: Update executing-plans integration line**
In `skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md`, change line 68 from:
```markdown
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting
```
to:
```markdown
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Update subagent-driven-development integration line**
In `skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md`, change line 268 from:
```markdown
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting
```
to:
```markdown
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
```
- [ ] **Step 3: Update writing-plans context line**
In `skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md`, change line 16 from:
```markdown
**Context:** This should be run in a dedicated worktree (created by brainstorming skill).
```
to:
```markdown
**Context:** If working in an isolated worktree, it should have been created via the using-git-worktrees skill at execution time.
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Commit all three**
```bash
git add skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md
git commit -m "fix: update worktree integration references across skills (PRI-974)
Remove REQUIRED language from executing-plans and subagent-driven-development.
Consent and detection now live inside using-git-worktrees itself.
Fix stale 'created by brainstorming' claim in writing-plans."
```
---
### Task 5: End-to-End Validation
Verify the full rewritten skills work together. Run the existing test suite plus manual verification.
**Files:**
- Read: `tests/claude-code/run-skill-tests.sh`
- Read: `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` (verify final state)
- Read: `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` (verify final state)
- [ ] **Step 1: Run existing test suite**
Run: `cd tests/claude-code && bash run-skill-tests.sh`
Expected: All existing tests pass. If any fail, investigate — the integration changes (Task 4) may have broken a content assertion.
- [ ] **Step 2: Re-run Step 1a GREEN test**
Run: `cd tests/claude-code && bash test-worktree-native-preference.sh green`
Expected: PASS — agent still uses EnterWorktree with the final skill text (not just the minimal Step 1a addition from Task 1).
- [ ] **Step 3: Manual verification — read both rewritten skills end-to-end**
Read `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` and `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` in their entirety. Check:
1. No references to old behavior (hardcoded `CLAUDE.md`, interactive directory prompt, "REQUIRED" language)
2. Step numbering is consistent within each file
3. Quick Reference tables match the prose
4. Integration sections cross-reference correctly
5. No markdown formatting issues
- [ ] **Step 4: Verify git status is clean**
Run: `git status`
Expected: Clean working tree. All changes committed across Tasks 1-4.
- [ ] **Step 5: Final commit if any fixups needed**
If manual verification found issues, fix them and commit:
```bash
git add -A
git commit -m "fix: address review findings in worktree skill rewrite (PRI-974)"
```
If no issues found, skip this step.

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@@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
# Document Review System Design
## Overview
Add two new review stages to the superpowers workflow:
1. **Spec Document Review** - After brainstorming, before writing-plans
2. **Plan Document Review** - After writing-plans, before implementation
Both follow the iterative loop pattern used by implementation reviews.
## Spec Document Reviewer
**Purpose:** Verify the spec is complete, consistent, and ready for implementation planning.
**Location:** `skills/brainstorming/spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md`
**What it checks for:**
| Category | What to Look For |
|----------|------------------|
| Completeness | TODOs, placeholders, "TBD", incomplete sections |
| Coverage | Missing error handling, edge cases, integration points |
| Consistency | Internal contradictions, conflicting requirements |
| Clarity | Ambiguous requirements |
| YAGNI | Unrequested features, over-engineering |
**Output format:**
```
## Spec Review
**Status:** Approved | Issues Found
**Issues (if any):**
- [Section X]: [issue] - [why it matters]
**Recommendations (advisory):**
- [suggestions that don't block approval]
```
**Review loop:** Issues found -> brainstorming agent fixes -> re-review -> repeat until approved.
**Dispatch mechanism:** Use the Task tool with `subagent_type: general-purpose`. The reviewer prompt template provides the full prompt. The brainstorming skill's controller dispatches the reviewer.
## Plan Document Reviewer
**Purpose:** Verify the plan is complete, matches the spec, and has proper task decomposition.
**Location:** `skills/writing-plans/plan-document-reviewer-prompt.md`
**What it checks for:**
| Category | What to Look For |
|----------|------------------|
| Completeness | TODOs, placeholders, incomplete tasks |
| Spec Alignment | Plan covers spec requirements, no scope creep |
| Task Decomposition | Tasks atomic, clear boundaries |
| Task Syntax | Checkbox syntax on tasks and steps |
| Chunk Size | Each chunk under 1000 lines |
**Chunk definition:** A chunk is a logical grouping of tasks within the plan document, delimited by `## Chunk N: <name>` headings. The writing-plans skill creates these boundaries based on logical phases (e.g., "Foundation", "Core Features", "Integration"). Each chunk should be self-contained enough to review independently.
**Spec alignment verification:** The reviewer receives both:
1. The plan document (or current chunk)
2. The path to the spec document for reference
The reviewer reads both and compares requirements coverage.
**Output format:** Same as spec reviewer, but scoped to the current chunk.
**Review process (chunk-by-chunk):**
1. Writing-plans creates chunk N
2. Controller dispatches plan-document-reviewer with chunk N content and spec path
3. Reviewer reads chunk and spec, returns verdict
4. If issues: writing-plans agent fixes chunk N, goto step 2
5. If approved: proceed to chunk N+1
6. Repeat until all chunks approved
**Dispatch mechanism:** Same as spec reviewer - Task tool with `subagent_type: general-purpose`.
## Updated Workflow
```
brainstorming -> spec -> SPEC REVIEW LOOP -> writing-plans -> plan -> PLAN REVIEW LOOP -> implementation
```
**Spec Review Loop:**
1. Spec complete
2. Dispatch reviewer
3. If issues: fix -> goto 2
4. If approved: proceed
**Plan Review Loop:**
1. Chunk N complete
2. Dispatch reviewer for chunk N
3. If issues: fix -> goto 2
4. If approved: next chunk or implementation
## Markdown Task Syntax
Tasks and steps use checkbox syntax:
```markdown
- [ ] ### Task 1: Name
- [ ] **Step 1:** Description
- File: path
- Command: cmd
```
## Error Handling
**Review loop termination:**
- No hard iteration limit - loops continue until reviewer approves
- If loop exceeds 5 iterations, the controller should surface this to the human for guidance
- The human can choose to: continue iterating, approve with known issues, or abort
**Disagreement handling:**
- Reviewers are advisory - they flag issues but don't block
- If the agent believes reviewer feedback is incorrect, it should explain why in its fix
- If disagreement persists after 3 iterations on the same issue, surface to human
**Malformed reviewer output:**
- Controller should validate reviewer output has required fields (Status, Issues if applicable)
- If malformed, re-dispatch reviewer with a note about expected format
- After 2 malformed responses, surface to human
## Files to Change
**New files:**
- `skills/brainstorming/spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md`
- `skills/writing-plans/plan-document-reviewer-prompt.md`
**Modified files:**
- `skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md` - add review loop after spec written
- `skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md` - add chunk-by-chunk review loop, update task syntax examples

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# Visual Brainstorming Refactor: Browser Displays, Terminal Commands
**Date:** 2026-02-19
**Status:** Approved
**Scope:** `lib/brainstorm-server/`, `skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md`, `tests/brainstorm-server/`
## Problem
During visual brainstorming, Claude runs `wait-for-feedback.sh` as a background task and blocks on `TaskOutput(block=true, timeout=600s)`. This seizes the TUI entirely — the user cannot type to Claude while visual brainstorming is running. The browser becomes the only input channel.
Claude Code's execution model is turn-based. There is no way for Claude to listen on two channels simultaneously within a single turn. The blocking `TaskOutput` pattern was the wrong primitive — it simulates event-driven behavior the platform doesn't support.
## Design
### Core Model
**Browser = interactive display.** Shows mockups, lets the user click to select options. Selections are recorded server-side.
**Terminal = conversation channel.** Always unblocked, always available. The user talks to Claude here.
### The Loop
1. Claude writes an HTML file to the session directory
2. Server detects it via chokidar, pushes WebSocket reload to the browser (unchanged)
3. Claude ends its turn — tells the user to check the browser and respond in the terminal
4. User looks at browser, optionally clicks to select an option, then types feedback in the terminal
5. On the next turn, Claude reads `$SCREEN_DIR/.events` for the browser interaction stream (clicks, selections), merges with the terminal text
6. Iterate or advance
No background tasks. No `TaskOutput` blocking. No polling scripts.
### Key Deletion: `wait-for-feedback.sh`
Deleted entirely. Its purpose was to bridge "server logs events to stdout" and "Claude needs to receive those events." The `.events` file replaces this — the server writes user interaction events directly, and Claude reads them with whatever file-reading mechanism the platform provides.
### Key Addition: `.events` File (Per-Screen Event Stream)
The server writes all user interaction events to `$SCREEN_DIR/.events`, one JSON object per line. This gives Claude the full interaction stream for the current screen — not just the final selection, but the user's exploration path (clicked A, then B, settled on C).
Example contents after a user explores options:
```jsonl
{"type":"click","choice":"a","text":"Option A - Preset-First Wizard","timestamp":1706000101}
{"type":"click","choice":"c","text":"Option C - Manual Config","timestamp":1706000108}
{"type":"click","choice":"b","text":"Option B - Hybrid Approach","timestamp":1706000115}
```
- Append-only within a screen. Each user event is appended as a new line.
- The file is cleared (deleted) when chokidar detects a new HTML file (new screen pushed), preventing stale events from carrying over.
- If the file doesn't exist when Claude reads it, no browser interaction occurred — Claude uses only the terminal text.
- The file contains only user events (`click`, etc.) — not server lifecycle events (`server-started`, `screen-added`). This keeps it small and focused.
- Claude can read the full stream to understand the user's exploration pattern, or just look at the last `choice` event for the final selection.
## Changes by File
### `index.js` (server)
**A. Write user events to `.events` file.**
In the WebSocket `message` handler, after logging the event to stdout: append the event as a JSON line to `$SCREEN_DIR/.events` via `fs.appendFileSync`. Only write user interaction events (those with `source: 'user-event'`), not server lifecycle events.
**B. Clear `.events` on new screen.**
In the chokidar `add` handler (new `.html` file detected), delete `$SCREEN_DIR/.events` if it exists. This is the definitive "new screen" signal — better than clearing on GET `/` which fires on every reload.
**C. Replace `wrapInFrame` content injection.**
The current regex anchors on `<div class="feedback-footer">`, which is being removed. Replace with a comment placeholder: remove the existing default content inside `#claude-content` (the `<h2>Visual Brainstorming</h2>` and subtitle paragraph) and replace with a single `<!-- CONTENT -->` marker. Content injection becomes `frameTemplate.replace('<!-- CONTENT -->', content)`. Simpler and won't break if template formatting changes.
### `frame-template.html` (UI frame)
**Remove:**
- The `feedback-footer` div (textarea, Send button, label, `.feedback-row`)
- Associated CSS (`.feedback-footer`, `.feedback-footer label`, `.feedback-row`, textarea and button styles within it)
**Add:**
- `<!-- CONTENT -->` placeholder inside `#claude-content`, replacing the default text
- A selection indicator bar where the footer was, with two states:
- Default: "Click an option above, then return to the terminal"
- After selection: "Option B selected — return to terminal to continue"
- CSS for the indicator bar (subtle, similar visual weight to the existing header)
**Keep unchanged:**
- Header bar with "Brainstorm Companion" title and connection status
- `.main` wrapper and `#claude-content` container
- All component CSS (`.options`, `.cards`, `.mockup`, `.split`, `.pros-cons`, placeholders, mock elements)
- Dark/light theme variables and media query
### `helper.js` (client-side script)
**Remove:**
- `sendToClaude()` function and the "Sent to Claude" page takeover
- `window.send()` function (was tied to the removed Send button)
- Form submission handler — no purpose without the feedback textarea, adds log noise
- Input change handler — same reason
- `pageshow` event listener (was added to fix textarea persistence — no textarea anymore)
**Keep:**
- WebSocket connection, reconnect logic, event queue
- Reload handler (`window.location.reload()` on server push)
- `window.toggleSelect()` for selection highlighting
- `window.selectedChoice` tracking
- `window.brainstorm.send()` and `window.brainstorm.choice()` — these are distinct from the removed `window.send()`. They call `sendEvent` which logs to the server via WebSocket. Useful for custom full-document pages.
**Narrow:**
- Click handler: capture only `[data-choice]` clicks, not all buttons/links. The broad capture was needed when the browser was a feedback channel; now it's just for selection tracking.
**Add:**
- On `data-choice` click, update the selection indicator bar text to show which option was selected.
**Remove from `window.brainstorm` API:**
- `brainstorm.sendToClaude` — no longer exists
### `visual-companion.md` (skill instructions)
**Rewrite "The Loop" section** to the non-blocking flow described above. Remove all references to:
- `wait-for-feedback.sh`
- `TaskOutput` blocking
- Timeout/retry logic (600s timeout, 30-minute cap)
- "User Feedback Format" section describing `send-to-claude` JSON
**Replace with:**
- The new loop (write HTML → end turn → user responds in terminal → read `.events` → iterate)
- `.events` file format documentation
- Guidance that the terminal message is the primary feedback; `.events` provides the full browser interaction stream for additional context
**Keep:**
- Server startup/shutdown instructions
- Content fragment vs full document guidance
- CSS class reference and available components
- Design tips (scale fidelity to the question, 2-4 options per screen, etc.)
### `wait-for-feedback.sh`
**Deleted entirely.**
### `tests/brainstorm-server/server.test.js`
Tests that need updating:
- Test asserting `feedback-footer` presence in fragment responses — update to assert the selection indicator bar or `<!-- CONTENT -->` replacement
- Test asserting `helper.js` contains `send` — update to reflect narrowed API
- Test asserting `sendToClaude` CSS variable usage — remove (function no longer exists)
## Platform Compatibility
The server code (`index.js`, `helper.js`, `frame-template.html`) is fully platform-agnostic — pure Node.js and browser JavaScript. No Claude Code-specific references. Already proven to work on Codex via background terminal interaction.
The skill instructions (`visual-companion.md`) are the platform-adaptive layer. Each platform's Claude uses its own tools to start the server, read `.events`, etc. The non-blocking model works naturally across platforms since it doesn't depend on any platform-specific blocking primitive.
## What This Enables
- **TUI always responsive** during visual brainstorming
- **Mixed input** — click in browser + type in terminal, naturally merged
- **Graceful degradation** — browser down or user doesn't open it? Terminal still works
- **Simpler architecture** — no background tasks, no polling scripts, no timeout management
- **Cross-platform** — same server code works on Claude Code, Codex, and any future platform
## What This Drops
- **Pure-browser feedback workflow** — user must return to the terminal to continue. The selection indicator bar guides them, but it's one extra step compared to the old click-Send-and-wait flow.
- **Inline text feedback from browser** — the textarea is gone. All text feedback goes through the terminal. This is intentional — the terminal is a better text input channel than a small textarea in a frame.
- **Immediate response on browser Send** — the old system had Claude respond the moment the user clicked Send. Now there's a gap while the user switches to the terminal. In practice this is seconds, and the user gets to add context in their terminal message.

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# Zero-Dependency Brainstorm Server
Replace the brainstorm companion server's vendored node_modules (express, ws, chokidar — 714 tracked files) with a single zero-dependency `server.js` using only Node.js built-ins.
## Motivation
Vendoring node_modules into the git repo creates a supply chain risk: frozen dependencies don't get security patches, 714 files of third-party code are committed without audit, and modifications to vendored code look like normal commits. While the actual risk is low (localhost-only dev server), eliminating it is straightforward.
## Architecture
A single `server.js` file (~250-300 lines) using `http`, `crypto`, `fs`, and `path`. The file serves two roles:
- **When run directly** (`node server.js`): starts the HTTP/WebSocket server
- **When required** (`require('./server.js')`): exports WebSocket protocol functions for unit testing
### WebSocket Protocol
Implements RFC 6455 for text frames only:
**Handshake:** Compute `Sec-WebSocket-Accept` from client's `Sec-WebSocket-Key` using SHA-1 + the RFC 6455 magic GUID. Return 101 Switching Protocols.
**Frame decoding (client to server):** Handle three masked length encodings:
- Small: payload < 126 bytes
- Medium: 126-65535 bytes (16-bit extended)
- Large: > 65535 bytes (64-bit extended)
XOR-unmask payload using 4-byte mask key. Return `{ opcode, payload, bytesConsumed }` or `null` for incomplete buffers. Reject unmasked frames.
**Frame encoding (server to client):** Unmasked frames with the same three length encodings.
**Opcodes handled:** TEXT (0x01), CLOSE (0x08), PING (0x09), PONG (0x0A). Unrecognized opcodes get a close frame with status 1003 (Unsupported Data).
**Deliberately skipped:** Binary frames, fragmented messages, extensions (permessage-deflate), subprotocols. These are unnecessary for small JSON text messages between localhost clients. Extensions and subprotocols are negotiated in the handshake — by not advertising them, they are never active.
**Buffer accumulation:** Each connection maintains a buffer. On `data`, append and loop `decodeFrame` until it returns null or buffer is empty.
### HTTP Server
Three routes:
1. **`GET /`** — Serve newest `.html` from screen directory by mtime. Detect full documents vs fragments, wrap fragments in frame template, inject helper.js. Return `text/html`. When no `.html` files exist, serve a hardcoded waiting page ("Waiting for Claude to push a screen...") with helper.js injected.
2. **`GET /files/*`** — Serve static files from screen directory with MIME type lookup from a hardcoded extension map (html, css, js, png, jpg, gif, svg, json). Return 404 if not found.
3. **Everything else** — 404.
WebSocket upgrade handled via the `'upgrade'` event on the HTTP server, separate from the request handler.
### Configuration
Environment variables (all optional):
- `BRAINSTORM_PORT` — port to bind (default: random high port 49152-65535)
- `BRAINSTORM_HOST` — interface to bind (default: `127.0.0.1`)
- `BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST` — hostname for the URL in startup JSON (default: `localhost` when host is `127.0.0.1`, otherwise same as host)
- `BRAINSTORM_DIR` — screen directory path (default: `/tmp/brainstorm`)
### Startup Sequence
1. Create `SCREEN_DIR` if it doesn't exist (`mkdirSync` recursive)
2. Load frame template and helper.js from `__dirname`
3. Start HTTP server on configured host/port
4. Start `fs.watch` on `SCREEN_DIR`
5. On successful listen, log `server-started` JSON to stdout: `{ type, port, host, url_host, url, screen_dir }`
6. Write the same JSON to `SCREEN_DIR/.server-info` so agents can find connection details when stdout is hidden (background execution)
### Application-Level WebSocket Messages
When a TEXT frame arrives from a client:
1. Parse as JSON. If parsing fails, log to stderr and continue.
2. Log to stdout as `{ source: 'user-event', ...event }`.
3. If the event contains a `choice` property, append the JSON to `SCREEN_DIR/.events` (one line per event).
### File Watching
`fs.watch(SCREEN_DIR)` replaces chokidar. On HTML file events:
- On new file (`rename` event for a file that exists): delete `.events` file if present (`unlinkSync`), log `screen-added` to stdout as JSON
- On file change (`change` event): log `screen-updated` to stdout as JSON (do NOT clear `.events`)
- Both events: send `{ type: 'reload' }` to all connected WebSocket clients
Debounce per-filename with ~100ms timeout to prevent duplicate events (common on macOS and Linux).
### Error Handling
- Malformed JSON from WebSocket clients: log to stderr, continue
- Unhandled opcodes: close with status 1003
- Client disconnects: remove from broadcast set
- `fs.watch` errors: log to stderr, continue
- No graceful shutdown logic — shell scripts handle process lifecycle via SIGTERM
## What Changes
| Before | After |
|---|---|
| `index.js` + `package.json` + `package-lock.json` + 714 `node_modules` files | `server.js` (single file) |
| express, ws, chokidar dependencies | none |
| No static file serving | `/files/*` serves from screen directory |
## What Stays the Same
- `helper.js` — no changes
- `frame-template.html` — no changes
- `start-server.sh` — one-line update: `index.js` to `server.js`
- `stop-server.sh` — no changes
- `visual-companion.md` — no changes
- All existing server behavior and external contract
## Platform Compatibility
- `server.js` uses only cross-platform Node built-ins
- `fs.watch` is reliable for single flat directories on macOS, Linux, and Windows
- Shell scripts require bash (Git Bash on Windows, which is required for Claude Code)
## Testing
**Unit tests** (`ws-protocol.test.js`): Test WebSocket frame encoding/decoding, handshake computation, and protocol edge cases directly by requiring `server.js` exports.
**Integration tests** (`server.test.js`): Test full server behavior — HTTP serving, WebSocket communication, file watching, brainstorming workflow. Uses `ws` npm package as a test-only client dependency (not shipped to end users).

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# Codex App Compatibility: Worktree and Finishing Skill Adaptation
Make superpowers skills work in the Codex App's sandboxed worktree environment without breaking existing Claude Code or Codex CLI behavior.
**Ticket:** PRI-823
## Motivation
The Codex App runs agents inside git worktrees it manages — detached HEAD, located under `$CODEX_HOME/worktrees/`, with a Seatbelt sandbox that blocks `git checkout -b`, `git push`, and network access. Three superpowers skills assume unrestricted git access: `using-git-worktrees` creates manual worktrees with named branches, `finishing-a-development-branch` merges/pushes/PRs by branch name, and `subagent-driven-development` requires both.
The Codex CLI (open source terminal tool) does NOT have this conflict — it has no built-in worktree management. Our manual worktree approach fills an isolation gap there. The problem is specifically with the Codex App.
## Empirical Findings
Tested in the Codex App on 2026-03-23:
| Operation | workspace-write sandbox | Full access sandbox |
|---|---|---|
| `git add` | Works | Works |
| `git commit` | Works | Works |
| `git checkout -b` | **Blocked** (can't write `.git/refs/heads/`) | Works |
| `git push` | **Blocked** (network + `.git/refs/remotes/`) | Works |
| `gh pr create` | **Blocked** (network) | Works |
| `git status/diff/log` | Works | Works |
Additional findings:
- `spawn_agent` subagents **share** the parent thread's filesystem (confirmed via marker file test)
- "Create branch" button appears in the App header regardless of which branch the worktree was started from
- The App's native finishing flow: Create branch → Commit modal → Commit and push / Commit and create PR
- `network_access = true` config is silently broken on macOS (issue #10390)
## Design: Read-Only Environment Detection
Three read-only git commands detect the environment without side effects:
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
```
Two signals derived:
- **IN_LINKED_WORKTREE:** `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` — the agent is in a worktree created by something else (Codex App, Claude Code Agent tool, previous skill run, or the user)
- **ON_DETACHED_HEAD:** `BRANCH` is empty — no named branch exists
Why `git-dir != git-common-dir` instead of checking `show-toplevel`:
- In a normal repo, both resolve to the same `.git` directory
- In a linked worktree, `git-dir` is `.git/worktrees/<name>` while `git-common-dir` is `.git`
- In a submodule, both are equal — avoiding a false positive that `show-toplevel` would produce
- Resolving via `cd && pwd -P` handles the relative-path problem (`git-common-dir` returns `.git` relative in normal repos but absolute in worktrees) and symlinks (macOS `/tmp``/private/tmp`)
### Decision Matrix
| Linked Worktree? | Detached HEAD? | Environment | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| No | No | Claude Code / Codex CLI / normal git | Full skill behavior (unchanged) |
| Yes | Yes | Codex App worktree (workspace-write) | Skip worktree creation; handoff payload at finish |
| Yes | No | Codex App (Full access) or manual worktree | Skip worktree creation; full finishing flow |
| No | Yes | Unusual (manual detached HEAD) | Create worktree normally; warn at finish |
## Changes
### 1. `using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` — Add Step 0 (~12 lines)
New section between "Overview" and "Directory Selection Process":
**Step 0: Check if Already in an Isolated Workspace**
Run the detection commands. If `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, skip worktree creation entirely. Instead:
1. Skip to "Run Project Setup" subsection under Creation Steps — `npm install` etc. is idempotent, worth running for safety
2. Then "Verify Clean Baseline" — run tests
3. Report with branch state:
- On a branch: "Already in an isolated workspace at `<path>` on branch `<name>`. Tests passing. Ready to implement."
- Detached HEAD: "Already in an isolated workspace at `<path>` (detached HEAD, externally managed). Tests passing. Note: branch creation needed at finish time. Ready to implement."
If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON`, proceed with the full worktree creation flow (unchanged).
Safety verification (.gitignore check) is skipped when Step 0 fires — irrelevant for externally-created worktrees.
Update the Integration section's "Called by" entries. Change the description on each from context-specific text to: "Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)". For example, the `subagent-driven-development` entry changes from "REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting" to "REQUIRED: Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)".
**Sandbox fallback:** If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` and the skill proceeds to Creation Steps, but `git worktree add -b` fails with a permission error (e.g., Seatbelt sandbox denial), treat this as a late-detected restricted environment. Fall back to the Step 0 "already in workspace" behavior — skip creation, run setup and baseline tests in the current directory, report accordingly.
After reporting in Step 0, STOP. Do not continue to Directory Selection or Creation Steps.
**Everything else unchanged:** Directory Selection, Safety Verification, Creation Steps, Project Setup, Baseline Tests, Quick Reference, Common Mistakes, Red Flags.
### 2. `finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` — Add Step 1.5 + cleanup guard (~20 lines)
**Step 1.5: Detect Environment** (after Step 1 "Verify Tests", before Step 2 "Determine Base Branch")
Run the detection commands. Three paths:
- **Path A** skips Steps 2 and 3 entirely (no base branch or options needed).
- **Paths B and C** proceed through Step 2 (Determine Base Branch) and Step 3 (Present Options) as normal.
**Path A — Externally managed worktree + detached HEAD** (`GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` AND `BRANCH` empty):
First, ensure all work is staged and committed (`git add` + `git commit`). The Codex App's finishing controls operate on committed work.
Then present this to the user (do NOT present the 4-option menu):
```
Implementation complete. All tests passing.
Current HEAD: <full-commit-sha>
This workspace is externally managed (detached HEAD).
I cannot create branches, push, or open PRs from here.
⚠ These commits are on a detached HEAD. If you do not create a branch,
they may be lost when this workspace is cleaned up.
If your host application provides these controls:
- "Create branch" — to name a branch, then commit/push/PR
- "Hand off to local" — to move changes to your local checkout
Suggested branch name: <ticket-id/short-description>
Suggested commit message: <summary-of-work>
```
Branch name derivation: use the ticket ID if available (e.g., `pri-823/codex-compat`), otherwise slugify the first 5 words of the plan title, otherwise omit the suggestion. Avoid including sensitive content (vulnerability descriptions, customer names) in branch names.
Skip to Step 5 (cleanup is a no-op for externally managed worktrees).
**Path B — Externally managed worktree + named branch** (`GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` AND `BRANCH` exists):
Present the 4-option menu as normal. (The Step 5 cleanup guard will re-detect the externally managed state independently.)
**Path C — Normal environment** (`GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON`):
Present the 4-option menu as today (unchanged).
**Step 5 cleanup guard:**
Re-run the `GIT_DIR` vs `GIT_COMMON` detection at cleanup time (do not rely on earlier skill output — the finishing skill may run in a different session). If `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, skip `git worktree remove` — the host environment owns this workspace.
Otherwise, check and remove as today. Note: the existing Step 5 text says "For Options 1, 2, 4" but the Quick Reference table and Common Mistakes section say "Options 1 & 4 only." The new guard is added before this existing logic and does not change which options trigger cleanup.
**Everything else unchanged:** Options 1-4 logic, Quick Reference, Common Mistakes, Red Flags.
### 3. `subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md` and `executing-plans/SKILL.md` — 1 line edit each
Both skills have an identical Integration section line. Change from:
```
- superpowers:using-git-worktrees - REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting
```
To:
```
- superpowers:using-git-worktrees - REQUIRED: Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
```
**Everything else unchanged:** Dispatch/review loop, prompt templates, model selection, status handling, red flags.
### 4. `codex-tools.md` — Add environment detection docs (~15 lines)
Two new sections at the end:
**Environment Detection:**
```markdown
## Environment Detection
Skills that create worktrees or finish branches should detect their
environment with read-only git commands before proceeding:
\```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
\```
- `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` → already in a linked worktree (skip creation)
- `BRANCH` empty → detached HEAD (cannot branch/push/PR from sandbox)
See `using-git-worktrees` Step 0 and `finishing-a-development-branch`
Step 1.5 for how each skill uses these signals.
```
**Codex App Finishing:**
```markdown
## Codex App Finishing
When the sandbox blocks branch/push operations (detached HEAD in an
externally managed worktree), the agent commits all work and informs
the user to use the App's native controls:
- **"Create branch"** — names the branch, then commit/push/PR via App UI
- **"Hand off to local"** — transfers work to the user's local checkout
The agent can still run tests, stage files, and output suggested branch
names, commit messages, and PR descriptions for the user to copy.
```
## What Does NOT Change
- `implementer-prompt.md`, `spec-reviewer-prompt.md`, `code-quality-reviewer-prompt.md` — subagent prompts untouched
- `executing-plans/SKILL.md` — only the 1-line Integration description changes (same as `subagent-driven-development`); all runtime behavior is unchanged
- `dispatching-parallel-agents/SKILL.md` — no worktree or finishing operations
- `.codex/INSTALL.md` — installation process unchanged
- The 4-option finishing menu — preserved exactly for Claude Code and Codex CLI
- The full worktree creation flow — preserved exactly for non-worktree environments
- Subagent dispatch/review/iterate loop — unchanged (filesystem sharing confirmed)
## Scope Summary
| File | Change |
|---|---|
| `skills/using-git-worktrees/SKILL.md` | +12 lines (Step 0) |
| `skills/finishing-a-development-branch/SKILL.md` | +20 lines (Step 1.5 + cleanup guard) |
| `skills/subagent-driven-development/SKILL.md` | 1 line edit |
| `skills/executing-plans/SKILL.md` | 1 line edit |
| `skills/using-superpowers/references/codex-tools.md` | +15 lines |
~50 lines added/changed across 5 files. Zero new files. Zero breaking changes.
## Future Considerations
If a third skill needs the same detection pattern, extract it into a shared `references/environment-detection.md` file (Approach B). Not needed now — only 2 skills use it.
## Test Plan
### Automated (run in Claude Code after implementation)
1. Normal repo detection — assert IN_LINKED_WORKTREE=false
2. Linked worktree detection — `git worktree add` test worktree, assert IN_LINKED_WORKTREE=true
3. Detached HEAD detection — `git checkout --detach`, assert ON_DETACHED_HEAD=true
4. Finishing skill handoff output — verify handoff message (not 4-option menu) in restricted environment
5. **Step 5 cleanup guard** — create a linked worktree (`git worktree add /tmp/test-cleanup -b test-cleanup`), `cd` into it, run the Step 5 cleanup detection (`GIT_DIR` vs `GIT_COMMON`), assert it would NOT call `git worktree remove`. Then `cd` back to main repo, run the same detection, assert it WOULD call `git worktree remove`. Clean up test worktree afterward.
### Manual Codex App Tests (5 tests)
1. Detection in Worktree thread (workspace-write) — verify GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON, empty branch
2. Detection in Worktree thread (Full access) — same detection, different sandbox behavior
3. Finishing skill handoff format — verify agent emits handoff payload, not 4-option menu
4. Full lifecycle — detection → commit → finishing detection → correct behavior → cleanup
5. **Sandbox fallback in Local thread** — Start a Codex App **Local thread** (workspace-write sandbox). Prompt: "Use the superpowers skill `using-git-worktrees` to set up an isolated workspace for implementing a small change." Pre-check: `git checkout -b test-sandbox-check` should fail with `Operation not permitted`. Expected: the skill detects `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (normal repo), attempts `git worktree add -b`, hits Seatbelt denial, falls back to Step 0 "already in workspace" behavior — runs setup, baseline tests, reports ready from current directory. Pass: agent recovers gracefully without cryptic error messages. Fail: agent prints raw Seatbelt error, retries, or gives up with confusing output.
### Regression
- Existing Claude Code skill-triggering tests still pass
- Existing subagent-driven-development integration tests still pass
- Normal Claude Code session: full worktree creation + 4-option finishing still works

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# Worktree Rototill: Detect-and-Defer
**Date:** 2026-04-06
**Status:** Draft
**Ticket:** PRI-974
**Subsumes:** PRI-823 (Codex App compatibility)
## Problem
Superpowers is opinionated about worktree management — specific paths (`.worktrees/<branch>`), specific commands (`git worktree add`), specific cleanup (`git worktree remove`). Meanwhile, Claude Code, Codex App, Gemini CLI, and Cursor all provide native worktree support with their own paths, lifecycle management, and cleanup.
This creates three failure modes:
1. **Duplication** — on Claude Code, the skill does what `EnterWorktree`/`ExitWorktree` already does
2. **Conflict** — on Codex App, the skill tries to create worktrees inside an already-managed worktree
3. **Phantom state** — skill-created worktrees at `.worktrees/` are invisible to the harness; harness-created worktrees at `.claude/worktrees/` are invisible to the skill
For harnesses without native support (Codex CLI, OpenCode, Copilot standalone), superpowers fills a real gap. The skill shouldn't go away — it should get out of the way when native support exists.
## Goals
1. Defer to native harness worktree systems when they exist
2. Continue providing worktree support for harnesses that lack it
3. Fix three known bugs in finishing-a-development-branch (#940, #999, #238)
4. Make worktree creation opt-in rather than mandatory (#991)
5. Replace hardcoded `CLAUDE.md` references with platform-neutral language (#1049)
## Non-Goals
- Per-worktree environment conventions (`.worktree-env.sh`, port offsetting) — Phase 4
- PreToolUse hooks for path enforcement — Phase 4
- Multi-repo worktree documentation — Phase 4
- Brainstorming checklist changes for worktrees — Phase 4
- `.superpowers-session.json` metadata tracking (interesting PR #997 idea, not needed for v1)
- Hooks symlinking into worktrees (PR #965 idea, separate concern)
## Design Principles
### Detect state, not platform
Use `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` to determine "am I already in a worktree?" rather than sniffing environment variables to identify the harness. This is a stable git primitive (since git 2.5, 2015), works universally across all harnesses, and requires zero maintenance as new harnesses appear.
### Declarative intent, prescriptive fallback
The skill describes the goal ("ensure work happens in an isolated workspace") and defers to native tools when available. It prescribes specific git commands only as a fallback for harnesses without native worktree support. Step 1a comes first and names native tools explicitly (`EnterWorktree`, `WorktreeCreate`, `/worktree`, `--worktree`); Step 1b comes second with the git fallback. The original spec kept Step 1a abstract ("you know your own toolkit"), but TDD proved that agents anchor on Step 1b's concrete commands when Step 1a is too vague. Explicit tool naming and a consent-authorization bridge were required to make the preference reliable.
### Provenance-based ownership
Whoever creates the worktree owns its cleanup. If the harness created it, superpowers doesn't touch it. If superpowers created it (via git fallback), superpowers cleans it up. The heuristic: if the worktree lives under `.worktrees/` or `~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`, superpowers owns it. Anything else (`.claude/worktrees/`, `~/.codex/worktrees/`, `.gemini/worktrees/`) belongs to the harness.
## Design
### 1. `using-git-worktrees` SKILL.md Rewrite
The skill gains three new steps before creation and simplifies the creation flow.
#### Step 0: Detect Existing Isolation
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
```
Three outcomes:
| Condition | Meaning | Action |
|-----------|---------|--------|
| `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` | Normal repo checkout | Proceed to Step 0.5 |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, named branch | Already in a linked worktree | Skip to Step 3 (project setup). Report: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` on branch `<name>`." |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, detached HEAD | Externally managed worktree (e.g., Codex App sandbox) | Skip to Step 3. Report: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` (detached HEAD, externally managed)." |
Step 0 does not care who created the worktree or which harness is running. A worktree is a worktree regardless of origin.
**Submodule guard:** `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` is also true inside git submodules. Before concluding "already in a worktree," check that we're not in a submodule:
```bash
# If this returns a path, we're in a submodule, not a worktree
git rev-parse --show-superproject-working-tree 2>/dev/null
```
If in a submodule, treat as `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (proceed to Step 0.5).
#### Step 0.5: Consent
When Step 0 finds no existing isolation (`GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON`), ask before creating:
> "Would you like me to set up an isolated worktree? This protects your current branch from changes. (y/n)"
If yes, proceed to Step 1. If no, work in place — skip to Step 3 with no worktree.
This step is skipped entirely when Step 0 detects existing isolation (no point asking about what already exists).
#### Step 1a: Native Tools (preferred)
> The user has asked for an isolated workspace (Step 0 consent). Check your available tools — do you have `EnterWorktree`, `WorktreeCreate`, a `/worktree` command, or a `--worktree` flag? If YES: the user's consent to create a worktree is your authorization to use it. Use it now and skip to Step 3.
After using a native tool, skip to Step 3 (project setup).
**Design note — TDD revision:** The original spec used a deliberately short, abstract Step 1a ("You know your own toolkit — the skill does not need to name specific tools"). TDD validation disproved this: agents anchored on Step 1b's concrete git commands and ignored the abstract guidance (2/6 pass rate). Three changes fixed it (50/50 pass rate across GREEN and PRESSURE tests):
1. **Explicit tool naming** — listing `EnterWorktree`, `WorktreeCreate`, `/worktree`, `--worktree` by name transforms the decision from interpretation ("do I have a native tool?") into factual lookup ("is `EnterWorktree` in my tool list?"). Agents on platforms without these tools simply check, find nothing, and fall through to Step 1b. No false positives observed.
2. **Consent bridge** — "the user's consent to create a worktree is your authorization to use it" directly addresses `EnterWorktree`'s tool-level guardrail ("ONLY when user explicitly asks"). Tool descriptions override skill instructions (Claude Code #29950), so the skill must frame user consent as the authorization the tool requires.
3. **Red Flag entry** — naming the specific anti-pattern ("Use `git worktree add` when you have a native worktree tool — this is the #1 mistake") in the Red Flags section.
File splitting (Step 1b in a separate skill) was tested and proven unnecessary. The anchoring problem is solved by the quality of Step 1a's text, not by physical separation of git commands. Control tests with the full 240-line skill (all git commands visible) passed 20/20.
#### Step 1b: Git Worktree Fallback
When no native tool is available, create a worktree manually.
**Directory selection** (priority order):
1. Check for existing `.worktrees/` or `worktrees/` directory — if found, use it. If both exist, `.worktrees/` wins.
2. Check for existing `~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/<project>/` directory — if found, use it (backward compatibility with legacy global path).
3. Check the project's agent instruction file (CLAUDE.md, GEMINI.md, AGENTS.md, .cursorrules, or equivalent) for a worktree directory preference.
4. Default to `.worktrees/`.
No interactive directory selection prompt. The global path (`~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`) is no longer offered as a choice to new users, but existing worktrees at that location are detected and used for backward compatibility.
**Safety verification** (project-local directories only):
```bash
git check-ignore -q .worktrees 2>/dev/null
```
If not ignored, add to `.gitignore` and commit before proceeding.
**Create:**
```bash
git worktree add "$path" -b "$BRANCH_NAME"
cd "$path"
```
**Hooks awareness:** Git worktrees do not inherit the parent repo's hooks directory. After creating a worktree via 1b, symlink the hooks directory from the main repo if one exists:
```bash
if [ -d "$MAIN_ROOT/.git/hooks" ]; then
ln -sf "$MAIN_ROOT/.git/hooks" "$path/.git/hooks"
fi
```
This prevents pre-commit checks, linters, and other hooks from silently stopping when work moves to a worktree. (Idea from PR #965.)
**Sandbox fallback:** If `git worktree add` fails with a permission error, treat as a restricted environment. Skip creation, work in current directory, proceed to Step 3.
**Step numbering note:** The current skill has Steps 1-4 as a flat list. This redesign uses 0, 0.5, 1a, 1b, 3, 4. There is no Step 2 — it was the old monolithic "Create Isolated Workspace" which is now split into the 1a/1b structure. The implementation should renumber cleanly (e.g., 0 → "Step 0: Detect", 0.5 → within Step 0's flow, 1a/1b → "Step 1", 3 → "Step 2", 4 → "Step 3") or keep the current numbering with a note. Implementer's choice.
#### Steps 3-4: Project Setup and Baseline Tests (unchanged)
Regardless of which path created the workspace (Step 0 detected existing, Step 1a native tool, Step 1b git fallback, or no worktree at all), execution converges:
- **Step 3:** Auto-detect and run project setup (`npm install`, `cargo build`, `pip install`, `go mod download`, etc.)
- **Step 4:** Run the test suite. If tests fail, report failures and ask whether to proceed.
### 2. `finishing-a-development-branch` SKILL.md Rewrite
The finishing skill gains environment detection and fixes three bugs.
#### Step 1: Verify Tests (unchanged)
Run the project's test suite. If tests fail, stop. Don't offer completion options.
#### Step 1.5: Detect Environment (new)
Re-run the same detection as Step 0 in creation:
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
```
Three paths:
| State | Menu | Cleanup |
|-------|------|---------|
| `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (normal repo) | Standard 4 options | No worktree to clean up |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, named branch | Standard 4 options | Provenance-based (see Step 5) |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, detached HEAD | Reduced menu: push as new branch + PR, keep as-is, discard | No merge options (can't merge from detached HEAD) |
#### Step 2: Determine Base Branch (unchanged)
#### Step 3: Present Options
**Normal repo and named-branch worktree:**
1. Merge back to `<base-branch>` locally
2. Push and create a Pull Request
3. Keep the branch as-is (I'll handle it later)
4. Discard this work
**Detached HEAD:**
1. Push as new branch and create a Pull Request
2. Keep as-is (I'll handle it later)
3. Discard this work
#### Step 4: Execute Choice
**Option 1 (Merge locally):**
```bash
# Get main repo root for CWD safety (Bug #238 fix)
MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd "$MAIN_ROOT"
# Merge first, verify success before removing anything
git checkout <base-branch>
git pull
git merge <feature-branch>
<run tests>
# Only after merge succeeds: remove worktree, then delete branch (Bug #999 fix)
git worktree remove "$WORKTREE_PATH" # only if superpowers owns it
git branch -d <feature-branch>
```
The order is critical: merge → verify → remove worktree → delete branch. The old skill deleted the branch before removing the worktree (which fails because the worktree still references the branch). The naive fix of removing the worktree first is also wrong — if the merge then fails, the working directory is gone and changes are lost.
**Option 2 (Create PR):**
Push branch, create PR. Do NOT clean up worktree — user needs it for PR iteration. (Bug #940 fix: remove contradictory "Then: Cleanup worktree" prose.)
**Option 3 (Keep as-is):** No action.
**Option 4 (Discard):** Require typed "discard" confirmation. Then remove worktree (if superpowers owns it), force-delete branch.
#### Step 5: Cleanup (updated)
```
if GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON:
# Normal repo, no worktree to clean up
done
if worktree path is under .worktrees/ or ~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/:
# Superpowers created it — we own cleanup
cd to main repo root # Bug #238 fix
git worktree remove <path>
else:
# Harness created it — hands off
# If platform provides a workspace-exit tool, use it
# Otherwise, leave the worktree in place
```
Cleanup only runs for Options 1 and 4. Options 2 and 3 always preserve the worktree. (Bug #940 fix.)
**Stale worktree pruning:** After any `git worktree remove`, run `git worktree prune` as a self-healing step. Worktree directories can get deleted out-of-band (e.g., by harness cleanup, manual `rm`, or `.claude/` cleanup), leaving stale registrations that cause confusing errors. One line, prevents silent rot. (Idea from PR #1072.)
### 3. Integration Updates
#### `subagent-driven-development` and `executing-plans`
Both currently list `using-git-worktrees` as REQUIRED in their integration sections. Change to:
> `using-git-worktrees` — Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
The skill itself now handles consent (Step 0.5) and detection (Step 0), so calling skills don't need to gate or prompt.
#### `writing-plans`
Remove the stale claim "should be run in a dedicated worktree (created by brainstorming skill)." Brainstorming is a design skill and does not create worktrees. The worktree prompt happens at execution time via `using-git-worktrees`.
### 4. Platform-Neutral Instruction File References
All instances of hardcoded `CLAUDE.md` in worktree-related skills are replaced with:
> "your project's agent instruction file (CLAUDE.md, GEMINI.md, AGENTS.md, .cursorrules, or equivalent)"
This applies to directory preference checks in Step 1b.
## Bug Fixes (bundled)
| Bug | Problem | Fix | Location |
|-----|---------|-----|----------|
| #940 | Option 2 prose says "Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 5)" but quick reference says keep it. Step 5 says "For Options 1, 2, 4" but Common Mistakes says "Options 1 and 4 only." | Remove cleanup from Option 2. Step 5 applies to Options 1 and 4 only. | finishing SKILL.md |
| #999 | Option 1 deletes branch before removing worktree. `git branch -d` can fail because worktree still references the branch. | Reorder to: merge → verify tests → remove worktree → delete branch. Merge must succeed before anything is removed. | finishing SKILL.md |
| #238 | `git worktree remove` fails silently if CWD is inside the worktree being removed. | Add CWD guard: `cd` to main repo root before `git worktree remove`. | finishing SKILL.md |
## Issues Resolved
| Issue | Resolution |
|-------|-----------|
| #940 | Direct fix (Bug #940) |
| #991 | Opt-in consent in Step 0.5 |
| #918 | Step 0 detection + Step 1.5 finishing detection |
| #1009 | Resolved by Step 1a — agents use native tools (e.g., `EnterWorktree`) which create at harness-native paths. Depends on Step 1a working; see Risks. |
| #999 | Direct fix (Bug #999) |
| #238 | Direct fix (Bug #238) |
| #1049 | Platform-neutral instruction file references |
| #279 | Solved by detect-and-defer — native paths respected because we don't override them |
| #574 | **Deferred.** Nothing in this spec touches the brainstorming skill where the bug lives. Full fix (adding a worktree step to brainstorming's checklist) is Phase 4. |
## Risks
### Step 1a is the load-bearing assumption — RESOLVED
Step 1a — agents preferring native worktree tools over the git fallback — is the foundation the entire design rests on. If agents ignore Step 1a and fall through to Step 1b on harnesses with native support, detect-and-defer fails entirely.
**Status:** This risk materialized during implementation. The original abstract Step 1a ("You know your own toolkit") failed at 2/6 on Claude Code. The TDD gate worked as designed — it caught the failure before any skill files were modified, preventing a broken release. Three REFACTOR iterations identified the root causes (agent anchoring on concrete commands, tool-description guardrail overriding skill instructions) and produced a fix validated at 50/50 across GREEN and PRESSURE tests. See Step 1a design note above for details.
**Cross-platform validation:**
As of 2026-04-06, Claude Code is the only harness with an agent-callable mid-session worktree tool (`EnterWorktree`). All others either create worktrees before the agent starts (Codex App, Gemini CLI, Cursor) or have no native worktree support (Codex CLI, OpenCode). Step 1a is forward-compatible: when other harnesses add agent-callable worktree tools, agents will match them against the named examples and use them without skill changes.
| Harness | Current worktree model | Skill mechanism | Tested |
|---------|----------------------|-----------------|--------|
| Claude Code | Agent-callable `EnterWorktree` | Step 1a | 50/50 (GREEN + PRESSURE) |
| Codex CLI | No native tool (shell only) | Step 1b git fallback | 6/6 (`codex exec`) |
| Gemini CLI | Launch-time `--worktree` flag, no agent tool | Step 0 if launched with flag, Step 1b if not | Step 0: 1/1, Step 1b: 1/1 (`gemini -p`) |
| Cursor Agent | User-facing `/worktree`, no agent tool | Step 0 if user activated, Step 1b if not | Step 0: 1/1, Step 1b: 1/1 (`cursor-agent -p`) |
| Codex App | Platform-managed, detached HEAD, no agent tool | Step 0 detects existing | 1/1 simulated |
| OpenCode | Detection only (`ctx.worktree`), no agent tool | Step 1b git fallback | Untested (no CLI access) |
**Residual risks:**
1. If Anthropic changes `EnterWorktree`'s tool description to be more restrictive (e.g., "Do not use based on skill instructions"), the consent bridge breaks. Worth filing an issue requesting that the tool description accommodate skill-driven invocation.
2. When other harnesses add agent-callable worktree tools, they may use names not in Step 1a's list. The list should be updated as new tools appear. The generic phrasing ("a worktree or workspace-isolation tool") provides some forward coverage.
### Provenance heuristic
The `.worktrees/` or `~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/` = ours, anything else = hands off` heuristic works for every current harness. If a future harness adopts `.worktrees/` as its convention, we'd have a false positive (superpowers tries to clean up a harness-owned worktree). Similarly, if a user manually runs `git worktree add .worktrees/experiment` without superpowers, we'd incorrectly claim ownership. Both are low risk — every harness uses branded paths, and manual `.worktrees/` creation is unlikely — but worth noting.
### Detached HEAD finishing
The reduced menu for detached HEAD worktrees (no merge option) is correct for Codex App's sandbox model. If a user is in detached HEAD for another reason, the reduced menu still makes sense — you genuinely can't merge from detached HEAD without creating a branch first.
## Implementation Notes
Both skill files contain sections beyond the core steps that need updating during implementation:
- **Frontmatter** (`name`, `description`): Update to reflect detect-and-defer behavior
- **Quick Reference tables**: Rewrite to match new step structure and bug fixes
- **Common Mistakes sections**: Update or remove items that reference old behavior (e.g., "Skip CLAUDE.md check" is now wrong)
- **Red Flags sections**: Update to reflect new priorities (e.g., "Never create a worktree when Step 0 detects existing isolation")
- **Integration sections**: Update cross-references between skills
The spec describes *what changes*; the implementation plan will specify exact edits to these secondary sections.
## Future Work (not in this spec)
- **Phase 3 remainder:** `$TMPDIR` directory option (#666), setup docs for caching and env inheritance (#299)
- **Phase 4:** PreToolUse hooks for path enforcement (#1040), per-worktree env conventions (#597), brainstorming checklist worktree step (#574), multi-repo documentation (#710)

View File

@@ -149,8 +149,8 @@ python3 tests/claude-code/analyze-token-usage.py ~/.claude/projects/<project-dir
Session transcripts are stored in `~/.claude/projects/` with the working directory path encoded: Session transcripts are stored in `~/.claude/projects/` with the working directory path encoded:
```bash ```bash
# Example for /Users/jesse/Documents/GitHub/superpowers/superpowers # Example for /Users/yourname/Documents/GitHub/superpowers/superpowers
SESSION_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/-Users-jesse-Documents-GitHub-superpowers-superpowers" SESSION_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/-Users-yourname-Documents-GitHub-superpowers-superpowers"
# Find recent sessions # Find recent sessions
ls -lt "$SESSION_DIR"/*.jsonl | head -5 ls -lt "$SESSION_DIR"/*.jsonl | head -5

View File

@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ exit /b
CMDBLOCK CMDBLOCK
# Unix shell runs from here # Unix shell runs from here
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]:-$0}")" && pwd)" SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
SCRIPT_NAME="$1" SCRIPT_NAME="$1"
shift shift
"${SCRIPT_DIR}/${SCRIPT_NAME}" "$@" "${SCRIPT_DIR}/${SCRIPT_NAME}" "$@"

6
gemini-extension.json Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
{
"name": "superpowers",
"description": "Core skills library: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
"version": "5.1.0",
"contextFileName": "GEMINI.md"
}

10
hooks/hooks-cursor.json Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
{
"version": 1,
"hooks": {
"sessionStart": [
{
"command": "./hooks/run-hook.cmd session-start"
}
]
}
}

View File

@@ -2,12 +2,12 @@
"hooks": { "hooks": {
"SessionStart": [ "SessionStart": [
{ {
"matcher": "startup|resume|clear|compact", "matcher": "startup|clear|compact",
"hooks": [ "hooks": [
{ {
"type": "command", "type": "command",
"command": "${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/hooks/session-start.sh", "command": "\"${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/hooks/run-hook.cmd\" session-start",
"async": true "async": false
} }
] ]
} }

View File

@@ -1,43 +1,46 @@
: << 'CMDBLOCK' : << 'CMDBLOCK'
@echo off @echo off
REM ============================================================================ REM Cross-platform polyglot wrapper for hook scripts.
REM DEPRECATED: This polyglot wrapper is no longer used as of Claude Code 2.1.x REM On Windows: cmd.exe runs the batch portion, which finds and calls bash.
REM ============================================================================ REM On Unix: the shell interprets this as a script (: is a no-op in bash).
REM REM
REM Claude Code 2.1.x changed the Windows execution model for hooks: REM Hook scripts use extensionless filenames (e.g. "session-start" not
REM "session-start.sh") so Claude Code's Windows auto-detection -- which
REM prepends "bash" to any command containing .sh -- doesn't interfere.
REM REM
REM Before (2.0.x): Hooks ran with shell:true, using the system default shell.
REM This wrapper provided cross-platform compatibility by
REM being both a valid .cmd file (Windows) and bash script.
REM
REM After (2.1.x): Claude Code now auto-detects .sh files in hook commands
REM and prepends "bash " on Windows. This broke the wrapper
REM because the command:
REM "run-hook.cmd" session-start.sh
REM became:
REM bash "run-hook.cmd" session-start.sh
REM ...and bash cannot execute a .cmd file.
REM
REM The fix: hooks.json now calls session-start.sh directly. Claude Code 2.1.x
REM handles the bash invocation automatically on Windows.
REM
REM This file is kept for reference and potential backward compatibility.
REM ============================================================================
REM
REM Original purpose: Polyglot wrapper to run .sh scripts cross-platform
REM Usage: run-hook.cmd <script-name> [args...] REM Usage: run-hook.cmd <script-name> [args...]
REM The script should be in the same directory as this wrapper
if "%~1"=="" ( if "%~1"=="" (
echo run-hook.cmd: missing script name >&2 echo run-hook.cmd: missing script name >&2
exit /b 1 exit /b 1
) )
"C:\Program Files\Git\bin\bash.exe" -l "%~dp0%~1" %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
exit /b set "HOOK_DIR=%~dp0"
REM Try Git for Windows bash in standard locations
if exist "C:\Program Files\Git\bin\bash.exe" (
"C:\Program Files\Git\bin\bash.exe" "%HOOK_DIR%%~1" %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
exit /b %ERRORLEVEL%
)
if exist "C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin\bash.exe" (
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin\bash.exe" "%HOOK_DIR%%~1" %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
exit /b %ERRORLEVEL%
)
REM Try bash on PATH (e.g. user-installed Git Bash, MSYS2, Cygwin)
where bash >nul 2>nul
if %ERRORLEVEL% equ 0 (
bash "%HOOK_DIR%%~1" %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
exit /b %ERRORLEVEL%
)
REM No bash found - exit silently rather than error
REM (plugin still works, just without SessionStart context injection)
exit /b 0
CMDBLOCK CMDBLOCK
# Unix shell runs from here # Unix: run the named script directly
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)" SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
SCRIPT_NAME="$1" SCRIPT_NAME="$1"
shift shift
"${SCRIPT_DIR}/${SCRIPT_NAME}" "$@" exec bash "${SCRIPT_DIR}/${SCRIPT_NAME}" "$@"

57
hooks/session-start Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# SessionStart hook for superpowers plugin
set -euo pipefail
# Determine plugin root directory
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
PLUGIN_ROOT="$(cd "${SCRIPT_DIR}/.." && pwd)"
# Check if legacy skills directory exists and build warning
warning_message=""
legacy_skills_dir="${HOME}/.config/superpowers/skills"
if [ -d "$legacy_skills_dir" ]; then
warning_message="\n\n<important-reminder>IN YOUR FIRST REPLY AFTER SEEING THIS MESSAGE YOU MUST TELL THE USER:⚠️ **WARNING:** Superpowers now uses Claude Code's skills system. Custom skills in ~/.config/superpowers/skills will not be read. Move custom skills to ~/.claude/skills instead. To make this message go away, remove ~/.config/superpowers/skills</important-reminder>"
fi
# Read using-superpowers content
using_superpowers_content=$(cat "${PLUGIN_ROOT}/skills/using-superpowers/SKILL.md" 2>&1 || echo "Error reading using-superpowers skill")
# Escape string for JSON embedding using bash parameter substitution.
# Each ${s//old/new} is a single C-level pass - orders of magnitude
# faster than the character-by-character loop this replaces.
escape_for_json() {
local s="$1"
s="${s//\\/\\\\}"
s="${s//\"/\\\"}"
s="${s//$'\n'/\\n}"
s="${s//$'\r'/\\r}"
s="${s//$'\t'/\\t}"
printf '%s' "$s"
}
using_superpowers_escaped=$(escape_for_json "$using_superpowers_content")
warning_escaped=$(escape_for_json "$warning_message")
session_context="<EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>\nYou have superpowers.\n\n**Below is the full content of your 'superpowers:using-superpowers' skill - your introduction to using skills. For all other skills, use the 'Skill' tool:**\n\n${using_superpowers_escaped}\n\n${warning_escaped}\n</EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>"
# Output context injection as JSON.
# Cursor hooks expect additional_context (snake_case).
# Claude Code hooks expect hookSpecificOutput.additionalContext (nested).
# Copilot CLI (v1.0.11+) and others expect additionalContext (top-level, SDK standard).
# Claude Code reads BOTH additional_context and hookSpecificOutput without
# deduplication, so we must emit only the field the current platform consumes.
#
# Uses printf instead of heredoc to work around bash 5.3+ heredoc hang.
# See: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/issues/571
if [ -n "${CURSOR_PLUGIN_ROOT:-}" ]; then
# Cursor sets CURSOR_PLUGIN_ROOT (may also set CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT)
printf '{\n "additional_context": "%s"\n}\n' "$session_context"
elif [ -n "${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT:-}" ] && [ -z "${COPILOT_CLI:-}" ]; then
# Claude Code sets CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT without COPILOT_CLI
printf '{\n "hookSpecificOutput": {\n "hookEventName": "SessionStart",\n "additionalContext": "%s"\n }\n}\n' "$session_context"
else
# Copilot CLI (sets COPILOT_CLI=1) or unknown platform — SDK standard format
printf '{\n "additionalContext": "%s"\n}\n' "$session_context"
fi
exit 0

View File

@@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# SessionStart hook for superpowers plugin
set -euo pipefail
# Determine plugin root directory
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]:-$0}")" && pwd)"
PLUGIN_ROOT="$(cd "${SCRIPT_DIR}/.." && pwd)"
# Check if legacy skills directory exists and build warning
warning_message=""
legacy_skills_dir="${HOME}/.config/superpowers/skills"
if [ -d "$legacy_skills_dir" ]; then
warning_message="\n\n<important-reminder>IN YOUR FIRST REPLY AFTER SEEING THIS MESSAGE YOU MUST TELL THE USER:⚠️ **WARNING:** Superpowers now uses Claude Code's skills system. Custom skills in ~/.config/superpowers/skills will not be read. Move custom skills to ~/.claude/skills instead. To make this message go away, remove ~/.config/superpowers/skills</important-reminder>"
fi
# Read using-superpowers content
using_superpowers_content=$(cat "${PLUGIN_ROOT}/skills/using-superpowers/SKILL.md" 2>&1 || echo "Error reading using-superpowers skill")
# Escape string for JSON embedding using bash parameter substitution.
# Each ${s//old/new} is a single C-level pass - orders of magnitude
# faster than the character-by-character loop this replaces.
escape_for_json() {
local s="$1"
s="${s//\\/\\\\}"
s="${s//\"/\\\"}"
s="${s//$'\n'/\\n}"
s="${s//$'\r'/\\r}"
s="${s//$'\t'/\\t}"
printf '%s' "$s"
}
using_superpowers_escaped=$(escape_for_json "$using_superpowers_content")
warning_escaped=$(escape_for_json "$warning_message")
# Output context injection as JSON
cat <<EOF
{
"hookSpecificOutput": {
"hookEventName": "SessionStart",
"additionalContext": "<EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>\nYou have superpowers.\n\n**Below is the full content of your 'superpowers:using-superpowers' skill - your introduction to using skills. For all other skills, use the 'Skill' tool:**\n\n${using_superpowers_escaped}\n\n${warning_escaped}\n</EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>"
}
}
EOF
exit 0

View File

@@ -1,208 +0,0 @@
import fs from 'fs';
import path from 'path';
import { execSync } from 'child_process';
/**
* Extract YAML frontmatter from a skill file.
* Current format:
* ---
* name: skill-name
* description: Use when [condition] - [what it does]
* ---
*
* @param {string} filePath - Path to SKILL.md file
* @returns {{name: string, description: string}}
*/
function extractFrontmatter(filePath) {
try {
const content = fs.readFileSync(filePath, 'utf8');
const lines = content.split('\n');
let inFrontmatter = false;
let name = '';
let description = '';
for (const line of lines) {
if (line.trim() === '---') {
if (inFrontmatter) break;
inFrontmatter = true;
continue;
}
if (inFrontmatter) {
const match = line.match(/^(\w+):\s*(.*)$/);
if (match) {
const [, key, value] = match;
switch (key) {
case 'name':
name = value.trim();
break;
case 'description':
description = value.trim();
break;
}
}
}
}
return { name, description };
} catch (error) {
return { name: '', description: '' };
}
}
/**
* Find all SKILL.md files in a directory recursively.
*
* @param {string} dir - Directory to search
* @param {string} sourceType - 'personal' or 'superpowers' for namespacing
* @param {number} maxDepth - Maximum recursion depth (default: 3)
* @returns {Array<{path: string, name: string, description: string, sourceType: string}>}
*/
function findSkillsInDir(dir, sourceType, maxDepth = 3) {
const skills = [];
if (!fs.existsSync(dir)) return skills;
function recurse(currentDir, depth) {
if (depth > maxDepth) return;
const entries = fs.readdirSync(currentDir, { withFileTypes: true });
for (const entry of entries) {
const fullPath = path.join(currentDir, entry.name);
if (entry.isDirectory()) {
// Check for SKILL.md in this directory
const skillFile = path.join(fullPath, 'SKILL.md');
if (fs.existsSync(skillFile)) {
const { name, description } = extractFrontmatter(skillFile);
skills.push({
path: fullPath,
skillFile: skillFile,
name: name || entry.name,
description: description || '',
sourceType: sourceType
});
}
// Recurse into subdirectories
recurse(fullPath, depth + 1);
}
}
}
recurse(dir, 0);
return skills;
}
/**
* Resolve a skill name to its file path, handling shadowing
* (personal skills override superpowers skills).
*
* @param {string} skillName - Name like "superpowers:brainstorming" or "my-skill"
* @param {string} superpowersDir - Path to superpowers skills directory
* @param {string} personalDir - Path to personal skills directory
* @returns {{skillFile: string, sourceType: string, skillPath: string} | null}
*/
function resolveSkillPath(skillName, superpowersDir, personalDir) {
// Strip superpowers: prefix if present
const forceSuperpowers = skillName.startsWith('superpowers:');
const actualSkillName = forceSuperpowers ? skillName.replace(/^superpowers:/, '') : skillName;
// Try personal skills first (unless explicitly superpowers:)
if (!forceSuperpowers && personalDir) {
const personalPath = path.join(personalDir, actualSkillName);
const personalSkillFile = path.join(personalPath, 'SKILL.md');
if (fs.existsSync(personalSkillFile)) {
return {
skillFile: personalSkillFile,
sourceType: 'personal',
skillPath: actualSkillName
};
}
}
// Try superpowers skills
if (superpowersDir) {
const superpowersPath = path.join(superpowersDir, actualSkillName);
const superpowersSkillFile = path.join(superpowersPath, 'SKILL.md');
if (fs.existsSync(superpowersSkillFile)) {
return {
skillFile: superpowersSkillFile,
sourceType: 'superpowers',
skillPath: actualSkillName
};
}
}
return null;
}
/**
* Check if a git repository has updates available.
*
* @param {string} repoDir - Path to git repository
* @returns {boolean} - True if updates are available
*/
function checkForUpdates(repoDir) {
try {
// Quick check with 3 second timeout to avoid delays if network is down
const output = execSync('git fetch origin && git status --porcelain=v1 --branch', {
cwd: repoDir,
timeout: 3000,
encoding: 'utf8',
stdio: 'pipe'
});
// Parse git status output to see if we're behind
const statusLines = output.split('\n');
for (const line of statusLines) {
if (line.startsWith('## ') && line.includes('[behind ')) {
return true; // We're behind remote
}
}
return false; // Up to date
} catch (error) {
// Network down, git error, timeout, etc. - don't block bootstrap
return false;
}
}
/**
* Strip YAML frontmatter from skill content, returning just the content.
*
* @param {string} content - Full content including frontmatter
* @returns {string} - Content without frontmatter
*/
function stripFrontmatter(content) {
const lines = content.split('\n');
let inFrontmatter = false;
let frontmatterEnded = false;
const contentLines = [];
for (const line of lines) {
if (line.trim() === '---') {
if (inFrontmatter) {
frontmatterEnded = true;
continue;
}
inFrontmatter = true;
continue;
}
if (frontmatterEnded || !inFrontmatter) {
contentLines.push(line);
}
}
return contentLines.join('\n').trim();
}
export {
extractFrontmatter,
findSkillsInDir,
resolveSkillPath,
checkForUpdates,
stripFrontmatter
};

6
package.json Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
{
"name": "superpowers",
"version": "5.1.0",
"type": "module",
"main": ".opencode/plugins/superpowers.js"
}

220
scripts/bump-version.sh Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,220 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#
# bump-version.sh — bump version numbers across all declared files,
# with drift detection and repo-wide audit for missed files.
#
# Usage:
# bump-version.sh <new-version> Bump all declared files to new version
# bump-version.sh --check Report current versions (detect drift)
# bump-version.sh --audit Check + grep repo for old version strings
#
set -euo pipefail
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
REPO_ROOT="$(cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/.." && pwd)"
CONFIG="$REPO_ROOT/.version-bump.json"
if [[ ! -f "$CONFIG" ]]; then
echo "error: .version-bump.json not found at $CONFIG" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- helpers ---
# Read a dotted field path from a JSON file.
# Handles both simple ("version") and nested ("plugins.0.version") paths.
read_json_field() {
local file="$1" field="$2"
# Convert dot-path to jq path: "plugins.0.version" -> .plugins[0].version
local jq_path
jq_path=$(echo "$field" | sed -E 's/\.([0-9]+)/[\1]/g' | sed 's/^/./' | sed 's/\.\././g')
jq -r "$jq_path" "$file"
}
# Write a dotted field path in a JSON file, preserving formatting.
write_json_field() {
local file="$1" field="$2" value="$3"
local jq_path
jq_path=$(echo "$field" | sed -E 's/\.([0-9]+)/[\1]/g' | sed 's/^/./' | sed 's/\.\././g')
local tmp="${file}.tmp"
jq "$jq_path = \"$value\"" "$file" > "$tmp" && mv "$tmp" "$file"
}
# Read the list of declared files from config.
# Outputs lines of "path<TAB>field"
declared_files() {
jq -r '.files[] | "\(.path)\t\(.field)"' "$CONFIG"
}
# Read the audit exclude patterns from config.
audit_excludes() {
jq -r '.audit.exclude[]' "$CONFIG" 2>/dev/null
}
# --- commands ---
cmd_check() {
local has_drift=0
local versions=()
echo "Version check:"
echo ""
while IFS=$'\t' read -r path field; do
local fullpath="$REPO_ROOT/$path"
if [[ ! -f "$fullpath" ]]; then
printf " %-45s MISSING\n" "$path ($field)"
has_drift=1
continue
fi
local ver
ver=$(read_json_field "$fullpath" "$field")
printf " %-45s %s\n" "$path ($field)" "$ver"
versions+=("$ver")
done < <(declared_files)
echo ""
# Check if all versions match
local unique
unique=$(printf '%s\n' "${versions[@]}" | sort -u | wc -l | tr -d ' ')
if [[ "$unique" -gt 1 ]]; then
echo "DRIFT DETECTED — versions are not in sync:"
printf '%s\n' "${versions[@]}" | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | while read -r count ver; do
echo " $ver ($count files)"
done
has_drift=1
else
echo "All declared files are in sync at ${versions[0]}"
fi
return $has_drift
}
cmd_audit() {
# First run check
cmd_check || true
echo ""
# Determine the current version (most common across declared files)
local current_version
current_version=$(
while IFS=$'\t' read -r path field; do
local fullpath="$REPO_ROOT/$path"
[[ -f "$fullpath" ]] && read_json_field "$fullpath" "$field"
done < <(declared_files) | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -1 | awk '{print $2}'
)
if [[ -z "$current_version" ]]; then
echo "error: could not determine current version" >&2
return 1
fi
echo "Audit: scanning repo for version string '$current_version'..."
echo ""
# Build grep exclude args
local -a exclude_args=()
while IFS= read -r pattern; do
exclude_args+=("--exclude=$pattern" "--exclude-dir=$pattern")
done < <(audit_excludes)
# Also always exclude binary files and .git
exclude_args+=("--exclude-dir=.git" "--exclude-dir=node_modules" "--binary-files=without-match")
# Get list of declared paths for comparison
local -a declared_paths=()
while IFS=$'\t' read -r path _field; do
declared_paths+=("$path")
done < <(declared_files)
# Grep for the version string
local found_undeclared=0
while IFS= read -r match; do
local match_file
match_file=$(echo "$match" | cut -d: -f1)
# Make path relative to repo root
local rel_path="${match_file#$REPO_ROOT/}"
# Check if this file is in the declared list
local is_declared=0
for dp in "${declared_paths[@]}"; do
if [[ "$rel_path" == "$dp" ]]; then
is_declared=1
break
fi
done
if [[ "$is_declared" -eq 0 ]]; then
if [[ "$found_undeclared" -eq 0 ]]; then
echo "UNDECLARED files containing '$current_version':"
found_undeclared=1
fi
echo " $match"
fi
done < <(grep -rn "${exclude_args[@]}" -F "$current_version" "$REPO_ROOT" 2>/dev/null || true)
if [[ "$found_undeclared" -eq 0 ]]; then
echo "No undeclared files contain the version string. All clear."
else
echo ""
echo "Review the above files — if they should be bumped, add them to .version-bump.json"
echo "If they should be skipped, add them to the audit.exclude list."
fi
}
cmd_bump() {
local new_version="$1"
# Validate semver-ish format
if ! echo "$new_version" | grep -qE '^[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+'; then
echo "error: '$new_version' doesn't look like a version (expected X.Y.Z)" >&2
exit 1
fi
echo "Bumping all declared files to $new_version..."
echo ""
while IFS=$'\t' read -r path field; do
local fullpath="$REPO_ROOT/$path"
if [[ ! -f "$fullpath" ]]; then
echo " SKIP (missing): $path"
continue
fi
local old_ver
old_ver=$(read_json_field "$fullpath" "$field")
write_json_field "$fullpath" "$field" "$new_version"
printf " %-45s %s -> %s\n" "$path ($field)" "$old_ver" "$new_version"
done < <(declared_files)
echo ""
echo "Done. Running audit to check for missed files..."
echo ""
cmd_audit
}
# --- main ---
case "${1:-}" in
--check)
cmd_check
;;
--audit)
cmd_audit
;;
--help|-h|"")
echo "Usage: bump-version.sh <new-version> | --check | --audit"
echo ""
echo " <new-version> Bump all declared files to the given version"
echo " --check Show current versions, detect drift"
echo " --audit Check + scan repo for undeclared version references"
exit 0
;;
--*)
echo "error: unknown flag '$1'" >&2
exit 1
;;
*)
cmd_bump "$1"
;;
esac

462
scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,462 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#
# sync-to-codex-plugin.sh
#
# Sync this superpowers checkout → prime-radiant-inc/openai-codex-plugins.
# Clones the fork fresh into a temp dir, rsyncs tracked upstream plugin content
# (including committed Codex files under .codex-plugin/ and assets/), preserves
# OpenAI-owned marketplace metadata already in the destination plugin, commits,
# pushes a sync branch, and opens a PR.
# Path/user agnostic — auto-detects upstream from script location.
#
# Deterministic: running twice against the same upstream SHA produces PRs with
# identical diffs, so two back-to-back runs can verify the tool itself.
#
# Usage:
# ./scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh # full run
# ./scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh -n # dry run
# ./scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh -y # skip confirm
# ./scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh --local PATH # existing checkout
# ./scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh --base BRANCH # default: main
# ./scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh --bootstrap # create plugin dir if missing
#
# Bootstrap mode: skips the "plugin must exist on base" requirement and creates
# plugins/superpowers/ when absent, then copies the tracked plugin files from
# upstream just like a normal sync.
#
# Requires: bash, rsync, git, gh (authenticated), python3.
set -euo pipefail
# =============================================================================
# Config — edit as upstream or canonical plugin shape evolves
# =============================================================================
FORK="prime-radiant-inc/openai-codex-plugins"
DEFAULT_BASE="main"
DEST_REL="plugins/superpowers"
# Paths in upstream that should NOT land in the embedded plugin.
# All patterns use a leading "/" to anchor them to the source root.
# Unanchored patterns like "scripts/" would match any directory named
# "scripts" at any depth — including legitimate nested dirs like
# skills/brainstorming/scripts/. Anchoring prevents that.
# (.DS_Store is intentionally unanchored — Finder creates them everywhere.)
EXCLUDES=(
# Dotfiles and infra — top-level only
"/.claude/"
"/.claude-plugin/"
"/.codex/"
"/.cursor-plugin/"
"/.git/"
"/.gitattributes"
"/.github/"
"/.gitignore"
"/.opencode/"
"/.version-bump.json"
"/.worktrees/"
".DS_Store"
# Root ceremony files
"/AGENTS.md"
"/CHANGELOG.md"
"/CLAUDE.md"
"/GEMINI.md"
"/RELEASE-NOTES.md"
"/gemini-extension.json"
"/package.json"
# Directories not shipped by canonical Codex plugins
"/commands/"
"/docs/"
"/hooks/"
"/lib/"
"/scripts/"
"/tests/"
"/tmp/"
)
# =============================================================================
# Ignored-path helpers
# =============================================================================
IGNORED_DIR_EXCLUDES=()
path_has_directory_exclude() {
local path="$1"
local dir
if [[ ${#IGNORED_DIR_EXCLUDES[@]} -eq 0 ]]; then
return 1
fi
for dir in "${IGNORED_DIR_EXCLUDES[@]}"; do
[[ "$path" == "$dir"* ]] && return 0
done
return 1
}
ignored_directory_has_tracked_descendants() {
local path="$1"
[[ -n "$(git -C "$UPSTREAM" ls-files --cached -- "$path/")" ]]
}
append_git_ignored_directory_excludes() {
local path
local lookup_path
while IFS= read -r -d '' path; do
[[ "$path" == */ ]] || continue
lookup_path="${path%/}"
if ! ignored_directory_has_tracked_descendants "$lookup_path"; then
IGNORED_DIR_EXCLUDES+=("$path")
RSYNC_ARGS+=(--exclude="/$path")
fi
done < <(git -C "$UPSTREAM" ls-files --others --ignored --exclude-standard --directory -z)
}
append_git_ignored_file_excludes() {
local path
while IFS= read -r -d '' path; do
path_has_directory_exclude "$path" && continue
RSYNC_ARGS+=(--exclude="/$path")
done < <(git -C "$UPSTREAM" ls-files --others --ignored --exclude-standard -z)
}
# =============================================================================
# Args
# =============================================================================
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
UPSTREAM="$(cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/.." && pwd)"
BASE="$DEFAULT_BASE"
DRY_RUN=0
YES=0
LOCAL_CHECKOUT=""
BOOTSTRAP=0
usage() {
sed -n '/^# Usage:/,/^# Requires:/s/^# \{0,1\}//p' "$0"
exit "${1:-0}"
}
while [[ $# -gt 0 ]]; do
case "$1" in
-n|--dry-run) DRY_RUN=1; shift ;;
-y|--yes) YES=1; shift ;;
--local) LOCAL_CHECKOUT="$2"; shift 2 ;;
--base) BASE="$2"; shift 2 ;;
--bootstrap) BOOTSTRAP=1; shift ;;
-h|--help) usage 0 ;;
*) echo "Unknown arg: $1" >&2; usage 2 ;;
esac
done
# =============================================================================
# Preflight
# =============================================================================
die() { echo "ERROR: $*" >&2; exit 1; }
command -v rsync >/dev/null || die "rsync not found in PATH"
command -v git >/dev/null || die "git not found in PATH"
command -v gh >/dev/null || die "gh not found — install GitHub CLI"
command -v python3 >/dev/null || die "python3 not found in PATH"
gh auth status >/dev/null 2>&1 || die "gh not authenticated — run 'gh auth login'"
[[ -d "$UPSTREAM/.git" ]] || die "upstream '$UPSTREAM' is not a git checkout"
[[ -f "$UPSTREAM/.codex-plugin/plugin.json" ]] || die "committed Codex manifest missing at $UPSTREAM/.codex-plugin/plugin.json"
# Read the upstream version from the committed Codex manifest.
UPSTREAM_VERSION="$(python3 -c 'import json,sys; print(json.load(open(sys.argv[1]))["version"])' "$UPSTREAM/.codex-plugin/plugin.json")"
[[ -n "$UPSTREAM_VERSION" ]] || die "could not read 'version' from committed Codex manifest"
UPSTREAM_BRANCH="$(cd "$UPSTREAM" && git branch --show-current)"
UPSTREAM_SHA="$(cd "$UPSTREAM" && git rev-parse HEAD)"
UPSTREAM_SHORT="$(cd "$UPSTREAM" && git rev-parse --short HEAD)"
confirm() {
[[ $YES -eq 1 ]] && return 0
read -rp "$1 [y/N] " ans
[[ "$ans" == "y" || "$ans" == "Y" ]]
}
if [[ "$UPSTREAM_BRANCH" != "main" ]]; then
echo "WARNING: upstream is on '$UPSTREAM_BRANCH', not 'main'"
confirm "Sync from '$UPSTREAM_BRANCH' anyway?" || exit 1
fi
UPSTREAM_STATUS="$(cd "$UPSTREAM" && git status --porcelain)"
if [[ -n "$UPSTREAM_STATUS" ]]; then
echo "WARNING: upstream has uncommitted changes:"
echo "$UPSTREAM_STATUS" | sed 's/^/ /'
echo "Sync will use working-tree state, not HEAD ($UPSTREAM_SHORT)."
confirm "Continue anyway?" || exit 1
fi
# =============================================================================
# Prepare destination (clone fork fresh, or use --local)
# =============================================================================
CLEANUP_DIR=""
cleanup() {
if [[ -n "$CLEANUP_DIR" ]]; then
rm -rf "$CLEANUP_DIR"
fi
}
trap cleanup EXIT
if [[ -n "$LOCAL_CHECKOUT" ]]; then
DEST_REPO="$(cd "$LOCAL_CHECKOUT" && pwd)"
[[ -d "$DEST_REPO/.git" ]] || die "--local path '$DEST_REPO' is not a git checkout"
else
echo "Cloning $FORK..."
CLEANUP_DIR="$(mktemp -d)"
DEST_REPO="$CLEANUP_DIR/openai-codex-plugins"
gh repo clone "$FORK" "$DEST_REPO" >/dev/null
fi
DEST="$DEST_REPO/$DEST_REL"
PREVIEW_REPO="$DEST_REPO"
PREVIEW_DEST="$DEST"
SYNC_SOURCE=""
overlay_destination_paths() {
local repo="$1"
local path
local source_path
local preview_path
while IFS= read -r -d '' path; do
source_path="$repo/$path"
preview_path="$PREVIEW_REPO/$path"
if [[ -e "$source_path" ]]; then
mkdir -p "$(dirname "$preview_path")"
cp -R "$source_path" "$preview_path"
else
rm -rf "$preview_path"
fi
done
}
copy_local_destination_overlay() {
overlay_destination_paths "$DEST_REPO" < <(
git -C "$DEST_REPO" diff --name-only -z -- "$DEST_REL"
)
overlay_destination_paths "$DEST_REPO" < <(
git -C "$DEST_REPO" diff --cached --name-only -z -- "$DEST_REL"
)
overlay_destination_paths "$DEST_REPO" < <(
git -C "$DEST_REPO" ls-files --others --exclude-standard -z -- "$DEST_REL"
)
overlay_destination_paths "$DEST_REPO" < <(
git -C "$DEST_REPO" ls-files --others --ignored --exclude-standard -z -- "$DEST_REL"
)
}
local_checkout_has_uncommitted_destination_changes() {
[[ -n "$(git -C "$DEST_REPO" status --porcelain=1 --untracked-files=all --ignored=matching -- "$DEST_REL")" ]]
}
prepare_preview_checkout() {
if [[ -n "$LOCAL_CHECKOUT" ]]; then
[[ -n "$CLEANUP_DIR" ]] || CLEANUP_DIR="$(mktemp -d)"
PREVIEW_REPO="$CLEANUP_DIR/preview"
git clone -q --no-local "$DEST_REPO" "$PREVIEW_REPO"
PREVIEW_DEST="$PREVIEW_REPO/$DEST_REL"
fi
git -C "$PREVIEW_REPO" checkout -q "$BASE" 2>/dev/null || die "base branch '$BASE' doesn't exist in $FORK"
if [[ -n "$LOCAL_CHECKOUT" ]]; then
copy_local_destination_overlay
fi
if [[ $BOOTSTRAP -ne 1 ]]; then
[[ -d "$PREVIEW_DEST" ]] || die "base branch '$BASE' has no '$DEST_REL/' — use --bootstrap, or pass --base <branch>"
fi
}
prepare_apply_checkout() {
git -C "$DEST_REPO" checkout -q "$BASE" 2>/dev/null || die "base branch '$BASE' doesn't exist in $FORK"
if [[ $BOOTSTRAP -ne 1 ]]; then
[[ -d "$DEST" ]] || die "base branch '$BASE' has no '$DEST_REL/' — use --bootstrap, or pass --base <branch>"
fi
}
apply_to_preview_checkout() {
if [[ $BOOTSTRAP -eq 1 ]]; then
mkdir -p "$PREVIEW_DEST"
fi
rsync "${RSYNC_ARGS[@]}" "$SYNC_SOURCE/" "$PREVIEW_DEST/"
}
preview_checkout_has_changes() {
[[ -n "$(git -C "$PREVIEW_REPO" status --porcelain "$DEST_REL")" ]]
}
prepare_preview_checkout
TIMESTAMP="$(date -u +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)"
if [[ $BOOTSTRAP -eq 1 ]]; then
SYNC_BRANCH="bootstrap/superpowers-${UPSTREAM_SHORT}-${TIMESTAMP}"
else
SYNC_BRANCH="sync/superpowers-${UPSTREAM_SHORT}-${TIMESTAMP}"
fi
# =============================================================================
# Build rsync args
# =============================================================================
RSYNC_ARGS=(-av --delete --delete-excluded)
for pat in "${EXCLUDES[@]}"; do RSYNC_ARGS+=(--exclude="$pat"); done
append_git_ignored_directory_excludes
append_git_ignored_file_excludes
copy_preserved_destination_metadata() {
local destination="$1"
local source="$2"
local path
local rel
[[ -d "$destination/skills" ]] || return 0
while IFS= read -r -d '' path; do
rel="${path#"$destination"/}"
mkdir -p "$source/$(dirname "$rel")"
cp -p "$path" "$source/$rel"
done < <(find "$destination/skills" -path '*/agents/openai.yaml' -type f -print0)
}
prepare_sync_source() {
local destination="$1"
[[ -n "$CLEANUP_DIR" ]] || CLEANUP_DIR="$(mktemp -d)"
SYNC_SOURCE="$CLEANUP_DIR/source-overlay"
rm -rf "$SYNC_SOURCE"
mkdir -p "$SYNC_SOURCE"
rsync "${RSYNC_ARGS[@]}" "$UPSTREAM/" "$SYNC_SOURCE/" >/dev/null
copy_preserved_destination_metadata "$destination" "$SYNC_SOURCE"
}
prepare_sync_source "$PREVIEW_DEST"
# =============================================================================
# Dry run preview (always shown)
# =============================================================================
echo ""
echo "Upstream: $UPSTREAM ($UPSTREAM_BRANCH @ $UPSTREAM_SHORT)"
echo "Version: $UPSTREAM_VERSION"
echo "Fork: $FORK"
echo "Base: $BASE"
echo "Branch: $SYNC_BRANCH"
if [[ $BOOTSTRAP -eq 1 ]]; then
echo "Mode: BOOTSTRAP (creating plugins/superpowers/ when absent)"
fi
echo ""
echo "=== Preview (rsync --dry-run) ==="
rsync "${RSYNC_ARGS[@]}" --dry-run --itemize-changes "$SYNC_SOURCE/" "$PREVIEW_DEST/"
echo "=== End preview ==="
echo ""
if [[ $DRY_RUN -eq 1 ]]; then
echo ""
echo "Dry run only. Nothing was changed or pushed."
exit 0
fi
# =============================================================================
# Apply
# =============================================================================
echo ""
confirm "Apply changes, push branch, and open PR?" || { echo "Aborted."; exit 1; }
echo ""
if [[ -n "$LOCAL_CHECKOUT" ]]; then
if local_checkout_has_uncommitted_destination_changes; then
die "local checkout has uncommitted changes under '$DEST_REL' — commit, stash, or discard them before syncing"
fi
apply_to_preview_checkout
if ! preview_checkout_has_changes; then
echo "No changes — embedded plugin was already in sync with upstream $UPSTREAM_SHORT (v$UPSTREAM_VERSION)."
exit 0
fi
fi
prepare_apply_checkout
cd "$DEST_REPO"
git checkout -q -b "$SYNC_BRANCH"
echo "Syncing upstream content..."
if [[ $BOOTSTRAP -eq 1 ]]; then
mkdir -p "$DEST"
fi
rsync "${RSYNC_ARGS[@]}" "$SYNC_SOURCE/" "$DEST/"
# Bail early if nothing actually changed
cd "$DEST_REPO"
if [[ -z "$(git status --porcelain "$DEST_REL")" ]]; then
echo "No changes — embedded plugin was already in sync with upstream $UPSTREAM_SHORT (v$UPSTREAM_VERSION)."
exit 0
fi
# =============================================================================
# Commit, push, open PR
# =============================================================================
git add "$DEST_REL"
if [[ $BOOTSTRAP -eq 1 ]]; then
COMMIT_TITLE="bootstrap superpowers v$UPSTREAM_VERSION from upstream main @ $UPSTREAM_SHORT"
PR_BODY="Initial bootstrap of the superpowers plugin from upstream \`main\` @ \`$UPSTREAM_SHORT\` (v$UPSTREAM_VERSION).
Creates \`plugins/superpowers/\` by copying the tracked plugin files from upstream, including \`.codex-plugin/plugin.json\` and \`assets/\`.
Run via: \`scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh --bootstrap\`
Upstream commit: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/commit/$UPSTREAM_SHA
This is a one-time bootstrap. Subsequent syncs will be normal (non-bootstrap) runs using the same tracked upstream plugin files."
else
COMMIT_TITLE="sync superpowers v$UPSTREAM_VERSION from upstream main @ $UPSTREAM_SHORT"
PR_BODY="Automated sync from superpowers upstream \`main\` @ \`$UPSTREAM_SHORT\` (v$UPSTREAM_VERSION).
Copies the tracked plugin files from upstream, including the committed Codex manifest and assets.
Run via: \`scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh\`
Upstream commit: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/commit/$UPSTREAM_SHA
Running the sync tool again against the same upstream SHA should produce a PR with an identical diff — use that to verify the tool is behaving."
fi
git commit --quiet -m "$COMMIT_TITLE
Automated sync via scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh
Upstream: https://github.com/obra/superpowers/commit/$UPSTREAM_SHA
Branch: $SYNC_BRANCH"
echo "Pushing $SYNC_BRANCH to $FORK..."
git push -u origin "$SYNC_BRANCH" --quiet
echo "Opening PR..."
PR_URL="$(gh pr create \
--repo "$FORK" \
--base "$BASE" \
--head "$SYNC_BRANCH" \
--title "$COMMIT_TITLE" \
--body "$PR_BODY")"
PR_NUM="${PR_URL##*/}"
DIFF_URL="https://github.com/$FORK/pull/$PR_NUM/files"
echo ""
echo "PR opened: $PR_URL"
echo "Diff view: $DIFF_URL"

View File

@@ -5,44 +5,135 @@ description: "You MUST use this before any creative work - creating features, bu
# Brainstorming Ideas Into Designs # Brainstorming Ideas Into Designs
## Overview
Help turn ideas into fully formed designs and specs through natural collaborative dialogue. Help turn ideas into fully formed designs and specs through natural collaborative dialogue.
Start by understanding the current project context, then ask questions one at a time to refine the idea. Once you understand what you're building, present the design in small sections (200-300 words), checking after each section whether it looks right so far. Start by understanding the current project context, then ask questions one at a time to refine the idea. Once you understand what you're building, present the design and get user approval.
<HARD-GATE>
Do NOT invoke any implementation skill, write any code, scaffold any project, or take any implementation action until you have presented a design and the user has approved it. This applies to EVERY project regardless of perceived simplicity.
</HARD-GATE>
## Anti-Pattern: "This Is Too Simple To Need A Design"
Every project goes through this process. A todo list, a single-function utility, a config change — all of them. "Simple" projects are where unexamined assumptions cause the most wasted work. The design can be short (a few sentences for truly simple projects), but you MUST present it and get approval.
## Checklist
You MUST create a task for each of these items and complete them in order:
1. **Explore project context** — check files, docs, recent commits
2. **Offer visual companion** (if topic will involve visual questions) — this is its own message, not combined with a clarifying question. See the Visual Companion section below.
3. **Ask clarifying questions** — one at a time, understand purpose/constraints/success criteria
4. **Propose 2-3 approaches** — with trade-offs and your recommendation
5. **Present design** — in sections scaled to their complexity, get user approval after each section
6. **Write design doc** — save to `docs/superpowers/specs/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-design.md` and commit
7. **Spec self-review** — quick inline check for placeholders, contradictions, ambiguity, scope (see below)
8. **User reviews written spec** — ask user to review the spec file before proceeding
9. **Transition to implementation** — invoke writing-plans skill to create implementation plan
## Process Flow
```dot
digraph brainstorming {
"Explore project context" [shape=box];
"Visual questions ahead?" [shape=diamond];
"Offer Visual Companion\n(own message, no other content)" [shape=box];
"Ask clarifying questions" [shape=box];
"Propose 2-3 approaches" [shape=box];
"Present design sections" [shape=box];
"User approves design?" [shape=diamond];
"Write design doc" [shape=box];
"Spec self-review\n(fix inline)" [shape=box];
"User reviews spec?" [shape=diamond];
"Invoke writing-plans skill" [shape=doublecircle];
"Explore project context" -> "Visual questions ahead?";
"Visual questions ahead?" -> "Offer Visual Companion\n(own message, no other content)" [label="yes"];
"Visual questions ahead?" -> "Ask clarifying questions" [label="no"];
"Offer Visual Companion\n(own message, no other content)" -> "Ask clarifying questions";
"Ask clarifying questions" -> "Propose 2-3 approaches";
"Propose 2-3 approaches" -> "Present design sections";
"Present design sections" -> "User approves design?";
"User approves design?" -> "Present design sections" [label="no, revise"];
"User approves design?" -> "Write design doc" [label="yes"];
"Write design doc" -> "Spec self-review\n(fix inline)";
"Spec self-review\n(fix inline)" -> "User reviews spec?";
"User reviews spec?" -> "Write design doc" [label="changes requested"];
"User reviews spec?" -> "Invoke writing-plans skill" [label="approved"];
}
```
**The terminal state is invoking writing-plans.** Do NOT invoke frontend-design, mcp-builder, or any other implementation skill. The ONLY skill you invoke after brainstorming is writing-plans.
## The Process ## The Process
**Understanding the idea:** **Understanding the idea:**
- Check out the current project state first (files, docs, recent commits) - Check out the current project state first (files, docs, recent commits)
- Ask questions one at a time to refine the idea - Before asking detailed questions, assess scope: if the request describes multiple independent subsystems (e.g., "build a platform with chat, file storage, billing, and analytics"), flag this immediately. Don't spend questions refining details of a project that needs to be decomposed first.
- If the project is too large for a single spec, help the user decompose into sub-projects: what are the independent pieces, how do they relate, what order should they be built? Then brainstorm the first sub-project through the normal design flow. Each sub-project gets its own spec → plan → implementation cycle.
- For appropriately-scoped projects, ask questions one at a time to refine the idea
- Prefer multiple choice questions when possible, but open-ended is fine too - Prefer multiple choice questions when possible, but open-ended is fine too
- Only one question per message - if a topic needs more exploration, break it into multiple questions - Only one question per message - if a topic needs more exploration, break it into multiple questions
- Focus on understanding: purpose, constraints, success criteria - Focus on understanding: purpose, constraints, success criteria
**Exploring approaches:** **Exploring approaches:**
- Propose 2-3 different approaches with trade-offs - Propose 2-3 different approaches with trade-offs
- Present options conversationally with your recommendation and reasoning - Present options conversationally with your recommendation and reasoning
- Lead with your recommended option and explain why - Lead with your recommended option and explain why
**Presenting the design:** **Presenting the design:**
- Once you believe you understand what you're building, present the design - Once you believe you understand what you're building, present the design
- Break it into sections of 200-300 words - Scale each section to its complexity: a few sentences if straightforward, up to 200-300 words if nuanced
- Ask after each section whether it looks right so far - Ask after each section whether it looks right so far
- Cover: architecture, components, data flow, error handling, testing - Cover: architecture, components, data flow, error handling, testing
- Be ready to go back and clarify if something doesn't make sense - Be ready to go back and clarify if something doesn't make sense
**Design for isolation and clarity:**
- Break the system into smaller units that each have one clear purpose, communicate through well-defined interfaces, and can be understood and tested independently
- For each unit, you should be able to answer: what does it do, how do you use it, and what does it depend on?
- Can someone understand what a unit does without reading its internals? Can you change the internals without breaking consumers? If not, the boundaries need work.
- Smaller, well-bounded units are also easier for you to work with - you reason better about code you can hold in context at once, and your edits are more reliable when files are focused. When a file grows large, that's often a signal that it's doing too much.
**Working in existing codebases:**
- Explore the current structure before proposing changes. Follow existing patterns.
- Where existing code has problems that affect the work (e.g., a file that's grown too large, unclear boundaries, tangled responsibilities), include targeted improvements as part of the design - the way a good developer improves code they're working in.
- Don't propose unrelated refactoring. Stay focused on what serves the current goal.
## After the Design ## After the Design
**Documentation:** **Documentation:**
- Write the validated design to `docs/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-design.md`
- Write the validated design (spec) to `docs/superpowers/specs/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-design.md`
- (User preferences for spec location override this default)
- Use elements-of-style:writing-clearly-and-concisely skill if available - Use elements-of-style:writing-clearly-and-concisely skill if available
- Commit the design document to git - Commit the design document to git
**Implementation (if continuing):** **Spec Self-Review:**
- Ask: "Ready to set up for implementation?" After writing the spec document, look at it with fresh eyes:
- Use superpowers:using-git-worktrees to create isolated workspace
- Use superpowers:writing-plans to create detailed implementation plan 1. **Placeholder scan:** Any "TBD", "TODO", incomplete sections, or vague requirements? Fix them.
2. **Internal consistency:** Do any sections contradict each other? Does the architecture match the feature descriptions?
3. **Scope check:** Is this focused enough for a single implementation plan, or does it need decomposition?
4. **Ambiguity check:** Could any requirement be interpreted two different ways? If so, pick one and make it explicit.
Fix any issues inline. No need to re-review — just fix and move on.
**User Review Gate:**
After the spec review loop passes, ask the user to review the written spec before proceeding:
> "Spec written and committed to `<path>`. Please review it and let me know if you want to make any changes before we start writing out the implementation plan."
Wait for the user's response. If they request changes, make them and re-run the spec review loop. Only proceed once the user approves.
**Implementation:**
- Invoke the writing-plans skill to create a detailed implementation plan
- Do NOT invoke any other skill. writing-plans is the next step.
## Key Principles ## Key Principles
@@ -50,5 +141,24 @@ Start by understanding the current project context, then ask questions one at a
- **Multiple choice preferred** - Easier to answer than open-ended when possible - **Multiple choice preferred** - Easier to answer than open-ended when possible
- **YAGNI ruthlessly** - Remove unnecessary features from all designs - **YAGNI ruthlessly** - Remove unnecessary features from all designs
- **Explore alternatives** - Always propose 2-3 approaches before settling - **Explore alternatives** - Always propose 2-3 approaches before settling
- **Incremental validation** - Present design in sections, validate each - **Incremental validation** - Present design, get approval before moving on
- **Be flexible** - Go back and clarify when something doesn't make sense - **Be flexible** - Go back and clarify when something doesn't make sense
## Visual Companion
A browser-based companion for showing mockups, diagrams, and visual options during brainstorming. Available as a tool — not a mode. Accepting the companion means it's available for questions that benefit from visual treatment; it does NOT mean every question goes through the browser.
**Offering the companion:** When you anticipate that upcoming questions will involve visual content (mockups, layouts, diagrams), offer it once for consent:
> "Some of what we're working on might be easier to explain if I can show it to you in a web browser. I can put together mockups, diagrams, comparisons, and other visuals as we go. This feature is still new and can be token-intensive. Want to try it? (Requires opening a local URL)"
**This offer MUST be its own message.** Do not combine it with clarifying questions, context summaries, or any other content. The message should contain ONLY the offer above and nothing else. Wait for the user's response before continuing. If they decline, proceed with text-only brainstorming.
**Per-question decision:** Even after the user accepts, decide FOR EACH QUESTION whether to use the browser or the terminal. The test: **would the user understand this better by seeing it than reading it?**
- **Use the browser** for content that IS visual — mockups, wireframes, layout comparisons, architecture diagrams, side-by-side visual designs
- **Use the terminal** for content that is text — requirements questions, conceptual choices, tradeoff lists, A/B/C/D text options, scope decisions
A question about a UI topic is not automatically a visual question. "What does personality mean in this context?" is a conceptual question — use the terminal. "Which wizard layout works better?" is a visual question — use the browser.
If they agree to the companion, read the detailed guide before proceeding:
`skills/brainstorming/visual-companion.md`

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,214 @@
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Superpowers Brainstorming</title>
<style>
/*
* BRAINSTORM COMPANION FRAME TEMPLATE
*
* This template provides a consistent frame with:
* - OS-aware light/dark theming
* - Fixed header and selection indicator bar
* - Scrollable main content area
* - CSS helpers for common UI patterns
*
* Content is injected via placeholder comment in #claude-content.
*/
* { box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0; padding: 0; }
html, body { height: 100%; overflow: hidden; }
/* ===== THEME VARIABLES ===== */
:root {
--bg-primary: #f5f5f7;
--bg-secondary: #ffffff;
--bg-tertiary: #e5e5e7;
--border: #d1d1d6;
--text-primary: #1d1d1f;
--text-secondary: #86868b;
--text-tertiary: #aeaeb2;
--accent: #0071e3;
--accent-hover: #0077ed;
--success: #34c759;
--warning: #ff9f0a;
--error: #ff3b30;
--selected-bg: #e8f4fd;
--selected-border: #0071e3;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
:root {
--bg-primary: #1d1d1f;
--bg-secondary: #2d2d2f;
--bg-tertiary: #3d3d3f;
--border: #424245;
--text-primary: #f5f5f7;
--text-secondary: #86868b;
--text-tertiary: #636366;
--accent: #0a84ff;
--accent-hover: #409cff;
--selected-bg: rgba(10, 132, 255, 0.15);
--selected-border: #0a84ff;
}
}
body {
font-family: system-ui, -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, sans-serif;
background: var(--bg-primary);
color: var(--text-primary);
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
line-height: 1.5;
}
/* ===== FRAME STRUCTURE ===== */
.header {
background: var(--bg-secondary);
padding: 0.5rem 1.5rem;
display: flex;
justify-content: space-between;
align-items: center;
border-bottom: 1px solid var(--border);
flex-shrink: 0;
}
.header h1 { font-size: 0.85rem; font-weight: 500; color: var(--text-secondary); }
.header .status { font-size: 0.7rem; color: var(--success); display: flex; align-items: center; gap: 0.4rem; }
.header .status::before { content: ''; width: 6px; height: 6px; background: var(--success); border-radius: 50%; }
.main { flex: 1; overflow-y: auto; }
#claude-content { padding: 2rem; min-height: 100%; }
.indicator-bar {
background: var(--bg-secondary);
border-top: 1px solid var(--border);
padding: 0.5rem 1.5rem;
flex-shrink: 0;
text-align: center;
}
.indicator-bar span {
font-size: 0.75rem;
color: var(--text-secondary);
}
.indicator-bar .selected-text {
color: var(--accent);
font-weight: 500;
}
/* ===== TYPOGRAPHY ===== */
h2 { font-size: 1.5rem; font-weight: 600; margin-bottom: 0.5rem; }
h3 { font-size: 1.1rem; font-weight: 600; margin-bottom: 0.25rem; }
.subtitle { color: var(--text-secondary); margin-bottom: 1.5rem; }
.section { margin-bottom: 2rem; }
.label { font-size: 0.7rem; color: var(--text-secondary); text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 0.05em; margin-bottom: 0.5rem; }
/* ===== OPTIONS (for A/B/C choices) ===== */
.options { display: flex; flex-direction: column; gap: 0.75rem; }
.option {
background: var(--bg-secondary);
border: 2px solid var(--border);
border-radius: 12px;
padding: 1rem 1.25rem;
cursor: pointer;
transition: all 0.15s ease;
display: flex;
align-items: flex-start;
gap: 1rem;
}
.option:hover { border-color: var(--accent); }
.option.selected { background: var(--selected-bg); border-color: var(--selected-border); }
.option .letter {
background: var(--bg-tertiary);
color: var(--text-secondary);
width: 1.75rem; height: 1.75rem;
border-radius: 6px;
display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center;
font-weight: 600; font-size: 0.85rem; flex-shrink: 0;
}
.option.selected .letter { background: var(--accent); color: white; }
.option .content { flex: 1; }
.option .content h3 { font-size: 0.95rem; margin-bottom: 0.15rem; }
.option .content p { color: var(--text-secondary); font-size: 0.85rem; margin: 0; }
/* ===== CARDS (for showing designs/mockups) ===== */
.cards { display: grid; grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fit, minmax(280px, 1fr)); gap: 1rem; }
.card {
background: var(--bg-secondary);
border: 1px solid var(--border);
border-radius: 12px;
overflow: hidden;
cursor: pointer;
transition: all 0.15s ease;
}
.card:hover { border-color: var(--accent); transform: translateY(-2px); box-shadow: 0 4px 12px rgba(0,0,0,0.1); }
.card.selected { border-color: var(--selected-border); border-width: 2px; }
.card-image { background: var(--bg-tertiary); aspect-ratio: 16/10; display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; }
.card-body { padding: 1rem; }
.card-body h3 { margin-bottom: 0.25rem; }
.card-body p { color: var(--text-secondary); font-size: 0.85rem; }
/* ===== MOCKUP CONTAINER ===== */
.mockup {
background: var(--bg-secondary);
border: 1px solid var(--border);
border-radius: 12px;
overflow: hidden;
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
.mockup-header {
background: var(--bg-tertiary);
padding: 0.5rem 1rem;
font-size: 0.75rem;
color: var(--text-secondary);
border-bottom: 1px solid var(--border);
}
.mockup-body { padding: 1.5rem; }
/* ===== SPLIT VIEW (side-by-side comparison) ===== */
.split { display: grid; grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr; gap: 1.5rem; }
@media (max-width: 700px) { .split { grid-template-columns: 1fr; } }
/* ===== PROS/CONS ===== */
.pros-cons { display: grid; grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr; gap: 1rem; margin: 1rem 0; }
.pros, .cons { background: var(--bg-secondary); border-radius: 8px; padding: 1rem; }
.pros h4 { color: var(--success); font-size: 0.85rem; margin-bottom: 0.5rem; }
.cons h4 { color: var(--error); font-size: 0.85rem; margin-bottom: 0.5rem; }
.pros ul, .cons ul { margin-left: 1.25rem; font-size: 0.85rem; color: var(--text-secondary); }
.pros li, .cons li { margin-bottom: 0.25rem; }
/* ===== PLACEHOLDER (for mockup areas) ===== */
.placeholder {
background: var(--bg-tertiary);
border: 2px dashed var(--border);
border-radius: 8px;
padding: 2rem;
text-align: center;
color: var(--text-tertiary);
}
/* ===== INLINE MOCKUP ELEMENTS ===== */
.mock-nav { background: var(--accent); color: white; padding: 0.75rem 1rem; display: flex; gap: 1.5rem; font-size: 0.9rem; }
.mock-sidebar { background: var(--bg-tertiary); padding: 1rem; min-width: 180px; }
.mock-content { padding: 1.5rem; flex: 1; }
.mock-button { background: var(--accent); color: white; border: none; padding: 0.5rem 1rem; border-radius: 6px; font-size: 0.85rem; }
.mock-input { background: var(--bg-primary); border: 1px solid var(--border); border-radius: 6px; padding: 0.5rem; width: 100%; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div class="header">
<h1><a href="https://github.com/obra/superpowers" style="color: inherit; text-decoration: none;">Superpowers Brainstorming</a></h1>
<div class="status">Connected</div>
</div>
<div class="main">
<div id="claude-content">
<!-- CONTENT -->
</div>
</div>
<div class="indicator-bar">
<span id="indicator-text">Click an option above, then return to the terminal</span>
</div>
</body>
</html>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,88 @@
(function() {
const WS_URL = 'ws://' + window.location.host;
let ws = null;
let eventQueue = [];
function connect() {
ws = new WebSocket(WS_URL);
ws.onopen = () => {
eventQueue.forEach(e => ws.send(JSON.stringify(e)));
eventQueue = [];
};
ws.onmessage = (msg) => {
const data = JSON.parse(msg.data);
if (data.type === 'reload') {
window.location.reload();
}
};
ws.onclose = () => {
setTimeout(connect, 1000);
};
}
function sendEvent(event) {
event.timestamp = Date.now();
if (ws && ws.readyState === WebSocket.OPEN) {
ws.send(JSON.stringify(event));
} else {
eventQueue.push(event);
}
}
// Capture clicks on choice elements
document.addEventListener('click', (e) => {
const target = e.target.closest('[data-choice]');
if (!target) return;
sendEvent({
type: 'click',
text: target.textContent.trim(),
choice: target.dataset.choice,
id: target.id || null
});
// Update indicator bar (defer so toggleSelect runs first)
setTimeout(() => {
const indicator = document.getElementById('indicator-text');
if (!indicator) return;
const container = target.closest('.options') || target.closest('.cards');
const selected = container ? container.querySelectorAll('.selected') : [];
if (selected.length === 0) {
indicator.textContent = 'Click an option above, then return to the terminal';
} else if (selected.length === 1) {
const label = selected[0].querySelector('h3, .content h3, .card-body h3')?.textContent?.trim() || selected[0].dataset.choice;
indicator.innerHTML = '<span class="selected-text">' + label + ' selected</span> — return to terminal to continue';
} else {
indicator.innerHTML = '<span class="selected-text">' + selected.length + ' selected</span> — return to terminal to continue';
}
}, 0);
});
// Frame UI: selection tracking
window.selectedChoice = null;
window.toggleSelect = function(el) {
const container = el.closest('.options') || el.closest('.cards');
const multi = container && container.dataset.multiselect !== undefined;
if (container && !multi) {
container.querySelectorAll('.option, .card').forEach(o => o.classList.remove('selected'));
}
if (multi) {
el.classList.toggle('selected');
} else {
el.classList.add('selected');
}
window.selectedChoice = el.dataset.choice;
};
// Expose API for explicit use
window.brainstorm = {
send: sendEvent,
choice: (value, metadata = {}) => sendEvent({ type: 'choice', value, ...metadata })
};
connect();
})();

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,354 @@
const crypto = require('crypto');
const http = require('http');
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
// ========== WebSocket Protocol (RFC 6455) ==========
const OPCODES = { TEXT: 0x01, CLOSE: 0x08, PING: 0x09, PONG: 0x0A };
const WS_MAGIC = '258EAFA5-E914-47DA-95CA-C5AB0DC85B11';
function computeAcceptKey(clientKey) {
return crypto.createHash('sha1').update(clientKey + WS_MAGIC).digest('base64');
}
function encodeFrame(opcode, payload) {
const fin = 0x80;
const len = payload.length;
let header;
if (len < 126) {
header = Buffer.alloc(2);
header[0] = fin | opcode;
header[1] = len;
} else if (len < 65536) {
header = Buffer.alloc(4);
header[0] = fin | opcode;
header[1] = 126;
header.writeUInt16BE(len, 2);
} else {
header = Buffer.alloc(10);
header[0] = fin | opcode;
header[1] = 127;
header.writeBigUInt64BE(BigInt(len), 2);
}
return Buffer.concat([header, payload]);
}
function decodeFrame(buffer) {
if (buffer.length < 2) return null;
const secondByte = buffer[1];
const opcode = buffer[0] & 0x0F;
const masked = (secondByte & 0x80) !== 0;
let payloadLen = secondByte & 0x7F;
let offset = 2;
if (!masked) throw new Error('Client frames must be masked');
if (payloadLen === 126) {
if (buffer.length < 4) return null;
payloadLen = buffer.readUInt16BE(2);
offset = 4;
} else if (payloadLen === 127) {
if (buffer.length < 10) return null;
payloadLen = Number(buffer.readBigUInt64BE(2));
offset = 10;
}
const maskOffset = offset;
const dataOffset = offset + 4;
const totalLen = dataOffset + payloadLen;
if (buffer.length < totalLen) return null;
const mask = buffer.slice(maskOffset, dataOffset);
const data = Buffer.alloc(payloadLen);
for (let i = 0; i < payloadLen; i++) {
data[i] = buffer[dataOffset + i] ^ mask[i % 4];
}
return { opcode, payload: data, bytesConsumed: totalLen };
}
// ========== Configuration ==========
const PORT = process.env.BRAINSTORM_PORT || (49152 + Math.floor(Math.random() * 16383));
const HOST = process.env.BRAINSTORM_HOST || '127.0.0.1';
const URL_HOST = process.env.BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST || (HOST === '127.0.0.1' ? 'localhost' : HOST);
const SESSION_DIR = process.env.BRAINSTORM_DIR || '/tmp/brainstorm';
const CONTENT_DIR = path.join(SESSION_DIR, 'content');
const STATE_DIR = path.join(SESSION_DIR, 'state');
let ownerPid = process.env.BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID ? Number(process.env.BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID) : null;
const MIME_TYPES = {
'.html': 'text/html', '.css': 'text/css', '.js': 'application/javascript',
'.json': 'application/json', '.png': 'image/png', '.jpg': 'image/jpeg',
'.jpeg': 'image/jpeg', '.gif': 'image/gif', '.svg': 'image/svg+xml'
};
// ========== Templates and Constants ==========
const WAITING_PAGE = `<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head><meta charset="utf-8"><title>Brainstorm Companion</title>
<style>body { font-family: system-ui, sans-serif; padding: 2rem; max-width: 800px; margin: 0 auto; }
h1 { color: #333; } p { color: #666; }</style>
</head>
<body><h1>Brainstorm Companion</h1>
<p>Waiting for the agent to push a screen...</p></body></html>`;
const frameTemplate = fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'frame-template.html'), 'utf-8');
const helperScript = fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'helper.js'), 'utf-8');
const helperInjection = '<script>\n' + helperScript + '\n</script>';
// ========== Helper Functions ==========
function isFullDocument(html) {
const trimmed = html.trimStart().toLowerCase();
return trimmed.startsWith('<!doctype') || trimmed.startsWith('<html');
}
function wrapInFrame(content) {
return frameTemplate.replace('<!-- CONTENT -->', content);
}
function getNewestScreen() {
const files = fs.readdirSync(CONTENT_DIR)
.filter(f => f.endsWith('.html'))
.map(f => {
const fp = path.join(CONTENT_DIR, f);
return { path: fp, mtime: fs.statSync(fp).mtime.getTime() };
})
.sort((a, b) => b.mtime - a.mtime);
return files.length > 0 ? files[0].path : null;
}
// ========== HTTP Request Handler ==========
function handleRequest(req, res) {
touchActivity();
if (req.method === 'GET' && req.url === '/') {
const screenFile = getNewestScreen();
let html = screenFile
? (raw => isFullDocument(raw) ? raw : wrapInFrame(raw))(fs.readFileSync(screenFile, 'utf-8'))
: WAITING_PAGE;
if (html.includes('</body>')) {
html = html.replace('</body>', helperInjection + '\n</body>');
} else {
html += helperInjection;
}
res.writeHead(200, { 'Content-Type': 'text/html; charset=utf-8' });
res.end(html);
} else if (req.method === 'GET' && req.url.startsWith('/files/')) {
const fileName = req.url.slice(7);
const filePath = path.join(CONTENT_DIR, path.basename(fileName));
if (!fs.existsSync(filePath)) {
res.writeHead(404);
res.end('Not found');
return;
}
const ext = path.extname(filePath).toLowerCase();
const contentType = MIME_TYPES[ext] || 'application/octet-stream';
res.writeHead(200, { 'Content-Type': contentType });
res.end(fs.readFileSync(filePath));
} else {
res.writeHead(404);
res.end('Not found');
}
}
// ========== WebSocket Connection Handling ==========
const clients = new Set();
function handleUpgrade(req, socket) {
const key = req.headers['sec-websocket-key'];
if (!key) { socket.destroy(); return; }
const accept = computeAcceptKey(key);
socket.write(
'HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols\r\n' +
'Upgrade: websocket\r\n' +
'Connection: Upgrade\r\n' +
'Sec-WebSocket-Accept: ' + accept + '\r\n\r\n'
);
let buffer = Buffer.alloc(0);
clients.add(socket);
socket.on('data', (chunk) => {
buffer = Buffer.concat([buffer, chunk]);
while (buffer.length > 0) {
let result;
try {
result = decodeFrame(buffer);
} catch (e) {
socket.end(encodeFrame(OPCODES.CLOSE, Buffer.alloc(0)));
clients.delete(socket);
return;
}
if (!result) break;
buffer = buffer.slice(result.bytesConsumed);
switch (result.opcode) {
case OPCODES.TEXT:
handleMessage(result.payload.toString());
break;
case OPCODES.CLOSE:
socket.end(encodeFrame(OPCODES.CLOSE, Buffer.alloc(0)));
clients.delete(socket);
return;
case OPCODES.PING:
socket.write(encodeFrame(OPCODES.PONG, result.payload));
break;
case OPCODES.PONG:
break;
default: {
const closeBuf = Buffer.alloc(2);
closeBuf.writeUInt16BE(1003);
socket.end(encodeFrame(OPCODES.CLOSE, closeBuf));
clients.delete(socket);
return;
}
}
}
});
socket.on('close', () => clients.delete(socket));
socket.on('error', () => clients.delete(socket));
}
function handleMessage(text) {
let event;
try {
event = JSON.parse(text);
} catch (e) {
console.error('Failed to parse WebSocket message:', e.message);
return;
}
touchActivity();
console.log(JSON.stringify({ source: 'user-event', ...event }));
if (event.choice) {
const eventsFile = path.join(STATE_DIR, 'events');
fs.appendFileSync(eventsFile, JSON.stringify(event) + '\n');
}
}
function broadcast(msg) {
const frame = encodeFrame(OPCODES.TEXT, Buffer.from(JSON.stringify(msg)));
for (const socket of clients) {
try { socket.write(frame); } catch (e) { clients.delete(socket); }
}
}
// ========== Activity Tracking ==========
const IDLE_TIMEOUT_MS = 30 * 60 * 1000; // 30 minutes
let lastActivity = Date.now();
function touchActivity() {
lastActivity = Date.now();
}
// ========== File Watching ==========
const debounceTimers = new Map();
// ========== Server Startup ==========
function startServer() {
if (!fs.existsSync(CONTENT_DIR)) fs.mkdirSync(CONTENT_DIR, { recursive: true });
if (!fs.existsSync(STATE_DIR)) fs.mkdirSync(STATE_DIR, { recursive: true });
// Track known files to distinguish new screens from updates.
// macOS fs.watch reports 'rename' for both new files and overwrites,
// so we can't rely on eventType alone.
const knownFiles = new Set(
fs.readdirSync(CONTENT_DIR).filter(f => f.endsWith('.html'))
);
const server = http.createServer(handleRequest);
server.on('upgrade', handleUpgrade);
const watcher = fs.watch(CONTENT_DIR, (eventType, filename) => {
if (!filename || !filename.endsWith('.html')) return;
if (debounceTimers.has(filename)) clearTimeout(debounceTimers.get(filename));
debounceTimers.set(filename, setTimeout(() => {
debounceTimers.delete(filename);
const filePath = path.join(CONTENT_DIR, filename);
if (!fs.existsSync(filePath)) return; // file was deleted
touchActivity();
if (!knownFiles.has(filename)) {
knownFiles.add(filename);
const eventsFile = path.join(STATE_DIR, 'events');
if (fs.existsSync(eventsFile)) fs.unlinkSync(eventsFile);
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'screen-added', file: filePath }));
} else {
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'screen-updated', file: filePath }));
}
broadcast({ type: 'reload' });
}, 100));
});
watcher.on('error', (err) => console.error('fs.watch error:', err.message));
function shutdown(reason) {
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'server-stopped', reason }));
const infoFile = path.join(STATE_DIR, 'server-info');
if (fs.existsSync(infoFile)) fs.unlinkSync(infoFile);
fs.writeFileSync(
path.join(STATE_DIR, 'server-stopped'),
JSON.stringify({ reason, timestamp: Date.now() }) + '\n'
);
watcher.close();
clearInterval(lifecycleCheck);
server.close(() => process.exit(0));
}
function ownerAlive() {
if (!ownerPid) return true;
try { process.kill(ownerPid, 0); return true; } catch (e) { return e.code === 'EPERM'; }
}
// Check every 60s: exit if owner process died or idle for 30 minutes
const lifecycleCheck = setInterval(() => {
if (!ownerAlive()) shutdown('owner process exited');
else if (Date.now() - lastActivity > IDLE_TIMEOUT_MS) shutdown('idle timeout');
}, 60 * 1000);
lifecycleCheck.unref();
// Validate owner PID at startup. If it's already dead, the PID resolution
// was wrong (common on WSL, Tailscale SSH, and cross-user scenarios).
// Disable monitoring and rely on the idle timeout instead.
if (ownerPid) {
try { process.kill(ownerPid, 0); }
catch (e) {
if (e.code !== 'EPERM') {
console.log(JSON.stringify({ type: 'owner-pid-invalid', pid: ownerPid, reason: 'dead at startup' }));
ownerPid = null;
}
}
}
server.listen(PORT, HOST, () => {
const info = JSON.stringify({
type: 'server-started', port: Number(PORT), host: HOST,
url_host: URL_HOST, url: 'http://' + URL_HOST + ':' + PORT,
screen_dir: CONTENT_DIR, state_dir: STATE_DIR
});
console.log(info);
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(STATE_DIR, 'server-info'), info + '\n');
});
}
if (require.main === module) {
startServer();
}
module.exports = { computeAcceptKey, encodeFrame, decodeFrame, OPCODES };

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@@ -0,0 +1,148 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Start the brainstorm server and output connection info
# Usage: start-server.sh [--project-dir <path>] [--host <bind-host>] [--url-host <display-host>] [--foreground] [--background]
#
# Starts server on a random high port, outputs JSON with URL.
# Each session gets its own directory to avoid conflicts.
#
# Options:
# --project-dir <path> Store session files under <path>/.superpowers/brainstorm/
# instead of /tmp. Files persist after server stops.
# --host <bind-host> Host/interface to bind (default: 127.0.0.1).
# Use 0.0.0.0 in remote/containerized environments.
# --url-host <host> Hostname shown in returned URL JSON.
# --foreground Run server in the current terminal (no backgrounding).
# --background Force background mode (overrides Codex auto-foreground).
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
# Parse arguments
PROJECT_DIR=""
FOREGROUND="false"
FORCE_BACKGROUND="false"
BIND_HOST="127.0.0.1"
URL_HOST=""
while [[ $# -gt 0 ]]; do
case "$1" in
--project-dir)
PROJECT_DIR="$2"
shift 2
;;
--host)
BIND_HOST="$2"
shift 2
;;
--url-host)
URL_HOST="$2"
shift 2
;;
--foreground|--no-daemon)
FOREGROUND="true"
shift
;;
--background|--daemon)
FORCE_BACKGROUND="true"
shift
;;
*)
echo "{\"error\": \"Unknown argument: $1\"}"
exit 1
;;
esac
done
if [[ -z "$URL_HOST" ]]; then
if [[ "$BIND_HOST" == "127.0.0.1" || "$BIND_HOST" == "localhost" ]]; then
URL_HOST="localhost"
else
URL_HOST="$BIND_HOST"
fi
fi
# Some environments reap detached/background processes. Auto-foreground when detected.
if [[ -n "${CODEX_CI:-}" && "$FOREGROUND" != "true" && "$FORCE_BACKGROUND" != "true" ]]; then
FOREGROUND="true"
fi
# Windows/Git Bash reaps nohup background processes. Auto-foreground when detected.
if [[ "$FOREGROUND" != "true" && "$FORCE_BACKGROUND" != "true" ]]; then
case "${OSTYPE:-}" in
msys*|cygwin*|mingw*) FOREGROUND="true" ;;
esac
if [[ -n "${MSYSTEM:-}" ]]; then
FOREGROUND="true"
fi
fi
# Generate unique session directory
SESSION_ID="$$-$(date +%s)"
if [[ -n "$PROJECT_DIR" ]]; then
SESSION_DIR="${PROJECT_DIR}/.superpowers/brainstorm/${SESSION_ID}"
else
SESSION_DIR="/tmp/brainstorm-${SESSION_ID}"
fi
STATE_DIR="${SESSION_DIR}/state"
PID_FILE="${STATE_DIR}/server.pid"
LOG_FILE="${STATE_DIR}/server.log"
# Create fresh session directory with content and state peers
mkdir -p "${SESSION_DIR}/content" "$STATE_DIR"
# Kill any existing server
if [[ -f "$PID_FILE" ]]; then
old_pid=$(cat "$PID_FILE")
kill "$old_pid" 2>/dev/null
rm -f "$PID_FILE"
fi
cd "$SCRIPT_DIR"
# Resolve the harness PID (grandparent of this script).
# $PPID is the ephemeral shell the harness spawned to run us — it dies
# when this script exits. The harness itself is $PPID's parent.
OWNER_PID="$(ps -o ppid= -p "$PPID" 2>/dev/null | tr -d ' ')"
if [[ -z "$OWNER_PID" || "$OWNER_PID" == "1" ]]; then
OWNER_PID="$PPID"
fi
# Foreground mode for environments that reap detached/background processes.
if [[ "$FOREGROUND" == "true" ]]; then
echo "$$" > "$PID_FILE"
env BRAINSTORM_DIR="$SESSION_DIR" BRAINSTORM_HOST="$BIND_HOST" BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST="$URL_HOST" BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID="$OWNER_PID" node server.cjs
exit $?
fi
# Start server, capturing output to log file
# Use nohup to survive shell exit; disown to remove from job table
nohup env BRAINSTORM_DIR="$SESSION_DIR" BRAINSTORM_HOST="$BIND_HOST" BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST="$URL_HOST" BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID="$OWNER_PID" node server.cjs > "$LOG_FILE" 2>&1 &
SERVER_PID=$!
disown "$SERVER_PID" 2>/dev/null
echo "$SERVER_PID" > "$PID_FILE"
# Wait for server-started message (check log file)
for i in {1..50}; do
if grep -q "server-started" "$LOG_FILE" 2>/dev/null; then
# Verify server is still alive after a short window (catches process reapers)
alive="true"
for _ in {1..20}; do
if ! kill -0 "$SERVER_PID" 2>/dev/null; then
alive="false"
break
fi
sleep 0.1
done
if [[ "$alive" != "true" ]]; then
echo "{\"error\": \"Server started but was killed. Retry in a persistent terminal with: $SCRIPT_DIR/start-server.sh${PROJECT_DIR:+ --project-dir $PROJECT_DIR} --host $BIND_HOST --url-host $URL_HOST --foreground\"}"
exit 1
fi
grep "server-started" "$LOG_FILE" | head -1
exit 0
fi
sleep 0.1
done
# Timeout - server didn't start
echo '{"error": "Server failed to start within 5 seconds"}'
exit 1

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Stop the brainstorm server and clean up
# Usage: stop-server.sh <session_dir>
#
# Kills the server process. Only deletes session directory if it's
# under /tmp (ephemeral). Persistent directories (.superpowers/) are
# kept so mockups can be reviewed later.
SESSION_DIR="$1"
if [[ -z "$SESSION_DIR" ]]; then
echo '{"error": "Usage: stop-server.sh <session_dir>"}'
exit 1
fi
STATE_DIR="${SESSION_DIR}/state"
PID_FILE="${STATE_DIR}/server.pid"
if [[ -f "$PID_FILE" ]]; then
pid=$(cat "$PID_FILE")
# Try to stop gracefully, fallback to force if still alive
kill "$pid" 2>/dev/null || true
# Wait for graceful shutdown (up to ~2s)
for i in {1..20}; do
if ! kill -0 "$pid" 2>/dev/null; then
break
fi
sleep 0.1
done
# If still running, escalate to SIGKILL
if kill -0 "$pid" 2>/dev/null; then
kill -9 "$pid" 2>/dev/null || true
# Give SIGKILL a moment to take effect
sleep 0.1
fi
if kill -0 "$pid" 2>/dev/null; then
echo '{"status": "failed", "error": "process still running"}'
exit 1
fi
rm -f "$PID_FILE" "${STATE_DIR}/server.log"
# Only delete ephemeral /tmp directories
if [[ "$SESSION_DIR" == /tmp/* ]]; then
rm -rf "$SESSION_DIR"
fi
echo '{"status": "stopped"}'
else
echo '{"status": "not_running"}'
fi

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# Spec Document Reviewer Prompt Template
Use this template when dispatching a spec document reviewer subagent.
**Purpose:** Verify the spec is complete, consistent, and ready for implementation planning.
**Dispatch after:** Spec document is written to docs/superpowers/specs/
```
Task tool (general-purpose):
description: "Review spec document"
prompt: |
You are a spec document reviewer. Verify this spec is complete and ready for planning.
**Spec to review:** [SPEC_FILE_PATH]
## What to Check
| Category | What to Look For |
|----------|------------------|
| Completeness | TODOs, placeholders, "TBD", incomplete sections |
| Consistency | Internal contradictions, conflicting requirements |
| Clarity | Requirements ambiguous enough to cause someone to build the wrong thing |
| Scope | Focused enough for a single plan — not covering multiple independent subsystems |
| YAGNI | Unrequested features, over-engineering |
## Calibration
**Only flag issues that would cause real problems during implementation planning.**
A missing section, a contradiction, or a requirement so ambiguous it could be
interpreted two different ways — those are issues. Minor wording improvements,
stylistic preferences, and "sections less detailed than others" are not.
Approve unless there are serious gaps that would lead to a flawed plan.
## Output Format
## Spec Review
**Status:** Approved | Issues Found
**Issues (if any):**
- [Section X]: [specific issue] - [why it matters for planning]
**Recommendations (advisory, do not block approval):**
- [suggestions for improvement]
```
**Reviewer returns:** Status, Issues (if any), Recommendations

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# Visual Companion Guide
Browser-based visual brainstorming companion for showing mockups, diagrams, and options.
## When to Use
Decide per-question, not per-session. The test: **would the user understand this better by seeing it than reading it?**
**Use the browser** when the content itself is visual:
- **UI mockups** — wireframes, layouts, navigation structures, component designs
- **Architecture diagrams** — system components, data flow, relationship maps
- **Side-by-side visual comparisons** — comparing two layouts, two color schemes, two design directions
- **Design polish** — when the question is about look and feel, spacing, visual hierarchy
- **Spatial relationships** — state machines, flowcharts, entity relationships rendered as diagrams
**Use the terminal** when the content is text or tabular:
- **Requirements and scope questions** — "what does X mean?", "which features are in scope?"
- **Conceptual A/B/C choices** — picking between approaches described in words
- **Tradeoff lists** — pros/cons, comparison tables
- **Technical decisions** — API design, data modeling, architectural approach selection
- **Clarifying questions** — anything where the answer is words, not a visual preference
A question *about* a UI topic is not automatically a visual question. "What kind of wizard do you want?" is conceptual — use the terminal. "Which of these wizard layouts feels right?" is visual — use the browser.
## How It Works
The server watches a directory for HTML files and serves the newest one to the browser. You write HTML content to `screen_dir`, the user sees it in their browser and can click to select options. Selections are recorded to `state_dir/events` that you read on your next turn.
**Content fragments vs full documents:** If your HTML file starts with `<!DOCTYPE` or `<html`, the server serves it as-is (just injects the helper script). Otherwise, the server automatically wraps your content in the frame template — adding the header, CSS theme, selection indicator, and all interactive infrastructure. **Write content fragments by default.** Only write full documents when you need complete control over the page.
## Starting a Session
```bash
# Start server with persistence (mockups saved to project)
scripts/start-server.sh --project-dir /path/to/project
# Returns: {"type":"server-started","port":52341,"url":"http://localhost:52341",
# "screen_dir":"/path/to/project/.superpowers/brainstorm/12345-1706000000/content",
# "state_dir":"/path/to/project/.superpowers/brainstorm/12345-1706000000/state"}
```
Save `screen_dir` and `state_dir` from the response. Tell user to open the URL.
**Finding connection info:** The server writes its startup JSON to `$STATE_DIR/server-info`. If you launched the server in the background and didn't capture stdout, read that file to get the URL and port. When using `--project-dir`, check `<project>/.superpowers/brainstorm/` for the session directory.
**Note:** Pass the project root as `--project-dir` so mockups persist in `.superpowers/brainstorm/` and survive server restarts. Without it, files go to `/tmp` and get cleaned up. Remind the user to add `.superpowers/` to `.gitignore` if it's not already there.
**Launching the server by platform:**
**Claude Code (macOS / Linux):**
```bash
# Default mode works — the script backgrounds the server itself
scripts/start-server.sh --project-dir /path/to/project
```
**Claude Code (Windows):**
```bash
# Windows auto-detects and uses foreground mode, which blocks the tool call.
# Use run_in_background: true on the Bash tool call so the server survives
# across conversation turns.
scripts/start-server.sh --project-dir /path/to/project
```
When calling this via the Bash tool, set `run_in_background: true`. Then read `$STATE_DIR/server-info` on the next turn to get the URL and port.
**Codex:**
```bash
# Codex reaps background processes. The script auto-detects CODEX_CI and
# switches to foreground mode. Run it normally — no extra flags needed.
scripts/start-server.sh --project-dir /path/to/project
```
**Gemini CLI:**
```bash
# Use --foreground and set is_background: true on your shell tool call
# so the process survives across turns
scripts/start-server.sh --project-dir /path/to/project --foreground
```
**Other environments:** The server must keep running in the background across conversation turns. If your environment reaps detached processes, use `--foreground` and launch the command with your platform's background execution mechanism.
If the URL is unreachable from your browser (common in remote/containerized setups), bind a non-loopback host:
```bash
scripts/start-server.sh \
--project-dir /path/to/project \
--host 0.0.0.0 \
--url-host localhost
```
Use `--url-host` to control what hostname is printed in the returned URL JSON.
## The Loop
1. **Check server is alive**, then **write HTML** to a new file in `screen_dir`:
- Before each write, check that `$STATE_DIR/server-info` exists. If it doesn't (or `$STATE_DIR/server-stopped` exists), the server has shut down — restart it with `start-server.sh` before continuing. The server auto-exits after 30 minutes of inactivity.
- Use semantic filenames: `platform.html`, `visual-style.html`, `layout.html`
- **Never reuse filenames** — each screen gets a fresh file
- Use Write tool — **never use cat/heredoc** (dumps noise into terminal)
- Server automatically serves the newest file
2. **Tell user what to expect and end your turn:**
- Remind them of the URL (every step, not just first)
- Give a brief text summary of what's on screen (e.g., "Showing 3 layout options for the homepage")
- Ask them to respond in the terminal: "Take a look and let me know what you think. Click to select an option if you'd like."
3. **On your next turn** — after the user responds in the terminal:
- Read `$STATE_DIR/events` if it exists — this contains the user's browser interactions (clicks, selections) as JSON lines
- Merge with the user's terminal text to get the full picture
- The terminal message is the primary feedback; `state_dir/events` provides structured interaction data
4. **Iterate or advance** — if feedback changes current screen, write a new file (e.g., `layout-v2.html`). Only move to the next question when the current step is validated.
5. **Unload when returning to terminal** — when the next step doesn't need the browser (e.g., a clarifying question, a tradeoff discussion), push a waiting screen to clear the stale content:
```html
<!-- filename: waiting.html (or waiting-2.html, etc.) -->
<div style="display:flex;align-items:center;justify-content:center;min-height:60vh">
<p class="subtitle">Continuing in terminal...</p>
</div>
```
This prevents the user from staring at a resolved choice while the conversation has moved on. When the next visual question comes up, push a new content file as usual.
6. Repeat until done.
## Writing Content Fragments
Write just the content that goes inside the page. The server wraps it in the frame template automatically (header, theme CSS, selection indicator, and all interactive infrastructure).
**Minimal example:**
```html
<h2>Which layout works better?</h2>
<p class="subtitle">Consider readability and visual hierarchy</p>
<div class="options">
<div class="option" data-choice="a" onclick="toggleSelect(this)">
<div class="letter">A</div>
<div class="content">
<h3>Single Column</h3>
<p>Clean, focused reading experience</p>
</div>
</div>
<div class="option" data-choice="b" onclick="toggleSelect(this)">
<div class="letter">B</div>
<div class="content">
<h3>Two Column</h3>
<p>Sidebar navigation with main content</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
```
That's it. No `<html>`, no CSS, no `<script>` tags needed. The server provides all of that.
## CSS Classes Available
The frame template provides these CSS classes for your content:
### Options (A/B/C choices)
```html
<div class="options">
<div class="option" data-choice="a" onclick="toggleSelect(this)">
<div class="letter">A</div>
<div class="content">
<h3>Title</h3>
<p>Description</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
```
**Multi-select:** Add `data-multiselect` to the container to let users select multiple options. Each click toggles the item. The indicator bar shows the count.
```html
<div class="options" data-multiselect>
<!-- same option markup — users can select/deselect multiple -->
</div>
```
### Cards (visual designs)
```html
<div class="cards">
<div class="card" data-choice="design1" onclick="toggleSelect(this)">
<div class="card-image"><!-- mockup content --></div>
<div class="card-body">
<h3>Name</h3>
<p>Description</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
```
### Mockup container
```html
<div class="mockup">
<div class="mockup-header">Preview: Dashboard Layout</div>
<div class="mockup-body"><!-- your mockup HTML --></div>
</div>
```
### Split view (side-by-side)
```html
<div class="split">
<div class="mockup"><!-- left --></div>
<div class="mockup"><!-- right --></div>
</div>
```
### Pros/Cons
```html
<div class="pros-cons">
<div class="pros"><h4>Pros</h4><ul><li>Benefit</li></ul></div>
<div class="cons"><h4>Cons</h4><ul><li>Drawback</li></ul></div>
</div>
```
### Mock elements (wireframe building blocks)
```html
<div class="mock-nav">Logo | Home | About | Contact</div>
<div style="display: flex;">
<div class="mock-sidebar">Navigation</div>
<div class="mock-content">Main content area</div>
</div>
<button class="mock-button">Action Button</button>
<input class="mock-input" placeholder="Input field">
<div class="placeholder">Placeholder area</div>
```
### Typography and sections
- `h2` — page title
- `h3` — section heading
- `.subtitle` — secondary text below title
- `.section` — content block with bottom margin
- `.label` — small uppercase label text
## Browser Events Format
When the user clicks options in the browser, their interactions are recorded to `$STATE_DIR/events` (one JSON object per line). The file is cleared automatically when you push a new screen.
```jsonl
{"type":"click","choice":"a","text":"Option A - Simple Layout","timestamp":1706000101}
{"type":"click","choice":"c","text":"Option C - Complex Grid","timestamp":1706000108}
{"type":"click","choice":"b","text":"Option B - Hybrid","timestamp":1706000115}
```
The full event stream shows the user's exploration path — they may click multiple options before settling. The last `choice` event is typically the final selection, but the pattern of clicks can reveal hesitation or preferences worth asking about.
If `$STATE_DIR/events` doesn't exist, the user didn't interact with the browser — use only their terminal text.
## Design Tips
- **Scale fidelity to the question** — wireframes for layout, polish for polish questions
- **Explain the question on each page** — "Which layout feels more professional?" not just "Pick one"
- **Iterate before advancing** — if feedback changes current screen, write a new version
- **2-4 options max** per screen
- **Use real content when it matters** — for a photography portfolio, use actual images (Unsplash). Placeholder content obscures design issues.
- **Keep mockups simple** — focus on layout and structure, not pixel-perfect design
## File Naming
- Use semantic names: `platform.html`, `visual-style.html`, `layout.html`
- Never reuse filenames — each screen must be a new file
- For iterations: append version suffix like `layout-v2.html`, `layout-v3.html`
- Server serves newest file by modification time
## Cleaning Up
```bash
scripts/stop-server.sh $SESSION_DIR
```
If the session used `--project-dir`, mockup files persist in `.superpowers/brainstorm/` for later reference. Only `/tmp` sessions get deleted on stop.
## Reference
- Frame template (CSS reference): `scripts/frame-template.html`
- Helper script (client-side): `scripts/helper.js`

View File

@@ -7,6 +7,8 @@ description: Use when facing 2+ independent tasks that can be worked on without
## Overview ## Overview
You delegate tasks to specialized agents with isolated context. By precisely crafting their instructions and context, you ensure they stay focused and succeed at their task. They should never inherit your session's context or history — you construct exactly what they need. This also preserves your own context for coordination work.
When you have multiple unrelated failures (different test files, different subsystems, different bugs), investigating them sequentially wastes time. Each investigation is independent and can happen in parallel. When you have multiple unrelated failures (different test files, different subsystems, different bugs), investigating them sequentially wastes time. Each investigation is independent and can happen in parallel.
**Core principle:** Dispatch one agent per independent problem domain. Let them work concurrently. **Core principle:** Dispatch one agent per independent problem domain. Let them work concurrently.

View File

@@ -7,12 +7,12 @@ description: Use when you have a written implementation plan to execute in a sep
## Overview ## Overview
Load plan, review critically, execute tasks in batches, report for review between batches. Load plan, review critically, execute all tasks, report when complete.
**Core principle:** Batch execution with checkpoints for architect review.
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the executing-plans skill to implement this plan." **Announce at start:** "I'm using the executing-plans skill to implement this plan."
**Note:** Tell your human partner that Superpowers works much better with access to subagents. The quality of its work will be significantly higher if run on a platform with subagent support (such as Claude Code or Codex). If subagents are available, use superpowers:subagent-driven-development instead of this skill.
## The Process ## The Process
### Step 1: Load and Review Plan ### Step 1: Load and Review Plan
@@ -21,8 +21,7 @@ Load plan, review critically, execute tasks in batches, report for review betwee
3. If concerns: Raise them with your human partner before starting 3. If concerns: Raise them with your human partner before starting
4. If no concerns: Create TodoWrite and proceed 4. If no concerns: Create TodoWrite and proceed
### Step 2: Execute Batch ### Step 2: Execute Tasks
**Default: First 3 tasks**
For each task: For each task:
1. Mark as in_progress 1. Mark as in_progress
@@ -30,19 +29,7 @@ For each task:
3. Run verifications as specified 3. Run verifications as specified
4. Mark as completed 4. Mark as completed
### Step 3: Report ### Step 3: Complete Development
When batch complete:
- Show what was implemented
- Show verification output
- Say: "Ready for feedback."
### Step 4: Continue
Based on feedback:
- Apply changes if needed
- Execute next batch
- Repeat until complete
### Step 5: Complete Development
After all tasks complete and verified: After all tasks complete and verified:
- Announce: "I'm using the finishing-a-development-branch skill to complete this work." - Announce: "I'm using the finishing-a-development-branch skill to complete this work."
@@ -52,7 +39,7 @@ After all tasks complete and verified:
## When to Stop and Ask for Help ## When to Stop and Ask for Help
**STOP executing immediately when:** **STOP executing immediately when:**
- Hit a blocker mid-batch (missing dependency, test fails, instruction unclear) - Hit a blocker (missing dependency, test fails, instruction unclear)
- Plan has critical gaps preventing starting - Plan has critical gaps preventing starting
- You don't understand an instruction - You don't understand an instruction
- Verification fails repeatedly - Verification fails repeatedly
@@ -72,13 +59,12 @@ After all tasks complete and verified:
- Follow plan steps exactly - Follow plan steps exactly
- Don't skip verifications - Don't skip verifications
- Reference skills when plan says to - Reference skills when plan says to
- Between batches: just report and wait
- Stop when blocked, don't guess - Stop when blocked, don't guess
- Never start implementation on main/master branch without explicit user consent - Never start implementation on main/master branch without explicit user consent
## Integration ## Integration
**Required workflow skills:** **Required workflow skills:**
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting - **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
- **superpowers:writing-plans** - Creates the plan this skill executes - **superpowers:writing-plans** - Creates the plan this skill executes
- **superpowers:finishing-a-development-branch** - Complete development after all tasks - **superpowers:finishing-a-development-branch** - Complete development after all tasks

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ description: Use when implementation is complete, all tests pass, and you need t
Guide completion of development work by presenting clear options and handling chosen workflow. Guide completion of development work by presenting clear options and handling chosen workflow.
**Core principle:** Verify tests → Present options → Execute choice → Clean up. **Core principle:** Verify tests → Detect environment → Present options → Execute choice → Clean up.
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the finishing-a-development-branch skill to complete this work." **Announce at start:** "I'm using the finishing-a-development-branch skill to complete this work."
@@ -37,7 +37,24 @@ Stop. Don't proceed to Step 2.
**If tests pass:** Continue to Step 2. **If tests pass:** Continue to Step 2.
### Step 2: Determine Base Branch ### Step 2: Detect Environment
**Determine workspace state before presenting options:**
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
```
This determines which menu to show and how cleanup works:
| State | Menu | Cleanup |
|-------|------|---------|
| `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (normal repo) | Standard 4 options | No worktree to clean up |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, named branch | Standard 4 options | Provenance-based (see Step 6) |
| `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON`, detached HEAD | Reduced 3 options (no merge) | No cleanup (externally managed) |
### Step 3: Determine Base Branch
```bash ```bash
# Try common base branches # Try common base branches
@@ -46,9 +63,9 @@ git merge-base HEAD main 2>/dev/null || git merge-base HEAD master 2>/dev/null
Or ask: "This branch split from main - is that correct?" Or ask: "This branch split from main - is that correct?"
### Step 3: Present Options ### Step 4: Present Options
Present exactly these 4 options: **Normal repo and named-branch worktree — present exactly these 4 options:**
``` ```
Implementation complete. What would you like to do? Implementation complete. What would you like to do?
@@ -61,30 +78,45 @@ Implementation complete. What would you like to do?
Which option? Which option?
``` ```
**Detached HEAD — present exactly these 3 options:**
```
Implementation complete. You're on a detached HEAD (externally managed workspace).
1. Push as new branch and create a Pull Request
2. Keep as-is (I'll handle it later)
3. Discard this work
Which option?
```
**Don't add explanation** - keep options concise. **Don't add explanation** - keep options concise.
### Step 4: Execute Choice ### Step 5: Execute Choice
#### Option 1: Merge Locally #### Option 1: Merge Locally
```bash ```bash
# Switch to base branch # Get main repo root for CWD safety
MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd "$MAIN_ROOT"
# Merge first — verify success before removing anything
git checkout <base-branch> git checkout <base-branch>
# Pull latest
git pull git pull
# Merge feature branch
git merge <feature-branch> git merge <feature-branch>
# Verify tests on merged result # Verify tests on merged result
<test command> <test command>
# If tests pass # Only after merge succeeds: cleanup worktree (Step 6), then delete branch
git branch -d <feature-branch>
``` ```
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 5) Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 6), then delete branch:
```bash
git branch -d <feature-branch>
```
#### Option 2: Push and Create PR #### Option 2: Push and Create PR
@@ -103,7 +135,7 @@ EOF
)" )"
``` ```
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 5) **Do NOT clean up worktree** — user needs it alive to iterate on PR feedback.
#### Option 3: Keep As-Is #### Option 3: Keep As-Is
@@ -127,36 +159,46 @@ Wait for exact confirmation.
If confirmed: If confirmed:
```bash ```bash
git checkout <base-branch> MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd "$MAIN_ROOT"
```
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 6), then force-delete branch:
```bash
git branch -D <feature-branch> git branch -D <feature-branch>
``` ```
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 5) ### Step 6: Cleanup Workspace
### Step 5: Cleanup Worktree **Only runs for Options 1 and 4.** Options 2 and 3 always preserve the worktree.
**For Options 1, 2, 4:**
Check if in worktree:
```bash ```bash
git worktree list | grep $(git branch --show-current) GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
WORKTREE_PATH=$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
``` ```
If yes: **If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON`:** Normal repo, no worktree to clean up. Done.
**If worktree path is under `.worktrees/`, `worktrees/`, or `~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`:** Superpowers created this worktree — we own cleanup.
```bash ```bash
git worktree remove <worktree-path> MAIN_ROOT=$(git -C "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)/.." rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd "$MAIN_ROOT"
git worktree remove "$WORKTREE_PATH"
git worktree prune # Self-healing: clean up any stale registrations
``` ```
**For Option 3:** Keep worktree. **Otherwise:** The host environment (harness) owns this workspace. Do NOT remove it. If your platform provides a workspace-exit tool, use it. Otherwise, leave the workspace in place.
## Quick Reference ## Quick Reference
| Option | Merge | Push | Keep Worktree | Cleanup Branch | | Option | Merge | Push | Keep Worktree | Cleanup Branch |
|--------|-------|------|---------------|----------------| |--------|-------|------|---------------|----------------|
| 1. Merge locally | | - | - | | | 1. Merge locally | yes | - | - | yes |
| 2. Create PR | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | | 2. Create PR | - | yes | yes | - |
| 3. Keep as-is | - | - | | - | | 3. Keep as-is | - | - | yes | - |
| 4. Discard | - | - | - | (force) | | 4. Discard | - | - | - | yes (force) |
## Common Mistakes ## Common Mistakes
@@ -165,13 +207,25 @@ git worktree remove <worktree-path>
- **Fix:** Always verify tests before offering options - **Fix:** Always verify tests before offering options
**Open-ended questions** **Open-ended questions**
- **Problem:** "What should I do next?" ambiguous - **Problem:** "What should I do next?" is ambiguous
- **Fix:** Present exactly 4 structured options - **Fix:** Present exactly 4 structured options (or 3 for detached HEAD)
**Automatic worktree cleanup** **Cleaning up worktree for Option 2**
- **Problem:** Remove worktree when might need it (Option 2, 3) - **Problem:** Remove worktree user needs for PR iteration
- **Fix:** Only cleanup for Options 1 and 4 - **Fix:** Only cleanup for Options 1 and 4
**Deleting branch before removing worktree**
- **Problem:** `git branch -d` fails because worktree still references the branch
- **Fix:** Merge first, remove worktree, then delete branch
**Running git worktree remove from inside the worktree**
- **Problem:** Command fails silently when CWD is inside the worktree being removed
- **Fix:** Always `cd` to main repo root before `git worktree remove`
**Cleaning up harness-owned worktrees**
- **Problem:** Removing a worktree the harness created causes phantom state
- **Fix:** Only clean up worktrees under `.worktrees/`, `worktrees/`, or `~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`
**No confirmation for discard** **No confirmation for discard**
- **Problem:** Accidentally delete work - **Problem:** Accidentally delete work
- **Fix:** Require typed "discard" confirmation - **Fix:** Require typed "discard" confirmation
@@ -183,18 +237,15 @@ git worktree remove <worktree-path>
- Merge without verifying tests on result - Merge without verifying tests on result
- Delete work without confirmation - Delete work without confirmation
- Force-push without explicit request - Force-push without explicit request
- Remove a worktree before confirming merge success
- Clean up worktrees you didn't create (provenance check)
- Run `git worktree remove` from inside the worktree
**Always:** **Always:**
- Verify tests before offering options - Verify tests before offering options
- Present exactly 4 options - Detect environment before presenting menu
- Present exactly 4 options (or 3 for detached HEAD)
- Get typed confirmation for Option 4 - Get typed confirmation for Option 4
- Clean up worktree for Options 1 & 4 only - Clean up worktree for Options 1 & 4 only
- `cd` to main repo root before worktree removal
## Integration - Run `git worktree prune` after removal
**Called by:**
- **subagent-driven-development** (Step 7) - After all tasks complete
- **executing-plans** (Step 5) - After all batches complete
**Pairs with:**
- **using-git-worktrees** - Cleans up worktree created by that skill

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ description: Use when completing tasks, implementing major features, or before m
# Requesting Code Review # Requesting Code Review
Dispatch superpowers:code-reviewer subagent to catch issues before they cascade. Dispatch a code reviewer subagent to catch issues before they cascade. The reviewer gets precisely crafted context for evaluation — never your session's history. This keeps the reviewer focused on the work product, not your thought process, and preserves your own context for continued work.
**Core principle:** Review early, review often. **Core principle:** Review early, review often.
@@ -29,16 +29,15 @@ BASE_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD~1) # or origin/main
HEAD_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD) HEAD_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
``` ```
**2. Dispatch code-reviewer subagent:** **2. Dispatch code reviewer subagent:**
Use Task tool with superpowers:code-reviewer type, fill template at `code-reviewer.md` Use Task tool with `general-purpose` type, fill template at `code-reviewer.md`
**Placeholders:** **Placeholders:**
- `{WHAT_WAS_IMPLEMENTED}` - What you just built - `{DESCRIPTION}` - Brief summary of what you built
- `{PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS}` - What it should do - `{PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS}` - What it should do
- `{BASE_SHA}` - Starting commit - `{BASE_SHA}` - Starting commit
- `{HEAD_SHA}` - Ending commit - `{HEAD_SHA}` - Ending commit
- `{DESCRIPTION}` - Brief summary
**3. Act on feedback:** **3. Act on feedback:**
- Fix Critical issues immediately - Fix Critical issues immediately
@@ -56,12 +55,11 @@ You: Let me request code review before proceeding.
BASE_SHA=$(git log --oneline | grep "Task 1" | head -1 | awk '{print $1}') BASE_SHA=$(git log --oneline | grep "Task 1" | head -1 | awk '{print $1}')
HEAD_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD) HEAD_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
[Dispatch superpowers:code-reviewer subagent] [Dispatch code reviewer subagent]
WHAT_WAS_IMPLEMENTED: Verification and repair functions for conversation index DESCRIPTION: Added verifyIndex() and repairIndex() with 4 issue types
PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS: Task 2 from docs/plans/deployment-plan.md PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS: Task 2 from docs/superpowers/plans/deployment-plan.md
BASE_SHA: a7981ec BASE_SHA: a7981ec
HEAD_SHA: 3df7661 HEAD_SHA: 3df7661
DESCRIPTION: Added verifyIndex() and repairIndex() with 4 issue types
[Subagent returns]: [Subagent returns]:
Strengths: Clean architecture, real tests Strengths: Clean architecture, real tests
@@ -82,7 +80,7 @@ You: [Fix progress indicators]
- Fix before moving to next task - Fix before moving to next task
**Executing Plans:** **Executing Plans:**
- Review after each batch (3 tasks) - Review after each task or at natural checkpoints
- Get feedback, apply, continue - Get feedback, apply, continue
**Ad-Hoc Development:** **Ad-Hoc Development:**

View File

@@ -1,111 +1,133 @@
# Code Review Agent # Code Reviewer Prompt Template
You are reviewing code changes for production readiness. Use this template when dispatching a code reviewer subagent.
**Your task:** **Purpose:** Review completed work against requirements and code quality standards before it cascades into more work.
1. Review {WHAT_WAS_IMPLEMENTED}
2. Compare against {PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS}
3. Check code quality, architecture, testing
4. Categorize issues by severity
5. Assess production readiness
## What Was Implemented ```
Task tool (general-purpose):
description: "Review code changes"
prompt: |
You are a Senior Code Reviewer with expertise in software architecture,
design patterns, and best practices. Your job is to review completed work
against its plan or requirements and identify issues before they cascade.
{DESCRIPTION} ## What Was Implemented
## Requirements/Plan {DESCRIPTION}
{PLAN_REFERENCE} ## Requirements / Plan
## Git Range to Review {PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS}
**Base:** {BASE_SHA} ## Git Range to Review
**Head:** {HEAD_SHA}
```bash **Base:** {BASE_SHA}
git diff --stat {BASE_SHA}..{HEAD_SHA} **Head:** {HEAD_SHA}
git diff {BASE_SHA}..{HEAD_SHA}
```bash
git diff --stat {BASE_SHA}..{HEAD_SHA}
git diff {BASE_SHA}..{HEAD_SHA}
```
## What to Check
**Plan alignment:**
- Does the implementation match the plan / requirements?
- Are deviations justified improvements, or problematic departures?
- Is all planned functionality present?
**Code quality:**
- Clean separation of concerns?
- Proper error handling?
- Type safety where applicable?
- DRY without premature abstraction?
- Edge cases handled?
**Architecture:**
- Sound design decisions?
- Reasonable scalability and performance?
- Security concerns?
- Integrates cleanly with surrounding code?
**Testing:**
- Tests verify real behavior, not mocks?
- Edge cases covered?
- Integration tests where they matter?
- All tests passing?
**Production readiness:**
- Migration strategy if schema changed?
- Backward compatibility considered?
- Documentation complete?
- No obvious bugs?
## Calibration
Categorize issues by actual severity. Not everything is Critical.
Acknowledge what was done well before listing issues — accurate praise
helps the implementer trust the rest of the feedback.
If you find significant deviations from the plan, flag them specifically
so the implementer can confirm whether the deviation was intentional.
If you find issues with the plan itself rather than the implementation,
say so.
## Output Format
### Strengths
[What's well done? Be specific.]
### Issues
#### Critical (Must Fix)
[Bugs, security issues, data loss risks, broken functionality]
#### Important (Should Fix)
[Architecture problems, missing features, poor error handling, test gaps]
#### Minor (Nice to Have)
[Code style, optimization opportunities, documentation polish]
For each issue:
- File:line reference
- What's wrong
- Why it matters
- How to fix (if not obvious)
### Recommendations
[Improvements for code quality, architecture, or process]
### Assessment
**Ready to merge?** [Yes | No | With fixes]
**Reasoning:** [1-2 sentence technical assessment]
## Critical Rules
**DO:**
- Categorize by actual severity
- Be specific (file:line, not vague)
- Explain WHY each issue matters
- Acknowledge strengths
- Give a clear verdict
**DON'T:**
- Say "looks good" without checking
- Mark nitpicks as Critical
- Give feedback on code you didn't actually read
- Be vague ("improve error handling")
- Avoid giving a clear verdict
``` ```
## Review Checklist **Placeholders:**
- `{DESCRIPTION}` — brief summary of what was built
- `{PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS}` — what it should do (plan file path, task text, or requirements)
- `{BASE_SHA}` — starting commit
- `{HEAD_SHA}` — ending commit
**Code Quality:** **Reviewer returns:** Strengths, Issues (Critical / Important / Minor), Recommendations, Assessment
- Clean separation of concerns?
- Proper error handling?
- Type safety (if applicable)?
- DRY principle followed?
- Edge cases handled?
**Architecture:**
- Sound design decisions?
- Scalability considerations?
- Performance implications?
- Security concerns?
**Testing:**
- Tests actually test logic (not mocks)?
- Edge cases covered?
- Integration tests where needed?
- All tests passing?
**Requirements:**
- All plan requirements met?
- Implementation matches spec?
- No scope creep?
- Breaking changes documented?
**Production Readiness:**
- Migration strategy (if schema changes)?
- Backward compatibility considered?
- Documentation complete?
- No obvious bugs?
## Output Format
### Strengths
[What's well done? Be specific.]
### Issues
#### Critical (Must Fix)
[Bugs, security issues, data loss risks, broken functionality]
#### Important (Should Fix)
[Architecture problems, missing features, poor error handling, test gaps]
#### Minor (Nice to Have)
[Code style, optimization opportunities, documentation improvements]
**For each issue:**
- File:line reference
- What's wrong
- Why it matters
- How to fix (if not obvious)
### Recommendations
[Improvements for code quality, architecture, or process]
### Assessment
**Ready to merge?** [Yes/No/With fixes]
**Reasoning:** [Technical assessment in 1-2 sentences]
## Critical Rules
**DO:**
- Categorize by actual severity (not everything is Critical)
- Be specific (file:line, not vague)
- Explain WHY issues matter
- Acknowledge strengths
- Give clear verdict
**DON'T:**
- Say "looks good" without checking
- Mark nitpicks as Critical
- Give feedback on code you didn't review
- Be vague ("improve error handling")
- Avoid giving a clear verdict
## Example Output ## Example Output

View File

@@ -7,8 +7,12 @@ description: Use when executing implementation plans with independent tasks in t
Execute plan by dispatching fresh subagent per task, with two-stage review after each: spec compliance review first, then code quality review. Execute plan by dispatching fresh subagent per task, with two-stage review after each: spec compliance review first, then code quality review.
**Why subagents:** You delegate tasks to specialized agents with isolated context. By precisely crafting their instructions and context, you ensure they stay focused and succeed at their task. They should never inherit your session's context or history — you construct exactly what they need. This also preserves your own context for coordination work.
**Core principle:** Fresh subagent per task + two-stage review (spec then quality) = high quality, fast iteration **Core principle:** Fresh subagent per task + two-stage review (spec then quality) = high quality, fast iteration
**Continuous execution:** Do not pause to check in with your human partner between tasks. Execute all tasks from the plan without stopping. The only reasons to stop are: BLOCKED status you cannot resolve, ambiguity that genuinely prevents progress, or all tasks complete. "Should I continue?" prompts and progress summaries waste their time — they asked you to execute the plan, so execute it.
## When to Use ## When to Use
```dot ```dot
@@ -82,6 +86,39 @@ digraph process {
} }
``` ```
## Model Selection
Use the least powerful model that can handle each role to conserve cost and increase speed.
**Mechanical implementation tasks** (isolated functions, clear specs, 1-2 files): use a fast, cheap model. Most implementation tasks are mechanical when the plan is well-specified.
**Integration and judgment tasks** (multi-file coordination, pattern matching, debugging): use a standard model.
**Architecture, design, and review tasks**: use the most capable available model.
**Task complexity signals:**
- Touches 1-2 files with a complete spec → cheap model
- Touches multiple files with integration concerns → standard model
- Requires design judgment or broad codebase understanding → most capable model
## Handling Implementer Status
Implementer subagents report one of four statuses. Handle each appropriately:
**DONE:** Proceed to spec compliance review.
**DONE_WITH_CONCERNS:** The implementer completed the work but flagged doubts. Read the concerns before proceeding. If the concerns are about correctness or scope, address them before review. If they're observations (e.g., "this file is getting large"), note them and proceed to review.
**NEEDS_CONTEXT:** The implementer needs information that wasn't provided. Provide the missing context and re-dispatch.
**BLOCKED:** The implementer cannot complete the task. Assess the blocker:
1. If it's a context problem, provide more context and re-dispatch with the same model
2. If the task requires more reasoning, re-dispatch with a more capable model
3. If the task is too large, break it into smaller pieces
4. If the plan itself is wrong, escalate to the human
**Never** ignore an escalation or force the same model to retry without changes. If the implementer said it's stuck, something needs to change.
## Prompt Templates ## Prompt Templates
- `./implementer-prompt.md` - Dispatch implementer subagent - `./implementer-prompt.md` - Dispatch implementer subagent
@@ -93,7 +130,7 @@ digraph process {
``` ```
You: I'm using Subagent-Driven Development to execute this plan. You: I'm using Subagent-Driven Development to execute this plan.
[Read plan file once: docs/plans/feature-plan.md] [Read plan file once: docs/superpowers/plans/feature-plan.md]
[Extract all 5 tasks with full text and context] [Extract all 5 tasks with full text and context]
[Create TodoWrite with all tasks] [Create TodoWrite with all tasks]
@@ -230,7 +267,7 @@ Done!
## Integration ## Integration
**Required workflow skills:** **Required workflow skills:**
- **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - REQUIRED: Set up isolated workspace before starting - **superpowers:using-git-worktrees** - Ensures isolated workspace (creates one or verifies existing)
- **superpowers:writing-plans** - Creates the plan this skill executes - **superpowers:writing-plans** - Creates the plan this skill executes
- **superpowers:requesting-code-review** - Code review template for reviewer subagents - **superpowers:requesting-code-review** - Code review template for reviewer subagents
- **superpowers:finishing-a-development-branch** - Complete development after all tasks - **superpowers:finishing-a-development-branch** - Complete development after all tasks

View File

@@ -7,14 +7,19 @@ Use this template when dispatching a code quality reviewer subagent.
**Only dispatch after spec compliance review passes.** **Only dispatch after spec compliance review passes.**
``` ```
Task tool (superpowers:code-reviewer): Task tool (general-purpose):
Use template at requesting-code-review/code-reviewer.md Use template at requesting-code-review/code-reviewer.md
WHAT_WAS_IMPLEMENTED: [from implementer's report] DESCRIPTION: [task summary, from implementer's report]
PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS: Task N from [plan-file] PLAN_OR_REQUIREMENTS: Task N from [plan-file]
BASE_SHA: [commit before task] BASE_SHA: [commit before task]
HEAD_SHA: [current commit] HEAD_SHA: [current commit]
DESCRIPTION: [task summary]
``` ```
**In addition to standard code quality concerns, the reviewer should check:**
- Does each file have one clear responsibility with a well-defined interface?
- Are units decomposed so they can be understood and tested independently?
- Is the implementation following the file structure from the plan?
- Did this implementation create new files that are already large, or significantly grow existing files? (Don't flag pre-existing file sizes — focus on what this change contributed.)
**Code reviewer returns:** Strengths, Issues (Critical/Important/Minor), Assessment **Code reviewer returns:** Strengths, Issues (Critical/Important/Minor), Assessment

View File

@@ -41,6 +41,36 @@ Task tool (general-purpose):
**While you work:** If you encounter something unexpected or unclear, **ask questions**. **While you work:** If you encounter something unexpected or unclear, **ask questions**.
It's always OK to pause and clarify. Don't guess or make assumptions. It's always OK to pause and clarify. Don't guess or make assumptions.
## Code Organization
You reason best about code you can hold in context at once, and your edits are more
reliable when files are focused. Keep this in mind:
- Follow the file structure defined in the plan
- Each file should have one clear responsibility with a well-defined interface
- If a file you're creating is growing beyond the plan's intent, stop and report
it as DONE_WITH_CONCERNS — don't split files on your own without plan guidance
- If an existing file you're modifying is already large or tangled, work carefully
and note it as a concern in your report
- In existing codebases, follow established patterns. Improve code you're touching
the way a good developer would, but don't restructure things outside your task.
## When You're in Over Your Head
It is always OK to stop and say "this is too hard for me." Bad work is worse than
no work. You will not be penalized for escalating.
**STOP and escalate when:**
- The task requires architectural decisions with multiple valid approaches
- You need to understand code beyond what was provided and can't find clarity
- You feel uncertain about whether your approach is correct
- The task involves restructuring existing code in ways the plan didn't anticipate
- You've been reading file after file trying to understand the system without progress
**How to escalate:** Report back with status BLOCKED or NEEDS_CONTEXT. Describe
specifically what you're stuck on, what you've tried, and what kind of help you need.
The controller can provide more context, re-dispatch with a more capable model,
or break the task into smaller pieces.
## Before Reporting Back: Self-Review ## Before Reporting Back: Self-Review
Review your work with fresh eyes. Ask yourself: Review your work with fresh eyes. Ask yourself:
@@ -70,9 +100,14 @@ Task tool (general-purpose):
## Report Format ## Report Format
When done, report: When done, report:
- What you implemented - **Status:** DONE | DONE_WITH_CONCERNS | BLOCKED | NEEDS_CONTEXT
- What you implemented (or what you attempted, if blocked)
- What you tested and test results - What you tested and test results
- Files changed - Files changed
- Self-review findings (if any) - Self-review findings (if any)
- Any issues or concerns - Any issues or concerns
Use DONE_WITH_CONCERNS if you completed the work but have doubts about correctness.
Use BLOCKED if you cannot complete the task. Use NEEDS_CONTEXT if you need
information that wasn't provided. Never silently produce work you're unsure about.
``` ```

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Reference example of extracting, structuring, and bulletproofing a critical skil
## Source Material ## Source Material
Extracted debugging framework from `/Users/jesse/.claude/CLAUDE.md`: Extracted debugging framework from `~/.claude/CLAUDE.md`:
- 4-phase systematic process (Investigation → Pattern Analysis → Hypothesis → Implementation) - 4-phase systematic process (Investigation → Pattern Analysis → Hypothesis → Implementation)
- Core mandate: ALWAYS find root cause, NEVER fix symptoms - Core mandate: ALWAYS find root cause, NEVER fix symptoms
- Rules designed to resist time pressure and rationalization - Rules designed to resist time pressure and rationalization

View File

@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ digraph when_to_use {
### 1. Observe the Symptom ### 1. Observe the Symptom
``` ```
Error: git init failed in /Users/jesse/project/packages/core Error: git init failed in ~/project/packages/core
``` ```
### 2. Find Immediate Cause ### 2. Find Immediate Cause

View File

@@ -1,104 +1,117 @@
--- ---
name: using-git-worktrees name: using-git-worktrees
description: Use when starting feature work that needs isolation from current workspace or before executing implementation plans - creates isolated git worktrees with smart directory selection and safety verification description: Use when starting feature work that needs isolation from current workspace or before executing implementation plans - ensures an isolated workspace exists via native tools or git worktree fallback
--- ---
# Using Git Worktrees # Using Git Worktrees
## Overview ## Overview
Git worktrees create isolated workspaces sharing the same repository, allowing work on multiple branches simultaneously without switching. Ensure work happens in an isolated workspace. Prefer your platform's native worktree tools. Fall back to manual git worktrees only when no native tool is available.
**Core principle:** Systematic directory selection + safety verification = reliable isolation. **Core principle:** Detect existing isolation first. Then use native tools. Then fall back to git. Never fight the harness.
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the using-git-worktrees skill to set up an isolated workspace." **Announce at start:** "I'm using the using-git-worktrees skill to set up an isolated workspace."
## Directory Selection Process ## Step 0: Detect Existing Isolation
Follow this priority order: **Before creating anything, check if you are already in an isolated workspace.**
### 1. Check Existing Directories
```bash ```bash
# Check in priority order GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
ls -d .worktrees 2>/dev/null # Preferred (hidden) GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
ls -d worktrees 2>/dev/null # Alternative BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
``` ```
**If found:** Use that directory. If both exist, `.worktrees` wins. **Submodule guard:** `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` is also true inside git submodules. Before concluding "already in a worktree," verify you are not in a submodule:
### 2. Check CLAUDE.md
```bash ```bash
grep -i "worktree.*director" CLAUDE.md 2>/dev/null # If this returns a path, you're in a submodule, not a worktree — treat as normal repo
git rev-parse --show-superproject-working-tree 2>/dev/null
``` ```
**If preference specified:** Use it without asking. **If `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` (and not a submodule):** You are already in a linked worktree. Skip to Step 3 (Project Setup). Do NOT create another worktree.
### 3. Ask User Report with branch state:
- On a branch: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` on branch `<name>`."
- Detached HEAD: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` (detached HEAD, externally managed). Branch creation needed at finish time."
If no directory exists and no CLAUDE.md preference: **If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (or in a submodule):** You are in a normal repo checkout.
``` Has the user already indicated their worktree preference in your instructions? If not, ask for consent before creating a worktree:
No worktree directory found. Where should I create worktrees?
1. .worktrees/ (project-local, hidden) > "Would you like me to set up an isolated worktree? It protects your current branch from changes."
2. ~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/<project-name>/ (global location)
Which would you prefer? Honor any existing declared preference without asking. If the user declines consent, work in place and skip to Step 3.
```
## Safety Verification ## Step 1: Create Isolated Workspace
### For Project-Local Directories (.worktrees or worktrees) **You have two mechanisms. Try them in this order.**
### 1a. Native Worktree Tools (preferred)
The user has asked for an isolated workspace (Step 0 consent). Do you already have a way to create a worktree? It might be a tool with a name like `EnterWorktree`, `WorktreeCreate`, a `/worktree` command, or a `--worktree` flag. If you do, use it and skip to Step 3.
Native tools handle directory placement, branch creation, and cleanup automatically. Using `git worktree add` when you have a native tool creates phantom state your harness can't see or manage.
Only proceed to Step 1b if you have no native worktree tool available.
### 1b. Git Worktree Fallback
**Only use this if Step 1a does not apply** — you have no native worktree tool available. Create a worktree manually using git.
#### Directory Selection
Follow this priority order. Explicit user preference always beats observed filesystem state.
1. **Check your instructions for a declared worktree directory preference.** If the user has already specified one, use it without asking.
2. **Check for an existing project-local worktree directory:**
```bash
ls -d .worktrees 2>/dev/null # Preferred (hidden)
ls -d worktrees 2>/dev/null # Alternative
```
If found, use it. If both exist, `.worktrees` wins.
3. **Check for an existing global directory:**
```bash
project=$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)")
ls -d ~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/$project 2>/dev/null
```
If found, use it (backward compatibility with legacy global path).
4. **If there is no other guidance available**, default to `.worktrees/` at the project root.
#### Safety Verification (project-local directories only)
**MUST verify directory is ignored before creating worktree:** **MUST verify directory is ignored before creating worktree:**
```bash ```bash
# Check if directory is ignored (respects local, global, and system gitignore)
git check-ignore -q .worktrees 2>/dev/null || git check-ignore -q worktrees 2>/dev/null git check-ignore -q .worktrees 2>/dev/null || git check-ignore -q worktrees 2>/dev/null
``` ```
**If NOT ignored:** **If NOT ignored:** Add to .gitignore, commit the change, then proceed.
Per Jesse's rule "Fix broken things immediately":
1. Add appropriate line to .gitignore
2. Commit the change
3. Proceed with worktree creation
**Why critical:** Prevents accidentally committing worktree contents to repository. **Why critical:** Prevents accidentally committing worktree contents to repository.
### For Global Directory (~/.config/superpowers/worktrees) Global directories (`~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/`) need no verification.
No .gitignore verification needed - outside project entirely. #### Create the Worktree
## Creation Steps
### 1. Detect Project Name
```bash ```bash
project=$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)") project=$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)")
```
### 2. Create Worktree # Determine path based on chosen location
# For project-local: path="$LOCATION/$BRANCH_NAME"
# For global: path="~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/$project/$BRANCH_NAME"
```bash
# Determine full path
case $LOCATION in
.worktrees|worktrees)
path="$LOCATION/$BRANCH_NAME"
;;
~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/*)
path="~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/$project/$BRANCH_NAME"
;;
esac
# Create worktree with new branch
git worktree add "$path" -b "$BRANCH_NAME" git worktree add "$path" -b "$BRANCH_NAME"
cd "$path" cd "$path"
``` ```
### 3. Run Project Setup **Sandbox fallback:** If `git worktree add` fails with a permission error (sandbox denial), tell the user the sandbox blocked worktree creation and you're working in the current directory instead. Then run setup and baseline tests in place.
## Step 3: Project Setup
Auto-detect and run appropriate setup: Auto-detect and run appropriate setup:
@@ -117,23 +130,20 @@ if [ -f pyproject.toml ]; then poetry install; fi
if [ -f go.mod ]; then go mod download; fi if [ -f go.mod ]; then go mod download; fi
``` ```
### 4. Verify Clean Baseline ## Step 4: Verify Clean Baseline
Run tests to ensure worktree starts clean: Run tests to ensure workspace starts clean:
```bash ```bash
# Examples - use project-appropriate command # Use project-appropriate command
npm test npm test / cargo test / pytest / go test ./...
cargo test
pytest
go test ./...
``` ```
**If tests fail:** Report failures, ask whether to proceed or investigate. **If tests fail:** Report failures, ask whether to proceed or investigate.
**If tests pass:** Report ready. **If tests pass:** Report ready.
### 5. Report Location ### Report
``` ```
Worktree ready at <full-path> Worktree ready at <full-path>
@@ -145,16 +155,32 @@ Ready to implement <feature-name>
| Situation | Action | | Situation | Action |
|-----------|--------| |-----------|--------|
| Already in linked worktree | Skip creation (Step 0) |
| In a submodule | Treat as normal repo (Step 0 guard) |
| Native worktree tool available | Use it (Step 1a) |
| No native tool | Git worktree fallback (Step 1b) |
| `.worktrees/` exists | Use it (verify ignored) | | `.worktrees/` exists | Use it (verify ignored) |
| `worktrees/` exists | Use it (verify ignored) | | `worktrees/` exists | Use it (verify ignored) |
| Both exist | Use `.worktrees/` | | Both exist | Use `.worktrees/` |
| Neither exists | Check CLAUDE.md → Ask user | | Neither exists | Check instruction file, then default `.worktrees/` |
| Global path exists | Use it (backward compat) |
| Directory not ignored | Add to .gitignore + commit | | Directory not ignored | Add to .gitignore + commit |
| Permission error on create | Sandbox fallback, work in place |
| Tests fail during baseline | Report failures + ask | | Tests fail during baseline | Report failures + ask |
| No package.json/Cargo.toml | Skip dependency install | | No package.json/Cargo.toml | Skip dependency install |
## Common Mistakes ## Common Mistakes
### Fighting the harness
- **Problem:** Using `git worktree add` when the platform already provides isolation
- **Fix:** Step 0 detects existing isolation. Step 1a defers to native tools.
### Skipping detection
- **Problem:** Creating a nested worktree inside an existing one
- **Fix:** Always run Step 0 before creating anything
### Skipping ignore verification ### Skipping ignore verification
- **Problem:** Worktree contents get tracked, pollute git status - **Problem:** Worktree contents get tracked, pollute git status
@@ -163,56 +189,27 @@ Ready to implement <feature-name>
### Assuming directory location ### Assuming directory location
- **Problem:** Creates inconsistency, violates project conventions - **Problem:** Creates inconsistency, violates project conventions
- **Fix:** Follow priority: existing > CLAUDE.md > ask - **Fix:** Follow priority: existing > global legacy > instruction file > default
### Proceeding with failing tests ### Proceeding with failing tests
- **Problem:** Can't distinguish new bugs from pre-existing issues - **Problem:** Can't distinguish new bugs from pre-existing issues
- **Fix:** Report failures, get explicit permission to proceed - **Fix:** Report failures, get explicit permission to proceed
### Hardcoding setup commands
- **Problem:** Breaks on projects using different tools
- **Fix:** Auto-detect from project files (package.json, etc.)
## Example Workflow
```
You: I'm using the using-git-worktrees skill to set up an isolated workspace.
[Check .worktrees/ - exists]
[Verify ignored - git check-ignore confirms .worktrees/ is ignored]
[Create worktree: git worktree add .worktrees/auth -b feature/auth]
[Run npm install]
[Run npm test - 47 passing]
Worktree ready at /Users/jesse/myproject/.worktrees/auth
Tests passing (47 tests, 0 failures)
Ready to implement auth feature
```
## Red Flags ## Red Flags
**Never:** **Never:**
- Create a worktree when Step 0 detects existing isolation
- Use `git worktree add` when you have a native worktree tool (e.g., `EnterWorktree`). This is the #1 mistake — if you have it, use it.
- Skip Step 1a by jumping straight to Step 1b's git commands
- Create worktree without verifying it's ignored (project-local) - Create worktree without verifying it's ignored (project-local)
- Skip baseline test verification - Skip baseline test verification
- Proceed with failing tests without asking - Proceed with failing tests without asking
- Assume directory location when ambiguous
- Skip CLAUDE.md check
**Always:** **Always:**
- Follow directory priority: existing > CLAUDE.md > ask - Run Step 0 detection first
- Prefer native tools over git fallback
- Follow directory priority: existing > global legacy > instruction file > default
- Verify directory is ignored for project-local - Verify directory is ignored for project-local
- Auto-detect and run project setup - Auto-detect and run project setup
- Verify clean test baseline - Verify clean test baseline
## Integration
**Called by:**
- **brainstorming** (Phase 4) - REQUIRED when design is approved and implementation follows
- **subagent-driven-development** - REQUIRED before executing any tasks
- **executing-plans** - REQUIRED before executing any tasks
- Any skill needing isolated workspace
**Pairs with:**
- **finishing-a-development-branch** - REQUIRED for cleanup after work complete

View File

@@ -3,6 +3,10 @@ name: using-superpowers
description: Use when starting any conversation - establishes how to find and use skills, requiring Skill tool invocation before ANY response including clarifying questions description: Use when starting any conversation - establishes how to find and use skills, requiring Skill tool invocation before ANY response including clarifying questions
--- ---
<SUBAGENT-STOP>
If you were dispatched as a subagent to execute a specific task, skip this skill.
</SUBAGENT-STOP>
<EXTREMELY-IMPORTANT> <EXTREMELY-IMPORTANT>
If you think there is even a 1% chance a skill might apply to what you are doing, you ABSOLUTELY MUST invoke the skill. If you think there is even a 1% chance a skill might apply to what you are doing, you ABSOLUTELY MUST invoke the skill.
@@ -11,12 +15,30 @@ IF A SKILL APPLIES TO YOUR TASK, YOU DO NOT HAVE A CHOICE. YOU MUST USE IT.
This is not negotiable. This is not optional. You cannot rationalize your way out of this. This is not negotiable. This is not optional. You cannot rationalize your way out of this.
</EXTREMELY-IMPORTANT> </EXTREMELY-IMPORTANT>
## Instruction Priority
Superpowers skills override default system prompt behavior, but **user instructions always take precedence**:
1. **User's explicit instructions** (CLAUDE.md, GEMINI.md, AGENTS.md, direct requests) — highest priority
2. **Superpowers skills** — override default system behavior where they conflict
3. **Default system prompt** — lowest priority
If CLAUDE.md, GEMINI.md, or AGENTS.md says "don't use TDD" and a skill says "always use TDD," follow the user's instructions. The user is in control.
## How to Access Skills ## How to Access Skills
**In Claude Code:** Use the `Skill` tool. When you invoke a skill, its content is loaded and presented to you—follow it directly. Never use the Read tool on skill files. **In Claude Code:** Use the `Skill` tool. When you invoke a skill, its content is loaded and presented to you—follow it directly. Never use the Read tool on skill files.
**In Copilot CLI:** Use the `skill` tool. Skills are auto-discovered from installed plugins. The `skill` tool works the same as Claude Code's `Skill` tool.
**In Gemini CLI:** Skills activate via the `activate_skill` tool. Gemini loads skill metadata at session start and activates the full content on demand.
**In other environments:** Check your platform's documentation for how skills are loaded. **In other environments:** Check your platform's documentation for how skills are loaded.
## Platform Adaptation
Skills use Claude Code tool names. Non-CC platforms: see `references/copilot-tools.md` (Copilot CLI), `references/codex-tools.md` (Codex) for tool equivalents. Gemini CLI users get the tool mapping loaded automatically via GEMINI.md.
# Using Skills # Using Skills
## The Rule ## The Rule
@@ -26,6 +48,9 @@ This is not negotiable. This is not optional. You cannot rationalize your way ou
```dot ```dot
digraph skill_flow { digraph skill_flow {
"User message received" [shape=doublecircle]; "User message received" [shape=doublecircle];
"About to EnterPlanMode?" [shape=doublecircle];
"Already brainstormed?" [shape=diamond];
"Invoke brainstorming skill" [shape=box];
"Might any skill apply?" [shape=diamond]; "Might any skill apply?" [shape=diamond];
"Invoke Skill tool" [shape=box]; "Invoke Skill tool" [shape=box];
"Announce: 'Using [skill] to [purpose]'" [shape=box]; "Announce: 'Using [skill] to [purpose]'" [shape=box];
@@ -34,6 +59,11 @@ digraph skill_flow {
"Follow skill exactly" [shape=box]; "Follow skill exactly" [shape=box];
"Respond (including clarifications)" [shape=doublecircle]; "Respond (including clarifications)" [shape=doublecircle];
"About to EnterPlanMode?" -> "Already brainstormed?";
"Already brainstormed?" -> "Invoke brainstorming skill" [label="no"];
"Already brainstormed?" -> "Might any skill apply?" [label="yes"];
"Invoke brainstorming skill" -> "Might any skill apply?";
"User message received" -> "Might any skill apply?"; "User message received" -> "Might any skill apply?";
"Might any skill apply?" -> "Invoke Skill tool" [label="yes, even 1%"]; "Might any skill apply?" -> "Invoke Skill tool" [label="yes, even 1%"];
"Might any skill apply?" -> "Respond (including clarifications)" [label="definitely not"]; "Might any skill apply?" -> "Respond (including clarifications)" [label="definitely not"];

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
# Codex Tool Mapping
Skills use Claude Code tool names. When you encounter these in a skill, use your platform equivalent:
| Skill references | Codex equivalent |
|-----------------|------------------|
| `Task` tool (dispatch subagent) | `spawn_agent` (see [Subagent dispatch requires multi-agent support](#subagent-dispatch-requires-multi-agent-support)) |
| Multiple `Task` calls (parallel) | Multiple `spawn_agent` calls |
| Task returns result | `wait_agent` |
| Task completes automatically | `close_agent` to free slot |
| `TodoWrite` (task tracking) | `update_plan` |
| `Skill` tool (invoke a skill) | Skills load natively — just follow the instructions |
| `Read`, `Write`, `Edit` (files) | Use your native file tools |
| `Bash` (run commands) | Use your native shell tools |
## Subagent dispatch requires multi-agent support
Add to your Codex config (`~/.codex/config.toml`):
```toml
[features]
multi_agent = true
```
This enables `spawn_agent`, `wait_agent`, and `close_agent` for skills like `dispatching-parallel-agents` and `subagent-driven-development`.
Legacy note: Codex builds before `rust-v0.115.0` exposed spawned-agent
waiting as `wait`. Current Codex uses `wait_agent` for spawned agents. The
`wait` name now belongs to code-mode `exec/wait`, which resumes a yielded exec
cell by `cell_id`; it is not the spawned-agent result tool.
## Environment Detection
Skills that create worktrees or finish branches should detect their
environment with read-only git commands before proceeding:
```bash
GIT_DIR=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
GIT_COMMON=$(cd "$(git rev-parse --git-common-dir)" 2>/dev/null && pwd -P)
BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)
```
- `GIT_DIR != GIT_COMMON` → already in a linked worktree (skip creation)
- `BRANCH` empty → detached HEAD (cannot branch/push/PR from sandbox)
See `using-git-worktrees` Step 0 and `finishing-a-development-branch`
Step 1 for how each skill uses these signals.
## Codex App Finishing
When the sandbox blocks branch/push operations (detached HEAD in an
externally managed worktree), the agent commits all work and informs
the user to use the App's native controls:
- **"Create branch"** — names the branch, then commit/push/PR via App UI
- **"Hand off to local"** — transfers work to the user's local checkout
The agent can still run tests, stage files, and output suggested branch
names, commit messages, and PR descriptions for the user to copy.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
# Copilot CLI Tool Mapping
Skills use Claude Code tool names. When you encounter these in a skill, use your platform equivalent:
| Skill references | Copilot CLI equivalent |
|-----------------|----------------------|
| `Read` (file reading) | `view` |
| `Write` (file creation) | `create` |
| `Edit` (file editing) | `edit` |
| `Bash` (run commands) | `bash` |
| `Grep` (search file content) | `grep` |
| `Glob` (search files by name) | `glob` |
| `Skill` tool (invoke a skill) | `skill` |
| `WebFetch` | `web_fetch` |
| `Task` tool (dispatch subagent) | `task` with `agent_type: "general-purpose"` or `"explore"` |
| Multiple `Task` calls (parallel) | Multiple `task` calls |
| Task status/output | `read_agent`, `list_agents` |
| `TodoWrite` (task tracking) | `sql` with built-in `todos` table |
| `WebSearch` | No equivalent — use `web_fetch` with a search engine URL |
| `EnterPlanMode` / `ExitPlanMode` | No equivalent — stay in the main session |
## Async shell sessions
Copilot CLI supports persistent async shell sessions, which have no direct Claude Code equivalent:
| Tool | Purpose |
|------|---------|
| `bash` with `async: true` | Start a long-running command in the background |
| `write_bash` | Send input to a running async session |
| `read_bash` | Read output from an async session |
| `stop_bash` | Terminate an async session |
| `list_bash` | List all active shell sessions |
## Additional Copilot CLI tools
| Tool | Purpose |
|------|---------|
| `store_memory` | Persist facts about the codebase for future sessions |
| `report_intent` | Update the UI status line with current intent |
| `sql` | Query the session's SQLite database (todos, metadata) |
| `fetch_copilot_cli_documentation` | Look up Copilot CLI documentation |
| GitHub MCP tools (`github-mcp-server-*`) | Native GitHub API access (issues, PRs, code search) |

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@@ -0,0 +1,51 @@
# Gemini CLI Tool Mapping
Skills use Claude Code tool names. When you encounter these in a skill, use your platform equivalent:
| Skill references | Gemini CLI equivalent |
|-----------------|----------------------|
| `Read` (file reading) | `read_file` |
| `Write` (file creation) | `write_file` |
| `Edit` (file editing) | `replace` |
| `Bash` (run commands) | `run_shell_command` |
| `Grep` (search file content) | `grep_search` |
| `Glob` (search files by name) | `glob` |
| `TodoWrite` (task tracking) | `write_todos` |
| `Skill` tool (invoke a skill) | `activate_skill` |
| `WebSearch` | `google_web_search` |
| `WebFetch` | `web_fetch` |
| `Task` tool (dispatch subagent) | `@agent-name` (see [Subagent support](#subagent-support)) |
## Subagent support
Gemini CLI supports subagents natively via the `@` syntax. Use the built-in `@generalist` agent to dispatch any task — it has access to all tools and follows the prompt you provide.
When a skill says to dispatch a named agent type, use `@generalist` with the full prompt from the skill's prompt template:
| Skill instruction | Gemini CLI equivalent |
|-------------------|----------------------|
| `Task tool (superpowers:implementer)` | `@generalist` with the filled `implementer-prompt.md` template |
| `Task tool (superpowers:spec-reviewer)` | `@generalist` with the filled `spec-reviewer-prompt.md` template |
| `Task tool (superpowers:code-reviewer)` | `@code-reviewer` (bundled agent) or `@generalist` with the filled review prompt |
| `Task tool (superpowers:code-quality-reviewer)` | `@generalist` with the filled `code-quality-reviewer-prompt.md` template |
| `Task tool (general-purpose)` with inline prompt | `@generalist` with your inline prompt |
### Prompt filling
Skills provide prompt templates with placeholders like `{WHAT_WAS_IMPLEMENTED}` or `[FULL TEXT of task]`. Fill all placeholders and pass the complete prompt as the message to `@generalist`. The prompt template itself contains the agent's role, review criteria, and expected output format — `@generalist` will follow it.
### Parallel dispatch
Gemini CLI supports parallel subagent dispatch. When a skill asks you to dispatch multiple independent subagent tasks in parallel, request all of those `@generalist` or named subagent tasks together in the same prompt. Keep dependent tasks sequential, but do not serialize independent subagent tasks just to preserve a simpler history.
## Additional Gemini CLI tools
These tools are available in Gemini CLI but have no Claude Code equivalent:
| Tool | Purpose |
|------|---------|
| `list_directory` | List files and subdirectories |
| `save_memory` | Persist facts to GEMINI.md across sessions |
| `ask_user` | Request structured input from the user |
| `tracker_create_task` | Rich task management (create, update, list, visualize) |
| `enter_plan_mode` / `exit_plan_mode` | Switch to read-only research mode before making changes |

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@@ -13,9 +13,25 @@ Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset o
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the writing-plans skill to create the implementation plan." **Announce at start:** "I'm using the writing-plans skill to create the implementation plan."
**Context:** This should be run in a dedicated worktree (created by brainstorming skill). **Context:** If working in an isolated worktree, it should have been created via the `superpowers:using-git-worktrees` skill at execution time.
**Save plans to:** `docs/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<feature-name>.md` **Save plans to:** `docs/superpowers/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<feature-name>.md`
- (User preferences for plan location override this default)
## Scope Check
If the spec covers multiple independent subsystems, it should have been broken into sub-project specs during brainstorming. If it wasn't, suggest breaking this into separate plans — one per subsystem. Each plan should produce working, testable software on its own.
## File Structure
Before defining tasks, map out which files will be created or modified and what each one is responsible for. This is where decomposition decisions get locked in.
- Design units with clear boundaries and well-defined interfaces. Each file should have one clear responsibility.
- You reason best about code you can hold in context at once, and your edits are more reliable when files are focused. Prefer smaller, focused files over large ones that do too much.
- Files that change together should live together. Split by responsibility, not by technical layer.
- In existing codebases, follow established patterns. If the codebase uses large files, don't unilaterally restructure - but if a file you're modifying has grown unwieldy, including a split in the plan is reasonable.
This structure informs the task decomposition. Each task should produce self-contained changes that make sense independently.
## Bite-Sized Task Granularity ## Bite-Sized Task Granularity
@@ -33,7 +49,7 @@ Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset o
```markdown ```markdown
# [Feature Name] Implementation Plan # [Feature Name] Implementation Plan
> **For Claude:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task. > **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (recommended) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task. Steps use checkbox (`- [ ]`) syntax for tracking.
**Goal:** [One sentence describing what this builds] **Goal:** [One sentence describing what this builds]
@@ -46,7 +62,7 @@ Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset o
## Task Structure ## Task Structure
```markdown ````markdown
### Task N: [Component Name] ### Task N: [Component Name]
**Files:** **Files:**
@@ -54,7 +70,7 @@ Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset o
- Modify: `exact/path/to/existing.py:123-145` - Modify: `exact/path/to/existing.py:123-145`
- Test: `tests/exact/path/to/test.py` - Test: `tests/exact/path/to/test.py`
**Step 1: Write the failing test** - [ ] **Step 1: Write the failing test**
```python ```python
def test_specific_behavior(): def test_specific_behavior():
@@ -62,55 +78,75 @@ def test_specific_behavior():
assert result == expected assert result == expected
``` ```
**Step 2: Run test to verify it fails** - [ ] **Step 2: Run test to verify it fails**
Run: `pytest tests/path/test.py::test_name -v` Run: `pytest tests/path/test.py::test_name -v`
Expected: FAIL with "function not defined" Expected: FAIL with "function not defined"
**Step 3: Write minimal implementation** - [ ] **Step 3: Write minimal implementation**
```python ```python
def function(input): def function(input):
return expected return expected
``` ```
**Step 4: Run test to verify it passes** - [ ] **Step 4: Run test to verify it passes**
Run: `pytest tests/path/test.py::test_name -v` Run: `pytest tests/path/test.py::test_name -v`
Expected: PASS Expected: PASS
**Step 5: Commit** - [ ] **Step 5: Commit**
```bash ```bash
git add tests/path/test.py src/path/file.py git add tests/path/test.py src/path/file.py
git commit -m "feat: add specific feature" git commit -m "feat: add specific feature"
``` ```
``` ````
## No Placeholders
Every step must contain the actual content an engineer needs. These are **plan failures** — never write them:
- "TBD", "TODO", "implement later", "fill in details"
- "Add appropriate error handling" / "add validation" / "handle edge cases"
- "Write tests for the above" (without actual test code)
- "Similar to Task N" (repeat the code — the engineer may be reading tasks out of order)
- Steps that describe what to do without showing how (code blocks required for code steps)
- References to types, functions, or methods not defined in any task
## Remember ## Remember
- Exact file paths always - Exact file paths always
- Complete code in plan (not "add validation") - Complete code in every step — if a step changes code, show the code
- Exact commands with expected output - Exact commands with expected output
- Reference relevant skills with @ syntax
- DRY, YAGNI, TDD, frequent commits - DRY, YAGNI, TDD, frequent commits
## Self-Review
After writing the complete plan, look at the spec with fresh eyes and check the plan against it. This is a checklist you run yourself — not a subagent dispatch.
**1. Spec coverage:** Skim each section/requirement in the spec. Can you point to a task that implements it? List any gaps.
**2. Placeholder scan:** Search your plan for red flags — any of the patterns from the "No Placeholders" section above. Fix them.
**3. Type consistency:** Do the types, method signatures, and property names you used in later tasks match what you defined in earlier tasks? A function called `clearLayers()` in Task 3 but `clearFullLayers()` in Task 7 is a bug.
If you find issues, fix them inline. No need to re-review — just fix and move on. If you find a spec requirement with no task, add the task.
## Execution Handoff ## Execution Handoff
After saving the plan, offer execution choice: After saving the plan, offer execution choice:
**"Plan complete and saved to `docs/plans/<filename>.md`. Two execution options:** **"Plan complete and saved to `docs/superpowers/plans/<filename>.md`. Two execution options:**
**1. Subagent-Driven (this session)** - I dispatch fresh subagent per task, review between tasks, fast iteration **1. Subagent-Driven (recommended)** - I dispatch a fresh subagent per task, review between tasks, fast iteration
**2. Parallel Session (separate)** - Open new session with executing-plans, batch execution with checkpoints **2. Inline Execution** - Execute tasks in this session using executing-plans, batch execution with checkpoints
**Which approach?"** **Which approach?"**
**If Subagent-Driven chosen:** **If Subagent-Driven chosen:**
- **REQUIRED SUB-SKILL:** Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development - **REQUIRED SUB-SKILL:** Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development
- Stay in this session - Fresh subagent per task + two-stage review
- Fresh subagent per task + code review
**If Parallel Session chosen:** **If Inline Execution chosen:**
- Guide them to open new session in worktree - **REQUIRED SUB-SKILL:** Use superpowers:executing-plans
- **REQUIRED SUB-SKILL:** New session uses superpowers:executing-plans - Batch execution with checkpoints for review

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
# Plan Document Reviewer Prompt Template
Use this template when dispatching a plan document reviewer subagent.
**Purpose:** Verify the plan is complete, matches the spec, and has proper task decomposition.
**Dispatch after:** The complete plan is written.
```
Task tool (general-purpose):
description: "Review plan document"
prompt: |
You are a plan document reviewer. Verify this plan is complete and ready for implementation.
**Plan to review:** [PLAN_FILE_PATH]
**Spec for reference:** [SPEC_FILE_PATH]
## What to Check
| Category | What to Look For |
|----------|------------------|
| Completeness | TODOs, placeholders, incomplete tasks, missing steps |
| Spec Alignment | Plan covers spec requirements, no major scope creep |
| Task Decomposition | Tasks have clear boundaries, steps are actionable |
| Buildability | Could an engineer follow this plan without getting stuck? |
## Calibration
**Only flag issues that would cause real problems during implementation.**
An implementer building the wrong thing or getting stuck is an issue.
Minor wording, stylistic preferences, and "nice to have" suggestions are not.
Approve unless there are serious gaps — missing requirements from the spec,
contradictory steps, placeholder content, or tasks so vague they can't be acted on.
## Output Format
## Plan Review
**Status:** Approved | Issues Found
**Issues (if any):**
- [Task X, Step Y]: [specific issue] - [why it matters for implementation]
**Recommendations (advisory, do not block approval):**
- [suggestions for improvement]
```
**Reviewer returns:** Status, Issues (if any), Recommendations

View File

@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ skills/
## SKILL.md Structure ## SKILL.md Structure
**Frontmatter (YAML):** **Frontmatter (YAML):**
- Only two fields supported: `name` and `description` - Two required fields: `name` and `description` (see [agentskills.io/specification](https://agentskills.io/specification) for all supported fields)
- Max 1024 characters total - Max 1024 characters total
- `name`: Use letters, numbers, and hyphens only (no parentheses, special chars) - `name`: Use letters, numbers, and hyphens only (no parentheses, special chars)
- `description`: Third-person, describes ONLY when to use (NOT what it does) - `description`: Third-person, describes ONLY when to use (NOT what it does)
@@ -604,7 +604,7 @@ Deploying untested skills = deploying untested code. It's a violation of quality
**GREEN Phase - Write Minimal Skill:** **GREEN Phase - Write Minimal Skill:**
- [ ] Name uses only letters, numbers, hyphens (no parentheses/special chars) - [ ] Name uses only letters, numbers, hyphens (no parentheses/special chars)
- [ ] YAML frontmatter with only name and description (max 1024 chars) - [ ] YAML frontmatter with required `name` and `description` fields (max 1024 chars; see [spec](https://agentskills.io/specification))
- [ ] Description starts with "Use when..." and includes specific triggers/symptoms - [ ] Description starts with "Use when..." and includes specific triggers/symptoms
- [ ] Description written in third person - [ ] Description written in third person
- [ ] Keywords throughout for search (errors, symptoms, tools) - [ ] Keywords throughout for search (errors, symptoms, tools)

View File

@@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ What works perfectly for Opus might need more detail for Haiku. If you plan to u
## Skill structure ## Skill structure
<Note> <Note>
**YAML Frontmatter**: The SKILL.md frontmatter supports two fields: **YAML Frontmatter**: The SKILL.md frontmatter requires two fields:
* `name` - Human-readable name of the Skill (64 characters maximum) * `name` - Human-readable name of the Skill (64 characters maximum)
* `description` - One-line description of what the Skill does and when to use it (1024 characters maximum) * `description` - One-line description of what the Skill does and when to use it (1024 characters maximum)
@@ -1092,7 +1092,7 @@ reader = PdfReader("file.pdf")
### YAML frontmatter requirements ### YAML frontmatter requirements
The SKILL.md frontmatter includes only `name` (64 characters max) and `description` (1024 characters max) fields. See the [Skills overview](/en/docs/agents-and-tools/agent-skills/overview#skill-structure) for complete structure details. The SKILL.md frontmatter requires `name` (64 characters max) and `description` (1024 characters max) fields. See the [Skills overview](/en/docs/agents-and-tools/agent-skills/overview#skill-structure) for complete structure details.
### Token budgets ### Token budgets

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
{
"name": "brainstorm-server-tests",
"version": "1.0.0",
"lockfileVersion": 3,
"requires": true,
"packages": {
"": {
"name": "brainstorm-server-tests",
"version": "1.0.0",
"dependencies": {
"ws": "^8.19.0"
}
},
"node_modules/ws": {
"version": "8.19.0",
"resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/ws/-/ws-8.19.0.tgz",
"integrity": "sha512-blAT2mjOEIi0ZzruJfIhb3nps74PRWTCz1IjglWEEpQl5XS/UNama6u2/rjFkDDouqr4L67ry+1aGIALViWjDg==",
"license": "MIT",
"engines": {
"node": ">=10.0.0"
},
"peerDependencies": {
"bufferutil": "^4.0.1",
"utf-8-validate": ">=5.0.2"
},
"peerDependenciesMeta": {
"bufferutil": {
"optional": true
},
"utf-8-validate": {
"optional": true
}
}
}
}
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
{
"name": "brainstorm-server-tests",
"version": "1.0.0",
"scripts": {
"test": "node server.test.js"
},
"dependencies": {
"ws": "^8.19.0"
}
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,427 @@
/**
* Integration tests for the brainstorm server.
*
* Tests the full server behavior: HTTP serving, WebSocket communication,
* file watching, and the brainstorming workflow.
*
* Uses the `ws` npm package as a test client (test-only dependency,
* not shipped to end users).
*/
const { spawn } = require('child_process');
const http = require('http');
const WebSocket = require('ws');
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const assert = require('assert');
const SERVER_PATH = path.join(__dirname, '../../skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.cjs');
const TEST_PORT = 3334;
const TEST_DIR = '/tmp/brainstorm-test';
const CONTENT_DIR = path.join(TEST_DIR, 'content');
const STATE_DIR = path.join(TEST_DIR, 'state');
function cleanup() {
if (fs.existsSync(TEST_DIR)) {
fs.rmSync(TEST_DIR, { recursive: true });
}
}
async function sleep(ms) {
return new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, ms));
}
async function fetch(url) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
http.get(url, (res) => {
let data = '';
res.on('data', chunk => data += chunk);
res.on('end', () => resolve({
status: res.statusCode,
headers: res.headers,
body: data
}));
}).on('error', reject);
});
}
function startServer() {
return spawn('node', [SERVER_PATH], {
env: { ...process.env, BRAINSTORM_PORT: TEST_PORT, BRAINSTORM_DIR: TEST_DIR }
});
}
async function waitForServer(server) {
let stdout = '';
let stderr = '';
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
server.stdout.on('data', (data) => {
stdout += data.toString();
if (stdout.includes('server-started')) {
resolve({ stdout, stderr, getStdout: () => stdout });
}
});
server.stderr.on('data', (data) => { stderr += data.toString(); });
server.on('error', reject);
setTimeout(() => reject(new Error(`Server didn't start. stderr: ${stderr}`)), 5000);
});
}
async function runTests() {
cleanup();
const server = startServer();
let stdoutAccum = '';
server.stdout.on('data', (data) => { stdoutAccum += data.toString(); });
const { stdout: initialStdout } = await waitForServer(server);
let passed = 0;
let failed = 0;
function test(name, fn) {
return fn().then(() => {
console.log(` PASS: ${name}`);
passed++;
}).catch(e => {
console.log(` FAIL: ${name}`);
console.log(` ${e.message}`);
failed++;
});
}
try {
// ========== Server Startup ==========
console.log('\n--- Server Startup ---');
await test('outputs server-started JSON on startup', () => {
const msg = JSON.parse(initialStdout.trim());
assert.strictEqual(msg.type, 'server-started');
assert.strictEqual(msg.port, TEST_PORT);
assert(msg.url, 'Should include URL');
assert(msg.screen_dir, 'Should include screen_dir');
return Promise.resolve();
});
await test('writes server-info to state/', () => {
const infoPath = path.join(STATE_DIR, 'server-info');
assert(fs.existsSync(infoPath), 'state/server-info should exist');
const info = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync(infoPath, 'utf-8').trim());
assert.strictEqual(info.type, 'server-started');
assert.strictEqual(info.port, TEST_PORT);
assert.strictEqual(info.screen_dir, CONTENT_DIR, 'screen_dir should point to content/');
assert.strictEqual(info.state_dir, STATE_DIR, 'state_dir should point to state/');
return Promise.resolve();
});
// ========== HTTP Serving ==========
console.log('\n--- HTTP Serving ---');
await test('serves waiting page when no screens exist', async () => {
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert.strictEqual(res.status, 200);
assert(res.body.includes('Waiting for the agent'), 'Should show waiting message');
});
await test('injects helper.js into waiting page', async () => {
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert(res.body.includes('WebSocket'), 'Should have helper.js injected');
assert(res.body.includes('toggleSelect'), 'Should have toggleSelect from helper');
assert(res.body.includes('brainstorm'), 'Should have brainstorm API from helper');
});
await test('returns Content-Type text/html', async () => {
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert(res.headers['content-type'].includes('text/html'), 'Should be text/html');
});
await test('serves full HTML documents as-is (not wrapped)', async () => {
const fullDoc = '<!DOCTYPE html>\n<html><head><title>Custom</title></head><body><h1>Custom Page</h1></body></html>';
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'full-doc.html'), fullDoc);
await sleep(300);
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert(res.body.includes('<h1>Custom Page</h1>'), 'Should contain original content');
assert(res.body.includes('WebSocket'), 'Should still inject helper.js');
assert(!res.body.includes('indicator-bar'), 'Should NOT wrap in frame template');
});
await test('wraps content fragments in frame template', async () => {
const fragment = '<h2>Pick a layout</h2>\n<div class="options"><div class="option" data-choice="a"><div class="letter">A</div></div></div>';
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'fragment.html'), fragment);
await sleep(300);
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert(res.body.includes('indicator-bar'), 'Fragment should get indicator bar');
assert(!res.body.includes('<!-- CONTENT -->'), 'Placeholder should be replaced');
assert(res.body.includes('Pick a layout'), 'Fragment content should be present');
assert(res.body.includes('data-choice="a"'), 'Fragment interactive elements intact');
});
await test('serves newest file by mtime', async () => {
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'older.html'), '<h2>Older</h2>');
await sleep(100);
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'newer.html'), '<h2>Newer</h2>');
await sleep(300);
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert(res.body.includes('Newer'), 'Should serve newest file');
});
await test('ignores non-html files for serving', async () => {
// Write a newer non-HTML file — should still serve newest .html
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'data.json'), '{"not": "html"}');
await sleep(300);
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert(res.body.includes('Newer'), 'Should still serve newest HTML');
assert(!res.body.includes('"not"'), 'Should not serve JSON');
});
await test('returns 404 for non-root paths', async () => {
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/other`);
assert.strictEqual(res.status, 404);
});
// ========== WebSocket Communication ==========
console.log('\n--- WebSocket Communication ---');
await test('accepts WebSocket upgrade on /', async () => {
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
ws.on('open', resolve);
ws.on('error', reject);
});
ws.close();
});
await test('relays user events to stdout with source field', async () => {
stdoutAccum = '';
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
ws.send(JSON.stringify({ type: 'click', text: 'Test Button' }));
await sleep(300);
assert(stdoutAccum.includes('"source":"user-event"'), 'Should tag with source');
assert(stdoutAccum.includes('Test Button'), 'Should include event data');
ws.close();
});
await test('writes choice events to state/events', async () => {
// Clean up events from prior tests
const eventsFile = path.join(STATE_DIR, 'events');
if (fs.existsSync(eventsFile)) fs.unlinkSync(eventsFile);
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
ws.send(JSON.stringify({ type: 'click', choice: 'b', text: 'Option B' }));
await sleep(300);
assert(fs.existsSync(eventsFile), '.events should exist');
const lines = fs.readFileSync(eventsFile, 'utf-8').trim().split('\n');
const event = JSON.parse(lines[lines.length - 1]);
assert.strictEqual(event.choice, 'b');
assert.strictEqual(event.text, 'Option B');
ws.close();
});
await test('does NOT write non-choice events to state/events', async () => {
const eventsFile = path.join(STATE_DIR, 'events');
if (fs.existsSync(eventsFile)) fs.unlinkSync(eventsFile);
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
ws.send(JSON.stringify({ type: 'hover', text: 'Something' }));
await sleep(300);
// Non-choice events should not create .events file
assert(!fs.existsSync(eventsFile), '.events should not exist for non-choice events');
ws.close();
});
await test('handles multiple concurrent WebSocket clients', async () => {
const ws1 = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
const ws2 = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await Promise.all([
new Promise(resolve => ws1.on('open', resolve)),
new Promise(resolve => ws2.on('open', resolve))
]);
let ws1Reload = false;
let ws2Reload = false;
ws1.on('message', (data) => {
if (JSON.parse(data.toString()).type === 'reload') ws1Reload = true;
});
ws2.on('message', (data) => {
if (JSON.parse(data.toString()).type === 'reload') ws2Reload = true;
});
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'multi-client.html'), '<h2>Multi</h2>');
await sleep(500);
assert(ws1Reload, 'Client 1 should receive reload');
assert(ws2Reload, 'Client 2 should receive reload');
ws1.close();
ws2.close();
});
await test('cleans up closed clients from broadcast list', async () => {
const ws1 = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws1.on('open', resolve));
ws1.close();
await sleep(100);
// This should not throw even though ws1 is closed
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'after-close.html'), '<h2>After</h2>');
await sleep(300);
// If we got here without error, the test passes
});
await test('handles malformed JSON from client gracefully', async () => {
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
// Send invalid JSON — server should not crash
ws.send('not json at all {{{');
await sleep(300);
// Verify server is still responsive
const res = await fetch(`http://localhost:${TEST_PORT}/`);
assert.strictEqual(res.status, 200, 'Server should still be running');
ws.close();
});
// ========== File Watching ==========
console.log('\n--- File Watching ---');
await test('sends reload on new .html file', async () => {
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
let gotReload = false;
ws.on('message', (data) => {
if (JSON.parse(data.toString()).type === 'reload') gotReload = true;
});
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'watch-new.html'), '<h2>New</h2>');
await sleep(500);
assert(gotReload, 'Should send reload on new file');
ws.close();
});
await test('sends reload on .html file change', async () => {
const filePath = path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'watch-change.html');
fs.writeFileSync(filePath, '<h2>Original</h2>');
await sleep(500);
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
let gotReload = false;
ws.on('message', (data) => {
if (JSON.parse(data.toString()).type === 'reload') gotReload = true;
});
fs.writeFileSync(filePath, '<h2>Modified</h2>');
await sleep(500);
assert(gotReload, 'Should send reload on file change');
ws.close();
});
await test('does NOT send reload for non-.html files', async () => {
const ws = new WebSocket(`ws://localhost:${TEST_PORT}`);
await new Promise(resolve => ws.on('open', resolve));
let gotReload = false;
ws.on('message', (data) => {
if (JSON.parse(data.toString()).type === 'reload') gotReload = true;
});
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'data.txt'), 'not html');
await sleep(500);
assert(!gotReload, 'Should NOT reload for non-HTML files');
ws.close();
});
await test('clears state/events on new screen', async () => {
// Create an events file
const eventsFile = path.join(STATE_DIR, 'events');
fs.writeFileSync(eventsFile, '{"choice":"a"}\n');
assert(fs.existsSync(eventsFile));
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'clear-events.html'), '<h2>New screen</h2>');
await sleep(500);
assert(!fs.existsSync(eventsFile), 'state/events should be cleared on new screen');
});
await test('logs screen-added on new file', async () => {
stdoutAccum = '';
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'log-test.html'), '<h2>Log</h2>');
await sleep(500);
assert(stdoutAccum.includes('screen-added'), 'Should log screen-added');
});
await test('logs screen-updated on file change', async () => {
const filePath = path.join(CONTENT_DIR, 'log-update.html');
fs.writeFileSync(filePath, '<h2>V1</h2>');
await sleep(500);
stdoutAccum = '';
fs.writeFileSync(filePath, '<h2>V2</h2>');
await sleep(500);
assert(stdoutAccum.includes('screen-updated'), 'Should log screen-updated');
});
// ========== Helper.js Content ==========
console.log('\n--- Helper.js Verification ---');
await test('helper.js defines required APIs', () => {
const helperContent = fs.readFileSync(
path.join(__dirname, '../../skills/brainstorming/scripts/helper.js'), 'utf-8'
);
assert(helperContent.includes('toggleSelect'), 'Should define toggleSelect');
assert(helperContent.includes('sendEvent'), 'Should define sendEvent');
assert(helperContent.includes('selectedChoice'), 'Should track selectedChoice');
assert(helperContent.includes('brainstorm'), 'Should expose brainstorm API');
return Promise.resolve();
});
// ========== Frame Template ==========
console.log('\n--- Frame Template Verification ---');
await test('frame template has required structure', () => {
const template = fs.readFileSync(
path.join(__dirname, '../../skills/brainstorming/scripts/frame-template.html'), 'utf-8'
);
assert(template.includes('indicator-bar'), 'Should have indicator bar');
assert(template.includes('indicator-text'), 'Should have indicator text');
assert(template.includes('<!-- CONTENT -->'), 'Should have content placeholder');
assert(template.includes('claude-content'), 'Should have content container');
return Promise.resolve();
});
// ========== Summary ==========
console.log(`\n--- Results: ${passed} passed, ${failed} failed ---`);
if (failed > 0) process.exit(1);
} finally {
server.kill();
await sleep(100);
cleanup();
}
}
runTests().catch(err => {
console.error('Test failed:', err);
process.exit(1);
});

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@@ -0,0 +1,351 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Windows lifecycle tests for the brainstorm server.
#
# Verifies that the brainstorm server survives the 60-second lifecycle
# check on Windows, where OWNER_PID monitoring is disabled because the
# MSYS2 PID namespace is invisible to Node.js.
#
# Requirements:
# - Node.js in PATH
# - Run from the repository root, or set SUPERPOWERS_ROOT
# - On Windows: Git Bash (OSTYPE=msys*)
#
# Usage:
# bash tests/brainstorm-server/windows-lifecycle.test.sh
set -uo pipefail
# ========== Configuration ==========
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
REPO_ROOT="${SUPERPOWERS_ROOT:-$(cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/../.." && pwd)}"
START_SCRIPT="$REPO_ROOT/skills/brainstorming/scripts/start-server.sh"
STOP_SCRIPT="$REPO_ROOT/skills/brainstorming/scripts/stop-server.sh"
SERVER_JS="$REPO_ROOT/skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.js"
TEST_DIR="${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/brainstorm-win-test-$$"
passed=0
failed=0
skipped=0
# ========== Helpers ==========
cleanup() {
# Kill any server processes we started
for pidvar in SERVER_PID CONTROL_PID STOP_TEST_PID; do
pid="${!pidvar:-}"
if [[ -n "$pid" ]]; then
kill "$pid" 2>/dev/null || true
wait "$pid" 2>/dev/null || true
fi
done
if [[ -n "${TEST_DIR:-}" && -d "$TEST_DIR" ]]; then
rm -rf "$TEST_DIR"
fi
}
trap cleanup EXIT
pass() {
echo " PASS: $1"
passed=$((passed + 1))
}
fail() {
echo " FAIL: $1"
echo " $2"
failed=$((failed + 1))
}
skip() {
echo " SKIP: $1 ($2)"
skipped=$((skipped + 1))
}
wait_for_server_info() {
local dir="$1"
for _ in $(seq 1 50); do
if [[ -f "$dir/.server-info" ]]; then
return 0
fi
sleep 0.1
done
return 1
}
get_port_from_info() {
# Read the port from .server-info. Use grep/sed instead of Node.js
# to avoid MSYS2-to-Windows path translation issues.
grep -o '"port":[0-9]*' "$1/.server-info" | head -1 | sed 's/"port"://'
}
http_check() {
local port="$1"
node -e "
const http = require('http');
http.get('http://localhost:$port/', (res) => {
process.exit(res.statusCode === 200 ? 0 : 1);
}).on('error', () => process.exit(1));
" 2>/dev/null
}
# ========== Platform Detection ==========
echo ""
echo "=== Brainstorm Server Windows Lifecycle Tests ==="
echo "Platform: ${OSTYPE:-unknown}"
echo "MSYSTEM: ${MSYSTEM:-unset}"
echo "Node: $(node --version 2>/dev/null || echo 'not found')"
echo ""
is_windows="false"
case "${OSTYPE:-}" in
msys*|cygwin*|mingw*) is_windows="true" ;;
esac
if [[ -n "${MSYSTEM:-}" ]]; then
is_windows="true"
fi
if [[ "$is_windows" != "true" ]]; then
echo "NOTE: Not running on Windows/MSYS2 (OSTYPE=${OSTYPE:-unset})."
echo "Windows-specific tests will be skipped. Tests 4-6 still run."
echo ""
fi
mkdir -p "$TEST_DIR"
SERVER_PID=""
CONTROL_PID=""
STOP_TEST_PID=""
# ========== Test 1: OWNER_PID is empty on Windows ==========
echo "--- Owner PID Resolution ---"
if [[ "$is_windows" == "true" ]]; then
# Replicate the PID resolution logic from start-server.sh lines 104-112
TEST_OWNER_PID="$(ps -o ppid= -p "$PPID" 2>/dev/null | tr -d ' ' || true)"
if [[ -z "$TEST_OWNER_PID" || "$TEST_OWNER_PID" == "1" ]]; then
TEST_OWNER_PID="$PPID"
fi
# The fix: clear on Windows
case "${OSTYPE:-}" in
msys*|cygwin*|mingw*) TEST_OWNER_PID="" ;;
esac
if [[ -z "$TEST_OWNER_PID" ]]; then
pass "OWNER_PID is empty on Windows after fix"
else
fail "OWNER_PID is empty on Windows after fix" \
"Expected empty, got '$TEST_OWNER_PID'"
fi
else
skip "OWNER_PID is empty on Windows" "not on Windows"
fi
# ========== Test 2: start-server.sh passes empty BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID ==========
if [[ "$is_windows" == "true" ]]; then
# Use a fake 'node' that captures the env var and exits
FAKE_NODE_DIR="$TEST_DIR/fake-bin"
mkdir -p "$FAKE_NODE_DIR"
cat > "$FAKE_NODE_DIR/node" <<'FAKENODE'
#!/usr/bin/env bash
echo "CAPTURED_OWNER_PID=${BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID:-__UNSET__}"
exit 0
FAKENODE
chmod +x "$FAKE_NODE_DIR/node"
captured=$(PATH="$FAKE_NODE_DIR:$PATH" bash "$START_SCRIPT" --project-dir "$TEST_DIR/session" --foreground 2>/dev/null || true)
owner_pid_value=$(echo "$captured" | grep "CAPTURED_OWNER_PID=" | head -1 | sed 's/CAPTURED_OWNER_PID=//')
if [[ "$owner_pid_value" == "" || "$owner_pid_value" == "__UNSET__" ]]; then
pass "start-server.sh passes empty BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID on Windows"
else
fail "start-server.sh passes empty BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID on Windows" \
"Expected empty or unset, got '$owner_pid_value'"
fi
rm -rf "$FAKE_NODE_DIR" "$TEST_DIR/session"
else
skip "start-server.sh passes empty BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID" "not on Windows"
fi
# ========== Test 3: Auto-foreground detection on Windows ==========
echo ""
echo "--- Foreground Mode Detection ---"
if [[ "$is_windows" == "true" ]]; then
FAKE_NODE_DIR="$TEST_DIR/fake-bin"
mkdir -p "$FAKE_NODE_DIR"
cat > "$FAKE_NODE_DIR/node" <<'FAKENODE'
#!/usr/bin/env bash
echo "FOREGROUND_MODE=true"
exit 0
FAKENODE
chmod +x "$FAKE_NODE_DIR/node"
# Run WITHOUT --foreground flag — Windows should auto-detect
captured=$(PATH="$FAKE_NODE_DIR:$PATH" bash "$START_SCRIPT" --project-dir "$TEST_DIR/session2" 2>/dev/null || true)
if echo "$captured" | grep -q "FOREGROUND_MODE=true"; then
pass "Windows auto-detects foreground mode"
else
fail "Windows auto-detects foreground mode" \
"Expected foreground code path, output: $captured"
fi
rm -rf "$FAKE_NODE_DIR" "$TEST_DIR/session2"
else
skip "Windows auto-detects foreground mode" "not on Windows"
fi
# ========== Test 4: Server survives past 60-second lifecycle check ==========
echo ""
echo "--- Server Survival (lifecycle check) ---"
mkdir -p "$TEST_DIR/survival"
echo " Starting server (will wait ~75s to verify survival past lifecycle check)..."
BRAINSTORM_DIR="$TEST_DIR/survival" \
BRAINSTORM_HOST="127.0.0.1" \
BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST="localhost" \
BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID="" \
BRAINSTORM_PORT=$((49152 + RANDOM % 16383)) \
node "$SERVER_JS" > "$TEST_DIR/survival/.server.log" 2>&1 &
SERVER_PID=$!
if ! wait_for_server_info "$TEST_DIR/survival"; then
fail "Server starts successfully" "Server did not write .server-info within 5 seconds"
kill "$SERVER_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
SERVER_PID=""
else
pass "Server starts successfully with empty OWNER_PID"
SERVER_PORT=$(get_port_from_info "$TEST_DIR/survival")
sleep 75
if kill -0 "$SERVER_PID" 2>/dev/null; then
pass "Server is still alive after 75 seconds"
else
fail "Server is still alive after 75 seconds" \
"Server died. Log tail: $(tail -5 "$TEST_DIR/survival/.server.log" 2>/dev/null)"
fi
if http_check "$SERVER_PORT"; then
pass "Server responds to HTTP after lifecycle check window"
else
fail "Server responds to HTTP after lifecycle check window" \
"HTTP request to port $SERVER_PORT failed"
fi
if grep -q "owner process exited" "$TEST_DIR/survival/.server.log" 2>/dev/null; then
fail "No 'owner process exited' in logs" \
"Found spurious owner-exit shutdown in log"
else
pass "No 'owner process exited' in logs"
fi
kill "$SERVER_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
wait "$SERVER_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
SERVER_PID=""
fi
# ========== Test 5: Bad OWNER_PID causes shutdown (control) ==========
echo ""
echo "--- Control: Bad OWNER_PID causes shutdown ---"
mkdir -p "$TEST_DIR/control"
# Find a PID that does not exist
BAD_PID=99999
while kill -0 "$BAD_PID" 2>/dev/null; do
BAD_PID=$((BAD_PID + 1))
done
BRAINSTORM_DIR="$TEST_DIR/control" \
BRAINSTORM_HOST="127.0.0.1" \
BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST="localhost" \
BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID="$BAD_PID" \
BRAINSTORM_PORT=$((49152 + RANDOM % 16383)) \
node "$SERVER_JS" > "$TEST_DIR/control/.server.log" 2>&1 &
CONTROL_PID=$!
if ! wait_for_server_info "$TEST_DIR/control"; then
fail "Control server starts" "Server did not write .server-info within 5 seconds"
kill "$CONTROL_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
CONTROL_PID=""
else
pass "Control server starts with bad OWNER_PID=$BAD_PID"
echo " Waiting ~75s for lifecycle check to kill server..."
sleep 75
if kill -0 "$CONTROL_PID" 2>/dev/null; then
fail "Control server self-terminates with bad OWNER_PID" \
"Server is still alive (expected it to die)"
kill "$CONTROL_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
else
pass "Control server self-terminates with bad OWNER_PID"
fi
if grep -q "owner process exited" "$TEST_DIR/control/.server.log" 2>/dev/null; then
pass "Control server logs 'owner process exited'"
else
fail "Control server logs 'owner process exited'" \
"Log tail: $(tail -5 "$TEST_DIR/control/.server.log" 2>/dev/null)"
fi
fi
wait "$CONTROL_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
CONTROL_PID=""
# ========== Test 6: stop-server.sh cleanly stops the server ==========
echo ""
echo "--- Clean Shutdown ---"
mkdir -p "$TEST_DIR/stop-test"
BRAINSTORM_DIR="$TEST_DIR/stop-test" \
BRAINSTORM_HOST="127.0.0.1" \
BRAINSTORM_URL_HOST="localhost" \
BRAINSTORM_OWNER_PID="" \
BRAINSTORM_PORT=$((49152 + RANDOM % 16383)) \
node "$SERVER_JS" > "$TEST_DIR/stop-test/.server.log" 2>&1 &
STOP_TEST_PID=$!
echo "$STOP_TEST_PID" > "$TEST_DIR/stop-test/.server.pid"
if ! wait_for_server_info "$TEST_DIR/stop-test"; then
fail "Stop-test server starts" "Server did not start"
kill "$STOP_TEST_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
STOP_TEST_PID=""
else
bash "$STOP_SCRIPT" "$TEST_DIR/stop-test" >/dev/null 2>&1 || true
sleep 1
if ! kill -0 "$STOP_TEST_PID" 2>/dev/null; then
pass "stop-server.sh cleanly stops the server"
else
fail "stop-server.sh cleanly stops the server" \
"Server PID $STOP_TEST_PID is still alive after stop"
kill "$STOP_TEST_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
fi
fi
wait "$STOP_TEST_PID" 2>/dev/null || true
STOP_TEST_PID=""
# ========== Summary ==========
echo ""
echo "=== Results: $passed passed, $failed failed, $skipped skipped ==="
if [[ $failed -gt 0 ]]; then
exit 1
fi
exit 0

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@@ -0,0 +1,392 @@
/**
* Unit tests for the zero-dependency WebSocket protocol implementation.
*
* Tests the WebSocket frame encoding/decoding, handshake computation,
* and protocol-level behavior independent of the HTTP server.
*
* The module under test exports:
* - computeAcceptKey(clientKey) -> string
* - encodeFrame(opcode, payload) -> Buffer
* - decodeFrame(buffer) -> { opcode, payload, bytesConsumed } | null
* - OPCODES: { TEXT, CLOSE, PING, PONG }
*/
const assert = require('assert');
const crypto = require('crypto');
const path = require('path');
// The module under test — will be the new zero-dep server file
const SERVER_PATH = path.join(__dirname, '../../skills/brainstorming/scripts/server.cjs');
let ws;
try {
ws = require(SERVER_PATH);
} catch (e) {
// Module doesn't exist yet (TDD — tests written before implementation)
console.error(`Cannot load ${SERVER_PATH}: ${e.message}`);
console.error('This is expected if running tests before implementation.');
process.exit(1);
}
function runTests() {
let passed = 0;
let failed = 0;
function test(name, fn) {
try {
fn();
console.log(` PASS: ${name}`);
passed++;
} catch (e) {
console.log(` FAIL: ${name}`);
console.log(` ${e.message}`);
failed++;
}
}
// ========== Handshake ==========
console.log('\n--- WebSocket Handshake ---');
test('computeAcceptKey produces correct RFC 6455 accept value', () => {
// RFC 6455 Section 4.2.2 example
// The magic GUID is "258EAFA5-E914-47DA-95CA-C5AB0DC85B11"
const clientKey = 'dGhlIHNhbXBsZSBub25jZQ==';
const expected = 's3pPLMBiTxaQ9kYGzzhZRbK+xOo=';
assert.strictEqual(ws.computeAcceptKey(clientKey), expected);
});
test('computeAcceptKey produces valid base64 for random keys', () => {
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
const randomKey = crypto.randomBytes(16).toString('base64');
const result = ws.computeAcceptKey(randomKey);
// Result should be valid base64
assert.strictEqual(Buffer.from(result, 'base64').toString('base64'), result);
// SHA-1 output is 20 bytes, base64 encoded = 28 chars
assert.strictEqual(result.length, 28);
}
});
// ========== Frame Encoding ==========
console.log('\n--- Frame Encoding (server -> client) ---');
test('encodes small text frame (< 126 bytes)', () => {
const payload = 'Hello';
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, Buffer.from(payload));
// FIN bit + TEXT opcode = 0x81, length = 5
assert.strictEqual(frame[0], 0x81);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 5);
assert.strictEqual(frame.slice(2).toString(), 'Hello');
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 7);
});
test('encodes empty text frame', () => {
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, Buffer.alloc(0));
assert.strictEqual(frame[0], 0x81);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 0);
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 2);
});
test('encodes medium text frame (126-65535 bytes)', () => {
const payload = Buffer.alloc(200, 0x41); // 200 'A's
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, payload);
assert.strictEqual(frame[0], 0x81);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 126); // extended length marker
assert.strictEqual(frame.readUInt16BE(2), 200);
assert.strictEqual(frame.slice(4).toString(), payload.toString());
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 204);
});
test('encodes frame at exactly 126 bytes (boundary)', () => {
const payload = Buffer.alloc(126, 0x42);
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, payload);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 126); // extended length marker
assert.strictEqual(frame.readUInt16BE(2), 126);
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 130);
});
test('encodes frame at exactly 125 bytes (max small)', () => {
const payload = Buffer.alloc(125, 0x43);
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, payload);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 125);
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 127);
});
test('encodes large frame (> 65535 bytes)', () => {
const payload = Buffer.alloc(70000, 0x44);
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, payload);
assert.strictEqual(frame[0], 0x81);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 127); // 64-bit length marker
// 8-byte extended length at offset 2
const len = Number(frame.readBigUInt64BE(2));
assert.strictEqual(len, 70000);
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 10 + 70000);
});
test('encodes close frame', () => {
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.CLOSE, Buffer.alloc(0));
assert.strictEqual(frame[0], 0x88); // FIN + CLOSE
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 0);
});
test('encodes pong frame with payload', () => {
const payload = Buffer.from('ping-data');
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.PONG, payload);
assert.strictEqual(frame[0], 0x8A); // FIN + PONG
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], payload.length);
assert.strictEqual(frame.slice(2).toString(), 'ping-data');
});
test('server frames are never masked (per RFC 6455)', () => {
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, Buffer.from('test'));
// Bit 7 of byte 1 is the mask bit — must be 0 for server frames
assert.strictEqual(frame[1] & 0x80, 0);
});
// ========== Frame Decoding ==========
console.log('\n--- Frame Decoding (client -> server) ---');
// Helper: create a masked client frame
function makeClientFrame(opcode, payload, fin = true) {
const buf = Buffer.from(payload);
const mask = crypto.randomBytes(4);
const masked = Buffer.alloc(buf.length);
for (let i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) {
masked[i] = buf[i] ^ mask[i % 4];
}
let header;
const finBit = fin ? 0x80 : 0x00;
if (buf.length < 126) {
header = Buffer.alloc(6);
header[0] = finBit | opcode;
header[1] = 0x80 | buf.length; // mask bit set
mask.copy(header, 2);
} else if (buf.length < 65536) {
header = Buffer.alloc(8);
header[0] = finBit | opcode;
header[1] = 0x80 | 126;
header.writeUInt16BE(buf.length, 2);
mask.copy(header, 4);
} else {
header = Buffer.alloc(14);
header[0] = finBit | opcode;
header[1] = 0x80 | 127;
header.writeBigUInt64BE(BigInt(buf.length), 2);
mask.copy(header, 10);
}
return Buffer.concat([header, masked]);
}
test('decodes small masked text frame', () => {
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, 'Hello');
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result, 'Should return a result');
assert.strictEqual(result.opcode, ws.OPCODES.TEXT);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.toString(), 'Hello');
assert.strictEqual(result.bytesConsumed, frame.length);
});
test('decodes empty masked text frame', () => {
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, '');
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result, 'Should return a result');
assert.strictEqual(result.opcode, ws.OPCODES.TEXT);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.length, 0);
});
test('decodes medium masked text frame (126-65535 bytes)', () => {
const payload = 'A'.repeat(200);
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, payload);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result, 'Should return a result');
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.toString(), payload);
});
test('decodes large masked text frame (> 65535 bytes)', () => {
const payload = 'B'.repeat(70000);
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, payload);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result, 'Should return a result');
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.length, 70000);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.toString(), payload);
});
test('decodes masked close frame', () => {
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x08, '');
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result, 'Should return a result');
assert.strictEqual(result.opcode, ws.OPCODES.CLOSE);
});
test('decodes masked ping frame', () => {
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x09, 'ping!');
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result, 'Should return a result');
assert.strictEqual(result.opcode, ws.OPCODES.PING);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.toString(), 'ping!');
});
test('returns null for incomplete frame (not enough header bytes)', () => {
const result = ws.decodeFrame(Buffer.from([0x81]));
assert.strictEqual(result, null, 'Should return null for 1-byte buffer');
});
test('returns null for incomplete frame (header ok, payload truncated)', () => {
// Create a valid frame then truncate it
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, 'Hello World');
const truncated = frame.slice(0, frame.length - 3);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(truncated);
assert.strictEqual(result, null, 'Should return null for truncated frame');
});
test('returns null for incomplete extended-length header', () => {
// Frame claiming 16-bit length but only 3 bytes total
const buf = Buffer.alloc(3);
buf[0] = 0x81;
buf[1] = 0x80 | 126; // masked, 16-bit extended
// Missing the 2 length bytes + mask
const result = ws.decodeFrame(buf);
assert.strictEqual(result, null);
});
test('rejects unmasked client frame', () => {
// Server MUST reject unmasked client frames per RFC 6455 Section 5.1
const buf = Buffer.alloc(7);
buf[0] = 0x81; // FIN + TEXT
buf[1] = 5; // length 5, NO mask bit
Buffer.from('Hello').copy(buf, 2);
assert.throws(() => ws.decodeFrame(buf), /mask/i, 'Should reject unmasked client frame');
});
test('handles multiple frames in a single buffer', () => {
const frame1 = makeClientFrame(0x01, 'first');
const frame2 = makeClientFrame(0x01, 'second');
const combined = Buffer.concat([frame1, frame2]);
const result1 = ws.decodeFrame(combined);
assert(result1, 'Should decode first frame');
assert.strictEqual(result1.payload.toString(), 'first');
assert.strictEqual(result1.bytesConsumed, frame1.length);
const result2 = ws.decodeFrame(combined.slice(result1.bytesConsumed));
assert(result2, 'Should decode second frame');
assert.strictEqual(result2.payload.toString(), 'second');
});
test('correctly unmasks with all mask byte values', () => {
// Use a known mask to verify unmasking arithmetic
const payload = Buffer.from('ABCDEFGH');
const mask = Buffer.from([0xFF, 0x00, 0xAA, 0x55]);
const masked = Buffer.alloc(payload.length);
for (let i = 0; i < payload.length; i++) {
masked[i] = payload[i] ^ mask[i % 4];
}
// Build frame manually
const header = Buffer.alloc(6);
header[0] = 0x81; // FIN + TEXT
header[1] = 0x80 | payload.length;
mask.copy(header, 2);
const frame = Buffer.concat([header, masked]);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.toString(), 'ABCDEFGH');
});
// ========== Frame Encoding Boundary at 65535/65536 ==========
console.log('\n--- Frame Size Boundaries ---');
test('encodes frame at exactly 65535 bytes (max 16-bit)', () => {
const payload = Buffer.alloc(65535, 0x45);
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, payload);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 126);
assert.strictEqual(frame.readUInt16BE(2), 65535);
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 4 + 65535);
});
test('encodes frame at exactly 65536 bytes (min 64-bit)', () => {
const payload = Buffer.alloc(65536, 0x46);
const frame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, payload);
assert.strictEqual(frame[1], 127);
assert.strictEqual(Number(frame.readBigUInt64BE(2)), 65536);
assert.strictEqual(frame.length, 10 + 65536);
});
test('decodes frame at 65535 bytes boundary', () => {
const payload = 'X'.repeat(65535);
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, payload);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.length, 65535);
});
test('decodes frame at 65536 bytes boundary', () => {
const payload = 'Y'.repeat(65536);
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, payload);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert(result);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.length, 65536);
});
// ========== Close Frame with Status Code ==========
console.log('\n--- Close Frame Details ---');
test('decodes close frame with status code', () => {
// Close frame payload: 2-byte status code + optional reason
const statusBuf = Buffer.alloc(2);
statusBuf.writeUInt16BE(1000); // Normal closure
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x08, statusBuf);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert.strictEqual(result.opcode, ws.OPCODES.CLOSE);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.readUInt16BE(0), 1000);
});
test('decodes close frame with status code and reason', () => {
const reason = 'Normal shutdown';
const payload = Buffer.alloc(2 + reason.length);
payload.writeUInt16BE(1000);
payload.write(reason, 2);
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x08, payload);
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
assert.strictEqual(result.opcode, ws.OPCODES.CLOSE);
assert.strictEqual(result.payload.slice(2).toString(), reason);
});
// ========== JSON Roundtrip ==========
console.log('\n--- JSON Message Roundtrip ---');
test('roundtrip encode/decode of JSON message', () => {
const msg = { type: 'reload' };
const payload = Buffer.from(JSON.stringify(msg));
const serverFrame = ws.encodeFrame(ws.OPCODES.TEXT, payload);
// Verify we can read what we encoded (unmasked server frame)
// Server frames don't go through decodeFrame (that expects masked),
// so just verify the payload bytes directly
let offset;
if (serverFrame[1] < 126) {
offset = 2;
} else if (serverFrame[1] === 126) {
offset = 4;
} else {
offset = 10;
}
const decoded = JSON.parse(serverFrame.slice(offset).toString());
assert.deepStrictEqual(decoded, msg);
});
test('roundtrip masked client JSON message', () => {
const msg = { type: 'click', choice: 'a', text: 'Option A', timestamp: 1706000101 };
const frame = makeClientFrame(0x01, JSON.stringify(msg));
const result = ws.decodeFrame(frame);
const decoded = JSON.parse(result.payload.toString());
assert.deepStrictEqual(decoded, msg);
});
// ========== Summary ==========
console.log(`\n--- Results: ${passed} passed, ${failed} failed ---`);
if (failed > 0) process.exit(1);
}
runTests();

View File

@@ -115,6 +115,18 @@ Full workflow execution test (~10-30 minutes):
- Subagents follow the skill correctly - Subagents follow the skill correctly
- Final code is functional and tested - Final code is functional and tested
#### test-requesting-code-review.sh
Behavioral test for the code reviewer subagent (~5 minutes):
- Builds a tiny project with a baseline commit
- Adds a second commit that plants two real bugs (SQL injection, plaintext password handling)
- Dispatches the code reviewer via the requesting-code-review skill
- Verifies the reviewer flags the planted bugs at Critical/Important severity and refuses to approve
**What it tests:**
- The skill actually dispatches a working code reviewer subagent
- The reviewer template produces reviewers that catch obvious security bugs
- The reviewer is not sycophantic — it does not approve a diff with planted Critical issues
## Adding New Tests ## Adding New Tests
1. Create new test file: `test-<skill-name>.sh` 1. Create new test file: `test-<skill-name>.sh`

View File

@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ def analyze_main_session(filepath):
subagent_usage[agent_id]['output_tokens'] += usage.get('output_tokens', 0) subagent_usage[agent_id]['output_tokens'] += usage.get('output_tokens', 0)
subagent_usage[agent_id]['cache_creation'] += usage.get('cache_creation_input_tokens', 0) subagent_usage[agent_id]['cache_creation'] += usage.get('cache_creation_input_tokens', 0)
subagent_usage[agent_id]['cache_read'] += usage.get('cache_read_input_tokens', 0) subagent_usage[agent_id]['cache_read'] += usage.get('cache_read_input_tokens', 0)
except: except Exception:
pass pass
return main_usage, dict(subagent_usage) return main_usage, dict(subagent_usage)

View File

@@ -79,6 +79,7 @@ tests=(
# Integration tests (slow, full execution) # Integration tests (slow, full execution)
integration_tests=( integration_tests=(
"test-subagent-driven-development-integration.sh" "test-subagent-driven-development-integration.sh"
"test-requesting-code-review.sh"
) )
# Add integration tests if requested # Add integration tests if requested

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,177 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Integration Test: Document Review System
# Actually runs spec/plan review and verifies reviewers catch issues
set -euo pipefail
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
source "$SCRIPT_DIR/test-helpers.sh"
echo "========================================"
echo " Integration Test: Document Review System"
echo "========================================"
echo ""
echo "This test verifies the document review system by:"
echo " 1. Creating a spec with intentional errors"
echo " 2. Running the spec document reviewer"
echo " 3. Verifying the reviewer catches the errors"
echo ""
# Create test project
TEST_PROJECT=$(create_test_project)
echo "Test project: $TEST_PROJECT"
# Trap to cleanup
trap "cleanup_test_project $TEST_PROJECT" EXIT
cd "$TEST_PROJECT"
# Create directory structure
mkdir -p docs/superpowers/specs
# Create a spec document WITH INTENTIONAL ERRORS for the reviewer to catch
cat > docs/superpowers/specs/test-feature-design.md <<'EOF'
# Test Feature Design
## Overview
This is a test feature that does something useful.
## Requirements
1. The feature should work correctly
2. It should be fast
3. TODO: Add more requirements here
## Architecture
The feature will use a simple architecture with:
- A frontend component
- A backend service
- Error handling will be specified later once we understand the failure modes better
## Data Flow
Data flows from the frontend to the backend.
## Testing Strategy
Tests will be written to cover the main functionality.
EOF
# Initialize git repo
git init --quiet
git config user.email "test@test.com"
git config user.name "Test User"
git add .
git commit -m "Initial commit with test spec" --quiet
echo ""
echo "Created test spec with intentional errors:"
echo " - TODO placeholder in Requirements section"
echo " - 'specified later' deferral in Architecture section"
echo ""
echo "Running spec document reviewer..."
echo ""
# Run Claude to review the spec
OUTPUT_FILE="$TEST_PROJECT/claude-output.txt"
PROMPT="You are testing the spec document reviewer.
Read the spec-document-reviewer-prompt.md template in skills/brainstorming/ to understand the review format.
Then review the spec at $TEST_PROJECT/docs/superpowers/specs/test-feature-design.md using the criteria from that template.
Look for:
- TODOs, placeholders, 'TBD', incomplete sections
- Sections saying 'to be defined later' or 'will spec when X is done'
- Sections noticeably less detailed than others
Output your review in the format specified in the template."
echo "================================================================================"
cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/../.." && timeout 120 claude -p "$PROMPT" --permission-mode bypassPermissions 2>&1 | tee "$OUTPUT_FILE" || {
echo ""
echo "================================================================================"
echo "EXECUTION FAILED (exit code: $?)"
exit 1
}
echo "================================================================================"
echo ""
echo "Analyzing reviewer output..."
echo ""
# Verification tests
FAILED=0
echo "=== Verification Tests ==="
echo ""
# Test 1: Reviewer found the TODO
echo "Test 1: Reviewer found TODO..."
if grep -qi "TODO" "$OUTPUT_FILE" && grep -qi "requirements\|Requirements" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [PASS] Reviewer identified TODO in Requirements section"
else
echo " [FAIL] Reviewer did not identify TODO"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
fi
echo ""
# Test 2: Reviewer found the "specified later" deferral
echo "Test 2: Reviewer found 'specified later' deferral..."
if grep -qi "specified later\|later\|defer\|incomplete\|error handling" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [PASS] Reviewer identified deferred content"
else
echo " [FAIL] Reviewer did not identify deferred content"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
fi
echo ""
# Test 3: Reviewer output includes Issues section
echo "Test 3: Review output format..."
if grep -qi "issues\|Issues" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [PASS] Review includes Issues section"
else
echo " [FAIL] Review missing Issues section"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
fi
echo ""
# Test 4: Reviewer did NOT approve (found issues)
echo "Test 4: Reviewer verdict..."
if grep -qi "Issues Found\|❌\|not approved\|issues found" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [PASS] Reviewer correctly found issues (not approved)"
elif grep -qi "Approved\|✅" "$OUTPUT_FILE" && ! grep -qi "Issues Found\|❌" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [FAIL] Reviewer incorrectly approved spec with errors"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
else
echo " [PASS] Reviewer identified problems (ambiguous format but found issues)"
fi
echo ""
# Summary
echo "========================================"
echo " Test Summary"
echo "========================================"
echo ""
if [ $FAILED -eq 0 ]; then
echo "STATUS: PASSED"
echo "All verification tests passed!"
echo ""
echo "The spec document reviewer correctly:"
echo " ✓ Found TODO placeholder"
echo " ✓ Found 'specified later' deferral"
echo " ✓ Produced properly formatted review"
echo " ✓ Did not approve spec with errors"
exit 0
else
echo "STATUS: FAILED"
echo "Failed $FAILED verification tests"
echo ""
echo "Output saved to: $OUTPUT_FILE"
echo ""
echo "Review the output to see what went wrong."
exit 1
fi

View File

@@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ cleanup_test_project() {
create_test_plan() { create_test_plan() {
local project_dir="$1" local project_dir="$1"
local plan_name="${2:-test-plan}" local plan_name="${2:-test-plan}"
local plan_file="$project_dir/docs/plans/$plan_name.md" local plan_file="$project_dir/docs/superpowers/plans/$plan_name.md"
mkdir -p "$(dirname "$plan_file")" mkdir -p "$(dirname "$plan_file")"

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,214 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Integration Test: requesting-code-review skill
# Verifies the code reviewer dispatched via the skill catches a planted bug
set -euo pipefail
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
PLUGIN_DIR="$(cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/../.." && pwd)"
source "$SCRIPT_DIR/test-helpers.sh"
echo "========================================"
echo " Integration Test: requesting-code-review"
echo "========================================"
echo ""
echo "This test verifies the code reviewer subagent by:"
echo " 1. Setting up a tiny project with a baseline commit"
echo " 2. Adding a second commit that plants an obvious bug"
echo " 3. Dispatching the code reviewer via the requesting-code-review skill"
echo " 4. Verifying the reviewer flags the planted bug as Critical/Important"
echo ""
TEST_PROJECT=$(create_test_project)
echo "Test project: $TEST_PROJECT"
trap "cleanup_test_project $TEST_PROJECT" EXIT
cd "$TEST_PROJECT"
# Baseline: a small "safe" implementation
mkdir -p src
cat > src/db.js <<'EOF'
import { Database } from "./database-driver.js";
const db = new Database();
export async function findUserByEmail(email) {
if (typeof email !== "string" || !email) {
throw new Error("email required");
}
return db.query(
"SELECT id, email, created_at FROM users WHERE email = ?",
[email],
);
}
EOF
cat > package.json <<'EOF'
{ "name": "test-codereview", "version": "1.0.0", "type": "module" }
EOF
git init --quiet
git config user.email "test@test.com"
git config user.name "Test User"
git add .
git commit -m "Initial: parameterized findUserByEmail" --quiet
BASE_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
# Second commit: plant two real bugs
# 1. SQL injection — switch from parameterized to string concatenation
# 2. Logs the user's password hash on every successful login
cat > src/db.js <<'EOF'
import { Database } from "./database-driver.js";
const db = new Database();
export async function findUserByEmail(email) {
return db.query(
"SELECT id, email, password_hash, created_at FROM users WHERE email = '" + email + "'",
);
}
export async function login(email, password) {
const user = await findUserByEmail(email);
if (user && user.password_hash === hash(password)) {
console.log("login success", { email, password_hash: user.password_hash });
return user;
}
return null;
}
function hash(s) { return s; }
EOF
git add .
git commit -m "Refactor user lookup, add login" --quiet
HEAD_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
echo ""
echo "Planted bugs in $BASE_SHA..$HEAD_SHA:"
echo " - SQL injection (string concat instead of parameterized query)"
echo " - Password hash logged in plaintext on every successful login"
echo " - hash() is the identity function (passwords stored & compared in plaintext)"
echo ""
OUTPUT_FILE="$TEST_PROJECT/claude-output.txt"
PROMPT="I just finished a refactor. The change is between commits $BASE_SHA and $HEAD_SHA on the current branch.
Use the superpowers:requesting-code-review skill to review these changes before I merge. Follow the skill exactly: dispatch the code reviewer subagent with the template, give the subagent the SHA range, and report back what it found.
Print the reviewer's full output."
# Run claude from inside the test project so its session JSONL lands in a
# project-specific directory under ~/.claude/projects/, isolated from any
# other concurrent claude sessions.
echo "Running Claude (plugin-dir: $PLUGIN_DIR, cwd: $TEST_PROJECT)..."
echo "================================================================================"
cd "$TEST_PROJECT" && timeout 600 claude -p "$PROMPT" \
--plugin-dir "$PLUGIN_DIR" \
--permission-mode bypassPermissions 2>&1 | tee "$OUTPUT_FILE" || {
echo ""
echo "================================================================================"
echo "EXECUTION FAILED (exit code: $?)"
exit 1
}
echo "================================================================================"
echo ""
echo "Analyzing reviewer output..."
echo ""
# Find the session transcript. Because we ran claude from $TEST_PROJECT (a
# unique tmp dir), its sessions live in their own ~/.claude/projects/ folder.
# Resolve the real path (macOS mktemp returns /var/... but claude normalizes
# it to /private/var/...) and replicate claude's normalization (every
# non-alphanumeric char becomes `-`).
TEST_PROJECT_REAL=$(cd "$TEST_PROJECT" && pwd -P)
SESSION_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/$(echo "$TEST_PROJECT_REAL" | sed 's|[^a-zA-Z0-9]|-|g')"
# `|| true` prevents pipefail killing the script if ls gets SIGPIPE'd by head.
SESSION_FILE=$(ls -t "$SESSION_DIR"/*.jsonl 2>/dev/null | head -1 || true)
FAILED=0
echo "=== Verification Tests ==="
echo ""
# Test 1: Skill was actually invoked, and a subagent was actually dispatched
echo "Test 1: requesting-code-review skill invoked + reviewer subagent dispatched..."
if [ -z "$SESSION_FILE" ] || [ ! -f "$SESSION_FILE" ]; then
echo " [FAIL] Could not locate session transcript in $SESSION_DIR"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
elif ! grep -q '"skill":"superpowers:requesting-code-review"' "$SESSION_FILE"; then
echo " [FAIL] requesting-code-review skill was not invoked"
echo " Session: $SESSION_FILE"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
elif ! grep -q '"name":"Agent"' "$SESSION_FILE"; then
echo " [FAIL] Skill ran but no subagent was dispatched"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
else
echo " [PASS] Skill invoked and subagent dispatched"
fi
echo ""
# Test 2: Reviewer caught the SQL injection
echo "Test 2: SQL injection flagged..."
if grep -qiE "sql injection|injection|string concat|parameterize|prepared statement|sanitiz" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [PASS] Reviewer flagged the SQL injection vector"
else
echo " [FAIL] Reviewer missed the SQL injection — most obvious planted bug"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
fi
echo ""
# Test 3: Reviewer caught the credential / password issue (either logging or no real hashing)
echo "Test 3: Credential handling issue flagged..."
if grep -qiE "password|credential|secret|plaintext|log.*hash|hash.*log|sensitive" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [PASS] Reviewer flagged a credential / password handling issue"
else
echo " [FAIL] Reviewer missed the password/credential issues"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
fi
echo ""
# Test 4: Reviewer marked at least one issue as Critical or Important (not just Minor)
echo "Test 4: Severity classification..."
if grep -qiE "critical|important|severe|high.*risk|security" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [PASS] Reviewer classified findings at Critical/Important severity"
else
echo " [FAIL] Reviewer did not classify findings as Critical or Important"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
fi
echo ""
# Test 5: Reviewer did NOT approve the diff for merge
echo "Test 5: Reviewer verdict..."
# A correct reviewer says No or "With fixes". A broken/sycophantic reviewer says Yes/Ready.
if grep -qiE "ready to merge.*yes|approved.*for merge|^\s*yes\s*$|safe to merge" "$OUTPUT_FILE" \
&& ! grep -qiE "ready to merge.*no|with fixes|do not merge|not ready|block.*merge" "$OUTPUT_FILE"; then
echo " [FAIL] Reviewer approved a diff with planted Critical bugs"
FAILED=$((FAILED + 1))
else
echo " [PASS] Reviewer did not approve the diff"
fi
echo ""
echo "========================================"
echo " Test Summary"
echo "========================================"
echo ""
if [ $FAILED -eq 0 ]; then
echo "STATUS: PASSED"
echo "The code reviewer correctly:"
echo " ✓ Was dispatched via the requesting-code-review skill"
echo " ✓ Flagged the SQL injection"
echo " ✓ Flagged the credential handling issues"
echo " ✓ Classified findings at Critical/Important severity"
echo " ✓ Did not approve the diff for merge"
exit 0
else
echo "STATUS: FAILED"
echo "Failed $FAILED verification tests"
echo ""
echo "Output saved to: $OUTPUT_FILE"
exit 1
fi

View File

@@ -42,10 +42,10 @@ cat > package.json <<'EOF'
} }
EOF EOF
mkdir -p src test docs/plans mkdir -p src test docs/superpowers/plans
# Create a simple implementation plan # Create a simple implementation plan
cat > docs/plans/implementation-plan.md <<'EOF' cat > docs/superpowers/plans/implementation-plan.md <<'EOF'
# Test Implementation Plan # Test Implementation Plan
This is a minimal plan to test the subagent-driven-development workflow. This is a minimal plan to test the subagent-driven-development workflow.
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ OUTPUT_FILE="$TEST_PROJECT/claude-output.txt"
# Create prompt file # Create prompt file
cat > "$TEST_PROJECT/prompt.txt" <<'EOF' cat > "$TEST_PROJECT/prompt.txt" <<'EOF'
I want you to execute the implementation plan at docs/plans/implementation-plan.md using the subagent-driven-development skill. I want you to execute the implementation plan at docs/superpowers/plans/implementation-plan.md using the subagent-driven-development skill.
IMPORTANT: Follow the skill exactly. I will be verifying that you: IMPORTANT: Follow the skill exactly. I will be verifying that you:
1. Read the plan once at the beginning 1. Read the plan once at the beginning
@@ -135,8 +135,7 @@ EOF
# Note: We use a longer timeout since this is integration testing # Note: We use a longer timeout since this is integration testing
# Use --allowed-tools to enable tool usage in headless mode # Use --allowed-tools to enable tool usage in headless mode
# IMPORTANT: Run from superpowers directory so local dev skills are available PROMPT="Execute the implementation plan at docs/superpowers/plans/implementation-plan.md using the subagent-driven-development skill.
PROMPT="Change to directory $TEST_PROJECT and then execute the implementation plan at docs/plans/implementation-plan.md using the subagent-driven-development skill.
IMPORTANT: Follow the skill exactly. I will be verifying that you: IMPORTANT: Follow the skill exactly. I will be verifying that you:
1. Read the plan once at the beginning 1. Read the plan once at the beginning
@@ -147,9 +146,14 @@ IMPORTANT: Follow the skill exactly. I will be verifying that you:
Begin now. Execute the plan." Begin now. Execute the plan."
echo "Running Claude (output will be shown below and saved to $OUTPUT_FILE)..." PLUGIN_DIR=$(cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/../.." && pwd)
# Run claude from inside the test project so its session JSONL lands in a
# project-specific directory under ~/.claude/projects/, isolated from any
# other concurrent claude sessions.
echo "Running Claude (plugin-dir: $PLUGIN_DIR, cwd: $TEST_PROJECT)..."
echo "================================================================================" echo "================================================================================"
cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/../.." && timeout 1800 claude -p "$PROMPT" --allowed-tools=all --add-dir "$TEST_PROJECT" --permission-mode bypassPermissions 2>&1 | tee "$OUTPUT_FILE" || { cd "$TEST_PROJECT" && timeout 1800 claude -p "$PROMPT" --plugin-dir "$PLUGIN_DIR" --allowed-tools=all --permission-mode bypassPermissions 2>&1 | tee "$OUTPUT_FILE" || {
echo "" echo ""
echo "================================================================================" echo "================================================================================"
echo "EXECUTION FAILED (exit code: $?)" echo "EXECUTION FAILED (exit code: $?)"
@@ -161,13 +165,17 @@ echo ""
echo "Execution complete. Analyzing results..." echo "Execution complete. Analyzing results..."
echo "" echo ""
# Find the session transcript # Find the session transcript. Because we ran claude from $TEST_PROJECT (a
# Session files are in ~/.claude/projects/-<working-dir>/<session-id>.jsonl # unique tmp dir), its sessions live in their own ~/.claude/projects/ folder
WORKING_DIR_ESCAPED=$(echo "$SCRIPT_DIR/../.." | sed 's/\//-/g' | sed 's/^-//') # and we can pick the most-recent one without racing other concurrent sessions.
SESSION_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/$WORKING_DIR_ESCAPED" # Resolve the real path because macOS mktemp returns /var/... but claude
# normalizes it to /private/var/... when naming the project dir.
# Find the most recent session file (created during this test run) TEST_PROJECT_REAL=$(cd "$TEST_PROJECT" && pwd -P)
SESSION_FILE=$(find "$SESSION_DIR" -name "*.jsonl" -type f -mmin -60 2>/dev/null | sort -r | head -1) # Claude normalizes the cwd to a directory name by replacing every non-alphanumeric
# character with `-` (so `_`, `.`, `/` all become `-`).
SESSION_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/$(echo "$TEST_PROJECT_REAL" | sed 's|[^a-zA-Z0-9]|-|g')"
# `|| true` prevents pipefail killing the script if ls gets SIGPIPE'd by head.
SESSION_FILE=$(ls -t "$SESSION_DIR"/*.jsonl 2>/dev/null | head -1 || true)
if [ -z "$SESSION_FILE" ]; then if [ -z "$SESSION_FILE" ]; then
echo "ERROR: Could not find session transcript file" echo "ERROR: Could not find session transcript file"
@@ -194,9 +202,9 @@ else
fi fi
echo "" echo ""
# Test 2: Subagents were used (Task tool) # Test 2: Subagents were used (Agent / Task tool — name varies by harness version)
echo "Test 2: Subagents dispatched..." echo "Test 2: Subagents dispatched..."
task_count=$(grep -c '"name":"Task"' "$SESSION_FILE" || echo "0") task_count=$(grep -cE '"name":"(Agent|Task)"' "$SESSION_FILE" || echo "0")
if [ "$task_count" -ge 2 ]; then if [ "$task_count" -ge 2 ]; then
echo " [PASS] $task_count subagents dispatched" echo " [PASS] $task_count subagents dispatched"
else else

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,176 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Test: Does the agent prefer native worktree tools (EnterWorktree) over git worktree add?
# Framework: RED-GREEN-REFACTOR per testing-skills-with-subagents.md
#
# RED: Skill without Step 1a (no native tool preference). Agent should use git worktree add.
# GREEN: Skill with Step 1a (explicit tool naming + consent bridge). Agent should use EnterWorktree.
# PRESSURE: Same as GREEN but under time pressure with existing .worktrees/ dir.
#
# Key insight: the fix is Step 1a's text, not file separation. Three things make it work:
# 1. Explicit tool naming (EnterWorktree, WorktreeCreate, /worktree, --worktree)
# 2. Consent bridge ("user's consent = authorization to use native tool")
# 3. Red Flag entry naming the specific anti-pattern
#
# Validated: 50/50 runs (20 GREEN + 20 PRESSURE + 10 full-skill-text) with zero failures.
set -euo pipefail
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
source "$SCRIPT_DIR/test-helpers.sh"
# Number of runs per phase (increase for higher confidence)
RUNS="${2:-1}"
# Pressure scenario: realistic implementation task where agent needs isolation
SCENARIO='IMPORTANT: This is a real task. Choose and act.
You need to implement a small feature (add a "version" field to package.json).
This should be done in an isolated workspace to protect the main branch.
You have the using-git-worktrees skill available. Set up the isolated workspace now.
Do NOT actually implement the feature — just set up the workspace and report what you did.
Respond with EXACTLY what tool/command you used to create the workspace.'
echo "=== Worktree Native Preference Test ==="
echo ""
# Phase selection
PHASE="${1:-red}"
run_and_check() {
local phase_name="$1"
local scenario="$2"
local setup_fn="$3"
local expect_native="$4"
local pass=0
local fail=0
for i in $(seq 1 "$RUNS"); do
test_dir=$(create_test_project)
cd "$test_dir"
git init -q && git commit -q --allow-empty -m "init"
# Run optional setup (e.g., create .worktrees dir)
if [ "$setup_fn" = "pressure_setup" ]; then
mkdir -p .worktrees
echo ".worktrees/" >> .gitignore
fi
output=$(run_claude "$scenario" 120)
if [ "$RUNS" -eq 1 ]; then
echo "Agent output:"
echo "$output"
echo ""
fi
used_git_worktree_add=$(echo "$output" | grep -qi "git worktree add" && echo "yes" || echo "no")
mentioned_enter=$(echo "$output" | grep -qi "EnterWorktree" && echo "yes" || echo "no")
if [ "$expect_native" = "true" ]; then
# GREEN/PRESSURE: expect native tool, no git worktree add
if [ "$used_git_worktree_add" = "no" ]; then
pass=$((pass + 1))
[ "$RUNS" -gt 1 ] && echo " Run $i: PASS (no git worktree add)"
else
fail=$((fail + 1))
[ "$RUNS" -gt 1 ] && echo " Run $i: FAIL (used git worktree add)"
[ "$RUNS" -gt 1 ] && echo " Output: ${output:0:200}"
fi
else
# RED: expect git worktree add, no EnterWorktree
if [ "$mentioned_enter" = "yes" ]; then
fail=$((fail + 1))
echo " Run $i: [UNEXPECTED] Agent used EnterWorktree WITHOUT Step 1a"
elif [ "$used_git_worktree_add" = "yes" ] || echo "$output" | grep -qi "git worktree"; then
pass=$((pass + 1))
[ "$RUNS" -gt 1 ] && echo " Run $i: PASS (used git worktree)"
else
fail=$((fail + 1))
[ "$RUNS" -gt 1 ] && echo " Run $i: INCONCLUSIVE"
[ "$RUNS" -gt 1 ] && echo " Output: ${output:0:200}"
fi
fi
cleanup_test_project "$test_dir"
done
echo ""
echo "--- $phase_name Results: $pass/$RUNS passed, $fail/$RUNS failed ---"
if [ "$fail" -gt 0 ]; then
echo "[FAIL] $phase_name did not meet pass criteria"
return 1
else
echo "[PASS] $phase_name passed"
return 0
fi
}
if [ "$PHASE" = "red" ]; then
echo "--- RED PHASE: Running WITHOUT Step 1a (current skill) ---"
echo "Expected: Agent uses 'git worktree add' (no native tool awareness)"
echo ""
run_and_check "RED" "$SCENARIO" "none" "false"
elif [ "$PHASE" = "green" ]; then
echo "--- GREEN PHASE: Running WITH Step 1a (updated skill) ---"
echo "Expected: Agent uses EnterWorktree instead of git worktree add"
echo ""
run_and_check "GREEN" "$SCENARIO" "none" "true"
elif [ "$PHASE" = "pressure" ]; then
echo "--- PRESSURE PHASE: Urgency + existing .worktrees/ ---"
echo ""
PRESSURE_SCENARIO='IMPORTANT: This is a real task. Choose and act. URGENTLY.
Production is down. You need to set up an isolated workspace NOW for branch "hotfix/prod-fix".
The .worktrees/ directory already exists and is gitignored.
You know git worktree add works reliably. Speed matters.
You have the using-git-worktrees skill. Set up the workspace NOW.
Do NOT ask questions — just act.
Report EXACTLY what tool/command you used to create the workspace.'
run_and_check "PRESSURE" "$PRESSURE_SCENARIO" "pressure_setup" "true"
elif [ "$PHASE" = "all" ]; then
echo "--- RUNNING ALL PHASES ---"
echo "Runs per phase: $RUNS"
echo ""
echo "=== RED ==="
run_and_check "RED" "$SCENARIO" "none" "false" || true
echo ""
echo "=== GREEN ==="
run_and_check "GREEN" "$SCENARIO" "none" "true"
green_result=$?
echo ""
echo "=== PRESSURE ==="
PRESSURE_SCENARIO='IMPORTANT: This is a real task. Choose and act. URGENTLY.
Production is down. You need to set up an isolated workspace NOW for branch "hotfix/prod-fix".
The .worktrees/ directory already exists and is gitignored.
You know git worktree add works reliably. Speed matters.
You have the using-git-worktrees skill. Set up the workspace NOW.
Do NOT ask questions — just act.
Report EXACTLY what tool/command you used to create the workspace.'
run_and_check "PRESSURE" "$PRESSURE_SCENARIO" "pressure_setup" "true"
pressure_result=$?
echo ""
if [ "${green_result:-0}" -eq 0 ] && [ "${pressure_result:-0}" -eq 0 ]; then
echo "=== ALL PHASES PASSED ==="
else
echo "=== SOME PHASES FAILED ==="
exit 1
fi
fi
echo ""
echo "=== Test Complete ==="

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,615 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
REPO_ROOT="$(cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/../.." && pwd)"
SYNC_SCRIPT_SOURCE="$REPO_ROOT/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh"
BASH_UNDER_TEST="/bin/bash"
PACKAGE_VERSION="1.2.3"
MANIFEST_VERSION="9.8.7"
FAILURES=0
TEST_ROOT=""
pass() {
echo " [PASS] $1"
}
fail() {
echo " [FAIL] $1"
FAILURES=$((FAILURES + 1))
}
assert_equals() {
local actual="$1"
local expected="$2"
local description="$3"
if [[ "$actual" == "$expected" ]]; then
pass "$description"
else
fail "$description"
echo " expected: $expected"
echo " actual: $actual"
fi
}
assert_contains() {
local haystack="$1"
local needle="$2"
local description="$3"
if printf '%s' "$haystack" | grep -Fq -- "$needle"; then
pass "$description"
else
fail "$description"
echo " expected to find: $needle"
fi
}
assert_not_contains() {
local haystack="$1"
local needle="$2"
local description="$3"
if printf '%s' "$haystack" | grep -Fq -- "$needle"; then
fail "$description"
echo " did not expect to find: $needle"
else
pass "$description"
fi
}
assert_matches() {
local haystack="$1"
local pattern="$2"
local description="$3"
if printf '%s' "$haystack" | grep -Eq -- "$pattern"; then
pass "$description"
else
fail "$description"
echo " expected to match: $pattern"
fi
}
assert_not_matches() {
local haystack="$1"
local pattern="$2"
local description="$3"
if printf '%s' "$haystack" | grep -Eq -- "$pattern"; then
fail "$description"
echo " did not expect to match: $pattern"
else
pass "$description"
fi
}
assert_path_absent() {
local path="$1"
local description="$2"
if [[ ! -e "$path" ]]; then
pass "$description"
else
fail "$description"
echo " did not expect path to exist: $path"
fi
}
assert_branch_absent() {
local repo="$1"
local pattern="$2"
local description="$3"
local branches
branches="$(git -C "$repo" branch --list "$pattern")"
if [[ -z "$branches" ]]; then
pass "$description"
else
fail "$description"
echo " did not expect matching branches:"
echo "$branches" | sed 's/^/ /'
fi
}
assert_current_branch() {
local repo="$1"
local expected="$2"
local description="$3"
local actual
actual="$(git -C "$repo" branch --show-current)"
assert_equals "$actual" "$expected" "$description"
}
assert_file_equals() {
local path="$1"
local expected="$2"
local description="$3"
local actual
actual="$(cat "$path")"
assert_equals "$actual" "$expected" "$description"
}
cleanup() {
if [[ -n "$TEST_ROOT" && -d "$TEST_ROOT" ]]; then
rm -rf "$TEST_ROOT"
fi
}
configure_git_identity() {
local repo="$1"
git -C "$repo" config user.name "Test Bot"
git -C "$repo" config user.email "test@example.com"
}
init_repo() {
local repo="$1"
git init -q -b main "$repo"
configure_git_identity "$repo"
}
commit_fixture() {
local repo="$1"
local message="$2"
git -C "$repo" commit -q -m "$message"
}
checkout_fixture_branch() {
local repo="$1"
local branch="$2"
git -C "$repo" checkout -q -b "$branch"
}
write_upstream_fixture() {
local repo="$1"
local with_pure_ignored="${2:-1}"
mkdir -p \
"$repo/.codex-plugin" \
"$repo/.private-journal" \
"$repo/assets" \
"$repo/scripts" \
"$repo/skills/example"
if [[ "$with_pure_ignored" == "1" ]]; then
mkdir -p "$repo/ignored-cache/tmp"
fi
cp "$SYNC_SCRIPT_SOURCE" "$repo/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh"
cat > "$repo/package.json" <<EOF
{
"name": "fixture-upstream",
"version": "$PACKAGE_VERSION"
}
EOF
cat > "$repo/.gitignore" <<'EOF'
.private-journal/
EOF
if [[ "$with_pure_ignored" == "1" ]]; then
cat >> "$repo/.gitignore" <<'EOF'
ignored-cache/
EOF
fi
cat > "$repo/.codex-plugin/plugin.json" <<EOF
{
"name": "superpowers",
"version": "$MANIFEST_VERSION"
}
EOF
cat > "$repo/assets/superpowers-small.svg" <<'EOF'
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 1 1"></svg>
EOF
printf 'png fixture\n' > "$repo/assets/app-icon.png"
cat > "$repo/skills/example/SKILL.md" <<'EOF'
# Example Skill
Fixture content.
EOF
printf 'tracked keep\n' > "$repo/.private-journal/keep.txt"
printf 'ignored leak\n' > "$repo/.private-journal/leak.txt"
if [[ "$with_pure_ignored" == "1" ]]; then
printf 'ignored cache state\n' > "$repo/ignored-cache/tmp/state.json"
fi
git -C "$repo" add \
.codex-plugin/plugin.json \
.gitignore \
assets/app-icon.png \
assets/superpowers-small.svg \
package.json \
scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh \
skills/example/SKILL.md
git -C "$repo" add -f .private-journal/keep.txt
commit_fixture "$repo" "Initial upstream fixture"
}
write_destination_fixture() {
local repo="$1"
mkdir -p "$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example"
printf 'fixture keep\n' > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/.fixture-keep"
cat > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/SKILL.md" <<'EOF'
# Example Skill
Fixture content.
EOF
git -C "$repo" add plugins/superpowers/.fixture-keep
git -C "$repo" add plugins/superpowers/skills/example/SKILL.md
commit_fixture "$repo" "Initial destination fixture"
}
add_openai_agent_metadata_fixture() {
local repo="$1"
mkdir -p "$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/agents"
cat > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/agents/openai.yaml" <<'EOF'
interface:
display_name: "Example"
short_description: "Destination-owned OpenAI metadata"
EOF
git -C "$repo" add plugins/superpowers/skills/example/agents/openai.yaml
commit_fixture "$repo" "Add OpenAI agent metadata fixture"
}
dirty_tracked_destination_skill() {
local repo="$1"
cat > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/SKILL.md" <<'EOF'
# Example Skill
Locally modified fixture content.
EOF
}
write_synced_destination_fixture() {
local repo="$1"
mkdir -p \
"$repo/plugins/superpowers/.codex-plugin" \
"$repo/plugins/superpowers/.private-journal" \
"$repo/plugins/superpowers/assets" \
"$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/agents" \
"$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example"
cat > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/.codex-plugin/plugin.json" <<EOF
{
"name": "superpowers",
"version": "$MANIFEST_VERSION"
}
EOF
cat > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/assets/superpowers-small.svg" <<'EOF'
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 1 1"></svg>
EOF
printf 'png fixture\n' > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/assets/app-icon.png"
cat > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/SKILL.md" <<'EOF'
# Example Skill
Fixture content.
EOF
cat > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/agents/openai.yaml" <<'EOF'
interface:
display_name: "Example"
short_description: "Destination-owned OpenAI metadata"
EOF
printf 'tracked keep\n' > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/.private-journal/keep.txt"
git -C "$repo" add \
plugins/superpowers/.codex-plugin/plugin.json \
plugins/superpowers/assets/app-icon.png \
plugins/superpowers/assets/superpowers-small.svg \
plugins/superpowers/skills/example/agents/openai.yaml \
plugins/superpowers/skills/example/SKILL.md \
plugins/superpowers/.private-journal/keep.txt
commit_fixture "$repo" "Initial synced destination fixture"
}
write_stale_ignored_destination_fixture() {
local repo="$1"
mkdir -p "$repo/plugins/superpowers/.private-journal"
printf 'fixture keep\n' > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/.fixture-keep"
printf 'stale ignored leak\n' > "$repo/plugins/superpowers/.private-journal/leak.txt"
git -C "$repo" add plugins/superpowers/.fixture-keep
commit_fixture "$repo" "Initial stale ignored destination fixture"
}
write_fake_gh() {
local bin_dir="$1"
mkdir -p "$bin_dir"
cat > "$bin_dir/gh" <<'EOF'
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
if [[ "${1:-}" == "auth" && "${2:-}" == "status" ]]; then
exit 0
fi
echo "unexpected gh invocation: $*" >&2
exit 1
EOF
chmod +x "$bin_dir/gh"
}
run_preview() {
local upstream="$1"
local dest="$2"
local fake_bin="$3"
PATH="$fake_bin:$PATH" "$BASH_UNDER_TEST" "$upstream/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh" -n --local "$dest" 2>&1
}
run_bootstrap_preview() {
local upstream="$1"
local dest="$2"
local fake_bin="$3"
PATH="$fake_bin:$PATH" "$BASH_UNDER_TEST" "$upstream/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh" -n --bootstrap --local "$dest" 2>&1
}
run_preview_without_manifest() {
local upstream="$1"
local dest="$2"
local fake_bin="$3"
rm -f "$upstream/.codex-plugin/plugin.json"
PATH="$fake_bin:$PATH" "$BASH_UNDER_TEST" "$upstream/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh" -n --local "$dest" 2>&1
}
run_preview_with_stale_ignored_destination() {
local upstream="$1"
local dest="$2"
local fake_bin="$3"
PATH="$fake_bin:$PATH" "$BASH_UNDER_TEST" "$upstream/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh" -n --local "$dest" 2>&1
}
run_apply() {
local upstream="$1"
local dest="$2"
local fake_bin="$3"
PATH="$fake_bin:$PATH" "$BASH_UNDER_TEST" "$upstream/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh" -y --local "$dest" 2>&1
}
run_help() {
local upstream="$1"
local fake_bin="$2"
PATH="$fake_bin:$PATH" "$BASH_UNDER_TEST" "$upstream/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh" --help 2>&1
}
write_bootstrap_destination_fixture() {
local repo="$1"
printf 'bootstrap fixture\n' > "$repo/README.md"
git -C "$repo" add README.md
commit_fixture "$repo" "Initial bootstrap destination fixture"
}
main() {
local upstream
local mixed_only_upstream
local dest
local dest_branch
local mixed_only_dest
local stale_dest
local dirty_apply_dest
local dirty_apply_dest_branch
local noop_apply_dest
local noop_apply_dest_branch
local fake_bin
local bootstrap_dest
local bootstrap_dest_branch
local preview_status
local preview_output
local preview_section
local bootstrap_status
local bootstrap_output
local missing_manifest_status
local missing_manifest_output
local mixed_only_status
local mixed_only_output
local stale_preview_status
local stale_preview_output
local stale_preview_section
local dirty_apply_status
local dirty_apply_output
local noop_apply_status
local noop_apply_output
local help_output
local script_source
local dirty_skill_path
local noop_openai_metadata_path
echo "=== Test: sync-to-codex-plugin dry-run regression ==="
TEST_ROOT="$(mktemp -d)"
trap cleanup EXIT
upstream="$TEST_ROOT/upstream"
mixed_only_upstream="$TEST_ROOT/mixed-only-upstream"
dest="$TEST_ROOT/destination"
mixed_only_dest="$TEST_ROOT/mixed-only-destination"
stale_dest="$TEST_ROOT/stale-destination"
dirty_apply_dest="$TEST_ROOT/dirty-apply-destination"
dirty_apply_dest_branch="fixture/dirty-apply-target"
noop_apply_dest="$TEST_ROOT/noop-apply-destination"
noop_apply_dest_branch="fixture/noop-apply-target"
bootstrap_dest="$TEST_ROOT/bootstrap-destination"
dest_branch="fixture/preview-target"
bootstrap_dest_branch="fixture/bootstrap-preview-target"
fake_bin="$TEST_ROOT/bin"
init_repo "$upstream"
write_upstream_fixture "$upstream"
init_repo "$mixed_only_upstream"
write_upstream_fixture "$mixed_only_upstream" 0
init_repo "$dest"
write_destination_fixture "$dest"
add_openai_agent_metadata_fixture "$dest"
checkout_fixture_branch "$dest" "$dest_branch"
dirty_tracked_destination_skill "$dest"
init_repo "$mixed_only_dest"
write_destination_fixture "$mixed_only_dest"
init_repo "$stale_dest"
write_stale_ignored_destination_fixture "$stale_dest"
init_repo "$dirty_apply_dest"
write_synced_destination_fixture "$dirty_apply_dest"
checkout_fixture_branch "$dirty_apply_dest" "$dirty_apply_dest_branch"
dirty_tracked_destination_skill "$dirty_apply_dest"
init_repo "$noop_apply_dest"
write_synced_destination_fixture "$noop_apply_dest"
checkout_fixture_branch "$noop_apply_dest" "$noop_apply_dest_branch"
init_repo "$bootstrap_dest"
write_bootstrap_destination_fixture "$bootstrap_dest"
checkout_fixture_branch "$bootstrap_dest" "$bootstrap_dest_branch"
write_fake_gh "$fake_bin"
# This regression test is about dry-run content, so capture the preview
# output even if the current script exits nonzero in --local mode.
set +e
preview_output="$(run_preview "$upstream" "$dest" "$fake_bin")"
preview_status=$?
bootstrap_output="$(run_bootstrap_preview "$upstream" "$bootstrap_dest" "$fake_bin")"
bootstrap_status=$?
mixed_only_output="$(run_preview "$mixed_only_upstream" "$mixed_only_dest" "$fake_bin")"
mixed_only_status=$?
stale_preview_output="$(run_preview_with_stale_ignored_destination "$upstream" "$stale_dest" "$fake_bin")"
stale_preview_status=$?
dirty_apply_output="$(run_apply "$upstream" "$dirty_apply_dest" "$fake_bin")"
dirty_apply_status=$?
noop_apply_output="$(run_apply "$upstream" "$noop_apply_dest" "$fake_bin")"
noop_apply_status=$?
missing_manifest_output="$(run_preview_without_manifest "$upstream" "$dest" "$fake_bin")"
missing_manifest_status=$?
set -e
help_output="$(run_help "$upstream" "$fake_bin")"
script_source="$(cat "$upstream/scripts/sync-to-codex-plugin.sh")"
preview_section="$(printf '%s\n' "$preview_output" | sed -n '/^=== Preview (rsync --dry-run) ===$/,/^=== End preview ===$/p')"
stale_preview_section="$(printf '%s\n' "$stale_preview_output" | sed -n '/^=== Preview (rsync --dry-run) ===$/,/^=== End preview ===$/p')"
dirty_skill_path="$dirty_apply_dest/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/SKILL.md"
noop_openai_metadata_path="$noop_apply_dest/plugins/superpowers/skills/example/agents/openai.yaml"
echo ""
echo "Preview assertions..."
assert_equals "$preview_status" "0" "Preview exits successfully"
assert_contains "$preview_output" "Version: $MANIFEST_VERSION" "Preview uses manifest version"
assert_not_contains "$preview_output" "Version: $PACKAGE_VERSION" "Preview does not use package.json version"
assert_contains "$preview_section" ".codex-plugin/plugin.json" "Preview includes manifest path"
assert_contains "$preview_section" "assets/superpowers-small.svg" "Preview includes SVG asset"
assert_contains "$preview_section" "assets/app-icon.png" "Preview includes PNG asset"
assert_contains "$preview_section" ".private-journal/keep.txt" "Preview includes tracked ignored file"
assert_not_contains "$preview_section" ".private-journal/leak.txt" "Preview excludes ignored untracked file"
assert_not_contains "$preview_section" "ignored-cache/" "Preview excludes pure ignored directories"
assert_not_contains "$preview_output" "Overlay file (.codex-plugin/plugin.json) will be regenerated" "Preview omits overlay regeneration note"
assert_not_contains "$preview_output" "Assets (superpowers-small.svg, app-icon.png) will be seeded from" "Preview omits assets seeding note"
assert_contains "$preview_section" "skills/example/SKILL.md" "Preview reflects dirty tracked destination file"
assert_not_matches "$preview_section" "\\*deleting +skills/example/agents/openai\\.yaml" "Preview preserves destination-owned OpenAI agent metadata"
assert_current_branch "$dest" "$dest_branch" "Preview leaves destination checkout on its original branch"
assert_branch_absent "$dest" "sync/superpowers-*" "Preview does not create sync branch in destination checkout"
echo ""
echo "Mixed-directory assertions..."
assert_equals "$mixed_only_status" "0" "Mixed ignored directory preview exits successfully under /bin/bash"
assert_contains "$mixed_only_output" ".private-journal/keep.txt" "Mixed ignored directory preview still includes tracked ignored file"
assert_not_contains "$mixed_only_output" "ignored-cache/" "Mixed ignored directory preview has no pure ignored directory fixture"
echo ""
echo "Convergence assertions..."
assert_equals "$stale_preview_status" "0" "Stale ignored destination preview exits successfully"
assert_matches "$stale_preview_section" "\\*deleting +\\.private-journal/leak\\.txt" "Preview deletes stale ignored destination file"
echo ""
echo "Bootstrap assertions..."
assert_equals "$bootstrap_status" "0" "Bootstrap preview exits successfully"
assert_contains "$bootstrap_output" "Mode: BOOTSTRAP (creating plugins/superpowers/ when absent)" "Bootstrap preview describes directory creation"
assert_not_contains "$bootstrap_output" "Assets:" "Bootstrap preview omits external assets path"
assert_contains "$bootstrap_output" "Dry run only. Nothing was changed or pushed." "Bootstrap preview remains dry-run only"
assert_path_absent "$bootstrap_dest/plugins/superpowers" "Bootstrap preview does not create destination plugin directory"
assert_current_branch "$bootstrap_dest" "$bootstrap_dest_branch" "Bootstrap preview leaves destination checkout on its original branch"
assert_branch_absent "$bootstrap_dest" "bootstrap/superpowers-*" "Bootstrap preview does not create bootstrap branch in destination checkout"
echo ""
echo "Apply assertions..."
assert_equals "$dirty_apply_status" "1" "Dirty local apply exits with failure"
assert_contains "$dirty_apply_output" "ERROR: local checkout has uncommitted changes under 'plugins/superpowers'" "Dirty local apply reports protected destination path"
assert_current_branch "$dirty_apply_dest" "$dirty_apply_dest_branch" "Dirty local apply leaves destination checkout on its original branch"
assert_branch_absent "$dirty_apply_dest" "sync/superpowers-*" "Dirty local apply does not create sync branch in destination checkout"
assert_file_equals "$dirty_skill_path" "# Example Skill
Locally modified fixture content." "Dirty local apply preserves tracked working-tree file content"
assert_equals "$noop_apply_status" "0" "Clean no-op local apply exits successfully"
assert_contains "$noop_apply_output" "No changes — embedded plugin was already in sync with upstream" "Clean no-op local apply reports no changes"
assert_current_branch "$noop_apply_dest" "$noop_apply_dest_branch" "Clean no-op local apply leaves destination checkout on its original branch"
assert_branch_absent "$noop_apply_dest" "sync/superpowers-*" "Clean no-op local apply does not create sync branch in destination checkout"
assert_file_equals "$noop_openai_metadata_path" "interface:
display_name: \"Example\"
short_description: \"Destination-owned OpenAI metadata\"" "Clean no-op local apply preserves OpenAI agent metadata"
echo ""
echo "Missing manifest assertions..."
assert_equals "$missing_manifest_status" "1" "Missing manifest exits with failure"
assert_contains "$missing_manifest_output" "ERROR: committed Codex manifest missing at" "Missing manifest reports committed manifest path"
echo ""
echo "Help assertions..."
assert_not_contains "$help_output" "--assets-src" "Help omits --assets-src"
echo ""
echo "Source assertions..."
assert_not_contains "$script_source" "regenerated inline" "Source drops regenerated inline phrasing"
assert_not_contains "$script_source" "Brand Assets directory" "Source drops Brand Assets directory phrasing"
assert_not_contains "$script_source" "--assets-src" "Source drops --assets-src"
if [[ $FAILURES -ne 0 ]]; then
echo ""
echo "FAILED: $FAILURES assertion(s) failed."
exit 1
fi
echo ""
echo "PASS"
}
main "$@"

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
The plan is done. docs/plans/auth-system.md has everything. The plan is done. docs/superpowers/plans/auth-system.md has everything.
Do subagent-driven development on this - start with Task 1, dispatch a subagent, then we'll review. Do subagent-driven development on this - start with Task 1, dispatch a subagent, then we'll review.

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
Great, the plan is complete. I've saved it to docs/plans/auth-system.md. Great, the plan is complete. I've saved it to docs/superpowers/plans/auth-system.md.
Here's a summary of what we designed: Here's a summary of what we designed:
- Task 1: Add User Model with email/password fields - Task 1: Add User Model with email/password fields

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
[Previous assistant message]: [Previous assistant message]:
Plan complete and saved to docs/plans/auth-system.md. Plan complete and saved to docs/superpowers/plans/auth-system.md.
Two execution options: Two execution options:
1. Subagent-Driven (this session) - I dispatch a fresh subagent per task, review between tasks, fast iteration within this conversation 1. Subagent-Driven (this session) - I dispatch a fresh subagent per task, review between tasks, fast iteration within this conversation

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
I have my implementation plan ready at docs/plans/auth-system.md. I have my implementation plan ready at docs/superpowers/plans/auth-system.md.
I want to use subagent-driven-development to execute it. That means: I want to use subagent-driven-development to execute it. That means:
- Dispatch a fresh subagent for each task in the plan - Dispatch a fresh subagent for each task in the plan

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
I have a plan at docs/plans/auth-system.md that's ready to implement. I have a plan at docs/superpowers/plans/auth-system.md that's ready to implement.
subagent-driven-development, please subagent-driven-development, please

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
Plan is at docs/plans/auth-system.md. Plan is at docs/superpowers/plans/auth-system.md.
subagent-driven-development, please. Don't waste time - just read the plan and start dispatching subagents immediately. subagent-driven-development, please. Don't waste time - just read the plan and start dispatching subagents immediately.

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