Files
gstack/CONTRIBUTING.md
Garry Tan b7a3bf108d fix: Codex compatibility — 1024-char cap, duplicate skills, repo-local installs, kiro support (v0.11.2.0) (#346)
* fix: cap gstack skill descriptions for codex (#251)

Compresses SKILL.md.tmpl root description to <1024 chars (Codex token limit).
Adds description-length validation test. Includes /autoplan in compressed
skill list (added since PR was branched).

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

* fix: skip sidecar dir in Codex skill linking (#269)

Adds guard to skip .agents/skills/gstack in link_codex_skill_dirs() —
it's a runtime asset sidecar, not a standalone skill. Prevents duplicate
skill discovery and symlink overwriting.

Fixes #261

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

* fix: generate .agents directory at setup time instead of shipping duplicates (#308)

Removes 14K+ lines of committed generated Codex skill files from git.
.agents/ is now gitignored and generated at setup time via
`bun run gen:skill-docs --host codex`. Updates CI workflow to validate
generation instead of checking committed file freshness.

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

* fix: avoid duplicate Codex skill discovery (#236)

Adds migrate_direct_codex_install() to move old direct installs from
~/.codex/skills/gstack to ~/.gstack/repos/gstack. Adds
create_codex_runtime_root() to expose only runtime assets (bin/, browse/,
review files) via symlinks instead of symlinking the entire repo.

Fixes #235

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

* feat: support repo-local Codex installs (#317)

Changes gen-skill-docs.ts to use dynamic $GSTACK_ROOT/$GSTACK_BIN/$GSTACK_BROWSE
variables in generated Codex preambles instead of hardcoded ~/.codex/ paths.
Renames GSTACK_DIR → SOURCE_GSTACK_DIR/INSTALL_GSTACK_DIR throughout setup for
clarity. Supports both global (~/.codex/skills/) and repo-local (.agents/skills/)
Codex installs.

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

* feat: add --host kiro support to setup script (#309)

Adds Kiro CLI as a supported agent platform. Setup detects kiro-cli,
copies+sed-rewrites SKILL.md paths from Codex/Claude to Kiro format,
and symlinks runtime assets (bin/, browse/).

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

* test: add sidecar skip, GSTACK_ROOT, and kiro coverage (T1-T3)

Adds 3 tests identified during CEO/Eng review:
- T1: link_codex_skill_dirs() contains sidecar skip guard
- T2: generated Codex preambles use dynamic $GSTACK_ROOT paths
- T3: setup supports --host kiro with INSTALL_KIRO and sed rewrites

Also fixes existing test to expect kiro in --host case statement.

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

* fix: review fixes — ETHOS.md, runtime root, repo-local guard, kiro assets, upgrade paths

Paranoid 4-pass review found 7 issues, all fixed:
- Add ETHOS.md to create_codex_runtime_root
- Clean old real dirs (not just symlinks) on upgrade
- Skip runtime root for repo-local installs (prevent self-referential symlinks)
- Add review/, ETHOS.md, gstack-upgrade/ to Kiro install
- Update gstack-upgrade to detect ~/.gstack/repos/ and .agents/skills/
- Guard --host without value from silent exit
- Fix Kiro sed patterns + timeout instruction in gen-skill-docs.ts

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

* chore: bump version and changelog (v0.11.2.0)

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

* chore: remove last tracked .agents/ file from git index

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

---------

Co-authored-by: cweill <cweill@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: mvanhorn <mvanhorn@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: cskwork <cskwork@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: shichangs <shichangs@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: pengwk <pengwk@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: AnshulDesai <AnshulDesai@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-03-22 19:27:10 -07:00

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Markdown

# Contributing to gstack
Thanks for wanting to make gstack better. Whether you're fixing a typo in a skill prompt or building an entirely new workflow, this guide will get you up and running fast.
## Quick start
gstack skills are Markdown files that Claude Code discovers from a `skills/` directory. Normally they live at `~/.claude/skills/gstack/` (your global install). But when you're developing gstack itself, you want Claude Code to use the skills *in your working tree* — so edits take effect instantly without copying or deploying anything.
That's what dev mode does. It symlinks your repo into the local `.claude/skills/` directory so Claude Code reads skills straight from your checkout.
```bash
git clone <repo> && cd gstack
bun install # install dependencies
bin/dev-setup # activate dev mode
```
Now edit any `SKILL.md`, invoke it in Claude Code (e.g. `/review`), and see your changes live. When you're done developing:
```bash
bin/dev-teardown # deactivate — back to your global install
```
## Contributor mode
Contributor mode turns gstack into a self-improving tool. Enable it and Claude Code
will periodically reflect on its gstack experience — rating it 0-10 at the end of
each major workflow step. When something isn't a 10, it thinks about why and files
a report to `~/.gstack/contributor-logs/` with what happened, repro steps, and what
would make it better.
```bash
~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config set gstack_contributor true
```
The logs are for **you**. When something bugs you enough to fix, the report is
already written. Fork gstack, symlink your fork into the project where you hit
the issue, fix it, and open a PR.
### The contributor workflow
1. **Use gstack normally** — contributor mode reflects and logs issues automatically
2. **Check your logs:** `ls ~/.gstack/contributor-logs/`
3. **Fork and clone gstack** (if you haven't already)
4. **Symlink your fork into the project where you hit the bug:**
```bash
# In your core project (the one where gstack annoyed you)
ln -sfn /path/to/your/gstack-fork .claude/skills/gstack
cd .claude/skills/gstack && bun install && bun run build
```
5. **Fix the issue** — your changes are live immediately in this project
6. **Test by actually using gstack** — do the thing that annoyed you, verify it's fixed
7. **Open a PR from your fork**
This is the best way to contribute: fix gstack while doing your real work, in the
project where you actually felt the pain.
### Session awareness
When you have 3+ gstack sessions open simultaneously, every question tells you which project, which branch, and what's happening. No more staring at a question thinking "wait, which window is this?" The format is consistent across all skills.
## Working on gstack inside the gstack repo
When you're editing gstack skills and want to test them by actually using gstack
in the same repo, `bin/dev-setup` wires this up. It creates `.claude/skills/`
symlinks (gitignored) pointing back to your working tree, so Claude Code uses
your local edits instead of the global install.
```
gstack/ <- your working tree
├── .claude/skills/ <- created by dev-setup (gitignored)
│ ├── gstack -> ../../ <- symlink back to repo root
│ ├── review -> gstack/review
│ ├── ship -> gstack/ship
│ └── ... <- one symlink per skill
├── review/
│ └── SKILL.md <- edit this, test with /review
├── ship/
│ └── SKILL.md
├── browse/
│ ├── src/ <- TypeScript source
│ └── dist/ <- compiled binary (gitignored)
└── ...
```
## Day-to-day workflow
```bash
# 1. Enter dev mode
bin/dev-setup
# 2. Edit a skill
vim review/SKILL.md
# 3. Test it in Claude Code — changes are live
# > /review
# 4. Editing browse source? Rebuild the binary
bun run build
# 5. Done for the day? Tear down
bin/dev-teardown
```
## Testing & evals
### Setup
```bash
# 1. Copy .env.example and add your API key
cp .env.example .env
# Edit .env → set ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=sk-ant-...
# 2. Install deps (if you haven't already)
bun install
```
Bun auto-loads `.env` — no extra config. Conductor workspaces inherit `.env` from the main worktree automatically (see "Conductor workspaces" below).
### Test tiers
| Tier | Command | Cost | What it tests |
|------|---------|------|---------------|
| 1 — Static | `bun test` | Free | Command validation, snapshot flags, SKILL.md correctness, TODOS-format.md refs, observability unit tests |
| 2 — E2E | `bun run test:e2e` | ~$3.85 | Full skill execution via `claude -p` subprocess |
| 3 — LLM eval | `bun run test:evals` | ~$0.15 standalone | LLM-as-judge scoring of generated SKILL.md docs |
| 2+3 | `bun run test:evals` | ~$4 combined | E2E + LLM-as-judge (runs both) |
```bash
bun test # Tier 1 only (runs on every commit, <5s)
bun run test:e2e # Tier 2: E2E only (needs EVALS=1, can't run inside Claude Code)
bun run test:evals # Tier 2 + 3 combined (~$4/run)
```
### Tier 1: Static validation (free)
Runs automatically with `bun test`. No API keys needed.
- **Skill parser tests** (`test/skill-parser.test.ts`) — Extracts every `$B` command from SKILL.md bash code blocks and validates against the command registry in `browse/src/commands.ts`. Catches typos, removed commands, and invalid snapshot flags.
- **Skill validation tests** (`test/skill-validation.test.ts`) — Validates that SKILL.md files reference only real commands and flags, and that command descriptions meet quality thresholds.
- **Generator tests** (`test/gen-skill-docs.test.ts`) — Tests the template system: verifies placeholders resolve correctly, output includes value hints for flags (e.g. `-d <N>` not just `-d`), enriched descriptions for key commands (e.g. `is` lists valid states, `press` lists key examples).
### Tier 2: E2E via `claude -p` (~$3.85/run)
Spawns `claude -p` as a subprocess with `--output-format stream-json --verbose`, streams NDJSON for real-time progress, and scans for browse errors. This is the closest thing to "does this skill actually work end-to-end?"
```bash
# Must run from a plain terminal — can't nest inside Claude Code or Conductor
EVALS=1 bun test test/skill-e2e-*.test.ts
```
- Gated by `EVALS=1` env var (prevents accidental expensive runs)
- Auto-skips if running inside Claude Code (`claude -p` can't nest)
- API connectivity pre-check — fails fast on ConnectionRefused before burning budget
- Real-time progress to stderr: `[Ns] turn T tool #C: Name(...)`
- Saves full NDJSON transcripts and failure JSON for debugging
- Tests live in `test/skill-e2e-*.test.ts` (split by category), runner logic in `test/helpers/session-runner.ts`
### E2E observability
When E2E tests run, they produce machine-readable artifacts in `~/.gstack-dev/`:
| Artifact | Path | Purpose |
|----------|------|---------|
| Heartbeat | `e2e-live.json` | Current test status (updated per tool call) |
| Partial results | `evals/_partial-e2e.json` | Completed tests (survives kills) |
| Progress log | `e2e-runs/{runId}/progress.log` | Append-only text log |
| NDJSON transcripts | `e2e-runs/{runId}/{test}.ndjson` | Raw `claude -p` output per test |
| Failure JSON | `e2e-runs/{runId}/{test}-failure.json` | Diagnostic data on failure |
**Live dashboard:** Run `bun run eval:watch` in a second terminal to see a live dashboard showing completed tests, the currently running test, and cost. Use `--tail` to also show the last 10 lines of progress.log.
**Eval history tools:**
```bash
bun run eval:list # list all eval runs (turns, duration, cost per run)
bun run eval:compare # compare two runs — shows per-test deltas + Takeaway commentary
bun run eval:summary # aggregate stats + per-test efficiency averages across runs
```
**Eval comparison commentary:** `eval:compare` generates natural-language Takeaway sections interpreting what changed between runs — flagging regressions, noting improvements, calling out efficiency gains (fewer turns, faster, cheaper), and producing an overall summary. This is driven by `generateCommentary()` in `eval-store.ts`.
Artifacts are never cleaned up — they accumulate in `~/.gstack-dev/` for post-mortem debugging and trend analysis.
### Tier 3: LLM-as-judge (~$0.15/run)
Uses Claude Sonnet to score generated SKILL.md docs on three dimensions:
- **Clarity** — Can an AI agent understand the instructions without ambiguity?
- **Completeness** — Are all commands, flags, and usage patterns documented?
- **Actionability** — Can the agent execute tasks using only the information in the doc?
Each dimension is scored 1-5. Threshold: every dimension must score **≥ 4**. There's also a regression test that compares generated docs against the hand-maintained baseline from `origin/main` — generated must score equal or higher.
```bash
# Needs ANTHROPIC_API_KEY in .env — included in bun run test:evals
```
- Uses `claude-sonnet-4-6` for scoring stability
- Tests live in `test/skill-llm-eval.test.ts`
- Calls the Anthropic API directly (not `claude -p`), so it works from anywhere including inside Claude Code
### CI
A GitHub Action (`.github/workflows/skill-docs.yml`) runs `bun run gen:skill-docs --dry-run` on every push and PR. If the generated SKILL.md files differ from what's committed, CI fails. This catches stale docs before they merge.
Tests run against the browse binary directly — they don't require dev mode.
## Editing SKILL.md files
SKILL.md files are **generated** from `.tmpl` templates. Don't edit the `.md` directly — your changes will be overwritten on the next build.
```bash
# 1. Edit the template
vim SKILL.md.tmpl # or browse/SKILL.md.tmpl
# 2. Regenerate for both hosts
bun run gen:skill-docs
bun run gen:skill-docs --host codex
# 3. Check health (reports both Claude and Codex)
bun run skill:check
# Or use watch mode — auto-regenerates on save
bun run dev:skill
```
For template authoring best practices (natural language over bash-isms, dynamic branch detection, `{{BASE_BRANCH_DETECT}}` usage), see CLAUDE.md's "Writing SKILL templates" section.
To add a browse command, add it to `browse/src/commands.ts`. To add a snapshot flag, add it to `SNAPSHOT_FLAGS` in `browse/src/snapshot.ts`. Then rebuild.
## Dual-host development (Claude + Codex)
gstack generates SKILL.md files for two hosts: **Claude** (`.claude/skills/`) and **Codex** (`.agents/skills/`). Every template change needs to be generated for both.
### Generating for both hosts
```bash
# Generate Claude output (default)
bun run gen:skill-docs
# Generate Codex output
bun run gen:skill-docs --host codex
# --host agents is an alias for --host codex
# Or use build, which does both + compiles binaries
bun run build
```
### What changes between hosts
| Aspect | Claude | Codex |
|--------|--------|-------|
| Output directory | `{skill}/SKILL.md` | `.agents/skills/gstack-{skill}/SKILL.md` (generated at setup, gitignored) |
| Frontmatter | Full (name, description, allowed-tools, hooks, version) | Minimal (name + description only) |
| Paths | `~/.claude/skills/gstack` | `$GSTACK_ROOT` (`.agents/skills/gstack` in a repo, otherwise `~/.codex/skills/gstack`) |
| Hook skills | `hooks:` frontmatter (enforced by Claude) | Inline safety advisory prose (advisory only) |
| `/codex` skill | Included (Claude wraps codex exec) | Excluded (self-referential) |
### Testing Codex output
```bash
# Run all static tests (includes Codex validation)
bun test
# Check freshness for both hosts
bun run gen:skill-docs --dry-run
bun run gen:skill-docs --host codex --dry-run
# Health dashboard covers both hosts
bun run skill:check
```
### Dev setup for .agents/
When you run `bin/dev-setup`, it creates symlinks in both `.claude/skills/` and `.agents/skills/` (if applicable), so Codex-compatible agents can discover your dev skills too. The `.agents/` directory is generated at setup time from `.tmpl` templates — it is gitignored and not committed.
### Adding a new skill
When you add a new skill template, both hosts get it automatically:
1. Create `{skill}/SKILL.md.tmpl`
2. Run `bun run gen:skill-docs` (Claude output) and `bun run gen:skill-docs --host codex` (Codex output)
3. The dynamic template discovery picks it up — no static list to update
4. Commit `{skill}/SKILL.md` — `.agents/` is generated at setup time and gitignored
## Conductor workspaces
If you're using [Conductor](https://conductor.build) to run multiple Claude Code sessions in parallel, `conductor.json` wires up workspace lifecycle automatically:
| Hook | Script | What it does |
|------|--------|-------------|
| `setup` | `bin/dev-setup` | Copies `.env` from main worktree, installs deps, symlinks skills |
| `archive` | `bin/dev-teardown` | Removes skill symlinks, cleans up `.claude/` directory |
When Conductor creates a new workspace, `bin/dev-setup` runs automatically. It detects the main worktree (via `git worktree list`), copies your `.env` so API keys carry over, and sets up dev mode — no manual steps needed.
**First-time setup:** Put your `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY` in `.env` in the main repo (see `.env.example`). Every Conductor workspace inherits it automatically.
## Things to know
- **SKILL.md files are generated.** Edit the `.tmpl` template, not the `.md`. Run `bun run gen:skill-docs` to regenerate.
- **TODOS.md is the unified backlog.** Organized by skill/component with P0-P4 priorities. `/ship` auto-detects completed items. All planning/review/retro skills read it for context.
- **Browse source changes need a rebuild.** If you touch `browse/src/*.ts`, run `bun run build`.
- **Dev mode shadows your global install.** Project-local skills take priority over `~/.claude/skills/gstack`. `bin/dev-teardown` restores the global one.
- **Conductor workspaces are independent.** Each workspace is its own git worktree. `bin/dev-setup` runs automatically via `conductor.json`.
- **`.env` propagates across worktrees.** Set it once in the main repo, all Conductor workspaces get it.
- **`.claude/skills/` is gitignored.** The symlinks never get committed.
## Testing your changes in a real project
**This is the recommended way to develop gstack.** Symlink your gstack checkout
into the project where you actually use it, so your changes are live while you
do real work:
```bash
# In your core project
ln -sfn /path/to/your/gstack-checkout .claude/skills/gstack
cd .claude/skills/gstack && bun install && bun run build
```
Now every gstack skill invocation in this project uses your working tree. Edit a
template, run `bun run gen:skill-docs`, and the next `/review` or `/qa` call picks
it up immediately.
**To go back to the stable global install**, just remove the symlink:
```bash
rm .claude/skills/gstack
```
Claude Code falls back to `~/.claude/skills/gstack/` automatically.
### Alternative: point your global install at a branch
If you don't want per-project symlinks, you can switch the global install:
```bash
cd ~/.claude/skills/gstack
git fetch origin
git checkout origin/<branch>
bun install && bun run build
```
This affects all projects. To revert: `git checkout main && git pull && bun run build`.
## Community PR triage (wave process)
When community PRs accumulate, batch them into themed waves:
1. **Categorize** — group by theme (security, features, infra, docs)
2. **Deduplicate** — if two PRs fix the same thing, pick the one that
changes fewer lines. Close the other with a note pointing to the winner.
3. **Collector branch** — create `pr-wave-N`, merge clean PRs, resolve
conflicts for dirty ones, verify with `bun test && bun run build`
4. **Close with context** — every closed PR gets a comment explaining
why and what (if anything) supersedes it. Contributors did real work;
respect that with clear communication.
5. **Ship as one PR** — single PR to main with all attributions preserved
in merge commits. Include a summary table of what merged and what closed.
See [PR #205](../../pull/205) (v0.8.3) for the first wave as an example.
## Shipping your changes
When you're happy with your skill edits:
```bash
/ship
```
This runs tests, reviews the diff, triages Greptile comments (with 2-tier escalation), manages TODOS.md, bumps the version, and opens a PR. See `ship/SKILL.md` for the full workflow.