Files
gstack/CONTRIBUTING.md
Garry Tan 6000af4589 feat: founder discovery engine + /debug skill — v0.7.0 (#185)
* feat: add escalation protocol to preamble — all skills get DONE/BLOCKED/NEEDS_CONTEXT

Every skill now reports completion status (DONE, DONE_WITH_CONCERNS, BLOCKED,
NEEDS_CONTEXT) and has escalation rules: 3 failed attempts → STOP, security
uncertainty → STOP, scope exceeds verification → STOP.

"It is always OK to stop and say 'this is too hard for me.'"

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

* feat: add verification gate to /ship (Step 6.5) — no push without fresh evidence

Before pushing, re-verify tests if code changed during review fixes.
Rationalization prevention: "Should work now" → RUN IT.
"I'm confident" → Confidence is not evidence.

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

* feat: add scope drift detection + verification of claims to /review

Step 1.5: Before reviewing code quality, check if the diff matches stated
intent. Flags scope creep and missing requirements (INFORMATIONAL).

Step 5 addition: Every review claim must cite evidence — "this pattern is
safe" needs a line reference, "tests cover this" needs a test name.

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

* feat: mandatory implementation alternatives + design doc lookup in /plan-ceo-review

Step 0C-bis: Every plan must consider 2-3 approaches (minimal viable vs ideal
architecture) before mode selection. RECOMMENDATION required.

Pre-Review System Audit now checks ~/.gstack/projects/ for /brainstorm design
docs (branch-filtered with fallback).

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

* feat: design doc lookup in /plan-eng-review + fix branch name sanitization

Step 0 now checks ~/.gstack/projects/ for /brainstorm design docs
(branch-filtered with fallback, reads Supersedes: for revision context).

Fix: branch names with '/' (e.g. garrytan/better-process) now get
sanitized via tr '/' '-' in test plan artifact filenames.

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

* feat: new /brainstorm and /debug skills

/brainstorm: Socratic design exploration before planning. Context gathering,
clarifying questions (smart-skip), related design discovery (keyword grep),
premise challenge, forced alternatives, design doc artifact with lineage
tracking (Supersedes: field). Writes to ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/.

/debug: Systematic root-cause debugging. Iron Law: no fixes without root
cause investigation. Pattern analysis, hypothesis testing with 3-strike
escalation, structured DEBUG REPORT output.

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

* test: structural tests for new skills + escalation protocol assertions

Add brainstorm + debug to skillsWithUpdateCheck and skillsWithPreamble arrays.
Add structural tests: brainstorm (Phase 1-6, Design Doc, Supersedes, Smart-skip),
debug (Iron Law, Root Cause, Pattern Analysis, Hypothesis, DEBUG REPORT, 3-strike).
Add escalation protocol tests (DONE_WITH_CONCERNS, BLOCKED, NEEDS_CONTEXT) for
all preamble skills.

Also: 2 new TODOs (design docs → Supabase sync, /plan-design-review skill),
update CLAUDE.md project structure with new skill directories.

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

* chore: bump version and changelog (v0.6.0)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: rename /brainstorm → /office-hours across references

Update CHANGELOG, CLAUDE.md, TODOS, design-consultation, plan-ceo-review,
and gen-skill-docs to reference the new office-hours skill name.

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

* feat: YC Office Hours — dual-mode product diagnostic + builder brainstorm

Rewrite /office-hours with two modes:

Startup mode: six forcing questions (Demand Reality, Status Quo, Desperate
Specificity, Narrowest Wedge, Observation & Surprise, Future-Fit) that push
founders toward radical honesty about demand, users, and product decisions.
Includes smart routing by product stage, intrapreneurship adaptation, and
YC apply CTA for strong-signal founders.

Builder mode: generative brainstorming for side projects, hackathons,
learning, and open source. Enthusiastic collaborator tone, design thinking
questions, no business interrogation.

Mode is determined by an explicit question in Phase 1 — no guessing.

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

* test: add 14 assertions for YC Office Hours content coverage

Validates dual-mode structure (Startup/Builder), all six forcing questions,
builder brainstorming content, intrapreneurship adaptation, YC apply CTA,
and operating principles for both modes. 192 tests total, all passing.

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

* docs: update project documentation for v0.6.1

- README.md: added /office-hours and /debug to skills table, updated
  skill count from 13 to 15, added both to install instructions
- docs/skills.md: added /office-hours and /debug deep dive sections
- CLAUDE.md: updated office-hours description to reflect dual-mode
- CONTRIBUTING.md: updated skill count from 13 to 15
- CHANGELOG.md: added YC Office Hours and /debug entries to 0.6.0

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

* feat: founder discovery engine in /office-hours (v0.7.0)

Turn /office-hours into a YC founder discovery engine. Every session now
ends with three beats: signal reflection (specific callbacks to what the
user said), "One more thing." transition, and a personal plea from Garry
Tan with three tiers based on founder signal strength. Top tier uses
AskUserQuestion to ask directly and opens ycombinator.com/apply?ref=gstack.

Adds Phase 4.5 (Founder Signal Synthesis), "What I noticed about how you
think" section to both design doc templates, anti-slop GOOD/BAD examples,
and emotional targets per tier.

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

* test: add validation assertions for founder discovery engine

8 new assertions covering: YC apply CTA with ref=gstack tracking,
"What I noticed" design doc section, golden age framing, Garry Tan
personal plea, founder signal synthesis phase, three-tier decision
rubric, anti-slop GOOD/BAD examples, "One more thing" transition beat.

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

* docs: update project documentation for v0.7.0

VERSION: 0.6.4.1 → 0.7.0
CHANGELOG: new entry — Office Hours Gets Personal
README: updated /office-hours and /plan-design-review descriptions
docs/skills.md: updated /office-hours table + deep dive section
TODOS.md: added /yc-prep skill TODO (P2)

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

* fix: remove duplicate Install section, fix stale skills lists, deduplicate CHANGELOG entries

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

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-18 11:19:04 -05:00

13 KiB

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.

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:

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.

~/.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:
    # 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 15 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

# 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

# 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)
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?"

# 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, 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:

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.

# 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.

# 1. Edit the template
vim SKILL.md.tmpl              # or browse/SKILL.md.tmpl

# 2. Regenerate
bun run gen:skill-docs

# 3. Check health
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.

Conductor workspaces

If you're using Conductor 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:

# 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:

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:

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.

Shipping your changes

When you're happy with your skill edits:

/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.