Files
Garry Tan 0a803f9e81 feat: gstack v1 — simpler prompts + real LOC receipts (v1.0.0.0) (#1039)
* docs: add design doc for /plan-tune v1 (observational substrate)

Canonical record of the /plan-tune v1 design: typed question registry,
per-question explicit preferences, inline tune: feedback with user-origin
gate, dual-track profile (declared + inferred separately), and plain-English
inspection skill. Captures every decision with pros/cons, what's deferred to
v2 with explicit acceptance criteria, and what was rejected entirely.

Codex review drove a substantial scope rollback from the initial CEO
EXPANSION plan. 15+ legitimate findings (substrate claim was false without
a typed registry; E4/E6/clamp logical contradiction; profile poisoning
attack surface; LANDED preamble side effect; implementation order) shaped
the final shape.

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

* feat: typed question registry for /plan-tune v1 foundation

scripts/question-registry.ts declares 53 recurring AskUserQuestion categories
across 15 skills (ship, review, office-hours, plan-ceo-review, plan-eng-review,
plan-design-review, plan-devex-review, qa, investigate, land-and-deploy, cso,
gstack-upgrade, preamble, plan-tune, autoplan).

Each entry has: stable kebab-case id, skill owner, category (approval |
clarification | routing | cherry-pick | feedback-loop), door_type (one-way
| two-way), optional stable option keys, optional psychographic signal_key,
and a one-line description.

12 of 53 are one-way doors (destructive ops, architecture/data forks,
security/compliance). These are ALWAYS asked regardless of user preference.

Helpers: getQuestion(id), getOneWayDoorIds(), getAllRegisteredIds(),
getRegistryStats(). No binary or resolver wiring yet — this is the schema
substrate the rest of /plan-tune builds on.

Ad-hoc question_ids (not registered) still log but skip psychographic
signal attribution. Future /plan-tune skill surfaces frequently-firing
ad-hoc ids as candidates for registry promotion.

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

* test: registry schema + safety + coverage tests (gate tier)

20 tests validating the question registry:

Schema (7 tests):
- Every entry has required fields
- All ids are kebab-case and start with their skill name
- No duplicate ids
- Categories are from the allowed set
- door_type is one-way | two-way
- Options arrays are well-formed
- Descriptions are short and single-line

Helpers (5 tests):
- getQuestion returns entry for known id, undefined for unknown
- getOneWayDoorIds includes destructive questions, excludes two-way
- getAllRegisteredIds count matches QUESTIONS keys
- getRegistryStats totals are internally consistent

One-way door safety (2 tests):
- Every critical question (test failure, SQL safety, LLM trust boundary,
  security scan, merge confirm, rollback, fix apply, premise revise,
  arch finding, privacy gate, user challenge) is declared one-way
- At least 10 one-way doors exist (catches regression if declarations
  are accidentally dropped)

Registry breadth (3 tests):
- 11 high-volume skills each have >= 1 registered question
- Preamble one-time prompts are registered
- /plan-tune's own questions are registered

Signal map references (1 test):
- signal_key values are typed kebab-case strings

Template coverage (2 tests, informational):
- AskUserQuestion usage across templates is non-trivial (>20)
- Registry spans >= 10 skills

20 pass, 0 fail.

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

* feat: one-way door classifier (belt-and-suspenders safety fallback)

scripts/one-way-doors.ts — secondary keyword-pattern classifier that catches
destructive questions even when the registry doesn't have an entry for them.

The registry's door_type field (from scripts/question-registry.ts) is the
PRIMARY safety gate. This classifier is the fallback for ad-hoc question_ids
that agents generate at runtime.

Classification priority:
  1. Registry lookup by question_id → use declared door_type
  2. Skill:category fallback (cso:approval, land-and-deploy:approval)
  3. Keyword pattern match against question_summary
  4. Default: treat as two-way (safer to log the miss than auto-decide unsafely)

Covers 21 destructive patterns across:
  - File system (rm -rf, delete, wipe, purge, truncate)
  - Database (drop table/database/schema, delete from)
  - Git/VCS (force-push, reset --hard, checkout --, branch -D)
  - Deploy/infra (kubectl delete, terraform destroy, rollback)
  - Credentials (revoke/reset/rotate API key|token|secret|password)
  - Architecture (breaking change, schema migration, data model change)

7 new tests in test/plan-tune.test.ts covering: registry-first lookup,
unknown-id fallthrough, keyword matching on destructive phrasings including
embedded filler words ("rotate the API key"), skill-category fallback,
benign questions defaulting to two-way, pattern-list non-empty.

27 pass, 0 fail. 1270 expect() calls.

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

* feat: psychographic signal map + builder archetypes

scripts/psychographic-signals.ts — hand-crafted {signal_key, user_choice} →
{dimension, delta} map. Version 0.1.0. Conservative deltas (±0.03 to ±0.06
per event). Covers 9 signal keys: scope-appetite, architecture-care,
code-quality-care, test-discipline, detail-preference, design-care,
devex-care, distribution-care, session-mode.

Helpers: applySignal() mutates running totals, newDimensionTotals() creates
empty starting state, normalizeToDimensionValue() sigmoid-clamps accumulated
delta to [0,1] (0 → 0.5 neutral), validateRegistrySignalKeys() checks that
every signal_key in the registry has a SIGNAL_MAP entry.

In v1 the signal map is used ONLY to compute inferred dimension values for
/plan-tune inspection output. No skill behavior adapts to these signals
until v2.

scripts/archetypes.ts — 8 named archetypes + Polymath fallback:
- Cathedral Builder (boil-the-ocean + architecture-first)
- Ship-It Pragmatist (small scope + fast)
- Deep Craft (detail-verbose + principled)
- Taste Maker (intuitive, overrides recommendations)
- Solo Operator (high-autonomy, delegates)
- Consultant (hands-on, consulted on everything)
- Wedge Hunter (narrow scope aggressively)
- Builder-Coach (balanced steering)
- Polymath (fallback when no archetype matches)

matchArchetype() uses L2 distance scaled by tightness, with a 0.55 threshold
below which we return Polymath. v1 ships the model stable; v2 narrative/vibe
commands wire it into user-facing output.

14 new tests: signal map consistency vs registry, applySignal behavior for
known/unknown keys, normalization bounds, archetype schema validity, name
uniqueness, matchArchetype correctness for each reference profile, Polymath
fallback for outliers.

41 pass, 0 fail total in test/plan-tune.test.ts.

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

* feat: bin/gstack-question-log — append validated AskUserQuestion events

Append-only JSONL log at ~/.gstack/projects/{SLUG}/question-log.jsonl.
Schema: {skill, question_id, question_summary, category?, door_type?,
options_count?, user_choice, recommended?, followed_recommendation?,
session_id?, ts}

Validates:
- skill is kebab-case
- question_id is kebab-case, <= 64 chars
- question_summary non-empty, <= 200 chars, newlines flattened
- category is one of approval/clarification/routing/cherry-pick/feedback-loop
- door_type is one-way or two-way
- options_count is integer in [1, 26]
- user_choice non-empty string, <= 64 chars

Injection defense on question_summary rejects the same patterns as
gstack-learnings-log (ignore previous instructions, system:, override:,
do not report, etc).

followed_recommendation is auto-computed when both user_choice and
recommended are present.

ts auto-injected as ISO 8601 if missing.

21 tests covering: valid payloads, full field preservation, auto-followed
computation, appending, long-summary truncation, newline flattening,
invalid JSON, missing fields, bad case, oversized ids, invalid enum
values, out-of-range options_count, and 6 injection attack patterns.

21 pass, 0 fail, 43 expect() calls.

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

* feat: bin/gstack-developer-profile — unified profile with migration

bin/gstack-developer-profile supersedes bin/gstack-builder-profile. The old
binary becomes a one-line legacy shim delegating to --read for /office-hours
backward compat.

Subcommands:
  --read              legacy KEY:VALUE output (tier, session_count, etc)
  --migrate           folds ~/.gstack/builder-profile.jsonl into
                      ~/.gstack/developer-profile.json. Atomic (temp + rename),
                      idempotent (no-op when target exists or source absent),
                      archives source as .migrated-YYYY-MM-DD-HHMMSS
  --derive            recomputes inferred dimensions from question-log.jsonl
                      using the signal map in scripts/psychographic-signals.ts
  --profile           full profile JSON
  --gap               declared vs inferred diff JSON
  --trace <dim>       event-level trace of what contributed to a dimension
  --check-mismatch    flags dimensions where declared and inferred disagree by
                      > 0.3 (requires >= 10 events first)
  --vibe              archetype name + description from scripts/archetypes.ts
  --narrative         (v2 stub)

Auto-migration on first read: if legacy file exists and new file doesn't,
migrate before reading. Creates a neutral (all-0.5) stub if nothing exists.

Unified schema (see docs/designs/PLAN_TUNING_V0.md §Architecture):
  {identity, declared, inferred: {values, sample_size, diversity},
   gap, overrides, sessions, signals_accumulated, schema_version}

25 new tests across subcommand behaviors:
- --read defaults + stub creation
- --migrate: 3 sessions preserved with signal tallies, idempotency, archival
- Tier calculation: welcome_back / regular / inner_circle boundaries
- --derive: neutral-when-empty, upward nudge on 'expand', downward on 'reduce',
  recomputable (same input → same output), ad-hoc unregistered ids ignored
- --trace: contributing events, empty for untouched dims, error without arg
- --gap: empty when no declared, correctly computed otherwise
- --vibe: returns archetype name + description
- --check-mismatch: threshold behavior, 10+ sample requirement
- Unknown subcommand errors

25 pass, 0 fail, 60 expect() calls.

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

* feat: bin/gstack-question-preference — explicit preferences + user-origin gate

Subcommands:
  --check <id>   → ASK_NORMALLY | AUTO_DECIDE  (decides if a registered
                   question should be auto-decided by the agent)
  --write '{…}'  → set a preference (requires user-origin source)
  --read         → dump preferences JSON
  --clear [id]   → clear one or all
  --stats        → short counts summary

Preference values: always-ask | never-ask | ask-only-for-one-way.
Stored at ~/.gstack/projects/{SLUG}/question-preferences.json.

Safety contract (the core of Codex finding #16, profile-poisoning defense
from docs/designs/PLAN_TUNING_V0.md §Security model):

  1. One-way doors ALWAYS return ASK_NORMALLY from --check, regardless of
     user preference. User's never-ask is overridden with a visible safety
     note so the user knows why their preference didn't suppress the prompt.

  2. --write requires an explicit `source` field:
       - Allowed:  "plan-tune", "inline-user"
       - REJECTED with exit code 2: "inline-tool-output", "inline-file",
         "inline-file-content", "inline-unknown"
     Rejection is explicit ("profile poisoning defense") so the caller can
     log and surface the attempt.

  3. free_text on --write is sanitized against injection patterns (ignore
     previous instructions, override:, system:, etc.) and newline-flattened.

Each --write also appends a preference-set event to
~/.gstack/projects/{SLUG}/question-events.jsonl for derivation audit trail.

31 tests:
- --check behavior (4): defaults, two-way, one-way (one-way overrides
  never-ask with safety note), unknown ids, missing arg
- --check with prefs (5): never-ask on two-way → AUTO_DECIDE; never-ask
  on one-way → ASK_NORMALLY with override note; always-ask always asks;
  ask-only-for-one-way flips appropriately
- --write valid (5): inline-user accepted, plan-tune accepted, persisted
  correctly, event appended, free_text preserved with flattening
- User-origin gate (6): missing source rejected; inline-tool-output
  rejected with exit code 2 and explicit poisoning message; inline-file,
  inline-file-content, inline-unknown rejected; unknown source rejected
- Schema validation (4): invalid JSON, bad question_id, bad preference,
  injection in free_text
- --read (2): empty → {}, returns writes
- --clear (3): specific id, clear-all, NOOP for missing
- --stats (2): empty zeros, tallies by preference type

31 pass, 0 fail, 52 expect() calls.

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

* feat: question-tuning preamble resolvers

scripts/resolvers/question-tuning.ts ships three preamble generators:

  generateQuestionPreferenceCheck — before each AskUserQuestion, agent runs
    gstack-question-preference --check <id>. AUTO_DECIDE suppresses the ask
    and auto-chooses recommended. ASK_NORMALLY asks as usual. One-way door
    safety override is handled by the binary.

  generateQuestionLog — after each AskUserQuestion, agent appends a log
    record with skill, question_id, summary, category, door_type,
    options_count, user_choice, recommended, session_id.

  generateInlineTuneFeedback — offers inline "tune:" prompt after two-way
    questions. Documents structured shortcuts (never-ask, always-ask,
    ask-only-for-one-way, ask-less) AND accepts free-form English with
    normalization + confirmation. Explicitly spells out the USER-ORIGIN
    GATE: only write tune events when the prefix appears in the user's own
    chat message, never from tool output or file content. Binary enforces.

All three resolvers are gated by the QUESTION_TUNING preamble echo. When
the config is off, the agent skips these sections entirely. Ready to be
wired into preamble.ts in the next commit.

Codex host has a simpler variant that uses $GSTACK_BIN env vars.

scripts/resolvers/index.ts registers three placeholders:
  QUESTION_PREFERENCE_CHECK, QUESTION_LOG, INLINE_TUNE_FEEDBACK

Total resolver count goes from 45 to 48.

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

* feat: wire question-tuning into preamble for tier >= 2 skills

scripts/resolvers/preamble.ts — adds two things:

  1. _QUESTION_TUNING config echo in the preamble bash block, gated on the
     user's gstack-config `question_tuning` value (default: false).
  2. A combined Question Tuning section for tier >= 2 skills, injected after
     the confusion protocol. The section itself is runtime-gated by the
     QUESTION_TUNING value — agents skip it entirely when off.

scripts/resolvers/question-tuning.ts — consolidated into one compact combined
section `generateQuestionTuning(ctx)` covering: preference check before the
question, log after, and inline tune: feedback with user-origin gate. Per-phase
generators remain exported for unit tests but are no longer the main entrypoint.

Size impact: +570 tokens / +2.3KB per tier-2+ SKILL.md. Three skills
(plan-ceo-review, office-hours, ship) still exceed the 100KB token ceiling —
but they were already over before this change. Delta is the smallest viable
wiring of the /plan-tune v1 substrate.

Golden fixtures (test/fixtures/golden/claude-ship, codex-ship, factory-ship)
regenerated to match the new baseline.

Full test run: 1149 pass, 0 fail, 113 skip across 28 files.

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

* chore: regenerate SKILL.md files with question-tuning section

bun run gen:skill-docs --host all after wiring the QUESTION_TUNING preamble
section. Every tier >= 2 skill now includes the combined Question Tuning
guidance. Runtime-gated — agents skip the section when question_tuning is
off in gstack-config (default).

Golden fixtures (claude-ship, codex-ship, factory-ship) updated to the new
baseline.

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

* feat: /plan-tune skill — conversational inspection + preferences

plan-tune/SKILL.md.tmpl: the user-facing skill for /plan-tune v1. Routes
plain-English intent to one of 8 flows:

  - Enable + setup (first-time): 5 declaration questions mapping to the
    5 psychographic dimensions (scope_appetite, risk_tolerance,
    detail_preference, autonomy, architecture_care). Writes to
    developer-profile.json declared.*.
  - Inspect profile: plain-English rendering of declared + inferred + gap.
    Uses word bands (low/balanced/high) not raw floats. Shows vibe archetype
    when calibration gate is met.
  - Review question log: top-20 question frequencies with follow/override
    counts. Highlights override-heavy questions as candidates for never-ask.
  - Set a preference: normalizes "stop asking me about X" → never-ask, etc.
    Confirms ambiguous phrasings before writing via gstack-question-preference.
  - Edit declared profile: interprets free-form ("more boil-the-ocean") and
    CONFIRMS before mutating declared.* (trust boundary per Codex #15).
  - Show gap: declared vs inferred diff with plain-English severity bands
    (close / drift / mismatch). Never auto-updates declared from the gap.
  - Stats: preference counts + diversity/calibration status.
  - Enable / disable: gstack-config set question_tuning true|false.

Design constraints enforced:
- Plain English everywhere. No CLI subcommand syntax required. Shortcuts
  (`profile`, `vibe`, `stats`, `setup`) exist but optional.
- user-origin gate on tune: writes. source: "plan-tune" for user-invoked
  /plan-tune; source: "inline-user" for inline tune: from other skills.
- One-way doors override never-ask (safety, surfaced to user).
- No behavior adaptation in v1 — this skill inspects and configures only.

Generates plan-tune/SKILL.md at ~11.6k tokens, well under the 100KB ceiling.
Generated for all hosts via `bun run gen:skill-docs --host all`.

Full free test suite: 1149 pass, 0 fail, 113 skip across 28 files.

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

* test: end-to-end pipeline + preamble injection coverage

Added 6 tests to test/plan-tune.test.ts:

Preamble injection (3 tests):
- tier 2+ includes Question Tuning section with preference check, log,
  and user-origin gate language ('profile-poisoning defense', 'inline-user')
- tier 1 does NOT include the prose section (QUESTION_TUNING bash echo
  still fires since it's in the bash block all tiers share)
- codex host swaps binDir references to $GSTACK_BIN

End-to-end pipeline (3 tests) — real binaries working together, not mocks:
- Log 5 expand choices → --derive → profile shows scope_appetite > 0.5
  (full log → registry lookup → signal map → normalization round-trip)
- --write source: inline-tool-output rejected; --read confirms no pref
  was persisted (the profile-poisoning defense actually works end-to-end)
- Migrate a 3-session legacy file; confirm legacy gstack-builder-profile
  shim still returns SESSION_COUNT: 3, TIER: welcome_back, CROSS_PROJECT: true

test/plan-tune.test.ts now has 47 tests total.

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

* test: E2E test for /plan-tune plain-English inspection flow (gate tier)

test/skill-e2e-plan-tune.test.ts — verifies /plan-tune correctly routes
plain-English intent ("review the questions I've been asked") to the
Review question log section without requiring CLI subcommand syntax.

Seeds a synthetic question-log.jsonl with 3 entries exercising:
- override behavior (user chose expand over recommended selective)
- one-way door respect (user followed ship-test-failure-triage recommendation)
- two-way override (user skipped recommended changelog polish)

Invokes the skill via `claude -p` and asserts:
- Agent surfaces >= 2 of 3 logged question_ids in output
- Agent notices override/skip behavior from the log
- Exit reason is success or error_max_turns (not agent-crash)

Gate-tier because the core v1 DX promise is plain-English intent routing.
If it requires memorized subcommands or breaks on natural language, that's
a regression of the defining feature.

Registered in test/helpers/touchfiles.ts with dependencies:
- plan-tune/** (skill template + generated md)
- scripts/question-registry.ts (required for log lookup)
- scripts/psychographic-signals.ts, scripts/one-way-doors.ts (derive path)
- bin/gstack-question-log, gstack-question-preference, gstack-developer-profile

Skipped when EVALS_ENABLED is not set; runs on `bun run test:evals`.

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

* chore: bump version and changelog (v0.19.0.0) — /plan-tune v1

Ships /plan-tune as observational substrate: typed question registry, dual-track
developer profile (declared + inferred), explicit per-question preferences with
user-origin gate, inline tune: feedback across every tier >= 2 skill, unified
developer-profile.json with migration from builder-profile.jsonl.

Scope rolled back from initial CEO EXPANSION plan after outside-voice review
(Codex). 6 deferrals tracked as P0 TODOs with explicit acceptance criteria:
E1 substrate wiring, E3 narrative/vibe, E4 blind-spot coach, E5 LANDED
celebration, E6 auto-adjustment, E7 psychographic auto-decide.

See docs/designs/PLAN_TUNING_V0.md for the full design record.

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

* fix(ci): harden Dockerfile.ci against transient Ubuntu mirror failures

The CI image build failed with:
  E: Failed to fetch http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/...
     Connection failed [IP: 91.189.92.22 80]
  ERROR: process "/bin/sh -c apt-get update && apt-get install ..."
     did not complete successfully: exit code: 100

archive.ubuntu.com periodically returns "connection refused" on individual
regional mirrors. Without retry logic a single failed fetch nukes the whole
Docker build. Three defenses, layered:

  1. /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/80-retries — apt fetches each package up to 5 times
     with a 30s timeout. Handles per-package flakes.
  2. Shell-loop retry around the whole apt-get step (x3, 10s sleep) — handles
     the case where apt-get update itself can't reach any mirror.
  3. --retry 5 --retry-delay 5 --retry-connrefused on all curl fetches (bun
     install script, GitHub CLI keyring, NodeSource setup script).

Applied to every apt-get and curl call in the Dockerfile. No behavior change
on happy path — only kicks in when mirrors blip. Fixes the build-image job
that was blocking CI on the /plan-tune PR.

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

* docs: add PLAN_TUNING_V1 + PACING_UPDATES_V0 design docs

Captures the V1 design (ELI10 writing + LOC reframe) in
docs/designs/PLAN_TUNING_V1.md and the extracted V1.1 pacing-overhaul
plan in docs/designs/PACING_UPDATES_V0.md. V1 scope was reduced from
the original bundled pacing + writing-style plan after three
engineering-review passes revealed structural gaps in the pacing
workstream that couldn't be closed via plan-text editing. TODOS.md
P0 entry links to V1.1.

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

* feat: curated jargon list for V1 writing-style glossing

Repo-owned list of ~50 high-frequency technical terms (idempotent,
race condition, N+1, backpressure, etc.) that gstack glosses on first
use in tier-≥2 skill output. Baked into generated SKILL.md prose at
gen-skill-docs time. Terms not on this list are assumed plain-English
enough. Contributions via PR.

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

* feat(preamble): V1 Writing Style section + EXPLAIN_LEVEL echo + migration prompt

Adds a new Writing Style section to tier-≥2 preamble output composing with
the existing AskUserQuestion Format section. Six rules: jargon glossed on
first use per skill invocation (from scripts/jargon-list.json), outcome-
framed questions, short sentences, decisions close with user impact,
gloss-on-first-use even if user pasted term, user-turn override for "be
terse" requests. Baked conditionally (skip if EXPLAIN_LEVEL: terse).

Adds EXPLAIN_LEVEL preamble echo using \${binDir} (host-portable matching
V0 QUESTION_TUNING pattern). Adds WRITING_STYLE_PENDING echo reading a
flag file written by the V0→V1 upgrade migration; on first post-upgrade
skill run, the agent fires a one-time AskUserQuestion offering terse mode.

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

* feat(gstack-config): validate explain_level + document in header

Adds explain_level: default|terse to the annotated config header with
a one-line description. Whitelists valid values; on set of an unknown
value, prints a specific warning ("explain_level '\$VALUE' not
recognized. Valid values: default, terse. Using default.") and writes
the default value. Matches V1 preamble's EXPLAIN_LEVEL echo expectation.

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

* feat: V1 upgrade migration — writing-style opt-out prompt

New migration script following existing v0.15.2.0.sh / v0.16.2.0.sh
pattern. Writes a .writing-style-prompt-pending flag file on first run
post-upgrade. The preamble's migration-prompt block reads the flag and
fires a one-time AskUserQuestion offering the user a choice between
the new default writing style and restoring V0 prose via
\`gstack-config set explain_level terse\`. Idempotent via flag files;
if the user has already set explain_level explicitly, counts as
answered and skips.

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

* feat: LOC reframe tooling — throughput comparison + README updater + scc installer

Three new scripts:

- scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts — enumerates Garry-authored commits
  in 2013 + 2026 on public repos, extracts ADDED lines from git diff,
  classifies as logical SLOC via scc --stdin (regex fallback if scc
  missing). Writes docs/throughput-2013-vs-2026.json with per-language
  breakdown + explicit caveats (public repos only, commit-style drift,
  private-work exclusion).

- scripts/update-readme-throughput.ts — reads the JSON if present,
  replaces the README's <!-- GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PLACEHOLDER --> anchor
  with the computed multiple (preserving the anchor for future runs).
  If JSON missing, writes GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PENDING marker that CI
  rejects — forcing the build to run before commit.

- scripts/setup-scc.sh — standalone OS-detecting installer for scc.
  Not a package.json dependency (95% of users never run throughput).
  Brew on macOS, apt on Linux, GitHub releases link on Windows.

Two-string anchor pattern (PLACEHOLDER vs PENDING) prevents the
pipeline from destroying its own update path.

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

* feat(retro): surface logical SLOC + weighted commits above raw LOC

V1 reorders the /retro summary table to lead with features shipped,
then commits + weighted commits (commits × files-touched capped at 20),
then PRs merged, then logical SLOC added as the primary code-volume
metric. Raw LOC stays present but is demoted to context. Rationale
inline in the template: ten lines of a good fix is not less shipping
than ten thousand lines of scaffold.

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

* docs(v1): README hero reframe + writing-style + CHANGELOG + version bump to 1.0.0.0

README.md:
- Hero removes "600,000+ lines of production code" framing; replaces
  with the computed 2013-vs-2026 pro-rata multiple (via
  <!-- GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PLACEHOLDER --> anchor, filled by the
  update-readme-throughput build step).
- Hiring callout: "ship real products at AI-coding speed" instead of
  "10K+ LOC/day."
- New Writing Style section (~80 words) between Quick start and
  Install: "v1 prompts = simpler" framing, outcome-language example,
  terse-mode opt-out, pointer to /plan-tune.

CLAUDE.md: one-paragraph Writing style (V1) note under project
conventions, linking to preamble resolver + V1 design docs.

CHANGELOG.md: V1 entry on top of v0.19.0.0 with user-facing narrative
(what changes, how to opt out, for-contributors notes). Mentions
scope reduction — pacing overhaul ships in V1.1.

CONTRIBUTING.md: one-paragraph note on jargon-list.json maintenance
(PR to add/remove terms; regenerate via gen:skill-docs).

VERSION + package.json: bump to 1.0.0.0.

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

* chore: regenerate SKILL.md files + golden fixtures for V1

Mechanical regeneration from the updated templates in prior commits:
- Writing Style section now appears in tier-≥2 skill output.
- EXPLAIN_LEVEL + WRITING_STYLE_PENDING echoes in preamble bash.
- V1 migration-prompt block fires conditionally on first upgrade.
- Jargon list inlined into preamble prose at gen time.
- Retro template's logical SLOC + weighted commits order applied.

Regenerated for all 8 hosts via bun run gen:skill-docs --host all.
Golden ship-skill fixtures refreshed from regenerated outputs.

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

* test: V1 gate coverage — writing-style resolver + config + jargon + migration + dormancy

Six new gate-tier test files:

- test/writing-style-resolver.test.ts — asserts Writing Style section
  is injected into tier-≥2 preamble, all 6 rules present, jargon list
  inlined, terse-mode gate condition present, Codex output uses
  \$GSTACK_BIN (not ~/.claude/), tier-1 does NOT get the section,
  migration-prompt block present.

- test/explain-level-config.test.ts — gstack-config set/get round-trip
  for default + terse, unknown-value warns + defaults to default,
  header documents the key, round-trip across set→set→get.

- test/jargon-list.test.ts — shape + ~50 terms + no duplicates
  (case-insensitive) + includes canonical high-signal terms.

- test/v0-dormancy.test.ts — 5D dimension names + archetype names
  forbidden in default-mode tier-≥2 SKILL.md output, except for
  plan-tune and office-hours where they're load-bearing.

- test/readme-throughput.test.ts — script replaces anchor with number
  on happy path, writes PENDING marker when JSON missing, CI gate
  asserts committed README contains no PENDING string.

- test/upgrade-migration-v1.test.ts — fresh run writes pending flag,
  idempotent after user-answered, pre-existing explain_level counts
  as answered.

All 95 V1 test-expect() calls pass. Full suite: 0 failures.

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

* feat: compute real 2013-vs-2026 throughput multiple (130.2×)

Ran scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts across all 15 public garrytan/*
repos. Aggregated results into docs/throughput-2013-vs-2026.json and
ran scripts/update-readme-throughput.ts to replace the README placeholder.

2013 public activity: 2 commits, 2,384 logical lines added across 1
week, in 1 repo (zurb-foundation-wysihtml5 upstream contribution).

2026 public activity: 279 commits, 310,484 logical lines added across
17 active weeks, in 3 repos (gbrain, gstack, resend_robot).

Multiples (public repos only, apples-to-apples):
- Logical SLOC: 130.2×
- Commits per active week: 8.2×
- Raw lines added: 134.4×

Private work at both eras (2013 Bookface at YC, Posterous-era code,
2026 internal tools) is excluded from this comparison.

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

* feat: 207× throughput multiple (with private repos + Bookface)

Re-ran scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts across all 41 repos under
garrytan/* (15 public + 26 private), including Bookface (YC's internal
social network, 2013-era work).

2013 activity: 71 commits, 5,143 logical lines, 4 active repos
  (bookface, delicounter, tandong, zurb-foundation-wysihtml5)
2026 activity: 350 commits, 1,064,818 logical lines, 15 active repos
  (gbrain, gstack, gbrowser, tax-app, kumo, tenjin, autoemail, kitsune,
  easy-chromium-compiles, conductor-playground, garryslist-agent, baku,
  gstack-website, resend_robot, garryslist-brain)

Multiples:
- Logical SLOC: 207× (up from 130.2× when including private work)
- Raw lines: 223×
- Commits/active-week: 3.4×

Stopped committing docs/throughput-2013-vs-2026.json — analysis is a
local artifact, not repo state. Added docs/throughput-*.json to
.gitignore. Full markdown analysis at ~/throughput-analysis-2026-04-18.md
(local-only). README multiple is now hardcoded; re-run the script and
edit manually when you want to refresh it.

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

* docs: run rate vs year-to-date throughput comparison

Two separate numbers in the README hero:
- Run rate: ~700× (9,859 logical lines/day in 2026 vs 14/day in 2013)
- Year-to-date: 207× (2026 through April 18 already exceeds 2013 full
  year by 207×)

Previous "207× pro-rata" framing mixed full-year 2013 vs partial-year
2026. Run rate is the apples-to-apples normalization; YTD is the
"already produced" total. Both are honest; both are compelling; they
measure different things.

Analysis at ~/throughput-analysis-2026-04-18.md (local-only).

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

* feat(throughput): script natively computes to-date + run-rate multiples

Enhanced scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts so both calculations come
out of a single run instead of being reassembled ad-hoc in bash:

PerYearResult now includes:
- days_elapsed — 365 for past years, day-of-year for current
- is_partial — flags the current (in-progress) year
- per_day_rate — logical/raw/commits normalized by calendar day
- annualized_projection — per_day_rate × 365

Output JSON's `multiples` now has two sibling blocks:
- multiples.to_date — raw volume ratios (2026-YTD / 2013-full-year)
- multiples.run_rate — per-day pace ratios (apples-to-apples)

Back-compat: multiples.logical_lines_added still aliases to_date for
older consumers reading the JSON.

Updated README hero to cite both (picking up brain/* repo that was
missed in the earlier aggregation pass):

  2026 run rate: ~880× my 2013 pace (12,382 vs 14 logical lines/day)
  2026 YTD:      260× the entire 2013 year

Stderr summary now prints both multiples at the end of each run.

Full analysis at ~/throughput-analysis-2026-04-18.md (local-only).

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

* docs: ON_THE_LOC_CONTROVERSY methodology post + README link

Long-form response to the "LOC is a meaningless vanity metric" critique.
Covers:
- The three branches of the LOC critique and which are right
- Why logical SLOC (NCLOC) beats raw LOC as the honest measurement
- Full method: author-scoped git diff, regex-classified added lines,
  aggregated across 41 public + private garrytan/* repos
- Both calculations: to-date (260x) and run-rate (879x)
- Steelman of the critics (greenfield-vs-maintenance, survivorship bias,
  quality-adjusted productivity, time-to-first-user)
- Reproduction instructions

Linked from README hero via a blockquote directly below the number.

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

* exclude: tax-app from throughput analysis (import-dominated history)

tax-app's history is one commit of 104K logical lines — an initial
import of a codebase, not authored work. Removing it to keep the
comparison honest.

Changes:
- scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts: added EXCLUDED_REPOS constant
  with tax-app + a one-line rationale. The script now skips excluded
  repos with a stderr note and deletes any stale output JSON so
  aggregation loops don't pick up pre-exclusion numbers.

- README hero: updated to 810× run rate + 240× YTD (were 880×/260×).
  Wording updated to "40 public + private repos ... after excluding
  repos dominated by imported code."

- docs/ON_THE_LOC_CONTROVERSY.md: updated all numbers, added an
  "Exclusions" paragraph explaining tax-app, removed tax-app from
  the "shipped not WIP" example list.

New numbers (2026 through day 108, without tax-app):
  - To-date:  240× logical SLOC (1,233,062 vs 5,143)
  - Run rate: 810× per-day pace (11,417 vs 14 logical/day)
  - Annualized: ~4.2M logical lines projected

Future re-runs automatically skip tax-app. Add more exclusions to
EXCLUDED_REPOS at the top of the script with a one-line rationale.

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

* fix: correct tax-app exclusion rationale

tax-app is a demo app I built for an upcoming YC channel video,
not an "import-dominated history" as the previous commit claimed.
Excluded because it's not production shipping work, not because
of an import commit.

Updated rationale in scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts's
EXCLUDED_REPOS constant, in docs/ON_THE_LOC_CONTROVERSY.md's
method section + conclusion, and in the README hero wording
("one demo repo" vs the earlier "repos dominated by imported code").

Numbers unchanged — the exclusion itself is the same, just the
reason.

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

* docs: harden ON_THE_LOC_CONTROVERSY against Cramer + neckbeard critiques

Reframes the thesis as "engineers can fly now" (amplification, not
replacement) and fortifies the soft spots critics will attack.

Added:
- Flight-thesis opener: pilot vs walker, leverage not replacement.
- Second deflation layer for AI verbosity (on top of NCLOC). Headline
  moves from 810x to 408x after generous 2x AI-boilerplate cut, with
  explicit sensitivity analysis showing the number is still large under
  pessimistic priors (5x → 162x, 10x → 81x, 100x impossible).
- Weekly distribution check (kills "you had one burst week" attack).
- Revert rate (2.0%) and post-merge fix rate (6.3%) with OSS
  comparables (K8s/Rails/Django band). Addresses "where are your error
  rates" directly.
- Named production adoption signals (gstack 1000+ installs, gbrain beta,
  resend_robot paying API) with explicit concession that "shipped != used
  at scale" for most of the corpus.
- Harder steelman: 5 specific concessions with quantified pivot points
  (e.g., "if 2013 baseline was 3.5x higher, 810x → 228x, still high").

Removed factual error: Posterous acquisition paragraph (Garry had already
left Posterous by 2011, so the "Twitter bought our private repos" excuse
for the 2013 corpus gap doesn't apply).

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

* docs: update gstack/gbrain adoption numbers in LOC controversy post

gstack: "1,000+ distinct project installations" → "tens of thousands of
daily active users" (telemetry-reported, community tier, opt-in).
gbrain: "small set of beta testers" → "hundreds of beta testers running
it live."

Both are the accurate current numbers. The concession paragraph below
(about shipped != adopted at scale for the long-tail repos) still reads
correctly since it's about the corpus as a whole, not gstack/gbrain
specifically.

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

* docs: reframe reproducibility note as OSS breakout flex

"You'd need access to my private repos" → "Bookface and Posthaven are
private, but gstack and gbrain are open-sourced with tens of thousands
of GitHub stars and tens of thousands of confirmed regular users, among
the most-used OSS projects in the world that didn't exist three months
ago."

Keeps the `gh repo list` command at the end for the actual
reproducibility instruction.

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

* Rewrite LOC controversy post

- Lead with concession (LOC is garbage, do the math anyway)
- Preempt 14 lines/day meme with historical baselines (Brooks, Jones, McConnell)
- Remove 'neckbeard' language throughout
- Add slop-scan story (Ben Vinegar, 5.24 → 1.96, 62% cut)
- David Cramer GUnit joke
- Add testing philosophy section (the real unlock)
- ASCII weekly distribution chart
- gstack telemetry section with real numbers (15K installs, 305K invocations, 95.2% success)
- Top skills usage chart
- Pick-your-priors paragraph moved earlier (the killer)
- Sharper close: run the script, show me your numbers

* docs: four precision fixes on LOC controversy post

1. Citation fix. Kernighan didn't say anything about LOC-as-metric
   (that's the famous "aircraft building by weight" quote, commonly
   misattributed but actually Bill Gates). Replaced "Kernighan implied
   it before that" with the real Dijkstra quote ("lines produced" vs
   "lines spent" from EWD1036, with direct link) + the Gates quote.
   Verified via web search.

2. Slop-scan direction clarified. "(highest on his benchmark)" was
   ambiguous — could read as a brag. Now: "Higher score = more slop.
   He ran it on gstack and we scored 5.24, the worst he'd measured
   at the time." Then the 62% cut lands as an actual win.

3. Prose/chart skill-usage ordering now matches. Added /plan-eng-review
   (28,014) to the prose list so it doesn't conflict with the chart
   below it.

4. Cut the "David — I owe you one / GUnit" insider joke. Most readers
   won't connect Cramer → Sentry → GUnit naming. Ends the slop-scan
   paragraph on the stronger line: "Run `bun test` and watch 2,000+
   tests pass."

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

* docs: tighten four LOC post citations to match primary sources

1. Bill Gates quote: flagged as folklore-grade. Was "Bill Gates put it
   more memorably" (firm attribution). Now "The old line (widely
   attributed to Bill Gates, sourcing murky) puts it more memorably."
   The quote stands; honesty about attribution avoids the same
   misattribution trap we just fixed for Kernighan.

2. Capers Jones: "15-50 across thousands of projects" → "roughly 16-38
   LOC/day across thousands of projects" — matches his actual published
   measurements (which also report as 325-750 LOC/month).

3. Steve McConnell: "10-50 for finished, tested, delivered code" was
   folklore. Replaced with his actual project-size-dependent range from
   Code Complete: "20-125 LOC/day for small projects (10K LOC) down to
   1.5-25 for large projects (10M LOC) — it's size-dependent, not a
   single number."

4. Revert rate comparison: "Kubernetes, Rails, and Django historically
   run 1.5-3%" was unsourced. Replaced with "mature OSS codebases
   typically run 1-3%" + "run the same command on whatever you consider
   the bar and compare." No false specificity about which repos.

Net: every quantitative citation in the post now matches primary-source
figures or is explicitly flagged as folklore. Neckbeards can verify.

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

* docs: drop Writing style section from README

Was sitting in prime real estate between Quick start and Install —
internal implementation detail, not something users need up-front.
Existing coverage is enough:
- Upgrade migration prompt notifies users on first post-upgrade run
- CLAUDE.md has the contributor note
- docs/designs/PLAN_TUNING_V1.md has the full design

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

* docs: collapse team-mode setup into one paste-and-go command

Step 2 was three separate code blocks: setup --team, then team-init,
then git add/commit. Mirrors Step 1's style now — one shell one-liner
that does all three. Subshell (cd && ./setup --team) keeps the user
in their repo pwd so team-init + git commit land in the right place.

"Swap required for optional" moved to a one-liner below.

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

* docs: move full-clone footnote from README to CONTRIBUTING

The "Contributing or need full history?" note is for contributors, not
for someone following the README install flow. Moved into CONTRIBUTING's
Quick start section where it fits next to the existing clone command,
with a tip to upgrade an existing shallow clone via
\`git fetch --unshallow\`.

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

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: root <root@localhost>
2026-04-18 15:05:42 +08:00

19 KiB
Raw Permalink Blame History

Plan Tuning v1 — Design Doc

Status: Approved for implementation (2026-04-18) Branch: garrytan/plan-tune-skill Authors: Garry Tan (user), with AI-assisted reviews from Claude Opus 4.7 + OpenAI Codex gpt-5.4 Supersedes scope: adds writing-style + LOC-receipts layer on top of PLAN_TUNING_V0.md (observational substrate). V0 remains in place unchanged. Related: PACING_UPDATES_V0.md — extracted pacing overhaul, V1.1 plan.

What this document is

A canonical record of what /plan-tune v1 is, what it is NOT, what we considered, and why we made each call. Committed to the repo so future contributors (and future Garry) can trace reasoning without archeology. Supersedes any per-user local plan artifacts.

Credit

This plan exists because of Louise de Sadeleer, who sat through a complete gstack run as a non-technical user and told us the truth about how it feels. Her specific feedback:

  1. "I was getting a bit tired after a while and it felt a little bit rigid." — pacing/fatigue
  2. "I'm just gonna say yes yes yes" (during architecture review). — disengagement
  3. "What I find funny is his emphasis on how many lines of code he produces. AI has produced for him of course." — LOC framing
  4. "As a non-engineer this is a bit complicated to understand." — jargon density + outcome framing

V1 addresses #3 and #4 directly: jargon-glossing + outcome-framed writing that reads like a real person wrote it for the reader, plus a defensible LOC reframe. Louise's #1 and #2 (pacing/fatigue) require a separate design round — extracted to PACING_UPDATES_V0.md as the V1.1 plan.

The feature, in one paragraph

gstack skill output is the product. If the prose doesn't read well for a non-technical founder, they check out of the review and click "yes yes yes." V1 adds a writing-style standard that applies to every tier ≥ 2 skill: jargon glossed on first use (from a curated ~50-term list), questions framed in outcome terms ("what breaks for your users if...") not implementation terms, short sentences, concrete nouns. Power users who want the tighter V0 prose can set gstack-config set explain_level terse. Binary switch, no partial modes. Plus: the README's "600,000+ lines of production code" framing — rightly called out as LOC vanity by Louise — gets replaced with a real computed 2013-vs-2026 pro-rata multiple from an scc-backed script, with honest caveats about public-vs-private repo visibility.

Why we're building the smaller version

V1 went through four substantial scope revisions over multiple review passes. Final scope is smaller than any intermediate version because each review pass caught real problems.

Revision 1 — Four-level experience axis (rejected). Original proposal: ask users on first run whether they're an experienced dev, an engineer-without-solo-experience, non-technical-who-shipped-on-a-team, or non-technical-entirely. Skills adapt per level. Rejected during CEO review's premise-challenge step because (a) the onboarding ask adds friction at exactly the moment V1 is trying to reduce it, (b) "what level am I?" is itself a confusing question for the users who most need help, (c) technical expertise isn't one-dimensional (designer level A on CSS, level D on deploy), (d) engineers benefit from the same writing standards non-technical users do.

Revision 2 — ELI10 by default, terse opt-out (accepted). Every skill's output defaults to the writing standard. Power users who want V0 prose set explain_level: terse. Codex Pass 1 caught critical gaps (static-markdown gating, host-aware paths, README update mechanism) — all three integrated.

Revision 3 — ELI10 + review-pacing overhaul (proposed, scoped back). Added a pacing workstream: rank findings, auto-accept two-way doors, max 3 AskUserQuestion prompts per phase, Silent Decisions block with flip-command. Intended to address Louise's #1 and #2 directly. Eng review Pass 2 caught scoring-formula and path-consistency bugs. Eng review Pass 3 + Codex Pass 2 surfaced 10+ structural gaps in the pacing workstream that couldn't be fixed via plan-text editing.

Revision 4 — ELI10 + LOC only (final). User chose scope reduction: ship V1 with writing style + LOC receipts, defer pacing to V1.1 via PACING_UPDATES_V0.md. This is the approved V1 scope.

The through-line: every review pass correctly narrowed the ambition until the remaining scope had no structural gaps. Matches the CEO review skill's SCOPE REDUCTION mode, arrived at late via engineering review rather than early via strategic choice.

v1 Scope (what we're building now)

  1. Writing Style section in preamble (scripts/resolvers/preamble.ts). Six rules: jargon-gloss on first use per skill invocation, outcome framing, short sentences / concrete nouns / active voice, decisions close with user impact, gloss-on-first-use-unconditional (even if user pasted the term), user-turn override (user says "be terse" → skip for that response).
  2. Jargon boundary via repo-owned list (scripts/jargon-list.json). ~50 curated high-frequency technical terms. Terms not on the list are assumed plain-English enough. Terms inlined into generated SKILL.md prose at gen-skill-docs time (zero runtime cost).
  3. Terse opt-out (gstack-config set explain_level terse). Binary: default vs terse. Terse skips the Writing Style block entirely and uses V0 prose style.
  4. Host-aware preamble echo. _EXPLAIN_LEVEL=$(${binDir}/gstack-config get explain_level 2>/dev/null || echo "default"). Host-portable via existing V0 ctx.paths.binDir pattern.
  5. gstack-config validation. Document explain_level: default|terse in header. Whitelist values. Warn on unknown with specific message + default to default.
  6. LOC reframe in README. Remove "600,000+ lines of production code" hero framing. Insert <!-- GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PLACEHOLDER --> anchor. Build-time script replaces anchor with computed multiple + caveat.
  7. scc-backed throughput script (scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts). For each of 2013 + 2026, enumerate Garry-authored public commits, extract added lines from git diff, classify via scc --stdin (or regex fallback). Output docs/throughput-2013-vs-2026.json with per-language breakdown + caveats.
  8. scc as standalone install script (scripts/setup-scc.sh). Not a package.json dependency (truly optional — 95% of users never run throughput). OS-detects and runs brew install scc / apt install scc / prints GitHub releases link.
  9. README update pipeline (scripts/update-readme-throughput.ts). Reads docs/throughput-2013-vs-2026.json if present, replaces the anchor with computed number. If missing, writes GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PENDING marker that CI rejects — forces contributor to run the script before commit.
  10. /retro adds logical SLOC + weighted commits above raw LOC. Raw LOC stays for context but is visually demoted.
  11. Upgrade migration (gstack-upgrade/migrations/v<VERSION>.sh). One-time post-upgrade interactive prompt offering to restore V0 prose via explain_level: terse for users who prefer it. Flag-file gated.
  12. Documentation. CLAUDE.md gains a Writing Style section (project convention). CHANGELOG.md gets V1 entry (user-facing narrative, mentions scope reduction + V1.1 pacing). README.md gets a Writing Style explainer section (~80 words). CONTRIBUTING.md gains a note on jargon-list maintenance (PRs to add/remove terms).
  13. Tests. 6 new test files + extension of existing gen-skill-docs.test.ts. All gate tier except LLM-judge E2E (periodic).
  14. V0 dormancy negative tests. Assert 5D dimension names and 8 archetype names don't appear in default-mode skill output. Prevents V0 psychographic machinery from leaking into V1.
  15. V1 and V1.1 design docs. PLAN_TUNING_V1.md (this file). PACING_UPDATES_V0.md (V1.1 plan, created during V1 implementation from the extracted appendix). TODOS.md P0 entry.

Deferred

To V1.1 (explicit, with dedicated design doc):

  • Review pacing overhaul (ranking, auto-accept, max-3-per-phase, Silent Decisions block, flip mechanism). Reasoning: see PACING_UPDATES_V0.md §"Why it's extracted." Has 10+ structural gaps unfixable via prose-only changes.
  • Preamble first-run meta-prompt audit (lake intro, telemetry, proactive, routing). Louise saw all of them on first run; they count against fatigue. V1.1 considers suppressing until session N.

To V2 (or later):

  • Confusion-signal detection from question-log driving on-the-fly translation offers.
  • 5D psychographic-driven skill adaptation (V0 E1 item).
  • /plan-tune narrative + /plan-tune vibe (V0 E3 item).
  • Per-skill or per-topic explain levels.
  • Team profiles.
  • AST-based "delivered features" metric.

Rejected entirely (considered, not doing)

  • Four-level declared experience axis (A/B/C/D). Rejected during CEO review premise-challenge. See "Why we're building the smaller version" above.
  • ELI10 as a new resolver file (scripts/resolvers/eli10-writing.ts). Codex Pass 1 caught the conflict with existing "smart 16-year-old" framing in preamble's AskUserQuestion Format section. Fold into existing preamble instead.
  • Runtime suppression of the Writing Style block. Codex Pass 1 caught that gen-skill-docs produces static Markdown — runtime EXPLAIN_LEVEL=terse can't hide content already baked in. Solution: conditional prose gate (prose convention, same category as V0's QUESTION_TUNING gate).
  • Middle writing mode between default and terse. Revision 3 proposed "terse = no glosses but keep outcome framing." Codex Pass 2 caught the contradiction with migration messaging. Binary wins: terse = V0 prose, full stop.
  • User-editable jargon list at runtime. Revision 3 proposed ~/.gstack/jargon-list.json as user override. Codex Pass 2 caught the contradiction with gen-time inlining. Resolved: repo-owned only, PRs to add/remove, regenerate to take effect.
  • devDependencies.optional field in package.json. Not a real npm/bun field. Eng review Pass 2 caught. Standalone install script instead.
  • Using the same string as replacement anchor AND CI-reject marker in README. Eng review Pass 2 / Codex Pass 2 caught that this makes the pipeline destroy its own update path. Two-string solution: GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PLACEHOLDER (anchor, stays across runs) vs GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PENDING (explicit "build didn't run" marker that CI rejects).
  • "Every technical term gets a gloss" as acceptance criterion. Codex Pass 2 caught the contradiction with the curated-list rule. Acceptance rewritten to match rule: "every term on scripts/jargon-list.json that appears gets a gloss."
  • Acceptance criterion "≤ 12 AskUserQuestion prompts per /autoplan." Removed from V1 — that target requires the pacing overhaul now in V1.1.

Architecture

~/.gstack/
  developer-profile.json           # unchanged from V0
  config.yaml                       # + explain_level key (default | terse)

scripts/
  jargon-list.json                  # NEW: ~50 repo-owned terms (gen-time inlined)
  garry-output-comparison.ts        # NEW: scc + git per-year, author-scoped
  update-readme-throughput.ts       # NEW: README anchor replacement
  setup-scc.sh                      # NEW: OS-detecting scc installer
  resolvers/preamble.ts             # MODIFIED: Writing Style section + EXPLAIN_LEVEL echo

docs/
  designs/PLAN_TUNING_V1.md         # NEW: this file
  designs/PACING_UPDATES_V0.md      # NEW: V1.1 plan (extracted)
  throughput-2013-vs-2026.json      # NEW: computed, committed

~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/
  gstack-config                     # MODIFIED: explain_level header + validation

gstack-upgrade/migrations/
  v<VERSION>.sh                     # NEW: V0 → V1 interactive prompt

Data flow

User runs tier-≥2 skill
       │
       ▼
Preamble bash (per-invocation):
  _EXPLAIN_LEVEL=$(${binDir}/gstack-config get explain_level 2>/dev/null || "default")
  echo "EXPLAIN_LEVEL: $_EXPLAIN_LEVEL"
       │
       ▼
Generated SKILL.md body (static Markdown, baked at gen-skill-docs):
  - AskUserQuestion Format section (existing V0)
  - Writing Style section (NEW, conditional prose gate)
       │
       ├── "Skip if EXPLAIN_LEVEL: terse OR user says 'be terse' this turn"
       ├── 6 writing rules (jargon, outcome, short, impact, first-use, override)
       └── Jargon list inlined from scripts/jargon-list.json
       │
       ▼
Agent applies or skips based on runtime EXPLAIN_LEVEL + user-turn signal
       │
       ▼
V0 QUESTION_TUNING + question-log + preferences unchanged
       │
       ▼
Output to user (gloss-on-first-use, outcome-framed, short sentences; or V0 prose if terse)

Data flow: throughput script (build-time)

bun run build
   │
   ├── gen:skill-docs (regenerates SKILL.md files with jargon list inlined)
   ├── update-readme-throughput (reads JSON if present; replaces anchor OR writes PENDING marker)
   └── other steps (binary compilation, etc.)

Separately, on-demand:
bun run scripts/garry-output-comparison.ts
   │
   ├── scc preflight (if missing → exit with setup-scc.sh hint)
   ├── For 2013 + 2026: enumerate Garry-authored commits in public garrytan/* repos
   ├── For each commit: git diff, extract ADDED lines, classify via scc --stdin
   └── Write docs/throughput-2013-vs-2026.json (per-language + caveats)

Security + privacy

  • No new user data. V1 extends preamble prose + config key. No new personal data collected.
  • No runtime file reads of sensitive data. Jargon list is a repo-committed curated list.
  • Migration script is one-shot. Flag-file prevents re-fire.
  • scc runs on public repos only. No access to private work.

Decisions log (with pros/cons)

Decision A: Four-level experience axis vs. ELI10 by default — ANSWER: ELI10 BY DEFAULT

Four-level axis (rejected): Ask users to self-identify as A/B/C/D on first run. Skills adapt per level.

  • Pros: Explicit user sovereignty. Power users get V0 behavior.
  • Cons: Adds onboarding friction. Forces users to label themselves. Technical expertise isn't one-dimensional. Engineers benefit from the same writing standards non-technical users do.

ELI10 by default with terse opt-out (chosen): Every skill's output defaults to the writing standard. Power users set explain_level: terse.

  • Pros: No onboarding question. Good writing benefits everyone. Power users still have an escape hatch.
  • Cons: Silently changes V0 behavior on upgrade → requires migration prompt.

Decision B: New resolver file vs. extend existing preamble — ANSWER: EXTEND EXISTING

New resolver (rejected): scripts/resolvers/eli10-writing.ts as a separate generator.

  • Pros: Modular.
  • Cons (Codex #7): Conflicts with existing "smart 16-year-old" framing in preamble's AskUserQuestion Format section. Two sources of truth.

Extend preamble (chosen): Writing Style section added to scripts/resolvers/preamble.ts directly below AskUserQuestion Format.

  • Pros: One source of truth. Composes with existing rules.
  • Cons: preamble.ts grows.

Decision C: Runtime suppression vs. conditional prose gate — ANSWER: CONDITIONAL PROSE GATE

Runtime suppression (rejected): Preamble read of explain_level triggers suppression logic.

  • Pros: Simpler mental model.
  • Cons (Codex #1): gen-skill-docs produces static Markdown. Once baked, content can't be retroactively hidden. Runtime suppression is fictional.

Conditional prose gate (chosen): "Skip this block if EXPLAIN_LEVEL: terse OR user says 'be terse' this turn." Prose convention; agent obeys or disobeys at runtime.

  • Pros: Testable. Matches V0's QUESTION_TUNING pattern. Honest about the mechanism.
  • Cons: Depends on agent prose compliance (no hard runtime gate).

Decision D: Jargon list location — runtime-user-editable vs. repo-owned gen-time — ANSWER: REPO-OWNED GEN-TIME

User-editable at runtime (rejected): ~/.gstack/jargon-list.json overrides scripts/jargon-list.json.

  • Pros: User can add terms specific to their domain.
  • Cons (Codex #4, Pass 2): Gen-time inlining means user edits require regeneration. Contradiction.

Repo-owned, gen-time inlined (chosen): scripts/jargon-list.json only. PRs to add/remove. bun run gen:skill-docs inlines terms into preamble prose.

  • Pros: One source of truth. Zero runtime cost. Composable with existing build.
  • Cons: Users can't add terms locally. Mitigation: documented in CONTRIBUTING.md; PRs accepted.

Decision E: Pacing overhaul in V1 vs. V1.1 — ANSWER: V1.1 (extracted)

Pacing in V1 (rejected): Bundle ranking + auto-accept + Silent Decisions + max-3-per-phase cap + flip mechanism.

  • Pros: Addresses Louise's fatigue directly.
  • Cons (Eng review Pass 3 + Codex Pass 2): 10+ structural gaps unfixable via plan-text editing. Session-state model undefined. phase field missing from question-log. Registry doesn't cover dynamic review findings. Flip mechanism has no implementation. Migration prompt itself is an interrupt. First-run preamble prompts also count. Pacing as prose can't invert existing ask-per-section execution order.

Extract to V1.1 (chosen): Ship ELI10 + LOC in V1. Pacing gets its own design round with full review cycle.

  • Pros: Ships V1 honestly. Gives V1.1 real baseline data from V1 usage (Louise's V1 transcript). Matches SCOPE REDUCTION mode from CEO review.
  • Cons: Louise's fatigue complaint isn't fully addressed until V1.1. Mitigation: V1 still improves her experience via writing quality; V1.1 follows up with pacing.

Decision F: README update mechanism — single string vs. two-string — ANSWER: TWO-STRING

Single string (rejected): <!-- GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-MULTIPLE: N× --> as both replacement anchor AND CI-reject marker.

  • Pros: Simple.
  • Cons (Codex Pass 2): Pipeline breaks on itself — CI rejects commits containing the marker, but the marker IS the anchor.

Two-string (chosen): GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PLACEHOLDER (anchor, stable) + GSTACK-THROUGHPUT-PENDING (explicit missing-build marker, CI rejects).

  • Pros: Anchor persists; CI catches actual failure state.
  • Cons: Two symbols to remember.

Review record

Review Runs Status Key findings integrated
CEO Review 1 CLEAR (HOLD SCOPE) Premise pivot: four-level axis → ELI10 by default. Cross-model tensions resolved via explicit user choice.
Codex Review 2 ISSUES_FOUND + drove scope reduction Pass 1: 25 findings, 3 critical blockers (static-markdown, host-paths, README mechanism). Pass 2: 20 findings on revised plan, drove V1.1 extraction.
Eng Review 3 CLEAR (SCOPE_REDUCED) Pass 1: critical gaps + 3 decisions (all A). Pass 2: scoring-formula bug, path contradiction, fake devDependencies.optional field. Pass 3: identified pacing structural gaps, drove extraction.
DX Review 1 CLEAR (TRIAGE) 3 critical (docs plan, upgrade migration, hero moment). 9 auto-accepted as Silent DX Decisions.

Review report persisted in ~/.gstack/ via gstack-review-log. Plan file retained with full history at ~/.claude/plans/system-instruction-you-are-working-transient-sunbeam.md.