Files
Garry Tan b805aa0113 feat: Confusion Protocol, Hermes + GBrain hosts, brain-first resolver (v0.18.0.0) (#1005)
* feat: add Confusion Protocol to preamble resolver

Injects a high-stakes ambiguity gate at preamble tier >= 2 so all
workflow skills get it. Fires when Claude encounters architectural
decisions, data model changes, destructive operations, or contradictory
requirements. Does NOT fire on routine coding.

Addresses Karpathy failure mode #1 (wrong assumptions) with an
inline STOP gate instead of relying on workflow skill invocation.

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

* feat: add Hermes and GBrain host configs

Hermes: tool rewrites for terminal/read_file/patch/delegate_task,
paths to ~/.hermes/skills/gstack, AGENTS.md config file.

GBrain: coding skills become brain-aware when GBrain mod is installed.
Same tool rewrites as OpenClaw (agents spawn Claude Code via ACP).
GBRAIN_CONTEXT_LOAD and GBRAIN_SAVE_RESULTS NOT suppressed on gbrain
host, enabling brain-first lookup and save-to-brain behavior.

Both registered in hosts/index.ts with setup script redirect messages.

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

* feat: GBrain resolver — brain-first lookup and save-to-brain

New scripts/resolvers/gbrain.ts with two resolver functions:
- GBRAIN_CONTEXT_LOAD: search brain for context before skill starts
- GBRAIN_SAVE_RESULTS: save skill output to brain after completion

Placeholders added to 4 thinking skill templates (office-hours,
investigate, plan-ceo-review, retro). Resolves to empty string on
all hosts except gbrain via suppressedResolvers.

GBRAIN suppression added to all 9 non-gbrain host configs.

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

* feat: wire slop:diff into /review as advisory diagnostic

Adds Step 3.5 to the review template: runs bun run slop:diff against
the base branch to catch AI code quality issues (empty catches,
redundant return await, overcomplicated abstractions). Advisory only,
never blocking. Skips silently if slop-scan is not installed.

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

* docs: add Karpathy compatibility note to README

Positions gstack as the workflow enforcement layer for Karpathy-style
CLAUDE.md rules (17K stars). Links to forrestchang/andrej-karpathy-skills.
Maps each Karpathy failure mode to the gstack skill that addresses it.

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

* fix: improve native OpenClaw thinking skills

office-hours: add design doc path visibility message after writing
ceo-review: add HARD GATE reminder at review section transitions
retro: add non-git context support (check memory for meeting notes)

Mirrors template improvements to hand-crafted native skills.

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

* chore: update tests and golden fixtures for new hosts

- Host count: 8 → 10 (hermes, gbrain)
- OpenClaw adapter test: expects undefined (dead code removed)
- Golden ship fixtures: updated with Confusion Protocol + vendoring

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

* chore: regenerate all SKILL.md files

Regenerated from templates after Confusion Protocol, GBrain resolver
placeholders, slop:diff in review, HARD GATE reminders, investigation
learnings, design doc visibility, and retro non-git context changes.

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

* docs: update project documentation for v0.18.0.0

- CHANGELOG: add v0.18.0.0 entry (Confusion Protocol, Hermes, GBrain,
  slop in review, Karpathy note, skill improvements)
- CLAUDE.md: add hermes.ts and gbrain.ts to hosts listing
- README.md: update agent count 8→10, add Hermes + GBrain to table
- VERSION: bump to 0.18.0.0

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

* chore: sync package.json version to 0.18.0.0

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

* fix: extract Step 0 from review SKILL.md in E2E test

The review-base-branch E2E test was copying the full 1493-line
review/SKILL.md into the test fixture. The agent spent 8+ turns
reading it in chunks, leaving only 7 turns for actual work, causing
error_max_turns on every attempt.

Now extracts only Step 0 (base branch detection, ~50 lines) which is
all the test actually needs. Follows the CLAUDE.md rule: "NEVER copy
a full SKILL.md file into an E2E test fixture."

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

* feat: update GBrain and Hermes host configs for v0.10.0 integration

GBrain: add 'triggers' to keepFields so generated skills pass
checkResolvable() validation. Add version compat comment.

Hermes: un-suppress GBRAIN_CONTEXT_LOAD and GBRAIN_SAVE_RESULTS.
The resolvers handle GBrain-not-installed gracefully, so Hermes
agents with GBrain as a mod get brain features automatically.

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

* feat: GBrain resolver DX improvements and preamble health check

Resolver changes:
- gbrain query → gbrain search (fast keyword search, not expensive hybrid)
- Add keyword extraction guidance for agents
- Show explicit gbrain put_page syntax with --title, --tags, heredoc
- Add entity enrichment with false-positive filter
- Name throttle error patterns (exit code 1, stderr keywords)
- Add data-research routing for investigate skill
- Expand skillSaveMap from 4 to 8 entries
- Add brain operation telemetry summary

Preamble changes:
- Add gbrain doctor --fast --json health check for gbrain/hermes hosts
- Parse check failures/warnings count
- Show failing check details when score < 50

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

* fix: preserve keepFields in allowlist frontmatter mode

The allowlist mode hard-coded name + description reconstruction but
never iterated keepFields for additional fields. Adding 'triggers'
to keepFields was a no-op because the field was silently stripped.

Now iterates keepFields and preserves any field beyond name/description
from the source template frontmatter, including YAML arrays.

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

* feat: add triggers to all 38 skill templates

Multi-word, skill-specific trigger keywords for GBrain's RESOLVER.md
router. Each skill gets 3-6 triggers derived from its "Use when asked
to..." description text. Avoids single generic words that would collide
across skills (e.g., "debug this" not "debug").

These are distinct from voice-triggers (speech-to-text aliases) and
serve GBrain's checkResolvable() validation.

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

* chore: regenerate all SKILL.md files and update golden fixtures

Regenerated from updated templates (triggers, brain placeholders,
resolver DX improvements, preamble health check). Golden fixtures
updated to match.

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

* fix: settings-hook remove exits 1 when nothing to remove

gstack-settings-hook remove was exiting 0 when settings.json didn't
exist, causing gstack-uninstall to report "SessionStart hook" as
removed on clean systems where nothing was installed.

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

* docs: update project documentation for GBrain v0.10.0 integration

ARCHITECTURE.md: added GBRAIN_CONTEXT_LOAD and GBRAIN_SAVE_RESULTS
to resolver table.

CHANGELOG.md: expanded v0.18.0.0 entry with GBrain v0.10.0 integration
details (triggers, expanded brain-awareness, DX improvements, Hermes
brain support), updated date.

CLAUDE.md: added gbrain to resolvers/ directory comment.

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

* fix: routing E2E stops writing to user's ~/.claude/skills/

installSkills() was copying SKILL.md files to both project-level
(.claude/skills/ in tmpDir) and user-level (~/.claude/skills/).
Writing to the user's real install fails when symlinks point to
different worktrees or dangling targets (ENOENT on copyFileSync).

Now installs to project-level only. The test already sets cwd to
the tmpDir, so project-level discovery works.

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

* chore: scale Gemini E2E back to smoke test

Gemini CLI gets lost in worktrees on complex tasks (review times out
at 600s, discover-skill hits exit 124). Nobody uses Gemini for gstack
skill execution. Replace the two failing tests (gemini-discover-skill
and gemini-review-findings) with a single smoke test that verifies
Gemini can start and read the README. 90s timeout, no skill invocation.

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

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-16 10:41:38 -07:00

379 lines
14 KiB
Cheetah

---
name: document-release
preamble-tier: 2
version: 1.0.0
description: |
Post-ship documentation update. Reads all project docs, cross-references the
diff, updates README/ARCHITECTURE/CONTRIBUTING/CLAUDE.md to match what shipped,
polishes CHANGELOG voice, cleans up TODOS, and optionally bumps VERSION. Use when
asked to "update the docs", "sync documentation", or "post-ship docs".
Proactively suggest after a PR is merged or code is shipped. (gstack)
allowed-tools:
- Bash
- Read
- Write
- Edit
- Grep
- Glob
- AskUserQuestion
triggers:
- update docs after ship
- document what changed
- post-ship docs
---
{{PREAMBLE}}
{{BASE_BRANCH_DETECT}}
# Document Release: Post-Ship Documentation Update
You are running the `/document-release` workflow. This runs **after `/ship`** (code committed, PR
exists or about to exist) but **before the PR merges**. Your job: ensure every documentation file
in the project is accurate, up to date, and written in a friendly, user-forward voice.
You are mostly automated. Make obvious factual updates directly. Stop and ask only for risky or
subjective decisions.
**Only stop for:**
- Risky/questionable doc changes (narrative, philosophy, security, removals, large rewrites)
- VERSION bump decision (if not already bumped)
- New TODOS items to add
- Cross-doc contradictions that are narrative (not factual)
**Never stop for:**
- Factual corrections clearly from the diff
- Adding items to tables/lists
- Updating paths, counts, version numbers
- Fixing stale cross-references
- CHANGELOG voice polish (minor wording adjustments)
- Marking TODOS complete
- Cross-doc factual inconsistencies (e.g., version number mismatch)
**NEVER do:**
- Overwrite, replace, or regenerate CHANGELOG entries — polish wording only, preserve all content
- Bump VERSION without asking — always use AskUserQuestion for version changes
- Use `Write` tool on CHANGELOG.md — always use `Edit` with exact `old_string` matches
---
## Step 1: Pre-flight & Diff Analysis
1. Check the current branch. If on the base branch, **abort**: "You're on the base branch. Run from a feature branch."
2. Gather context about what changed:
```bash
git diff <base>...HEAD --stat
```
```bash
git log <base>..HEAD --oneline
```
```bash
git diff <base>...HEAD --name-only
```
3. Discover all documentation files in the repo:
```bash
find . -maxdepth 2 -name "*.md" -not -path "./.git/*" -not -path "./node_modules/*" -not -path "./.gstack/*" -not -path "./.context/*" | sort
```
4. Classify the changes into categories relevant to documentation:
- **New features** — new files, new commands, new skills, new capabilities
- **Changed behavior** — modified services, updated APIs, config changes
- **Removed functionality** — deleted files, removed commands
- **Infrastructure** — build system, test infrastructure, CI
5. Output a brief summary: "Analyzing N files changed across M commits. Found K documentation files to review."
---
## Step 2: Per-File Documentation Audit
Read each documentation file and cross-reference it against the diff. Use these generic heuristics
(adapt to whatever project you're in — these are not gstack-specific):
**README.md:**
- Does it describe all features and capabilities visible in the diff?
- Are install/setup instructions consistent with the changes?
- Are examples, demos, and usage descriptions still valid?
- Are troubleshooting steps still accurate?
**ARCHITECTURE.md:**
- Do ASCII diagrams and component descriptions match the current code?
- Are design decisions and "why" explanations still accurate?
- Be conservative — only update things clearly contradicted by the diff. Architecture docs
describe things unlikely to change frequently.
**CONTRIBUTING.md — New contributor smoke test:**
- Walk through the setup instructions as if you are a brand new contributor.
- Are the listed commands accurate? Would each step succeed?
- Do test tier descriptions match the current test infrastructure?
- Are workflow descriptions (dev setup, operational learnings, etc.) current?
- Flag anything that would fail or confuse a first-time contributor.
**CLAUDE.md / project instructions:**
- Does the project structure section match the actual file tree?
- Are listed commands and scripts accurate?
- Do build/test instructions match what's in package.json (or equivalent)?
**Any other .md files:**
- Read the file, determine its purpose and audience.
- Cross-reference against the diff to check if it contradicts anything the file says.
For each file, classify needed updates as:
- **Auto-update** — Factual corrections clearly warranted by the diff: adding an item to a
table, updating a file path, fixing a count, updating a project structure tree.
- **Ask user** — Narrative changes, section removal, security model changes, large rewrites
(more than ~10 lines in one section), ambiguous relevance, adding entirely new sections.
---
## Step 3: Apply Auto-Updates
Make all clear, factual updates directly using the Edit tool.
For each file modified, output a one-line summary describing **what specifically changed** — not
just "Updated README.md" but "README.md: added /new-skill to skills table, updated skill count
from 9 to 10."
**Never auto-update:**
- README introduction or project positioning
- ARCHITECTURE philosophy or design rationale
- Security model descriptions
- Do not remove entire sections from any document
---
## Step 4: Ask About Risky/Questionable Changes
For each risky or questionable update identified in Step 2, use AskUserQuestion with:
- Context: project name, branch, which doc file, what we're reviewing
- The specific documentation decision
- `RECOMMENDATION: Choose [X] because [one-line reason]`
- Options including C) Skip — leave as-is
Apply approved changes immediately after each answer.
---
## Step 5: CHANGELOG Voice Polish
**CRITICAL — NEVER CLOBBER CHANGELOG ENTRIES.**
This step polishes voice. It does NOT rewrite, replace, or regenerate CHANGELOG content.
A real incident occurred where an agent replaced existing CHANGELOG entries when it should have
preserved them. This skill must NEVER do that.
**Rules:**
1. Read the entire CHANGELOG.md first. Understand what is already there.
2. Only modify wording within existing entries. Never delete, reorder, or replace entries.
3. Never regenerate a CHANGELOG entry from scratch. The entry was written by `/ship` from the
actual diff and commit history. It is the source of truth. You are polishing prose, not
rewriting history.
4. If an entry looks wrong or incomplete, use AskUserQuestion — do NOT silently fix it.
5. Use Edit tool with exact `old_string` matches — never use Write to overwrite CHANGELOG.md.
**If CHANGELOG was not modified in this branch:** skip this step.
**If CHANGELOG was modified in this branch**, review the entry for voice:
- **Sell test:** Would a user reading each bullet think "oh nice, I want to try that"? If not,
rewrite the wording (not the content).
- Lead with what the user can now **do** — not implementation details.
- "You can now..." not "Refactored the..."
- Flag and rewrite any entry that reads like a commit message.
- Internal/contributor changes belong in a separate "### For contributors" subsection.
- Auto-fix minor voice adjustments. Use AskUserQuestion if a rewrite would alter meaning.
---
## Step 6: Cross-Doc Consistency & Discoverability Check
After auditing each file individually, do a cross-doc consistency pass:
1. Does the README's feature/capability list match what CLAUDE.md (or project instructions) describes?
2. Does ARCHITECTURE's component list match CONTRIBUTING's project structure description?
3. Does CHANGELOG's latest version match the VERSION file?
4. **Discoverability:** Is every documentation file reachable from README.md or CLAUDE.md? If
ARCHITECTURE.md exists but neither README nor CLAUDE.md links to it, flag it. Every doc
should be discoverable from one of the two entry-point files.
5. Flag any contradictions between documents. Auto-fix clear factual inconsistencies (e.g., a
version mismatch). Use AskUserQuestion for narrative contradictions.
---
## Step 7: TODOS.md Cleanup
This is a second pass that complements `/ship`'s Step 5.5. Read `review/TODOS-format.md` (if
available) for the canonical TODO item format.
If TODOS.md does not exist, skip this step.
1. **Completed items not yet marked:** Cross-reference the diff against open TODO items. If a
TODO is clearly completed by the changes in this branch, move it to the Completed section
with `**Completed:** vX.Y.Z.W (YYYY-MM-DD)`. Be conservative — only mark items with clear
evidence in the diff.
2. **Items needing description updates:** If a TODO references files or components that were
significantly changed, its description may be stale. Use AskUserQuestion to confirm whether
the TODO should be updated, completed, or left as-is.
3. **New deferred work:** Check the diff for `TODO`, `FIXME`, `HACK`, and `XXX` comments. For
each one that represents meaningful deferred work (not a trivial inline note), use
AskUserQuestion to ask whether it should be captured in TODOS.md.
---
## Step 8: VERSION Bump Question
**CRITICAL — NEVER BUMP VERSION WITHOUT ASKING.**
1. **If VERSION does not exist:** Skip silently.
2. Check if VERSION was already modified on this branch:
```bash
git diff <base>...HEAD -- VERSION
```
3. **If VERSION was NOT bumped:** Use AskUserQuestion:
- RECOMMENDATION: Choose C (Skip) because docs-only changes rarely warrant a version bump
- A) Bump PATCH (X.Y.Z+1) — if doc changes ship alongside code changes
- B) Bump MINOR (X.Y+1.0) — if this is a significant standalone release
- C) Skip — no version bump needed
4. **If VERSION was already bumped:** Do NOT skip silently. Instead, check whether the bump
still covers the full scope of changes on this branch:
a. Read the CHANGELOG entry for the current VERSION. What features does it describe?
b. Read the full diff (`git diff <base>...HEAD --stat` and `git diff <base>...HEAD --name-only`).
Are there significant changes (new features, new skills, new commands, major refactors)
that are NOT mentioned in the CHANGELOG entry for the current version?
c. **If the CHANGELOG entry covers everything:** Skip — output "VERSION: Already bumped to
vX.Y.Z, covers all changes."
d. **If there are significant uncovered changes:** Use AskUserQuestion explaining what the
current version covers vs what's new, and ask:
- RECOMMENDATION: Choose A because the new changes warrant their own version
- A) Bump to next patch (X.Y.Z+1) — give the new changes their own version
- B) Keep current version — add new changes to the existing CHANGELOG entry
- C) Skip — leave version as-is, handle later
The key insight: a VERSION bump set for "feature A" should not silently absorb "feature B"
if feature B is substantial enough to deserve its own version entry.
---
## Step 9: Commit & Output
**Empty check first:** Run `git status` (never use `-uall`). If no documentation files were
modified by any previous step, output "All documentation is up to date." and exit without
committing.
**Commit:**
1. Stage modified documentation files by name (never `git add -A` or `git add .`).
2. Create a single commit:
```bash
git commit -m "$(cat <<'EOF'
docs: update project documentation for vX.Y.Z.W
{{CO_AUTHOR_TRAILER}}
EOF
)"
```
3. Push to the current branch:
```bash
git push
```
**PR/MR body update (idempotent, race-safe):**
1. Read the existing PR/MR body into a PID-unique tempfile (use the platform detected in Step 0):
**If GitHub:**
```bash
gh pr view --json body -q .body > /tmp/gstack-pr-body-$$.md
```
**If GitLab:**
```bash
glab mr view -F json 2>/dev/null | python3 -c "import sys,json; print(json.load(sys.stdin).get('description',''))" > /tmp/gstack-pr-body-$$.md
```
2. If the tempfile already contains a `## Documentation` section, replace that section with the
updated content. If it does not contain one, append a `## Documentation` section at the end.
3. The Documentation section should include a **doc diff preview** — for each file modified,
describe what specifically changed (e.g., "README.md: added /document-release to skills
table, updated skill count from 9 to 10").
4. Write the updated body back:
**If GitHub:**
```bash
gh pr edit --body-file /tmp/gstack-pr-body-$$.md
```
**If GitLab:**
Read the contents of `/tmp/gstack-pr-body-$$.md` using the Read tool, then pass it to `glab mr update` using a heredoc to avoid shell metacharacter issues:
```bash
glab mr update -d "$(cat <<'MRBODY'
<paste the file contents here>
MRBODY
)"
```
5. Clean up the tempfile:
```bash
rm -f /tmp/gstack-pr-body-$$.md
```
6. If `gh pr view` / `glab mr view` fails (no PR/MR exists): skip with message "No PR/MR found — skipping body update."
7. If `gh pr edit` / `glab mr update` fails: warn "Could not update PR/MR body — documentation changes are in the
commit." and continue.
**Structured doc health summary (final output):**
Output a scannable summary showing every documentation file's status:
```
Documentation health:
README.md [status] ([details])
ARCHITECTURE.md [status] ([details])
CONTRIBUTING.md [status] ([details])
CHANGELOG.md [status] ([details])
TODOS.md [status] ([details])
VERSION [status] ([details])
```
Where status is one of:
- Updated — with description of what changed
- Current — no changes needed
- Voice polished — wording adjusted
- Not bumped — user chose to skip
- Already bumped — version was set by /ship
- Skipped — file does not exist
---
## Important Rules
- **Read before editing.** Always read the full content of a file before modifying it.
- **Never clobber CHANGELOG.** Polish wording only. Never delete, replace, or regenerate entries.
- **Never bump VERSION silently.** Always ask. Even if already bumped, check whether it covers the full scope of changes.
- **Be explicit about what changed.** Every edit gets a one-line summary.
- **Generic heuristics, not project-specific.** The audit checks work on any repo.
- **Discoverability matters.** Every doc file should be reachable from README or CLAUDE.md.
- **Voice: friendly, user-forward, not obscure.** Write like you're explaining to a smart person
who hasn't seen the code.