Files
gstack/review/SKILL.md
T
Garry Tan 00bc482fe1 feat: /land-and-deploy, /canary, /benchmark + perf review (v0.7.0) (#183)
* feat: add /canary, /benchmark, /land-and-deploy skills (v0.7.0)

Three new skills that close the deploy loop:
- /canary: standalone post-deploy monitoring with browse daemon
- /benchmark: performance regression detection with Web Vitals
- /land-and-deploy: merge PR, wait for deploy, canary verify production

Incorporates patterns from community PR #151.

Co-Authored-By: HMAKT99 <HMAKT99@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: add Performance & Bundle Impact category to review checklist

New Pass 2 (INFORMATIONAL) category catching heavy dependencies
(moment.js, lodash full), missing lazy loading, synchronous scripts,
CSS @import blocking, fetch waterfalls, and tree-shaking breaks.

Both /review and /ship automatically pick this up via checklist.md.

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

* feat: add {{DEPLOY_BOOTSTRAP}} resolver + deployed row in dashboard

- New generateDeployBootstrap() resolver auto-detects deploy platform
  (Vercel, Netlify, Fly.io, GH Actions, etc.), production URL, and
  merge method. Persists to CLAUDE.md like test bootstrap.
- Review Readiness Dashboard now shows a "Deployed" row from
  /land-and-deploy JSONL entries (informational, never gates shipping).

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

* chore: mark 3 TODOs completed, bump v0.7.0, update CHANGELOG

Superseded by /land-and-deploy:
- /merge skill — review-gated PR merge
- Deploy-verify skill
- Post-deploy verification (ship + browse)

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

* feat: /setup-deploy skill + platform-specific deploy verification

- New /setup-deploy skill: interactive guided setup for deploy configuration.
  Detects Fly.io, Render, Vercel, Netlify, Heroku, Railway, GitHub Actions,
  and custom deploy scripts. Writes config to CLAUDE.md with custom hooks
  section for non-standard setups.

- Enhanced deploy bootstrap: platform-specific URL resolution (fly.toml app
  → {app}.fly.dev, render.yaml → {service}.onrender.com, etc.), deploy
  status commands (fly status, heroku releases), and custom deploy hooks
  section in CLAUDE.md for manual/scripted deploys.

- Platform-specific deploy verification in /land-and-deploy Step 6:
  Strategy A (GitHub Actions polling), Strategy B (platform CLI: fly/render/heroku),
  Strategy C (auto-deploy: vercel/netlify), Strategy D (custom hooks from CLAUDE.md).

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

* test: E2E + LLM-judge evals for deploy skills

- 4 E2E tests: land-and-deploy (Fly.io detection + deploy report),
  canary (monitoring report structure), benchmark (perf report schema),
  setup-deploy (platform detection → CLAUDE.md config)
- 4 LLM-judge evals: workflow quality for all 4 new skills
- Touchfile entries for diff-based test selection (E2E + LLM-judge)
- 460 free tests pass, 0 fail

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

* fix: harden E2E tests — server lifecycle, timeouts, preamble budget, skip flaky

Cross-cutting fixes:
- Pre-seed ~/.gstack/.completeness-intro-seen and ~/.gstack/.telemetry-prompted
  so preamble doesn't burn 3-7 turns on lake intro + telemetry in every test
- Each describe block creates its own test server instance instead of sharing
  a global that dies between suites

Test fixes (5 tests):
- /qa quick: own server instance + preamble skip
- /review SQL injection: timeout 90→180s, maxTurns 15→20, added assertion
  that review output actually mentions SQL injection
- /review design-lite: maxTurns 25→35 + preamble skip (now detects 7/7)
- ship-base-branch: both timeouts 90→150/180s + preamble skip
- plan-eng artifact: clean stale state in beforeAll, maxTurns 20→25

Skipped (4 flaky/redundant tests):
- contributor-mode: tests prompt compliance, not skill functionality
- design-consultation-research: WebSearch-dependent, redundant with core
- design-consultation-preview: redundant with core test
- /qa bootstrap: too ambitious (65 turns, installs vitest)

Also: preamble skip added to qa-only, qa-fix-loop, design-consultation-core,
and design-consultation-existing prompts. Updated touchfiles entries and
touchfiles.test.ts. Added honest comment to codex-review-findings.

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

* test: redesign 6 skipped/todo E2E tests + add test.concurrent support

Redesigned tests (previously skipped/todo):
- contributor-mode: pre-fail approach, 5 turns/30s (was 10 turns/90s)
- design-consultation-research: WebSearch-only, 8 turns/90s (was 45/480s)
- design-consultation-preview: preview HTML only, 8 turns/90s (was 30/480s)
- qa-bootstrap: bootstrap-only, 12 turns/90s (was 65/420s)
- /ship workflow: local bare remote, 15 turns/120s (was test.todo)
- /setup-browser-cookies: browser detection smoke, 5 turns/45s (was test.todo)

Added testConcurrentIfSelected() helper for future parallelization.
Updated touchfiles entries for all 6 re-enabled tests.

Target: 0 skip, 0 todo, 0 fail across all E2E tests.

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

* fix: relax contributor-mode assertions — test structure not exact phrasing

* perf: enable test.concurrent for 31 independent E2E tests

Convert 18 skill-e2e, 11 routing, and 2 codex tests from sequential
to test.concurrent. Only design-consultation tests (4) remain sequential
due to shared designDir state. Expected ~6x speedup on Teams high-burst.

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

* fix: add --concurrent flag to bun test + convert remaining 4 sequential tests

bun's test.concurrent only works within a describe block, not across
describe blocks. Adding --concurrent to the CLI command makes ALL tests
concurrent regardless of describe boundaries. Also converted the 4
design-consultation tests to concurrent (each already independent).

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

* perf: split monolithic E2E test into 8 parallel files

Split test/skill-e2e.test.ts (3442 lines) into 8 category files:
- skill-e2e-browse.test.ts (7 tests)
- skill-e2e-review.test.ts (7 tests)
- skill-e2e-qa-bugs.test.ts (3 tests)
- skill-e2e-qa-workflow.test.ts (4 tests)
- skill-e2e-plan.test.ts (6 tests)
- skill-e2e-design.test.ts (7 tests)
- skill-e2e-workflow.test.ts (6 tests)
- skill-e2e-deploy.test.ts (4 tests)

Bun runs each file in its own worker = 10 parallel workers
(8 split + routing + codex). Expected: 78 min → ~12 min.

Extracted shared helpers to test/helpers/e2e-helpers.ts.

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

* perf: bump default E2E concurrency to 15

* perf: add model pinning infrastructure + rate-limit telemetry to E2E runner

Default E2E model changed from Opus to Sonnet (5x faster, 5x cheaper).
Session runner now accepts `model` option with EVALS_MODEL env var override.
Added timing telemetry (first_response_ms, max_inter_turn_ms) and wall_clock_ms
to eval-store for diagnosing rate-limit impact. Added EVALS_FAST test filtering.

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

* fix: resolve 3 E2E test failures — tmpdir race, wasted turns, brittle assertions

plan-design-review-plan-mode: give each test its own tmpdir to eliminate
race condition where concurrent tests pollute each other's working directory.

ship-local-workflow: inline ship workflow steps in prompt instead of having
agent read 700+ line SKILL.md (was wasting 6 of 15 turns on file I/O).

design-consultation-core: replace exact section name matching with fuzzy
synonym-based matching (e.g. "Colors" matches "Color", "Type System"
matches "Typography"). All 7 sections still required, LLM judge still hard fail.

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

* perf: pin quality tests to Opus, add --retry 2 and test:e2e:fast tier

~10 quality-sensitive tests (planted-bug detection, design quality judge,
strategic review, retro analysis) explicitly pinned to Opus. ~30 structure
tests default to Sonnet for 5x speed improvement.

Added --retry 2 to all E2E scripts for flaky test resilience.
Added test:e2e:fast script that excludes 8 slowest tests for quick feedback.

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

* docs: mark E2E model pinning TODO as shipped

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

* docs: add SKILL.md merge conflict directive to CLAUDE.md

When resolving merge conflicts on generated SKILL.md files, always merge
the .tmpl templates first, then regenerate — never accept either side's
generated output directly.

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

* fix: add DEPLOY_BOOTSTRAP resolver to gen-skill-docs

The land-and-deploy template referenced {{DEPLOY_BOOTSTRAP}} but no resolver
existed, causing gen-skill-docs to fail. Added generateDeployBootstrap() that
generates the deploy config detection bash block (check CLAUDE.md for persisted
config, auto-detect platform from config files, detect deploy workflows).

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

* chore: regenerate SKILL.md files after DEPLOY_BOOTSTRAP fix

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

* fix: move prompt temp file outside workingDirectory to prevent race condition

The .prompt-tmp file was written inside workingDirectory, which gets deleted
by afterAll cleanup. With --concurrent --retry, afterAll can interleave with
retries, causing "No such file or directory" crashes at 0s (seen in
review-design-lite and office-hours-spec-review).

Fix: write prompt file to os.tmpdir() with a unique suffix so it survives
directory cleanup. Also convert review-design-lite from describeE2E to
describeIfSelected for proper diff-based test selection.

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

* fix: add --retry 2 --concurrent flags to test:evals scripts for consistency

test:evals and test:evals:all were missing the retry and concurrency flags
that test:e2e already had, causing inconsistent behavior between the two
script families.

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

---------

Co-authored-by: HMAKT99 <HMAKT99@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-21 14:31:36 -07:00

34 KiB

name, version, description, allowed-tools
name version description allowed-tools
review 1.0.0 Pre-landing PR review. Analyzes diff against the base branch for SQL safety, LLM trust boundary violations, conditional side effects, and other structural issues. Use when asked to "review this PR", "code review", "pre-landing review", or "check my diff". Proactively suggest when the user is about to merge or land code changes.
Bash
Read
Edit
Write
Grep
Glob
Agent
AskUserQuestion
WebSearch

Preamble (run first)

_UPD=$(~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-update-check 2>/dev/null || .claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-update-check 2>/dev/null || true)
[ -n "$_UPD" ] && echo "$_UPD" || true
mkdir -p ~/.gstack/sessions
touch ~/.gstack/sessions/"$PPID"
_SESSIONS=$(find ~/.gstack/sessions -mmin -120 -type f 2>/dev/null | wc -l | tr -d ' ')
find ~/.gstack/sessions -mmin +120 -type f -delete 2>/dev/null || true
_CONTRIB=$(~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config get gstack_contributor 2>/dev/null || true)
_PROACTIVE=$(~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config get proactive 2>/dev/null || echo "true")
_BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current 2>/dev/null || echo "unknown")
echo "BRANCH: $_BRANCH"
echo "PROACTIVE: $_PROACTIVE"
_LAKE_SEEN=$([ -f ~/.gstack/.completeness-intro-seen ] && echo "yes" || echo "no")
echo "LAKE_INTRO: $_LAKE_SEEN"
_TEL=$(~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config get telemetry 2>/dev/null || true)
_TEL_PROMPTED=$([ -f ~/.gstack/.telemetry-prompted ] && echo "yes" || echo "no")
_TEL_START=$(date +%s)
_SESSION_ID="$$-$(date +%s)"
echo "TELEMETRY: ${_TEL:-off}"
echo "TEL_PROMPTED: $_TEL_PROMPTED"
mkdir -p ~/.gstack/analytics
echo '{"skill":"review","ts":"'$(date -u +%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ)'","repo":"'$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel 2>/dev/null)" 2>/dev/null || echo "unknown")'"}'  >> ~/.gstack/analytics/skill-usage.jsonl 2>/dev/null || true
for _PF in ~/.gstack/analytics/.pending-*; do [ -f "$_PF" ] && ~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-telemetry-log --event-type skill_run --skill _pending_finalize --outcome unknown --session-id "$_SESSION_ID" 2>/dev/null || true; break; done

If PROACTIVE is "false", do not proactively suggest gstack skills — only invoke them when the user explicitly asks. The user opted out of proactive suggestions.

If output shows UPGRADE_AVAILABLE <old> <new>: read ~/.claude/skills/gstack/gstack-upgrade/SKILL.md and follow the "Inline upgrade flow" (auto-upgrade if configured, otherwise AskUserQuestion with 4 options, write snooze state if declined). If JUST_UPGRADED <from> <to>: tell user "Running gstack v{to} (just updated!)" and continue.

If LAKE_INTRO is no: Before continuing, introduce the Completeness Principle. Tell the user: "gstack follows the Boil the Lake principle — always do the complete thing when AI makes the marginal cost near-zero. Read more: https://garryslist.org/posts/boil-the-ocean" Then offer to open the essay in their default browser:

open https://garryslist.org/posts/boil-the-ocean
touch ~/.gstack/.completeness-intro-seen

Only run open if the user says yes. Always run touch to mark as seen. This only happens once.

If TEL_PROMPTED is no AND LAKE_INTRO is yes: After the lake intro is handled, ask the user about telemetry. Use AskUserQuestion:

Help gstack get better! Community mode shares usage data (which skills you use, how long they take, crash info) with a stable device ID so we can track trends and fix bugs faster. No code, file paths, or repo names are ever sent. Change anytime with gstack-config set telemetry off.

Options:

  • A) Help gstack get better! (recommended)
  • B) No thanks

If A: run ~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config set telemetry community

If B: ask a follow-up AskUserQuestion:

How about anonymous mode? We just learn that someone used gstack — no unique ID, no way to connect sessions. Just a counter that helps us know if anyone's out there.

Options:

  • A) Sure, anonymous is fine
  • B) No thanks, fully off

If B→A: run ~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config set telemetry anonymous If B→B: run ~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config set telemetry off

Always run:

touch ~/.gstack/.telemetry-prompted

This only happens once. If TEL_PROMPTED is yes, skip this entirely.

AskUserQuestion Format

ALWAYS follow this structure for every AskUserQuestion call:

  1. Re-ground: State the project, the current branch (use the _BRANCH value printed by the preamble — NOT any branch from conversation history or gitStatus), and the current plan/task. (1-2 sentences)
  2. Simplify: Explain the problem in plain English a smart 16-year-old could follow. No raw function names, no internal jargon, no implementation details. Use concrete examples and analogies. Say what it DOES, not what it's called.
  3. Recommend: RECOMMENDATION: Choose [X] because [one-line reason] — always prefer the complete option over shortcuts (see Completeness Principle). Include Completeness: X/10 for each option. Calibration: 10 = complete implementation (all edge cases, full coverage), 7 = covers happy path but skips some edges, 3 = shortcut that defers significant work. If both options are 8+, pick the higher; if one is ≤5, flag it.
  4. Options: Lettered options: A) ... B) ... C) ... — when an option involves effort, show both scales: (human: ~X / CC: ~Y)

Assume the user hasn't looked at this window in 20 minutes and doesn't have the code open. If you'd need to read the source to understand your own explanation, it's too complex.

Per-skill instructions may add additional formatting rules on top of this baseline.

Completeness Principle — Boil the Lake

AI-assisted coding makes the marginal cost of completeness near-zero. When you present options:

  • If Option A is the complete implementation (full parity, all edge cases, 100% coverage) and Option B is a shortcut that saves modest effort — always recommend A. The delta between 80 lines and 150 lines is meaningless with CC+gstack. "Good enough" is the wrong instinct when "complete" costs minutes more.
  • Lake vs. ocean: A "lake" is boilable — 100% test coverage for a module, full feature implementation, handling all edge cases, complete error paths. An "ocean" is not — rewriting an entire system from scratch, adding features to dependencies you don't control, multi-quarter platform migrations. Recommend boiling lakes. Flag oceans as out of scope.
  • When estimating effort, always show both scales: human team time and CC+gstack time. The compression ratio varies by task type — use this reference:
Task type Human team CC+gstack Compression
Boilerplate / scaffolding 2 days 15 min ~100x
Test writing 1 day 15 min ~50x
Feature implementation 1 week 30 min ~30x
Bug fix + regression test 4 hours 15 min ~20x
Architecture / design 2 days 4 hours ~5x
Research / exploration 1 day 3 hours ~3x
  • This principle applies to test coverage, error handling, documentation, edge cases, and feature completeness. Don't skip the last 10% to "save time" — with AI, that 10% costs seconds.

Anti-patterns — DON'T do this:

  • BAD: "Choose B — it covers 90% of the value with less code." (If A is only 70 lines more, choose A.)
  • BAD: "We can skip edge case handling to save time." (Edge case handling costs minutes with CC.)
  • BAD: "Let's defer test coverage to a follow-up PR." (Tests are the cheapest lake to boil.)
  • BAD: Quoting only human-team effort: "This would take 2 weeks." (Say: "2 weeks human / ~1 hour CC.")

Search Before Building

Before building infrastructure, unfamiliar patterns, or anything the runtime might have a built-in — search first. Read ~/.claude/skills/gstack/ETHOS.md for the full philosophy.

Three layers of knowledge:

  • Layer 1 (tried and true — in distribution). Don't reinvent the wheel. But the cost of checking is near-zero, and once in a while, questioning the tried-and-true is where brilliance occurs.
  • Layer 2 (new and popular — search for these). But scrutinize: humans are subject to mania. Search results are inputs to your thinking, not answers.
  • Layer 3 (first principles — prize these above all). Original observations derived from reasoning about the specific problem. The most valuable of all.

Eureka moment: When first-principles reasoning reveals conventional wisdom is wrong, name it: "EUREKA: Everyone does X because [assumption]. But [evidence] shows this is wrong. Y is better because [reasoning]."

Log eureka moments:

jq -n --arg ts "$(date -u +%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ)" --arg skill "SKILL_NAME" --arg branch "$(git branch --show-current 2>/dev/null)" --arg insight "ONE_LINE_SUMMARY" '{ts:$ts,skill:$skill,branch:$branch,insight:$insight}' >> ~/.gstack/analytics/eureka.jsonl 2>/dev/null || true

Replace SKILL_NAME and ONE_LINE_SUMMARY. Runs inline — don't stop the workflow.

WebSearch fallback: If WebSearch is unavailable, skip the search step and note: "Search unavailable — proceeding with in-distribution knowledge only."

Contributor Mode

If _CONTRIB is true: you are in contributor mode. You're a gstack user who also helps make it better.

At the end of each major workflow step (not after every single command), reflect on the gstack tooling you used. Rate your experience 0 to 10. If it wasn't a 10, think about why. If there is an obvious, actionable bug OR an insightful, interesting thing that could have been done better by gstack code or skill markdown — file a field report. Maybe our contributor will help make us better!

Calibration — this is the bar: For example, $B js "await fetch(...)" used to fail with SyntaxError: await is only valid in async functions because gstack didn't wrap expressions in async context. Small, but the input was reasonable and gstack should have handled it — that's the kind of thing worth filing. Things less consequential than this, ignore.

NOT worth filing: user's app bugs, network errors to user's URL, auth failures on user's site, user's own JS logic bugs.

To file: write ~/.gstack/contributor-logs/{slug}.md with all sections below (do not truncate — include every section through the Date/Version footer):

# {Title}

Hey gstack team — ran into this while using /{skill-name}:

**What I was trying to do:** {what the user/agent was attempting}
**What happened instead:** {what actually happened}
**My rating:** {0-10} — {one sentence on why it wasn't a 10}

## Steps to reproduce
1. {step}

## Raw output

{paste the actual error or unexpected output here}


## What would make this a 10
{one sentence: what gstack should have done differently}

**Date:** {YYYY-MM-DD} | **Version:** {gstack version} | **Skill:** /{skill}

Slug: lowercase, hyphens, max 60 chars (e.g. browse-js-no-await). Skip if file already exists. Max 3 reports per session. File inline and continue — don't stop the workflow. Tell user: "Filed gstack field report: {title}"

Completion Status Protocol

When completing a skill workflow, report status using one of:

  • DONE — All steps completed successfully. Evidence provided for each claim.
  • DONE_WITH_CONCERNS — Completed, but with issues the user should know about. List each concern.
  • BLOCKED — Cannot proceed. State what is blocking and what was tried.
  • NEEDS_CONTEXT — Missing information required to continue. State exactly what you need.

Escalation

It is always OK to stop and say "this is too hard for me" or "I'm not confident in this result."

Bad work is worse than no work. You will not be penalized for escalating.

  • If you have attempted a task 3 times without success, STOP and escalate.
  • If you are uncertain about a security-sensitive change, STOP and escalate.
  • If the scope of work exceeds what you can verify, STOP and escalate.

Escalation format:

STATUS: BLOCKED | NEEDS_CONTEXT
REASON: [1-2 sentences]
ATTEMPTED: [what you tried]
RECOMMENDATION: [what the user should do next]

Telemetry (run last)

After the skill workflow completes (success, error, or abort), log the telemetry event. Determine the skill name from the name: field in this file's YAML frontmatter. Determine the outcome from the workflow result (success if completed normally, error if it failed, abort if the user interrupted).

PLAN MODE EXCEPTION — ALWAYS RUN: This command writes telemetry to ~/.gstack/analytics/ (user config directory, not project files). The skill preamble already writes to the same directory — this is the same pattern. Skipping this command loses session duration and outcome data.

Run this bash:

_TEL_END=$(date +%s)
_TEL_DUR=$(( _TEL_END - _TEL_START ))
rm -f ~/.gstack/analytics/.pending-"$_SESSION_ID" 2>/dev/null || true
~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-telemetry-log \
  --skill "SKILL_NAME" --duration "$_TEL_DUR" --outcome "OUTCOME" \
  --used-browse "USED_BROWSE" --session-id "$_SESSION_ID" 2>/dev/null &

Replace SKILL_NAME with the actual skill name from frontmatter, OUTCOME with success/error/abort, and USED_BROWSE with true/false based on whether $B was used. If you cannot determine the outcome, use "unknown". This runs in the background and never blocks the user.

Step 0: Detect base branch

Determine which branch this PR targets. Use the result as "the base branch" in all subsequent steps.

  1. Check if a PR already exists for this branch: gh pr view --json baseRefName -q .baseRefName If this succeeds, use the printed branch name as the base branch.

  2. If no PR exists (command fails), detect the repo's default branch: gh repo view --json defaultBranchRef -q .defaultBranchRef.name

  3. If both commands fail, fall back to main.

Print the detected base branch name. In every subsequent git diff, git log, git fetch, git merge, and gh pr create command, substitute the detected branch name wherever the instructions say "the base branch."


Pre-Landing PR Review

You are running the /review workflow. Analyze the current branch's diff against the base branch for structural issues that tests don't catch.


Step 1: Check branch

  1. Run git branch --show-current to get the current branch.
  2. If on the base branch, output: "Nothing to review — you're on the base branch or have no changes against it." and stop.
  3. Run git fetch origin <base> --quiet && git diff origin/<base> --stat to check if there's a diff. If no diff, output the same message and stop.

Step 1.5: Scope Drift Detection

Before reviewing code quality, check: did they build what was requested — nothing more, nothing less?

  1. Read TODOS.md (if it exists). Read PR description (gh pr view --json body --jq .body 2>/dev/null || true). Read commit messages (git log origin/<base>..HEAD --oneline). If no PR exists: rely on commit messages and TODOS.md for stated intent — this is the common case since /review runs before /ship creates the PR.

  2. Identify the stated intent — what was this branch supposed to accomplish?

  3. Run git diff origin/<base> --stat and compare the files changed against the stated intent.

  4. Evaluate with skepticism:

    SCOPE CREEP detection:

    • Files changed that are unrelated to the stated intent
    • New features or refactors not mentioned in the plan
    • "While I was in there..." changes that expand blast radius

    MISSING REQUIREMENTS detection:

    • Requirements from TODOS.md/PR description not addressed in the diff
    • Test coverage gaps for stated requirements
    • Partial implementations (started but not finished)
  5. Output (before the main review begins):

    Scope Check: [CLEAN / DRIFT DETECTED / REQUIREMENTS MISSING]
    Intent: <1-line summary of what was requested>
    Delivered: <1-line summary of what the diff actually does>
    [If drift: list each out-of-scope change]
    [If missing: list each unaddressed requirement]
    
  6. This is INFORMATIONAL — does not block the review. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2: Read the checklist

Read .claude/skills/review/checklist.md.

If the file cannot be read, STOP and report the error. Do not proceed without the checklist.


Step 2.5: Check for Greptile review comments

Read .claude/skills/review/greptile-triage.md and follow the fetch, filter, classify, and escalation detection steps.

If no PR exists, gh fails, API returns an error, or there are zero Greptile comments: Skip this step silently. Greptile integration is additive — the review works without it.

If Greptile comments are found: Store the classifications (VALID & ACTIONABLE, VALID BUT ALREADY FIXED, FALSE POSITIVE, SUPPRESSED) — you will need them in Step 5.


Step 3: Get the diff

Fetch the latest base branch to avoid false positives from stale local state:

git fetch origin <base> --quiet

Run git diff origin/<base> to get the full diff. This includes both committed and uncommitted changes against the latest base branch.


Step 4: Two-pass review

Apply the checklist against the diff in two passes:

  1. Pass 1 (CRITICAL): SQL & Data Safety, Race Conditions & Concurrency, LLM Output Trust Boundary, Enum & Value Completeness
  2. Pass 2 (INFORMATIONAL): Conditional Side Effects, Magic Numbers & String Coupling, Dead Code & Consistency, LLM Prompt Issues, Test Gaps, View/Frontend, Performance & Bundle Impact

Enum & Value Completeness requires reading code OUTSIDE the diff. When the diff introduces a new enum value, status, tier, or type constant, use Grep to find all files that reference sibling values, then Read those files to check if the new value is handled. This is the one category where within-diff review is insufficient.

Search-before-recommending: When recommending a fix pattern (especially for concurrency, caching, auth, or framework-specific behavior):

  • Verify the pattern is current best practice for the framework version in use
  • Check if a built-in solution exists in newer versions before recommending a workaround
  • Verify API signatures against current docs (APIs change between versions)

Takes seconds, prevents recommending outdated patterns. If WebSearch is unavailable, note it and proceed with in-distribution knowledge.

Follow the output format specified in the checklist. Respect the suppressions — do NOT flag items listed in the "DO NOT flag" section.


Step 4.5: Design Review (conditional)

Design Review (conditional, diff-scoped)

Check if the diff touches frontend files using gstack-diff-scope:

source <(~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-diff-scope <base> 2>/dev/null)

If SCOPE_FRONTEND=false: Skip design review silently. No output.

If SCOPE_FRONTEND=true:

  1. Check for DESIGN.md. If DESIGN.md or design-system.md exists in the repo root, read it. All design findings are calibrated against it — patterns blessed in DESIGN.md are not flagged. If not found, use universal design principles.

  2. Read .claude/skills/review/design-checklist.md. If the file cannot be read, skip design review with a note: "Design checklist not found — skipping design review."

  3. Read each changed frontend file (full file, not just diff hunks). Frontend files are identified by the patterns listed in the checklist.

  4. Apply the design checklist against the changed files. For each item:

    • [HIGH] mechanical CSS fix (outline: none, !important, font-size < 16px): classify as AUTO-FIX
    • [HIGH/MEDIUM] design judgment needed: classify as ASK
    • [LOW] intent-based detection: present as "Possible — verify visually or run /design-review"
  5. Include findings in the review output under a "Design Review" header, following the output format in the checklist. Design findings merge with code review findings into the same Fix-First flow.

  6. Log the result for the Review Readiness Dashboard:

~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-review-log '{"skill":"design-review-lite","timestamp":"TIMESTAMP","status":"STATUS","findings":N,"auto_fixed":M,"commit":"COMMIT"}'

Substitute: TIMESTAMP = ISO 8601 datetime, STATUS = "clean" if 0 findings or "issues_found", N = total findings, M = auto-fixed count, COMMIT = output of git rev-parse --short HEAD.

Include any design findings alongside the findings from Step 4. They follow the same Fix-First flow in Step 5 — AUTO-FIX for mechanical CSS fixes, ASK for everything else.


Step 5: Fix-First Review

Every finding gets action — not just critical ones.

Output a summary header: Pre-Landing Review: N issues (X critical, Y informational)

Step 5a: Classify each finding

For each finding, classify as AUTO-FIX or ASK per the Fix-First Heuristic in checklist.md. Critical findings lean toward ASK; informational findings lean toward AUTO-FIX.

Step 5b: Auto-fix all AUTO-FIX items

Apply each fix directly. For each one, output a one-line summary: [AUTO-FIXED] [file:line] Problem → what you did

Step 5c: Batch-ask about ASK items

If there are ASK items remaining, present them in ONE AskUserQuestion:

  • List each item with a number, the severity label, the problem, and a recommended fix
  • For each item, provide options: A) Fix as recommended, B) Skip
  • Include an overall RECOMMENDATION

Example format:

I auto-fixed 5 issues. 2 need your input:

1. [CRITICAL] app/models/post.rb:42 — Race condition in status transition
   Fix: Add `WHERE status = 'draft'` to the UPDATE
   → A) Fix  B) Skip

2. [INFORMATIONAL] app/services/generator.rb:88 — LLM output not type-checked before DB write
   Fix: Add JSON schema validation
   → A) Fix  B) Skip

RECOMMENDATION: Fix both — #1 is a real race condition, #2 prevents silent data corruption.

If 3 or fewer ASK items, you may use individual AskUserQuestion calls instead of batching.

Step 5d: Apply user-approved fixes

Apply fixes for items where the user chose "Fix." Output what was fixed.

If no ASK items exist (everything was AUTO-FIX), skip the question entirely.

Verification of claims

Before producing the final review output:

  • If you claim "this pattern is safe" → cite the specific line proving safety
  • If you claim "this is handled elsewhere" → read and cite the handling code
  • If you claim "tests cover this" → name the test file and method
  • Never say "likely handled" or "probably tested" — verify or flag as unknown

Rationalization prevention: "This looks fine" is not a finding. Either cite evidence it IS fine, or flag it as unverified.

Greptile comment resolution

After outputting your own findings, if Greptile comments were classified in Step 2.5:

Include a Greptile summary in your output header: + N Greptile comments (X valid, Y fixed, Z FP)

Before replying to any comment, run the Escalation Detection algorithm from greptile-triage.md to determine whether to use Tier 1 (friendly) or Tier 2 (firm) reply templates.

  1. VALID & ACTIONABLE comments: These are included in your findings — they follow the Fix-First flow (auto-fixed if mechanical, batched into ASK if not) (A: Fix it now, B: Acknowledge, C: False positive). If the user chooses A (fix), reply using the Fix reply template from greptile-triage.md (include inline diff + explanation). If the user chooses C (false positive), reply using the False Positive reply template (include evidence + suggested re-rank), save to both per-project and global greptile-history.

  2. FALSE POSITIVE comments: Present each one via AskUserQuestion:

    • Show the Greptile comment: file:line (or [top-level]) + body summary + permalink URL
    • Explain concisely why it's a false positive
    • Options:
      • A) Reply to Greptile explaining why this is incorrect (recommended if clearly wrong)
      • B) Fix it anyway (if low-effort and harmless)
      • C) Ignore — don't reply, don't fix

    If the user chooses A, reply using the False Positive reply template from greptile-triage.md (include evidence + suggested re-rank), save to both per-project and global greptile-history.

  3. VALID BUT ALREADY FIXED comments: Reply using the Already Fixed reply template from greptile-triage.md — no AskUserQuestion needed:

    • Include what was done and the fixing commit SHA
    • Save to both per-project and global greptile-history
  4. SUPPRESSED comments: Skip silently — these are known false positives from previous triage.


Step 5.5: TODOS cross-reference

Read TODOS.md in the repository root (if it exists). Cross-reference the PR against open TODOs:

  • Does this PR close any open TODOs? If yes, note which items in your output: "This PR addresses TODO: