* docs: design tools v1 plan — visual mockup generation for gstack skills Full design doc covering the `design` binary that wraps OpenAI's GPT Image API to generate real UI mockups from gstack's design skills. Includes comparison board UX spec, auth model, 6 CEO expansions (design memory, mockup diffing, screenshot evolution, design intent verification, responsive variants, design-to-code prompt), and 9-commit implementation plan. Reviewed: /office-hours + /plan-eng-review (CLEARED) + /plan-ceo-review (EXPANSION, 6/6 accepted) + /plan-design-review (2/10 → 8/10). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: design tools prototype validation — GPT Image API works Prototype script sends 3 design briefs to OpenAI Responses API with image_generation tool. Results: dashboard (47s, 2.1MB), landing page (42s, 1.3MB), settings page (37s, 1.3MB) all produce real, implementable UI mockups with accurate text rendering and clean layouts. Key finding: Codex OAuth tokens lack image generation scopes. Direct API key (sk-proj-*) required, stored in ~/.gstack/openai.json. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: design binary core — generate, check, compare commands Stateless CLI (design/dist/design) wrapping OpenAI Responses API for UI mockup generation. Three working commands: - generate: brief -> PNG mockup via gpt-4o + image_generation tool - check: vision-based quality gate via GPT-4o (text readability, layout completeness, visual coherence) - compare: generates self-contained HTML comparison board with star ratings, radio Pick, per-variant feedback, regenerate controls, and Submit button that writes structured JSON for agent polling Auth reads from ~/.gstack/openai.json (0600), falls back to OPENAI_API_KEY env var. Compiled separately from browse binary (openai added to devDependencies, not runtime deps). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: design binary variants + iterate commands variants: generates N style variations with staggered parallel (1.5s between launches, exponential backoff on 429). 7 built-in style variations (bold, calm, warm, corporate, dark, playful + default). Tested: 3/3 variants in 41.6s. iterate: multi-turn design iteration using previous_response_id for conversational threading. Falls back to re-generation with accumulated feedback if threading doesn't retain visual context. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: DESIGN_SETUP + DESIGN_MOCKUP template resolvers Add generateDesignSetup() and generateDesignMockup() to the existing design.ts resolver file. Add designDir to HostPaths (claude + codex). Register DESIGN_SETUP and DESIGN_MOCKUP in the resolver index. DESIGN_SETUP: $D binary discovery (mirrors $B browse setup pattern). Falls back to DESIGN_SKETCH if binary not available. DESIGN_MOCKUP: full visual exploration workflow template — construct brief from DESIGN.md context, generate 3 variants, open comparison board in Chrome, poll for user feedback, save approved mockup to docs/designs/, generate HTML wireframe for implementation. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix: sync package.json version with VERSION file (0.12.2.0) Pre-existing mismatch: VERSION was 0.12.2.0 but package.json was 0.12.0.0. Also adds design binary to build script and dev:design convenience command. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: /office-hours visual design exploration integration Add {{DESIGN_MOCKUP}} to office-hours template before the existing {{DESIGN_SKETCH}}. When the design binary is available, /office-hours generates 3 visual mockup variants, opens a comparison board in Chrome, and polls for user feedback. Falls back to HTML wireframes if the design binary isn't built. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: /plan-design-review visual mockup integration Add {{DESIGN_SETUP}} to pre-review audit and "show me what 10/10 looks like" mockup generation to the 0-10 rating method. When a design dimension rates below 7/10, the review can generate a mockup showing the improved version. Falls back to text descriptions if the design binary isn't available. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: design memory — extract visual language from mockups into DESIGN.md New `$D extract` command: sends approved mockup to GPT-4o vision, extracts color palette, typography, spacing, and layout patterns, writes/updates DESIGN.md with an "Extracted Design Language" section. Progressive constraint: if DESIGN.md exists, future mockup briefs include it as style context. If no DESIGN.md, explorations run wide. readDesignConstraints() reads existing DESIGN.md for brief construction. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: mockup diffing + design intent verification New commands: - $D diff --before old.png --after new.png: visual diff using GPT-4o vision. Returns differences by area with severity (high/medium/low) and a matchScore (0-100). - $D verify --mockup approved.png --screenshot live.png: compares live site screenshot against approved design mockup. Pass if matchScore >= 70 and no high-severity differences. Used by /design-review to close the design loop: design -> implement -> verify visually. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: screenshot-to-mockup evolution ($D evolve) New command: $D evolve --screenshot current.png --brief "make it calmer" Two-step process: first analyzes the screenshot via GPT-4o vision to produce a detailed description, then generates a new mockup that keeps the existing layout structure but applies the requested changes. Starts from reality, not blank canvas. Bridges the gap between /design-review critique ("the spacing is off") and a visual proposal of the fix. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: responsive variants + design-to-code prompt Responsive variants: $D variants --viewports desktop,tablet,mobile generates mockups at 1536x1024, 1024x1024, and 1024x1536 (portrait) with viewport-appropriate layout instructions. Design-to-code prompt: $D prompt --image approved.png extracts colors, typography, layout, and components via GPT-4o vision, producing a structured implementation prompt. Reads DESIGN.md for additional constraint context. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * chore: bump version and changelog (v0.13.0.0) Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: gstack designer as first-class tool in /plan-design-review Brand the gstack designer prominently, add Step 0.5 for proactive visual mockup generation before review passes, and update priority hierarchy. When a plan describes new UI, the skill now offers to generate mockups with $D variants, run $D check for quality gating, and present a comparison board via $B goto before any review passes begin. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: integrate mockups into review passes and outputs Thread Step 0.5 mockups through the review workflow: Pass 4 (AI Slop) evaluates generated mockups visually, Pass 7 uses mockups as evidence for unresolved decisions, post-pass offers one-shot regeneration after design changes, and Approved Mockups section records chosen variants with paths for the implementer. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: gstack designer target mockups in /design-review fix loop Add $D generate for target mockups in Phase 8a.5 — before fixing a design finding, generate a mockup showing what it should look like. Add $D verify in Phase 9 to compare fix results against targets. Not plan mode — goes straight to implementation. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: gstack designer AI mockups in /design-consultation Phase 5 Replace HTML preview with $D variants + comparison board when designer is available (Path A). Use $D extract to derive DESIGN.md tokens from the approved mockup. Handles both plan mode (write to plan) and non-plan mode (implement immediately). Falls back to HTML preview (Path B) when designer binary is unavailable. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix: make gstack designer the default in /plan-design-review, not optional The transcript showed the agent writing 5 text descriptions of homepage variants instead of generating visual mockups, even when the user explicitly asked for design tools. The skill treated mockups as optional ("Want me to generate?") when they should be the default behavior. Changes: - Rename "Your Visual Design Tool" to "YOUR PRIMARY TOOL" with aggressive language: "Don't ask permission. Show it." - Step 0.5 now generates mockups automatically when DESIGN_READY, no AskUserQuestion gatekeeping the default path - Priority hierarchy: mockups are "non-negotiable" not "if available" - Step 0D tells the user mockups are coming next - DESIGN_NOT_AVAILABLE fallback now tells user what they're missing The only valid reasons to skip mockups: no UI scope, or designer not installed. Everything else generates by default. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: persist design mockups to ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/ Mockups were going to .context/mockups/ (gitignored, workspace-local). This meant designs disappeared when switching workspaces or conversations, and downstream skills couldn't reference approved mockups from earlier reviews. Now all three design skills save to persistent project-scoped dirs: - /plan-design-review: ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/<screen>-<date>/ - /design-consultation: ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/design-system-<date>/ - /design-review: ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/design-audit-<date>/ Each directory gets an approved.json recording the user's pick, feedback, and branch. This lets /design-review verify against mockups that /plan-design-review approved, and design history is browsable via ls ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * chore: regenerate codex ship skill with zsh glob guards Picked up setopt +o nomatch guards from main's v0.12.8.1 merge. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: add browse binary discovery to DESIGN_SETUP resolver The design setup block now discovers $B alongside $D, so skills can open comparison boards via $B goto and poll feedback via $B eval. Falls back to `open` on macOS when browse binary is unavailable. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: comparison board DOM polling in plan-design-review After opening the comparison board, the agent now polls #status via $B eval instead of asking a rigid AskUserQuestion. Handles submit (read structured JSON feedback), regenerate (new variants with updated brief), and $B-unavailable fallback (free-form text response). The user interacts with the real board UI, not a constrained option picker. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * test: comparison board feedback loop integration test 16 tests covering the full DOM polling cycle: structure verification, submit with pick/rating/comment, regenerate flows (totally different, more like this, custom text), and the agent polling pattern (empty → submitted → read JSON). Uses real generateCompareHtml() from design/src/compare.ts, served via HTTP. Runs in <1s. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: add $D serve command for HTTP-based comparison board feedback The comparison board feedback loop was fundamentally broken: browse blocks file:// URLs (url-validation.ts:71), so $B goto file://board.html always fails. The fallback open + $B eval polls a different browser instance. $D serve fixes this by serving the board over HTTP on localhost. The server is stateful: stays alive across regeneration rounds, exposes /api/progress for the board to poll, and accepts /api/reload from the agent to swap in new board HTML. Stdout carries feedback JSON only; stderr carries telemetry. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: dual-mode feedback + post-submit lifecycle in comparison board When __GSTACK_SERVER_URL is set (injected by $D serve), the board POSTs feedback to the server instead of only writing to hidden DOM elements. After submit: disables all inputs, shows "Return to your coding agent." After regenerate: shows spinner, polls /api/progress, auto-refreshes on ready. On POST failure: shows copyable JSON fallback. On progress timeout (5 min): shows error with /design-shotgun prompt. DOM fallback preserved for headed browser mode and tests. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * test: HTTP serve command endpoints and regeneration lifecycle 11 tests covering: HTML serving with injected server URL, /api/progress state reporting, submit → done lifecycle, regenerate → regenerating state, remix with remixSpec, malformed JSON rejection, /api/reload HTML swapping, missing file validation, and full regenerate → reload → submit round-trip. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: add DESIGN_SHOTGUN_LOOP resolver + fix design artifact paths Adds generateDesignShotgunLoop() resolver for the shared comparison board feedback loop (serve via HTTP, handle regenerate/remix, AskUserQuestion fallback, feedback confirmation). Registered as {{DESIGN_SHOTGUN_LOOP}}. Fixes generateDesignMockup() to use ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/ instead of /tmp/ and docs/designs/. Replaces broken $B goto file:// + $B eval polling with $D compare --serve (HTTP-based, stdout feedback). Adds CRITICAL PATH RULE guardrail to DESIGN_SETUP: design artifacts must go to ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/, never .context/ or /tmp/. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: add /design-shotgun standalone design exploration skill New skill for visual brainstorming: generate AI design variants, open a comparison board in the user's browser, collect structured feedback, and iterate. Features: session detection (revisit prior explorations), 5-dimension context gathering (who, job to be done, what exists, user flow, edge cases), taste memory (prior approved designs bias new generations), inline variant preview, configurable variant count, screenshot-to-variants via $D evolve. Uses {{DESIGN_SHOTGUN_LOOP}} resolver for the feedback loop. Saves all artifacts to ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/designs/. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * chore: regenerate SKILL.md files for design-shotgun + resolver changes Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: add remix UI to comparison board Per-variant element selectors (Layout, Colors, Typography, Spacing) with radio buttons in a grid. Remix button collects selections into a remixSpec object and sends via the same HTTP POST feedback mechanism. Enabled only when at least one element is selected. Board shows regenerating spinner while agent generates the hybrid variant. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: add $D gallery command for design history timeline Generates a self-contained HTML page showing all prior design explorations for a project: every variant (approved or not), feedback notes, organized by date (newest first). Images embedded as base64. Handles corrupted approved.json gracefully (skips, still shows the session). Empty state shows "No history yet" with /design-shotgun prompt. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * test: gallery generation — sessions, dates, corruption, empty state 7 tests: empty dir, nonexistent dir, single session with approved variant, multiple sessions sorted newest-first, corrupted approved.json handled gracefully, session without approved.json, self-contained HTML (no external dependencies). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * refactor: replace broken file:// polling with {{DESIGN_SHOTGUN_LOOP}} plan-design-review and design-consultation templates previously used $B goto file:// + $B eval polling for the comparison board feedback loop. This was broken (browse blocks file:// URLs). Both templates now use {{DESIGN_SHOTGUN_LOOP}} which serves via HTTP, handles regeneration in the same browser tab, and falls back to AskUserQuestion. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * test: add design-shotgun touchfile entries and tier classifications design-shotgun-path (gate): verify artifacts go to ~/.gstack/, not .context/ design-shotgun-session (gate): verify repeat-run detection + AskUserQuestion design-shotgun-full (periodic): full round-trip with real design binary Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * chore: regenerate SKILL.md files for template refactor Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: comparison board UI improvements — option headers, pick confirmation, grid view Three changes to the design comparison board: 1. Pick confirmation: selecting "Pick" on Option A shows "We'll move forward with Option A" in green, plus a status line above the submit button repeating the choice. 2. Clear option headers: each variant now has "Option A" in bold with a subtitle above the image, instead of just the raw image. 3. View toggle: top-right Large/Grid buttons switch between single-column (default) and 3-across grid view. Also restructured the bottom section into a 2-column grid: submit/overall feedback on the left, regenerate controls on the right. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix: use 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost for serve URL Avoids DNS resolution issues on some systems where localhost may resolve to IPv6 ::1 while Bun listens on IPv4 only. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix: write ALL feedback to disk so agent can poll in background mode The agent backgrounds $D serve (Claude Code can't block on a subprocess and do other work simultaneously). With stdout-only feedback delivery, the agent never sees regenerate/remix feedback. Fix: write feedback-pending.json (regenerate/remix) and feedback.json (submit) to disk next to the board HTML. Agent polls the filesystem instead of reading stdout. Both channels (stdout + disk) are always active so foreground mode still works. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: DESIGN_SHOTGUN_LOOP uses file polling instead of stdout reading Update the template resolver to instruct the agent to background $D serve and poll for feedback-pending.json / feedback.json on a 5-second loop. This matches the real-world pattern where Claude Code / Conductor agents can't block on subprocess stdout. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * chore: regenerate SKILL.md files for file-polling feedback loop Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix: null-safe DOM selectors for post-submit and regenerating states The user's layout restructure renamed .regenerate-bar → .regen-column, .submit-bar → .submit-column, and .overall-section → .bottom-section. The JS still referenced the old class names, causing querySelector to return null and showPostSubmitState() / showRegeneratingState() to silently crash. This meant Submit and Regenerate buttons appeared to work (DOM elements updated, HTTP POST succeeded) but the visual feedback (disabled inputs, spinner, success message) never appeared. Fix: use fallback selectors that check both old and new class names, with null guards so a missing element doesn't crash the function. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * test: end-to-end feedback roundtrip — browser click to file on disk The test that proves "changes on the website propagate to Claude Code." Opens the comparison board in a real headless browser with __GSTACK_SERVER_URL injected, simulates user clicks (Submit, Regenerate, More Like This), and verifies that feedback.json / feedback-pending.json land on disk with the correct structured data. 6 tests covering: submit → feedback.json, post-submit UI lockdown, regenerate → feedback-pending.json, more-like-this → feedback-pending.json, regenerate spinner display, and full regen → reload → submit round-trip. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * docs: comprehensive design doc for Design Shotgun feedback loop Documents the full browser-to-agent feedback architecture: state machine, file-based polling, port discovery, post-submit lifecycle, and every known edge case (zombie forms, dead servers, stale spinners, file:// bug, double-click races, port coordination, sequential generate rule). Includes ASCII diagrams of the data flow and state transitions, complete step-by-step walkthrough of happy path and regeneration path, test coverage map with gaps, and short/medium/long-term improvement ideas. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix: plan-design-review agent guardrails for feedback loop Four fixes to prevent agents from reinventing the feedback loop badly: 1. Sequential generate rule: explicit instruction that $D generate calls must run one at a time (API rate-limits concurrent image generation). 2. No-AskUserQuestion-for-feedback rule: agent reads feedback.json instead of re-asking what the user picked. 3. Remove file:// references: $B goto file:// was always rejected by url-validation.ts. The --serve flag handles everything. 4. Remove $B eval polling reference: no longer needed with HTTP POST. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * fix: design-shotgun Step 3 progressive reveal, silent failure detection, timing estimate Three production UX bugs fixed: 1. Dead air — now shows timing estimate before generation starts 2. Silent variant drop — replaced $D variants batch with individual $D generate calls, each verified for existence and non-zero size with retry 3. No progressive reveal — each variant shown inline via Read tool immediately after generation (~60s increments instead of all at ~180s) Also: /tmp/ then cp as default output pattern (sandbox workaround), screenshot taken once for evolve path (not per-variant). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: parallel design-shotgun with concept-first confirmation Step 3 rewritten to concept-first + parallel Agent architecture: - 3a: generate text concepts (free, instant) - 3b: AskUserQuestion to confirm/modify before spending API credits - 3c: launch N Agent subagents in parallel (~60s total regardless of count) - 3d: show all results, dynamic image list for comparison board Adds Agent to allowed-tools. Softens plan-design-review sequential warning to note design-shotgun uses parallel at Tier 2+. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * docs: update project documentation for v0.13.0.0 Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * chore: untrack .agents/skills/ — generated at setup, already gitignored These files were committed despite .agents/ being in .gitignore. They regenerate from ./setup --host codex on any machine. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> * chore: regenerate design-shotgun SKILL.md for v0.12.12.0 preamble changes Merge from main brought updated preamble resolver (conditional telemetry, local JSONL logging) but design-shotgun/SKILL.md wasn't regenerated. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> --------- Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
22 KiB
Design: Design Shotgun — Browser-to-Agent Feedback Loop
Generated on 2026-03-27 Branch: garrytan/agent-design-tools Status: LIVING DOCUMENT — update as bugs are found and fixed
What This Feature Does
Design Shotgun generates multiple AI design mockups, opens them side-by-side in the user's real browser as a comparison board, and collects structured feedback (pick a favorite, rate alternatives, leave notes, request regeneration). The feedback flows back to the coding agent, which acts on it: either proceeding with the approved variant or generating new variants and reloading the board.
The user never leaves their browser tab. The agent never asks redundant questions. The board is the feedback mechanism.
The Core Problem: Two Worlds That Must Talk
┌─────────────────────┐ ┌──────────────────────┐
│ USER'S BROWSER │ │ CODING AGENT │
│ (real Chrome) │ │ (Claude Code / │
│ │ │ Conductor) │
│ Comparison board │ │ │
│ with buttons: │ ??? │ Needs to know: │
│ - Submit │ ──────── │ - What was picked │
│ - Regenerate │ │ - Star ratings │
│ - More like this │ │ - Comments │
│ - Remix │ │ - Regen requested? │
└─────────────────────┘ └──────────────────────┘
The "???" is the hard part. The user clicks a button in Chrome. The agent running in a terminal needs to know about it. These are two completely separate processes with no shared memory, no shared event bus, no WebSocket connection.
Architecture: How the Linkage Works
USER'S BROWSER $D serve (Bun HTTP) AGENT
═══════════════ ═══════════════════ ═════
│ │ │
│ GET / │ │
│ ◄─────── serves board HTML ──────►│ │
│ (with __GSTACK_SERVER_URL │ │
│ injected into <head>) │ │
│ │ │
│ [user rates, picks, comments] │ │
│ │ │
│ POST /api/feedback │ │
│ ─────── {preferred:"A",...} ─────►│ │
│ │ │
│ ◄── {received:true} ────────────│ │
│ │── writes feedback.json ──►│
│ [inputs disabled, │ (or feedback-pending │
│ "Return to agent" shown] │ .json for regen) │
│ │ │
│ │ [agent polls
│ │ every 5s,
│ │ reads file]
The Three Files
| File | Written when | Means | Agent action |
|---|---|---|---|
feedback.json |
User clicks Submit | Final selection, done | Read it, proceed |
feedback-pending.json |
User clicks Regenerate/More Like This | Wants new options | Read it, delete it, generate new variants, reload board |
feedback.json (round 2+) |
User clicks Submit after regeneration | Final selection after iteration | Read it, proceed |
The State Machine
$D serve starts
│
▼
┌──────────┐
│ SERVING │◄──────────────────────────────────────┐
│ │ │
│ Board is │ POST /api/feedback │
│ live, │ {regenerated: true} │
│ waiting │──────────────────►┌──────────────┐ │
│ │ │ REGENERATING │ │
│ │ │ │ │
└────┬─────┘ │ Agent has │ │
│ │ 10 min to │ │
│ POST /api/feedback │ POST new │ │
│ {regenerated: false} │ board HTML │ │
│ └──────┬───────┘ │
▼ │ │
┌──────────┐ POST /api/reload │
│ DONE │ {html: "/new/board"} │
│ │ │ │
│ exit 0 │ ▼ │
└──────────┘ ┌──────────────┐ │
│ RELOADING │─────┘
│ │
│ Board auto- │
│ refreshes │
│ (same tab) │
└──────────────┘
Port Discovery
The agent backgrounds $D serve and reads stderr for the port:
SERVE_STARTED: port=54321 html=/path/to/board.html
SERVE_BROWSER_OPENED: url=http://127.0.0.1:54321
The agent parses port=XXXXX from stderr. This port is needed later to POST
/api/reload when the user requests regeneration. If the agent loses the port
number, it cannot reload the board.
Why 127.0.0.1, Not localhost
localhost can resolve to IPv6 ::1 on some systems while Bun.serve() listens
on IPv4 only. More importantly, localhost sends all dev cookies for every domain
the developer has been working on. On a machine with many active sessions, this
blows past Bun's default header size limit (HTTP 431 error). 127.0.0.1 avoids
both issues.
Every Edge Case and Pitfall
1. The Zombie Form Problem
What: User submits feedback, the POST succeeds, the server exits. But the HTML page is still open in Chrome. It looks interactive. The user might edit their feedback and click Submit again. Nothing happens because the server is gone.
Fix: After successful POST, the board JS:
- Disables ALL inputs (buttons, radios, textareas, star ratings)
- Hides the Regenerate bar entirely
- Replaces the Submit button with: "Feedback received! Return to your coding agent."
- Shows: "Want to make more changes? Run
/design-shotgunagain." - The page becomes a read-only record of what was submitted
Implemented in: compare.ts:showPostSubmitState() (line 484)
2. The Dead Server Problem
What: The server times out (10 min default) or crashes while the user still has the board open. User clicks Submit. The fetch() fails silently.
Fix: The postFeedback() function has a .catch() handler. On network failure:
- Shows red error banner: "Connection lost"
- Displays the collected feedback JSON in a copyable
<pre>block - User can copy-paste it directly into their coding agent
Implemented in: compare.ts:showPostFailure() (line 546)
3. The Stale Regeneration Spinner
What: User clicks Regenerate. Board shows spinner and polls /api/progress
every 2 seconds. Agent crashes or takes too long to generate new variants. The
spinner spins forever.
Fix: Progress polling has a hard 5-minute timeout (150 polls x 2s interval). After 5 minutes:
- Spinner replaced with: "Something went wrong."
- Shows: "Run
/design-shotgunagain in your coding agent." - Polling stops. Page becomes informational.
Implemented in: compare.ts:startProgressPolling() (line 511)
4. The file:// URL Problem (THE ORIGINAL BUG)
What: The skill template originally used $B goto file:///path/to/board.html.
But browse/src/url-validation.ts:71 blocks file:// URLs for security. The
fallback open file://... opens the user's macOS browser, but $B eval polls
Playwright's headless browser (different process, never loaded the page).
Agent polls empty DOM forever.
Fix: $D serve serves over HTTP. Never use file:// for the board. The
--serve flag on $D compare combines board generation and HTTP serving in
one command.
Evidence: See .context/attachments/image-v2.png — a real user hit this exact
bug. The agent correctly diagnosed: (1) $B goto rejects file:// URLs,
(2) no polling loop even with the browse daemon.
5. The Double-Click Race
What: User clicks Submit twice rapidly. Two POST requests arrive at the server. First one sets state to "done" and schedules exit(0) in 100ms. Second one arrives during that 100ms window.
Current state: NOT fully guarded. The handleFeedback() function doesn't check
if state is already "done" before processing. The second POST would succeed and
write a second feedback.json (harmless, same data). The exit still fires after
100ms.
Risk: Low. The board disables all inputs on the first successful POST response, so a second click would need to arrive within ~1ms. And both writes would contain the same feedback data.
Potential fix: Add if (state === 'done') return Response.json({error: 'already submitted'}, {status: 409}) at the top of handleFeedback().
6. The Port Coordination Problem
What: Agent backgrounds $D serve and parses port=54321 from stderr. Agent
needs this port later to POST /api/reload during regeneration. If the agent
loses context (conversation compresses, context window fills up), it may not
remember the port.
Current state: The port is printed to stderr once. The agent must remember it. There is no port file written to disk.
Potential fix: Write a serve.pid or serve.port file next to the board HTML
on startup. Agent can read it anytime:
cat "$_DESIGN_DIR/serve.port" # → 54321
7. The Feedback File Cleanup Problem
What: feedback-pending.json from a regeneration round is left on disk. If the
agent crashes before reading it, the next $D serve session finds a stale file.
Current state: The polling loop in the resolver template says to delete
feedback-pending.json after reading it. But this depends on the agent following
instructions perfectly. Stale files could confuse a new session.
Potential fix: $D serve could check for and delete stale feedback files on
startup. Or: name files with timestamps (feedback-pending-1711555200.json).
8. Sequential Generate Rule
What: The underlying OpenAI GPT Image API rate-limits concurrent image generation
requests. When 3 $D generate calls run in parallel, 1 succeeds and 2 get aborted.
Fix: The skill template must explicitly say: "Generate mockups ONE AT A TIME.
Do not parallelize $D generate calls." This is a prompt-level instruction, not
a code-level lock. The design binary does not enforce sequential execution.
Risk: Agents are trained to parallelize independent work. Without an explicit instruction, they will try to run 3 generates simultaneously. This wastes API calls and money.
9. The AskUserQuestion Redundancy
What: After the user submits feedback via the board (with preferred variant, ratings, comments all in the JSON), the agent asks them again: "Which variant do you prefer?" This is annoying. The whole point of the board is to avoid this.
Fix: The skill template must say: "Do NOT use AskUserQuestion to ask the user's
preference. Read feedback.json, it contains their selection. Only AskUserQuestion
to confirm you understood correctly, not to re-ask."
10. The CORS Problem
What: If the board HTML references external resources (fonts, images from CDN),
the browser sends requests with Origin: http://127.0.0.1:PORT. Most CDNs allow
this, but some might block it.
Current state: The server does not set CORS headers. The board HTML is self-contained (images base64-encoded, styles inline), so this hasn't been an issue in practice.
Risk: Low for current design. Would matter if the board loaded external resources.
11. The Large Payload Problem
What: No size limit on POST bodies to /api/feedback. If the board somehow
sends a multi-MB payload, req.json() will parse it all into memory.
Current state: In practice, feedback JSON is ~500 bytes to ~2KB. The risk is theoretical, not practical. The board JS constructs a fixed-shape JSON object.
12. The fs.writeFileSync Error
What: feedback.json write in serve.ts:138 uses fs.writeFileSync() with no
try/catch. If the disk is full or the directory is read-only, this throws and
crashes the server. The user sees a spinner forever (server is dead, but board
doesn't know).
Risk: Low in practice (the board HTML was just written to the same directory, proving it's writable). But a try/catch with a 500 response would be cleaner.
The Complete Flow (Step by Step)
Happy Path: User Picks on First Try
1. Agent runs: $D compare --images "A.png,B.png,C.png" --output board.html --serve &
2. $D serve starts Bun.serve() on random port (e.g. 54321)
3. $D serve opens http://127.0.0.1:54321 in user's browser
4. $D serve prints to stderr: SERVE_STARTED: port=54321 html=/path/board.html
5. $D serve writes board HTML with injected __GSTACK_SERVER_URL
6. User sees comparison board with 3 variants side by side
7. User picks Option B, rates A: 3/5, B: 5/5, C: 2/5
8. User writes "B has better spacing, go with that" in overall feedback
9. User clicks Submit
10. Board JS POSTs to http://127.0.0.1:54321/api/feedback
Body: {"preferred":"B","ratings":{"A":3,"B":5,"C":2},"overall":"B has better spacing","regenerated":false}
11. Server writes feedback.json to disk (next to board.html)
12. Server prints feedback JSON to stdout
13. Server responds {received:true, action:"submitted"}
14. Board disables all inputs, shows "Return to your coding agent"
15. Server exits with code 0 after 100ms
16. Agent's polling loop finds feedback.json
17. Agent reads it, summarizes to user, proceeds
Regeneration Path: User Wants Different Options
1-6. Same as above
7. User clicks "Totally different" chiclet
8. User clicks Regenerate
9. Board JS POSTs to /api/feedback
Body: {"regenerated":true,"regenerateAction":"different","preferred":"","ratings":{},...}
10. Server writes feedback-pending.json to disk
11. Server state → "regenerating"
12. Server responds {received:true, action:"regenerate"}
13. Board shows spinner: "Generating new designs..."
14. Board starts polling GET /api/progress every 2s
Meanwhile, in the agent:
15. Agent's polling loop finds feedback-pending.json
16. Agent reads it, deletes it
17. Agent runs: $D variants --brief "totally different direction" --count 3
(ONE AT A TIME, not parallel)
18. Agent runs: $D compare --images "new-A.png,new-B.png,new-C.png" --output board-v2.html
19. Agent POSTs: curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:54321/api/reload -d '{"html":"/path/board-v2.html"}'
20. Server swaps htmlContent to new board
21. Server state → "serving" (from reloading)
22. Board's next /api/progress poll returns {"status":"serving"}
23. Board auto-refreshes: window.location.reload()
24. User sees new board with 3 fresh variants
25. User picks one, clicks Submit → happy path from step 10
"More Like This" Path
Same as regeneration, except:
- regenerateAction is "more_like_B" (references the variant)
- Agent uses $D iterate --image B.png --brief "more like this, keep the spacing"
instead of $D variants
Fallback Path: $D serve Fails
1. Agent tries $D compare --serve, it fails (binary missing, port error, etc.)
2. Agent falls back to: open file:///path/board.html
3. Agent uses AskUserQuestion: "I've opened the design board. Which variant
do you prefer? Any feedback?"
4. User responds in text
5. Agent proceeds with text feedback (no structured JSON)
Files That Implement This
| File | Role |
|---|---|
design/src/serve.ts |
HTTP server, state machine, file writing, browser launch |
design/src/compare.ts |
Board HTML generation, JS for ratings/picks/regen, POST logic, post-submit lifecycle |
design/src/cli.ts |
CLI entry point, wires serve and compare --serve commands |
design/src/commands.ts |
Command registry, defines serve and compare with their args |
scripts/resolvers/design.ts |
generateDesignShotgunLoop() — template resolver that outputs the polling loop and reload instructions |
design-shotgun/SKILL.md.tmpl |
Skill template that orchestrates the full flow: context gathering, variant generation, {{DESIGN_SHOTGUN_LOOP}}, feedback confirmation |
design/test/serve.test.ts |
Unit tests for HTTP endpoints and state transitions |
design/test/feedback-roundtrip.test.ts |
E2E test: browser click → JS fetch → HTTP POST → file on disk |
browse/test/compare-board.test.ts |
DOM-level tests for the comparison board UI |
What Could Still Go Wrong
Known Risks (ordered by likelihood)
-
Agent doesn't follow sequential generate rule — most LLMs want to parallelize. Without enforcement in the binary, this is a prompt-level instruction that can be ignored.
-
Agent loses port number — context compression drops the stderr output. Agent can't reload the board. Mitigation: write port to a file.
-
Stale feedback files — leftover
feedback-pending.jsonfrom a crashed session confuses the next run. Mitigation: clean on startup. -
fs.writeFileSync crash — no try/catch on the feedback file write. Silent server death if disk is full. User sees infinite spinner.
-
Progress polling drift —
setInterval(fn, 2000)over 5 minutes. In practice, JavaScript timers are accurate enough. But if the browser tab is backgrounded, Chrome may throttle intervals to once per minute.
Things That Work Well
-
Dual-channel feedback — stdout for foreground mode, files for background mode. Both always active. Agent can use whichever works.
-
Self-contained HTML — board has all CSS, JS, and base64-encoded images inline. No external dependencies. Works offline.
-
Same-tab regeneration — user stays in one tab. Board auto-refreshes via
/api/progresspolling +window.location.reload(). No tab explosion. -
Graceful degradation — POST failure shows copyable JSON. Progress timeout shows clear error message. No silent failures.
-
Post-submit lifecycle — board becomes read-only after submit. No zombie forms. Clear "what to do next" message.
Test Coverage
What's Tested
| Flow | Test | File |
|---|---|---|
| Submit → feedback.json on disk | browser click → file | feedback-roundtrip.test.ts |
| Post-submit UI lockdown | inputs disabled, success shown | feedback-roundtrip.test.ts |
| Regenerate → feedback-pending.json | chiclet + regen click → file | feedback-roundtrip.test.ts |
| "More like this" → specific action | more_like_B in JSON | feedback-roundtrip.test.ts |
| Spinner after regenerate | DOM shows loading text | feedback-roundtrip.test.ts |
| Full regen → reload → submit | 2-round trip | feedback-roundtrip.test.ts |
| Server starts on random port | port 0 binding | serve.test.ts |
| HTML injection of server URL | __GSTACK_SERVER_URL check | serve.test.ts |
| Invalid JSON rejection | 400 response | serve.test.ts |
| HTML file validation | exit 1 if missing | serve.test.ts |
| Timeout behavior | exit 1 after timeout | serve.test.ts |
| Board DOM structure | radios, stars, chiclets | compare-board.test.ts |
What's NOT Tested
| Gap | Risk | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Double-click submit race | Low — inputs disable on first response | P3 |
| Progress polling timeout (150 iterations) | Medium — 5 min is long to wait in a test | P2 |
| Server crash during regeneration | Medium — user sees infinite spinner | P2 |
| Network timeout during POST | Low — localhost is fast | P3 |
| Backgrounded Chrome tab throttling intervals | Medium — could extend 5-min timeout to 30+ min | P2 |
| Large feedback payload | Low — board constructs fixed-shape JSON | P3 |
| Concurrent sessions (two boards, one server) | Low — each $D serve gets its own port | P3 |
| Stale feedback file from prior session | Medium — could confuse new polling loop | P2 |
Potential Improvements
Short-term (this branch)
- Write port to file —
serve.tswritesserve.portto disk on startup. Agent reads it anytime. 5 lines. - Clean stale files on startup —
serve.tsdeletesfeedback*.jsonbefore starting. 3 lines. - Guard double-click — check
state === 'done'at top ofhandleFeedback(). 2 lines. - try/catch file write — wrap
fs.writeFileSyncin try/catch, return 500 on failure. 5 lines.
Medium-term (follow-up)
-
WebSocket instead of polling — replace
setInterval+GET /api/progresswith a WebSocket connection. Board gets instant notification when new HTML is ready. Eliminates polling drift and backgrounded-tab throttling. ~50 lines in serve.ts + ~20 lines in compare.ts. -
Port file for agent — write
{"port": 54321, "pid": 12345, "html": "/path/board.html"}to$_DESIGN_DIR/serve.json. Agent reads this instead of parsing stderr. Makes the system more robust to context loss. -
Feedback schema validation — validate the POST body against a JSON schema before writing. Catch malformed feedback early instead of confusing the agent downstream.
Long-term (design direction)
-
Persistent design server — instead of launching
$D serveper session, run a long-lived design daemon (like the browse daemon). Multiple boards share one server. Eliminates cold start. But adds daemon lifecycle management complexity. -
Real-time collaboration — two agents (or one agent + one human) working on the same board simultaneously. Server broadcasts state changes via WebSocket. Requires conflict resolution on feedback.