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gstack/CLAUDE.md
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Garry Tan 2014557e7f v1.12.0.0 feat: /setup-gbrain — coding-agent onboarding for gbrain (#1183)
* feat(setup-gbrain): add gstack-gbrain-repo-policy bin helper

Per-remote trust-tier store for the forthcoming /setup-gbrain skill.
Tiers are the D3 triad (read-write / read-only / deny), keyed by a
normalized remote URL so ssh-shorthand and https variants collapse to
the same entry. The file carries _schema_version: 2 (D2-eng); legacy
`allow` values from pre-D3 experiments auto-migrate to `read-write`
on first read, idempotent, with a one-shot log line.

Pure bash + jq to match the existing gstack-brain-* family. Atomic
writes via tmpfile + rename. Policy file mode 0600. Corrupt files
quarantine to .corrupt-<ts> and start fresh.

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

* test(setup-gbrain): unit tests for gstack-gbrain-repo-policy

24 tests covering normalize (ssh/https/shorthand/uppercase collapse to
one key), set/get round-trip, all three D3 tiers accepted, invalid
tiers rejected, file mode 0600, _schema_version field written on fresh
files, legacy allow migration (including idempotence and preservation
of non-allow entries), corrupt-JSON quarantine + fresh-file recovery,
list output sorting, and get-without-arg auto-detect against a git
repo with no origin.

All tests green against a per-test tmpdir GSTACK_HOME so nothing
leaks into the real ~/.gstack.

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

* feat(setup-gbrain): add gstack-gbrain-detect state reporter

Pure-introspection JSON emitter for the /setup-gbrain skill's
start-up branching. Reports: gbrain presence + version on PATH,
~/.gbrain/config.json existence + engine, `gbrain doctor --json`
health (wrapped in timeout 5s to match the /health D6 pattern),
gstack-brain-sync mode via gstack-config, and ~/.gstack/.git
presence for the memory-sync feature.

Never modifies state. Always emits valid JSON even when every check
is false. Handles malformed ~/.gbrain/config.json without crashing
— gbrain_engine is null in that case, not an error.

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

* feat(setup-gbrain): add gstack-gbrain-install with D5 detect-first + D19 PATH-shadow guard

Clones gbrain at a pinned commit (v0.18.2) and registers it via
`bun link`. Before any clone:

  D5 detect-first — probes ~/git/gbrain, ~/gbrain, and the install
  target for a valid pre-existing clone (package.json with name
  "gbrain" and bin.gbrain set). If one is found, `bun link` runs
  there instead of cloning a second copy. Prevents the day-one
  duplicate-install footgun on the skill author's own machine.

After install:

  D19 PATH-shadow guard — reads the install-dir's package.json
  version, compares to `gbrain --version` on PATH. On mismatch:
  exits 3, prints every gbrain binary on PATH via `type -a`, and
  gives a remediation menu. Setup skills refuse broken environments
  instead of warning and continuing.

Prereq checks (bun, git, https://github.com reachability) fail fast
with install hints. --dry-run and --validate-only flags let the
skill probe the plan without touching state; tests use them to
cover D5 and D19 without exercising real bun link.

Pin is a load-bearing version: setup-gbrain v1 verified against
gbrain v0.18.2. Updating requires re-running Pre-Impl Gate 1 to
verify gbrain's CLI + config shapes haven't drifted.

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

* test(setup-gbrain): unit tests for gstack-gbrain-detect + install

15 tests covering: detect emits valid JSON when nothing configured,
reports gstack_brain_git on GSTACK_HOME/.git presence, reads
~/.gbrain/config.json engine, tolerates malformed config, detects
a mocked gbrain binary on PATH with version parsing.

For install: D5 detect-first uses ~/git/gbrain fixtures under a
sandboxed HOME, verifies fall-through to fresh clone when no valid
clone exists, rejects invalid package.json shapes. D19 PATH-shadow
validation uses a fake gbrain on a minimal SAFE_PATH to simulate
version mismatch, same-version-pass, v-prefix tolerance, missing
binary on PATH, and missing version field in package.json.

--validate-only mode in the install bin makes the D19 check unit-
testable without running real bun link (which touches ~/.bun/bin).

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

* feat(setup-gbrain): add gstack-gbrain-lib.sh with read_secret_to_env (D3-eng)

Shared secret-read helper for PAT (D11) and pooler URL paste (D16).
One implementation of the hardest-to-get-right pattern: stty -echo +
SIGINT/TERM/EXIT trap that restores terminal mode, read into a named
env var, optional redacted preview.

Validates the target var name against [A-Z_][A-Z0-9_]* to prevent
bash name-injection via `read -r "$varname"`. When stdin is not a TTY
(CI, piped tests) the stty branches skip cleanly — piped input doesn't
echo anyway. Exports the var after read so subprocesses inherit it;
callers own the `unset` at handoff time.

Sourced, not executed — no +x bit.

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

* feat(setup-gbrain): add gstack-gbrain-supabase-verify structural URL check

Zero-network validator for Supabase Session Pooler URLs before handing
them to `gbrain init`. Canonical shape verified per gbrain init.ts:266:
  postgresql://postgres.<ref>:<password>@aws-0-<region>.pooler.supabase.com:6543/postgres

Rejects direct-connection URLs (db.*.supabase.co:5432) with a distinct
exit code 3 and clear IPv6-failure remediation — that's the most common
paste mistake users make, so it earns its own UX path rather than a
generic "bad URL" error.

Never echoes the URL (contains a password) in error messages; tests
verify a distinct seed password never appears in stderr on any reject
path. Accepts URL from argv[1] or stdin ("-" or no arg).

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

* test(setup-gbrain): unit tests for supabase-verify + lib.sh secret helper

22 tests. verify: accepts canonical pooler URL (argv + stdin modes),
rejects direct-connection URL with exit 3, rejects wrong scheme, wrong
port, empty password, missing userinfo, plain 'postgres' user (catches
direct-URL paste errors), wrong host, empty URL. Case-insensitive host
match. Explicit negative: error messages never echo the URL password.

lib.sh read_secret_to_env: reads piped stdin into the named env var,
exports to subprocesses, redacted-preview emits masked form on stderr
with the seed password absent, rejects invalid var names (lowercase,
leading digit, hyphens), rejects missing/unknown flags, secret value
never appears on stdout.

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

* feat(setup-gbrain): add gstack-gbrain-supabase-provision Management API wrapper

Four subcommands: list-orgs, create, wait, pooler-url. Built against
the verified Supabase Management API shape (Pre-Impl Gate 1):

  - POST /v1/projects with {name, db_pass, organization_slug, region}
    — not the original plan's /v1/organizations/{ref}/projects
  - No `plan` field; subscription tier is org-level per the OpenAPI
    description ("Subscription Plan is now set on organization level
    and is ignored in this request")
  - GET /v1/projects/{ref}/config/database/pooler for pooler config
    — not /config/database

Secrets discipline: SUPABASE_ACCESS_TOKEN (PAT) and DB_PASS read from
env only, never from argv (D8 grep test enforces this). `set +x` at
the top as a defensive default so debug tracing never leaks secrets.
Management API hostname hardcoded to SUPABASE_API_BASE env override —
no user-controlled URL portion (SSRF guard).

HTTP error paths: 401/403 → exit 3 (auth), 402 → 4 (quota), 409 → 5
(conflict), 429 + 5xx → exponential-backoff retry up to 3 attempts,
then exit 8. Wait subcommand polls every 5s until ACTIVE_HEALTHY
with a configurable timeout; terminal states (INIT_FAILED, REMOVED,
etc.) exit 7 immediately with a clear message. Timeout emits the
--resume-provision hint so the skill can recover.

Pooler-url constructs the URL locally from db_user/host/port/name +
DB_PASS rather than trusting the API response's connection_string
field, which is templated with [PASSWORD] rather than the real value.
Handles both object and array response shapes, preferring session
pool_mode when Supabase returns multiple pooler configs.

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

* test(setup-gbrain): unit tests for gstack-gbrain-supabase-provision via mock API

22 tests covering D21 HTTP error suite (401/403/402/409/429/5xx) and
happy paths for all four subcommands. Every test spins up a Bun.serve
mock server bound to SUPABASE_API_BASE so nothing hits the real API.

Uses Bun.spawn (async) rather than spawnSync because spawnSync blocks
the Bun event loop, which prevents Bun.serve mocks from responding —
calls would hit curl's own timeout instead of round-tripping.

Verifies: POST body contains organization_slug (not organization_id)
and no `plan` field, bearer-token auth header, retry-on-429 with
eventual success, exit-8 on persistent 5xx after max retries, wait
succeeds on ACTIVE_HEALTHY, exits 7 on INIT_FAILED, exits 6 with
--resume-provision hint on timeout, pooler-url builds URL locally
from db_user/host/port/name + DB_PASS (not response connection_string
template), handles array pooler responses.

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

* feat(setup-gbrain): add SKILL.md.tmpl — user-facing skill prompt

Stitches together every slice built so far (repo-policy, detect,
install, lib.sh secret helper, supabase-verify, supabase-provision)
into a single interactive flow. Paths: Supabase existing-URL, Supabase
auto-provision (D7), Supabase manual, PGLite local, switch (PGLite ↔
Supabase via gbrain migrate wrapped in timeout 180s per D9).

Secrets discipline per D8/D10/D11: PAT + DB_PASS + pooler URL all
read via read_secret_to_env from lib.sh and handed to gbrain via
GBRAIN_DATABASE_URL env, never argv. PAT carries the full D11 scope
disclosure before collection and an explicit revocation reminder after
success. D12 SIGINT recovery prints the in-flight ref + resume command.

D18 MCP registration is scoped honestly to Claude Code — skips with
a manual-register hint when `claude` is not on PATH. D6 per-remote
trust-triad question (read-write/read-only/deny/skip-for-now) gates
repo import; the triad values compose with the D2-eng schema-version
policy file so future migrations stay deterministic.

Skill runs concurrent-run-locked via mkdir ~/.gstack/.setup-gbrain.lock.d
(atomic, same pattern as gstack-brain-sync). Telemetry (D4) payload
carries enumerated categorical values only — never URL, PAT, or any
postgresql:// substring.

--repo, --switch, --resume-provision, --cleanup-orphans shortcut modes
documented inline; the skill parses its own invocation args.

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

* feat(health): integrate gbrain as D6 composite dimension

Adds a GBrain row to the /health dashboard rubric with weight 10%.
Three sub-signals rolled into one 0-10 score: doctor status (0.5),
sync queue depth (0.3), last-push age (0.2). Redistributes when
gbrain_sync_mode is off so the dimension stays fair.

Weights rebalance: typecheck 25→22, lint 20→18, test 30→28,
deadcode 15→13, shell 10→9, gbrain +10 — sums to 100.

gbrain doctor --json wrapped in timeout 5s so a hung gbrain never
stalls the /health dashboard. Dimension is omitted (not red) when
gbrain is not installed — running /health on a non-gbrain machine
shouldn't penalize that choice.

History-JSONL adds a `gbrain` field. Pre-D6 entries read as null for
trend comparison; new tracking starts from first post-D6 run.

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

* feat(test): add secret-sink-harness for negative-space leak testing (D21 #5)

Runs a subprocess with a seeded secret, captures every channel the
subprocess could leak through, and asserts the seed never appears.
Built per the D1-eng tightened contract: per-run tmp $HOME, four seed
match rules (exact + URL-decoded + first-12-char prefix + base64),
fd-level stdout/stderr capture via Bun.spawn, post-mortem walk of
every file written under $HOME, separate buckets for telemetry JSONL.

Reusable: any future skill that handles secrets can import
runWithSecretSink and run positive/negative controls against its own
bins. The harness itself is ~180 lines of TS with no external deps
beyond Bun + node:fs.

Out of scope for v1 (documented as follow-ups): subprocess env dump
(portable /proc reading), the user's real shell history (bins don't
modify it).

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

* test: secret-sink harness positive controls + real-bin negative controls

11 tests. Positive controls deliberately leak a seed in every covered
channel (stdout, stderr, a file under $HOME, the telemetry JSONL path,
base64-encoded, first-12-char prefix) and assert the harness catches
each one. Without these, a harness that silently under-reports would
look identical to a harness that works.

Negative controls run real setup-gbrain bins with distinctive seeds:
  - supabase-verify rejects a mysql:// URL and a direct-connection URL,
    password never appears in any captured channel
  - lib.sh read_secret_to_env reads piped stdin, emits only the length,
    seed value stays invisible
  - supabase-provision on an auth-failure path fails fast without
    leaking the PAT to any channel

Covers D21 #5 leak harness + uses it to validate D3-eng, D10, D11
discipline end-to-end on the already-shipped bins.

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

* feat(setup-gbrain): add list-orphans + delete-project subcommands (D20)

Powers /setup-gbrain --cleanup-orphans. list-orphans filters the
authenticated user's Supabase projects by name prefix (default
"gbrain") and excludes the project the local ~/.gbrain/config.json
currently points at, so only unclaimed gbrain-shaped projects come
back. Active-ref detection parses the pooler URL's user portion
(postgres.<ref>:<pw>@...).

delete-project is a thin DELETE /v1/projects/{ref} wrapper with no
confirmation of its own — the skill's UI layer owns the per-project
confirm AskUserQuestion loop. Keeps responsibilities clean: the bin
manages HTTP; the skill manages user intent.

Both subcommands reuse the existing api_call retry+backoff and the
same PAT discipline (env only, never argv).

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

* test(setup-gbrain): list-orphans active-ref filtering + delete-project 404

6 new tests bringing the supabase-provision suite to 28:

list-orphans:
  - Filters to gbrain-prefixed projects, excludes the active-ref derived
    from ~/.gbrain/config.json's pooler URL
  - Treats all gbrain-prefixed projects as orphans when no config exists
    (first run on a new machine)
  - Respects custom --name-prefix for users who named their brain
    something else

delete-project:
  - Happy path sends DELETE /v1/projects/<ref> and returns {deleted_ref}
  - 404 surfaces cleanly (exit 2, "404" in stderr)
  - Missing <ref> positional rejected with exit 2

Uses per-test tmpdir HOME with a stubbed ~/.gbrain/config.json so
active-ref extraction runs against deterministic fixtures.

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

* chore: regenerate setup-gbrain SKILL.md after main merge

* chore: bump version and changelog (v1.12.0.0)

Ships /setup-gbrain and its supporting infrastructure end-to-end:
per-remote trust policy, installer with PATH-shadow guard, shared
secret-read helper, structural URL verifier, Supabase Management
API wrapper, /health GBrain dimension, secret-sink test harness.

100 new tests across 5 suites, all green. Three pre-existing test
failures noted as P0 in TODOS.md.

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

* docs: add USING_GBRAIN_WITH_GSTACK.md + update README for /setup-gbrain

README changes:
- Rewrote the "Cross-machine memory with GBrain sync" section into
  "GBrain — persistent knowledge for your coding agent." Covers the
  three /setup-gbrain paths (Supabase existing URL, auto-provision,
  PGLite local), MCP registration, per-remote trust triad, and the
  (still-separate) memory sync feature.
- Added /setup-gbrain row to the skills table pointing at the full guide.
- Added /setup-gbrain to both skill-list install snippets.
- Added USING_GBRAIN_WITH_GSTACK.md to the Docs table.

New doc (USING_GBRAIN_WITH_GSTACK.md):
- All three setup paths with trust-surface caveats
- MCP registration details (and honest Claude-Code-v1 scoping)
- Per-remote trust triad semantics + how to change a policy
- Switching engines (PGLite ↔ Supabase) via --switch
- GStack memory sync + its relationship to the gbrain knowledge base
- /setup-gbrain --cleanup-orphans for orphan Supabase projects
- Full command + flag reference, every bin helper, every env var
- Security model: what's enforced in code, what's enforced by the leak
  harness, and the honest limits of v1
- Troubleshooting: PATH shadowing, direct-connection URL reject,
  auto-provision timeout, stale lock, policy file hand-edits,
  migrate hang
- Why-this-design section explaining the non-obvious choices

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

* fix(brain-sync): secret scanner now catches Bearer-prefixed auth tokens in JSON

The bearer-token-json regex value charset was [A-Za-z0-9_./+=-]{16,},
which does NOT permit spaces. Real HTTP auth headers embed the scheme
name with a literal space — "Bearer <token>" — so the value portion
actually starts with "Bearer " and the existing regex couldn't match.
Result: any JSON blob containing "authorization":"Bearer ..." would
slip past the scanner and sync to the user's private brain repo with
the bearer token inline.

Added optional (Bearer |Basic |Token )? prefix in front of the value
charset. Now matches the common auth-scheme forms without broadening
the matcher to tolerate arbitrary whitespace (which would false-positive
on lots of benign JSON).

Verified against 5 positive cases (bearer-in-json, clean bearer, apikey
no-prefix, token with Bearer, password no-prefix) + 3 negative cases
(too-short tokens, non-secret field names like username, random JSON).

This closes the P0 security regression first noticed during v1.12.0.0
/ship. brain-sync.test.ts now passes all 7 secret-scan fixtures.

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

* test: mock-gh integration tests for gstack-brain-init auto-create path

8 tests covering the gh-repo-create happy path that had zero coverage
before. Existing brain-sync.test.ts always passes --remote <bare-url>
to bypass gh entirely, so the interactive default ("press Enter, we'll
run gh repo create for you") was shipping on trust.

Test strategy: write a bash stub for gh that records every call into
a file, then run gstack-brain-init with that stub on PATH. Assertions
verify: gh auth status is checked, gh repo create fires with the
computed gstack-brain-<user> default name + --private + --source
flags, fall-through to gh repo view when create reports already-exists,
user-provided URL bypasses gh entirely, gh-not-on-path and gh-not-authed
branches both prompt for URL, --remote flag short-circuits all gh
calls, conflicting-remote re-runs exit 1 with a clear message.

No real GitHub, no live auth. Gate tier — runs on every commit.

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

* test(e2e): privacy-gate AskUserQuestion fires from preamble (periodic tier)

Two periodic-tier E2E tests exercising the preamble's privacy gate
end-to-end via the Agent SDK + canUseTool. Previously uncovered:

- Positive: stages a fake gbrain on PATH + gbrain_sync_mode_prompted=false
  in config, runs a real skill, intercepts tool-use. Asserts the
  preamble fires a 3-option AskUserQuestion matching the canonical
  prose ("publish session memory" / "artifact" / "decline") and does
  NOT fire a second time in the same run (idempotency within session).

- Negative: same staging but prompted=true. Asserts the gate stays
  silent even with gbrain detected on the host.

Registered in test/helpers/touchfiles.ts as `brain-privacy-gate`
(periodic) with dependency tracking on generate-brain-sync-block.ts,
the three gstack-brain-* bins, gstack-config, and the Agent SDK runner.
Diff-based selection re-runs the E2E when any of those change.

Cost: ~$0.30-$0.50 per run. Only fires under EVALS=1 EVALS_TIER=periodic;
gate tier stays free.

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

* docs: update TODOS for bearer-json fix + new brain-sync test coverage

Moves the bearer-json secret-scan regression from the P0 "pre-existing
failures" block into the Completed section with full context on the
fix, the mock-gh tests, the E2E privacy-gate tests, and the touchfile
registration. Remaining P0s are the GSTACK_HOME config-isolation bug
and the stale Opus 4.7 overlay pacing assertion, both unrelated.

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

* fix(test): E2E privacy gate — ambient env + skill-file prompt

Two fixes to get the E2E actually running end-to-end (first attempt
failed at the SDK auth step, second at the assertion step):

1. Don't pass an explicit `env:` object to runAgentSdkTest. The SDK's
   auth pipeline misses ANTHROPIC_API_KEY when env is supplied as an
   object (verified against the plan-mode-no-op test, which passes no
   env and auths cleanly). Mutate process.env before the call instead,
   and restore the originals in finally so other tests don't inherit
   the ambient mutation.

2. The "Run /learn with no arguments" user prompt was too narrow — the
   model reduced it to a direct action and skipped the preamble
   privacy-gate directives entirely, so zero AskUserQuestions fired.
   Mirror the plan-mode-no-op pattern: point the model at the skill
   file on disk and ask it to follow every preamble directive. Bumped
   maxTurns from 6 to 10 to give the preamble room to execute.

Verified both tests pass under `EVALS=1 EVALS_TIER=periodic bun test
test/skill-e2e-brain-privacy-gate.test.ts` against a real ANTHROPIC_API_KEY.
Cost per run: ~$0.30-$0.50 per test.

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

* docs(CLAUDE.md): source ANTHROPIC/OPENAI keys from ~/.zshrc for paid evals

Conductor workspaces don't inherit the interactive shell env, so
both API keys are absent from the default process env even though
they're set in ~/.zshrc. Documents the source-from-zshrc pattern
(grep + eval, never echo the value) plus the Agent SDK gotcha: do
NOT pass env as an object to runAgentSdkTest — mutate process.env
ambiently and restore in finally.

Discovered this during the brain-privacy-gate E2E. First run failed
at SDK auth with 401; second failed because explicit env handoff
bypassed the SDK's own auth routing. Fix pattern now codified so
the next paid-eval session in a Conductor workspace doesn't hit the
same two dead ends.

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

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-24 01:38:21 -07:00

37 KiB

gstack development

Commands

bun install          # install dependencies
bun test             # run free tests (browse + snapshot + skill validation)
bun run test:evals   # run paid evals: LLM judge + E2E (diff-based, ~$4/run max)
bun run test:evals:all  # run ALL paid evals regardless of diff
bun run test:gate    # run gate-tier tests only (CI default, blocks merge)
bun run test:periodic  # run periodic-tier tests only (weekly cron / manual)
bun run test:e2e     # run E2E tests only (diff-based, ~$3.85/run max)
bun run test:e2e:all # run ALL E2E tests regardless of diff
bun run eval:select  # show which tests would run based on current diff
bun run dev <cmd>    # run CLI in dev mode, e.g. bun run dev goto https://example.com
bun run build        # gen docs + compile binaries
bun run gen:skill-docs  # regenerate SKILL.md files from templates
bun run skill:check  # health dashboard for all skills
bun run dev:skill    # watch mode: auto-regen + validate on change
bun run eval:list    # list all eval runs from ~/.gstack-dev/evals/
bun run eval:compare # compare two eval runs (auto-picks most recent)
bun run eval:summary # aggregate stats across all eval runs
bun run slop          # full slop-scan report (all files)
bun run slop:diff     # slop findings in files changed on this branch only

test:evals requires ANTHROPIC_API_KEY. Codex E2E tests (test/codex-e2e.test.ts) use Codex's own auth from ~/.codex/ config — no OPENAI_API_KEY env var needed.

Where the keys live on this machine. Conductor workspaces don't inherit the user's interactive shell env, so ANTHROPIC_API_KEY and OPENAI_API_KEY aren't in the default process env. Before running any paid eval / E2E, source them from ~/.zshrc (that's where Garry keeps them):

bash -c '
  eval "$(grep -E "^export (ANTHROPIC_API_KEY|OPENAI_API_KEY)=" ~/.zshrc)"
  export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY OPENAI_API_KEY
  EVALS=1 EVALS_TIER=periodic bun test test/skill-e2e-<whatever>.test.ts
'

Do not echo the key value anywhere (stdout, logs, shell history). The grep+eval pattern keeps it in process env only. When passing to a test's Agent SDK, do NOT pass env: {...} to runAgentSdkTest — the SDK's auth pipeline doesn't pick up the key the same way when env is supplied as an object (confirmed failure mode). Instead, mutate process.env.ANTHROPIC_API_KEY ambiently before the call and restore in finally. E2E tests stream progress in real-time (tool-by-tool via --output-format stream-json --verbose). Results are persisted to ~/.gstack-dev/evals/ with auto-comparison against the previous run.

Diff-based test selection: test:evals and test:e2e auto-select tests based on git diff against the base branch. Each test declares its file dependencies in test/helpers/touchfiles.ts. Changes to global touchfiles (session-runner, eval-store, touchfiles.ts itself) trigger all tests. Use EVALS_ALL=1 or the :all script variants to force all tests. Run eval:select to preview which tests would run.

Two-tier system: Tests are classified as gate or periodic in E2E_TIERS (in test/helpers/touchfiles.ts). CI runs only gate tests (EVALS_TIER=gate); periodic tests run weekly via cron or manually. Use EVALS_TIER=gate or EVALS_TIER=periodic to filter. When adding new E2E tests, classify them:

  1. Safety guardrail or deterministic functional test? -> gate
  2. Quality benchmark, Opus model test, or non-deterministic? -> periodic
  3. Requires external service (Codex, Gemini)? -> periodic

Testing

bun test             # run before every commit — free, <2s
bun run test:evals   # run before shipping — paid, diff-based (~$4/run max)

bun test runs skill validation, gen-skill-docs quality checks, and browse integration tests. bun run test:evals runs LLM-judge quality evals and E2E tests via claude -p. Both must pass before creating a PR.

Project structure

gstack/
├── browse/          # Headless browser CLI (Playwright)
│   ├── src/         # CLI + server + commands
│   │   ├── commands.ts  # Command registry (single source of truth)
│   │   └── snapshot.ts  # SNAPSHOT_FLAGS metadata array
│   ├── test/        # Integration tests + fixtures
│   └── dist/        # Compiled binary
├── hosts/           # Typed host configs (one per AI agent)
│   ├── claude.ts    # Primary host config
│   ├── codex.ts, factory.ts, kiro.ts  # Existing hosts
│   ├── opencode.ts, slate.ts, cursor.ts, openclaw.ts  # IDE hosts
│   ├── hermes.ts, gbrain.ts  # Agent runtime hosts
│   └── index.ts     # Registry: exports all, derives Host type
├── scripts/         # Build + DX tooling
│   ├── gen-skill-docs.ts  # Template → SKILL.md generator (config-driven)
│   ├── host-config.ts     # HostConfig interface + validator
│   ├── host-config-export.ts  # Shell bridge for setup script
│   ├── host-adapters/     # Host-specific adapters (OpenClaw tool mapping)
│   ├── resolvers/   # Template resolver modules (preamble, design, review, gbrain, etc.)
│   ├── skill-check.ts     # Health dashboard
│   └── dev-skill.ts       # Watch mode
├── test/            # Skill validation + eval tests
│   ├── helpers/     # skill-parser.ts, session-runner.ts, llm-judge.ts, eval-store.ts
│   ├── fixtures/    # Ground truth JSON, planted-bug fixtures, eval baselines
│   ├── skill-validation.test.ts  # Tier 1: static validation (free, <1s)
│   ├── gen-skill-docs.test.ts    # Tier 1: generator quality (free, <1s)
│   ├── skill-llm-eval.test.ts   # Tier 3: LLM-as-judge (~$0.15/run)
│   └── skill-e2e-*.test.ts       # Tier 2: E2E via claude -p (~$3.85/run, split by category)
├── qa-only/         # /qa-only skill (report-only QA, no fixes)
├── plan-design-review/  # /plan-design-review skill (report-only design audit)
├── design-review/    # /design-review skill (design audit + fix loop)
├── ship/            # Ship workflow skill
├── review/          # PR review skill
├── plan-ceo-review/ # /plan-ceo-review skill
├── plan-eng-review/ # /plan-eng-review skill
├── autoplan/        # /autoplan skill (auto-review pipeline: CEO → design → eng)
├── benchmark/       # /benchmark skill (performance regression detection)
├── canary/          # /canary skill (post-deploy monitoring loop)
├── codex/           # /codex skill (multi-AI second opinion via OpenAI Codex CLI)
├── land-and-deploy/ # /land-and-deploy skill (merge → deploy → canary verify)
├── office-hours/    # /office-hours skill (YC Office Hours — startup diagnostic + builder brainstorm)
├── investigate/     # /investigate skill (systematic root-cause debugging)
├── retro/           # Retrospective skill (includes /retro global cross-project mode)
├── bin/             # CLI utilities (gstack-repo-mode, gstack-slug, gstack-config, etc.)
├── document-release/ # /document-release skill (post-ship doc updates)
├── cso/             # /cso skill (OWASP Top 10 + STRIDE security audit)
├── design-consultation/ # /design-consultation skill (design system from scratch)
├── design-shotgun/  # /design-shotgun skill (visual design exploration)
├── open-gstack-browser/  # /open-gstack-browser skill (launch GStack Browser)
├── connect-chrome/  # symlink → open-gstack-browser (backwards compat)
├── design/          # Design binary CLI (GPT Image API)
│   ├── src/         # CLI + commands (generate, variants, compare, serve, etc.)
│   ├── test/        # Integration tests
│   └── dist/        # Compiled binary
├── extension/       # Chrome extension (side panel + activity feed + CSS inspector)
├── lib/             # Shared libraries (worktree.ts)
├── docs/designs/    # Design documents
├── setup-deploy/    # /setup-deploy skill (one-time deploy config)
├── .github/         # CI workflows + Docker image
│   ├── workflows/   # evals.yml (E2E on Ubicloud), skill-docs.yml, actionlint.yml
│   └── docker/      # Dockerfile.ci (pre-baked toolchain + Playwright/Chromium)
├── contrib/         # Contributor-only tools (never installed for users)
│   └── add-host/    # /gstack-contrib-add-host skill
├── setup            # One-time setup: build binary + symlink skills
├── SKILL.md         # Generated from SKILL.md.tmpl (don't edit directly)
├── SKILL.md.tmpl    # Template: edit this, run gen:skill-docs
├── ETHOS.md         # Builder philosophy (Boil the Lake, Search Before Building)
└── package.json     # Build scripts for browse

SKILL.md workflow

SKILL.md files are generated from .tmpl templates. To update docs:

  1. Edit the .tmpl file (e.g. SKILL.md.tmpl or browse/SKILL.md.tmpl)
  2. Run bun run gen:skill-docs (or bun run build which does it automatically)
  3. Commit both the .tmpl and generated .md files

To add a new browse command: add it to browse/src/commands.ts and rebuild. To add a snapshot flag: add it to SNAPSHOT_FLAGS in browse/src/snapshot.ts and rebuild.

Token ceiling: Generated SKILL.md files trip a warning above 160KB (~40K tokens). This is a "watch for feature bloat" guardrail, not a hard gate. Modern flagship models have 200K-1M context windows, so 40K is 4-20% of window, and prompt caching makes the marginal cost of larger skills small. The ceiling exists to catch runaway preamble/resolver growth, not to force compression on carefully-tuned big skills (ship, plan-ceo-review, office-hours legitimately pack 25-35K tokens of behavior). If you blow past 40K, the right fix is usually: (1) look at WHAT grew, (2) if one resolver added 10K+ in a single PR, question whether it belongs inline or as a reference doc, (3) only compress carefully-tuned prose as a last resort — cuts to the coverage audit, review army, or voice directive have real quality cost.

Merge conflicts on SKILL.md files: NEVER resolve conflicts on generated SKILL.md files by accepting either side. Instead: (1) resolve conflicts on the .tmpl templates and scripts/gen-skill-docs.ts (the sources of truth), (2) run bun run gen:skill-docs to regenerate all SKILL.md files, (3) stage the regenerated files. Accepting one side's generated output silently drops the other side's template changes.

Platform-agnostic design

Skills must NEVER hardcode framework-specific commands, file patterns, or directory structures. Instead:

  1. Read CLAUDE.md for project-specific config (test commands, eval commands, etc.)
  2. If missing, AskUserQuestion — let the user tell you or let gstack search the repo
  3. Persist the answer to CLAUDE.md so we never have to ask again

This applies to test commands, eval commands, deploy commands, and any other project-specific behavior. The project owns its config; gstack reads it.

Writing SKILL templates

SKILL.md.tmpl files are prompt templates read by Claude, not bash scripts. Each bash code block runs in a separate shell — variables do not persist between blocks.

Rules:

  • Use natural language for logic and state. Don't use shell variables to pass state between code blocks. Instead, tell Claude what to remember and reference it in prose (e.g., "the base branch detected in Step 0").
  • Don't hardcode branch names. Detect main/master/etc dynamically via gh pr view or gh repo view. Use {{BASE_BRANCH_DETECT}} for PR-targeting skills. Use "the base branch" in prose, <base> in code block placeholders.
  • Keep bash blocks self-contained. Each code block should work independently. If a block needs context from a previous step, restate it in the prose above.
  • Express conditionals as English. Instead of nested if/elif/else in bash, write numbered decision steps: "1. If X, do Y. 2. Otherwise, do Z."

Writing style (V1)

Default output from every tier-≥2 skill follows the Writing Style section in scripts/resolvers/preamble.ts: jargon glossed on first use (curated list in scripts/jargon-list.json, baked at gen-skill-docs time), questions framed in outcome terms ("what breaks for your users if...") not implementation terms, short sentences, decisions close with user impact. Power users who want the tighter V0 prose set gstack-config set explain_level terse (binary switch, no middle mode). See docs/designs/PLAN_TUNING_V1.md for the full design rationale. The review pacing overhaul that originally tried to ride alongside writing-style was extracted to V1.1 — see docs/designs/PACING_UPDATES_V0.md.

Browser interaction

When you need to interact with a browser (QA, dogfooding, cookie setup), use the /browse skill or run the browse binary directly via $B <command>. NEVER use mcp__claude-in-chrome__* tools — they are slow, unreliable, and not what this project uses.

Sidebar architecture: Before modifying sidepanel.js, background.js, content.js, sidebar-agent.ts, or sidebar-related server endpoints, read docs/designs/SIDEBAR_MESSAGE_FLOW.md. It documents the full initialization timeline, message flow, auth token chain, tab concurrency model, and known failure modes. The sidebar spans 5 files across 2 codebases (extension + server) with non-obvious ordering dependencies. The doc exists to prevent the kind of silent failures that come from not understanding the cross-component flow.

Transport-layer security (v1.6.0.0+). When pair-agent starts an ngrok tunnel, the daemon binds two HTTP listeners: a local listener (127.0.0.1, full command surface, never forwarded) and a tunnel listener (locked allowlist: /connect, /command with a scoped token + 17-command browser-driving allowlist, /sidebar-chat). ngrok forwards only the tunnel port. Root tokens over the tunnel return 403. SSE endpoints use a 30-minute HttpOnly gstack_sse cookie minted via POST /sse-session (never valid against /command). Tunnel-surface rejections go to ~/.gstack/security/attempts.jsonl via tunnel-denial-log.ts. Before editing server.ts, sse-session-cookie.ts, or tunnel-denial-log.ts, read ARCHITECTURE.md — the module boundary (no imports from token-registry.ts into sse-session-cookie.ts) is load-bearing for scope isolation.

Sidebar security stack (layered defense against prompt injection):

Layer Module Lives in
L1-L3 content-security.ts both server and agent — datamarking, hidden element strip, ARIA regex, URL blocklist, envelope wrapping
L4 security-classifier.ts (TestSavantAI ONNX) sidebar-agent only
L4b security-classifier.ts (Claude Haiku transcript) sidebar-agent only
L5 security.ts (canary) both — inject in compiled, check in agent
L6 security.ts (combineVerdict ensemble) both

Critical constraint: security-classifier.ts CANNOT be imported from the compiled browse binary. @huggingface/transformers v4 requires onnxruntime-node which fails to dlopen from Bun compile's temp extract dir. Only security.ts (pure-string operations — canary, verdict combiner, attack log, status) is safe for server.ts. See ~/.gstack/projects/garrytan-gstack/ceo-plans/2026-04-19-prompt-injection-guard.md §"Pre-Impl Gate 1 Outcome" for full architectural decision.

Thresholds (in security.ts):

  • BLOCK: 0.85 — single-layer score that would cause BLOCK if cross-confirmed
  • WARN: 0.60 — cross-confirm threshold. When L4 AND L4b both >= 0.60 → BLOCK
  • LOG_ONLY: 0.40 — gates transcript classifier (skip Haiku when all layers < 0.40)

Ensemble rule: BLOCK only when the ML content classifier AND the transcript classifier both report >= WARN. Single-layer high confidence degrades to WARN — this is the Stack Overflow instruction-writing FP mitigation. Canary leak always BLOCKs (deterministic).

Env knobs:

  • GSTACK_SECURITY_OFF=1 — emergency kill switch. Classifier stays off even if warmed. Canary is still injected; just the ML scan is skipped.
  • GSTACK_SECURITY_ENSEMBLE=deberta — opt-in DeBERTa-v3 ensemble. Adds ProtectAI DeBERTa-v3-base-injection-onnx as L4c classifier for cross-model agreement. 721MB first-run download. With ensemble enabled, BLOCK requires 2-of-3 ML classifiers agreeing at >= WARN (testsavant, deberta, transcript). Without ensemble (default), BLOCK requires testsavant + transcript at >= WARN.
  • Classifier model cache: ~/.gstack/models/testsavant-small/ (112MB, first run only) plus ~/.gstack/models/deberta-v3-injection/ (721MB, only when ensemble enabled)
  • Attack log: ~/.gstack/security/attempts.jsonl (salted sha256 + domain only, rotates at 10MB, 5 generations)
  • Per-device salt: ~/.gstack/security/device-salt (0600)
  • Session state: ~/.gstack/security/session-state.json (cross-process, atomic)

When developing gstack, .claude/skills/gstack may be a symlink back to this working directory (gitignored). This means skill changes are live immediately, great for rapid iteration, risky during big refactors where half-written skills could break other Claude Code sessions using gstack concurrently.

Check once per session: Run ls -la .claude/skills/gstack to see if it's a symlink or a real copy. If it's a symlink to your working directory, be aware that:

  • Template changes + bun run gen:skill-docs immediately affect all gstack invocations
  • Breaking changes to SKILL.md.tmpl files can break concurrent gstack sessions
  • During large refactors, remove the symlink (rm .claude/skills/gstack) so the global install at ~/.claude/skills/gstack/ is used instead

Prefix setting: Setup creates real directories (not symlinks) at the top level with a SKILL.md symlink inside (e.g., qa/SKILL.md -> gstack/qa/SKILL.md). This ensures Claude discovers them as top-level skills, not nested under gstack/. Names are either short (qa) or namespaced (gstack-qa), controlled by skill_prefix in ~/.gstack/config.yaml. Pass --no-prefix or --prefix to skip the interactive prompt.

Note: Vendoring gstack into a project's repo is deprecated. Use global install

  • ./setup --team instead. See README.md for team mode instructions.

For plan reviews: When reviewing plans that modify skill templates or the gen-skill-docs pipeline, consider whether the changes should be tested in isolation before going live (especially if the user is actively using gstack in other windows).

Upgrade migrations: When a change modifies on-disk state (directory structure, config format, stale files) in ways that could break existing user installs, add a migration script to gstack-upgrade/migrations/. Read CONTRIBUTING.md's "Upgrade migrations" section for the format and testing requirements. The upgrade skill runs these automatically after ./setup during /gstack-upgrade.

Compiled binaries — NEVER commit browse/dist/ or design/dist/

The browse/dist/ and design/dist/ directories contain compiled Bun binaries (browse, find-browse, design, ~58MB each). These are Mach-O arm64 only — they do NOT work on Linux, Windows, or Intel Macs. The ./setup script already builds from source for every platform, so the checked-in binaries are redundant. They are tracked by git due to a historical mistake and should eventually be removed with git rm --cached.

NEVER stage or commit these files. They show up as modified in git status because they're tracked despite .gitignore — ignore them. When staging files, always use specific filenames (git add file1 file2) — never git add . or git add -A, which will accidentally include the binaries.

Commit style

Always bisect commits. Every commit should be a single logical change. When you've made multiple changes (e.g., a rename + a rewrite + new tests), split them into separate commits before pushing. Each commit should be independently understandable and revertable.

Examples of good bisection:

  • Rename/move separate from behavior changes
  • Test infrastructure (touchfiles, helpers) separate from test implementations
  • Template changes separate from generated file regeneration
  • Mechanical refactors separate from new features

When the user says "bisect commit" or "bisect and push," split staged/unstaged changes into logical commits and push.

Slop-scan: AI code quality, not AI code hiding

We use slop-scan to catch patterns where AI-generated code is genuinely worse than what a human would write. We are NOT trying to pass as human code. We are AI-coded and proud of it. The goal is code quality.

npx slop-scan scan .          # human-readable report
npx slop-scan scan . --json   # machine-readable for diffing

Config: slop-scan.config.json at repo root (currently excludes **/vendor/**).

What to fix (genuine quality improvements)

  • Empty catches around file ops — use safeUnlink() (ignores ENOENT, rethrows EPERM/EIO). A swallowed EPERM in cleanup means silent data loss.
  • Empty catches around process kills — use safeKill() (ignores ESRCH, rethrows EPERM). A swallowed EPERM means you think you killed something you didn't.
  • Redundant return await — remove when there's no enclosing try block. Saves a microtask, signals intent.
  • Typed exception catchescatch (err) { if (!(err instanceof TypeError)) throw err } is genuinely better than catch {} when the try block does URL parsing or DOM work. You know what error you expect, so say so.

What NOT to fix (linter gaming, not quality)

  • String-matching on error messageserr.message.includes('closed') is brittle. Playwright/Chrome can change wording anytime. If a fire-and-forget operation can fail for ANY reason and you don't care, catch {} is the correct pattern.
  • Adding comments to exempt pass-through wrappers — "alias for active session" above a method just to trip slop-scan's exemption rule is noise, not documentation.
  • Converting extension catch-and-log to selective rethrow — Chrome extensions crash entirely on uncaught errors. If the catch logs and continues, that IS the right pattern for extension code. Don't make it throw.
  • Tightening best-effort cleanup paths — shutdown, emergency cleanup, and disconnect code should use safeUnlinkQuiet() (swallows ALL errors). A cleanup path that throws on EPERM means the rest of cleanup doesn't run. That's worse.

Utilities in browse/src/error-handling.ts

Function Use when Behavior
safeUnlink(path) Normal file deletion Ignores ENOENT, rethrows others
safeUnlinkQuiet(path) Shutdown/emergency cleanup Swallows all errors
safeKill(pid, signal) Sending signals Ignores ESRCH, rethrows others
isProcessAlive(pid) Boolean process checks Returns true/false, never throws

Score tracking

Baseline (2026-04-09, before cleanup): 100 findings, 432.8 score, 2.38 score/file. After cleanup: 90 findings, 358.1 score, 1.96 score/file.

Don't chase the number. Fix patterns that represent actual code quality problems. Accept findings where the "sloppy" pattern is the correct engineering choice.

Community PR guardrails

When reviewing or merging community PRs, always AskUserQuestion before accepting any commit that:

  1. Touches ETHOS.md — this file is Garry's personal builder philosophy. No edits from external contributors or AI agents, period.
  2. Removes or softens promotional material — YC references, founder perspective, and product voice are intentional. PRs that frame these as "unnecessary" or "too promotional" must be rejected.
  3. Changes Garry's voice — the tone, humor, directness, and perspective in skill templates, CHANGELOG, and docs are not generic. PRs that rewrite voice to be more "neutral" or "professional" must be rejected.

Even if the agent strongly believes a change improves the project, these three categories require explicit user approval via AskUserQuestion. No exceptions. No auto-merging. No "I'll just clean this up."

CHANGELOG + VERSION style

Versioning invariant (workspace-aware ship). VERSION is a monotonic ordered release identifier, not a strict semver commitment. The bump level (major/minor/patch/micro) expresses intent at ship time. Queue-advancing past a claimed version within the same bump level is explicitly permitted — if branch A claims v1.7.0.0 as a MINOR and branch B is also a MINOR, B lands at v1.8.0.0 (still a MINOR relative to main). Downstream consumers must NOT rely on "MINOR = feature-only, PATCH = fix-only" as a strict contract. This is why bin/gstack-next-version advances within the chosen bump level rather than repicking the level when collisions happen.

VERSION and CHANGELOG are branch-scoped. Every feature branch that ships gets its own version bump and CHANGELOG entry. The entry describes what THIS branch adds — not what was already on main.

When to write the CHANGELOG entry:

  • At /ship time (Step 13), not during development or mid-branch.
  • The entry covers ALL commits on this branch vs the base branch.
  • Never fold new work into an existing CHANGELOG entry from a prior version that already landed on main. If main has v0.10.0.0 and your branch adds features, bump to v0.10.1.0 with a new entry — don't edit the v0.10.0.0 entry.

Key questions before writing:

  1. What branch am I on? What did THIS branch change?
  2. Is the base branch version already released? (If yes, bump and create new entry.)
  3. Does an existing entry on this branch already cover earlier work? (If yes, replace it with one unified entry for the final version.)

Merging main does NOT mean adopting main's version. When you merge origin/main into a feature branch, main may bring new CHANGELOG entries and a higher VERSION. Your branch still needs its OWN version bump on top. If main is at v0.13.8.0 and your branch adds features, bump to v0.13.9.0 with a new entry. Never jam your changes into an entry that already landed on main. Your entry goes on top because your branch lands next.

After merging main, always check:

  • Does CHANGELOG have your branch's own entry separate from main's entries?
  • Is VERSION higher than main's VERSION?
  • Is your entry the topmost entry in CHANGELOG (above main's latest)? If any answer is no, fix it before continuing.

After any CHANGELOG edit that moves, adds, or removes entries, immediately run grep "^## \[" CHANGELOG.md to verify no duplicates and a sensible reverse-chronological order. Gaps between version numbers are fine. A branch that ships at v1.6.4.0 without a prior v1.5.2.0 or v1.5.3.0 entry on main is correct — those were branch-internal version numbers that never landed. Do not back-fill gaps with placeholder entries.

Never orphan branch-internal versions. If your branch bumped VERSION several times during development (v1.5.1.0 → v1.5.2.0 → v1.6.4.0, say) and those earlier entries were never released to main, the final ship consolidates ALL of them into a single entry at the final version (v1.6.4.0). Collapse them — delete the old entries and move their content into the final entry, re-version table columns accordingly. Readers see one release, not a branch diary. Gaps are fine (v1.6.3.0 → v1.6.4.0 with no v1.5.x in between on main is correct).

CHANGELOG.md is for users, not contributors. Write it like product release notes:

  • Lead with what the user can now do that they couldn't before. Sell the feature.
  • Use plain language, not implementation details. "You can now..." not "Refactored the..."
  • Never mention TODOS.md, internal tracking, eval infrastructure, or contributor-facing details. These are invisible to users and meaningless to them.
  • Put contributor/internal changes in a separate "For contributors" section at the bottom.
  • Every entry should make someone think "oh nice, I want to try that."
  • No jargon: say "every question now tells you which project and branch you're in" not "AskUserQuestion format standardized across skill templates via preamble resolver."

Only document what shipped between main and this change. Readers do not care how we got here. Keep out of the CHANGELOG, always:

  • Branch resyncs, merge commits with main, rebase activity.
  • Plan approvals, review outcomes (CEO / eng / design / outside-voice / codex findings), AskUserQuestion decisions, scope negotiations.
  • "Work queued," "plan approved," "in-progress," "will ship later" — the CHANGELOG documents what DID ship, not what MIGHT ship.
  • Version-bump housekeeping when no user-facing work actually landed.

If the diff between the base branch version and this version has no user-facing change (only merges, only CHANGELOG edits, only placeholder work), the honest entry is one sentence: "Version bump for branch-ahead discipline. No user-facing changes yet." Stop there. Do not pad. Do not explain the plan that will ship eventually. Do not narrate the branch's history. When real work lands, the entry will replace this at /ship time.

Release-summary format (every ## [X.Y.Z] entry)

Every version entry in CHANGELOG.md MUST start with a release-summary section in the GStack/Garry voice, one viewport's worth of prose + tables that lands like a verdict, not marketing. The itemized changelog (subsections, bullets, files) goes BELOW that summary, separated by a ### Itemized changes header.

The release-summary section gets read by humans, by the auto-update agent, and by anyone deciding whether to upgrade. The itemized list is for agents that need to know exactly what changed.

Structure for the top of every ## [X.Y.Z] entry:

  1. Two-line bold headline (10-14 words total). Should land like a verdict, not marketing. Sound like someone who shipped today and cares whether it works.
  2. Lead paragraph (3-5 sentences). What shipped, what changed for the user. Specific, concrete, no AI vocabulary, no em dashes, no hype.
  3. A "The X numbers that matter" section with:
    • One short setup paragraph naming the source of the numbers (real production deployment OR a reproducible benchmark, name the file/command to run).
    • A table of 3-6 key metrics with BEFORE / AFTER / Δ columns.
    • A second optional table for per-category breakdown if relevant.
    • 1-2 sentences interpreting the most striking number in concrete user terms.
  4. A "What this means for [audience]" closing paragraph (2-4 sentences) tying the metrics to a real workflow shift. End with what to do.

Voice rules for the release summary:

  • No em dashes (use commas, periods, "...").
  • No AI vocabulary (delve, robust, comprehensive, nuanced, fundamental, etc.) or banned phrases ("here's the kicker", "the bottom line", etc.).
  • Real numbers, real file names, real commands. Not "fast" but "~30s on 30K pages."
  • Short paragraphs, mix one-sentence punches with 2-3 sentence runs.
  • Connect to user outcomes: "the agent does ~3x less reading" beats "improved precision."
  • Be direct about quality. "Well-designed" or "this is a mess." No dancing.

Source material:

  • CHANGELOG previous entry for prior context.
  • Benchmark files or /retro output for headline numbers.
  • Recent commits (git log <prev-version>..HEAD --oneline) for what shipped.
  • Don't make up numbers. If a metric isn't in a benchmark or production data, don't include it. Say "no measurement yet" if asked.

Target length: ~250-350 words for the summary. Should render as one viewport.

Itemized changes (below the release summary)

Write ### Itemized changes and continue with the detailed subsections (Added, Changed, Fixed, For contributors). Same rules as the user-facing voice guidance above, plus:

  • Always credit community contributions. When an entry includes work from a community PR, name the contributor with Contributed by @username. Contributors did real work. Thank them publicly every time, no exceptions.

AI effort compression

When estimating or discussing effort, always show both human-team and CC+gstack time:

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

Completeness is cheap. Don't recommend shortcuts when the complete implementation is a "lake" (achievable) not an "ocean" (multi-quarter migration). See the Completeness Principle in the skill preamble for the full philosophy.

Search before building

Before designing any solution that involves concurrency, unfamiliar patterns, infrastructure, or anything where the runtime/framework might have a built-in:

  1. Search for "{runtime} {thing} built-in"
  2. Search for "{thing} best practice {current year}"
  3. Check official runtime/framework docs

Three layers of knowledge: tried-and-true (Layer 1), new-and-popular (Layer 2), first-principles (Layer 3). Prize Layer 3 above all. See ETHOS.md for the full builder philosophy.

Local plans

Contributors can store long-range vision docs and design documents in ~/.gstack-dev/plans/. These are local-only (not checked in). When reviewing TODOS.md, check plans/ for candidates that may be ready to promote to TODOs or implement.

E2E eval failure blame protocol

When an E2E eval fails during /ship or any other workflow, never claim "not related to our changes" without proving it. These systems have invisible couplings — a preamble text change affects agent behavior, a new helper changes timing, a regenerated SKILL.md shifts prompt context.

Required before attributing a failure to "pre-existing":

  1. Run the same eval on main (or base branch) and show it fails there too
  2. If it passes on main but fails on the branch — it IS your change. Trace the blame.
  3. If you can't run on main, say "unverified — may or may not be related" and flag it as a risk in the PR body

"Pre-existing" without receipts is a lazy claim. Prove it or don't say it.

Long-running tasks: don't give up

When running evals, E2E tests, or any long-running background task, poll until completion. Use sleep 180 && echo "ready" + TaskOutput in a loop every 3 minutes. Never switch to blocking mode and give up when the poll times out. Never say "I'll be notified when it completes" and stop checking — keep the loop going until the task finishes or the user tells you to stop.

The full E2E suite can take 30-45 minutes. That's 10-15 polling cycles. Do all of them. Report progress at each check (which tests passed, which are running, any failures so far). The user wants to see the run complete, not a promise that you'll check later.

E2E test fixtures: extract, don't copy

NEVER copy a full SKILL.md file into an E2E test fixture. SKILL.md files are 1500-2000 lines. When claude -p reads a file that large, context bloat causes timeouts, flaky turn limits, and tests that take 5-10x longer than necessary.

Instead, extract only the section the test actually needs:

// BAD — agent reads 1900 lines, burns tokens on irrelevant sections
fs.copyFileSync(path.join(ROOT, 'ship', 'SKILL.md'), path.join(dir, 'ship-SKILL.md'));

// GOOD — agent reads ~60 lines, finishes in 38s instead of timing out
const full = fs.readFileSync(path.join(ROOT, 'ship', 'SKILL.md'), 'utf-8');
const start = full.indexOf('## Review Readiness Dashboard');
const end = full.indexOf('\n---\n', start);
fs.writeFileSync(path.join(dir, 'ship-SKILL.md'), full.slice(start, end > start ? end : undefined));

Also when running targeted E2E tests to debug failures:

  • Run in foreground (bun test ...), not background with & and tee
  • Never pkill running eval processes and restart — you lose results and waste money
  • One clean run beats three killed-and-restarted runs

Publishing native OpenClaw skills to ClawHub

Native OpenClaw skills live in openclaw/skills/gstack-openclaw-*/SKILL.md. These are hand-crafted methodology skills (not generated by the pipeline) published to ClawHub so any OpenClaw user can install them.

Publishing: The command is clawhub publish (NOT clawhub skill publish):

clawhub publish openclaw/skills/gstack-openclaw-office-hours \
  --slug gstack-openclaw-office-hours --name "gstack Office Hours" \
  --version 1.0.0 --changelog "description of changes"

Repeat for each skill: gstack-openclaw-ceo-review, gstack-openclaw-investigate, gstack-openclaw-retro. Bump --version on each update.

Auth: clawhub login (opens browser for GitHub auth). clawhub whoami to verify.

Updating: Same clawhub publish command with a higher --version and --changelog.

Verification: clawhub search gstack to confirm they're live.

Deploying to the active skill

The active skill lives at ~/.claude/skills/gstack/. After making changes:

  1. Push your branch
  2. Fetch and reset in the skill directory: cd ~/.claude/skills/gstack && git fetch origin && git reset --hard origin/main
  3. Rebuild: cd ~/.claude/skills/gstack && bun run build

Or copy the binaries directly:

  • cp browse/dist/browse ~/.claude/skills/gstack/browse/dist/browse
  • cp design/dist/design ~/.claude/skills/gstack/design/dist/design