@codyswann/lisa 2.26.3 → 2.28.0

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package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@
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  "lodash": ">=4.18.1"
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  },
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  "name": "@codyswann/lisa",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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+ "version": "2.28.0",
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  "description": "Claude Code governance framework that applies guardrails, guidance, and automated enforcement to projects",
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  "main": "dist/index.js",
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  "exports": {
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  {
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  "name": "lisa",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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+ "version": "2.28.0",
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  "description": "Universal governance — agents, skills, commands, hooks, and rules for all projects",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  {
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  "name": "lisa",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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+ "version": "2.28.0",
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  "description": "Universal governance: agents, skills, commands, hooks, and rules for all projects.",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
@@ -0,0 +1,94 @@
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+ # Leaf-Only Build-Ready Invariant & Parent Status Rollup
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+
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+ This is the single vendor-neutral source of truth for two coupled lifecycle rules. Every `*-to-tracker`, `*-write-*`, `*-validate-*`, and `*-build-intake` skill cites this rule rather than restating it, so per-vendor logic does not drift.
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+
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+ 1. **Leaf-only invariant** — only an independently implementable **leaf work unit** may carry the build-ready role. A parent/container with child work is never directly build-ready.
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+ 2. **Parent status rollup** — a parent/container's lifecycle state is *derived* from its children, never set independently.
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+
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+ The two are the same idea seen from opposite ends: a parent never enters the build queue as work; it only ever *reflects* the state of the leaves underneath it.
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+
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+ ## Why this exists
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+
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+ Build intake claims and implements whatever carries the build-ready role (the `ready` role — see `config-resolution`). A parent container (an Epic, a Story, a Linear Project, any issue with child work) is not a unit of implementation; it organizes work. If a parent is marked build-ready, an agent will try to implement the container itself — the wrong permission and lifecycle boundary. This surfaced in real PRD intake: a PRD decomposed into an Epic, Stories, and Sub-tasks, and *every* item received the build-ready label, so a subsequent build pass would have tried to "implement" the Epic.
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+
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+ The fix is not vendor-specific. It belongs here, in a cross-vendor rule, and every writer / validator / intake path enforces it.
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+
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+ ## Container vs. leaf taxonomy
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+
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+ A **leaf work unit** is an individually implementable item with **no child work** — issue types **Bug, Task, Sub-task, Improvement**. These are what an agent claims and implements. This is the same definition used by the `repo-scope-split` rule (a leaf work unit is also single-repo).
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+
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+ A **container** organizes other work and is never directly implemented:
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+
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+ | Class | Examples by type | May carry build-ready? |
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+ |---|---|---|
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+ | **Leaf work unit** | Bug, Task, Sub-task, Improvement — with no children | **Yes** |
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+ | **Container** | Epic, Story, Spike, or *any* item that has child work | **No** — state rolls up from children |
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+
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+ The classification is **structural, not nominal**: an item is a container if it has child work, regardless of its declared type. A "Task" that has acquired sub-tasks is a container for rollup purposes. The type label is a strong default (Epic/Story/Spike are containers by design), but the presence of children is decisive. See the childless-parent exception below for the converse case.
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+ ### How each vendor encodes hierarchy
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+
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+ The invariant is vendor-neutral; the mechanics of "has child work" differ. A skill resolves child membership using the native hierarchy first, falling back to text/metadata links where the vendor has no native parent/child:
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+ - **GitHub Issues** — native **sub-issues** (parent ↔ child issue graph), plus task-list checkboxes and `Blocked by #<n>` / parent references in the body. Epic and Story are modeled as parent issues; their Sub-tasks are sub-issues.
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+ - **JIRA** — native **Epic → Story → Sub-task** hierarchy: Epic link / parent field for Stories under an Epic, and the subtask relationship for Sub-tasks under a Story/Task. Issue links (`blocks` / `is blocked by`) express cross-item dependencies but are not parentage.
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+ - **Linear** — **Project** (the Epic equivalent) groups **Issues** via `projectId`; an Issue groups **sub-issues** via `parentId`. Project state and Issue state are native. Relations (`save_issue_relation`) express dependencies, not parentage. (Initiatives are not used — see `config-resolution`.)
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+ Where a vendor lacks native hierarchy for a given pair, a text link or metadata marker establishes the relationship (per PRD #522 non-goals: vendors need not expose identical native hierarchy features).
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+ ## Leaf-only invariant (the rule)
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+ **Build-ready means a directly implementable leaf work unit.** Therefore:
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+ - **At decomposition / write time** — when a PRD decomposes into a hierarchy, only the leaf work units receive the `ready` role (status/label). Parent containers (Epic, Story, Project, and any parent issue that has child work) are created in their normal non-ready state and never receive the build-ready role directly. The leaves are what downstream build intake will claim.
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+ - **At validate time** — the `*-validate-*` gate FAILs any container carrying the build-ready role. This is the symmetric write-side guard: a stale or hand-applied build-ready role on a parent is a lifecycle error.
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+ - **At claim time** — build intake scans for the `ready` role but claims **only leaf work units**. A container that still carries a stale build-ready role (e.g. applied before this rule existed) is **not claimed**: intake either skips it or safely blocks it with a clear lifecycle-repair message (move the role to the leaves; roll the parent up). Intake never silently implements a container.
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+ The permission boundary is the maintainer-applied build-ready role, not authorship — do not add author-based guards (PRD #522 non-goal). This rule narrows *what* may carry that role, not *who* may apply it.
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+ ## Childless-parent exception
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+ A container *type* with **no child work** is, structurally, a leaf — and may be build-ready **iff its issue type is itself a valid leaf work unit**.
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+ - A **Task** or **Bug** with no children → leaf → may be build-ready. (Many real tickets are flat Tasks with no sub-tasks; this rule must not strand them.)
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+ - An **Epic, Story, or Spike** with no children → still **not** build-ready. These types are coordination containers by design; an empty one is an incomplete decomposition, not an implementable unit. The correct repair is to decompose it (add leaf children) or reclassify it to a leaf type — not to claim it.
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+ So the exception is narrow: childlessness *enables* build-ready only for types that are leaf work units to begin with. It never promotes an Epic/Story/Spike to directly implementable.
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+ ## Parent status rollup (the state machine)
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+ A parent/container never sets its own lifecycle state; it **derives** it from the roll-up of its children's states. Rollup is evaluated whenever a child transitions (or when intake observes the child set). Using the canonical build-lifecycle roles from `config-resolution` (`ready`, `claimed`, `review`, `blocked`, `done`):
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+ Evaluate the children in priority order and take the **first** match:
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+ | If among the required leaves… | …the parent rolls up to | Role |
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+ |---|---|---|
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+ | any leaf is **blocked** | blocked / attention-needed | `blocked` |
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+ | else any leaf is **in progress** (claimed or in review) | active / in-progress | `claimed` |
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+ | else **all** required leaves are **terminal** (`done`) | the configured rollup terminal state | `done` (or `review` where supported — see below) |
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+ | else (leaves exist but none started) | unchanged (parent stays in its non-ready container state) | — |
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+ Notes:
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+ - **Blocked dominates.** A single blocked leaf surfaces blocked/attention on the parent even if other leaves are progressing, so a human sees the parent needs attention.
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+ - **"Required" leaves.** Optional or won't-do children do not hold a parent open; only the leaves that must ship for the parent to be complete are counted toward the all-terminal check.
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+ - **Rollup is recursive.** An Epic rolls up from its Stories, each of which rolls up from its own leaves. Evaluate bottom-up: a Story reaches `done` only when its leaves are all terminal; an Epic reaches `done` only when its Stories are all `done`.
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+ - **Vendor support varies.** Apply the rollup state the vendor can express. Where a vendor has no native intermediate state, use the nearest configured role or a metadata/comment signal rather than forcing a non-existent status (PRD #522 non-goal: vendors need not expose identical states).
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+ - **The parent never carries `ready`.** `ready` is a *human* "this is buildable, claim it" signal and only ever lives on leaves. Rollup moves a parent between non-ready container states (in-progress / blocked / terminal); it never sets the parent to `ready`.
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+ ### The rollup terminal state is the configured "done" — multi-env capable
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+ The terminal rollup state is whatever the project configures for `done` — which is **env-keyed** (`config-resolution` "Env-keyed `done`"): a `done` map keyed by environment (`dev`, `staging`, `production`), resolved from the merged PR's base branch. This rule does **not** hardcode a `dev → staging → prod` promotion chain as required — that is a project-specific deploy topology. A downstream project with dev/staging/prod environments rolls a parent up to whichever terminal `done` value matches the environment its leaves shipped to. The rule stays generic and multi-env capable.
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+ **Single-environment collapse (this repo).** Lisa's own deploy has only `main`/`production` (no dev/staging), so `done` is a single value, not a map, and the build lifecycle collapses to one chain: `ready → claimed (in-progress) → review (code-review) → done`. The rollup terminal state is simply `done`. This is the *collapsed* case of the generic rule, not a different rule — projects with more environments keep the env-keyed map.
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+ ## Citation
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+ Skills that enforce this invariant or perform rollup cite this rule by slug (the `leaf-only-lifecycle` rule) instead of restating it:
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+ - **Decomposition / write** (`*-to-tracker`, `*-write-*`) — apply the `ready` role to leaves only; never to containers.
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+ - **Validate** (`*-validate-*`) — FAIL a container carrying the build-ready role; FAIL a childless Epic/Story/Spike marked build-ready.
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+ - **Build intake** (`*-build-intake`, `tracker-build-intake`) — claim leaves only; skip or safe-block containers with stale build-ready roles.
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+ - **Rollup** — derive parent state from children per the state machine above.
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+ This is the inverse-direction companion to `repo-scope-split` (which governs a leaf's *repo* scope); together they define what a build-ready leaf work unit is: directly implementable, single-repo, childless-or-leaf-typed.
@@ -198,6 +198,8 @@ For each epic identified in Phase 1, **invoke the `lisa:tracker-write` shim** (d
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  - `artifacts`: the full Phase 1.5 artifact list — every artifact, regardless of domain. The Epic is the canonical hub.
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  - `priority`, `labels`, `components`, `fix_version`: as appropriate
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+ **Leaf-only build-ready (`leaf-only-lifecycle`)**: an Epic is a container, not a leaf work unit. Do NOT mark it build-ready — `lisa:tracker-write` must not be passed `status:ready` for an Epic, and the Epic's lifecycle state rolls up from its children. The build-ready label is applied only in Phase 5.
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  Capture the returned epic ref — Phase 4 needs it as the parent for Stories.
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  ### Phase 4: Create Stories
@@ -225,6 +227,8 @@ For each Story, **invoke `lisa:tracker-write`** with:
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  | Infrastructure | `ops`, `reference` |
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  | Mixed / setup ("X.0") | All domains |
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+ **Leaf-only build-ready (`leaf-only-lifecycle`)**: a Story is a container (it has child Sub-tasks), not a leaf work unit. Do NOT mark it build-ready — never pass `status:ready` to `lisa:tracker-write` for a Story. Its lifecycle state rolls up from its Sub-tasks. The build-ready label is applied only in Phase 5.
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  Capture each returned story ref — Phase 5 needs it.
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  ### Phase 5: Create Sub-tasks
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  1. **Be scoped to exactly ONE repo** — indicated in brackets in the summary: `[repo-name]`.
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  2. **Include an Empirical Verification Plan** — real user-like verification, NOT unit tests, linting, or typechecking.
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+ **Leaf-only build-ready (`leaf-only-lifecycle`)**: Sub-tasks are the **leaf work units** of the decomposition — they are the ONLY items in the hierarchy that receive the build-ready label. `lisa:tracker-write` applies `status:ready` here so downstream build intake (`lisa:github-build-intake`) claims the leaves and never the Epic or Stories. Apply `status:ready` to each Sub-task; never to its parent Story or Epic (Phases 3–4). `lisa:github-write-issue` enforces the same invariant on the write side, so a Sub-task split into per-repo children (the cross-repo case above) carries build-ready on the children, not on any intermediate parent that gains child work.
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  Sub-tasks inherit their parent Story's artifacts by reference (the parent link). Do not pass the same artifact list to every sub-task.
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  ### Phase 5.5: Artifact Preservation Gate (mandatory)
@@ -206,6 +206,12 @@ Milestones map to `fix-version:<value>` labels OR native GitHub Milestones — p
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  Create labels lazily — call `gh label create` if a referenced label doesn't exist. Use a stable color palette per category so the issue board reads cleanly.
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+ ### Build-ready label is leaf-only
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+ The build-ready status label (`status:ready`) is governed by the `leaf-only-lifecycle` rule. **Apply `status:ready` only when the issue is a leaf work unit** — an individually implementable issue type (`Bug`, `Task`, `Sub-task`, `Improvement`) that has **no child work**. A container (`Epic`, `Story`, `Spike`, or *any* issue that has sub-issues) is **never** written with `status:ready`; its lifecycle state rolls up from its children. The classification is structural: an item is a container if it has child work, regardless of its declared type (see the childless-parent exception in the rule). Do not hand-apply `status:ready` to a parent.
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+ For non-build-ready issues created fresh (Epics, Stories, and other containers), omit the status label entirely; the container's rollup state is derived, not set directly.
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  ## Phase 5.5 — Validate (Pre-write Gate)
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  Before any write, invoke `lisa:github-validate-issue` with the full proposed spec assembled from Phases 2 / 3 / 4 / 5. Pass it as a YAML block per the `lisa:github-validate-issue` schema, including `runtime_behavior_change`, `authenticated_surface`, and `artifacts_attached` flags so the right gates run.
@@ -218,8 +224,9 @@ If the validator reports `FAIL`, do NOT proceed to Phase 6. Fix the spec and re-
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  ### CREATE
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- 1. Compose the body markdown from Phases 2/3/4 in a temp file (avoid quoting hell):
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+ 1. Compose the body markdown from Phases 2/3/4 in a temp file (avoid quoting hell). Apply `status:ready` **only for a leaf work unit** per the Phase 5 leaf-only rule (`leaf-only-lifecycle`) — omit it for `Epic` / `Story` / `Spike` and any issue that has child work:
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  ```bash
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+ # Leaf work unit (Bug / Task / Sub-task / Improvement with no children):
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  gh issue create \
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  --repo <org>/<repo> \
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  --title "<summary>" \
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  --label "type:<type>" --label "status:ready" --label "priority:<priority>" \
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  [--label "component:<name>" ...] [--milestone "<milestone>"] \
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  [--assignee "<login>"]
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+ # Container (Epic / Story / Spike / any issue with child work):
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+ # identical, but WITHOUT --label "status:ready" — its state rolls up from children.
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+ gh issue create \
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+ --repo <org>/<repo> \
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+ --title "<summary>" \
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+ --body-file /tmp/issue-body.md \
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+ --label "type:<type>" --label "priority:<priority>" \
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+ [--label "component:<name>" ...] [--milestone "<milestone>"] \
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+ [--assignee "<login>"]
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  ```
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  2. Capture the returned issue number.
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  3. **Link to parent sub-issue** (if non-Epic): use the GraphQL sub-issue API.
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  {
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  "name": "lisa-cdk",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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+ "version": "2.28.0",
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  "description": "AWS CDK-specific plugin",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  {
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  "name": "lisa-cdk",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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+ "version": "2.28.0",
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  "description": "AWS CDK-specific Lisa plugin.",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  {
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  "name": "lisa-expo",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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+ "version": "2.28.0",
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  "description": "Expo/React Native-specific skills, agents, rules, and MCP servers",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  {
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  "name": "lisa-expo",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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  "description": "Expo and React Native-specific skills, agents, rules, and MCP servers.",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  {
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  "name": "lisa-harper-fabric",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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  "description": "Harper/Fabric-specific rules for TypeScript component apps",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  {
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  "name": "lisa-harper-fabric",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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  "description": "Harper/Fabric-specific Lisa rules for TypeScript component apps.",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  "name": "lisa-nestjs",
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- "version": "2.26.3",
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  "description": "NestJS-specific skills (GraphQL, TypeORM) and hooks (migration write-protection)",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  "description": "NestJS-specific skills and migration write-protection hooks.",
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  "name": "lisa-rails",
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  "description": "Ruby on Rails-specific hooks — RuboCop linting/formatting and ast-grep scanning on edit",
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  "author": {
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  "name": "lisa-rails",
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  "description": "Ruby on Rails-specific skills and hooks for RuboCop and ast-grep scanning on edit.",
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  "name": "Cody Swann"
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  "name": "lisa-typescript",
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  "description": "TypeScript-specific hooks — Prettier formatting, ESLint linting, and ast-grep scanning on edit",
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  "description": "TypeScript-specific hooks for formatting, linting, and ast-grep scanning on edit.",
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  "description": "LLM Wiki — a distributable, git-native markdown knowledge base for Claude Code and Codex",
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  "description": "Distributable LLM Wiki kernel — ingest, query, lint, and maintain a git-native markdown knowledge base across Claude and Codex.",
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+ # Leaf-Only Build-Ready Invariant & Parent Status Rollup
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+
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+ This is the single vendor-neutral source of truth for two coupled lifecycle rules. Every `*-to-tracker`, `*-write-*`, `*-validate-*`, and `*-build-intake` skill cites this rule rather than restating it, so per-vendor logic does not drift.
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+
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+ 1. **Leaf-only invariant** — only an independently implementable **leaf work unit** may carry the build-ready role. A parent/container with child work is never directly build-ready.
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+ 2. **Parent status rollup** — a parent/container's lifecycle state is *derived* from its children, never set independently.
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+
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+ The two are the same idea seen from opposite ends: a parent never enters the build queue as work; it only ever *reflects* the state of the leaves underneath it.
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+ ## Why this exists
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+
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+ Build intake claims and implements whatever carries the build-ready role (the `ready` role — see `config-resolution`). A parent container (an Epic, a Story, a Linear Project, any issue with child work) is not a unit of implementation; it organizes work. If a parent is marked build-ready, an agent will try to implement the container itself — the wrong permission and lifecycle boundary. This surfaced in real PRD intake: a PRD decomposed into an Epic, Stories, and Sub-tasks, and *every* item received the build-ready label, so a subsequent build pass would have tried to "implement" the Epic.
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+
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+ The fix is not vendor-specific. It belongs here, in a cross-vendor rule, and every writer / validator / intake path enforces it.
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+ ## Container vs. leaf taxonomy
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+
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+ A **leaf work unit** is an individually implementable item with **no child work** — issue types **Bug, Task, Sub-task, Improvement**. These are what an agent claims and implements. This is the same definition used by the `repo-scope-split` rule (a leaf work unit is also single-repo).
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+ A **container** organizes other work and is never directly implemented:
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+ | Class | Examples by type | May carry build-ready? |
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+ |---|---|---|
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+ | **Leaf work unit** | Bug, Task, Sub-task, Improvement — with no children | **Yes** |
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+ | **Container** | Epic, Story, Spike, or *any* item that has child work | **No** — state rolls up from children |
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+
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+ The classification is **structural, not nominal**: an item is a container if it has child work, regardless of its declared type. A "Task" that has acquired sub-tasks is a container for rollup purposes. The type label is a strong default (Epic/Story/Spike are containers by design), but the presence of children is decisive. See the childless-parent exception below for the converse case.
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+ ### How each vendor encodes hierarchy
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+
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+ The invariant is vendor-neutral; the mechanics of "has child work" differ. A skill resolves child membership using the native hierarchy first, falling back to text/metadata links where the vendor has no native parent/child:
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+
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+ - **GitHub Issues** — native **sub-issues** (parent ↔ child issue graph), plus task-list checkboxes and `Blocked by #<n>` / parent references in the body. Epic and Story are modeled as parent issues; their Sub-tasks are sub-issues.
34
+ - **JIRA** — native **Epic → Story → Sub-task** hierarchy: Epic link / parent field for Stories under an Epic, and the subtask relationship for Sub-tasks under a Story/Task. Issue links (`blocks` / `is blocked by`) express cross-item dependencies but are not parentage.
35
+ - **Linear** — **Project** (the Epic equivalent) groups **Issues** via `projectId`; an Issue groups **sub-issues** via `parentId`. Project state and Issue state are native. Relations (`save_issue_relation`) express dependencies, not parentage. (Initiatives are not used — see `config-resolution`.)
36
+
37
+ Where a vendor lacks native hierarchy for a given pair, a text link or metadata marker establishes the relationship (per PRD #522 non-goals: vendors need not expose identical native hierarchy features).
38
+
39
+ ## Leaf-only invariant (the rule)
40
+
41
+ **Build-ready means a directly implementable leaf work unit.** Therefore:
42
+
43
+ - **At decomposition / write time** — when a PRD decomposes into a hierarchy, only the leaf work units receive the `ready` role (status/label). Parent containers (Epic, Story, Project, and any parent issue that has child work) are created in their normal non-ready state and never receive the build-ready role directly. The leaves are what downstream build intake will claim.
44
+ - **At validate time** — the `*-validate-*` gate FAILs any container carrying the build-ready role. This is the symmetric write-side guard: a stale or hand-applied build-ready role on a parent is a lifecycle error.
45
+ - **At claim time** — build intake scans for the `ready` role but claims **only leaf work units**. A container that still carries a stale build-ready role (e.g. applied before this rule existed) is **not claimed**: intake either skips it or safely blocks it with a clear lifecycle-repair message (move the role to the leaves; roll the parent up). Intake never silently implements a container.
46
+
47
+ The permission boundary is the maintainer-applied build-ready role, not authorship — do not add author-based guards (PRD #522 non-goal). This rule narrows *what* may carry that role, not *who* may apply it.
48
+
49
+ ## Childless-parent exception
50
+
51
+ A container *type* with **no child work** is, structurally, a leaf — and may be build-ready **iff its issue type is itself a valid leaf work unit**.
52
+
53
+ - A **Task** or **Bug** with no children → leaf → may be build-ready. (Many real tickets are flat Tasks with no sub-tasks; this rule must not strand them.)
54
+ - An **Epic, Story, or Spike** with no children → still **not** build-ready. These types are coordination containers by design; an empty one is an incomplete decomposition, not an implementable unit. The correct repair is to decompose it (add leaf children) or reclassify it to a leaf type — not to claim it.
55
+
56
+ So the exception is narrow: childlessness *enables* build-ready only for types that are leaf work units to begin with. It never promotes an Epic/Story/Spike to directly implementable.
57
+
58
+ ## Parent status rollup (the state machine)
59
+
60
+ A parent/container never sets its own lifecycle state; it **derives** it from the roll-up of its children's states. Rollup is evaluated whenever a child transitions (or when intake observes the child set). Using the canonical build-lifecycle roles from `config-resolution` (`ready`, `claimed`, `review`, `blocked`, `done`):
61
+
62
+ Evaluate the children in priority order and take the **first** match:
63
+
64
+ | If among the required leaves… | …the parent rolls up to | Role |
65
+ |---|---|---|
66
+ | any leaf is **blocked** | blocked / attention-needed | `blocked` |
67
+ | else any leaf is **in progress** (claimed or in review) | active / in-progress | `claimed` |
68
+ | else **all** required leaves are **terminal** (`done`) | the configured rollup terminal state | `done` (or `review` where supported — see below) |
69
+ | else (leaves exist but none started) | unchanged (parent stays in its non-ready container state) | — |
70
+
71
+ Notes:
72
+
73
+ - **Blocked dominates.** A single blocked leaf surfaces blocked/attention on the parent even if other leaves are progressing, so a human sees the parent needs attention.
74
+ - **"Required" leaves.** Optional or won't-do children do not hold a parent open; only the leaves that must ship for the parent to be complete are counted toward the all-terminal check.
75
+ - **Rollup is recursive.** An Epic rolls up from its Stories, each of which rolls up from its own leaves. Evaluate bottom-up: a Story reaches `done` only when its leaves are all terminal; an Epic reaches `done` only when its Stories are all `done`.
76
+ - **Vendor support varies.** Apply the rollup state the vendor can express. Where a vendor has no native intermediate state, use the nearest configured role or a metadata/comment signal rather than forcing a non-existent status (PRD #522 non-goal: vendors need not expose identical states).
77
+ - **The parent never carries `ready`.** `ready` is a *human* "this is buildable, claim it" signal and only ever lives on leaves. Rollup moves a parent between non-ready container states (in-progress / blocked / terminal); it never sets the parent to `ready`.
78
+
79
+ ### The rollup terminal state is the configured "done" — multi-env capable
80
+
81
+ The terminal rollup state is whatever the project configures for `done` — which is **env-keyed** (`config-resolution` "Env-keyed `done`"): a `done` map keyed by environment (`dev`, `staging`, `production`), resolved from the merged PR's base branch. This rule does **not** hardcode a `dev → staging → prod` promotion chain as required — that is a project-specific deploy topology. A downstream project with dev/staging/prod environments rolls a parent up to whichever terminal `done` value matches the environment its leaves shipped to. The rule stays generic and multi-env capable.
82
+
83
+ **Single-environment collapse (this repo).** Lisa's own deploy has only `main`/`production` (no dev/staging), so `done` is a single value, not a map, and the build lifecycle collapses to one chain: `ready → claimed (in-progress) → review (code-review) → done`. The rollup terminal state is simply `done`. This is the *collapsed* case of the generic rule, not a different rule — projects with more environments keep the env-keyed map.
84
+
85
+ ## Citation
86
+
87
+ Skills that enforce this invariant or perform rollup cite this rule by slug (the `leaf-only-lifecycle` rule) instead of restating it:
88
+
89
+ - **Decomposition / write** (`*-to-tracker`, `*-write-*`) — apply the `ready` role to leaves only; never to containers.
90
+ - **Validate** (`*-validate-*`) — FAIL a container carrying the build-ready role; FAIL a childless Epic/Story/Spike marked build-ready.
91
+ - **Build intake** (`*-build-intake`, `tracker-build-intake`) — claim leaves only; skip or safe-block containers with stale build-ready roles.
92
+ - **Rollup** — derive parent state from children per the state machine above.
93
+
94
+ This is the inverse-direction companion to `repo-scope-split` (which governs a leaf's *repo* scope); together they define what a build-ready leaf work unit is: directly implementable, single-repo, childless-or-leaf-typed.
@@ -198,6 +198,8 @@ For each epic identified in Phase 1, **invoke the `lisa:tracker-write` shim** (d
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  - `artifacts`: the full Phase 1.5 artifact list — every artifact, regardless of domain. The Epic is the canonical hub.
199
199
  - `priority`, `labels`, `components`, `fix_version`: as appropriate
200
200
 
201
+ **Leaf-only build-ready (`leaf-only-lifecycle`)**: an Epic is a container, not a leaf work unit. Do NOT mark it build-ready — `lisa:tracker-write` must not be passed `status:ready` for an Epic, and the Epic's lifecycle state rolls up from its children. The build-ready label is applied only in Phase 5.
202
+
201
203
  Capture the returned epic ref — Phase 4 needs it as the parent for Stories.
202
204
 
203
205
  ### Phase 4: Create Stories
@@ -225,6 +227,8 @@ For each Story, **invoke `lisa:tracker-write`** with:
225
227
  | Infrastructure | `ops`, `reference` |
226
228
  | Mixed / setup ("X.0") | All domains |
227
229
 
230
+ **Leaf-only build-ready (`leaf-only-lifecycle`)**: a Story is a container (it has child Sub-tasks), not a leaf work unit. Do NOT mark it build-ready — never pass `status:ready` to `lisa:tracker-write` for a Story. Its lifecycle state rolls up from its Sub-tasks. The build-ready label is applied only in Phase 5.
231
+
228
232
  Capture each returned story ref — Phase 5 needs it.
229
233
 
230
234
  ### Phase 5: Create Sub-tasks
@@ -237,6 +241,8 @@ Each sub-task MUST:
237
241
  1. **Be scoped to exactly ONE repo** — indicated in brackets in the summary: `[repo-name]`.
238
242
  2. **Include an Empirical Verification Plan** — real user-like verification, NOT unit tests, linting, or typechecking.
239
243
 
244
+ **Leaf-only build-ready (`leaf-only-lifecycle`)**: Sub-tasks are the **leaf work units** of the decomposition — they are the ONLY items in the hierarchy that receive the build-ready label. `lisa:tracker-write` applies `status:ready` here so downstream build intake (`lisa:github-build-intake`) claims the leaves and never the Epic or Stories. Apply `status:ready` to each Sub-task; never to its parent Story or Epic (Phases 3–4). `lisa:github-write-issue` enforces the same invariant on the write side, so a Sub-task split into per-repo children (the cross-repo case above) carries build-ready on the children, not on any intermediate parent that gains child work.
245
+
240
246
  Sub-tasks inherit their parent Story's artifacts by reference (the parent link). Do not pass the same artifact list to every sub-task.
241
247
 
242
248
  ### Phase 5.5: Artifact Preservation Gate (mandatory)
@@ -206,6 +206,12 @@ Milestones map to `fix-version:<value>` labels OR native GitHub Milestones — p
206
206
 
207
207
  Create labels lazily — call `gh label create` if a referenced label doesn't exist. Use a stable color palette per category so the issue board reads cleanly.
208
208
 
209
+ ### Build-ready label is leaf-only
210
+
211
+ The build-ready status label (`status:ready`) is governed by the `leaf-only-lifecycle` rule. **Apply `status:ready` only when the issue is a leaf work unit** — an individually implementable issue type (`Bug`, `Task`, `Sub-task`, `Improvement`) that has **no child work**. A container (`Epic`, `Story`, `Spike`, or *any* issue that has sub-issues) is **never** written with `status:ready`; its lifecycle state rolls up from its children. The classification is structural: an item is a container if it has child work, regardless of its declared type (see the childless-parent exception in the rule). Do not hand-apply `status:ready` to a parent.
212
+
213
+ For non-build-ready issues created fresh (Epics, Stories, and other containers), omit the status label entirely; the container's rollup state is derived, not set directly.
214
+
209
215
  ## Phase 5.5 — Validate (Pre-write Gate)
210
216
 
211
217
  Before any write, invoke `lisa:github-validate-issue` with the full proposed spec assembled from Phases 2 / 3 / 4 / 5. Pass it as a YAML block per the `lisa:github-validate-issue` schema, including `runtime_behavior_change`, `authenticated_surface`, and `artifacts_attached` flags so the right gates run.
@@ -218,8 +224,9 @@ If the validator reports `FAIL`, do NOT proceed to Phase 6. Fix the spec and re-
218
224
 
219
225
  ### CREATE
220
226
 
221
- 1. Compose the body markdown from Phases 2/3/4 in a temp file (avoid quoting hell):
227
+ 1. Compose the body markdown from Phases 2/3/4 in a temp file (avoid quoting hell). Apply `status:ready` **only for a leaf work unit** per the Phase 5 leaf-only rule (`leaf-only-lifecycle`) — omit it for `Epic` / `Story` / `Spike` and any issue that has child work:
222
228
  ```bash
229
+ # Leaf work unit (Bug / Task / Sub-task / Improvement with no children):
223
230
  gh issue create \
224
231
  --repo <org>/<repo> \
225
232
  --title "<summary>" \
@@ -227,6 +234,16 @@ If the validator reports `FAIL`, do NOT proceed to Phase 6. Fix the spec and re-
227
234
  --label "type:<type>" --label "status:ready" --label "priority:<priority>" \
228
235
  [--label "component:<name>" ...] [--milestone "<milestone>"] \
229
236
  [--assignee "<login>"]
237
+
238
+ # Container (Epic / Story / Spike / any issue with child work):
239
+ # identical, but WITHOUT --label "status:ready" — its state rolls up from children.
240
+ gh issue create \
241
+ --repo <org>/<repo> \
242
+ --title "<summary>" \
243
+ --body-file /tmp/issue-body.md \
244
+ --label "type:<type>" --label "priority:<priority>" \
245
+ [--label "component:<name>" ...] [--milestone "<milestone>"] \
246
+ [--assignee "<login>"]
230
247
  ```
231
248
  2. Capture the returned issue number.
232
249
  3. **Link to parent sub-issue** (if non-Epic): use the GraphQL sub-issue API.