@laitszkin/apollo-toolkit 2.4.0 → 2.4.1

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package/CHANGELOG.md CHANGED
@@ -4,6 +4,13 @@ All notable changes to this repository are documented in this file.
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  ## [Unreleased]
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+ ## [v2.4.1] - 2026-03-19
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+
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+ ### Changed
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+ - Tighten `codex-subagent-orchestration` so non-trivial tasks must use actual subagent tool calls when delegation is allowed, instead of stopping at prose-only delegation guidance.
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+ - Require `codex-subagent-orchestration` to default to a parallel subagents workflow whenever two or more independent workstreams can run safely in parallel.
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+ - Clarify runtime handoff and orchestration boundaries for delegated agents, including tool-rule, sandbox, write-scope, and isolated-review expectations.
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  ## [v2.4.0] - 2026-03-19
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  ### Added
@@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ description: Use for almost every non-trivial Codex task. Inspect existing custo
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  ## Standards
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  - Evidence: Inspect the current task shape and the existing custom-agent catalog before creating or updating any agent.
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- - Execution: Use this skill for nearly every non-trivial task; explicitly tell Codex to spawn one or more subagents unless the task is trivial or delegation is disallowed; delegate read-heavy exploration, review, verification, and unrelated module edits; keep shared planning, conflict resolution, and final synthesis in the main agent.
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- - Quality: Keep each custom agent narrow, opinionated, and non-overlapping; prefer read-only sandboxes for explorers and reviewers; avoid parallel write conflicts.
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+ - Execution: Use this skill for nearly every non-trivial task. When current tool rules allow delegation, the agent must actually launch one or more subagents instead of only describing delegation in prose. Treat a parallel subagents workflow as the default whenever two or more independent workstreams can run safely in parallel, use a single helper agent only when there is exactly one bounded sidecar job, and keep shared planning, conflict resolution, and final synthesis in the main agent.
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+ - Quality: Keep each custom agent narrow, opinionated, and non-overlapping; prefer read-only sandboxes for explorers and reviewers; keep review contexts isolated from the implementation thread; avoid parallel write conflicts.
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  - Output: State which agents were reused or created, what each owned, whether they waited in parallel or were staged, and what remained with the main agent.
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  ## Overview
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  ## When To Use
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- Use this skill by default unless the task is genuinely trivial, such as:
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+ Use this skill by default unless the task is genuinely trivial or current tool rules disallow delegation, such as:
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  - a one-shot factual answer with no decomposition value
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  - a single obvious command or one-line edit
@@ -68,16 +68,20 @@ Subagents are most valuable for:
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  - browser reproduction and debugging
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  - parallel edits across unrelated files or modules
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- Keep the main agent in charge when the work is highly continuous, tightly coupled, or depends on a single evolving mental model. In those cases, let subagents provide bounded context, not final ownership.
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+ Keep the main agent in charge when the work is highly continuous, tightly coupled, or depends on a single evolving mental model. In those cases, let subagents provide bounded context, not final ownership, and do not force parallel writers.
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+ This skill is not satisfied by merely writing that Codex should delegate later. When parallelizable sidecar work exists and delegation is allowed, the default compliant shape is a parallel subagents workflow.
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  ## Workflow
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  ### 1) Triage the task first
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  - Decide whether the task is trivial, serial-but-complex, or parallelizable.
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+ - If the task is non-trivial and delegation is allowed, you must delegate at least one bounded subtask to a subagent.
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+ - If the task has two or more independent read/review/exploration tracks, you must use a parallel subagents workflow rather than a single helper agent or a staged suggestion-only plan.
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  - Use subagents for most non-trivial tasks, but do not force them into tiny or tightly coupled work.
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  - Prefer one writer plus supporting read-only agents when ownership would otherwise overlap.
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- - For any non-trivial task, explicitly instruct Codex to spawn the chosen subagents unless delegation is blocked.
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+ - If tool rules require explicit user intent before delegation, confirm that gate first; once satisfied, launch the chosen subagents and do not stay in suggestion-only mode.
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  ### 2) Inspect the current agent catalog
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@@ -147,6 +151,7 @@ Whenever you prompt a subagent, include:
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  - the expected summary or output format
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  - the file or module ownership boundary
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  - the stop condition if the agent hits uncertainty or overlap
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+ - the instruction to stay within current tool-rule limits for delegation, sandbox, and write scope
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  ### 6) Decompose ownership before spawning
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  ### 7) Orchestrate the run
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- - Explicitly tell Codex to spawn the selected subagents and state exactly how to split the work.
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+ - Use actual subagent tool calls when delegation is allowed; do not stop at writing that Codex should spawn agents later.
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+ - State exactly how to split the work before each launch.
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  - Say whether to wait for all agents before continuing or to stage them in sequence.
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  - Ask for concise returned summaries, not raw logs.
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+ - Treat single-subagent delegation as the exception path, not the default orchestration pattern.
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  Preferred patterns:
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@@ -176,6 +183,7 @@ Preferred patterns:
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  Practical default:
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  - spawn 2-4 agents for a complex task
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+ - spawn at least 2 agents when the task clearly contains parallelizable investigation or review tracks
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  - keep within the current `agents.max_threads`
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  - keep nesting shallow; many Codex setups leave `agents.max_depth` at 1 unless configured otherwise
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package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  {
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  "name": "@laitszkin/apollo-toolkit",
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- "version": "2.4.0",
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+ "version": "2.4.1",
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  "description": "Apollo Toolkit npm installer for managed skill linking across Codex, OpenClaw, and Trae.",
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  "license": "MIT",
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  "author": "LaiTszKin",