pi-dev 0.1.1

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
Files changed (40) hide show
  1. package/LICENSE +28 -0
  2. package/README.md +117 -0
  3. package/dist/cli.js +73 -0
  4. package/dist/install.js +101 -0
  5. package/dist/manifest.js +28 -0
  6. package/dist/paths.js +14 -0
  7. package/package.json +48 -0
  8. package/presets/preferences.md +74 -0
  9. package/skills/diagnose/SKILL.md +117 -0
  10. package/skills/diagnose/scripts/hitl-loop.template.sh +41 -0
  11. package/skills/do/SKILL.md +180 -0
  12. package/skills/grill-with-docs/ADR-FORMAT.md +47 -0
  13. package/skills/grill-with-docs/CONTEXT-FORMAT.md +77 -0
  14. package/skills/grill-with-docs/SKILL.md +88 -0
  15. package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/DEEPENING.md +37 -0
  16. package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/INTERFACE-DESIGN.md +44 -0
  17. package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/LANGUAGE.md +53 -0
  18. package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/SKILL.md +71 -0
  19. package/skills/migrate/SKILL.md +231 -0
  20. package/skills/recon-with-vision/SKILL.md +106 -0
  21. package/skills/setup/SKILL.md +121 -0
  22. package/skills/setup/domain.md +51 -0
  23. package/skills/setup/issue-tracker-github.md +22 -0
  24. package/skills/setup/issue-tracker-gitlab.md +23 -0
  25. package/skills/setup/issue-tracker-local.md +19 -0
  26. package/skills/setup/triage-labels.md +15 -0
  27. package/skills/taste/SKILL.md +148 -0
  28. package/skills/tdd/SKILL.md +109 -0
  29. package/skills/tdd/deep-modules.md +33 -0
  30. package/skills/tdd/interface-design.md +31 -0
  31. package/skills/tdd/mocking.md +59 -0
  32. package/skills/tdd/refactoring.md +10 -0
  33. package/skills/tdd/tests.md +61 -0
  34. package/skills/to-issues/SKILL.md +81 -0
  35. package/skills/to-prd/SKILL.md +74 -0
  36. package/skills/triage/AGENT-BRIEF.md +168 -0
  37. package/skills/triage/OUT-OF-SCOPE.md +101 -0
  38. package/skills/triage/SKILL.md +111 -0
  39. package/skills/where/SKILL.md +108 -0
  40. package/skills/zoom-out/SKILL.md +7 -0
@@ -0,0 +1,168 @@
1
+ # Writing Agent Briefs
2
+
3
+ An agent brief is a structured comment posted on a GitHub issue when it moves to `ready-for-agent`. It is the authoritative specification that an AFK agent will work from. The original issue body and discussion are context — the agent brief is the contract.
4
+
5
+ ## Principles
6
+
7
+ ### Durability over precision
8
+
9
+ The issue may sit in `ready-for-agent` for days or weeks. The codebase will change in the meantime. Write the brief so it stays useful even as files are renamed, moved, or refactored.
10
+
11
+ - **Do** describe interfaces, types, and behavioral contracts
12
+ - **Do** name specific types, function signatures, or config shapes that the agent should look for or modify
13
+ - **Don't** reference file paths — they go stale
14
+ - **Don't** reference line numbers
15
+ - **Don't** assume the current implementation structure will remain the same
16
+
17
+ ### Behavioral, not procedural
18
+
19
+ Describe **what** the system should do, not **how** to implement it. The agent will explore the codebase fresh and make its own implementation decisions.
20
+
21
+ - **Good:** "The `SkillConfig` type should accept an optional `schedule` field of type `CronExpression`"
22
+ - **Bad:** "Open src/types/skill.ts and add a schedule field on line 42"
23
+ - **Good:** "When a user runs `/triage` with no arguments, they should see a summary of issues needing attention"
24
+ - **Bad:** "Add a switch statement in the main handler function"
25
+
26
+ ### Complete acceptance criteria
27
+
28
+ The agent needs to know when it's done. Every agent brief must have concrete, testable acceptance criteria. Each criterion should be independently verifiable.
29
+
30
+ - **Good:** "Running `gh issue list --label needs-triage` returns issues that have been through initial classification"
31
+ - **Bad:** "Triage should work correctly"
32
+
33
+ ### Explicit scope boundaries
34
+
35
+ State what is out of scope. This prevents the agent from gold-plating or making assumptions about adjacent features.
36
+
37
+ ## Template
38
+
39
+ ```markdown
40
+ ## Agent Brief
41
+
42
+ **Category:** bug / enhancement
43
+ **Summary:** one-line description of what needs to happen
44
+
45
+ **Current behavior:**
46
+ Describe what happens now. For bugs, this is the broken behavior.
47
+ For enhancements, this is the status quo the feature builds on.
48
+
49
+ **Desired behavior:**
50
+ Describe what should happen after the agent's work is complete.
51
+ Be specific about edge cases and error conditions.
52
+
53
+ **Key interfaces:**
54
+ - `TypeName` — what needs to change and why
55
+ - `functionName()` return type — what it currently returns vs what it should return
56
+ - Config shape — any new configuration options needed
57
+
58
+ **Acceptance criteria:**
59
+ - [ ] Specific, testable criterion 1
60
+ - [ ] Specific, testable criterion 2
61
+ - [ ] Specific, testable criterion 3
62
+
63
+ **Out of scope:**
64
+ - Thing that should NOT be changed or addressed in this issue
65
+ - Adjacent feature that might seem related but is separate
66
+ ```
67
+
68
+ ## Examples
69
+
70
+ ### Good agent brief (bug)
71
+
72
+ ```markdown
73
+ ## Agent Brief
74
+
75
+ **Category:** bug
76
+ **Summary:** Skill description truncation drops mid-word, producing broken output
77
+
78
+ **Current behavior:**
79
+ When a skill description exceeds 1024 characters, it is truncated at exactly
80
+ 1024 characters regardless of word boundaries. This produces descriptions
81
+ that end mid-word (e.g. "Use when the user wants to confi").
82
+
83
+ **Desired behavior:**
84
+ Truncation should break at the last word boundary before 1024 characters
85
+ and append "..." to indicate truncation.
86
+
87
+ **Key interfaces:**
88
+ - The `SkillMetadata` type's `description` field — no type change needed,
89
+ but the validation/processing logic that populates it needs to respect
90
+ word boundaries
91
+ - Any function that reads SKILL.md frontmatter and extracts the description
92
+
93
+ **Acceptance criteria:**
94
+ - [ ] Descriptions under 1024 chars are unchanged
95
+ - [ ] Descriptions over 1024 chars are truncated at the last word boundary
96
+ before 1024 chars
97
+ - [ ] Truncated descriptions end with "..."
98
+ - [ ] The total length including "..." does not exceed 1024 chars
99
+
100
+ **Out of scope:**
101
+ - Changing the 1024 char limit itself
102
+ - Multi-line description support
103
+ ```
104
+
105
+ ### Good agent brief (enhancement)
106
+
107
+ ```markdown
108
+ ## Agent Brief
109
+
110
+ **Category:** enhancement
111
+ **Summary:** Add `.out-of-scope/` directory support for tracking rejected feature requests
112
+
113
+ **Current behavior:**
114
+ When a feature request is rejected, the issue is closed with a `wontfix` label
115
+ and a comment. There is no persistent record of the decision or reasoning.
116
+ Future similar requests require the maintainer to recall or search for the
117
+ prior discussion.
118
+
119
+ **Desired behavior:**
120
+ Rejected feature requests should be documented in `.out-of-scope/<concept>.md`
121
+ files that capture the decision, reasoning, and links to all issues that
122
+ requested the feature. When triaging new issues, these files should be
123
+ checked for matches.
124
+
125
+ **Key interfaces:**
126
+ - Markdown file format in `.out-of-scope/` — each file should have a
127
+ `# Concept Name` heading, a `**Decision:**` line, a `**Reason:**` line,
128
+ and a `**Prior requests:**` list with issue links
129
+ - The triage workflow should read all `.out-of-scope/*.md` files early
130
+ and match incoming issues against them by concept similarity
131
+
132
+ **Acceptance criteria:**
133
+ - [ ] Closing a feature as wontfix creates/updates a file in `.out-of-scope/`
134
+ - [ ] The file includes the decision, reasoning, and link to the closed issue
135
+ - [ ] If a matching `.out-of-scope/` file already exists, the new issue is
136
+ appended to its "Prior requests" list rather than creating a duplicate
137
+ - [ ] During triage, existing `.out-of-scope/` files are checked and surfaced
138
+ when a new issue matches a prior rejection
139
+
140
+ **Out of scope:**
141
+ - Automated matching (human confirms the match)
142
+ - Reopening previously rejected features
143
+ - Bug reports (only enhancement rejections go to `.out-of-scope/`)
144
+ ```
145
+
146
+ ### Bad agent brief
147
+
148
+ ```markdown
149
+ ## Agent Brief
150
+
151
+ **Summary:** Fix the triage bug
152
+
153
+ **What to do:**
154
+ The triage thing is broken. Look at the main file and fix it.
155
+ The function around line 150 has the issue.
156
+
157
+ **Files to change:**
158
+ - src/triage/handler.ts (line 150)
159
+ - src/types.ts (line 42)
160
+ ```
161
+
162
+ This is bad because:
163
+ - No category
164
+ - Vague description ("the triage thing is broken")
165
+ - References file paths and line numbers that will go stale
166
+ - No acceptance criteria
167
+ - No scope boundaries
168
+ - No description of current vs desired behavior
@@ -0,0 +1,101 @@
1
+ # Out-of-Scope Knowledge Base
2
+
3
+ The `.out-of-scope/` directory in a repo stores persistent records of rejected feature requests. It serves two purposes:
4
+
5
+ 1. **Institutional memory** — why a feature was rejected, so the reasoning isn't lost when the issue is closed
6
+ 2. **Deduplication** — when a new issue comes in that matches a prior rejection, the skill can surface the previous decision instead of re-litigating it
7
+
8
+ ## Directory structure
9
+
10
+ ```
11
+ .out-of-scope/
12
+ ├── dark-mode.md
13
+ ├── plugin-system.md
14
+ └── graphql-api.md
15
+ ```
16
+
17
+ One file per **concept**, not per issue. Multiple issues requesting the same thing are grouped under one file.
18
+
19
+ ## File format
20
+
21
+ The file should be written in a relaxed, readable style — more like a short design document than a database entry. Use paragraphs, code samples, and examples to make the reasoning clear and useful to someone encountering it for the first time.
22
+
23
+ ```markdown
24
+ # Dark Mode
25
+
26
+ This project does not support dark mode or user-facing theming.
27
+
28
+ ## Why this is out of scope
29
+
30
+ The rendering pipeline assumes a single color palette defined in
31
+ `ThemeConfig`. Supporting multiple themes would require:
32
+
33
+ - A theme context provider wrapping the entire component tree
34
+ - Per-component theme-aware style resolution
35
+ - A persistence layer for user theme preferences
36
+
37
+ This is a significant architectural change that doesn't align with the
38
+ project's focus on content authoring. Theming is a concern for downstream
39
+ consumers who embed or redistribute the output.
40
+
41
+ ```ts
42
+ // The current ThemeConfig interface is not designed for runtime switching:
43
+ interface ThemeConfig {
44
+ colors: ColorPalette; // single palette, resolved at build time
45
+ fonts: FontStack;
46
+ }
47
+ ```
48
+
49
+ ## Prior requests
50
+
51
+ - #42 — "Add dark mode support"
52
+ - #87 — "Night theme for accessibility"
53
+ - #134 — "Dark theme option"
54
+ ```
55
+
56
+ ### Naming the file
57
+
58
+ Use a short, descriptive kebab-case name for the concept: `dark-mode.md`, `plugin-system.md`, `graphql-api.md`. The name should be recognizable enough that someone browsing the directory understands what was rejected without opening the file.
59
+
60
+ ### Writing the reason
61
+
62
+ The reason should be substantive — not "we don't want this" but why. Good reasons reference:
63
+
64
+ - Project scope or philosophy ("This project focuses on X; theming is a downstream concern")
65
+ - Technical constraints ("Supporting this would require Y, which conflicts with our Z architecture")
66
+ - Strategic decisions ("We chose to use A instead of B because...")
67
+
68
+ The reason should be durable. Avoid referencing temporary circumstances ("we're too busy right now") — those aren't real rejections, they're deferrals.
69
+
70
+ ## When to check `.out-of-scope/`
71
+
72
+ During triage (Step 1: Gather context), read all files in `.out-of-scope/`. When evaluating a new issue:
73
+
74
+ - Check if the request matches an existing out-of-scope concept
75
+ - Matching is by concept similarity, not keyword — "night theme" matches `dark-mode.md`
76
+ - If there's a match, surface it to the maintainer: "This is similar to `.out-of-scope/dark-mode.md` — we rejected this before because [reason]. Do you still feel the same way?"
77
+
78
+ The maintainer may:
79
+
80
+ - **Confirm** — the new issue gets added to the existing file's "Prior requests" list, then closed
81
+ - **Reconsider** — the out-of-scope file gets deleted or updated, and the issue proceeds through normal triage
82
+ - **Disagree** — the issues are related but distinct, proceed with normal triage
83
+
84
+ ## When to write to `.out-of-scope/`
85
+
86
+ Only when an **enhancement** (not a bug) is rejected as `wontfix`. The flow:
87
+
88
+ 1. Maintainer decides a feature request is out of scope
89
+ 2. Check if a matching `.out-of-scope/` file already exists
90
+ 3. If yes: append the new issue to the "Prior requests" list
91
+ 4. If no: create a new file with the concept name, decision, reason, and first prior request
92
+ 5. Post a comment on the issue explaining the decision and mentioning the `.out-of-scope/` file
93
+ 6. Close the issue with the `wontfix` label
94
+
95
+ ## Updating or removing out-of-scope files
96
+
97
+ If the maintainer changes their mind about a previously rejected concept:
98
+
99
+ - Delete the `.out-of-scope/` file
100
+ - The skill does not need to reopen old issues — they're historical records
101
+ - The new issue that triggered the reconsideration proceeds through normal triage
@@ -0,0 +1,111 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: triage
3
+ description: Triage issues through a state machine driven by triage roles. Use when user wants to create an issue, triage issues, review incoming bugs or feature requests, prepare issues for an AFK agent, or manage issue workflow.
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # Triage
7
+
8
+ Move issues on the project issue tracker through a small state machine of triage roles.
9
+
10
+ Every comment or issue posted to the issue tracker during triage **must** start with this disclaimer:
11
+
12
+ ```
13
+ > *This was generated by AI during triage.*
14
+ ```
15
+
16
+ ## Reference docs
17
+
18
+ Before acting on the issue tracker, read the repo-local setup docs if they exist:
19
+
20
+ - `docs/agents/issue-tracker.md` — where issues live and which CLI flags to use
21
+ - `docs/agents/triage-labels.md` — mapping from canonical roles to labels
22
+ - `docs/agents/domain.md` — domain/ADR reading rules
23
+
24
+ Also read:
25
+
26
+ - [AGENT-BRIEF.md](AGENT-BRIEF.md) — how to write durable agent briefs
27
+ - [OUT-OF-SCOPE.md](OUT-OF-SCOPE.md) — how the `.out-of-scope/` knowledge base works
28
+
29
+ ## Roles
30
+
31
+ Two **category** roles:
32
+
33
+ - `bug` — something is broken
34
+ - `enhancement` — new feature or improvement
35
+
36
+ Five **state** roles:
37
+
38
+ - `needs-triage` — maintainer needs to evaluate
39
+ - `needs-info` — waiting on reporter for more information
40
+ - `ready-for-agent` — fully specified, ready for an AFK agent
41
+ - `ready-for-human` — needs human implementation
42
+ - `wontfix` — will not be actioned
43
+
44
+ Every triaged issue should carry exactly one category role and one state role. If state roles conflict, flag it and ask the maintainer before doing anything else.
45
+
46
+ These are canonical role names — the actual label strings used in the issue tracker may differ. The mapping should have been provided to you - run `/`/setup`` if not.
47
+
48
+ State transitions: an unlabeled issue normally goes to `needs-triage` first; from there it moves to `needs-info`, `ready-for-agent`, `ready-for-human`, or `wontfix`. `needs-info` returns to `needs-triage` once the reporter replies. The maintainer can override at any time — flag transitions that look unusual and ask before proceeding.
49
+
50
+ ## Invocation
51
+
52
+ The maintainer invokes `/triage` and describes what they want in natural language. Interpret the request and act. Examples:
53
+
54
+ - "Show me anything that needs my attention"
55
+ - "Let's look at #42"
56
+ - "Move #42 to ready-for-agent"
57
+ - "What's ready for agents to pick up?"
58
+
59
+ ## Show what needs attention
60
+
61
+ Query the issue tracker and present three buckets, oldest first:
62
+
63
+ 1. **Unlabeled** — never triaged.
64
+ 2. **`needs-triage`** — evaluation in progress.
65
+ 3. **`needs-info` with reporter activity since the last triage notes** — needs re-evaluation.
66
+
67
+ Show counts and a one-line summary per issue. Let the maintainer pick.
68
+
69
+ ## Triage a specific issue
70
+
71
+ 1. **Gather context.** Read the full issue (body, comments, labels, reporter, dates). Parse any prior triage notes so you don't re-ask resolved questions. Explore the codebase using the project's domain glossary, respecting ADRs in the area. Read `.out-of-scope/*.md` and surface any prior rejection that resembles this issue.
72
+
73
+ 2. **Recommend.** Tell the maintainer your category and state recommendation with reasoning, plus a brief codebase summary relevant to the issue. Wait for direction.
74
+
75
+ 3. **Reproduce (bugs only).** Before any grilling, attempt reproduction: read the reporter's steps, trace the relevant code, run tests or commands. Report what happened — successful repro with code path, failed repro, or insufficient detail (a strong `needs-info` signal). A confirmed repro makes a much stronger agent brief.
76
+
77
+ 4. **Grill (if needed).** If the issue needs fleshing out, run a `/grill-with-docs` session.
78
+
79
+ 5. **Apply the outcome:**
80
+ - `ready-for-agent` — post an agent brief comment ([AGENT-BRIEF.md](AGENT-BRIEF.md)).
81
+ - `ready-for-human` — same structure as an agent brief, but note why it can't be delegated (judgment calls, external access, design decisions, manual testing).
82
+ - `needs-info` — post triage notes (template below).
83
+ - `wontfix` (bug) — polite explanation, then close.
84
+ - `wontfix` (enhancement) — write to `.out-of-scope/`, link to it from a comment, then close ([OUT-OF-SCOPE.md](OUT-OF-SCOPE.md)).
85
+ - `needs-triage` — apply the role. Optional comment if there's partial progress.
86
+
87
+ ## Quick state override
88
+
89
+ If the maintainer says "move #42 to ready-for-agent", trust them and apply the role directly. Confirm what you're about to do (role changes, comment, close), then act. Skip grilling. If moving to `ready-for-agent` without a grilling session, ask whether they want to write an agent brief.
90
+
91
+ ## Needs-info template
92
+
93
+ ```markdown
94
+ ## Triage Notes
95
+
96
+ **What we've established so far:**
97
+
98
+ - point 1
99
+ - point 2
100
+
101
+ **What we still need from you (@reporter):**
102
+
103
+ - question 1
104
+ - question 2
105
+ ```
106
+
107
+ Capture everything resolved during grilling under "established so far" so the work isn't lost. Questions must be specific and actionable, not "please provide more info".
108
+
109
+ ## Resuming a previous session
110
+
111
+ If prior triage notes exist on the issue, read them, check whether the reporter has answered any outstanding questions, and present an updated picture before continuing. Don't re-ask resolved questions.
@@ -0,0 +1,108 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: where
3
+ description: Quickly absorb relevant prior pi sessions for the current cwd so multi-session work continues without rediscovery. Use when the user says "지난주에 뭐했지", "where were we", "이어서 가자", "다시 시작", or when /do detects continuation intent.
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # /where — Recall pi History
7
+
8
+ This is a pi-specific skill. pi stores every session as a JSONL stream under `~/.pi/agent/sessions/<encoded-cwd>/<ts>_<sessionId>.jsonl`. This skill gives the agent a disciplined way to find and ingest only the slice of history that matters, without bloating context.
9
+
10
+ ## When to use
11
+
12
+ - User resumes work after a break ("이어서 가자", "where were we", "다시 시작")
13
+ - A slice was clearly started before but is incomplete (no commit, no closed issue)
14
+ - The agent needs to know prior decisions that did not land in code/issues/prefs (rare — usually those three layers are enough; this skill is the safety net)
15
+
16
+ Do not use:
17
+
18
+ - For routine onboarding (preferences + AGENTS.md + issue tracker cover that)
19
+ - To bypass the migration gate (it doesn't)
20
+ - As a replacement for ADRs, CONTEXT.md, or issues (those are the durable channels)
21
+
22
+ ## Process
23
+
24
+ ### 1. Resolve session directory
25
+
26
+ ```
27
+ cwd = $(pwd)
28
+ encoded = cwd with every "/" replaced by "-", wrapped in double dashes:
29
+ /Users/jason/pi/pi-mono → --Users-jason-pi-pi-mono--
30
+ sessions_dir = ~/.pi/agent/sessions/$encoded
31
+ ```
32
+
33
+ If `sessions_dir` does not exist, exit cleanly: "no prior pi sessions for this cwd".
34
+
35
+ ### 2. Pick relevance window
36
+
37
+ Default: the **last 3 sessions by mtime**. Override with explicit user time hint ("어제", "지난주", "since 2025-05-01").
38
+
39
+ ```bash
40
+ ls -t ~/.pi/agent/sessions/$encoded/*.jsonl | head -3
41
+ ```
42
+
43
+ ### 3. Cheap pass — headers only
44
+
45
+ For each candidate file, read just the **first 3 lines** to get session metadata (id, model, cwd, timestamp). Skip files older than the window.
46
+
47
+ ### 4. Targeted extraction
48
+
49
+ Pull only these event kinds from each in-window jsonl:
50
+
51
+ - `message` where `role=user` (intent)
52
+ - `message` where `role=assistant` AND content includes one of: a heading, a final summary block, a list of changed files, a commit SHA, an issue URL
53
+ - Tool calls of types: `Edit`, `Write`, `Bash` (filter by command keyword: `git commit|push|gh issue|gh pr`)
54
+ - Any explicit handoff strings (`flow complete`, `Final summary`, `[flow] complete`)
55
+
56
+ Implementation hint (jq):
57
+
58
+ ```bash
59
+ jq -c 'select(
60
+ (.type == "message" and .role == "user") or
61
+ (.type == "tool_use" and (.name == "Edit" or .name == "Write")) or
62
+ (.type == "tool_use" and .name == "Bash" and (.input.command | test("git commit|git push|gh issue|gh pr"))) or
63
+ (.type == "message" and .role == "assistant" and (.content | tostring | test("Final summary|flow complete|## Summary")))
64
+ )' <file>
65
+ ```
66
+
67
+ If `jq` is unavailable or the file format does not match, fall back to `grep`-based filters on the raw file. Keep extraction under 200 lines per session.
68
+
69
+ ### 5. Synthesise a recall card
70
+
71
+ Output exactly this shape, no more:
72
+
73
+ ```markdown
74
+ ## Recall: <cwd> — last <N> sessions
75
+
76
+ ### <YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM> — session <short-id>
77
+ - **Intent**: <one line drawn from the first user message>
78
+ - **Touched**: <comma-separated file paths from Edit/Write tools>
79
+ - **Side effects**: <commit SHAs / issue URLs / PR URLs>
80
+ - **State**: <complete | incomplete: <reason>>
81
+
82
+ ### <YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM> — session <short-id>
83
+ ...
84
+
85
+ ## Continuation hypothesis
86
+
87
+ <one paragraph: what was likely left undone, which files/issues to look at first>
88
+ ```
89
+
90
+ Stop here. Do not start work. The hypothesis is the bridge to `/do`.
91
+
92
+ ### 6. Hand off
93
+
94
+ If the user confirms the hypothesis, invoke `/do` with the resolved intent + scope. If the hypothesis is wrong, ask one clarifying question and try once more.
95
+
96
+ ## Privacy / safety
97
+
98
+ - Sessions can contain secrets that were pasted in. Do not echo full message bodies in the recall card; extract only headings, file paths, URLs, SHAs.
99
+ - Never write the recall card to a file in the repo. It lives in conversation context only.
100
+
101
+ ## Performance
102
+
103
+ - Target: < 2 seconds wallclock for the cheap pass + targeted extraction across 3 sessions, even if individual jsonl files are multi-MB.
104
+ - If a single jsonl is > 5 MB, sample: head -2000 + tail -2000 lines, plus any line containing `git commit`/`gh issue`.
105
+
106
+ ## Limits
107
+
108
+ - This skill does not reconstruct the full state of work. Code, issues, and merged preferences remain the source of truth. Recall is a memory aid, not a substitute.
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: zoom-out
3
+ description: Tell the agent to zoom out and give broader context or a higher-level perspective. Use when you're unfamiliar with a section of code or need to understand how it fits into the bigger picture.
4
+ disable-model-invocation: true
5
+ ---
6
+
7
+ I don't know this area of code well. Go up a layer of abstraction. Read `docs/agents/domain.md` if it exists, then give me a map of all relevant modules and callers using the project's glossary vocabulary.