siesa-agents 2.1.1 → 2.1.3

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 (145) hide show
  1. package/README.md +83 -83
  2. package/bin/install.js +400 -399
  3. package/bin/prepare-publish.js +26 -26
  4. package/bin/restore-folders.js +26 -26
  5. package/bmad-core/agent-teams/team-all.yaml +15 -15
  6. package/bmad-core/agent-teams/team-fullstack.yaml +19 -19
  7. package/bmad-core/agent-teams/team-ide-minimal.yaml +11 -11
  8. package/bmad-core/agent-teams/team-no-ui.yaml +14 -14
  9. package/bmad-core/agents/analyst.md +84 -84
  10. package/bmad-core/agents/architect.md +94 -94
  11. package/bmad-core/agents/backend-agent.md +189 -189
  12. package/bmad-core/agents/bmad-master.md +110 -110
  13. package/bmad-core/agents/bmad-orchestrator.md +147 -147
  14. package/bmad-core/agents/dev.md +81 -81
  15. package/bmad-core/agents/frontend-agent.md +168 -168
  16. package/bmad-core/agents/pm.md +84 -84
  17. package/bmad-core/agents/po.md +79 -79
  18. package/bmad-core/agents/qa.md +91 -91
  19. package/bmad-core/agents/sm.md +65 -65
  20. package/bmad-core/agents/ux-expert.md +69 -69
  21. package/bmad-core/checklists/architect-checklist.md +440 -440
  22. package/bmad-core/checklists/backend-checklist.md +142 -142
  23. package/bmad-core/checklists/change-checklist.md +184 -184
  24. package/bmad-core/checklists/frontend-checklist.md +105 -105
  25. package/bmad-core/checklists/pm-checklist.md +372 -372
  26. package/bmad-core/checklists/po-master-checklist.md +434 -434
  27. package/bmad-core/checklists/story-dod-checklist.md +96 -96
  28. package/bmad-core/checklists/story-draft-checklist.md +155 -155
  29. package/bmad-core/core-config.yaml +22 -22
  30. package/bmad-core/data/backend-standards.md +439 -439
  31. package/bmad-core/data/bmad-kb.md +809 -809
  32. package/bmad-core/data/brainstorming-techniques.md +38 -38
  33. package/bmad-core/data/elicitation-methods.md +156 -156
  34. package/bmad-core/data/frontend-standards.md +323 -323
  35. package/bmad-core/data/technical-preferences.md +5 -5
  36. package/bmad-core/data/test-levels-framework.md +148 -148
  37. package/bmad-core/data/test-priorities-matrix.md +174 -174
  38. package/bmad-core/enhanced-ide-development-workflow.md +248 -248
  39. package/bmad-core/install-manifest.yaml +230 -230
  40. package/bmad-core/tasks/advanced-elicitation.md +119 -119
  41. package/bmad-core/tasks/apply-qa-fixes.md +150 -150
  42. package/bmad-core/tasks/brownfield-create-epic.md +162 -162
  43. package/bmad-core/tasks/brownfield-create-story.md +149 -149
  44. package/bmad-core/tasks/correct-course.md +72 -72
  45. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-brownfield-story.md +314 -314
  46. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-component.md +102 -102
  47. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-deep-research-prompt.md +280 -280
  48. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-doc.md +103 -103
  49. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-entity.md +132 -132
  50. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-feature.md +90 -90
  51. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-next-story.md +114 -114
  52. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-service.md +117 -117
  53. package/bmad-core/tasks/create-use-case.md +140 -140
  54. package/bmad-core/tasks/document-project.md +345 -345
  55. package/bmad-core/tasks/execute-checklist.md +88 -88
  56. package/bmad-core/tasks/facilitate-brainstorming-session.md +138 -138
  57. package/bmad-core/tasks/generate-ai-frontend-prompt.md +53 -53
  58. package/bmad-core/tasks/index-docs.md +175 -175
  59. package/bmad-core/tasks/kb-mode-interaction.md +77 -77
  60. package/bmad-core/tasks/nfr-assess.md +345 -345
  61. package/bmad-core/tasks/qa-gate.md +163 -163
  62. package/bmad-core/tasks/review-story.md +316 -316
  63. package/bmad-core/tasks/risk-profile.md +355 -355
  64. package/bmad-core/tasks/scaffold-backend.md +110 -110
  65. package/bmad-core/tasks/scaffold-frontend.md +78 -78
  66. package/bmad-core/tasks/shard-doc.md +187 -187
  67. package/bmad-core/tasks/test-design.md +176 -176
  68. package/bmad-core/tasks/trace-requirements.md +266 -266
  69. package/bmad-core/tasks/validate-next-story.md +136 -136
  70. package/bmad-core/templates/architecture-tmpl.yaml +662 -662
  71. package/bmad-core/templates/brainstorming-output-tmpl.yaml +156 -156
  72. package/bmad-core/templates/brownfield-architecture-tmpl.yaml +477 -477
  73. package/bmad-core/templates/brownfield-prd-tmpl.yaml +281 -281
  74. package/bmad-core/templates/competitor-analysis-tmpl.yaml +307 -307
  75. package/bmad-core/templates/front-end-architecture-tmpl.yaml +258 -258
  76. package/bmad-core/templates/front-end-spec-tmpl.yaml +350 -350
  77. package/bmad-core/templates/fullstack-architecture-tmpl.yaml +824 -824
  78. package/bmad-core/templates/market-research-tmpl.yaml +253 -253
  79. package/bmad-core/templates/prd-tmpl.yaml +203 -203
  80. package/bmad-core/templates/project-brief-tmpl.yaml +222 -222
  81. package/bmad-core/templates/qa-gate-tmpl.yaml +103 -103
  82. package/bmad-core/templates/story-tmpl.yaml +138 -138
  83. package/bmad-core/user-guide.md +530 -530
  84. package/bmad-core/utils/bmad-doc-template.md +327 -327
  85. package/bmad-core/utils/workflow-management.md +71 -71
  86. package/bmad-core/workflows/brownfield-fullstack.yaml +298 -298
  87. package/bmad-core/workflows/brownfield-service.yaml +188 -188
  88. package/bmad-core/workflows/brownfield-ui.yaml +198 -198
  89. package/bmad-core/workflows/greenfield-fullstack.yaml +241 -241
  90. package/bmad-core/workflows/greenfield-service.yaml +207 -207
  91. package/bmad-core/workflows/greenfield-ui.yaml +236 -236
  92. package/bmad-core/working-in-the-brownfield.md +606 -606
  93. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/analyst.md +88 -0
  94. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/architect.md +89 -0
  95. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/backend.md +188 -0
  96. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/bmad-master.md +114 -0
  97. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/bmad-orchestrator.md +151 -0
  98. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/dev.md +85 -0
  99. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/frontend.md +151 -0
  100. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/pm.md +88 -0
  101. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/po.md +83 -0
  102. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/qa.md +95 -0
  103. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/sm.md +69 -0
  104. package/claude/commands/BMad/agents/ux-expert.md +73 -0
  105. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/advanced-elicitation.md +123 -0
  106. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/apply-qa-fixes.md +154 -0
  107. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/brownfield-create-epic.md +166 -0
  108. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/brownfield-create-story.md +153 -0
  109. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/correct-course.md +76 -0
  110. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/create-brownfield-story.md +318 -0
  111. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/create-deep-research-prompt.md +284 -0
  112. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/create-doc.md +107 -0
  113. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/create-next-story.md +118 -0
  114. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/document-project.md +349 -0
  115. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/execute-checklist.md +92 -0
  116. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/facilitate-brainstorming-session.md +142 -0
  117. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/generate-ai-frontend-prompt.md +57 -0
  118. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/index-docs.md +179 -0
  119. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/kb-mode-interaction.md +81 -0
  120. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/nfr-assess.md +349 -0
  121. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/qa-gate.md +167 -0
  122. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/review-story.md +320 -0
  123. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/risk-profile.md +359 -0
  124. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/shard-doc.md +191 -0
  125. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/test-design.md +180 -0
  126. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/trace-requirements.md +270 -0
  127. package/claude/commands/BMad/tasks/validate-next-story.md +140 -0
  128. package/claude/settings.local.json +20 -0
  129. package/github/b-mad-expert.md +742 -742
  130. package/github/chatmodes/analyst.chatmode.md +89 -89
  131. package/github/chatmodes/architect.chatmode.md +97 -97
  132. package/github/chatmodes/backend.chatmode.md +194 -194
  133. package/github/chatmodes/bmad-master.chatmode.md +115 -115
  134. package/github/chatmodes/bmad-orchestrator.chatmode.md +152 -152
  135. package/github/chatmodes/dev.chatmode.md +86 -86
  136. package/github/chatmodes/frontend.chatmode.md +157 -157
  137. package/github/chatmodes/pm.chatmode.md +89 -89
  138. package/github/chatmodes/po.chatmode.md +84 -84
  139. package/github/chatmodes/qa.chatmode.md +96 -96
  140. package/github/chatmodes/sm.chatmode.md +70 -70
  141. package/github/chatmodes/ux-expert.chatmode.md +74 -74
  142. package/index.js +9 -9
  143. package/package.json +37 -36
  144. package/vscode/mcp.json +11 -11
  145. package/vscode/settings.json +12 -12
@@ -1,203 +1,203 @@
1
- # <!-- Powered by BMAD™ Core -->
2
- template:
3
- id: prd-template-v2
4
- name: Product Requirements Document
5
- version: 2.0
6
- output:
7
- format: markdown
8
- filename: docs/prd.md
9
- title: "{{project_name}} Product Requirements Document (PRD)"
10
-
11
- workflow:
12
- mode: interactive
13
- elicitation: advanced-elicitation
14
-
15
- sections:
16
- - id: goals-context
17
- title: Goals and Background Context
18
- instruction: |
19
- Ask if Project Brief document is available. If NO Project Brief exists, STRONGLY recommend creating one first using project-brief-tmpl (it provides essential foundation: problem statement, target users, success metrics, MVP scope, constraints). If user insists on PRD without brief, gather this information during Goals section. If Project Brief exists, review and use it to populate Goals (bullet list of desired outcomes) and Background Context (1-2 paragraphs on what this solves and why) so we can determine what is and is not in scope for PRD mvp. Either way this is critical to determine the requirements. Include Change Log table.
20
- sections:
21
- - id: goals
22
- title: Goals
23
- type: bullet-list
24
- instruction: Bullet list of 1 line desired outcomes the PRD will deliver if successful - user and project desires
25
- - id: background
26
- title: Background Context
27
- type: paragraphs
28
- instruction: 1-2 short paragraphs summarizing the background context, such as what we learned in the brief without being redundant with the goals, what and why this solves a problem, what the current landscape or need is
29
- - id: changelog
30
- title: Change Log
31
- type: table
32
- columns: [Date, Version, Description, Author]
33
- instruction: Track document versions and changes
34
-
35
- - id: requirements
36
- title: Requirements
37
- instruction: Draft the list of functional and non functional requirements under the two child sections
38
- elicit: true
39
- sections:
40
- - id: functional
41
- title: Functional
42
- type: numbered-list
43
- prefix: FR
44
- instruction: Each Requirement will be a bullet markdown and an identifier sequence starting with FR
45
- examples:
46
- - "FR6: The Todo List uses AI to detect and warn against potentially duplicate todo items that are worded differently."
47
- - id: non-functional
48
- title: Non Functional
49
- type: numbered-list
50
- prefix: NFR
51
- instruction: Each Requirement will be a bullet markdown and an identifier sequence starting with NFR
52
- examples:
53
- - "NFR1: AWS service usage must aim to stay within free-tier limits where feasible."
54
-
55
- - id: ui-goals
56
- title: User Interface Design Goals
57
- condition: PRD has UX/UI requirements
58
- instruction: |
59
- Capture high-level UI/UX vision to guide Design Architect and to inform story creation. Steps:
60
-
61
- 1. Pre-fill all subsections with educated guesses based on project context
62
- 2. Present the complete rendered section to user
63
- 3. Clearly let the user know where assumptions were made
64
- 4. Ask targeted questions for unclear/missing elements or areas needing more specification
65
- 5. This is NOT detailed UI spec - focus on product vision and user goals
66
- elicit: true
67
- choices:
68
- accessibility: [None, WCAG AA, WCAG AAA]
69
- platforms: [Web Responsive, Mobile Only, Desktop Only, Cross-Platform]
70
- sections:
71
- - id: ux-vision
72
- title: Overall UX Vision
73
- - id: interaction-paradigms
74
- title: Key Interaction Paradigms
75
- - id: core-screens
76
- title: Core Screens and Views
77
- instruction: From a product perspective, what are the most critical screens or views necessary to deliver the the PRD values and goals? This is meant to be Conceptual High Level to Drive Rough Epic or User Stories
78
- examples:
79
- - "Login Screen"
80
- - "Main Dashboard"
81
- - "Item Detail Page"
82
- - "Settings Page"
83
- - id: accessibility
84
- title: "Accessibility: {None|WCAG AA|WCAG AAA|Custom Requirements}"
85
- - id: branding
86
- title: Branding
87
- instruction: Any known branding elements or style guides that must be incorporated?
88
- examples:
89
- - "Replicate the look and feel of early 1900s black and white cinema, including animated effects replicating film damage or projector glitches during page or state transitions."
90
- - "Attached is the full color pallet and tokens for our corporate branding."
91
- - id: target-platforms
92
- title: "Target Device and Platforms: {Web Responsive|Mobile Only|Desktop Only|Cross-Platform}"
93
- examples:
94
- - "Web Responsive, and all mobile platforms"
95
- - "iPhone Only"
96
- - "ASCII Windows Desktop"
97
-
98
- - id: technical-assumptions
99
- title: Technical Assumptions
100
- instruction: |
101
- Gather technical decisions that will guide the Architect. Steps:
102
-
103
- 1. Check if .bmad-core/data/technical-preferences.yaml or an attached technical-preferences file exists - use it to pre-populate choices
104
- 2. Ask user about: languages, frameworks, starter templates, libraries, APIs, deployment targets
105
- 3. For unknowns, offer guidance based on project goals and MVP scope
106
- 4. Document ALL technical choices with rationale (why this choice fits the project)
107
- 5. These become constraints for the Architect - be specific and complete
108
- elicit: true
109
- choices:
110
- repository: [Monorepo, Polyrepo]
111
- architecture: [Monolith, Microservices, Serverless]
112
- testing: [Unit Only, Unit + Integration, Full Testing Pyramid]
113
- sections:
114
- - id: repository-structure
115
- title: "Repository Structure: {Monorepo|Polyrepo|Multi-repo}"
116
- - id: service-architecture
117
- title: Service Architecture
118
- instruction: "CRITICAL DECISION - Document the high-level service architecture (e.g., Monolith, Microservices, Serverless functions within a Monorepo)."
119
- - id: testing-requirements
120
- title: Testing Requirements
121
- instruction: "CRITICAL DECISION - Document the testing requirements, unit only, integration, e2e, manual, need for manual testing convenience methods)."
122
- - id: additional-assumptions
123
- title: Additional Technical Assumptions and Requests
124
- instruction: Throughout the entire process of drafting this document, if any other technical assumptions are raised or discovered appropriate for the architect, add them here as additional bulleted items
125
-
126
- - id: epic-list
127
- title: Epic List
128
- instruction: |
129
- Present a high-level list of all epics for user approval. Each epic should have a title and a short (1 sentence) goal statement. This allows the user to review the overall structure before diving into details.
130
-
131
- CRITICAL: Epics MUST be logically sequential following agile best practices:
132
-
133
- - Each epic should deliver a significant, end-to-end, fully deployable increment of testable functionality
134
- - Epic 1 must establish foundational project infrastructure (app setup, Git, CI/CD, core services) unless we are adding new functionality to an existing app, while also delivering an initial piece of functionality, even as simple as a health-check route or display of a simple canary page - remember this when we produce the stories for the first epic!
135
- - Each subsequent epic builds upon previous epics' functionality delivering major blocks of functionality that provide tangible value to users or business when deployed
136
- - Not every project needs multiple epics, an epic needs to deliver value. For example, an API completed can deliver value even if a UI is not complete and planned for a separate epic.
137
- - Err on the side of less epics, but let the user know your rationale and offer options for splitting them if it seems some are too large or focused on disparate things.
138
- - Cross Cutting Concerns should flow through epics and stories and not be final stories. For example, adding a logging framework as a last story of an epic, or at the end of a project as a final epic or story would be terrible as we would not have logging from the beginning.
139
- elicit: true
140
- examples:
141
- - "Epic 1: Foundation & Core Infrastructure: Establish project setup, authentication, and basic user management"
142
- - "Epic 2: Core Business Entities: Create and manage primary domain objects with CRUD operations"
143
- - "Epic 3: User Workflows & Interactions: Enable key user journeys and business processes"
144
- - "Epic 4: Reporting & Analytics: Provide insights and data visualization for users"
145
-
146
- - id: epic-details
147
- title: Epic {{epic_number}} {{epic_title}}
148
- repeatable: true
149
- instruction: |
150
- After the epic list is approved, present each epic with all its stories and acceptance criteria as a complete review unit.
151
-
152
- For each epic provide expanded goal (2-3 sentences describing the objective and value all the stories will achieve).
153
-
154
- CRITICAL STORY SEQUENCING REQUIREMENTS:
155
-
156
- - Stories within each epic MUST be logically sequential
157
- - Each story should be a "vertical slice" delivering complete functionality aside from early enabler stories for project foundation
158
- - No story should depend on work from a later story or epic
159
- - Identify and note any direct prerequisite stories
160
- - Focus on "what" and "why" not "how" (leave technical implementation to Architect) yet be precise enough to support a logical sequential order of operations from story to story.
161
- - Ensure each story delivers clear user or business value, try to avoid enablers and build them into stories that deliver value.
162
- - Size stories for AI agent execution: Each story must be completable by a single AI agent in one focused session without context overflow
163
- - Think "junior developer working for 2-4 hours" - stories must be small, focused, and self-contained
164
- - If a story seems complex, break it down further as long as it can deliver a vertical slice
165
- elicit: true
166
- template: "{{epic_goal}}"
167
- sections:
168
- - id: story
169
- title: Story {{epic_number}}.{{story_number}} {{story_title}}
170
- repeatable: true
171
- template: |
172
- As a {{user_type}},
173
- I want {{action}},
174
- so that {{benefit}}.
175
- sections:
176
- - id: acceptance-criteria
177
- title: Acceptance Criteria
178
- type: numbered-list
179
- item_template: "{{criterion_number}}: {{criteria}}"
180
- repeatable: true
181
- instruction: |
182
- Define clear, comprehensive, and testable acceptance criteria that:
183
-
184
- - Precisely define what "done" means from a functional perspective
185
- - Are unambiguous and serve as basis for verification
186
- - Include any critical non-functional requirements from the PRD
187
- - Consider local testability for backend/data components
188
- - Specify UI/UX requirements and framework adherence where applicable
189
- - Avoid cross-cutting concerns that should be in other stories or PRD sections
190
-
191
- - id: checklist-results
192
- title: Checklist Results Report
193
- instruction: Before running the checklist and drafting the prompts, offer to output the full updated PRD. If outputting it, confirm with the user that you will be proceeding to run the checklist and produce the report. Once the user confirms, execute the pm-checklist and populate the results in this section.
194
-
195
- - id: next-steps
196
- title: Next Steps
197
- sections:
198
- - id: ux-expert-prompt
199
- title: UX Expert Prompt
200
- instruction: This section will contain the prompt for the UX Expert, keep it short and to the point to initiate create architecture mode using this document as input.
201
- - id: architect-prompt
202
- title: Architect Prompt
203
- instruction: This section will contain the prompt for the Architect, keep it short and to the point to initiate create architecture mode using this document as input.
1
+ # <!-- Powered by BMAD™ Core -->
2
+ template:
3
+ id: prd-template-v2
4
+ name: Product Requirements Document
5
+ version: 2.0
6
+ output:
7
+ format: markdown
8
+ filename: docs/prd.md
9
+ title: "{{project_name}} Product Requirements Document (PRD)"
10
+
11
+ workflow:
12
+ mode: interactive
13
+ elicitation: advanced-elicitation
14
+
15
+ sections:
16
+ - id: goals-context
17
+ title: Goals and Background Context
18
+ instruction: |
19
+ Ask if Project Brief document is available. If NO Project Brief exists, STRONGLY recommend creating one first using project-brief-tmpl (it provides essential foundation: problem statement, target users, success metrics, MVP scope, constraints). If user insists on PRD without brief, gather this information during Goals section. If Project Brief exists, review and use it to populate Goals (bullet list of desired outcomes) and Background Context (1-2 paragraphs on what this solves and why) so we can determine what is and is not in scope for PRD mvp. Either way this is critical to determine the requirements. Include Change Log table.
20
+ sections:
21
+ - id: goals
22
+ title: Goals
23
+ type: bullet-list
24
+ instruction: Bullet list of 1 line desired outcomes the PRD will deliver if successful - user and project desires
25
+ - id: background
26
+ title: Background Context
27
+ type: paragraphs
28
+ instruction: 1-2 short paragraphs summarizing the background context, such as what we learned in the brief without being redundant with the goals, what and why this solves a problem, what the current landscape or need is
29
+ - id: changelog
30
+ title: Change Log
31
+ type: table
32
+ columns: [Date, Version, Description, Author]
33
+ instruction: Track document versions and changes
34
+
35
+ - id: requirements
36
+ title: Requirements
37
+ instruction: Draft the list of functional and non functional requirements under the two child sections
38
+ elicit: true
39
+ sections:
40
+ - id: functional
41
+ title: Functional
42
+ type: numbered-list
43
+ prefix: FR
44
+ instruction: Each Requirement will be a bullet markdown and an identifier sequence starting with FR
45
+ examples:
46
+ - "FR6: The Todo List uses AI to detect and warn against potentially duplicate todo items that are worded differently."
47
+ - id: non-functional
48
+ title: Non Functional
49
+ type: numbered-list
50
+ prefix: NFR
51
+ instruction: Each Requirement will be a bullet markdown and an identifier sequence starting with NFR
52
+ examples:
53
+ - "NFR1: AWS service usage must aim to stay within free-tier limits where feasible."
54
+
55
+ - id: ui-goals
56
+ title: User Interface Design Goals
57
+ condition: PRD has UX/UI requirements
58
+ instruction: |
59
+ Capture high-level UI/UX vision to guide Design Architect and to inform story creation. Steps:
60
+
61
+ 1. Pre-fill all subsections with educated guesses based on project context
62
+ 2. Present the complete rendered section to user
63
+ 3. Clearly let the user know where assumptions were made
64
+ 4. Ask targeted questions for unclear/missing elements or areas needing more specification
65
+ 5. This is NOT detailed UI spec - focus on product vision and user goals
66
+ elicit: true
67
+ choices:
68
+ accessibility: [None, WCAG AA, WCAG AAA]
69
+ platforms: [Web Responsive, Mobile Only, Desktop Only, Cross-Platform]
70
+ sections:
71
+ - id: ux-vision
72
+ title: Overall UX Vision
73
+ - id: interaction-paradigms
74
+ title: Key Interaction Paradigms
75
+ - id: core-screens
76
+ title: Core Screens and Views
77
+ instruction: From a product perspective, what are the most critical screens or views necessary to deliver the the PRD values and goals? This is meant to be Conceptual High Level to Drive Rough Epic or User Stories
78
+ examples:
79
+ - "Login Screen"
80
+ - "Main Dashboard"
81
+ - "Item Detail Page"
82
+ - "Settings Page"
83
+ - id: accessibility
84
+ title: "Accessibility: {None|WCAG AA|WCAG AAA|Custom Requirements}"
85
+ - id: branding
86
+ title: Branding
87
+ instruction: Any known branding elements or style guides that must be incorporated?
88
+ examples:
89
+ - "Replicate the look and feel of early 1900s black and white cinema, including animated effects replicating film damage or projector glitches during page or state transitions."
90
+ - "Attached is the full color pallet and tokens for our corporate branding."
91
+ - id: target-platforms
92
+ title: "Target Device and Platforms: {Web Responsive|Mobile Only|Desktop Only|Cross-Platform}"
93
+ examples:
94
+ - "Web Responsive, and all mobile platforms"
95
+ - "iPhone Only"
96
+ - "ASCII Windows Desktop"
97
+
98
+ - id: technical-assumptions
99
+ title: Technical Assumptions
100
+ instruction: |
101
+ Gather technical decisions that will guide the Architect. Steps:
102
+
103
+ 1. Check if .bmad-core/data/technical-preferences.yaml or an attached technical-preferences file exists - use it to pre-populate choices
104
+ 2. Ask user about: languages, frameworks, starter templates, libraries, APIs, deployment targets
105
+ 3. For unknowns, offer guidance based on project goals and MVP scope
106
+ 4. Document ALL technical choices with rationale (why this choice fits the project)
107
+ 5. These become constraints for the Architect - be specific and complete
108
+ elicit: true
109
+ choices:
110
+ repository: [Monorepo, Polyrepo]
111
+ architecture: [Monolith, Microservices, Serverless]
112
+ testing: [Unit Only, Unit + Integration, Full Testing Pyramid]
113
+ sections:
114
+ - id: repository-structure
115
+ title: "Repository Structure: {Monorepo|Polyrepo|Multi-repo}"
116
+ - id: service-architecture
117
+ title: Service Architecture
118
+ instruction: "CRITICAL DECISION - Document the high-level service architecture (e.g., Monolith, Microservices, Serverless functions within a Monorepo)."
119
+ - id: testing-requirements
120
+ title: Testing Requirements
121
+ instruction: "CRITICAL DECISION - Document the testing requirements, unit only, integration, e2e, manual, need for manual testing convenience methods)."
122
+ - id: additional-assumptions
123
+ title: Additional Technical Assumptions and Requests
124
+ instruction: Throughout the entire process of drafting this document, if any other technical assumptions are raised or discovered appropriate for the architect, add them here as additional bulleted items
125
+
126
+ - id: epic-list
127
+ title: Epic List
128
+ instruction: |
129
+ Present a high-level list of all epics for user approval. Each epic should have a title and a short (1 sentence) goal statement. This allows the user to review the overall structure before diving into details.
130
+
131
+ CRITICAL: Epics MUST be logically sequential following agile best practices:
132
+
133
+ - Each epic should deliver a significant, end-to-end, fully deployable increment of testable functionality
134
+ - Epic 1 must establish foundational project infrastructure (app setup, Git, CI/CD, core services) unless we are adding new functionality to an existing app, while also delivering an initial piece of functionality, even as simple as a health-check route or display of a simple canary page - remember this when we produce the stories for the first epic!
135
+ - Each subsequent epic builds upon previous epics' functionality delivering major blocks of functionality that provide tangible value to users or business when deployed
136
+ - Not every project needs multiple epics, an epic needs to deliver value. For example, an API completed can deliver value even if a UI is not complete and planned for a separate epic.
137
+ - Err on the side of less epics, but let the user know your rationale and offer options for splitting them if it seems some are too large or focused on disparate things.
138
+ - Cross Cutting Concerns should flow through epics and stories and not be final stories. For example, adding a logging framework as a last story of an epic, or at the end of a project as a final epic or story would be terrible as we would not have logging from the beginning.
139
+ elicit: true
140
+ examples:
141
+ - "Epic 1: Foundation & Core Infrastructure: Establish project setup, authentication, and basic user management"
142
+ - "Epic 2: Core Business Entities: Create and manage primary domain objects with CRUD operations"
143
+ - "Epic 3: User Workflows & Interactions: Enable key user journeys and business processes"
144
+ - "Epic 4: Reporting & Analytics: Provide insights and data visualization for users"
145
+
146
+ - id: epic-details
147
+ title: Epic {{epic_number}} {{epic_title}}
148
+ repeatable: true
149
+ instruction: |
150
+ After the epic list is approved, present each epic with all its stories and acceptance criteria as a complete review unit.
151
+
152
+ For each epic provide expanded goal (2-3 sentences describing the objective and value all the stories will achieve).
153
+
154
+ CRITICAL STORY SEQUENCING REQUIREMENTS:
155
+
156
+ - Stories within each epic MUST be logically sequential
157
+ - Each story should be a "vertical slice" delivering complete functionality aside from early enabler stories for project foundation
158
+ - No story should depend on work from a later story or epic
159
+ - Identify and note any direct prerequisite stories
160
+ - Focus on "what" and "why" not "how" (leave technical implementation to Architect) yet be precise enough to support a logical sequential order of operations from story to story.
161
+ - Ensure each story delivers clear user or business value, try to avoid enablers and build them into stories that deliver value.
162
+ - Size stories for AI agent execution: Each story must be completable by a single AI agent in one focused session without context overflow
163
+ - Think "junior developer working for 2-4 hours" - stories must be small, focused, and self-contained
164
+ - If a story seems complex, break it down further as long as it can deliver a vertical slice
165
+ elicit: true
166
+ template: "{{epic_goal}}"
167
+ sections:
168
+ - id: story
169
+ title: Story {{epic_number}}.{{story_number}} {{story_title}}
170
+ repeatable: true
171
+ template: |
172
+ As a {{user_type}},
173
+ I want {{action}},
174
+ so that {{benefit}}.
175
+ sections:
176
+ - id: acceptance-criteria
177
+ title: Acceptance Criteria
178
+ type: numbered-list
179
+ item_template: "{{criterion_number}}: {{criteria}}"
180
+ repeatable: true
181
+ instruction: |
182
+ Define clear, comprehensive, and testable acceptance criteria that:
183
+
184
+ - Precisely define what "done" means from a functional perspective
185
+ - Are unambiguous and serve as basis for verification
186
+ - Include any critical non-functional requirements from the PRD
187
+ - Consider local testability for backend/data components
188
+ - Specify UI/UX requirements and framework adherence where applicable
189
+ - Avoid cross-cutting concerns that should be in other stories or PRD sections
190
+
191
+ - id: checklist-results
192
+ title: Checklist Results Report
193
+ instruction: Before running the checklist and drafting the prompts, offer to output the full updated PRD. If outputting it, confirm with the user that you will be proceeding to run the checklist and produce the report. Once the user confirms, execute the pm-checklist and populate the results in this section.
194
+
195
+ - id: next-steps
196
+ title: Next Steps
197
+ sections:
198
+ - id: ux-expert-prompt
199
+ title: UX Expert Prompt
200
+ instruction: This section will contain the prompt for the UX Expert, keep it short and to the point to initiate create architecture mode using this document as input.
201
+ - id: architect-prompt
202
+ title: Architect Prompt
203
+ instruction: This section will contain the prompt for the Architect, keep it short and to the point to initiate create architecture mode using this document as input.