openspec-onboard
npx skills add https://github.com/pbh-btn/peerbanhelper --skill openspec-onboard
Agent 安装分布
Skill 文档
Guide the user through their first complete OpenSpec workflow cycle. This is a teaching experienceâyou’ll do real work in their codebase while explaining each step.
Preflight
Before starting, check if OpenSpec is initialized:
openspec status --json 2>&1 || echo "NOT_INITIALIZED"
If not initialized:
OpenSpec isn’t set up in this project yet. Run
openspec initfirst, then come back to/opsx:onboard.
Stop here if not initialized.
Phase 1: Welcome
Display:
## Welcome to OpenSpec!
I'll walk you through a complete change cycleâfrom idea to implementationâusing a real task in your codebase. Along the way, you'll learn the workflow by doing it.
**What we'll do:**
1. Pick a small, real task in your codebase
2. Explore the problem briefly
3. Create a change (the container for our work)
4. Build the artifacts: proposal â specs â design â tasks
5. Implement the tasks
6. Archive the completed change
**Time:** ~15-20 minutes
Let's start by finding something to work on.
Phase 2: Task Selection
Codebase Analysis
Scan the codebase for small improvement opportunities. Look for:
- TODO/FIXME comments – Search for
TODO,FIXME,HACK,XXXin code files - Missing error handling –
catchblocks that swallow errors, risky operations without try-catch - Functions without tests – Cross-reference
src/with test directories - Type issues –
anytypes in TypeScript files (: any,as any) - Debug artifacts –
console.log,console.debug,debuggerstatements in non-debug code - Missing validation – User input handlers without validation
Also check recent git activity:
git log --oneline -10 2>/dev/null || echo "No git history"
Present Suggestions
From your analysis, present 3-4 specific suggestions:
## Task Suggestions
Based on scanning your codebase, here are some good starter tasks:
**1. [Most promising task]**
Location: `src/path/to/file.ts:42`
Scope: ~1-2 files, ~20-30 lines
Why it's good: [brief reason]
**2. [Second task]**
Location: `src/another/file.ts`
Scope: ~1 file, ~15 lines
Why it's good: [brief reason]
**3. [Third task]**
Location: [location]
Scope: [estimate]
Why it's good: [brief reason]
**4. Something else?**
Tell me what you'd like to work on.
Which task interests you? (Pick a number or describe your own)
If nothing found: Fall back to asking what the user wants to build:
I didn’t find obvious quick wins in your codebase. What’s something small you’ve been meaning to add or fix?
Scope Guardrail
If the user picks or describes something too large (major feature, multi-day work):
That's a valuable task, but it's probably larger than ideal for your first OpenSpec run-through.
For learning the workflow, smaller is betterâit lets you see the full cycle without getting stuck in implementation details.
**Options:**
1. **Slice it smaller** - What's the smallest useful piece of [their task]? Maybe just [specific slice]?
2. **Pick something else** - One of the other suggestions, or a different small task?
3. **Do it anyway** - If you really want to tackle this, we can. Just know it'll take longer.
What would you prefer?
Let the user override if they insistâthis is a soft guardrail.
Phase 3: Explore Demo
Once a task is selected, briefly demonstrate explore mode:
Before we create a change, let me quickly show you **explore mode**âit's how you think through problems before committing to a direction.
Spend 1-2 minutes investigating the relevant code:
- Read the file(s) involved
- Draw a quick ASCII diagram if it helps
- Note any considerations
## Quick Exploration
[Your brief analysisâwhat you found, any considerations]
âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
â [Optional: ASCII diagram if helpful] â
âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
Explore mode (`/opsx:explore`) is for this kind of thinkingâinvestigating before implementing. You can use it anytime you need to think through a problem.
Now let's create a change to hold our work.
PAUSE – Wait for user acknowledgment before proceeding.
Phase 4: Create the Change
EXPLAIN:
## Creating a Change
A "change" in OpenSpec is a container for all the thinking and planning around a piece of work. It lives in `openspec/changes/<name>/` and holds your artifactsâproposal, specs, design, tasks.
Let me create one for our task.
DO: Create the change with a derived kebab-case name:
openspec new change "<derived-name>"
SHOW:
Created: `openspec/changes/<name>/`
The folder structure:
openspec/changes// âââ proposal.md â Why we’re doing this (empty, we’ll fill it) âââ design.md â How we’ll build it (empty) âââ specs/ â Detailed requirements (empty) âââ tasks.md â Implementation checklist (empty)
Now let's fill in the first artifactâthe proposal.
Phase 5: Proposal
EXPLAIN:
## The Proposal
The proposal captures **why** we're making this change and **what** it involves at a high level. It's the "elevator pitch" for the work.
I'll draft one based on our task.
DO: Draft the proposal content (don’t save yet):
Here's a draft proposal:
---
## Why
[1-2 sentences explaining the problem/opportunity]
## What Changes
[Bullet points of what will be different]
## Capabilities
### New Capabilities
- `<capability-name>`: [brief description]
### Modified Capabilities
<!-- If modifying existing behavior -->
## Impact
- `src/path/to/file.ts`: [what changes]
- [other files if applicable]
---
Does this capture the intent? I can adjust before we save it.
PAUSE – Wait for user approval/feedback.
After approval, save the proposal:
openspec instructions proposal --change "<name>" --json
Then write the content to openspec/changes/<name>/proposal.md.
Proposal saved. This is your "why" documentâyou can always come back and refine it as understanding evolves.
Next up: specs.
Phase 6: Specs
EXPLAIN:
## Specs
Specs define **what** we're building in precise, testable terms. They use a requirement/scenario format that makes expected behavior crystal clear.
For a small task like this, we might only need one spec file.
DO: Create the spec file:
mkdir -p openspec/changes/<name>/specs/<capability-name>
Draft the spec content:
Here's the spec:
---
## ADDED Requirements
### Requirement: <Name>
<Description of what the system should do>
#### Scenario: <Scenario name>
- **WHEN** <trigger condition>
- **THEN** <expected outcome>
- **AND** <additional outcome if needed>
---
This formatâWHEN/THEN/ANDâmakes requirements testable. You can literally read them as test cases.
Save to openspec/changes/<name>/specs/<capability>/spec.md.
Phase 7: Design
EXPLAIN:
## Design
The design captures **how** we'll build itâtechnical decisions, tradeoffs, approach.
For small changes, this might be brief. That's fineânot every change needs deep design discussion.
DO: Draft design.md:
Here's the design:
---
## Context
[Brief context about the current state]
## Goals / Non-Goals
**Goals:**
- [What we're trying to achieve]
**Non-Goals:**
- [What's explicitly out of scope]
## Decisions
### Decision 1: [Key decision]
[Explanation of approach and rationale]
---
For a small task, this captures the key decisions without over-engineering.
Save to openspec/changes/<name>/design.md.
Phase 8: Tasks
EXPLAIN:
## Tasks
Finally, we break the work into implementation tasksâcheckboxes that drive the apply phase.
These should be small, clear, and in logical order.
DO: Generate tasks based on specs and design:
Here are the implementation tasks:
---
## 1. [Category or file]
- [ ] 1.1 [Specific task]
- [ ] 1.2 [Specific task]
## 2. Verify
- [ ] 2.1 [Verification step]
---
Each checkbox becomes a unit of work in the apply phase. Ready to implement?
PAUSE – Wait for user to confirm they’re ready to implement.
Save to openspec/changes/<name>/tasks.md.
Phase 9: Apply (Implementation)
EXPLAIN:
## Implementation
Now we implement each task, checking them off as we go. I'll announce each one and occasionally note how the specs/design informed the approach.
DO: For each task:
- Announce: “Working on task N: [description]”
- Implement the change in the codebase
- Reference specs/design naturally: “The spec says X, so I’m doing Y”
- Mark complete in tasks.md:
- [ ]â- [x] - Brief status: “â Task N complete”
Keep narration lightâdon’t over-explain every line of code.
After all tasks:
## Implementation Complete
All tasks done:
- [x] Task 1
- [x] Task 2
- [x] ...
The change is implemented! One more stepâlet's archive it.
Phase 10: Archive
EXPLAIN:
## Archiving
When a change is complete, we archive it. This moves it from `openspec/changes/` to `openspec/archive/YYYY-MM-DD--<name>/`.
Archived changes become your project's decision historyâyou can always find them later to understand why something was built a certain way.
DO:
openspec archive "<name>"
SHOW:
Archived to: `openspec/archive/YYYY-MM-DD--<name>/`
The change is now part of your project's history. The code is in your codebase, the decision record is preserved.
Phase 11: Recap & Next Steps
## Congratulations!
You just completed a full OpenSpec cycle:
1. **Explore** - Thought through the problem
2. **New** - Created a change container
3. **Proposal** - Captured WHY
4. **Specs** - Defined WHAT in detail
5. **Design** - Decided HOW
6. **Tasks** - Broke it into steps
7. **Apply** - Implemented the work
8. **Archive** - Preserved the record
This same rhythm works for any size changeâa small fix or a major feature.
---
## Command Reference
| Command | What it does |
|---------|--------------|
| `/opsx:explore` | Think through problems before/during work |
| `/opsx:new` | Start a new change, step through artifacts |
| `/opsx:ff` | Fast-forward: create all artifacts at once |
| `/opsx:continue` | Continue working on an existing change |
| `/opsx:apply` | Implement tasks from a change |
| `/opsx:verify` | Verify implementation matches artifacts |
| `/opsx:archive` | Archive a completed change |
---
## What's Next?
Try `/opsx:new` or `/opsx:ff` on something you actually want to build. You've got the rhythm now!
Graceful Exit Handling
User wants to stop mid-way
If the user says they need to stop, want to pause, or seem disengaged:
No problem! Your change is saved at `openspec/changes/<name>/`.
To pick up where we left off later:
- `/opsx:continue <name>` - Resume artifact creation
- `/opsx:apply <name>` - Jump to implementation (if tasks exist)
The work won't be lost. Come back whenever you're ready.
Exit gracefully without pressure.
User just wants command reference
If the user says they just want to see the commands or skip the tutorial:
## OpenSpec Quick Reference
| Command | What it does |
|---------|--------------|
| `/opsx:explore` | Think through problems (no code changes) |
| `/opsx:new <name>` | Start a new change, step by step |
| `/opsx:ff <name>` | Fast-forward: all artifacts at once |
| `/opsx:continue <name>` | Continue an existing change |
| `/opsx:apply <name>` | Implement tasks |
| `/opsx:verify <name>` | Verify implementation |
| `/opsx:archive <name>` | Archive when done |
Try `/opsx:new` to start your first change, or `/opsx:ff` if you want to move fast.
Exit gracefully.
Guardrails
- Follow the EXPLAIN â DO â SHOW â PAUSE pattern at key transitions (after explore, after proposal draft, after tasks, after archive)
- Keep narration light during implementationâteach without lecturing
- Don’t skip phases even if the change is smallâthe goal is teaching the workflow
- Pause for acknowledgment at marked points, but don’t over-pause
- Handle exits gracefullyânever pressure the user to continue
- Use real codebase tasksâdon’t simulate or use fake examples
- Adjust scope gentlyâguide toward smaller tasks but respect user choice