Our review
OpenSpec Workflow (OpsX) provides a structured lifecycle management system for specification-driven development changes, from proposal to archival.
Strengths
- Complete automation of the change lifecycle (proposal, planning, implementation, archival)
- Standardized artifact structure (specifications, plans, tasks) enabling collaboration
- Simple and intuitive commands via /opsx to navigate between phases
- Automatic archiving of completed changes for future reference
Limitations
- Requires adherence to the OpenSpec methodology, which can be restrictive for unfamiliar teams
- May be overkill for trivial or fast-paced changes
- Relies on a .openspec directory structure that may not fit all projects
Use OpsX to manage complex or evolving changes that require traceability and comprehensive lifecycle documentation.
Avoid OpsX for urgent fixes or quick experiments where setup time outweighs the benefit of structure.
Security analysis
SafeThe skill file is purely descriptive and contains no executable commands, no destructive or exfiltrating instructions, and does not declare any tools that could be misused. It presents a workflow management methodology without any security risks.
No concerns found
Examples
I need to implement user authentication with OAuth. Start the OpenSpec workflow for this.Generate a detailed planning document for the database migration change.The feature implementation for search optimization is done. Archive this change.name: opsx description: OpenSpec workflow management system for creating, planning, implementing, and archiving specification-driven development changes with comprehensive lifecycle management
OpenSpec Workflow (OpsX)
OpenSpec Workflow (OpsX) provides a comprehensive lifecycle management system for specification-driven development changes, from initial proposal through implementation and archival.
Overview
OpsX implements a structured approach to managing development changes through the OpenSpec methodology:
- Onboard - Get started with OpenSpec workflow
- New - Create new OpenSpec change proposals
- Fast-Forward - Generate complete planning documentation
- Apply - Execute implementation tasks
- Archive - Complete and archive finished changes
Available Commands
Lifecycle Management Commands
| Command | Purpose | Usage |
|---------|---------|--------|
| opsx.onboard | Get started with OpenSpec workflow | /opsx.onboard |
| opsx.new | Create a new OpenSpec change proposal | /opsx.new "change description" |
| opsx.ff | Fast-forward to generate all planning docs | /opsx.ff |
| opsx.apply | Execute OpenSpec implementation tasks | /opsx.apply |
| opsx.archive | Archive a completed OpenSpec change | /opsx.archive |
Workflow Patterns
Standard Change Lifecycle
# 1. Initialize OpenSpec workflow (first time)
/opsx.onboard
# 2. Create new change proposal
/opsx.new "Add user authentication system"
# 3. Generate complete planning documentation
/opsx.ff
# 4. Execute implementation
/opsx.apply
# 5. Archive completed change
/opsx.archive
Quick Implementation Pattern
# For urgent changes or small fixes
/opsx.new "Fix critical security vulnerability"
/opsx.apply # Skip detailed planning for urgent changes
/opsx.archive
Comprehensive Planning Pattern
# For complex changes requiring thorough planning
/opsx.new "Migrate to microservices architecture"
/opsx.ff # Generate comprehensive planning docs
# Review and refine plans as needed
/opsx.apply # Execute with full planning context
/opsx.archive
OpenSpec Change Structure
OpsX manages changes with a standardized structure:
.openspec/
├── changes/
│ └── [change-id]/
│ ├── proposal.md # Initial change proposal
│ ├── specification.md # Detailed requirements
│ ├── plan.md # Implementation plan
│ ├── tasks.md # Task breakdown
│ ├── implementation/ # Implementation artifacts
│ └── archive.md # Completion summary
├── templates/ # OpenSpec templates
├── config/ # Workflow configuration
└── archive/ # Completed changes
└── [year]/
└── [change-id]/ # Archived change artifacts
Change Lifecycle Phases
1. Proposal Phase (opsx.new)
- Purpose: Capture initial change request and basic scope
- Artifacts:
proposal.mdwith change description, rationale, and initial scope - Next Steps: Fast-forward planning or direct implementation
2. Planning Phase (opsx.ff)
- Purpose: Generate comprehensive planning documentation
- Artifacts:
specification.md- Detailed requirements and acceptance criteriaplan.md- Implementation strategy and design decisionstasks.md- Ordered task breakdown with dependencies
- Next Steps: Review plans, then execute implementation
3. Implementation Phase (opsx.apply)
- Purpose: Execute planned tasks and track progress
- Artifacts: Implementation code, tests, documentation in
implementation/ - Next Steps: Complete implementation and archive change
4. Archive Phase (opsx.archive)
- Purpose: Complete the change lifecycle and preserve artifacts
- Artifacts:
archive.mdwith completion summary and lessons learned - Outcome: Change moved to archive for future reference
Integration Points
Version Control Integration
- Automatic Branching - Creates feature branches for each change
- Commit Automation - Structures commits according to OpenSpec conventions
- Pull Request Generation - Automated PR creation with proper documentation
- Merge Management - Handles branch cleanup after successful completion
Project Management Integration
- Issue Tracking - Links changes to project management tools
- Sprint Planning - Integrates task breakdown with sprint planning
- Progress Reporting - Automated status updates and progress tracking
- Dependency Management - Tracks cross-change dependencies
Quality Assurance Integration
- Validation Gates - Automated quality checks at each phase
- Documentation Standards - Ensures consistent documentation quality
- Review Workflows - Structured peer review processes
- Compliance Tracking - Monitors adherence to organizational standards
Configuration and Customization
Workflow Customization
OpsX supports organization-specific customization:
# .openspec/config/workflow.yml
phases:
planning:
required: true
templates: ["specification", "plan", "tasks"]
implementation:
validation_gates: ["tests", "documentation", "security"]
archive:
retention_policy: "permanent"
backup_location: "archive/"
integrations:
git:
branch_prefix: "openspec/"
commit_conventions: "conventional"
project_management:
provider: "github"
link_issues: true
Template Customization
Organizations can customize templates for their specific needs:
- Proposal templates - Standardized change request format
- Specification templates - Requirements documentation format
- Plan templates - Implementation planning format
- Archive templates - Completion documentation format
Best Practices
Change Scoping
- Single Responsibility - Each change should address one specific concern
- Clear Boundaries - Well-defined scope with explicit inclusions/exclusions
- Dependency Mapping - Identify and document relationships with other changes
- Risk Assessment - Evaluate potential impacts and mitigation strategies
Planning Quality
- Stakeholder Input - Gather requirements from all affected parties
- Technical Validation - Ensure feasibility of proposed solutions
- Timeline Realism - Accurate estimation of effort and dependencies
- Quality Gates - Define clear acceptance criteria and validation steps
Implementation Management
- Task Granularity - Break work into manageable, trackable units
- Progress Tracking - Regular updates on task completion and blockers
- Quality Assurance - Continuous validation against acceptance criteria
- Documentation Maintenance - Keep artifacts current throughout implementation
Archive Management
- Lessons Learned - Document insights for future reference
- Artifact Preservation - Maintain complete change history
- Knowledge Transfer - Share learnings with team and organization
- Process Improvement - Use archive data to refine workflow
Error Handling and Recovery
Common Issues and Solutions
| Issue | Symptoms | Resolution |
|-------|----------|------------|
| Incomplete planning | Missing artifacts, unclear requirements | Run /opsx.ff to generate missing documentation |
| Stalled implementation | Long-running tasks, blocked progress | Review task breakdown, identify blockers, replan if needed |
| Quality gate failures | Failed validation, incomplete criteria | Address specific failures, update implementation |
| Merge conflicts | Git conflicts, integration issues | Resolve conflicts, validate integration, continue |
Recovery Procedures
- Rollback Capability - Ability to revert changes if issues arise
- Checkpoint Management - Regular save points during long implementations
- Alternative Paths - Fallback strategies for blocked implementations
- Emergency Procedures - Fast-track critical fixes when needed
Metrics and Analytics
OpsX tracks key metrics for process improvement:
Process Metrics
- Cycle Time - Time from proposal to archive
- Planning Accuracy - Actual vs. estimated effort
- Quality Metrics - Defect rates, rework frequency
- Success Rate - Percentage of changes successfully completed
Organizational Metrics
- Change Velocity - Number of changes completed per time period
- Resource Utilization - Efficiency of team capacity usage
- Knowledge Retention - Effectiveness of documentation and archival
- Process Adoption - Team adherence to OpenSpec methodology
This comprehensive OpsX skill provides a complete lifecycle management system for specification-driven development that ensures quality, traceability, and continuous improvement.
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