Rédacteur de Plans Loom

VérifiéSûr

Crée des plans d'exécution Loom pour orchestrer des tâches de développement multi-étapes. Impose une structure DAG avec des étapes obligatoires de démarrage des connaissances et de vérification d'intégration, et maximise le débit grâce à une parallélisation à deux niveaux : sous-agents au sein des étapes (pour les fichiers sans chevauchement) et étapes simultanées dans l'arborescence (pour les fichiers avec chevauchement). Utilisez cette compétence lorsque vous devez planifier et orchestrer des workflows complexes en plusieurs étapes avec exécution parallèle.

Spar Skills Guide Bot
DeveloppementIntermédiaire
14002/06/2026
Claude Code
#loom#plan-writer#parallel-execution#orchestration#execution-plan

Recommandé pour

Notre avis

Crée des plans d'exécution Loom structurés avec des étapes obligatoires de bootstrap des connaissances et de vérification d'intégration, maximisant le débit via deux niveaux de parallélisme.

Points forts

  • Garantit une structure de plan correcte avec les étapes obligatoires
  • Maximise la parallélisation via sous-agents et étages concurrents
  • Inclut des diagrammes visuels et métadonnées YAML explicites
  • Aligne les plans avec les règles CLAUDE.md

Limites

  • Nécessite une familiarité avec les concepts d'orchestration Loom
  • Les plans peuvent devenir complexes pour de grands projets
  • Suppose que l'étape de bootstrap des connaissances est toujours nécessaire
Quand l'utiliser

À utiliser lors de la conception d'un plan d'exécution pour l'orchestration Loom afin de coordonner plusieurs agents Claude Code.

Quand l'éviter

Ne pas utiliser pour des tâches simples mono-agent ne nécessitant pas d'exécution parallèle ou de structure de plan.

Analyse de sécurité

Sûr
Score qualité95/100

The skill only uses Read, Grep, Glob, Write, Edit tools and instructs writing YAML/metadata files. No execution of external commands, no data exfiltration, no destructive actions. Safe to list.

Aucun point d'attention détecté

Exemples

Parallel feature implementation plan
Create a Loom execution plan for building a REST API with user authentication and product CRUD, using parallel stages and subagents. Include knowledge-bootstrap and integration-verify.
Refactoring orchestration plan
Write a plan with subagents for refactoring the database layer and frontend components concurrently, using Loom stages and worktree merging.
Complex multi-stage plan
Design an orchestration plan to implement a chat feature with websockets, where the backend and frontend touch the same files but need to be developed in separate concurrent stages. Use loom stages and subagents.

name: loom-plan-writer description: REQUIRED skill for creating Loom execution plans. Designs DAG-based plans with mandatory knowledge-bootstrap and integration-verify bookends, parallel subagent execution within stages, and concurrent worktree stages for maximum throughput. Trigger keywords: loom, plan, stage, worktree, orchestration, parallel execution, parallel stages, concurrent execution, knowledge-bootstrap, integration-verify, acceptance criteria, signal, handoff, execution graph, dag, dependencies, loom plan, create plan, write plan, execution plan, orchestration plan, stage dependencies, parallel subagents, functional verification, wiring verification, smoke test. allowed-tools: Read, Grep, Glob, Write, Edit

Loom Plan Writer

Overview

THIS IS THE REQUIRED SKILL FOR CREATING LOOM EXECUTION PLANS.

When any agent needs to create a plan for Loom orchestration, this skill MUST be invoked. This skill ensures:

  • Correct plan structure with mandatory knowledge-bootstrap (first) and integration-verify (last) stages
  • Proper YAML metadata formatting (3 backticks, no nested code fences)
  • Parallelization strategy (subagents within stages FIRST, separate stages SECOND)
  • Functional verification requirements (tests passing ≠ feature working)
  • Alignment with all CLAUDE.md rules for plan writing

Plans maximize throughput through two levels of parallelism: subagents within stages (FIRST priority), and concurrent worktree stages (SECOND priority).

Instructions

1. Output Location

MANDATORY: Write all plans to:

doc/plans/PLAN-<description>.md

NEVER write to ~/.claude/plans/ or any .claude/plans path.

2. Parallelization Strategy

Maximize parallel execution at TWO levels:

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  PARALLELIZATION PRIORITY                                           │
│                                                                     │
│  1. SUBAGENTS FIRST  - Within a stage, use parallel subagents       │
│                        for tasks with NO file overlap               │
│                                                                     │
│  2. STAGES SECOND    - Separate stages for tasks that WILL touch    │
│                        the same files (loom merges branches)        │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

| Files Overlap? | Solution | | -------------- | ---------------------------------- | | NO | Same stage, parallel subagents | | YES | Separate stages, loom merges later |

3. Stage Description Requirement

EVERY stage description MUST include this line:

Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

This ensures Claude Code instances spawn concurrent subagents for independent tasks.

4. Plan Structure

Every plan MUST follow this structure:

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  MANDATORY PLAN STRUCTURE                                           │
│                                                                     │
│  FIRST:  knowledge-bootstrap    (unless knowledge already exists)   │
│  MIDDLE: implementation stages  (parallelized where possible)       │
│  LAST:   integration-verify     (ALWAYS - no exceptions)            │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Include a visual execution diagram:

[knowledge-bootstrap] --> [stage-a, stage-b] --> [stage-c] --> [integration-verify]

Stages in [a, b] notation run concurrently.

5. Loom Metadata Format

Plans contain embedded YAML wrapped in HTML comments:

<!-- loom METADATA -->

```yaml
loom:
  version: 1
  stages:
    - id: stage-id # Required: unique kebab-case identifier
      name: "Stage Name" # Required: human-readable display name
      description: | # Required: full task description for agent
        What this stage must accomplish.

        CRITICAL: Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

        Tasks:
        - Subtask 1 with requirements
        - Subtask 2 with requirements
      dependencies: [] # Required: array of stage IDs this depends on
      parallel_group: "grp" # Optional: concurrent execution grouping
      acceptance: # Required: verification commands
        - "cargo test"
        - "cargo clippy -- -D warnings"
      files: # Optional: target file globs for scope
        - "src/**/*.rs"
      working_dir: "." # Required: "." for worktree root, or subdirectory like "loom"
```

<!-- END loom METADATA -->

YAML Formatting Rules:

| Rule | Correct | Incorrect | | ------------------------ | ----------------------- | --------------------- | | Code fence | 3 backticks | 4 backticks | | Nested code blocks | NEVER in descriptions | Breaks YAML parser | | Examples in descriptions | Use plain indented text | Do NOT use ``` fences |

Working Directory Requirement:

The working_dir field is REQUIRED on every stage. This forces explicit choice of where acceptance criteria run:

working_dir: "."      # Run from worktree root
working_dir: "loom"   # Run from loom/ subdirectory

Why required? Prevents acceptance failures due to forgotten directory context. Every stage must consciously declare its execution directory.

Examples:

# Project with Cargo.toml at root
- id: build-check
  acceptance:
    - "cargo test"
  working_dir: "."

# Project with Cargo.toml in loom/ subdirectory
- id: build-check
  acceptance:
    - "cargo test"
  working_dir: "loom"

Mixed directories? Create separate stages instead of inline cd. Each stage = one working directory.

6. Knowledge Bootstrap Stage (First)

Captures codebase understanding before implementation:

- id: knowledge-bootstrap
  name: "Bootstrap Knowledge Base"
  description: |
    Explore codebase hierarchically and populate doc/loom/knowledge/:

    Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

    Exploration order:
    1. Architecture: high-level structure, component relationships, data flow
    2. Entry points: main modules, CLI commands, API endpoints
    3. Module boundaries: public interfaces, internal vs external
    4. Patterns: error handling, state management, common idioms
    5. Conventions: naming, file structure, testing patterns

    Use loom knowledge update commands to capture findings:
      loom knowledge update architecture "## Section\n\nContent..."
      loom knowledge update entry-points "## Section\n\nContent..."
      loom knowledge update patterns "## Section\n\nContent..."
      loom knowledge update conventions "## Section\n\nContent..."

    IMPORTANT: Before completing, review existing mistakes.md to avoid repeating errors.
  dependencies: []
  acceptance:
    - "grep -q '## ' doc/loom/knowledge/architecture.md"
    - "grep -q '## ' doc/loom/knowledge/entry-points.md"
    - "grep -q '## ' doc/loom/knowledge/patterns.md"
    - "grep -q '## ' doc/loom/knowledge/conventions.md"
  files:
    - "doc/loom/knowledge/**"
  working_dir: "."  # REQUIRED: "." for worktree root

Skip ONLY if: doc/loom/knowledge/ already populated or user explicitly states knowledge exists.

7. Integration Verify Stage (Last)

Verifies all work integrates correctly after merges AND that the feature actually works:

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  ⚠️ CRITICAL: TESTS PASSING ≠ FEATURE WORKING                       │
│                                                                     │
│  We have had MANY instances where:                                  │
│  - All tests pass                                                   │
│  - Code compiles                                                    │
│  - But the feature is NEVER WIRED UP or FUNCTIONAL                  │
│                                                                     │
│  integration-verify MUST include FUNCTIONAL VERIFICATION:           │
│  - Can you actually USE the feature?                                │
│  - Is it wired into the application (routes, UI, CLI)?              │
│  - Does it produce the expected user-visible behavior?              │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
- id: integration-verify
  name: "Integration Verification"
  description: |
    Final integration verification - runs AFTER all feature stages complete.

    Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

    CRITICAL: This stage must verify FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION, not just tests passing.
    Code that compiles and passes tests but is never wired up is USELESS.

    Tasks:
    1. Run full test suite (all tests, not just affected)
    2. Run linting with warnings as errors
    3. Verify build succeeds
    4. Check for unintended regressions

    FUNCTIONAL VERIFICATION (MANDATORY):
    5. Verify the feature is actually WIRED INTO the application:
       - For CLI: Is the command registered and callable?
       - For API: Is the endpoint mounted and reachable?
       - For UI: Is the component rendered and interactive?
    6. Execute a manual smoke test of the PRIMARY USE CASE:
       - Run the actual feature end-to-end
       - Verify it produces expected output/behavior
       - Document the test steps and results
    7. Verify integration points with existing code:
       - Are callbacks/hooks connected?
       - Are events being published/subscribed?
       - Are dependencies injected correctly?
  dependencies: ["stage-a", "stage-b", "stage-c"] # ALL feature stages
  acceptance:
    - "cargo test"
    - "cargo clippy -- -D warnings"
    - "cargo build"
    # ADD FUNCTIONAL ACCEPTANCE CRITERIA - examples:
    # - "./target/debug/myapp --help | grep 'new-command'"  # CLI wired
    # - "curl -s localhost:8080/api/new-endpoint | jq .status"  # API wired
    # - "grep -q 'NewComponent' src/app/routes.tsx"  # UI wired
  files: [] # Verification only - no file modifications
  working_dir: "."  # REQUIRED: "." for worktree root, or subdirectory like "loom"

Why integration-verify is mandatory:

| Reason | Explanation | | ----------------------- | -------------------------------------------------- | | Isolated worktrees | Feature stages test locally, not globally | | Merge conflicts | Individual tests pass but merged code may conflict | | Cross-stage regressions | Stage A change may break Stage B functionality | | Single verification | One authoritative pass/fail for entire plan | | Wiring verification | Features must be connected to actually work | | Functional proof | Smoke test proves the feature is usable |

8. After Writing Plan

  1. Write plan to doc/plans/PLAN-<name>.md
  2. STOP - Do NOT implement
  3. Tell user:

    Plan written to doc/plans/PLAN-<name>.md. Please review and run: loom init doc/plans/PLAN-<name>.md && loom run

  4. Wait for user feedback

The plan file IS your deliverable. Never proceed to implementation.

Best Practices

  1. Subagents First: Always maximize parallelism within stages before creating separate stages
  2. Explicit Dependencies: Never create unnecessary sequential dependencies
  3. Clear File Scopes: Define files: arrays to make overlap analysis explicit
  4. Actionable Descriptions: Each description should be a complete task specification
  5. Testable Acceptance: Every acceptance criterion must be a runnable command
  6. Bookend Compliance: Always include knowledge-bootstrap first and integration-verify last
  7. Working Directory: Every stage must declare its working_dir explicitly

Examples

Example 1: Parallel Stages (No File Overlap)

# Good - stages can run concurrently
stages:
  - id: add-auth
    dependencies: ["knowledge-bootstrap"]
    files: ["src/auth/**"]
    working_dir: "."
  - id: add-logging
    dependencies: ["knowledge-bootstrap"]
    files: ["src/logging/**"]
    working_dir: "."
  - id: integration-verify
    dependencies: ["add-auth", "add-logging"]
    working_dir: "."

Example 2: Sequential Stages (Same Files)

# Both touch src/api/handler.rs - must be sequential
stages:
  - id: add-auth-to-handler
    dependencies: ["knowledge-bootstrap"]
    files: ["src/api/handler.rs"]
    working_dir: "."
  - id: add-logging-to-handler
    dependencies: ["add-auth-to-handler"] # Sequential
    files: ["src/api/handler.rs"]
    working_dir: "."
  - id: integration-verify
    dependencies: ["add-logging-to-handler"]
    working_dir: "."

Example 3: Complete Plan Template

# Plan: [Title]

## Overview

[2-3 sentence description]

## Execution Diagram

```
[knowledge-bootstrap] --> [stage-a, stage-b] --> [integration-verify]
```

<!-- loom METADATA -->

```yaml
loom:
  version: 1
  stages:
    - id: knowledge-bootstrap
      name: "Bootstrap Knowledge Base"
      description: |
        Explore codebase and populate doc/loom/knowledge/.

        Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

        Tasks:
        - Identify entry points and main modules
        - Document patterns and conventions
      dependencies: []
      acceptance:
        - "grep -q '## ' doc/loom/knowledge/entry-points.md"
      files:
        - "doc/loom/knowledge/**"
      working_dir: "."

    - id: stage-a
      name: "Feature A"
      description: |
        Implement feature A.

        Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

        Tasks:
        - Task 1
        - Task 2
      dependencies: ["knowledge-bootstrap"]
      acceptance:
        - "cargo test"
      files:
        - "src/feature_a/**"
      working_dir: "."

    - id: stage-b
      name: "Feature B"
      description: |
        Implement feature B.

        Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

        Tasks:
        - Task 1
        - Task 2
      dependencies: ["knowledge-bootstrap"]
      acceptance:
        - "cargo test"
      files:
        - "src/feature_b/**"
      working_dir: "."

    - id: integration-verify
      name: "Integration Verification"
      description: |
        Final verification after all stages complete.

        Use parallel subagents and skills to maximize performance.

        CRITICAL: Verify FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION, not just tests passing.

        Build/Test Tasks:
        - Full test suite
        - Linting
        - Build verification

        FUNCTIONAL VERIFICATION (MANDATORY):
        - Verify features are WIRED into the application
        - Execute smoke test of primary use case
        - Confirm user-visible behavior works end-to-end
      dependencies: ["stage-a", "stage-b"]
      acceptance:
        - "cargo test"
        - "cargo clippy -- -D warnings"
        - "cargo build"
        # ADD: Functional acceptance criteria for YOUR feature
      files: []
      working_dir: "."
```

<!-- END loom METADATA -->
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