fix(skills): pull upstream skill runtime resolution to stop event-loop starvation
Build: Production / build (push) Failing after 12m39s
Build: Production / build (push) Failing after 12m39s
The fork's listRuntimeSkillEntries rematerialized every skill's files from the DB on every heartbeat run dispatch — fs.rm + fs.mkdir + per-file readFile/writeFile, sequentially per skill. With 24 configured skills and 5 concurrent agents, this saturated the Node event loop badly enough that executeRun continuations couldn't reach activeRunExecutions.add() within the orphan-reaper's 5-min threshold, causing reaper to false-positive runs as "process_lost". Upstream's listRuntimeSkillEntries calls resolveRuntimeSkillSource, which checks if the materialized directory already exists on disk and short- circuits when it does. Fixes the symptom at the root. Replaces these files with upstream/master content: - server/src/services/company-skills.ts - server/src/services/heartbeat.ts - server/src/services/workspace-runtime.ts - server/src/services/company-portability.ts - server/src/routes/company-skills.ts - server/src/routes/agents.ts - packages/adapter-utils/src/server-utils.ts Pulls in supporting upstream files: - server/src/services/catalog-provenance.ts - server/src/services/skills-catalog.ts - server/src/services/github-fetch.ts - server/src/services/portable-path.ts - packages/skills-catalog/ (new package) - packages/db document_annotation_* schema + migration 0091 - packages/shared document-annotation types/validators Drops fork features (to be re-evaluated later): - Gitea/Forgejo git skill sources (server/src/services/git-source.ts deleted) - PAT support for private skill repos - Fork-specific secret-export portability extensions Adds agentId: null to acquireRunLease test-probe call in routes/agents.ts to satisfy the fork's environment-runtime agentId requirement (kept). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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---
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name: task-planning
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description: Turn a Paperclip issue or request into a structured implementation plan with child task graph, blockers, owners, and acceptance criteria, then save it as the issue `plan` document.
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key: paperclipai/bundled/paperclip-operations/task-planning
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recommendedForRoles:
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- manager
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- engineer
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- product
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tags:
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- paperclip
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- planning
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- issues
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- delegation
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---
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# Task Planning
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Produce implementation plans that the Paperclip executor can actually run: explicit child issues, real blockers, named owners, and a defined acceptance bar. Avoid plans that read well but cannot be split into work.
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## When to use
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- An issue asks you to "plan", "scope", "break down", "design the rollout", "propose the work", or similar.
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- A user wants a written plan before approving implementation.
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- A manager needs to delegate non-trivial work and the shape of the work is not obvious yet.
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- You inherited an issue too large to deliver in one heartbeat and need to split it.
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## When not to use
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- The issue is a single small change you can ship in the same heartbeat. Just ship it.
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- The issue is forensic ("why did this break"). Use a diagnosis skill first; plan only after the root cause is named.
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- A current `plan` document already exists and the change is minor. Update that document; do not start fresh.
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## Outputs
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1. An updated issue document with key `plan` (markdown).
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2. A short comment on the issue that links to the plan document and names the next action.
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3. Where the plan requires approval, an issue-thread interaction of kind `request_confirmation` bound to the latest plan revision.
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Do not create implementation subtasks until the plan is accepted.
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## Plan structure
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Required sections, in order:
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1. **Goal** — one paragraph. What changes for the user, the operator, or the system once this work lands.
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2. **Context reviewed** — bullet list of documents, files, and prior issues you read. Lets reviewers spot missing inputs.
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3. **Constraints and non-goals** — what must hold (compatibility, security, performance) and what this plan deliberately will not do.
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4. **Approach** — the chosen path, with a short rationale. If you considered alternatives, name them and why you rejected them.
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5. **Work breakdown** — ordered list of child issues. Each child has:
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- Title in imperative form.
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- Owner specialty (Engineer, QA, Designer, Security, DevRel, Manager, etc.).
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- Scope and deliverables.
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- Acceptance criteria.
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- Blocks/blocked-by relationships expressed by phase letter or child title.
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6. **Acceptance** — the bar for the parent issue. How the user knows the whole thing is done.
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7. **Risks and mitigations** — short list. Skip if there are none.
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8. **Deferrals** — what is intentionally pushed to follow-up issues, with why.
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## Rules of thumb for splitting
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- One child issue, one specialty. If two specialties have to coordinate inside the same issue, split it.
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- One child issue, one acceptance verdict. If a reviewer would say "this is half done", split it.
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- A child must be checkout-able by the owner from its title and description alone. Reviewers should not have to re-read the parent plan to understand a child.
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- Order children by real blocker chains, not by author preference. Parallel children should explicitly say `blockers: none`.
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- Avoid `polish` or `cleanup` child issues without acceptance criteria — they never close.
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## Filing the plan
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Use the Paperclip API to write the plan document, then comment:
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- `PUT /api/issues/{issueId}/documents/plan` with the markdown body. If `plan` already exists, include the latest `baseRevisionId`.
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- `POST /api/issues/{issueId}/comments` with a short summary that links the plan: `/<prefix>/issues/<issue-id>#document-plan`.
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- If approval is required: `POST /api/issues/{issueId}/interactions` with `kind: request_confirmation`, `targetRevisionId` set to the new plan revision, `continuationPolicy: wake_assignee`, and `idempotencyKey: "confirmation:{issueId}:plan:{revisionId}"`.
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- Set the issue to `in_review` after creating the confirmation. Stay assigned so the acceptance wakes the planner.
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When the plan is accepted, see the companion skill for converting accepted plans into Paperclip executable tasks.
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## Anti-patterns
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- Plan disguised as a description edit. Use the `plan` document.
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- "Phases A–Z" with no work breakdown inside the phases.
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- Children with descriptions that say "see parent" — they fail at delegation time.
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- Acceptance written as "code review approval". Reviewers need a behavior bar, not a process bar.
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- Plans that bury blocker chains in prose. Use explicit blocked-by lines.
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Reference in New Issue
Block a user