openspec-ff-change

Fast-forward through OpenSpec artifact creation. Use when the user wants to quickly create all artifacts needed for implementation without stepping through…

npx skills add https://github.com/rivet-dev/rivet --skill openspec-ff-change

Fast-forward through artifact creation - generate everything needed to start implementation in one go.

Input: The user's request should include a change name (kebab-case) OR a description of what they want to build.

Steps

  1. If no clear input provided, ask what they want to build

    Use the AskUserQuestion tool (open-ended, no preset options) to ask:

    "What change do you want to work on? Describe what you want to build or fix."

    From their description, derive a kebab-case name (e.g., "add user authentication" → add-user-auth).

    IMPORTANT: Do NOT proceed without understanding what the user wants to build.

  2. Create the change directory

    openspec new change "<name>"
    

    This creates a scaffolded change at openspec/changes/<name>/.

  3. Get the artifact build order

    openspec status --change "<name>" --json
    

    Parse the JSON to get:

    • applyRequires: array of artifact IDs needed before implementation (e.g., ["tasks"])
    • artifacts: list of all artifacts with their status and dependencies
  4. Create artifacts in sequence until apply-ready

    Use the TodoWrite tool to track progress through the artifacts.

    Loop through artifacts in dependency order (artifacts with no pending dependencies first):

    a. For each artifact that is ready (dependencies satisfied):

    • Get instructions:
      openspec instructions <artifact-id> --change "<name>" --json
      
    • The instructions JSON includes:
      • context: Project background (constraints for you - do NOT include in output)
      • rules: Artifact-specific rules (constraints for you - do NOT include in output)
      • template: The structure to use for your output file
      • instruction: Schema-specific guidance for this artifact type
      • outputPath: Where to write the artifact
      • dependencies: Completed artifacts to read for context
    • Read any completed dependency files for context
    • Create the artifact file using template as the structure
    • Apply context and rules as constraints - but do NOT copy them into the file
    • Show brief progress: "✓ Created "

    b. Continue until all applyRequires artifacts are complete

    • After creating each artifact, re-run openspec status --change "<name>" --json
    • Check if every artifact ID in applyRequires has status: "done" in the artifacts array
    • Stop when all applyRequires artifacts are done

    c. If an artifact requires user input (unclear context):

    • Use AskUserQuestion tool to clarify
    • Then continue with creation
  5. Show final status

    openspec status --change "<name>"
    

Output

After completing all artifacts, summarize:

  • Change name and location
  • List of artifacts created with brief descriptions
  • What's ready: "All artifacts created! Ready for implementation."
  • Prompt: "Run /opsx-apply or ask me to implement to start working on the tasks."

Artifact Creation Guidelines

  • Follow the instruction field from openspec instructions for each artifact type
  • The schema defines what each artifact should contain - follow it
  • Read dependency artifacts for context before creating new ones
  • Use template as the structure for your output file - fill in its sections
  • IMPORTANT: context and rules are constraints for YOU, not content for the file
    • Do NOT copy <context>, <rules>, <project_context> blocks into the artifact
    • These guide what you write, but should never appear in the output

Guardrails

  • Create ALL artifacts needed for implementation (as defined by schema's apply.requires)
  • Always read dependency artifacts before creating a new one
  • If context is critically unclear, ask the user - but prefer making reasonable decisions to keep momentum
  • If a change with that name already exists, suggest continuing that change instead
  • Verify each artifact file exists after writing before proceeding to next

More skills from rivet-dev

ai-agent
rivet-dev
Build an AI agent backend with persistent memory: one Rivet Actor per conversation, queued message handling, and streaming LLM responses as realtime events.
official
ai-agent-workspace
rivet-dev
Give every AI agent its own computer: a persistent workspace with a filesystem, processes, shells, networking, and agent sessions on a lightweight in-process…
official
chat-room
rivet-dev
Build a realtime chat room backend with Rivet Actors: one actor per room, SQLite-backed message history, and WebSocket broadcast to every connected client.
official
collaborative-text-editor
rivet-dev
Build a collaborative text editor backend with Yjs CRDTs and Rivet Actors: per-document actors relay sync and awareness updates and persist snapshots.
official
cron-jobs
rivet-dev
Durable cron jobs with Rivet Actors: schedule.after and schedule.at timers survive restarts and crashes, plus re-arming recurring jobs and idempotent handlers.
official
live-cursors
rivet-dev
Live cursors and multiplayer presence with Rivet Actors: per-connection cursor state, realtime updates over events or raw WebSockets, and throttling.
official
per-tenant-database
rivet-dev
Multi-tenant data isolation with one Rivet Actor per tenant: the actor key is the tenant id, so each tenant gets its own isolated dataset and migrations.
official
rivetkit-client-javascript
rivet-dev
JavaScript client for connecting to Rivet Actors with stateless or stateful connections. Supports browser, Node.js, and Bun environments with automatic endpoint detection via environment variables or explicit configuration Offers two interaction modes: stateless action calls for independent requests and stateful connections with real-time event subscriptions Includes low-level HTTP and WebSocket access for actors implementing onRequest or onWebSocket handlers Provides compound array-based...
official