SKILL.md 4.0 KB


name: bugfix description: | Structured bug fix with root cause investigation. For bugs where the cause isn't immediately obvious, spans multiple files, or requires careful analysis before fixing. Includes hypothesis-driven investigation and a fix plan. Trigger: "bugfix", "debug this", "fix this bug", "pourquoi ca marche pas", "investigate and fix", "find and fix", "root cause + fix". For obvious 1-2 file fixes → use /hotfix instead. For bugs that need investigation only (no fix) → use /analyze. argument-hint: disable-model-invocation: false allowed-tools:

  • Read
  • Edit
  • Write
  • Bash
  • Grep
  • Glob
  • Agent ---

BUGFIX — Structured Bug Fix

Investigate, understand, plan, fix. No guessing. The iron law: understand the root cause before writing a single fix.

REQUEST

$ARGUMENTS


STEP 1 — GATHER CONTEXT

Understand the current state:

git status
git log --oneline -5

Read the error message, stack trace, or bug description. Identify:

  • What is broken (symptom)
  • Where it manifests (file, line, endpoint, UI element)
  • When it started (recent commit? always? after a deploy?)

    # If the user mentions "it was working before":
    git log --oneline -20 --all -- <suspected files>
    

STEP 2 — INVESTIGATE

Trace the bug from symptom to root cause:

  1. Read the code path involved (follow the data flow).
  2. Check recent changes to the affected files:

    git log --oneline -10 -- <file>
    git diff HEAD~5 -- <file>  # if recent regression suspected
    
  3. Look for related tests — do they pass? Do they cover the broken case?

  4. Search for similar patterns elsewhere that might have the same bug:

    # grep for the same pattern to assess blast radius
    

STEP 3 — HYPOTHESIZE + PLAN

Present findings before fixing:

BUGFIX — DIAGNOSIS
BUG     : <one-line symptom>
ROOT CAUSE: <what is actually wrong and why>
EVIDENCE: <what confirmed it — test, trace, diff>
BLAST RADIUS: <other places affected, or "isolated">

FIX PLAN:
  1. <file:line> — <what to change>
  2. <file:line> — <what to change>
  [3. <test file> — add/update test for this case]

RISK: <low/medium — what could go wrong>
  • If the root cause is still unclear after investigation, say so explicitly. List remaining hypotheses ranked by probability. Ask the user before proceeding.
  • If the fix is trivial after investigation (1-2 lines): proceed directly — no need to wait for approval on an obvious fix.
  • If the fix is significant (>10 lines, multiple files, behavior change): wait for user approval.

STEP 4 — FIX

Apply the fix following the plan:

  • Fix the root cause, not the symptom.
  • Add or update tests to cover the bug case (regression test).
  • If no test framework exists: document what you verified.
  • Keep changes minimal — fix the bug, nothing else.

STEP 5 — VERIFY + COMMIT

  1. Run the full relevant test suite:

    # detect and run tests
    
  2. If a build step exists, verify it passes.

  3. Check for regressions in related functionality.

  4. Commit using conventional format:

    fix(<scope>): <root cause description>
    
    <what was wrong and why>
    <what the fix does>
    
    Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
    
  5. Print summary:

    BUGFIX COMPLETE
    BUG        : <symptom>
    ROOT CAUSE : <one-line>
    FILE(S)    : <changed files>
    TEST(S)    : <added/updated tests, or "none — verified manually">
    REGRESSION : <checked areas>
    

RULES

  • No fix without understanding the root cause first.
  • No plugin check (lightweight skill, not an orchestrator).
  • If investigation reveals a design flaw requiring significant refactoring → stop, explain, suggest /ship-feature for the proper fix.
  • Always add a regression test when possible.
  • Keep the fix scoped. No "while we're here" cleanups.
  • If >5 files need changes → reconsider if /ship-feature is more appropriate.