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386 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
The Chef
7d3d51ff4f docs: fix typos in README and customization guide (#1424)
- Remove duplicate "for" in README example command
- Fix "this is" to "thing is" in README
- Remove extra "at" in "star project icon at near" in README
- Fix "MEthod" to "Method" in customize-bmad.md
2026-01-26 23:25:08 -08:00
Vladimir Hrusovsky
4c92e0cc88 Fix: Correct workflow_path in bmad-quick-flow/quick-spec steps (#1368)
- Fix workflow_path in step-01-understand.md, step-02-investigate.md, and step-03-generate.md
- Changed from non-existent 'create-tech-spec' to correct 'quick-spec'
- Aligns with step-04-review.md which already had correct path

Co-authored-by: Your Name <you@example.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-26 23:15:22 -08:00
Brian Madison
0d2b8c3429 readme link fix 2026-01-26 18:22:04 -08:00
Brian Madison
984bd9e558 Bump version to 6.0.0-Beta.2 2026-01-26 17:44:49 -06:00
Brian Madison
6a282f86b4 allow updates from any beta, warn on alpha and v4 2026-01-26 17:33:02 -06:00
Brian Madison
6c5381b6dc help system update 2026-01-26 16:30:47 -06:00
Brian Madison
27c18e0020 installer fix 2026-01-26 16:06:00 -06:00
Brian Madison
9ebc4ce9c0 package push 2026-01-26 00:28:14 -06:00
Brian Madison
5ffef8dc35 6.0.0-beta.0 2026-01-26 00:15:32 -06:00
Brian Madison
43c0e290d2 feat(installer): update install messages for Beta.0 release 2026-01-26 00:15:22 -06:00
Brian Madison
cad9be3e89 feat(installer): update install messages for Beta.0 release 2026-01-26 00:09:46 -06:00
Brian Madison
82d211b7ca release: bump to v6.0.0-Beta.0 - Alpha to Beta transition
- Transition BMad Method from Alpha to Beta
- Beta versions now publish to npm 'latest' tag (default for npx)
- Updated manual release workflow to prioritize beta releases
- Updated CHANGELOG with Beta.0 release notes
2026-01-26 00:06:17 -06:00
Brian Madison
8719d828d0 fix width and responsiveness of diagram 2026-01-26 00:06:17 -06:00
Brian
3abcefe1fb feat: make workflow diagram iframe full-width (#1409)
- Add CSS to break workflow diagram iframe out of content container
- iframe now spans full viewport width instead of max-width constraint
- Adjust iframe height to 700px for better fit
- Remove border/border-radius for seamless full-width look

Co-authored-by: Brian Madison <brianmadison@Brians-MacBook-Pro.local>
2026-01-25 23:00:04 -06:00
Brian Madison
9168e00167 fix(build): add iframe support to rehype base path plugin
Allows iframe src attributes to be properly transformed with the base path,
enabling the interactive workflow diagram to be embedded in markdown pages.
2026-01-25 22:43:00 -06:00
Brian Madison
d0c9cd7b0b removed dead code and obsolete levels 0-4 ref 2026-01-25 22:23:36 -06:00
Brian Madison
c352e03d18 add interactive diagram to test final doc build and layout 2026-01-25 22:12:23 -06:00
Brian Madison
9b12f6f86c docs updates 2026-01-25 21:18:09 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
91f6c41be1 docs: radical reduction of documentation scope for v6 beta (#1406)
* docs: radical reduction of documentation scope for v6 beta

Archive and basement unreviewed content to ship a focused, minimal doc set.

Changes:
- Archive stale how-to workflow guides (will rewrite for v6)
- Archive outdated explanation and reference content
- Move unreviewed content to basement for later review
- Reorganize TEA docs into dedicated /tea/ section
- Add workflow-map visual reference page
- Simplify getting-started tutorial and sidebar navigation
- Add explanation pages: brainstorming, adversarial-review, party-mode,
  quick-flow, advanced-elicitation
- Fix base URL handling for subdirectory deployments (GitHub Pages forks)

The goal is a minimal, accurate doc set for beta rather than
comprehensive but potentially misleading content.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor: restructure BMM and agents documentation by consolidating and flattening index files.

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-25 14:00:26 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
02513c721f fix(workflow): correct stale path references in check-implementation-readiness steps (#1404)
Directory was renamed in 1da77058 but step file contents weren't updated.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-25 03:57:50 -06:00
Brian Madison
e7a34a2b61 installer updates 2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
85339708e6 normalize commands 2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
b4f230f565 installer standardization 2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
b102694c64 Fix: use String.raw for escaped triple quotes in TOML 2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
5aef6379b9 Fix github-copilot installer to use UnifiedInstaller for prompts
- Add .github/prompts directory alongside .github/agents
- Use UnifiedInstaller with TemplateType.COPILOT for prompts/workflows/tasks/tools
- Fix typo: bmd-custom- -> bmad- prefix for agents
- Update cleanup to handle both directories
- Format fixes for auggie.js and windsurf.js
2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
4cb5cc7dbc Fix gemini installer to use UnifiedInstaller with .toml support
- Add fileExtension parameter support to path-utils (toColonPath, toDashPath)
- Add TemplateType.GEMINI to unified-installer for TOML output format
- Update task-tool-command-generator to support TOML format
- Refactor gemini.js to use UnifiedInstaller with:
  - NamingStyle.FLAT_DASH for dash-separated filenames
  - TemplateType.GEMINI for TOML format (description + prompt fields)
  - fileExtension: '.toml' for Gemini CLI

TOML format:
description = "BMAD Agent: Title"
prompt = """
Content here
"""
2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
c5d0fb55ba Fix windsurf installer to use UnifiedInstaller with flat files
- Replace manual artifact collection with UnifiedInstaller class
- Remove nested folder structure (.windsurf/workflows/bmad/[module]/[type]/)
- Now installs flat files to .windsurf/workflows/ (e.g., bmad-bmm-agent-pm.md)
- Use NamingStyle.FLAT_DASH and TemplateType.WINDSURF
- Add customTemplateFn for Windsurf-specific auto_execution_mode frontmatter
- Simplify cleanup() and update installCustomAgentLauncher() for flat structure
2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
c0adbc4e76 Fix cline installer to use UnifiedInstaller
- Replace individual generators with UnifiedInstaller class
- Use NamingStyle.FLAT_DASH and TemplateType.CLINE
- Remove collectClineArtifacts, flattenAndWriteArtifacts, flattenFilename methods
- Reduce code by ~98 lines (36% reduction)
- Keep cleanup(), installCustomAgentLauncher(), detect() as-is
2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
f6dab0d0ff Fix crush installer to use UnifiedInstaller
- Replace individual generators with UnifiedInstaller class
- Use NamingStyle.FLAT_COLON and TemplateType.CODEX
- Remove manual counting logic, use counts from UnifiedInstaller
- Keep cleanup() and installCustomAgentLauncher() as-is
2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
cf6cf779bb Fix auggie installer to use UnifiedInstaller with flat files
- Replace individual generators with UnifiedInstaller class
- Remove nested folder structure (.augment/commands/bmad/agents/, etc.)
- Now installs flat files to .augment/commands/ (e.g., bmad_bmm_agent_pm.md)
- Use NamingStyle.FLAT_COLON and TemplateType.AUGMENT
- Remove createTaskCommand, createToolCommand, createWorkflowCommand methods
- Simplify cleanup() and update installCustomAgentLauncher() for flat structure
2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
7074395bdd claude cline codex installers use central function 2026-01-25 03:56:40 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
9b8ce69f37 fix(quick-spec): reorder final menu to D-B-A-P-R (#1402)
Group "go-on" options first (Done, Begin Dev), then reasoning options
(Advanced Elicitation, Party Mode, Adversarial Review).

Follows established pattern: most common action first, related options grouped.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-24 23:57:08 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
79959e75ac fix(quick-flow): standardize menu shortcuts for intuitive UX (#1401)
* fix(quick-spec): change menu shortcuts to avoid Approve/Advanced confusion

Users were typing 'a' expecting to Approve (since it starts with A) but
triggering Advanced Elicitation instead. Changed shortcuts to:
- [C] Continue (was [Y] Approve)
- [E] Edit (was [C] Changes)

This keeps [A] for Advanced Elicitation consistent with other workflows.

Fixes user-reported UX issue with confusing menu shortcuts.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(quick-dev): standardize menu shortcuts to use intuitive letters

- Change [T] to [P] for "Plan first" (P matches the label)
- Change [1][2][3] to [W][F][S] for findings resolution:
  - [W] Walk through
  - [F] Fix automatically
  - [S] Skip

Consistent with letter-based menu pattern used elsewhere.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-24 21:15:01 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
8bdf21f65b doc: standardize quick-flow menu patterns to newer format (#1388)
Update quick-spec and quick-dev workflow menus to match established standards:
- Uppercase all menu option letters ([A], [P], [C], [T], [E], [W], etc.)
- Add "Menu Handling Logic:" sections with IF/THEN structure
- Add "EXECUTION RULES:" sections with halt/wait behavior
- Add chat handling for checkpoint menus (A/P/C)
- Remove code blocks from Display patterns, use standard format
- Add header for adversarial review process block

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-24 12:17:28 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
7d63dcd6a0 docs: fix td leftover (#1394) 2026-01-24 12:16:44 -06:00
forcetrainer
999ece33a9 Interactive workflow guide, README Quick Start overhaul, and /bmad-help callouts (#1396)
* Add interactive workflow guide page

Replace confusing static SVG workflow diagram with an interactive
guide at /workflow-guide. Users select their track (Quick Flow,
BMad Method, Enterprise) and see relevant phases, agents, commands,
and outputs. Update link validator to recognize custom page routes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Add visual dev loop indicator to workflow guide

Wrap create-story, dev-story, and code-review in a dashed border
group with a "Repeat for each story" label to clearly communicate
the iterative development cycle in Phase 4.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Simplify workflow guide to vertical slash command flow

Replace expandable phase cards with a clean vertical flow showing
slash commands as the primary element, with down arrows between
steps, agent badges, required/optional status, and concise
descriptions. Add prominent /bmad-help callout and note that
agent loading is optional.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Simplify README Quick Start with numbered command flows

Replace wordy paragraphs and track table with two clear numbered
paths (Quick Flow: 3 commands, BMad Method: 6 steps) and a
prominent /bmad-help callout as the primary guidance mechanism.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Add Party Mode to README, /bmad-help to getting-started

Add Party Mode bullet to Why BMad section, note about agent-based
usage as an alternative to direct workflows, and a /bmad-help
mention in the getting-started tutorial after installation.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Add link to getting-started tutorial in README Quick Start

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Add workflow guide link to docs index New Here section

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Update README tagline and format modules table

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Fix workflow-guide links to use relative paths

The /workflow-guide absolute path breaks with non-root base paths.
Use relative paths since workflow-guide is a custom Astro page
outside the docs collection. Docs-to-docs links keep the /docs/
pattern which the rehype plugin handles.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Revert workflow-guide links to absolute paths

Use /workflow-guide to match the /docs/ convention used throughout.
Works correctly on the production site where base path is /.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-24 12:16:20 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
baf2b9daef chore: update package-lock.json and fix markdownlint ignore pattern (#1375)
- Security fixes for transitive dependencies (lodash, etc.)
- npm peer metadata additions
- Fix markdownlint to ignore all node_modules, not just root

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-24 00:25:49 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
9abd6654f1 feat: add optional style_guide input to editorial review tasks (#1380)
When provided, the style_guide input overrides all generic principles
(including Microsoft Style Guide baseline, reader-type priorities, and
structure-model selection) except CONTENT IS SACROSANCT.

Changes to both editorial-review-structure.xml and editorial-review-prose.xml:
- Add style_guide input after content input
- Add STYLE GUIDE OVERRIDE instruction in llm section
- Add "Consult style_guide" action in Step 3 for mid-flow refresh

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-24 00:24:54 -06:00
forcetrainer
4346f0bcf3 Remove previous/next article footer navigation from docs site (#1385)
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-24 00:24:13 -06:00
Brian Madison
431b961451 Update agent command file naming to include -agent- in filename
- Change agent command files from bmad_module_name to bmad_module_agent_name
- Update path-utils.js to insert 'agent' segment in agent file names
- Update CSV files to reflect new underscore naming convention
- Refactor toUnderscorePath to use toUnderscoreName for consistency
- Update parseUnderscoreName to handle new agent naming pattern

Examples:
- bmm/agents/pm.md → bmad_bmm_agent_pm.md (was bmad_bmm_pm.md)
- cis/agents/brainstorming.md → bmad_cis_agent_brainstorming.md
- Core agents: bmad_agent_name.md
2026-01-23 22:30:14 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
def8da0acb refactor: replace 'execute' with 'Read fully and follow:' in workflow prompts (#1387)
Replace ambiguous "execute" terminology with explicit "Read fully and follow:"
phrasing across all workflow files to prevent LLM goal-seeking behavior where
models attempt to "achieve the end result" rather than following step-by-step
instructions verbatim.

Changes:
- Update 5 handler templates with canonical phrasing
- Replace ~150 INSTRUCTIONAL patterns across 87 workflow files
- Add "[Workflow] complete." prefix to 7 workflow endpoints
- Preserve BEHAVIORAL/STRUCTURAL patterns (agent descriptions, XML tags)
- Fix gitignore and markdownlint to ignore all node_modules directories

Closes #1372

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-23 22:25:19 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
48881f86a6 doc: test design refinements (#1382) 2026-01-23 13:00:48 -06:00
Brian Madison
efbe839a0a installer cleanup 2026-01-23 00:27:26 -06:00
Brian Madison
3f9ad4868c versioned module downloads and manifest 2026-01-23 00:27:26 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
aad132c9b1 feat: add optional also_consider input to adversarial review task (#1371)
Add an optional also_consider parameter that allows callers to pass
domain-specific areas to keep in mind during review. This gently nudges
the reviewer toward specific concerns without overriding normal analysis.

Testing showed:
- Specific items steer strongly (questions get directly answered)
- Domain-focused items shift the lens (e.g., security focus = deeper security findings)
- Vague items have minimal effect (similar to baseline)
- Single items nudge without dominating
- Contradictory items handled gracefully

Includes test cases with sample content and 10 configurations to validate
the parameter behavior across different use cases.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-22 22:26:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
c9f2dc51db docs: update README with proper welcome and GitHub links 2026-01-22 21:34:08 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
6eb7c34752 docs: update test-design workflow to generate two documents for system-level mode (#1367)
* docs: update test-design workflow to generate two documents for system-level mode

* addressed pr comments
2026-01-22 14:29:33 -06:00
Brian Madison
9b9f43fcb9 fix: reorder mergeModuleHelpCatalogs after generateManifests
The mergeModuleHelpCatalogs function depends on agent-manifest.csv
being populated, but was being called before generateManifests.
This caused new modules' agent info to be empty in the help catalog.

Fixes issue where game-dev-studio workflows weren't appearing
in bmad-help.csv and IDE commands weren't being generated.
2026-01-22 00:39:00 -06:00
Brian Madison
77a53a20ed Update module-help.csv format
Refine format documentation and phase ordering guidance
2026-01-22 00:04:32 -06:00
Brian Madison
5d89298fe8 brainstorming docs now go to /brainstorming folder instead of /analysis 2026-01-21 23:18:38 -06:00
Brian Madison
421a811e87 added diagrams to module help 2026-01-21 21:16:44 -06:00
Brian Madison
c9c3d31d3a add the phase four items to the workflow csv for bmm. compile all csv to a install file. improve the bmad-help to know how to work with the csv that contains the workflows from all installed modules 2026-01-21 20:47:43 -06:00
Brian Madison
ec8ab0c638 workflow tracking evolved to bmad-help 2026-01-21 14:05:57 -06:00
Brian Madison
aae7923d5d standardize installer flat command list with naming convention standardization to make workflow update 2026-01-21 12:22:32 -06:00
Brian Madison
3734607994 workflow drastic simplification and more reliable 2026-01-20 01:12:20 -06:00
Brian Madison
e29a1273e1 remove legacy workflow manager 2026-01-19 21:52:04 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
01bbe2a3ef fix: add sprint-status.yaml sync to correct-course workflow (#1358)
The correct-course workflow restructures epics but did not update
sprint-status.yaml, leaving tracking out of sync. Added check-item 6.4
to Section 6 (after user approval) to update sprint-status.yaml when
epics are added, removed, renumbered, or stories are modified.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-19 11:09:10 -06:00
Brian Madison
73135bee8e gitignore ide installs settings and removed gamedev doc reference 2026-01-19 02:18:14 -06:00
Brian Madison
6f8f0871cf Project Cleanup of Agents Menus, BMB module removal to other repo 2026-01-19 02:04:14 -06:00
Brian Madison
14bfa5b224 bmad builder removed to new repo 2026-01-18 20:44:57 -06:00
Brian Madison
83641eee9d improve all install prompts 2026-01-18 17:27:50 -06:00
Brian Madison
a96ea2f19a project licence, contribution and discord noise updates, along with improved simplified issue templates 2026-01-18 17:03:47 -06:00
Brian Madison
28e6dded4d installation for remote modules now indicates its getching or installing so it does not appear to be hung when caching the remote in the local npm cache 2026-01-18 08:11:35 -06:00
Brian Madison
966ca5db0b indicator when external modules are being downloaded during install so installer does not appear to be frozen / unresponsive. 2026-01-18 02:16:25 -06:00
forcetrainer
e0318d9da8 feat: update website header with new BMAD Method branding (#1352)
* docs: apply style guide to TEA Lite quickstart

- Remove duplicate H1 header (frontmatter provides title)
- Remove horizontal rules throughout
- Convert Prerequisites to admonition
- Add Quick Path TL;DR admonition
- Convert Key Takeaway to tip admonition
- Convert TEA Workflows list to Quick Reference table
- Convert Troubleshooting to Common Questions FAQ format
- Rename Need Help to Getting Help section
- Remove redundant Feedback section

Also adds missing @clack/prompts dependency from upstream merge.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: spell out acronyms in TEA Lite quickstart

- MCP → Model Context Protocol
- E2E → End-to-end (also fix missing article)
- CI/CD → Continuous integration/continuous deployment
- ATDD → Acceptance Test-Driven Development
- TDD → Test-Driven Development
- NFR → non-functional requirements
- Remove inaccurate CRUD reference

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: spell out TDD in ATDD link text

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: update branding with new wordmark logo and banner

- Add banner image to README header
- Replace website logo with wordmark, hiding title text
- Left-align logo with sidebar by reducing header padding

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: update README banner to new design with waveform

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: add banner to docs website welcome page

- Revert README to original banner
- Add waveform banner to docs site welcome page

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: use waveform banner as website header logo

- Remove banner from welcome page content
- Update header logo to use banner-bmad-method2.png

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: add separate logo for dark mode

Use banner-bmad-method-dark.png in dark mode for better blending

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: update header logos for light and dark modes

- Light mode: bmad-light.png (dark blue background with lightning)
- Dark mode: bmad-dark.png (light background variant)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: clean up unused banner images and add readme2

- Remove unused banner-bmad-method2.png and bmad-wordmark.png
- Add readme2.md with upcoming features section
- Update banner-bmad-method-dark.png

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: remove unused banner image variants

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: finalize header logo graphics

- Rename bmad-light2.png to bmad-light.png as final version
- Remove readme2.md draft

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-18 00:25:12 -06:00
MarkRadaba
4a983d64a7 chore: add .github/agents to gitignore (#1353)
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-17 23:35:08 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
f25fcc686c fix: web bundler entry point (#1341)
* fix: web bundler entry point

* removed the web-bundles folder

* added web-bundles to gitignore

* disabled web bundles

---------

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-17 16:30:59 -06:00
forcetrainer
411cded4d0 docs: apply style guide to TEA Lite quickstart (#1342)
* docs: apply style guide to TEA Lite quickstart

- Remove duplicate H1 header (frontmatter provides title)
- Remove horizontal rules throughout
- Convert Prerequisites to admonition
- Add Quick Path TL;DR admonition
- Convert Key Takeaway to tip admonition
- Convert TEA Workflows list to Quick Reference table
- Convert Troubleshooting to Common Questions FAQ format
- Rename Need Help to Getting Help section
- Remove redundant Feedback section

Also adds missing @clack/prompts dependency from upstream merge.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: spell out acronyms in TEA Lite quickstart

- MCP → Model Context Protocol
- E2E → End-to-end (also fix missing article)
- CI/CD → Continuous integration/continuous deployment
- ATDD → Acceptance Test-Driven Development
- TDD → Test-Driven Development
- NFR → non-functional requirements
- Remove inaccurate CRUD reference

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: spell out TDD in ATDD link text

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Murat K Ozcan <34237651+muratkeremozcan@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-01-17 16:17:18 -06:00
Brian Madison
a50d82df1c remove subagent installation option from CC and antigravity - subagents install have been replaced with the better subprocess request / task agents to allow for more ideas to use the tool they have available to generate needed subagent functionality on the fly. 2026-01-17 02:16:46 -06:00
Brian Madison
d022e569bd remove gamedev and cis docs 2026-01-17 02:03:48 -06:00
Brian Madison
7990ad528c minor doc updates related to cis removal from repo 2026-01-17 01:33:12 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
5881790068 Merge pull request #1345 from jheyworth/fix-todomvc-url
Fix TodoMVC example URL to include /dist/ path
2026-01-16 11:31:45 -06:00
jheyworth
d83a88da66 Fix remaining TodoMVC URL references in documentation
Updated 2 additional files to use the correct /dist/ path:
- docs/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md: Standalone mode example
- docs/reference/tea/configuration.md: Playwright BASE_URL example

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-16 12:09:19 +00:00
jheyworth
7b68d1a326 Fix TodoMVC example URL to include /dist/ path
Updated all references to TodoMVC URL from https://todomvc.com/examples/react/
to https://todomvc.com/examples/react/dist/ for correct working example.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-16 11:12:20 +00:00
Brian Madison
7cd4926adb project-root stutter fix 2026-01-15 23:03:02 -06:00
Brian Madison
0fa53ad144 removing docs accidentally added to wrong repo docs folder 2026-01-15 22:30:43 -06:00
Brian Madison
afee68ca99 temp disable WDS from installer to first resolve some module issues 2026-01-15 22:20:56 -06:00
Brian Madison
b952d28fb3 Modify installation now will remove modules that get unselected, with an option to confirm the deletion 2026-01-15 22:20:56 -06:00
Brian Madison
577c1aa218 remove modules moved to new repos and update installer to support the remote module isntallation and updates. this is a temporary imlemtation machanism 2026-01-15 22:20:56 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
abba7ee987 docs: removed enterprise folder (#1340) 2026-01-15 19:32:55 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
d34efa2695 docs: fixed tea sidebar links (#1338)
* docs: fixed tea sidebar links

* fix: removed the additional label
2026-01-15 19:25:21 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
87b1292e3f docs: named TEA links consistently (#1337) 2026-01-15 18:01:37 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
43f7eee29a docs: fix docs build (#1336)
* docs: fix docs build

* docs: conditional pre-commit

* fix: included more LLM exclude patterns

* fix: iclude docs:build

---------

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-15 16:44:14 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
96f21be73e docs: optimize style guide for LLM readers (#1321)
* docs: optimize style guide for LLM readers

Restructure documentation style guide with dependency-first ordering
and LLM-optimized content based on editorial-review-structure analysis.

Key changes:
- Add Universal Formatting Rules section at top (consolidated anti-patterns)
- Move Visual Hierarchy and formatting rules before document types
- Add Document Types decision table for type selection
- Move Before/After example to follow Visual Hierarchy
- Merge Links/Images into single Assets table
- Move tutorial-specific checklist into Tutorial Structure section
- Move Validation Steps to end (submission workflow)
- Cut abstract Quick Principles (no execution value for LLMs)
- Remove emotional/orientation language throughout
- Condense FAQ Sections structure

Result: ~35% reduction (539 deletions, 383 insertions) with improved
parseability for AI agents writing documentation.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: clarify explanation checklist admonition limit

Disambiguate 2-3 admonitions max to explicitly show it is a per-document
limit that still respects the universal per-section rule.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: clarify header budget vs structure template relationship

Add note explaining that structure templates show content flow, not 1:1
header mapping. Admonitions and inline elements are within sections.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: remove horizontal rules to follow own guidelines

Remove all --- section separators to comply with Universal Formatting
Rules. The ## headers provide sufficient visual separation.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: address PR review findings for style guide

- Fix forward reference in Header Budget section
- Clarify descriptions rule scope (tables and 5+ item lists)
- Restore realistic FAQ examples
- Add qualifier to admonition content length guideline

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: further optimize style guide as delta-only document

- Add opener declaring adherence to Google Style Guide and Diataxis
- Remove generic Google style guide sections (Visual Hierarchy patterns,
  Tables constraints, Code Blocks, Lists, Assets)
- Remove Diataxis explainer content (Document Types table, "X documents
  do Y" explanatory sentences, Before/After example)
- Keep all project-specific structure templates and checklists
- Consolidate rules into single Project-Specific Rules table

Result: 367 lines (down from 597), pure delta document assuming
LLM training knowledge of baseline standards.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-15 16:41:57 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
66e7d3a36d docs: tea in 4; Diátaxis (#1320)
* docs: tea in 4; Diátaxis

* docs: addressed review comments

* docs: refined the docs
2026-01-15 13:18:37 -06:00
Brian Madison
2b7f7ff421 minor updates to installer multiselects 2026-01-14 23:48:50 -06:00
Brian Madison
3360666c2a remove hard inclusion of AV from installer, to replace with module soon 2026-01-14 23:04:19 -06:00
Nwokoma Chukwuma U.
274dea16fa Fix YAML indentation in kilo.js customInstructions field (#1291)
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-14 21:26:10 -06:00
Kevin Heidt
dcd581c84a Fix glob pattern to use forward slashes (#1241)
Normalize source directory path for glob pattern compatibility.

Reviewed-by: Alex Verkhovsky <alexey.verkhovsky@gmail.com>
2026-01-14 21:16:23 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
6d84a60a78 docs: tea entry points and resume tip (#1246)
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-14 21:13:48 -06:00
Eduard Voiculescu
59e1b7067c remove remember the users name is {user_name}, it is already present in the activation-steps.txt (#1315) 2026-01-14 21:04:43 -06:00
sjennings
1d8df63ac5 feat(bmgd): Add E2E testing methodology and scaffold workflow (#1322)
* feat(bmgd): Add E2E testing methodology and scaffold workflow

- Add comprehensive e2e-testing.md knowledge fragment
- Add e2e-scaffold workflow for infrastructure generation
- Update qa-index.csv with e2e-testing fragment reference
- Update game-qa.agent.yaml with ES trigger
- Update test-design and automate instructions with E2E guidance
- Update unity-testing.md with E2E section reference

* fix(bmgd): improve E2E testing infrastructure robustness

- Add WaitForValueApprox overloads for float/double comparisons
- Fix assembly definition to use precompiledReferences for test runners
- Fix CaptureOnFailure to yield before screenshot capture (main thread)
- Add error handling to test file cleanup with try/catch
- Fix ClickButton to use FindObjectsByType and check scene.isLoaded
- Add engine-specific output paths (Unity/Unreal/Godot) to workflow
- Fix knowledge_fragments paths to use correct relative paths

* feat(bmgd): add E2E testing support for Godot and Unreal

Godot:
- Add C# testing with xUnit/NSubstitute alongside GDScript GUT
- Add E2E infrastructure: GameE2ETestFixture, ScenarioBuilder,
  InputSimulator, AsyncAssert (all GDScript)
- Add example E2E tests and quick checklist

Unreal:
- Add E2E infrastructure extending AFunctionalTest
- Add GameE2ETestBase, ScenarioBuilder, InputSimulator classes
- Add AsyncTestHelpers with latent commands and macros
- Add example E2E tests for combat and turn cycle
- Add CLI commands for running E2E tests

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Jennings <scott.jennings+CIGINT@cloudimperiumgames.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-14 20:53:40 -06:00
VJSai
993d02b8b3 Enhance security policy documentation (#1312)
Expanded the security policy to include supported versions, reporting guidelines, response timelines, security scope, and best practices for users.

Co-authored-by: Alex Verkhovsky <alexey.verkhovsky@gmail.com>
2026-01-14 16:27:52 -06:00
Davor Racic
5cb5606ba3 fix(cli): replace inquirer with @clack/prompts for Windows compatibility (#1316)
* fix(cli): replace inquirer with @clack/prompts for Windows compatibility

- Add new prompts.js wrapper around @clack/prompts to fix Windows arrow
  key navigation issues (libuv #852)
- Fix validation logic in github-copilot.js that always returned true
- Add support for primitive choice values (string/number) in select/multiselect
- Add 'when' property support for conditional questions in prompt()
- Update all IDE installers to use new prompts module

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(cli): address code review feedback for prompts migration

- Move @clack/prompts from devDependencies to dependencies (critical)
- Remove unused inquirer dependency
- Fix potential crash in multiselect when initialValues is undefined
- Add async validator detection with explicit error message
- Extract validateCustomContentPathSync method in ui.js
- Extract promptInstallLocation methods in claude-code.js and antigravity.js
- Fix moduleId -> missing.id in installer.js remove flow
- Update multiselect to support native clack API (options/initialValues)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* chore: update comments to reference @clack/prompts instead of inquirer

- Update bmad-cli.js comment about CLI prompts
- Update config-collector.js JSDoc comments
- Rename inquirer variable to choiceUtils in ui.js
- Update JSDoc returns and calls documentation

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(cli): add spacing between prompts and installation progress

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(cli): add multiselect usage hints for inexperienced users

Add inline navigation hints to all multiselect prompts showing
(↑/↓ navigate, SPACE select, ENTER confirm) to help users
unfamiliar with terminal multiselect controls.

Also restore detailed warning when no tools are selected,
explaining that SPACE must be pressed to select items.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat(cli): restore IDE grouping using groupMultiselect

Replace flat multiselect with native @clack/prompts groupMultiselect
component to restore visual grouping of IDE/tool options:
- "Previously Configured" - pre-selected IDEs from existing install
- "Recommended Tools" - starred preferred options
- "Additional Tools" - other available options

This restores the grouped UX that was lost during the Inquirer.js
to @clack/prompts migration.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-14 16:25:35 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
eeebf152af docs: tea editorial review (#1313)
* docs: tea editorial review

* fix: addressed nit pick
2026-01-13 02:27:25 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
d419ac8a70 feat: add editorial review tasks for structure and prose (#1307)
* feat: add editorial review tasks for structure and prose

Add two complementary editorial review tasks:

- editorial-review-structure.xml: Structural editor that proposes cuts,
  reorganization, and simplification. Includes 5 document archetype models
  (Tutorial, Reference, Explanation, Prompt, Strategic) for targeted evaluation.

- editorial-review-prose.xml: Clinical copy-editor for prose improvements
  using Microsoft Writing Style Guide as baseline.

Both tasks support humans and llm target audiences with different principles.

* fix: add content-sacrosanct guardrail to editorial review tasks

Both editorial review tasks (prose and structure) were missing the key
constraint that reviewers should never challenge the ideas/knowledge
themselves—only how clearly they are communicated. This restores the
original design intent.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: align reader_type parameter naming across editorial tasks

Prose task was using 'target_audience' for the humans/llm optimization
flag while structure task correctly separates 'target_audience' (who
reads) from 'reader_type' (optimization mode). Aligns to reader_type.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-13 00:20:04 +08:00
Murat K Ozcan
568249e985 Merge pull request #1309 from forcetrainer/main
docs: comprehensive documentation overhaul with style guide expansion
2026-01-12 06:04:45 -06:00
forcetrainer
c0f6401902 docs: add token usage FAQ and fix broken links
- Add "Why does BMad use so many tokens?" FAQ explaining design tradeoff
  (decision quality over code velocity)
- Fix stale anchor #adversarial-review-general → #adversarial-review
- Remove link to archived customize-workflows.md

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-12 00:31:54 -05:00
forcetrainer
e535f94325 docs: comprehensive style guide update with reference and glossary standards
Style Guide Additions:
- Add Reference Structure section with 6 document types (Index, Catalog,
  Deep-Dive, Configuration, Glossary, Comprehensive)
- Add Glossary Structure section with table-based format leveraging
  Starlight's right-nav for navigation
- Include checklists for both new document types

Reference Docs Updated:
- agents/index.md: Catalog format, universal commands tip admonition
- configuration/core-tasks.md: Configuration format with admonitions
- configuration/global-config.md: Table-based config reference
- workflows/index.md: Minimal index format
- workflows/core-workflows.md: Catalog format
- workflows/document-project.md: Deep-dive with Quick Facts admonition
- workflows/bmgd-workflows.md: Comprehensive format, removed ~30 hr rules

Glossary Rewritten:
- Converted from 373 lines with ### headers to 123 lines with tables
- Right nav now shows 9 categories instead of 50+ terms
- Added italic context markers (*BMGD.*, *Brownfield.*, etc.)
- Alphabetized terms within categories
- Removed redundant inline TOC

All Docs:
- Remove horizontal rules (---) per style guide
- Remove "Related" sections (sidebar handles navigation)
- Standardize admonition usage
- Archive deleted workflow customization docs

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-12 00:23:05 -05:00
forcetrainer
e465ce4bb5 docs: fix year typo in README (2025 -> 2026)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-11 12:01:37 -05:00
forcetrainer
9d328082eb Merge upstream/main 2026-01-11 11:46:30 -05:00
Alex Verkhovsky
d4f6642333 fix: add missing review menu and HALT to quick-spec step 4 (#1305)
Step 4 was missing a structured menu at the spec review checkpoint.
This caused agents to skip past the approval step without waiting for
explicit user confirmation.

Added:
- Review menu with [y] Approve, [c] Changes, [q] Questions, [a] Advanced Elicitation, [p] Party Mode
- Explicit HALT instruction
- Menu handling section

This aligns step 4 with the menu-driven pattern used in steps 1-3.

Fixes #1304

Also fixes pre-existing prettier issue in src/modules/cis/module.yaml.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-11 17:04:52 +08:00
forcetrainer
9f85dade25 docs: capitalize support section descriptions
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-11 00:28:29 -05:00
forcetrainer
5870651bad docs: enhance README free/open source messaging and support section
- Expand tagline: "No gated Discord", "empowering everyone"
- Add emojis and stronger CTAs to Support section
- Consolidate star/subscribe asks into Support section

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-11 00:24:58 -05:00
forcetrainer
eff826eef9 docs: add open source philosophy and support options to README
- Add "100% free and open source" tagline at top
- Update YouTube line with upcoming master class/podcast
- Add "Help us grow" CTA for stars and subs
- Add new "Support BMad" section with donation and speaking info

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-11 00:18:34 -05:00
Brian Madison
0a3cc1d12c release: bump to v6.0.0-alpha.23 2026-01-11 13:16:49 +08:00
Brian
c3b7e98241 Workflow Creator and Validator Tools with Sub Process Support and PRD Validation Step now available!
* critical file issues in prd refactor resolved caught using the BMB workflow validator!!
* subprocess optimization and path violation checks in the workflow validator, along with fixes to the BMM PRD workflow
* standardize workflow and PRD step markdown formatting
- Improve consistency across workflow validation steps
- Standardize PRD innovation step structure
* Workflow Validation Max Parallel Mode POC
* prd trimodal compliant
* correct PRD completion suggested next steps
2026-01-11 11:13:38 +08:00
Murat K Ozcan
2f98f9130a docs: add TEA design philosophy callout and context engineering glossary entry (#1303) 2026-01-11 09:23:25 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
c18904d674 refactor: rename create-tech-spec to quick-spec for QuickFlow branding (#1290) 2026-01-10 11:33:00 +08:00
Murat K Ozcan
3e3c92ed3e docs: expand TEA documentation with cheat sheets, MCP enhancements, a… (#1289)
* docs: expand TEA documentation with cheat sheets, MCP enhancements, and API testing patterns

* docs: update TEA fragment counts and fix playwright-utils code examples

* docs: addressed PR review concerns

* docs: update TEA MCP configuration link to point to documentation site
2026-01-10 02:55:57 +08:00
forcetrainer
12d3492e0c Add link auditor, reorganize documentation, and README update (#1277)
* feat: add link auditor tools and fix broken docs links

- Add audit-doc-links.js to scan docs for broken links with auto-resolution
- Add fix-doc-links.js to apply suggested fixes (dry-run by default)
- Remove stale "Back to Core Concepts" breadcrumb links
- Update BMad acronym to "Breakthrough Method of Agile AI Driven Development"
- Update README links to docs.bmad-method.org
- Simplify upgrade callout in getting-started tutorial

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: reorganize docs structure and archive v4 tutorial

- Remove unused section index files (tutorials, how-to, explanation, reference)
- Move getting-started-bmadv4.md to _archive
- Update quick-start-bmgd.md to remove archived file reference
- Update upgrade-to-v6.md
- Update astro.config.mjs for new structure

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: ignore underscore directories in link checker

Update check-doc-links.js to skip _archive, _planning, and other
underscore-prefixed directories when validating links.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: add v4 users section to README

Add links to v4 documentation archive and upgrade guide for users
migrating from previous versions.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat: convert docs to site-relative links and add validation tools

- Convert all relative links (./  ../) to site-relative paths (/path/)
- Strip .md extensions and use trailing slashes for Astro/Starlight
- Add fix-doc-links.js to convert relative links to site-relative
- Add validate-doc-links.js to check links point to existing files
- Remove old audit-doc-links.js and check-doc-links.js
- Update build-docs.js to use new validation script
- Add npm scripts: docs:fix-links, docs:validate-links
- Update style guide with validation steps

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: standardize acronym to BMad across documentation

Replace incorrect "BMAD" with correct "BMad" in text and frontmatter
while preserving "BMAD-METHOD" in GitHub URLs.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: fix BMad acronym and remove draft README

- Correct acronym to "Breakthrough Method of Agile AI Driven Development"
- Remove unused README-draft.md

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: standardize BMad acronym in README

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: standardize FAQ format across all FAQ pages

- Add TOC with jump links under "## Questions"
- Use ### headers for questions (no Q: prefix)
- Direct answers without **A:** prefix
- Remove horizontal rules and "Related Documentation" sections
- End each FAQ with issue/Discord CTA
- Update style guide with new FAQ guidelines
- Delete redundant faq/index.md (sidebar handles navigation)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: use repo-relative links with .md for GitHub compatibility

Convert all documentation links to repo-relative format (/docs/path/file.md)
so they work when browsing on GitHub. The rehype plugin strips /docs/ prefix
and converts .md to trailing slash at build time for Astro/Starlight.

- Update rehype-markdown-links.js to strip /docs/ prefix from absolute paths
- Update fix-doc-links.js to generate /docs/ prefixed paths with .md extension
- Convert 217 links across 64 files to new format

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: handle /docs/ prefix in link validator

Update resolveLink to strip /docs/ prefix from repo-relative links
before checking if files exist.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: restore FAQ index page

Re-add the FAQ index page that was accidentally deleted, with
updated repo-relative link format.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Verkhovsky <alexey.verkhovsky@gmail.com>
2026-01-10 02:55:33 +08:00
Phil
677a00280b feat: refactor Cursor IDE setup to do command generation and cleanup instead of rules (#1283)
* feat: refactor Cursor IDE setup to do  command generation and cleanup instead of rules

- Added support for command generation in the Cursor IDE setup, including the creation of a new commands directory.
- Implemented cleanup for old BMAD commands alongside existing rules.
- Integrated TaskToolCommandGenerator for generating task and tool commands.
- Updated logging to reflect the number of agents, tasks, tools, and workflow commands generated during setup.

* style: adjust constructor formatting and update command path in Cursor IDE setup

- Reformatted the constructor method for consistency.
- Updated the command path syntax in the Cursor IDE setup to use a more standard format.

* fix: update Cursor command paths in documentation

- Changed the command path for Cursor IDE setup from `.cursor/rules/bmad/` to `.cursor/commands/bmad/` in both installers.md and modules.md.
- Updated file extension references to use `.md` instead of `.mdc` for consistency.
2026-01-09 16:39:32 +08:00
Q00
d19cca79d2 fix: resolve ERR_REQUIRE_ESM by using dynamic import for inquirer (#1278)
Inquirer v9+ is ESM-only, causing ERR_REQUIRE_ESM when loaded via
require() in CommonJS. Convert all require('inquirer') calls to
dynamic import('inquirer') across 8 CLI files.

Fixes #1197
2026-01-08 15:42:22 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
8e165b9b57 chore: enable CodeRabbit auto-review on new PRs (#1276) 2026-01-08 07:59:30 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
67b70288a6 docs: update README links to new documentation site (#1274) 2026-01-08 07:58:53 +08:00
Brian Madison
5c76657732 Add CNAME file 2026-01-07 18:18:12 +08:00
Brian Madison
7bf05c9d9d fix missing scripts from installation, and add ability to exclude workflows from being added as commands in tools, the first being the example workflow meant just for workflow example to the workflow builder 2026-01-07 16:21:25 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
692f14f2e7 docs: add how-to guide for getting BMAD answers + fix Discord channels (#1265)
* docs: add how-to guide for getting BMAD answers + fix Discord channels

- New guide: docs/how-to/get-answers-about-bmad.md
  Teaches users to point LLMs at BMAD sources for self-serve answers

- Fixed outdated Discord channel references across 8 files:
  #general-dev → #bmad-development
  #bugs-issues → #report-bugs-and-issues
  Added #suggestions-feedback and #bmad-method-help where appropriate

* docs: add Mayakovsky-style poem to how-to guide
2026-01-07 16:05:05 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
2e16650067 feat(docs): Diataxis restructure + Astro/Starlight migration (#1263)
* feat(docs): add Diataxis folder structure and update sidebar styling

- Create tutorials, how-to, explanation, reference directories with subdirectories
- Add index.md files for each main Diataxis section
- Update homepage with Diataxis card navigation layout
- Implement clean React Native-inspired sidebar styling
- Convert sidebar to autogenerated for both Diataxis and legacy sections
- Update docusaurus config with dark mode default and navbar changes

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat(docs): migrate Phase 1 files to Diataxis structure

Move 21 files to new locations:
- Tutorials: quick-start guides, agent creation guide
- How-To: installation, customization, workflows
- Explanation: core concepts, features, game-dev, builder
- Reference: merged glossary from BMM and BMGD

Also:
- Copy images to new locations
- Update internal links via migration script (73 links updated)
- Build verified successfully

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(docs): add category labels for sidebar folders

Add _category_.json files to control display labels and position
for autogenerated sidebar categories.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* style(docs): improve welcome page and visual styling

- Rewrite index.md with React Native-inspired welcoming layout
- Add Diataxis section cards with descriptions
- Remove sidebar separator, add spacing instead
- Increase navbar padding with responsive breakpoints
- Add rounded admonitions without left border bar
- Use system font stack for better readability
- Add lighter chevron styling in sidebar
- Constrain max-width to 1600px for wide viewports

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: use baseUrl in meta tag paths for correct deployment URLs

* feat(docs): complete Phase 2 - split files and fix broken links

Phase 2 of Diataxis migration:
- Split 16 large legacy files into 42+ focused documents
- Created FAQ section with 7 topic-specific files
- Created brownfield how-to guides (3 files)
- Created workflow how-to guides (15+ files)
- Created architecture explanation files (3 files)
- Created TEA/testing explanation files
- Moved remaining legacy module files to proper Diataxis locations

Link fixes:
- Fixed ~50 broken internal links across documentation
- Updated relative paths for new file locations
- Created missing index files for installation, advanced tutorials
- Simplified TOC anchors to fix Docusaurus warnings

Cleanup:
- Removed legacy sidebar entries for deleted folders
- Deleted duplicate and empty placeholder files
- Moved workflow diagram assets to tutorials/images

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(build): use file glob instead of sidebar parsing for llms-full.txt

Replace brittle sidebar.js regex parsing with recursive file glob.
The old approach captured non-file strings like 'autogenerated' and
category labels, resulting in only 5 files being processed.

Now correctly processes all 86+ markdown files (~95k tokens).

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(seo): use absolute URLs in AI meta tags for agent discoverability

AI web-browsing agents couldn't follow relative paths in meta tags due to
URL security restrictions. Changed llms-full.txt and llms.txt meta tag
URLs from relative (baseUrl) to absolute (urlParts.origin + baseUrl).

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor(docs): recategorize misplaced files per Diataxis analysis

Phase 2.5 categorization fixes based on post-migration analysis:

Moved to correct Diataxis categories:
- tutorials/installation.md → deleted (duplicate of how-to/install-bmad.md)
- tutorials/brownfield-onboarding.md → how-to/brownfield/index.md
- reference/faq/* (8 files) → explanation/faq/
- reference/agents/barry-quick-flow.md → explanation/agents/
- reference/agents/bmgd-agents.md → explanation/game-dev/agents.md

Created:
- explanation/agents/index.md

Fixed all broken internal links (14 total)

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat(docs): add Getting Started tutorial and simplify build script

- Add comprehensive Getting Started tutorial with installation as Step 1
- Simplify build-docs.js to read directly from docs/ (no consolidation)
- Remove backup/restore dance that could corrupt docs folder on build failure
- Remove ~150 lines of unused consolidation code

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(css): use fixed width layout to prevent content shifting

Apply React Native docs approach: set both width and max-width at
largest breakpoint (1400px) so content area maintains consistent
size regardless of content length. Switches to fluid 100% below
1416px breakpoint.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor(docs): restructure tutorials with renamed entry point

- Rename index.md to bmad-tutorial.md for clearer navigation
- Remove redundant tutorials/index.md
- Update sidebar and config references

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat(docs): add tutorial style guide and AI agent announcement bar

- Add docs/_contributing/ with tutorial style guide
- Reformat quick-start-bmm.md and bmad-tutorial.md per style guide
- Remove horizontal separators, add strategic admonitions
- Add persistent announcement bar for AI agents directing to llms-full.txt
- Fix footer broken link to tutorials

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat(docs): add markdown demo page and UI refinements

- Add comprehensive markdown-demo.md for style testing
- Remove doc category links from navbar (use sidebar instead)
- Remove card buttons from welcome page
- Add dark mode styling for announcement bar
- Clean up index.md card layout

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat(docs): apply unified tutorial style and update references

- Reformat create-custom-agent.md to follow tutorial style guide
- Update tutorial-style.md with complete unified structure
- Update all internal references to renamed tutorial files
- Remove obsolete advanced/index.md

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor(docs): migrate from Docusaurus to Astro+Starlight

Replace Docusaurus with Astro and the Starlight documentation theme
for improved performance, better customization, and modern tooling.

Build pipeline changes:
- New build-docs.js orchestrates link checking, artifact generation,
  and Astro build in sequence
- Add check-doc-links.js for validating internal links and anchors
- Generate llms.txt and llms-full.txt for LLM-friendly documentation
- Create downloadable source bundles (bmad-sources.zip, bmad-prompts.zip)
- Suppress MODULE_TYPELESS_PACKAGE_JSON warning in Astro build
- Output directly to build/site for cleaner deployment

Website architecture:
- Add rehype-markdown-links.js plugin to transform .md links to routes
- Add site-url.js helper for GitHub Pages URL resolution with strict
  validation (throws on invalid GITHUB_REPOSITORY format)
- Custom Astro components: Banner, Header, MobileMenuFooter
- Symlink docs/ into website/src/content/docs for Starlight

Documentation cleanup:
- Remove Docusaurus _category_.json files (Starlight uses frontmatter)
- Convert all docs to use YAML frontmatter with title field
- Move downloads.md from website/src/pages to docs/
- Consolidate style guide and workflow diagram docs
- Add 404.md and tutorials/index.md

---------

Co-authored-by: forcetrainer <bryan@inagaki.us>
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-07 14:42:15 +08:00
dependabot[bot]
dc7a7f8c43 Bump qs from 6.14.0 to 6.14.1 (#1244)
Bumps [qs](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) from 6.14.0 to 6.14.1.
- [Changelog](https://github.com/ljharb/qs/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/ljharb/qs/compare/v6.14.0...v6.14.1)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: qs
  dependency-version: 6.14.1
  dependency-type: indirect
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Verkhovsky <alexey.verkhovsky@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-07 11:21:14 +08:00
Brian Madison
987410eb75 workflows doc addition 2026-01-07 10:29:50 +08:00
Brian Madison
f838486caa agent and workflow doc 2026-01-07 10:29:50 +08:00
Davor Racic
51aa3dda2f fix: brainstorming (#1251)
* fix(brainstorming): extend ideation phase with 100+ idea goal

Add emphasis on quantity-first approach to unlock better quality ideas.
Introduce energy checkpoints, multiple continuation options, and clearer
success metrics to keep users in generative exploration mode longer.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(brainstorming): improve exploration menus and fix workflow paths

- Change menu options from numbers [1-4] to letters [K/T/A/B/C] for clearer navigation
- Fix workflow references from .yaml to .md across agents and patterns
- Add universal facilitation rules emphasizing 100+ idea quantity goal
- Update exploration menu with Keep/Try/Advanced/Break/Continue options

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* feat(brainstorming): implement research-backed procedural rigor

Phase 4 achievements:
- Added Anti-Bias Protocol (Every 10 ideas domain pivot)
- Added Chain-of-Thought requirements (Reasoning before generation)
- Implemented Simulated Temperature prompts for higher divergence
- Standardized Idea Format Template for quality control
- Fixed undefined Advanced Elicitation variables
- Synchronized documentation with new [K, T, A, P, C] pattern

* fix(brainstorming): align ideation goals and fix broken workflow paths

- Standardized quantity goals to 100+ ideas across all brainstorming steps
- Fixed broken .yaml references pointing to renamed .md workflow files
- Aligned documentation summaries with mandatory IDEA FORMAT TEMPLATE
- Cleaned up misplaced mindset/goal sections in core workflow file
- Fixed spelling and inconsistencies in facilitation rules

* Fix ambiguous variable names in brainstorming ideation step

* fix(brainstorming): enforce quality growth alongside quantity

* fix: correct dependency format and add missing frontmatter variable

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-07 09:09:03 +08:00
Brian Madison
35ae4fd024 quadrivariate module workflow 2026-01-03 17:12:00 +08:00
Brian Madison
f31659765e trimodal viarate workflow creation 2026-01-03 17:12:00 +08:00
forcetrainer
d1f3844449 Docusaurus build fix - Sidebar and missing image issues (#1243)
* fix(docs): align sidebar with actual docs structure and fix image path

Sidebar referenced non-existent paths (modules/bmm/, getting-started/, etc.)
while actual docs live in different locations (modules/bmm-bmad-method/,
bmad-core-concepts/, etc.). Updated sidebar to match reality so Docusaurus
can build successfully.

Also fixed broken image reference in workflows-guide.md that used an
incorrect relative path.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(docs): update build script to include docs/modules directory

The build script was excluding the modules folder when copying from docs/,
but module docs now live in docs/modules/ instead of src/modules/*/docs/.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(docs): correct broken internal links

Fixed relative paths that were pointing to non-existent locations:
- bmgd index: ../../bmm/docs/index.md → ../bmm/index.md
- cis index: ../../bmm/docs/index.md → ../bmm/index.md
- bmm faq: ./README.md → GitHub URL

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-03 17:09:42 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
05ddc2d29b fix(dev): allow full project-context usage with conflict precedence (#1220) 2026-01-03 09:14:09 +08:00
Brian Madison
c748f0f6cc paths for workflow and sprint tatus files fixed 2026-01-01 21:20:14 +08:00
Andaman Lekawat
4142972b6a fix: standardize variable naming from {project_root} to {project-root} (#1217)
Fixed inconsistent variable naming in workflow instruction files across
CIS, BMGD, and BMM modules. The standard variable format uses hyphens
({project-root}) not underscores ({project_root}).

Affected files:
- CIS: problem-solving, innovation-strategy, design-thinking, storytelling
- BMGD: brainstorm-game, narrative, create-story checklist
- BMM: excalidraw diagrams, create-story checklist

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-01 21:14:21 +08:00
Murat K Ozcan
cd45d22eb6 docs: chose your tea engagement (#1228)
* docs: chose your tea engagement

* docs: addressed PR comments

* docs: made refiements to the mermaid diagram

* docs: wired in test architect discoverability nudges

---------

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2026-01-01 19:06:55 +08:00
Nick Pirocanac
a297235862 fix: *code-review is picking up non-application files (#1232)
Co-authored-by: Nick Pirocanac <nick.pirocanac@rtktickets.com>
2026-01-01 13:22:51 +08:00
Brian Madison
d8b13bdb2e agents all indicate hasSidecar true or false, validation requires it, agent builder and validator and editor use the field. Added a better brownfield doc 2025-12-31 21:30:19 +08:00
lkrysik
8699d7d968 Mixed line endings (Windows CRLF problem) (#1222)
Co-authored-by: lukasz.krysik <lukasz.krysik@effem.com>
2025-12-31 14:44:53 +08:00
Brian Madison
8b92e5ee59 Release 6.0.0-alpha.22
Major features:
- Unified Agent Workflow: Create/Edit/Validate consolidated into single workflow
- Agent Knowledge System: Comprehensive data file architecture for agent building
- Deep Language Integration: All sharded workflows support language choice
- Core Module Documentation: New docs for brainstorming, party mode, advanced elicitation
- BMAD Core Concepts: New documentation structure for agents, workflows, modules
- Create-Tech-Spec Sharded: Converted to sharded format with orient-first pattern

466 files changed, 12,983 insertions(+), 12,047 deletions(-)
2025-12-31 03:06:16 +08:00
Brian Madison
9f53d896b7 agent-workflow create edit validate consolidation 2025-12-31 02:58:03 +08:00
Brian Madison
b46409e71d agent create workflow overhaul to use data files efficiently. updated and created separate user guides for the create agent workflow along with general concept docs of what an agent and workflow are in regards to0 bmad generally. 2025-12-30 22:44:38 +08:00
Brian Madison
8cffd09fb7 agent build intel complete 2025-12-30 17:46:29 +08:00
Brian Madison
2b89ee1302 agent build data optimized 2025-12-30 14:19:00 +08:00
Brian Madison
b72c810a1f bmb agent knowledge streamline in progress 2025-12-30 12:34:54 +08:00
Brian Madison
484990de50 all sharded progressive workflows integrate language choice deeply with each step biased towards configured language. Tested with Spanish and Pirate Speak, worked really well. 2025-12-29 19:35:20 +08:00
Brian Madison
b8836ced24 another inquirer default addition missed, maybe this will fix windows issues also 2025-12-29 15:56:00 +08:00
Brian Madison
c7fcf16eae fix install for alpha instruction in the readme 2025-12-29 15:45:38 +08:00
Brian Madison
529d4a8c95 doc fixes 2025-12-29 09:36:54 +08:00
Brian Madison
f0520c39d9 fix wording in create-epics-and-stories doc discovery continuation 2025-12-29 09:25:56 +08:00
Brian Madison
ff0517f4d0 workflow-status phase paths corrected with current reality 2025-12-29 09:25:56 +08:00
Luke Finch
b509fb9a1e bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.21 and enhance stdin handling for Windows in CLI (#1200) 2025-12-28 22:09:22 +08:00
Brian Madison
e0090e5602 more docs migrations 2025-12-28 21:13:44 +08:00
Brian Madison
8d679b177b advanced elicitation moved to workflows folder. core module extensive documentation added. 2025-12-28 19:44:55 +08:00
Brian Madison
ea421adbf9 create and edit workflow minor fixes 2025-12-27 21:35:39 +08:00
Brian Madison
2a8a4388a9 v4 detection cleanup 2025-12-27 20:31:12 +08:00
Brian Madison
d4a94df29a doc cleanup round 1 2025-12-27 18:29:35 +08:00
Brian Madison
949cf64d3b workflow status, init and phase 4 items aligned with planning_artifacts and implementation_artifacts for discovery and output 2025-12-27 10:59:44 +08:00
Brian Madison
aba9d11c88 quick flow updates to aid discovery and implementation 2025-12-27 10:40:23 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
208f27dcdb refactor: convert create-tech-spec to sharded workflow with orient-first pattern (#1185)
* refactor: convert create-tech-spec to sharded workflow with orient-first pattern

* docs: reposition deep exploration isolation guideline within universal code investigation section

* docs: Update terminology from 'Requirement Delta' to 'Problem Statement' in step-02-investigate.md context.

* Update src/modules/bmm/workflows/bmad-quick-flow/create-tech-spec/steps/step-04-review.md

Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Update src/modules/bmm/workflows/bmad-quick-flow/create-tech-spec/steps/step-01-understand.md

Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-12-27 09:43:59 +08:00
Brian Madison
c15ad174ed chore: bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.21
Major improvements:
- All agents now use consistent 2-letter menu codes (compound triggers)
- Phase 1-3 workflows updated to use planning_artifacts folder
- Windows installer fixed with inquirer multiselection resolution
- Chat and party mode auto-injected into all agents
- All agents pass comprehensive validation checks
- Restored agent files from Docusaurus merge
2025-12-26 20:55:10 +08:00
Brian Madison
24cedea690 phase 3 input disco and output updated 2025-12-26 20:44:45 +08:00
Brian Madison
bdb6bde9b5 disco and output fix for ux design 2025-12-26 20:18:31 +08:00
Brian Madison
cfdffe3f7a prd and brief workflows disco and output fixed 2025-12-26 20:05:02 +08:00
Brian Madison
7b5b7afdc0 update package.json to resolve windows installer issue with inquirer version 2025-12-26 18:05:59 +08:00
Brian Madison
59a0eec2e2 all agents passing new validation checks 2025-12-26 17:34:20 +08:00
Brian Madison
1f16bb7413 agent renormalized, and all now have chat and party mode auto injectioned 2025-12-26 12:00:37 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
b1d1242fcf fix: restore agent files accidentally modified in Docusaurus merge (#1191)
* fix: restore agent files accidentally modified in Docusaurus merge

Restores 25 agent files to their pre-merge state:
- Trigger format with shortcuts (WS, CH, BP, etc.) restored
- Fuzzy matching syntax restored
- BMB module: restores separate agent-builder, module-builder,
  workflow-builder agents; removes consolidated bmad-builder

Also updates test to match restored trigger format.

Note: Schema validation needs update in follow-up commit.

* fix: normalize trigger fuzzy match format for schema validation

- Add dashes to fuzzy match text to match kebab-case triggers
- Add missing 'chat' kebab in CH triggers (CH or chat or fuzzy match on chat)
- Relax schema to allow 1-3 char shortcuts and skip shortcut derivation check
- Remove compound-wrong-shortcut test fixture (no longer validated)

All 24 agent files now pass schema validation.
2025-12-26 06:59:39 +08:00
Brian Madison
47a0ebda4f chore: bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.20
Major improvements:
- Path segregation implementation across 90+ workflow files
- Windows installer fixed with inquirer v9.x upgrade
- Custom installation messages via install-messages.yaml
- Two-version auto upgrade with config preservation
- Quick-dev workflow refactor with adversarial review
- Doc site auto-generation on merge
- Streamlined personas and cleaned up documentation
2025-12-23 23:17:36 +08:00
Murat K Ozcan
1a1a806d99 docs: remove old links in test architect (#1183)
* docs: remove dead links in  test architecture documentation

* docs: updated test architecture documentation for clarity and consistenc

* docs: update test architecture documentation for clarity and consistency

* docs: addressed PR comments
2025-12-23 23:09:08 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
19df17b261 feat: add documentation website with Docusaurus build pipeline (#1177)
* feat: add documentation website with Docusaurus build pipeline

* feat(docs): add AI discovery meta tags for llms.txt files

- Add global headTags with ai-terms, llms, llms-full meta tags
- Update landing page link to clarify AI context purpose

* fix(docs): restore accidentally deleted faq.md and glossary.md

Files were removed in 12dd97fe during path restructuring.

* fix(docs): update broken project-readme links to GitHub URL

* feat(schema): add compound trigger format validation
2025-12-23 23:01:36 +08:00
Brian Madison
925b715d4f prettier no longer should screw up md files underscores 2025-12-23 22:29:51 +08:00
Brian Madison
e4a4f47a1e remove unnecessary \ before _ and disable md auto fix 2025-12-23 22:21:59 +08:00
Brian Madison
4195eb3b30 installation intro and outtro custom messages, configurable in install-messages.yaml 2025-12-23 21:43:29 +08:00
Brian Madison
c0f5d33c61 core module always asks its questions (no accept defaults 2025-12-23 20:52:06 +08:00
Brian Madison
3f76c2de74 ensure config vars are retained in a quick update 2025-12-23 20:17:32 +08:00
Brian Madison
45ff3840a8 2 version auto upgrade only 2025-12-23 20:05:17 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
dcaa892ce1 refactor(bmm): convert quick-dev workflow to sharded format with adversarial review (#1182)
convert quick-dev workflow to sharded format with adversarial review
2025-12-23 17:48:47 +08:00
Brian Madison
00a380a03f remove unused commands that need to be replaced 2025-12-23 17:32:53 +08:00
Brian Madison
12dd97fe9b start implementing new bm paths into phases 1-4 2025-12-23 11:40:38 +08:00
Brian Madison
00ad756acf remove unneeded folder 2025-12-22 19:44:15 +08:00
Brian Madison
021936eaa9 update inquirer to v9.x for better windows support 2025-12-22 18:18:16 +08:00
Brian Madison
da21790531 quickinstall duplicate success message removed 2025-12-22 14:17:32 +08:00
Brian Madison
34cfdddd3a refac tools part 1 2025-12-22 13:12:25 +08:00
Brian Madison
1e721f7fd0 consolidate and remove some duplication 2025-12-22 10:13:56 +08:00
Brian Madison
9c268f8190 remove asterix insertion into agent files 2025-12-22 08:18:53 +08:00
sjennings
e59c7b79ed fix(bmgd): correct workflow-status filename and add sprint-planning update (#1172)
* fix(bmgd): add workflow status update to game-architecture completion

The game-architecture workflow was not updating the bmgd-workflow-status.yaml
file on completion, unlike other BMGD workflows (narrative, brainstorm-game).

Changes:
- Add step 4 "Update Workflow Status" to update create-architecture status
- Renumber subsequent steps (5-8 → 6-9)
- Add success metric for workflow status update
- Add failure condition for missing status update

* feat(bmgd): add generate-project-context workflow for game development

Adds a new workflow to create optimized project-context.md files for AI agent
consistency in game development projects.

New workflow files:
- workflow.md: Main workflow entry point
- project-context-template.md: Template for context file
- steps/step-01-discover.md: Context discovery & initialization
- steps/step-02-generate.md: Rules generation with A/P/C menus
- steps/step-03-complete.md: Finalization & optimization

Integration:
- Added generate-project-context trigger to game-architect agent menu
- Added project context creation option to game-architecture completion step
- Renumbered steps 6-9 → 7-10 to accommodate new step 6

Adapted from BMM generate-project-context with game-specific:
- Engine patterns (Unity, Unreal, Godot)
- Performance and frame budget rules
- Platform-specific requirements
- Game testing patterns

* fix(bmgd): correct workflow-status filename and add sprint-planning update

- Fix all BMGD workflows to reference bmgd-workflow-status.yaml instead of bmm-workflow-status.yaml
- Add workflow-status update to sprint-planning workflow completion

Affected workflows:
- brainstorm-game (instructions.md, step-01-init.md, step-04-complete.md)
- game-brief (instructions.md)
- narrative (instructions-narrative.md, step-11-complete.md)
- game-architecture (instructions.md)
- sprint-planning (instructions.md)

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Jennings <scott.jennings+CIGINT@cloudimperiumgames.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-21 09:30:17 +08:00
Brian Madison
a20198b94b workflow step location fixed in create product brief 2025-12-20 16:39:43 +08:00
Serhii
4271fe5f2b fix(bmm): resolve dead references and syntax errors in agents and workflows (#1164)
- Fix XML syntax error in dev-story/instructions.xml:20 (goto element)
- Fix path typo in tech-writer.agent.yaml (_bmadbmm → _bmad/bmm)
- Fix wrong route in analyst.agent.yaml (edit-agent → party-mode)
- Comment out unimplemented validate-create-story in sm.agent.yaml
- Comment out unimplemented validate-design in ux-designer.agent.yaml
- Remove misleading validate-create-story reference in create-story output

Fixes #1075
Related to #1163

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-20 13:37:09 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
b276d5a387 refactor: streamline quick-flow-solo-dev persona for clarity and accuracy (#1167)
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-20 13:33:55 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
7b762fe211 fix: sync package-lock.json with package.json version (#1168) 2025-12-20 13:31:54 +08:00
sjennings
e39aa33eea fix(bmgd): add workflow status update to game-architecture completion (#1161)
* fix(bmgd): add workflow status update to game-architecture completion

The game-architecture workflow was not updating the bmgd-workflow-status.yaml
file on completion, unlike other BMGD workflows (narrative, brainstorm-game).

Changes:
- Add step 4 "Update Workflow Status" to update create-architecture status
- Renumber subsequent steps (5-8 → 6-9)
- Add success metric for workflow status update
- Add failure condition for missing status update

* feat(bmgd): add generate-project-context workflow for game development

Adds a new workflow to create optimized project-context.md files for AI agent
consistency in game development projects.

New workflow files:
- workflow.md: Main workflow entry point
- project-context-template.md: Template for context file
- steps/step-01-discover.md: Context discovery & initialization
- steps/step-02-generate.md: Rules generation with A/P/C menus
- steps/step-03-complete.md: Finalization & optimization

Integration:
- Added generate-project-context trigger to game-architect agent menu
- Added project context creation option to game-architecture completion step
- Renumbered steps 6-9 → 7-10 to accommodate new step 6

Adapted from BMM generate-project-context with game-specific:
- Engine patterns (Unity, Unreal, Godot)
- Performance and frame budget rules
- Platform-specific requirements
- Game testing patterns

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Jennings <scott.jennings+CIGINT@cloudimperiumgames.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-18 16:14:18 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
2da9aebaa8 docs: add DigitalOcean sponsor attribution (#1162) 2025-12-18 15:58:54 +08:00
Brian Madison
5c756b6404 chore: bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.19
Bug fix:
- Fixed _bmad folder stutter with agent custom files
- Removed unnecessary backup file causing installer bloat
- Improved path handling for agent customizations
2025-12-18 12:52:10 +08:00
Brian Madison
23f650ff4d fixed _bmad folder stutter with agent custom files 2025-12-18 03:22:46 +08:00
Brian Madison
363915b0c6 chore: bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.18
Major improvements:
- BMGD module complete overhaul with professional game development workflows
- New Game QA (GLaDOS) and Game Solo Dev (Indie) agents
- 15 comprehensive testing guides for all major game engines
- Agent recompile feature for quick updates without full reinstall
- Full agent customization support - ALL fields now customizable
- Enhanced custom module installation and management
- Complete BMGD documentation suite with 9 guides
2025-12-17 18:07:41 +08:00
Brian Madison
f36369512b fixed issue with agent customization application, now all fields are customized form the custom yaml. also added a recompile agents menu item 2025-12-17 17:58:37 +08:00
sjennings
ccb64623bc feat(bmgd): comprehensive BMGD module upgrade (#1151)
* feat(bmgd): comprehensive BMGD module upgrade

## New Agents
- **Game QA (GLaDOS)**: Game QA Architect + Test Automation Specialist
  - Engine-specific testing (Unity, Unreal, Godot)
  - Knowledge base with 15+ testing topics
  - Workflows: test-framework, test-design, automate, playtest-plan, performance-test, test-review

- **Game Solo Dev (Indie)**: Elite Indie Game Developer + Quick Flow Specialist
  - Rapid prototyping and iteration focused
  - Quick-flow workflows for solo/small team development

## Production Workflow Alignment
Aligned BMGD 4-production workflows with BMM 4-implementation:

### Removed Obsolete Workflows
- story-done (merged into dev-story)
- story-ready (merged into create-story)
- story-context (merged into create-story)
- epic-tech-context (no longer separate workflow)

### Added Workflows
- sprint-status: View sprint progress, surface risks, recommend next action

### Updated Workflows (now standalone, copied from BMM)
- code-review: Adversarial review with instructions.xml
- correct-course: Sprint change management
- create-story: Direct ready-for-dev marking
- dev-story: TDD implementation with instructions.xml
- retrospective: Epic completion review
- sprint-planning: Sprint status generation

## Game Testing Architecture (gametest/)
New knowledge base for game-specific testing:
- qa-index.csv: Knowledge fragment index
- 15 knowledge files covering:
  - Engine-specific: Unity, Unreal, Godot testing
  - Game-specific: Playtesting, balance, save systems, multiplayer
  - Platform: Certification (TRC/XR), localization, input
  - General QA: Automation, performance, regression, smoke tests

## Quick-Flow Workflows (bmgd-quick-flow/)
- quick-prototype: Rapid mechanic testing
- quick-dev: Flexible feature implementation

## Documentation
Complete documentation suite in docs/:
- README.md: Documentation index
- quick-start.md: Getting started guide
- agents-guide.md: All 6 agents reference
- workflows-guide.md: Complete workflow reference
- quick-flow-guide.md: Rapid development guide
- game-types-guide.md: 24 game type templates
- glossary.md: Game dev terminology
- troubleshooting.md: Common issues

## Teams & Installer
- Updated team-gamedev.yaml with all 6 agents and workflows
- Updated default-party.csv with Game QA and Game Solo Dev
- Created _module-installer/ with:
  - installer.js: Creates directories, logs engine selection
  - platform-specifics/: Claude Code and Windsurf handlers

## Agent Updates
All agents now reference standalone BMGD workflows:
- game-architect: correct-course → BMGD
- game-dev: dev-story, code-review → BMGD
- game-scrum-master: All production workflows → BMGD
- game-solo-dev: code-review → BMGD

## Module Configuration
- Added sprint_artifacts alias for workflow compatibility
- All workflows use bmgd/config.yaml

* fix(bmgd): update sprint-status workflow to reference bmgd instead of bmm

Replace all /bmad:bmm:workflows references with /bmad:bmgd:workflows
in the sprint-status workflow instructions.

* feat(bmgd): add workflow-status and create-tech-spec workflows

Add BMGD-native workflow-status and create-tech-spec workflows,
replacing all BMM references with BMGD paths.

## New Workflows

### workflow-status
- Multi-mode status checker for game projects
- Game-specific project levels (Game Jam → AAA)
- Workflow paths: gamedev-greenfield, gamedev-brownfield,
  quickflow-greenfield, quickflow-brownfield
- Init workflow for new game project setup

### create-tech-spec
- Game-focused spec engineering workflow
- Engine-aware (Unity/Unreal/Godot)
- Performance and gameplay feel considerations

## Agent Updates
Updated all BMGD agents to reference BMGD workflows:
- game-architect, game-designer, game-dev, game-qa,
  game-scrum-master, game-solo-dev

All agents now use /bmad:bmgd:workflows instead of /bmad:bmm:workflows

* fix(bmgd): address PR review findings and enhance playtesting docs

## PR Review Fixes (F1-F20)

### Configuration & Naming
- F1: Changed user_skill_level to game_dev_experience in module.yaml
- F3: Renamed gametest/framework to gametest/test-framework

### Cleanup
- F2: Deleted 4 orphaned root-level template files
- F6: Removed duplicate code block in create-story/instructions.xml
- F9: Removed trailing empty line from qa-index.csv
- F20: Deleted orphaned docs/unnamed.jpg

### Installer Improvements
- F7: Simplified platform handler stubs (removed unused code)
- F8: Added return value checking for platform handlers
- F13: Added path traversal validation (isWithinProjectRoot)
- F18: Added type validation for config string values

### Agent Fixes
- F10: Added workflow-status and advanced-elicitation to game-solo-dev
- F12: Fixed "GOTO step 2a" → "GOTO step 2" references
- F14: Removed duplicate project-context.md from principles in 5 agents

### Workflow Updates
- F17: Added input_file_patterns to playtest-plan workflow

### Documentation
- F4-F5: Updated quick-start.md with 6 agents and fixed table
- Updated workflows-guide.md with test-framework reference

### Knowledge Base Updates (from earlier CodeRabbit comments)
- Updated unity-testing.md to Test Framework 1.6.0
- Fixed unreal-testing.md (MarkAsGarbage, UnrealEditor.exe)
- Added FVerifyPlayerMoved note to smoke-testing.md
- Fixed certification-testing.md table formatting

### Playtesting Documentation Enhancement
- Added "Playtesting by Game Type" section (7 genres)
- Added "Processing Feedback Effectively" section
- Expanded from ~138 to ~340 lines

* refactor(bmgd): use exec for step-file workflows and multi format

Update agent menu items to use correct notation for step-file workflows:

**game-designer.agent.yaml:**
- Convert 4 step-file workflows to multi format with shortcodes:
  - [BG] brainstorm-game
  - [GB] create-game-brief
  - [GDD] create-gdd
  - [ND] narrative
- Changed from workflow: .yaml to exec: .md

**game-architect.agent.yaml:**
- Changed create-architecture from workflow: to exec: with workflow.md

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Jennings <scott.jennings+CIGINT@cloudimperiumgames.com>
2025-12-17 14:33:22 +08:00
Brian Madison
e37edf098c modify install now supports adding custom modules even if there were no custom modules originally 2025-12-16 20:45:27 +08:00
Brian Madison
e3eb374218 chore: bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.17 with comprehensive changelog
Major improvements include:
- Revolutionary installer overhaul with unified flow for core and custom modules
- Full custom content support re-enabled with streamlined sharing
- Critical migration from .bmad to _bmad for AI visibility
- Agent memory system rollout with _bmad/_memory location
- Quick default selection for faster module installation
- BMM Phase 4 workflow improvements and standardization
- Sample modules demonstrating custom content creation
- Future-ready architecture for content segregation
2025-12-16 18:25:50 +08:00
Brian Madison
83b0df0f21 .17 changelog and link to changelog in installer output 2025-12-16 18:23:15 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
00a3af3eb0 fix(bmm): sprint-status workflow improvements (#1141)
* fix(bmm): sprint-status workflow improvements

- Remove dead by_epic template block and context_status variable (#1116, #1117)
- Define "first" story ordering as epic number then story number (#1119)
- Clarify retrospective check: "any retrospective status == optional" (#1120)
- Strengthen validate mode: check required metadata fields and valid statuses (#1121)
- Expand risk detection: stale file, orphaned stories, empty epics (#1122)
- Fix retrospective valid status: use "done" instead of "completed" for consistency

Fixes #1116, fixes #1117, fixes #1119, fixes #1120, fixes #1121, fixes #1122

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(bmm): address CodeRabbit review feedback

- Improve retrospective status descriptions for clarity
- Fix empty epic detection to only warn on in-progress epics
- Add 'generated' to required metadata field validation

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-16 17:59:42 +08:00
Brian Madison
d0e0a0963a examples of custom modules, custom module and readme doc updates 2025-12-16 17:45:41 +08:00
Brian Madison
32615afaf9 memory location is non configurable _bmad/_memory for sidecar content 2025-12-16 15:43:38 +08:00
Brian Madison
59e4cc7b82 minor code cleanup 2025-12-16 13:09:20 +08:00
Brian Madison
c24821b6ed menu wording updates 2025-12-16 01:25:49 +08:00
Brian Madison
2c4c2d9717 reduce installer log output 2025-12-15 23:53:26 +08:00
Brian Madison
901b39de9a fixed duplicate entry in files manfest issue 2025-12-15 20:47:21 +08:00
Brian Madison
4d8d1f84f7 quick update works and retains custom content also 2025-12-15 19:54:40 +08:00
Brian Madison
48795d46de core and custom modules all install through the same flow now 2025-12-15 19:16:03 +08:00
Brian Madison
bbda7171bd quick update output modified 2025-12-15 17:30:12 +08:00
Brian Madison
08f05cf9a4 update menu updated 2025-12-15 16:25:01 +08:00
Brian Madison
c7827bf031 less verbose final output during install 2025-12-15 15:55:28 +08:00
Brian Madison
5716282898 roo installer had some bugs 2025-12-15 15:08:19 +08:00
Brian Madison
60238d2854 default accepted for installer quesitons 2025-12-15 12:55:57 +08:00
Brian Madison
6513c77d1b single install panel, no clearing disjointed between modules 2025-12-15 11:54:37 +08:00
Brian Madison
3cbe330b8e improved ui for initial install question intake 2025-12-15 11:33:01 +08:00
Brian Madison
ecc2901649 remove header display before tool selection 2025-12-15 11:05:27 +08:00
Brian Madison
d4eccf07cf reorganize order of questions to make more logical sense 2025-12-15 10:59:15 +08:00
Brian Madison
1da7705821 folder workflow naming alignment for consistency 2025-12-15 10:17:58 +08:00
Brian Madison
7f742d4af6 custom modules install after any non custom modules selected and after the core, manifest tracks custom modules separately to ensure always installed from the custom cache 2025-12-15 09:14:16 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
9fe79882b2 fix(release): restore automated release workflow for v6 (#1139)
* fix(release): update workflow to sync package-lock.json

- Call 'npm version' directly with --no-git-tag-version flag to ensure
  both package.json and package-lock.json are updated together
- Add 'alpha' option (default) for alpha version bumps
- Add 'beta' option to transition to/bump beta series
- Temporarily disable web bundles (tools/cli/bundlers/ is missing)

The workflow was previously calling non-existent npm scripts
(version:patch/minor/major) that were removed in the v6 refactor.

Note: This change cannot be fully tested without triggering an actual
release. The web bundles functionality requires a separate fix.

Fixes #1104

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* fix(release): simplify version bump logic

Modern npm (v11+) correctly handles --preid flag transitions:
- prerelease --preid=beta on alpha.X produces beta.0 (works!)
- prerelease --preid=alpha on alpha.X produces alpha.X+1 (works!)

CodeRabbit warning was based on outdated npm behavior.
Consolidate alpha|beta into single case for cleaner code.

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-15 07:34:04 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
ebb20f675f chore(discord): suppress link embeds and handle truncated URLs (#1126)
* chore(discord): suppress link embeds and handle truncated URLs

- Add wrap_urls() to wrap URLs in <> to suppress Discord embeds
- Add strip_trailing_url() to remove partial URLs from truncated text
- Update all 6 workflow jobs with body text to use the new helpers
- Partial URLs (from truncation) are removed since they are unusable
- Complete URLs are wrapped to prevent large embed previews

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(discord): preserve URLs when escaping markdown

- Replace sed-based esc() with awk version that skips content inside
  <URL> wrappers, preventing URL corruption from backslash escaping
- Reorder pipeline: wrap_urls | esc (wrap first, then escape)
- Update comment: "partial" → "incomplete" for clarity

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-15 07:19:44 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
82cc10824a fix(bmm): improve sprint-status validation and epic status handling (#1125)
* fix(bmm): improve sprint-status validation and epic status handling

- Add status validation with interactive correction for unknown values
- Update epic statuses to match state machine: backlog, in-progress, done
- Map legacy "contexted" status to "in-progress" explicitly
- Add retrospective status counting (optional, completed)
- Rewrite risk detection rules for LLM clarity
- Fix warnings vs risks naming inconsistency in data mode

Closes #1106
Closes #1118

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* style: fix prettier formatting in sprint-status instructions

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-15 07:17:30 +08:00
Brian Madison
4c65f3a006 quick install fixed 2025-12-13 23:45:47 +08:00
Brian Madison
401e8e481c a few minor agent workflow main file cleanup actions 2025-12-13 23:04:54 +08:00
Brian Madison
cba7cf223f standardize custom agent workflow and module output, and improve module folder selection 2025-12-13 22:59:58 +08:00
Brian Madison
add789a408 remove unused code 2025-12-13 19:53:03 +08:00
Brian Madison
ae9851acab _cfg -> _config 2025-12-13 19:41:09 +08:00
Brian Madison
ac5fa5c23f agent customization now gets allied on quick update and compile agents 2025-12-13 19:23:02 +08:00
Brian Madison
8642553bd7 we only need one yaml lib 2025-12-13 18:35:07 +08:00
Brian Madison
ce42d56fdd agent customzation almost working again 2025-12-13 17:50:33 +08:00
Brian Madison
25c79e3fe5 folder rename from .bmad to _bmad 2025-12-13 16:22:34 +08:00
Brian Madison
0c873638ab remove dead and unused functionality - the web bundler will be replaced 2025-12-13 14:08:14 +08:00
Brian Madison
e6f911d791 remove dead and unused functionality - the web bundler will be replaced 2025-12-13 14:06:35 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
f11be2b2e2 chore: disable CodeRabbit walkthrough (#1115)
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Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-13 13:34:41 +08:00
Murat K Ozcan
572074d2a6 Merge pull request #1109 from alexeyv/fix/normalize-dev-story-trigger
fix(bmm): normalize dev-story trigger naming
2025-12-12 12:45:14 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
0ed546619f Merge branch 'main' into fix/normalize-dev-story-trigger 2025-12-12 12:44:12 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
c3b54c5fc6 Merge pull request #1108 from alexeyv/fix/normalize-status-kebab-case
fix(bmm): normalize story status references to lowercase kebab-case
2025-12-12 12:44:03 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
e34f53d6f8 Merge branch 'main' into fix/normalize-status-kebab-case 2025-12-12 12:42:49 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
ebbb44f961 Merge pull request #1107 from alexeyv/fix/remove-drafted-status-bmm
fix(bmm): remove stale 'drafted' story state from docs and workflows
2025-12-12 12:42:35 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
76185937c6 fix(bmm): normalize dev-story trigger naming
Rename 'develop-story' to 'dev-story' across agent triggers and documentation
to match the actual workflow folder and YAML configuration naming.

- Update dev.agent.yaml trigger from develop-story to dev-story
- Update game-dev.agent.yaml trigger from develop-story to dev-story
- Update 7 references in agents-guide.md documentation

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-11 23:48:00 -07:00
Alex Verkhovsky
7a9f1d4a3c fix(bmm): normalize story status references to lowercase kebab-case
Updated status references to use canonical lowercase kebab-case format:

- dev-story/instructions.xml: Status field set to "review" (was "Ready for Review")
- dev-story/instructions.xml: Output messages reference actual "review" status
- dev-story/checklist.md: Status field instruction uses "review"
- daily-standup.xml: Status examples use "in-progress, review"

Story lifecycle: backlog → ready-for-dev → in-progress → review → done

Fixes #1105

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-11 23:22:05 -07:00
Alex Verkhovsky
7d6aae1b78 fix(bmm): remove stale 'drafted' story state from docs and workflows
The `drafted` story state is no longer used since create-story now sets
status directly to `ready-for-dev`. This PR removes all references to
this legacy state from BMM documentation and workflow files.

Changes:
- Remove `drafted` from story status definitions and state machine docs
- Remove dead story-context file detection (story-context files no longer exist)
- Replace "draft" verb with "create" in story-related messaging
- Add legacy `drafted` → `ready-for-dev` migration in sprint-status
- Clarify that validate-create-story is optional and doesn't change status
- Document story handoff sequence: create-story → (optional) validate → dev-story

Story lifecycle is now: backlog → ready-for-dev → in-progress → review → done

Closes #1089

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-11 21:20:44 -07:00
Dicky Moore
ed0defbe08 fix: normalize workflow manifest schema (#1071)
* fix: normalize workflow manifest schema

* fix: escape workflow manifest values safely

---------

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-12 07:20:43 +08:00
Kevin Heidt
3bc485d0ed Enhance config collector to support static fields (#1086)
Refactor config collection to handle both interactive and static fields. Update logic to process new static fields and merge answers accordingly.

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-12 06:56:31 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
0f5a9cf0dd fix: correct grammar in PRD workflow description (#1087) 2025-12-12 06:43:40 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
e2d9d35ce9 fix(bmm): improve code review completion message (#1095)
Change "Story is ready for next work!" to "Code review complete!"

The original phrasing was misleading - when a code review finishes
with status "done", it means the review itself is complete and the
story is marked done in tracking. However, the user may choose to
do additional reviews or the story may genuinely be finished.
"Code review complete" more accurately describes what actually
happened without implying next steps.
2025-12-12 06:42:52 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
82e6433b69 refactor: standardize file naming to use dashes instead of underscores (#1094)
Rename output/template files and update all references to use kebab-case
(dashes) instead of snake_case (underscores) for consistency:

- project_context.md -> project-context.md (13 references)
- backlog_template.md -> backlog-template.md
- agent_commands.md -> agent-commands.md
- agent_persona.md -> agent-persona.md
- agent_purpose_and_type.md -> agent-purpose-and-type.md
2025-12-12 06:42:24 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
be7e07cc1a fix: fully silence CodeRabbit unless explicitly invoked (#1096)
- Disable high_level_summary to stop PR description modifications
- Disable commit_status to stop GitHub status checks
- Disable issue_enrichment.auto_enrich to stop auto-commenting on issues

These settings complement the existing review_status: false and
auto_review.enabled: false to ensure CodeRabbit only responds
when explicitly tagged with @coderabbitai review.
2025-12-12 06:32:24 +08:00
Alex Verkhovsky
079f79aba5 Merge pull request #1103 from bmad-code-org/docs/test-architect-ADR-usage-update-2
docs: test arch ADR usage update
2025-12-11 12:35:12 -07:00
murat
b4d7e1adef docs: addressed further PR comments 2025-12-11 13:13:44 -06:00
murat
6e9fe6c9a2 fix: addressed review comment 2025-12-11 11:36:33 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
d2d9010a8e Update src/modules/bmm/docs/test-architecture.md
Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-12-11 10:15:23 -06:00
murat
6d5a1084eb docs: test arch ADR usage update 2 2025-12-11 09:43:25 -06:00
murat
978a93ed33 docs: test arch ADR usage update 2025-12-11 09:34:22 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
ec90699016 Merge pull request #1090 from alexeyv/fix/issue-1088-remove-stale-workflow-refs
docs: remove stale references to deleted Phase 4 workflows
2025-12-11 04:38:31 -07:00
Alex Verkhovsky
0f06ef724b Merge branch 'main' into fix/issue-1088-remove-stale-workflow-refs 2025-12-10 16:00:11 -07:00
Brian Madison
26e47562dd Release: 6.0.0-alpha.16
- Update changelog with recent changes
- Version bump to 6.0.0-alpha.16
- Document temporary custom content installation disable
- Document BMB workflow path fixes and package updates
2025-12-10 21:10:57 +09:00
Brian Madison
3256bda42f package updates 2025-12-10 21:04:38 +09:00
Brian Madison
3d2727e190 fix bmb path in step file issues 2025-12-10 20:56:56 +09:00
Brian Madison
446a0359ab fix bmb workflow paths 2025-12-10 20:50:24 +09:00
Brian Madison
45a97b070a disable custom content installation temporarily 2025-12-10 19:11:18 +09:00
Brian Madison
a2d01813f0 temp removal of example modules 2025-12-10 19:05:15 +09:00
Alex Verkhovsky
b9ba98d3f8 docs: remove stale references to deleted Phase 4 workflows
Removes references to epic-tech-context, story-context, story-done,
and story-ready workflows that were deleted in the Phase 4 transformation.

Also renames mislabeled excalidraw element IDs from proc-story-done
to proc-code-review to match the actual displayed text.

Fixes #1088
2025-12-09 21:50:39 -07:00
Murat K Ozcan
5971a88553 Merge pull request #1069 from alexeyv/chore/silence-coderabbit-status
chore: disable CodeRabbit review status comments
2025-12-09 17:10:13 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
08642a0420 Merge pull request #1084 from alexeyv/fix/issue-1080-product-brief-next-steps
fix: correct markdown formatting in product-brief next steps
2025-12-09 17:09:46 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
ec73e44097 fix: correct markdown formatting in product-brief next steps
Fixes #1080
2025-12-09 12:45:56 -07:00
Alex Verkhovsky
d55f518a96 chore: disable CodeRabbit review status comments
Suppress the automatic "Review skipped" comments on PRs.
CodeRabbit can still be invoked on-demand with @coderabbitai review.

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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-08 14:02:33 -07:00
Alex Verkhovsky
cf50f4935d fix: address code review issues from alpha.14 to alpha.15 (#1068)
* fix: remove debug console.log statements from ui.js

* fix: add error handling and rollback for temp directory cleanup

* fix: use streaming for hash calculation to reduce memory usage

* refactor: hoist CustomHandler require to top of installer.js and ui.js

* fix: fail fast on malformed custom module YAML

User customizations must be valid - silent skip hides broken configs.

* refactor: use consistent return type in handleMissingCustomSources

* refactor: clone config at install() entry to prevent mutation
2025-12-08 13:24:30 -06:00
Brian Madison
55cb4681bc party mode and brainstorming had bmm config instead of core config listed causing loading error when bmm is not an installed module - fixed. 2025-12-08 08:11:39 -06:00
Brian Madison
eb4325fab9 restore bmm as default selected module. 2025-12-08 08:04:39 -06:00
Brian Madison
57ceaf9fa9 conflict marker removed from docs 2025-12-08 08:01:00 -06:00
OhSeungWan
1513b2d478 fix: collect module.yaml prompts for custom modules (#1065)
Custom modules with module.yaml configuration prompts were not being
collected during installation. Added customModulePaths option to
ConfigCollector to resolve custom module paths from selectedFiles
and cachedModules sources.
2025-12-08 07:33:53 -06:00
Brian Madison
2da016f797 chore: bump version to alpha.15
- Module installation standardization with module.yaml
- Enhanced custom content installation with interactive search
- Added CodeRabbit AI and Raven's Verdict integrations
- Documentation improvements and cleanup
- Breaking change: _module-installer/install-config.yaml → module.yaml
2025-12-07 22:16:42 -06:00
Brian Madison
6947851393 module updates 2025-12-07 22:00:52 -06:00
Brian Madison
9d7b09d065 bmad_folder replacement working properly with custom and defauly modules 2025-12-07 21:58:44 -06:00
Brian Madison
86f2786dde remove hardcoded .bmad folders from demo content 2025-12-07 21:41:37 -06:00
Brian Madison
a638f062b9 some debug output when installer errors 2025-12-07 21:03:05 -06:00
Brian Madison
738237b4ae custom install module cached 2025-12-07 20:46:09 -06:00
Brian Madison
6430173738 all modules custom or core use the same installer and have consistent behavior now. 2025-12-07 17:17:50 -06:00
Brian Madison
baaa984a90 almost working installer updates 2025-12-07 15:38:49 -06:00
Brian Madison
38e65abd83 moved code of conduct to github folder, readme links to it 2025-12-07 14:55:44 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
ff9a085dd0 feat: add Raven's Verdict PR review tool (#1054)
* feat: add Raven's Verdict PR review tool

* docs: add usage guidance to Raven's Verdict README

* docs: add guidance to skip PRs that shouldn't merge
2025-12-07 14:13:33 -06:00
Brian Madison
d5c687d99d custom content installation guide 2025-12-07 14:11:17 -06:00
Brian Madison
b68e5c0225 add custom content installation question to indicate location of custom content 2025-12-07 13:39:27 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
987f81ff64 feat: add CodeRabbit AI code review integration (#1053)
- Add .coderabbit.yaml with minimal config and path instructions
- Exclude node_modules from review scope
- Document pilot research and conclusions in docs/planning/

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-07 10:36:24 -06:00
Wendy Smoak
0c2afdd2bb Change Gem creation link to Gemini Gem manager (#1057)
Updated the link for creating a Gem to the Gemini Gem manager.
2025-12-07 10:16:49 -06:00
Brian Madison
a65ff90b44 example-custom-* disabled so installer does not find them when trying to install from npx 2025-12-07 07:48:44 -06:00
Brian Madison
80a90c01d4 chore: bump version to alpha.14
- Updated CHANGELOG.md with comprehensive Alpha.14 release notes
- Added advanced builder features and custom installation improvements
- IDE configuration preservation during upgrades
- Breaking change: removed legacy agent-install command
2025-12-07 02:21:49 -06:00
Brian Madison
119187a1e7 custom module installer improved, and removed agent-install 2025-12-07 02:10:03 -06:00
Brian Madison
b252778043 custom inst imporove 2025-12-07 01:43:44 -06:00
Brian Madison
eacfba2e5b custom agents and workflows can now also be installed with a simple custom.yaml designation 2025-12-06 22:45:02 -06:00
Brian Madison
903c7a4133 remove hardcoded agent sidecar locations to fully use config option 2025-12-06 21:37:43 -06:00
Brian Madison
8c04ccf3f0 rename default folder location for agent_sidecar_folder installation location 2025-12-06 21:21:03 -06:00
Brian Madison
6d98864ec1 sidecar files retained on updates 2025-12-06 21:17:13 -06:00
Brian Madison
1697a45376 sidecar content goes to custom core config location 2025-12-06 21:08:57 -06:00
Brian Madison
ba2c81263b remove: all legacy file cleanup functionality
- Removed scanForLegacyFiles, performCleanup, and related methods from installer.js
- Removed --skip-cleanup option from install command
- Deleted cleanup.js command file entirely
- Simplified installation flow by removing cleanup prompts
- All tests passing after removal
2025-12-06 17:11:40 -06:00
Brian Madison
8d044f8c3e fix: prevent modules from showing as obsolete during reinstall
- Skip module selection prompt during update/reinstall
- Keep all existing installed modules by default
- This prevents inquirer from showing modules as 'obsolete items' with confusing delete options
- Modules are now preserved during update/reinstall operations
2025-12-06 16:56:09 -06:00
Brian Madison
74d071708d fix: nested agents now appear in CLI commands
- Fix getAgentsFromDir in bmad-artifacts.js to recursively scan subdirectories
- This ensures agents like cbt-coach and wellness-companion that are in subdirectories are properly found
- Agents now correctly get slash commands in .claude/commands/bmad/mwm/agents/
- All agents from the manifest now have corresponding IDE commands
2025-12-06 16:39:28 -06:00
Brian Madison
86e2daabba fix: ManifestGenerator now recursively scans for agents
- Updated getAgentsFromDir to search subdirectories for .md files
- Fixed installPath construction to include nested directory structure
- This ensures agents in subdirectories (like cbt-coach/cbt-coach.md) get added to agent-manifest.csv
- All agents now get proper CLI slash commands regardless of nesting depth
2025-12-06 16:31:32 -06:00
Brian Madison
aad7a71718 fix: ManifestGenerator now scans for all installed modules
- Previously only scanned selectedModules, missing modules installed from custom locations
- Now scans the bmad directory to find all actually installed modules
- Any module with agents/workflows/tasks/tools will be included in manifests
- This fixes issue where MWM workflows weren't getting slash commands
- All modules now get equal treatment in IDE integration
2025-12-06 16:16:48 -06:00
Brian Madison
f052967f65 fix: ModuleManager now creates customize.yaml files for agents
- Added logic to create customize template files during agent compilation
- ModuleManager was only using existing customize files, not creating them
- Now customize.yaml files will be created for all module agents
- This fixes issue where agents in subdirectories had no customization support

Next: Need to fix agent-manifest.csv to find agents in subdirectories
2025-12-06 16:02:07 -06:00
Brian Madison
1bd01e1ce6 feat: implement recursive agent discovery and compilation
- Module agents now discovered recursively at any depth in agents folder
- .agent.yaml files are compiled to .md format during module installation
- Custom agents also support subdirectory structure
- Agents maintain their directory structure when installed
- YAML files are skipped during file copying as they're compiled separately
- Added compileModuleAgents method to handle YAML-to-MD compilation
- Updated discoverAgents to recursively search for .agent.yaml files
- Agents in subdirectories are properly placed in _cfg/agents with relative paths

This fixes issue where agents like cbt-coach were not being compiled
and were only copied as YAML files.
2025-12-06 15:38:38 -06:00
Brian Madison
0d83799ecf refactor: simplify module discovery to scan entire project
- Module discovery now scans entire project recursively for install-config.yaml
- Removed hardcoded module locations (bmad-custom-src, etc.)
- Modules can exist anywhere with _module-installer/install-config.yaml
- All modules treated equally regardless of location
- No special UI handling for 'custom' modules
- Core module excluded from selection list (always installed first)
- Only install-config.yaml is valid (removed support for legacy config.yaml)

Modules are now discovered by structure, not location.
2025-12-06 15:28:37 -06:00
Brian Madison
7c5c97a914 atl rovo dev not in preferred list until fully tested 2025-12-06 14:25:29 -06:00
Brian Madison
7545bf9227 remove custom test content from src control 2025-12-06 12:53:43 -06:00
Brian Madison
228dfa28a5 installer updates working with basic flow 2025-12-06 12:53:43 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
e3f756488a feat(quality): add markdownlint-cli2 to quality checks (#1039)
- Add markdownlint-cli2 as dev dependency
- Add lint:md script to package.json
- Add markdownlint job to CI workflow
- Configure 5 rules: heading-increment, no-duplicate-heading,
  no-trailing-punctuation, no-bare-urls, no-space-in-emphasis
- Fix existing violations across 19 markdown files
- No auto-fix to prevent destructive changes

Closes #1034

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Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-06 12:40:07 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
d85090060b fix: read version from package.json instead of hardcoded fallback (#1041)
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-06 12:39:39 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
a0442d4fb7 chore(cli): remove broken build caching (#1042)
The agent build caching never worked - BUILD-META comments were
never written to output files, so every build acted like --force.

Since building all 29 agents takes ~300ms, caching provided no
meaningful benefit. Removed ~190 lines of dead code including
checkIfNeedsRebuild, checkBuildStatus, buildMetadataComment,
and the --force flag.

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-06 12:38:56 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
e979b47fe5 fix(workflows): remove hardcoded years from WebSearch queries (#1040)
* update 2024 to 2025

* fix(workflows): remove hardcoded years from WebSearch queries

Years in search queries (2024/2025) do not improve results - search
engines already prioritize current documentation. Tested all patterns
and confirmed identical quality results with/without years.

Removes years from:
- step-03-starter.md (5 queries)
- step-04-decisions.md (2 queries)
- game-architecture/instructions.md (2 queries)

Leaves file-utils.md unchanged (test fixture data, not a search query).

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(workflows): remove year placeholders from research WebSearch queries

Search engines return current results regardless of year - removes
{{current_year}} and hardcoded 2025 from step-05-technical-trends.md

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor(workflows): replace {{current_year}} with semantic alternatives

Replaces year placeholder with context-appropriate wording:
- 'current data' for up-to-date information
- 'web searches' without year qualifier
- Updated failure mode to focus on using web searches

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix(workflows): clarify failure mode about stale training data

Rephrased to explicitly mention training data cutoff as the reason
to use web searches for current technology trends.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor(workflows): make web search references platform-agnostic

- Remove hardcoded year references from WebSearch queries
- Replace `WebSearch` tool name with natural language "search the web"
- Soften "training data is stale" to "verify and supplement your knowledge"
- Add web search prerequisite check to research workflow
- Add platform-agnostic design note to CLAUDE.md

This framework targets 15+ agentic platforms, not just Claude Code.
Tool-specific syntax like `WebSearch:` won't work across all platforms.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>

* refactor(research): clean up prompts and routing

---------

Co-authored-by: Pomazan Bohdan <pomazan.bogdan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-06 12:37:50 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
a6dffb4706 fix(installer): remove hardcoded 'bmad' prefix from files-manifest.csv paths (#1043)
The manifest writer hardcoded 'bmad' as the path prefix regardless of
the actual folder name (.bmad, bmad, etc). The reader had a matching
hardcoded strip, so it worked by accident.

Now paths are stored relative to bmadDir without any prefix. Legacy
fallback strips 'bmad/' on read - safe because no real path inside
bmadDir would start with 'bmad/'.

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-06 12:36:17 -06:00
Hang
282bc27c7e feat(bmm): enhance PRD workflow with brownfield project support (#1047)
- Add three-branch conditional logic for document-based discovery:
  - PATH A: Has Product Brief (any project type)
  - PATH B: No Brief + Has Project Docs (brownfield)
  - PATH C: No Documents (greenfield from scratch)
- Add YAML frontmatter to all 12 PRD step files
- Add documentCounts to frontmatter for state tracking
- Fix step count (11 steps, not 10) and path typos
- Remove non-existent workflow references (story-context, validate-architecture)
- Update workflow chains and glossary definitions

Key insight: Branch based on DOCUMENT TYPE, not PROJECT TYPE.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-06 12:35:30 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
5ee1551b5b fix(bmm): remove stale validate-prd references (fixes #1030) (#1038)
- Remove validate-prd workflow references from all workflow path YAML files
- Update Excalidraw diagram: remove Validate PRD box and zombie JSON elements
- Re-export SVG at 1x scale
- Standardize implementation-readiness descriptions across all docs
- Add validation script (validate-svg-changes.sh) and README for SVG export process
- Correct Excalidraw timestamps

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-05 21:35:46 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
c95b65f462 fix(bmm): correct code-review workflow status logic and checklist (#1015) (#1028)
- Fix checklist to only accept 'review' status (not 'ready-for-review')
- Include MEDIUM issues in done/in-progress status determination
- Initialize and track fixed_count/action_count variables for summary
- Add sprint-status.yaml sync when story status changes

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-05 21:27:11 -06:00
Nguyen Quang Huy
72ef9e9722 fix: use backticks for quoted phrase in code-review description (#1025)
Replace 'looks good' with `looks good` to avoid nested single quote
issues when IDEs generate command files from workflow YAML.

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-05 21:26:04 -06:00
Paul Preibisch
8265bbf295 feat(installer): Enhanced TTS injection summary with tracking and documentation (#1037)
## Summary
- Track all files with TTS injection applied during installation
- Display informative summary explaining what TTS injection does
- Show backup location and restore command for recovery

## What is TTS Injection?
TTS (Text-to-Speech) injection adds voice instructions to BMAD agents,
enabling them to speak their responses aloud using AgentVibes.

Example: When you activate the PM agent, it will greet you with
spoken audio like "Hey! I'm your Project Manager. How can I help?"

## Changes
- **installer.js**: Track files in `processAgentFiles()`, `buildStandaloneAgents()`,
  and `rebuildAgentFiles()` when TTS markers are processed
- **compiler.js**: Add TTS injection support for custom agent compilation
- **ui.js**: Enhanced installation summary showing:
  - Explanation of what TTS injection is with example
  - List of all files with TTS injection applied (grouped by type)
  - Backup location (~/.bmad-tts-backups/)
  - Restore command for recovery

## Example Output
```
═══════════════════════════════════════════════════
            AgentVibes TTS Injection Summary
═══════════════════════════════════════════════════

What is TTS Injection?

  TTS (Text-to-Speech) injection adds voice instructions to BMAD agents,
  enabling them to speak their responses aloud using AgentVibes.

  Example: When you activate the PM agent, it will greet you with
  spoken audio like "Hey! I'm your Project Manager. How can I help?"

 TTS injection applied to 11 file(s):

  Party Mode (multi-agent conversations):
    • .bmad/core/workflows/party-mode/instructions.md
  Agent TTS (individual agent voices):
    • .bmad/bmm/agents/analyst.md
    • .bmad/bmm/agents/architect.md
    ...

Backups & Recovery:

  Pre-injection backups are stored in:
    ~/.bmad-tts-backups/

  To restore original files (removes TTS instructions):
    bmad-tts-injector.sh --restore /path/to/.bmad
```

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Paul Preibisch <paul@paulpreibisch.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-05 18:54:03 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
f99e192e74 fix: tea ci nvmrc (#1036) 2025-12-05 12:30:20 -06:00
Brian Madison
0b9290789e installer fixes 2025-12-03 22:44:13 -06:00
Brian Madison
aa1cf76f88 new workflow types generate slash commands 2025-12-03 21:36:24 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
b8b4b65c10 feat(discord): compact plain-text notifications with bug fixes (#1021)
- Fix esc() bracket expression (] must be first in POSIX regex)
- Fix delete job: inline helper to avoid checkout of deleted ref
- Fix issue notifications: attribute close/reopen to actor, not author
- Simplify trunc() comment (remove false Unicode-safe claim)
- Smart truncation with wall-of-text detection
- Escape markdown and @mentions for safe display

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-03 20:22:59 -06:00
Brian Madison
73db5538bf roo installer improovement 2025-12-03 19:56:23 -06:00
Philip Louw
41f9cc1913 feat: add kiro-cli installer with BMad Core compliance (#993)
- Implement KiroCliSetup class extending BaseIdeSetup
- Generate 21 agents from YAML sources with JSON configs and markdown prompts
- Add runtime resource loading and numbered menu formatting
- Include BMad Core validation for required agent fields
- Fix agent naming conventions to prevent double prefixes
- Add .kiro/ directory to gitignore

Follows BMad Method standards for IDE installer integration.

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-03 12:17:02 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
686af5b0ee feat: add intelligent routing to quick-dev workflow (#1019)
Add escalation threshold and scale-adaptive routing to quick-dev:
- Simple requests get standard [t]/[e] choice
- Complex requests evaluated against project-levels.yaml
- Level 1-2 or uncertain → tech-spec recommended
- Level 3+ → BMad Method (workflow-init) recommended

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-03 12:14:36 -06:00
Dicky Moore
65658a499b Feat/sprint status command (#1012)
* feat: add sprint-status command

* minor changes to reduce the change radius

---------

Co-authored-by: mq-bot <mq-bot@local>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-12-03 12:00:34 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
d553a09f73 docs: create CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md (#1013)
* docs: create CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md

* chore: exclude CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md from Prettier

Third-party artifact should not be reformatted.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: add Discord as enforcement contact channel

Uses permanent invite link. Discord is common practice for
open source project Code of Conduct enforcement.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-03 10:42:28 -06:00
Brian Madison
c79d081128 fix pm and architect agents menu items to load new step sharded workflows 2025-12-02 22:40:57 -06:00
Brian Madison
0b3964902a workflow builder has template LOD output options 2025-12-02 22:36:44 -06:00
Brian Madison
1e6fc4ba14 workflow creation update 2025-12-02 21:44:30 -06:00
Brian Madison
aa30ef3e79 convert create epics and stories and implementation readiness to the new workflow step format 2025-12-02 19:22:15 -06:00
Brian Madison
6365a63dff workflow builder understands how to build continuable workflows 2025-12-02 19:22:15 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
fe0817f590 fix(bmm): complete cleanup of epic-tech-context workflow removal (#1001)
- Remove references to deprecated epic-tech-context, story-context,
  validate-epic-tech-context, validate-story-context, and story-done workflows
- Simplify epic status: backlog → in-progress → done (was backlog → contexted)
- Update create-story to handle legacy 'contexted' status for backward compat
- Clean up sprint-planning instructions and status template
- Update docs: agents-guide, brownfield-guide, faq, glossary, quick-start

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-30 23:52:04 -06:00
Brian Madison
afd2a163bf chore: bump version to alpha.13 2025-11-30 23:23:08 -06:00
Brian Madison
9223174f40 remove legacy workflows from bmb that were upgraded to step sharded flows and prep .13 changelog 2025-11-30 23:18:01 -06:00
Brian Madison
47ad645f22 complience check of workflow fix 2025-11-30 22:47:28 -06:00
Brian Madison
788c746857 product brief compliance with documented workflow standards 2025-11-30 22:45:48 -06:00
Brian Madison
ad053a6508 create workflow validation check fixes 2025-11-30 21:51:46 -06:00
Brian Madison
4539ca7436 feat: implement granular step-file workflow architecture with multi-menu support
## Major Features Added
- **Step-file workflow architecture**: Transform monolithic workflows into granular step files for improved LLM adherence and consistency
- **Multi-menu handler system**: New `handler-multi.xml` enables grouped menu items with fuzzy matching
- **Workflow compliance checker**: Added automated compliance validation for all workflows
- **Create/edit agent workflows**: New structured workflows for agent creation and editing

## Workflow Enhancements
- **Create-workflow**: Expanded from 6 to 14 detailed steps covering tools, design, compliance
- **Granular step execution**: Each workflow step now has dedicated files for focused execution
- **New documentation**: Added CSV data standards, intent vs prescriptive spectrum, and common tools reference

## Complete Migration Status
- **4 workflows fully migrated**: `create-agent`, `edit-agent`, `create-workflow`, and `edit-workflow` now use the new granular step-file architecture
- **Legacy transformation**: `edit-workflow` includes built-in capability to transform legacy single-file workflows into the new improved granular format
- **Future cleanup**: Legacy versions will be removed in a future commit after validation

## Schema Updates
- **Multi-menu support**: Updated agent schema to support `triggers` array for grouped menu items
- **Legacy compatibility**: Maintains backward compatibility with single `trigger` field
- **Discussion enhancements**: Added conversational_knowledge recommendation for discussion agents

## File Structure Changes
- Added: `create-agent/`, `edit-agent/`, `edit-workflow/`, `workflow-compliance-check/` workflows
- Added: Documentation standards and CSV reference files
- Refactored: `create-workflow/steps/` with detailed granular step files

## Handler Improvements
- Enhanced `handler-exec.xml` with clearer execution instructions
- Improved data passing context for executed files
- Better error handling and user guidance

This architectural change significantly improves workflow execution consistency across all LLM models by breaking complex processes into manageable, focused steps. The edit-workflow transformation tool ensures smooth migration of existing workflows to the new format.
2025-11-30 15:09:23 -06:00
Brian Madison
829d051c91 move agent builder docs, create workflow builder docs, and a new workflow builder to conform to stepwise workflow creation 2025-11-29 23:23:35 -06:00
Brian Madison
a0732df56c more step sharded workflows added for architecture and some fixes across all workflows to improve their file loading and reduction of time based estimates. 2025-11-29 01:49:15 -06:00
Brian Madison
4e254d7c63 brainstorming, research and partymode updated to use sharded step flow workflows 2025-11-29 01:49:15 -06:00
Brian Madison
00e72e66f8 Initial stepwise converstion of the phase 1 and 2 workflows complete. 2025-11-29 01:49:15 -06:00
Brian Madison
5a11519dc1 converted ux design to sharded step workflow 2025-11-29 01:49:14 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
5ea02d7091 feat: add adversarial code review recommendation to quick-dev workflow (#989)
* feat: add adversarial code review recommendation to quick-dev workflow

* fix: clarify scope of code review with 'in it' reference
2025-11-27 23:38:54 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
7b21708868 feat: recommend different LLM for code review in dev-story (#984)
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-27 23:38:32 -06:00
Brian Madison
3c81d78991 the first reworked sharded workflow, prd, works great and resolves the issues with latest sonnet udpates 2025-11-27 22:33:03 -06:00
Brian Madison
dcaf02f665 Fix phase numbering throughout documentation
- Removed all references to Phase 0 (should be Documentation prerequisite)
- Updated phase transitions from 'Phase 3→4' to 'Phase 3 to Phase 4'
- Ensured all phases are numbered 1-4 consistently
- Documentation for brownfield projects is now correctly referred to as 'Documentation prerequisite' rather than Phase 0
2025-11-26 20:59:46 -06:00
Brian Madison
04b328bd2a Fix workflow documentation - remove non-existent workflows and Mermaid diagrams
- Updated workflows-implementation.md: removed validate workflows, epic-tech-context, story-context
- Updated workflows-analysis.md: removed brainstorm-game, game-brief, added domain-research
- Updated workflows-planning.md: removed gdd, narrative, moved create-epics-and-stories to Phase 3
- Updated workflows-solutioning.md: already correct with create-epics-and-stories in Phase 3
- Removed all Mermaid diagrams and replaced with text descriptions
- Updated quick reference tables to reflect actual workflows
- Fixed flow examples to match current implementation
2025-11-26 20:42:20 -06:00
Brian Madison
355ccebca2 workflow-status can call workflow init 2025-11-26 19:48:47 -06:00
Brian Madison
dfc35f35f8 BMad Agents menu items are logically ordered and marked with optional or recommended and some required tags 2025-11-26 18:22:24 -06:00
Brian Madison
677c000820 github uses agents folder now instead of chatmodes 2025-11-26 17:46:26 -06:00
Brian Madison
3ac539b61f npm vulnerabilities resolved 2025-11-26 17:07:09 -06:00
Brian Madison
331a67eeb3 installer allows cleanup of unneeded files in upgrades 2025-11-26 16:47:15 -06:00
Brian Madison
fbdb91b991 standard greenfield workflow updated diagrams 2025-11-26 15:14:34 -06:00
Jorge Castillo
54e6745a55 fix: update GitHub Copilot tools names for consistency (#880)
Copilot was triggering warning or errors in the chatmode files due to some changes in tool names.
- findTestFiles is internal tool, cannot be used.
- Other tools have change names.
- Added new tools: todos and runSubAgents.

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-26 14:49:17 -06:00
Serhii
f793cf8fcd fix: add radix parameter to parseInt() calls (#862)
Add explicit radix=10 to parseInt() calls and NaN validation to prevent
unexpected hex parsing and invalid config values.

Changes:
- Line 52: Add radix and NaN check in input validation
- Line 189-192: Add radix and NaN fallback for config parsing

Fixes potential issues:
- Hex input (0x10) now rejected instead of parsed as 16
- Invalid strings return default value instead of NaN→null

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-26 14:44:12 -06:00
fikri-kompanion
9223e2be21 fix: give kilocode tool access to bmad modes (#961)
Co-authored-by: Ahmad Fikrizaman <ahmadfikrizaman@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-26 13:48:16 -06:00
Brian Madison
2cac74cfb5 agent vibes injection and installer update 2025-11-26 11:00:46 -06:00
Paul Preibisch
5702195ef7 Add Text-to-Speech Integration via TTS_INJECTION System (#934)
* feat: Add provider-agnostic TTS integration via injection point system

Implements comprehensive Text-to-Speech integration for BMAD agents using a generic
TTS_INJECTION marker system. When AgentVibes (or any compatible TTS provider) is
installed, all BMAD agents can speak their responses with unique AI voices.

## Key Features

**Provider-Agnostic Architecture**
- Uses generic `TTS_INJECTION` markers instead of vendor-specific naming
- Future-proof for multiple TTS providers beyond AgentVibes
- Clean separation - BMAD stays TTS-agnostic, providers handle injection

**Installation Flow**
- BMAD → AgentVibes: TTS instructions injected when AgentVibes detects existing BMAD installation
- AgentVibes → BMAD: TTS instructions injected during BMAD installation when AgentVibes detected
- User must manually create voice assignment file when AgentVibes installs first (documented limitation)

**Party Mode Voice Support**
- Each agent speaks with unique assigned voice in multi-agent discussions
- PM, Architect, Developer, Analyst, UX Designer, etc. - all with distinct voices

**Zero Breaking Changes**
- Fully backward compatible - works without any TTS provider
- `TTS_INJECTION` markers are benign HTML comments if not processed
- No changes to existing agent behavior or non-TTS workflows

## Implementation Details

**Files Modified:**
- `tools/cli/installers/lib/core/installer.js` - TTS injection processing logic
- `tools/cli/lib/ui.js` - AgentVibes detection and installation prompts
- `tools/cli/commands/install.js` - Post-install guidance for AgentVibes setup
- `src/utility/models/fragments/activation-rules.xml` - TTS_INJECTION marker for agents
- `src/core/workflows/party-mode/instructions.md` - TTS_INJECTION marker for party mode

**Injection Point System:**
```xml
<rules>
  - ALWAYS communicate in {communication_language}
  <!-- TTS_INJECTION:agent-tts -->
  - Stay in character until exit selected
</rules>
```

When AgentVibes is detected, the installer replaces this marker with:
```
- When responding to user messages, speak your responses using TTS:
  Call: `.claude/hooks/bmad-speak.sh '{agent-id}' '{response-text}'` after each response
  IMPORTANT: Use single quotes - do NOT escape special characters like ! or $
```

**Special Character Handling:**
- Explicit guidance to use single quotes without escaping
- Prevents "backslash exclamation" artifacts in speech

**User Experience:**
```
User: "How should we architect this feature?"
Architect: [Text response] + 🔊 [Professional voice explains architecture]
```

Party Mode:
```
PM (John): "I'll focus on user value..." 🔊 [Male professional voice]
UX Designer (Sara): "From a user perspective..." 🔊 [Female voice]
Architect (Marcus): "The technical approach..." 🔊 [Male technical voice]
```

## Testing

**Unit Tests:**  62/62 passing
- 49/49 schema validation tests
- 13/13 installation component tests

**Integration Testing:**
-  BMAD → AgentVibes (automatic injection)
-  AgentVibes → BMAD (automatic injection)
-  No TTS provider (markers remain as comments)

## Documentation

Comprehensive testing guide created with:
- Both installation scenario walkthroughs
- Verification commands and expected outputs
- Troubleshooting guidance

## Known Limitations

**AgentVibes → BMAD Installation Order:**
When AgentVibes installs first, voice assignment file must be created manually:
```bash
mkdir -p .bmad/_cfg
cat > .bmad/_cfg/agent-voice-map.csv << 'EOF'
agent_id,voice_name
pm,en_US-ryan-high
architect,en_US-danny-low
dev,en_US-joe-medium
EOF
```

This limitation exists to prevent false legacy v4 detection warnings from BMAD installer.

**Recommended:** Install BMAD first, then AgentVibes for automatic voice assignment.

## Related Work

**Companion Implementation:**
- Repository: paulpreibisch/AgentVibes
- Commits: 6 commits implementing injection processing and voice routing
- Features: Retroactive injection, file path extraction, escape stripping

**GitHub Issues:**
- paulpreibisch/AgentVibes#36 - BMAD agent ID support

## Breaking Changes

None. Feature is opt-in and requires separate TTS provider installation.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Enforce project hooks over global hooks in party mode

before, claude would sometimes favor global agent vibes hooks over project specific

* feat: Automate AgentVibes installer invocation after BMAD install

Instead of showing manual installation instructions, the installer now:
- Prompts "Press Enter to start AgentVibes installer..."
- Automatically runs npx agentvibes@latest install
- Handles errors gracefully with fallback instructions

This provides a seamless installation flow matching the test script's
interactive approach.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* docs: Add automated testing script and guide for PR #934

Added comprehensive testing tools for AgentVibes party mode integration:

- test-bmad-pr.sh: Fully automated installation and verification script
  - Interactive mode selection (official PR or custom fork)
  - Automatic BMAD CLI setup and linking
  - AgentVibes installation with guided prompts
  - Built-in verification checks for voice maps and hooks
  - Saved configuration for quick re-testing

- TESTING.md: Complete testing documentation
  - Quick start with one-line npx command
  - Manual installation alternative
  - Troubleshooting guide
  - Cleanup instructions

Testers can now run a single command to test the full AgentVibes integration
without needing to understand the complex setup process.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Add shell: true to npx execSync to prevent permission denied error

The execSync call for 'npx agentvibes@latest install' was failing with
'Permission denied' because the shell was trying to execute 'agentvibes@latest'
directly instead of passing it as an argument to npx.

Adding shell: true ensures the command runs in a proper shell context
where npx can correctly interpret the @latest version syntax.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Remove duplicate AgentVibes installation step from test script

The test script was calling AgentVibes installer twice:
1. BMAD installer now automatically runs AgentVibes (new feature)
2. Test script had a separate Step 6 that also ran AgentVibes

This caused the installer to run twice, with the second call failing
because it was already installed.

Changes:
- Removed redundant Step 6 (AgentVibes installation)
- Updated Step 5 to indicate it includes AgentVibes
- Updated step numbers from 7 to 6 throughout
- Added guidance that AgentVibes runs automatically

Now the flow is cleaner: BMAD installer handles everything!

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Address bmadcode review - preserve variables and move TTS logic to injection

Fixes requested changes from PR review:

1. Preserve {bmad_folder} variable placeholder
   - Changed: {project_root}/.bmad/core/tasks/workflow.xml
   - To: {project_root}/{bmad_folder}/core/tasks/workflow.xml
   - Allows users to choose custom BMAD folder names during installation

2. Move TTS-specific hook guidance to injection system
   - Removed hardcoded hook enforcement from source files
   - Added hook guidance to processTTSInjectionPoints() in installer.js
   - Now only appears when AgentVibes is installed (via TTS_INJECTION)

3. Maintain TTS-agnostic source architecture
   - Source files remain clean of TTS-specific instructions
   - TTS details injected at install-time only when needed
   - Preserves provider-agnostic design principle

Changes made:
- src/core/workflows/party-mode/instructions.md
  - Reverted .bmad to {bmad_folder} variable
  - Replaced hardcoded hook guidance with <!-- TTS_INJECTION:party-mode -->
  - Removed <note> about play-tts.sh hook location

- tools/cli/installers/lib/core/installer.js
  - Added hook enforcement to party-mode injection replacement
  - Guidance now injected only when enableAgentVibes is true

Addresses review comments from bmadcode:
- "needs to remain the variable. it will get set in the file at the install destination."
- "items like this we will need to inject if user is using claude and TTS"

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* fix: Change 'claude-code' to 'claude' in test script instructions

The correct command to start Claude is 'claude', not 'claude-code'.
Updated line 362-363 in test-bmad-pr.sh to show the correct command.

* fix: Remove npm link from test script to avoid global namespace pollution

- Removed 'npm link' command that was installing BMAD globally
- Changed 'bmad install' to direct node execution using local clone
- Updated success message to reflect no global installation

This keeps testing fully isolated and prevents conflicts with:
- Existing BMAD installations
- Future official BMAD installs
- Orphaned symlinks when test directory is deleted

The test script now runs completely self-contained without modifying
the user's global npm environment.

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Code <claude@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Preibisch <paul@paulpreibisch.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-26 09:51:57 -06:00
mreis-atlassian
11a1dbaefc feat: Adding support for Rovo Dev (#975)
- Adding support for rovo dev
- Adding rovo dev translation wrappers
2025-11-26 09:05:04 -06:00
Brian Madison
d6b98afd2b minor udpates to prd, architecture, and create epics and stories flows. 2025-11-26 00:28:49 -06:00
Brian Madison
24e952c511 updated code review 2025-11-25 16:59:00 -06:00
Brian Madison
3740a554f0 fix: optimize agent compiler and complete handler cleanup
- Add deployment-aware handler generation (filters web-only/ide-only commands)
- Remove unused run-workflow handler type (ghost handler cleanup)
- Implement missing validate-workflow and data handler generation
- Update schema validation to support exactly 6 active handler types
- Clean up activation templates and web bundler logic
- Prevent generation of unused handler instructions for better performance
- All 62 tests pass with backward compatibility maintained
2025-11-23 21:28:50 -06:00
Brian Madison
cd98a7f5bb feat: complete Phase 4 workflow transformation - simpler, faster, better results
MAJOR BREAKING CHANGES: Phase 4 completely reengineered for developer efficiency and quality

🚀 **Phase 4 Streamlined & Supercharged:**
- **Reduced from 11 to 5 essential workflows** (55% reduction in complexity)
- **Eliminated redundant steps** that created token waste and confusion
- **Created single source of truth** story files with comprehensive implementation context
- **Achieved more reliable results** with fewer steps and better developer guidance

💡 **Revolutionary Dev Agent Behavior Fixes:**
- **Story file is now LAW:** Tasks/subtasks sequence is absolutely binding
- **Red-green-refactor enforcement:** Tests written first, validated, then implementation
- **Zero tolerance for cheating:** Tests must ACTUALLY exist and pass before marking complete
- **Sequential execution only:** No more "doing whatever you want" - follow the story exactly
- **Continuous execution:** No premature pausing until all tasks complete

🎯 **Quality Competition System:**
- **Enhanced story context engine** prevents common LLM development mistakes
- **Quality competition between LLMs** ensures optimal story preparation
- **Comprehensive anti-pattern prevention** stops wheel reinvention and wrong approaches
- **Developer optimization focus** for maximum clarity with minimum verbosity

📋 **Enhanced Definition of Done:**
- **27-point validation checklist** covers all implementation aspects
- **Multiple validation gates** prevent claiming work that isn't actually done
- **Comprehensive test requirements** ensure no functionality goes untested
- **File tracking and documentation** for complete project visibility

🔧 **Technical Improvements:**
- **Variable consistency** throughout all workflow files
- **XML instruction format** for better workflow engine compatibility
- **Proper ask tag handling** for user interaction clarity
- **Project context integration** without blocking implementation
- **Fixed all agent schema compliance** for proper array formatting

**Result:** Phase 4 now delivers superior development outcomes with:
-  **55% fewer workflows** to learn and maintain
-  **Dramatically reduced token usage** and context switching
-  **Eliminated dev agent behavioral issues** that caused quality problems
-  **Faster time-to-completion** with more reliable, predictable results
-  **Better developer experience** with clearer guidance and validation

This represents the most significant Phase 4 improvement since BMAD Method inception - fundamentally fixing developer workflow quality while drastically simplifying the implementation process.
2025-11-23 16:43:04 -06:00
Brian Madison
4308b36d4d feat: add custom agents and quick-flow workflows, remove tech-spec track
Major Changes:
- Add sample custom agents demonstrating installable agent system
  - commit-poet: Generates semantic commit messages (BMAD Method repo sample)
  - toolsmith: Development tooling expert with knowledge base covering bundlers, deployment, docs, installers, modules, and tests (BMAD Method repo sample)
  - Both agents demonstrate custom agent architecture and are installable to projects via BMAD installer system
  - Include comprehensive installation guides and sidecar knowledge bases

- Add bmad-quick-flow methodology for rapid development
  - create-tech-spec: Direct technical specification workflow
  - quick-dev: Flexible execution workflow supporting both tech-spec-driven and direct instruction development
  - quick-flow-solo-dev (Barry): 1 man show agent specialized in bmad-quick-flow methodology
  - Comprehensive documentation for quick-flow approach and solo development

- Remove deprecated tech-spec workflow track
  - Delete entire tech-spec workflow directory and templates
  - Remove quick-spec-flow.md documentation (replaced by quick-flow docs)
  - Clean up unused epic and story templates

- Fix custom agent installation across IDE installers
  - Repair antigravity and multiple IDE installers to properly support custom agents
  - Enable custom agent installation via quick installer, agent installer, regular installer, and special agent installer
  - All installation methods now accessible via npx with full documentation

Infrastructure:
- Update BMM module configurations and team setups
- Modify workflow status paths to support quick-flow integration
- Reorganize documentation with new agent and workflow guides
- Add custom/ directory for user customizations
- Update platform codes and installer configurations
2025-11-23 08:51:26 -06:00
Brian Madison
6907d44810 fix: display proper persona names in custom agent manifests
## Problem
Custom agents showed generic names (like "Commit Poet") instead of their
actual persona names (like "Inkwell Von Comitizen") in the agent manifest.

## Root Cause
The extractManifestData function was using metadata.name/title instead of
extracting the persona name from the compiled agent XML.

## Solution
1. Added extractAgentAttribute function to pull attributes from <agent> tag
2. Prioritize XML extraction over metadata for persona info:
   - displayName: uses agent title attribute from XML
   - title: uses agent title attribute from XML
   - icon: uses agent icon attribute from XML
   - Falls back to metadata if XML extraction fails

## Result
Custom agents now display their actual persona names in manifests:
- Before: "Commit Poet"
- After: "Inkwell Von Comitizen"

This provides better user experience with proper agent identification
in IDE integrations and manifests.
2025-11-23 08:51:26 -06:00
Brian Madison
efc2b6d0df feat: complete custom agent support for ALL remaining IDEs
## Added installCustomAgentLauncher to remaining IDEs:

 Qwen (.qwen/commands/BMad/)
- TOML format with proper description and prompt fields
- Uses existing processAgentLauncherContent method
- Format: custom-{agent-name}.toml

 Trae (.trae/rules/)
- Markdown format with bmad-agent-custom- prefix
- Follows existing BMAD naming pattern
- Format: bmad-agent-custom-{agent-name}.md

 Roo (.roomodes)
- YAML format appends to existing customModes section
- Creates customModes section if missing
- Format: bmad-custom-{agent-name} (slug-based)

 Kilo (.kilocodemodes)
- YAML format identical to Roo pattern
- Handles existing customModes gracefully
- Format: bmad-custom-{agent-name} (slug-based)

 Auggie (.augment/commands/bmad/)
- Frontmatter + Markdown format
- Follows existing Auggie command pattern
- Format: custom-{agent-name}.md

## Complete IDE Coverage:
ALL IDEs now support custom agent installation:
- 16 total IDEs with custom agent support
- Various formats: TOML, YAML, Markdown, file-based
- All include @agentPath references and usage instructions
- Proper IDE-specific naming and directory structures

Custom agents from .bmad/custom/src/agents/ now install to EVERY configured IDE!
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
98342f2174 feat: add custom agent support to more IDEs
## Added installCustomAgentLauncher function to:

 Cline (.clinerules/workflows/)
- Creates workflow files with custom agent launchers
- Format: bmad-custom-{agent-name}.md

 Crush (.crush/commands/bmad/)
- Creates command files with custom agent launchers
- Format: custom-{agent-name}.md

 Gemini (.gemini/commands/)
- Creates TOML command files with custom agent launchers
- Format: bmad-custom-{agent-name}.toml

 iFlow (.iflow/commands/bmad/)
- Creates command files with custom agent launchers
- Format: custom-{agent-name}.md

## All Custom Agent Launchers Include:
- @agentPath reference to load complete agent
- Usage instructions for loading first, then activating
- Proper IDE-specific formatting and file structure
- Return values for tracking installations

Now custom agents install to 8+ IDEs instead of just 4!
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
2edadd11ae fix: add custom agent support to Antigravity IDE
## Problem
Custom agents were only installing to Claude Code (.claude/commands/)
but not to Antigravity (.agent/) or other IDEs that lack installCustomAgentLauncher function.

## Root Cause
Antigravity was missing the installCustomAgentLauncher function that the
IdeManager calls to install custom agents during agent installation.

## Solution
Added installCustomAgentLauncher function to Antigravity that:
- Creates .agent directory if needed
- Generates custom agent launchers with @agentPath references
- Uses same pattern as existing Antigravity agent launchers
- Returns proper installation result for tracking

## Result
Custom agents now install to:
- Claude Code: .claude/commands/bmad/custom/agents/ 
- Antigravity: .agent/bmad-custom-agents-{agentName}.md 
- Codex: (already working) 

All configured IDEs now receive custom agent installations!
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
0aeaa5b2ea fix: compile agents now checks multiple source locations
## Problem
Compile Agents ignored custom agents in source locations like:
- {project-root}/custom/src/agents/
- {bmad-folder}/custom/src/agents/

## Solution
Update reinstallCustomAgents to check all locations:
1. _cfg/custom/agents/ (backup location)
2. {bmad-folder}/custom/src/agents/ (source in BMAD folder)
3. {project-root}/custom/src/agents/ (source at project root)

## Changes
- Search multiple locations for agents during compile
- Avoid duplicate processing with Set tracking
- Auto-backup source YAML to _cfg/custom/agents/ if needed
- Works with any custom bmad_folder name from config

Now 'Compile Agents' works with agents in any source location!
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
b20773e7f7 docs: remove fluff from installation guide
- Remove verbose explanations and marketing language
- Keep only essential commands and process steps
- Reduce from verbose guide to concise reference
- Focus on what users need to know, not explanations
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
c57ada4d9c feat: improve agent creation workflow and documentation
## BMB Agent Workflow Improvements
- Always create folders for agents (even simple ones)
- Add compact info-and-installation-guide.md (20 lines max)
- Include installation guide with every created agent
- Update workflow to use standalone_output_folder structure

## Documentation Updates
- Clarify --defaults makes installation non-interactive
- Update all parameter documentation for clarity
- Fix npm package references (bmad-method only)

## New Agent Structure
Every agent now gets:
  agent-folder/
  ├── agent-name.agent.yaml    # Source YAML
  └── info-and-installation-guide.md  # Quick install guide + description

## Quick Install Commands (added to guide)
- Interactive: npx bmad-method agent-install --source ./agent.yaml
- Non-interactive: npx bmad-method agent-install --source ./agent.yaml --defaults

This makes agent installation much more user-friendly and consistent.
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
05cbc6ccb8 feat: rename agent-install parameters for clarity
- Change --path → --source (much clearer purpose)
- Change --target → --destination (more intuitive)
- Update all code references and documentation
- Add advanced parameter examples to installation guide
- Keep short aliases: -s for --source, -t for --destination

Parameters are now much more self-explanatory:
- --source: where to find the agent YAML
- --destination: where to install the compiled agent
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
905f9ca346 docs: fix incorrect npm package references
- Fix npx bmad → npx bmad-method in documentation
- Only bmad-method is registered in npm registry, not bmad
- Clarify that bmad command works locally when BMAD is installed
- Update installation guides to use correct package name

Ensures users don't get 'package not found' errors when trying npx bmad
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
90af352247 docs: update installation guide with npx support
- Add npx bmad-method agent-install option for users without cloned repo
- Show both local and npx commands side by side
- Clarify when to use each installation option
- Update automatic updates section with npx option
- Add prominent note about npx capability

Users can now install custom agents without needing to clone the BMAD repository.
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Brian Madison
13b1fc7517 fix: remove remaining webskip keys from presentation-master.agent.yaml
All menu items now conform to agent schema validation.
2025-11-23 08:51:25 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
9d510fc075 docs: playwright untils note in test-architecture.md (#957)
Co-authored-by: Murat Ozcan <murat@Murats-MacBook-Pro.local>
2025-11-21 09:19:22 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
00b541f5d4 feat: playwright-utils integration (#954)
* feat: playwright-utils integration

* removed the temp plan file, and addressed changelog

* feat: edited the installer question for pw-utils

* feat: even more n00b friendly install prompt

* Update README.md

Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Update src/modules/bmm/_module-installer/install-config.yaml

Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Murat Ozcan <murat@mac.lan>
Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-11-20 17:34:08 -06:00
Murat K Ozcan
55fd621664 fix: enabled web bundles for test and dev (#948)
* fix: enabled web bundles for test and dev

* fix: only bundle non webskip agents

* fix: addressed pr comments

* fix: addressed pr comments

---------

Co-authored-by: Murat Ozcan <murat@mac.lan>
2025-11-20 13:44:48 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
da00b295a9 fix: remove .agent from gitignore for Antigravity workflow access (#953)
Antigravity respects .gitignore rules which blocks access to workflow files
in .agent/workflows/, preventing custom workflows from being discovered.
Removing .agent from gitignore to allow Antigravity to scan workflow files.

Note: Codex and Claude Code ignore .gitignore when scanning for custom
prompts, so this only affects Antigravity users.
2025-11-20 12:33:14 -06:00
Brian Madison
a6f089cfd2 feat: add empty IDE selection warning and promote Antigravity to recommended
- Add persistent warning loop when no tools selected in installer
- Users must press spacebar to select, not just highlight
- Red warning explains the issue and offers to go back
- Only way to proceed without tools is explicit "No" confirmation
- Promote Google Antigravity to preferred/recommended IDE section
2025-11-19 22:12:45 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
09533e4abb Chore/update gitignore (#945)
* feat: Add Google Antigravity IDE installer

Implements installer for Google Antigravity IDE with flattened slash command
naming to match Antigravity's namespace requirements.

Key features:
- Flattened file naming (bmad-module-agents-name.md) for proper slash commands
- Subagent installation support (project-level or user-level)
- Module-specific injection configuration
- Agent, workflow, task, and tool command generation

Implementation:
- Added AntigravitySetup class extending BaseIdeSetup
- Extracted flattenFilename() to BaseIdeSetup for reuse across IDE handlers
- Uses .agent/workflows directory structure
- Supports both interactive and non-interactive configuration

Fixes:
- Proper namespace isolation: /bmad-module-agents-dev instead of /dev
- Prevents conflicts between modules with same agent names

Note: This installer shares 95% of its code with claude-code.js.
Future refactoring could extract common patterns to IdeWithSlashCommandsSetup
base class (see design documents for details).

* chore: update gitignore for antigravity installer

---------

Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-19 20:41:08 -06:00
Dicky Moore
d7f045b11e Align UX design workflow references (#935)
Co-authored-by: Brian <bmadcode@gmail.com>
2025-11-19 20:40:07 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
e8e13a9aa3 feat: default installer username to system user (#939)
good idea here, thank you!
2025-11-19 20:36:54 -06:00
Brian Madison
be04d687dc chore: bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.12 and add yaml dependency
- Add missing yaml package dependency to fix MODULE_NOT_FOUND error
- Update CHANGELOG.md with alpha.12 release notes
2025-11-19 00:36:31 -06:00
Brian Madison
047dfc1462 chore: bump version to 6.0.0-alpha.11 2025-11-18 23:17:01 -06:00
Brian Madison
ece3eefd13 docs: Update CHANGELOG and README for v6.0.0-alpha.11 release
- Comprehensive alpha.11 changelog capturing all major features
- Condensed earlier alpha releases (0-10) to 5 key bullets each
- Reduced changelog from 1,744 to 609 lines for better readability
- Updated README status badges and installation instructions
2025-11-18 23:16:23 -06:00
Brian Madison
f17e4ef0b7 refactor(bmm,cis,core): Align diagram workflows with agile roles and distribute capabilities
## The Tale of the Frame Expert

Once upon a time, BMad Method had a specialized agent called Frame Expert.
This agent was the master of all visual artifacts - flowcharts, diagrams,
wireframes, data flows. Whenever anyone needed a diagram, they called upon
Frame Expert. The agent lived in its own isolated domain with four dedicated
workflows and a library of shared templates.

## The Awakening

But something felt wrong. Teams using BMad Method were meant to mirror real
agile teams - Product Managers, Architects, UX Designers, Tech Writers,
Developers. Each agent represented an authentic role you'd find in any
software team.

Except Frame Expert.

No real agile team has a "Frame Expert" or "Diagram Specialist" who creates
all visual artifacts. In real teams, Architects diagram system architecture.
PMs flowchart processes. UX Designers wireframe interfaces. Tech Writers
create documentation diagrams. The visuals emerge from the domain experts
who need them, not from a centralized diagram factory.

Frame Expert was an abstraction that made technical sense but violated the
very soul of BMad Method - authentic agile role modeling.

## The Transformation

And so Frame Expert was dissolved, its knowledge distributed to those who
truly needed it:

**The Architect** inherited system architecture diagrams and data flows -
the blueprints of technical systems they design.

**The Product Manager** received process flowcharts - the visual maps of
features and workflows they orchestrate.

**The UX Designer** claimed wireframes - the interface sketches that bring
their vision to life.

**The Tech Writer** gained all diagram types - the visual aids that clarify
their documentation.

Each agent now creates diagrams in their domain, using their expertise,
serving their purpose.

## The Shared Knowledge

But the wisdom of diagram creation itself - the Excalidraw templates, the
component libraries, the validation patterns - this knowledge was too
valuable to scatter. It was elevated to core resources, where both BMM
agents AND the new CIS presentation-master agent could draw upon it.

Shared infrastructure for common needs. Distributed execution for domain
expertise.

## The Ripple Effects

With diagrams now properly distributed, other misalignments became visible:

Epic creation was happening in Phase 2 (Planning), before Architecture
existed. But epics need architectural context - API contracts, data models,
technical decisions. So epic creation migrated to Phase 3 (Solutioning),
after Architecture provides that foundation.

Workflow paths were updated. Documentation gained visual flowcharts showing
the complete journey. Agent naming standards were clarified - filenames are
stable roles, persona names are user dreams.

## What Changed

**Removed:**
- frame-expert.agent.yaml (the centralized specialist)
- All frame-expert workflows and shared resources
- Phase 2 epic creation workflow (wrong timing)
- game-design workflow path (consolidated to method track)
- v6-open-items.md (planning doc, now complete)

**Distributed Diagram Capabilities:**
- Architect: create-excalidraw-diagram, create-excalidraw-dataflow
- PM: create-excalidraw-flowchart
- Tech Writer: create-excalidraw-{diagram,dataflow,flowchart}, generate-mermaid
- UX Designer: create-excalidraw-wireframe

**Created:**
- src/core/resources/ (shared diagram context for all modules)
- src/modules/cis/agents/presentation-master.agent.yaml (visual comms specialist)
- src/modules/bmm/workflows/3-solutioning/create-epics-and-stories/ (epic creation's new home)
- src/modules/bmm/workflows/diagrams/ (distributed diagram implementations)
- src/modules/bmm/docs/images/ (workflow visualization assets)

**Enhanced:**
- All agent definitions with domain-appropriate diagram workflows
- Documentation with embedded workflow diagrams and visual guides
- Agent compilation docs with critical naming convention rules
- All 4 workflow paths (enterprise/method × brownfield/greenfield)

**Fixed:**
- Epic creation now in Phase 3 after Architecture
- Story context path variables in BMGD module
- PRD workflow descriptions (epics moved to Phase 3)

## For Users

The Frame Expert commands are gone. In their place:

- Need architecture diagrams? Ask `/architect`
- Need process flows? Ask `/pm`
- Need wireframes? Ask `/ux-designer`
- Need documentation visuals? Ask `/tech-writer`

Each expert creates diagrams in their domain, with their context, using
their judgment.

This is how real teams work.
2025-11-18 21:55:47 -06:00
Brian Madison
224af173ef feat: Comprehensive edit-agent workflow enhancement with Expert agent support and unified validation
## Overview
Major enhancement to edit-agent workflow to match create-agent quality standards, plus critical addition of Expert agent sidecar file support and consolidation of validation checklists into single source of truth.

## 1. edit-agent Workflow Comprehensive Enhancement

### Documentation Reference Updates (workflow.yaml)
**Fixed all broken references** - replaced deleted docs with new comprehensive guides:
-  Removed: agent-types.md, agent-architecture.md, agent-command-patterns.md, communication-styles.md
-  Added structured references:
  * Core Concepts: understanding_agent_types, agent_compilation
  * Architecture Guides: simple_architecture, expert_architecture, module_architecture
  * Design Patterns: menu_patterns, communication_presets, brainstorm_context
  * Reference Agents: commit-poet, journal-keeper, module examples, BMM agents

### Critical Persona Field Guidance Added (instructions.md +59 lines)
**The #1 issue in legacy agents** - comprehensive guidance on persona field separation:

- Explains how LLMs interpret each field:
  * role → "What knowledge/skills/capabilities do I possess?"
  * identity → "What background/experience/context shapes my responses?"
  * communication_style → "What verbal patterns/word choice do I use?"
  * principles → "What beliefs/philosophy drive my choices?"

- BEFORE/AFTER examples showing common mistakes
- Red flag word detection guide (ensures, experienced, believes in, etc.)
- Pure communication style examples from reference agents

### Enhanced Step 1: Analysis (instructions.md +57 lines)
- References all new comprehensive documentation
- **CRITICAL: Persona field separation analysis**
  * Checks for behaviors/role/identity mixed into communication_style
  * Compares against communication_presets for purity
  * Compares against reference agents for quality
- Warm, conversational feedback explaining issues found

### Massive Step 3 Enhancement: Communication Style Refinement (+122 lines)
**7-step prescriptive pattern for fixing the #1 quality issue:**

1. Diagnose Current Communication Style - red flag word detection
2. Extract Non-Style Content - working copy methodology
3. Discover TRUE Communication Style - interview questions + preset exploration
4. Craft Pure Communication Style - good/bad examples from references
5. Show Before/After With Full Context - complete transformation
6. Validate Against Standards - zero red flags, compare to presets/references
7. Confirm With User - explain changes, read dramatically, refine

Examples from actual reference agents:
- "Treats analysis like a treasure hunt - excited by every clue" (Mary/analyst)
- "Ultra-succinct. Speaks in file paths and AC IDs" (Amelia/dev)
- "Poetic drama and flair with every turn of a phrase" (commit-poet)

### Legacy Type Migration Pattern (+42 lines)
**Comprehensive guide for full/hybrid/standalone → Simple/Expert/Module migration:**

- Clear explanations of modern types (architecture, NOT capability)
- Migration patterns with decision tree
- Structural conversion guides (Simple ↔ Expert)
- Module = design intent clarification

### Enhanced Validation (Step 4)
- Persona field separation validation emphasized
- Updated success message with all quality standards
- Comprehensive checklist validation

### Complete README Documentation (200 lines created)
- Purpose emphasizing persona field separation as #1 issue
- 14 common editing scenarios (persona separation listed FIRST)
- Complete doc reference listing by category
- Dedicated "Critical: Persona Field Separation" section
- Red flag words guide
- 3 detailed usage scenarios
- Quality standards checklist

## 2. Expert Agent Sidecar File Support (NEW)

### Step 1: Smart Path Detection and Loading (+35 lines)
**Automatically detects and loads based on path type:**

```yaml
If path is .agent.yaml → Simple Agent (load single file)
If path is folder → Expert Agent:
  - Load .agent.yaml from inside folder
  - Load ALL sidecar files (*.md, *.txt, *.csv, *.json, *.yaml)
  - Create inventory for reference
  - Present: "Loaded agent.yaml + 5 sidecar files: [list]"
```

**Sidecar analysis:**
- Maps which menu items reference which sidecar files (tmpl="path", data="path")
- Checks if all sidecar references actually exist
- Identifies unused/orphaned sidecar files
- Assesses sidecar organization

**Warm expert agent feedback:**
"This is beautifully organized as an Expert agent! The sidecar files include 3 journal templates (daily, weekly, breakthrough) and a mood-patterns knowledge file. Your menu items reference them nicely. I do notice 'old-template.md' isn't referenced anywhere - we could clean that up."

### Step 3: Sidecar Editing Patterns (+47 lines)
**5 complete sidecar editing scenarios:**

1. **Updating templates** - Edit content, verify references work, test variables
2. **Adding new sidecar files** - Create file + add menu item with reference
3. **Removing unused sidecar files** - Confirm unused, ask to delete, clean references
4. **Reorganizing sidecar structure** - Move files, update ALL YAML references
5. **Updating knowledge base files** - Edit .csv/.json/.yaml data directly

**Critical mindset:** "Sidecar files are as much a part of the agent as the YAML!"

### Step 4: Sidecar Validation (+16 lines)
**Conversational validation:**
- "Your menu item 'daily-journal' references 'templates/daily.md'... checking... ✓ exists!"
- Check for orphaned files not referenced anywhere
- Verify sidecar file formats (YAML parses, CSV has headers, markdown well-formed)
- Success message: "✓ All sidecar file references valid - 5 sidecar files, all referenced correctly!"

### README Updates
- "What You'll Need" distinguishes Simple vs Expert paths
- Scenario 2b: Complete Expert agent editing example (journal-keeper template update)
- Updated common scenarios list

## 3. Unified Validation Checklist (Single Source of Truth)

### Problem Solved
- create-agent had outdated checklist (62 lines, no persona field separation)
- edit-agent had enhanced checklist (112 lines, with our improvements)
- Risk of drift and inconsistency between workflows

### Solution: agent-validation-checklist.md (160 lines)
**Canonical location:** `/src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/`

**Comprehensive coverage combining best of both:**
- YAML structure validation
- **Persona field separation** (field separation check, purity check, quality benchmarking)
- Menu validation (including sidecar file path validation)
- Type-specific validation (Simple/Expert/Module)
- Compilation validation
- Common issues and fixes section

**Key sections:**
- Persona Validation (CRITICAL - #1 Quality Issue)
  * Field Separation Check (what belongs where)
  * Communication Style Purity Check (red flag word detection)
  * Quality Benchmarking (compare to presets and references)
- Expert Agent validation (9 sidecar-specific checks)
- Module Agent validation (design intent verification)
- Common Issues and Fixes (real examples with solutions)

### References Updated
**create-agent/workflow.yaml:**
```yaml
validation: "{installed_path}/agent-validation-checklist.md"
```

**edit-agent/workflow.yaml:**
```yaml
# Shared validation checklist (canonical location in create-agent folder)
validation: "{project-root}/{bmad_folder}/bmb/workflows/create-agent/agent-validation-checklist.md"
```

**edit-agent/instructions.md:**
```xml
<note>The validation checklist is shared between create-agent and edit-agent workflows to ensure consistent quality standards.</note>
```

### Files Changed
-  Created: agent-validation-checklist.md (160 lines)
-  Deleted: create-agent/checklist.md (62 lines)
-  Deleted: edit-agent/checklist.md (112 lines)
- Updated: Both workflow.yaml files to reference unified checklist

## Statistics

**Overall changes:** 6 files changed, +553 insertions, -264 deletions

**edit-agent enhancements:**
- instructions.md: +396 lines (comprehensive guidance)
- README.md: +213 lines (complete documentation)
- workflow.yaml: +32 lines (proper doc references)

**Validation unification:**
- Net result: Better quality, less duplication, easier maintenance
- Single source of truth for all agent validation

## Impact

### For Users Editing Agents
- Automatically detects and handles Expert agents with sidecar files
- Clear guidance on fixing #1 issue (persona field separation)
- 7-step prescriptive pattern for communication style refinement
- Warm, educational feedback throughout
- Validates against same standards as create-agent

### For Agent Quality
- Both create and edit workflows use same validation standards
- Persona field separation gets proper attention
- Expert agent sidecar files treated as first-class citizens
- Legacy agents can be migrated to modern standards
- All agents validated against reference implementations

### For Maintenance
- ONE checklist to maintain instead of two
- Consistent quality standards across workflows
- Documentation properly linked to new comprehensive guides
- No risk of checklist drift

This brings edit-agent to the same quality level as create-agent while adding critical Expert agent support and establishing single source of truth for validation.
2025-11-18 21:55:47 -06:00
Brian Madison
054b031c1d feat: Complete BMAD agent creation system with install tooling, references, and field guidance
## Overview
This commit represents a complete overhaul of the BMAD agent creation system, establishing clear standards for agent development, installation workflows, and persona design. The changes span documentation, tooling, reference implementations, and field-specific guidance.

## Key Components

### 1. Agent Installation Infrastructure
**New CLI Command: `agent-install`**
- Interactive agent installation with persona customization
- Supports Simple (single YAML), Expert (sidecar files), and Module agents
- Template variable processing with Handlebars-style syntax
- Automatic compilation from YAML to XML (.md) format
- Manifest tracking and IDE integration (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, etc.)
- Source preservation in `_cfg/custom/agents/` for reinstallation

**Files Created:**
- `tools/cli/commands/agent-install.js` - Main CLI command
- `tools/cli/lib/agent/compiler.js` - YAML to XML compilation engine
- `tools/cli/lib/agent/installer.js` - Installation orchestration
- `tools/cli/lib/agent/template-engine.js` - Handlebars template processing

**Compiler Features:**
- Auto-injects frontmatter, activation, handlers, help/exit menu items
- Smart handler inclusion (only includes action/workflow/exec/tmpl handlers actually used)
- Proper XML escaping and formatting
- Persona name customization (e.g., "Fred the Commit Poet")

### 2. Documentation Overhaul
**Deleted Bloated/Outdated Docs (2,651 lines removed):**
- Old verbose architecture docs
- Redundant pattern files
- Outdated workflow guides

**Created Focused, Type-Specific Docs:**
- `src/modules/bmb/docs/understanding-agent-types.md` - Architecture vs capability distinction
- `src/modules/bmb/docs/simple-agent-architecture.md` - Self-contained agents
- `src/modules/bmb/docs/expert-agent-architecture.md` - Agents with sidecar files
- `src/modules/bmb/docs/module-agent-architecture.md` - Workflow-integrated agents
- `src/modules/bmb/docs/agent-compilation.md` - YAML → XML process
- `src/modules/bmb/docs/agent-menu-patterns.md` - Menu design patterns
- `src/modules/bmb/docs/index.md` - Documentation hub

**Net Result:** ~1,930 line reduction while adding MORE value through focused content

### 3. Create-Agent Workflow Enhancements
**Critical Persona Field Guidance Added to Step 4:**
Explains how the LLM interprets each persona field when the agent activates:

- **role** → "What knowledge, skills, and capabilities do I possess?"
- **identity** → "What background, experience, and context shape my responses?"
- **communication_style** → "What verbal patterns, word choice, quirks, and phrasing do I use?"
- **principles** → "What beliefs and operating philosophy drive my choices?"

**Key Insight:** `communication_style` should ONLY describe HOW the agent talks, not restate role/identity/principles. The `communication-presets.csv` provides 60 pure communication styles with NO role/identity/principles mixed in.

**Files Updated:**
- `src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/instructions.md` - Added persona field interpretation guide
- `src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/brainstorm-context.md` - Refined to 137 lines
- `src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/communication-presets.csv` - 60 styles across 13 categories

### 4. Reference Agent Cleanup
**Removed install_config Personality Bloat:**
Understanding: Future installer will handle personality customization, so stripped all personality toggles from reference agents.

**commit-poet.agent.yaml** (Simple Agent):
- BEFORE: 36 personality combinations (3 enthusiasm × 3 depths × 4 styles) = decision fatigue
- AFTER: Single concise persona with pure communication style
- Changed from verbose conditionals to: "Poetic drama and flair with every turn of a phrase. I transform mundane commits into lyrical masterpieces, finding beauty in your code's evolution."
- Reduction: 248 lines → 153 lines (38% reduction)

**journal-keeper.agent.yaml** (Expert Agent):
- Stripped install_config, simplified communication_style
- Shows proper Expert agent structure with sidecar files

**security-engineer.agent.yaml & trend-analyst.agent.yaml** (Module Agents):
- Added header comments explaining WHY Module Agent (design intent, not just location)
- Clarified: Module agents are designed FOR ecosystem integration, not capability-limited

**Files Updated:**
- `src/modules/bmb/reference/agents/simple-examples/commit-poet.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmb/reference/agents/expert-examples/journal-keeper/journal-keeper.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmb/reference/agents/module-examples/security-engineer.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmb/reference/agents/module-examples/trend-analyst.agent.yaml`

### 5. BMM Agent Voice Enhancement
**Gave all 9 BMM agents distinct, memorable communication voices:**

**Mary (analyst)** - The favorite! Changed from generic "systematic and probing" to:
"Treats analysis like a treasure hunt - excited by every clue, thrilled when patterns emerge. Asks questions that spark 'aha!' moments while structuring insights with precision."

**Other Notable Voices:**
- **John (pm):** "Asks 'WHY?' relentlessly like a detective on a case. Direct and data-sharp, cuts through fluff to what actually matters."
- **Winston (architect):** "Speaks in calm, pragmatic tones, balancing 'what could be' with 'what should be.' Champions boring technology that actually works."
- **Amelia (dev):** "Ultra-succinct. Speaks in file paths and AC IDs - every statement citable. No fluff, all precision."
- **Bob (sm):** "Crisp and checklist-driven. Every word has a purpose, every requirement crystal clear. Zero tolerance for ambiguity."
- **Sally (ux-designer):** "Paints pictures with words, telling user stories that make you FEEL the problem. Empathetic advocate with creative storytelling flair."

**Pattern Applied:** Moved behaviors from communication_style to principles, keeping communication_style as PURE verbal patterns.

**Files Updated:**
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/analyst.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/pm.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/architect.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/dev.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/sm.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/tea.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/tech-writer.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/ux-designer.agent.yaml`
- `src/modules/bmm/agents/frame-expert.agent.yaml`

### 6. Linting Fixes
**ESLint Compliance:**
- Replaced all `'utf-8'` with `'utf8'` (unicorn/text-encoding-identifier-case)
- Changed `variables.hasOwnProperty(varName)` to `Object.hasOwn(variables, varName)` (unicorn/prefer-object-has-own)
- Replaced `JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(...))` with `structuredClone(...)` (unicorn/prefer-structured-clone)
- Fixed empty YAML mapping values in sample files

**Files Fixed:**
- 7 JavaScript files across agent tooling (compiler, installer, commands, IDE integration)
- 1 YAML sample file

## Architecture Decisions

### Agent Types Are About Architecture, Not Capability
- **Simple:** Self-contained in single YAML (NOT limited in capability)
- **Expert:** Includes sidecar files (templates, docs, etc.)
- **Module:** Designed for BMAD ecosystem integration (workflows, cross-agent coordination)

### Persona Field Separation Critical for LLM Interpretation
The LLM needs distinct fields to understand its role:
- Mixing role/identity/principles into communication_style confuses the persona
- Pure communication styles (from communication-presets.csv) have ZERO role/identity/principles content
- Example DON'T: "Experienced analyst who uses systematic approaches..." (mixing identity + style)
- Example DO: "Systematic and probing. Structures findings hierarchically." (pure style)

### Install-Time vs Runtime Configuration
- Template variables ({{var}}) resolve at compile-time
- Runtime variables ({user_name}, {bmad_folder}) resolve when agent activates
- Future installer will handle personality customization, so agents should ship with single default persona

## Testing
- All linting passes (ESLint with max-warnings=0)
- Agent compilation tested with commit-poet, journal-keeper examples
- Install workflow validated with Simple and Expert agent types
- Manifest tracking and IDE integration verified

## Impact
This establishes BMAD as having a complete, production-ready agent creation and installation system with:
- Clear documentation for all agent types
- Automated compilation and installation
- Strong persona design guidance
- Reference implementations showing best practices
- Distinct, memorable agent voices throughout BMM module

Co-Authored-By: BMad Builder <builder@bmad.dev>
Co-Authored-By: Mary the Analyst <analyst@bmad.dev>
Co-Authored-By: Paige the Tech Writer <tech-writer@bmad.dev>
2025-11-18 21:55:47 -06:00
Alex Verkhovsky
7b7f984cd2 feat: Add Google Antigravity IDE installer (#938)
Implements installer for Google Antigravity IDE with flattened slash command
naming to match Antigravity's namespace requirements.

Key features:
- Flattened file naming (bmad-module-agents-name.md) for proper slash commands
- Subagent installation support (project-level or user-level)
- Module-specific injection configuration
- Agent, workflow, task, and tool command generation

Implementation:
- Added AntigravitySetup class extending BaseIdeSetup
- Extracted flattenFilename() to BaseIdeSetup for reuse across IDE handlers
- Uses .agent/workflows directory structure
- Supports both interactive and non-interactive configuration

Fixes:
- Proper namespace isolation: /bmad-module-agents-dev instead of /dev
- Prevents conflicts between modules with same agent names

Note: This installer shares 95% of its code with claude-code.js.
Future refactoring could extract common patterns to IdeWithSlashCommandsSetup
base class (see design documents for details).
2025-11-18 20:09:06 -06:00
932 changed files with 78386 additions and 74151 deletions

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.coderabbit.yaml Normal file
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# yaml-language-server: $schema=https://coderabbit.ai/integrations/schema.v2.json
language: "en-US"
early_access: true
reviews:
profile: chill
high_level_summary: false # don't post summary until explicitly invoked
request_changes_workflow: false
review_status: false
commit_status: false
walkthrough: false
poem: false
auto_review:
enabled: true
drafts: false # Don't review drafts automatically
auto_incremental_review: false # always review the whole PR, not just new commits
base_branches:
- main
path_filters:
- "!**/node_modules/**"
path_instructions:
- path: "**/*"
instructions: |
Focus on inconsistencies, contradictions, edge cases and serious issues.
Avoid commenting on minor issues such as linting, formatting and style issues.
When providing code suggestions, use GitHub's suggestion format:
```suggestion
<code changes>
```
- path: "**/*.js"
instructions: |
CLI tooling code. Check for: missing error handling on fs operations,
path.join vs string concatenation, proper cleanup in error paths.
Flag any process.exit() without error message.
chat:
auto_reply: true # Response to mentions in comments, a la @coderabbit review
issue_enrichment:
auto_enrich:
enabled: false # don't auto-comment on issues

128
.github/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md vendored Normal file
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# Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct
## Our Pledge
We as members, contributors, and leaders pledge to make participation in our
community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body
size, visible or invisible disability, ethnicity, sex characteristics, gender
identity and expression, level of experience, education, socio-economic status,
nationality, personal appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity
and orientation.
We pledge to act and interact in ways that contribute to an open, welcoming,
diverse, inclusive, and healthy community.
## Our Standards
Examples of behavior that contributes to a positive environment for our
community include:
* Demonstrating empathy and kindness toward other people
* Being respectful of differing opinions, viewpoints, and experiences
* Giving and gracefully accepting constructive feedback
* Accepting responsibility and apologizing to those affected by our mistakes,
and learning from the experience
* Focusing on what is best not just for us as individuals, but for the
overall community
Examples of unacceptable behavior include:
* The use of sexualized language or imagery, and sexual attention or
advances of any kind
* Trolling, insulting or derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
* Public or private harassment
* Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or email
address, without their explicit permission
* Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a
professional setting
## Enforcement Responsibilities
Community leaders are responsible for clarifying and enforcing our standards of
acceptable behavior and will take appropriate and fair corrective action in
response to any behavior that they deem inappropriate, threatening, offensive,
or harmful.
Community leaders have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject
comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions that are
not aligned to this Code of Conduct, and will communicate reasons for moderation
decisions when appropriate.
## Scope
This Code of Conduct applies within all community spaces, and also applies when
an individual is officially representing the community in public spaces.
Examples of representing our community include using an official e-mail address,
posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed
representative at an online or offline event.
## Enforcement
Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be
reported to the community leaders responsible for enforcement at
the official BMAD Discord server (<https://discord.com/invite/gk8jAdXWmj>) - DM a moderator or flag a post.
All complaints will be reviewed and investigated promptly and fairly.
All community leaders are obligated to respect the privacy and security of the
reporter of any incident.
## Enforcement Guidelines
Community leaders will follow these Community Impact Guidelines in determining
the consequences for any action they deem in violation of this Code of Conduct:
### 1. Correction
**Community Impact**: Use of inappropriate language or other behavior deemed
unprofessional or unwelcome in the community.
**Consequence**: A private, written warning from community leaders, providing
clarity around the nature of the violation and an explanation of why the
behavior was inappropriate. A public apology may be requested.
### 2. Warning
**Community Impact**: A violation through a single incident or series
of actions.
**Consequence**: A warning with consequences for continued behavior. No
interaction with the people involved, including unsolicited interaction with
those enforcing the Code of Conduct, for a specified period of time. This
includes avoiding interactions in community spaces as well as external channels
like social media. Violating these terms may lead to a temporary or
permanent ban.
### 3. Temporary Ban
**Community Impact**: A serious violation of community standards, including
sustained inappropriate behavior.
**Consequence**: A temporary ban from any sort of interaction or public
communication with the community for a specified period of time. No public or
private interaction with the people involved, including unsolicited interaction
with those enforcing the Code of Conduct, is allowed during this period.
Violating these terms may lead to a permanent ban.
### 4. Permanent Ban
**Community Impact**: Demonstrating a pattern of violation of community
standards, including sustained inappropriate behavior, harassment of an
individual, or aggression toward or disparagement of classes of individuals.
**Consequence**: A permanent ban from any sort of public interaction within
the community.
## Attribution
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage],
version 2.0, available at
<https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/2/0/code_of_conduct.html>.
Community Impact Guidelines were inspired by [Mozilla's code of conduct
enforcement ladder](https://github.com/mozilla/diversity).
[homepage]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org
For answers to common questions about this code of conduct, see the FAQ at
<https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq>. Translations are available at
<https://www.contributor-covenant.org/translations>.

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@@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
---
name: Bug report
about: Create a report to help us improve
title: ''
labels: ''
assignees: ''
---
**Describe the bug**
A clear and concise description of what the bug is.
**Steps to Reproduce**
What lead to the bug and can it be reliable recreated - if so with what steps.
**PR**
If you have an idea to fix and would like to contribute, please indicate here you are working on a fix, or link to a proposed PR to fix the issue. Please review the contribution.md - contributions are always welcome!
**Expected behavior**
A clear and concise description of what you expected to happen.
**Please be Specific if relevant**
Model(s) Used:
Agentic IDE Used:
WebSite Used:
Project Language:
BMad Method version:
**Screenshots or Links**
If applicable, add screenshots or links (if web sharable record) to help explain your problem.
**Additional context**
Add any other context about the problem here. The more information you can provide, the easier it will be to suggest a fix or resolve

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,8 @@
blank_issues_enabled: false
contact_links:
- name: Discord Community Support
- name: 📚 Documentation
url: http://docs.bmad-method.org
about: Check the docs first — tutorials, guides, and reference
- name: 💬 Discord Community
url: https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj
about: Please join our Discord server for general questions and community discussion before opening an issue.
about: Join for questions, discussion, and help before opening an issue

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
---
name: Feature Request
about: Suggest an idea or new feature
title: ''
labels: ''
assignees: ''
---
**Describe your idea**
A clear and concise description of what you'd like to see added or changed.
**Why is this needed?**
Explain the problem this solves or the benefit it brings to the BMad community.
**How should it work?**
Describe your proposed solution. If you have ideas on implementation, share them here.
**PR**
If you'd like to contribute, please indicate you're working on this or link to your PR. Please review [CONTRIBUTING.md](../../CONTRIBUTING.md) — contributions are always welcome!
**Additional context**
Add any other context, screenshots, or links that help explain your idea.

View File

@@ -1,109 +0,0 @@
---
name: V6 Idea Submission
about: Suggest an idea for v6
title: ''
labels: ''
assignees: ''
---
# Idea: [Replace with a clear, actionable title]
### PASS Framework
**P**roblem:
> What's broken or missing? What pain point are we addressing? (1-2 sentences)
>
> [Your answer here]
**A**udience:
> Who's affected by this problem and how severely? (1-2 sentences)
>
> [Your answer here]
**S**olution:
> What will we build or change? How will we measure success? (1-2 sentences with at least 1 measurable outcome)
>
> [Your answer here]
>
> [Your Acceptance Criteria for measuring success here]
**S**ize:
> How much effort do you estimate this will take?
>
> - [ ] **XS** - A few hours
> - [ ] **S** - 1-2 days
> - [ ] **M** - 3-5 days
> - [ ] **L** - 1-2 weeks
> - [ ] **XL** - More than 2 weeks
---
### Metadata
**Submitted by:** [Your name]
**Date:** [Today's date]
**Priority:** [Leave blank - will be assigned during team review]
---
## Examples
<details>
<summary>Click to see a GOOD example</summary>
### Idea: Add search functionality to customer dashboard
**P**roblem:
Customers can't find their past orders quickly. They have to scroll through pages of orders to find what they're looking for, leading to 15+ support tickets per week.
**A**udience:
All 5,000+ active customers are affected. Support team spends ~10 hours/week helping customers find orders.
**S**olution:
Add a search bar that filters by order number, date range, and product name. Success = 50% reduction in order-finding support tickets within 2 weeks of launch.
**S**ize:
- [x] **M** - 3-5 days
</details>
<details>
<summary>Click to see a POOR example</summary>
### Idea: Make the app better
**P**roblem:
The app needs improvements and updates.
**A**udience:
Users
**S**olution:
Fix issues and add features.
**S**ize:
- [ ] Unknown
_Why this is poor: Too vague, no specific problem identified, no measurable success criteria, unclear scope_
</details>
---
## Tips for Success
1. **Be specific** - Vague problems lead to vague solutions
2. **Quantify when possible** - Numbers help us prioritize (e.g., "20 customers asked for this" vs "customers want this")
3. **One idea per submission** - If you have multiple ideas, submit multiple templates
4. **Success metrics matter** - How will we know this worked?
5. **Honest sizing** - Better to overestimate than underestimate
## Questions?
Reach out to @OverlordBaconPants if you need help completing this template.

32
.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/issue.md vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,32 @@
---
name: Issue
about: Report a problem or something that's not working
title: ''
labels: ''
assignees: ''
---
**Describe the bug**
A clear and concise description of what the bug is.
**Steps to reproduce**
1. What were you doing when the bug occurred?
2. What steps can recreate the issue?
**Expected behavior**
A clear and concise description of what you expected to happen.
**Environment (if relevant)**
- Model(s) used:
- Agentic IDE used:
- BMad version:
- Project language:
**Screenshots or links**
If applicable, add screenshots or links to help explain the problem.
**PR**
If you'd like to contribute a fix, please indicate you're working on it or link to your PR. See [CONTRIBUTING.md](../../CONTRIBUTING.md) — contributions are always welcome!
**Additional context**
Add any other context about the problem here. The more information you provide, the easier it is to help.

34
.github/scripts/discord-helpers.sh vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
#!/bin/bash
# Discord notification helper functions
# Escape markdown special chars and @mentions for safe Discord display
# Skips content inside <URL> wrappers to preserve URLs intact
esc() {
awk '{
result = ""; in_url = 0; n = length($0)
for (i = 1; i <= n; i++) {
c = substr($0, i, 1)
if (c == "<" && substr($0, i, 8) ~ /^<https?:/) in_url = 1
if (in_url) { result = result c; if (c == ">") in_url = 0 }
else if (c == "@") result = result "@ "
else if (index("[]\\*_()~`", c) > 0) result = result "\\" c
else result = result c
}
print result
}'
}
# Truncate to $1 chars (or 80 if wall-of-text with <3 spaces)
trunc() {
local max=$1
local txt=$(tr '\n\r' ' ' | cut -c1-"$max")
local spaces=$(printf '%s' "$txt" | tr -cd ' ' | wc -c)
[ "$spaces" -lt 3 ] && [ ${#txt} -gt 80 ] && txt=$(printf '%s' "$txt" | cut -c1-80)
printf '%s' "$txt"
}
# Remove incomplete URL at end of truncated text (incomplete URLs are useless)
strip_trailing_url() { sed -E 's~<?https?://[^[:space:]]*$~~'; }
# Wrap URLs in <> to suppress Discord embeds (keeps links clickable)
wrap_urls() { sed -E 's~https?://[^[:space:]<>]+~<&>~g'; }

View File

@@ -1,277 +0,0 @@
name: Publish Latest Bundles
on:
push:
branches: [main]
workflow_dispatch: {}
permissions:
contents: write
jobs:
bundle-and-publish:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout BMAD-METHOD
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: ".nvmrc"
cache: npm
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Generate bundles
run: npm run bundle
- name: Create bundle distribution structure
run: |
mkdir -p dist/bundles
# Copy web bundles (XML files from npm run bundle output)
cp -r web-bundles/* dist/bundles/ 2>/dev/null || true
# Verify bundles were copied (fail if completely empty)
if [ ! "$(ls -A dist/bundles)" ]; then
echo "❌ ERROR: No bundles found in dist/bundles/"
echo "This likely means 'npm run bundle' failed or bundles weren't generated"
exit 1
fi
# Count bundles per module
for module in bmm bmb cis bmgd; do
if [ -d "dist/bundles/$module/agents" ]; then
COUNT=$(find dist/bundles/$module/agents -name '*.xml' 2>/dev/null | wc -l)
echo "✅ $module: $COUNT agent bundles"
fi
done
# Generate index.html for each agents directory (fixes directory browsing)
for module in bmm bmb cis bmgd; do
if [ -d "dist/bundles/$module/agents" ]; then
cat > "dist/bundles/$module/agents/index.html" << 'DIREOF'
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>MODULE_NAME Agents</title>
<style>
body { font-family: system-ui; max-width: 800px; margin: 50px auto; padding: 20px; }
li { margin: 10px 0; }
a { color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none; }
a:hover { text-decoration: underline; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>MODULE_NAME Agents</h1>
<ul>
AGENT_LINKS
</ul>
<p><a href="../../">← Back to all modules</a></p>
</body>
</html>
DIREOF
# Replace MODULE_NAME
sed -i "s/MODULE_NAME/${module^^}/g" "dist/bundles/$module/agents/index.html"
# Generate agent links
LINKS=""
for file in dist/bundles/$module/agents/*.xml; do
if [ -f "$file" ]; then
name=$(basename "$file" .xml)
LINKS="$LINKS <li><a href=\"./$name.xml\">$name</a></li>\n"
fi
done
sed -i "s|AGENT_LINKS|$LINKS|" "dist/bundles/$module/agents/index.html"
fi
done
# Create zip archives per module
mkdir -p dist/bundles/downloads
for module in bmm bmb cis bmgd; do
if [ -d "dist/bundles/$module" ]; then
(cd dist/bundles && zip -r downloads/$module-agents.zip $module/)
echo "✅ Created $module-agents.zip"
fi
done
# Create index.html for GitHub Pages
cat > dist/bundles/index.html << 'EOF'
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>BMAD Bundles - Latest</title>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<style>
body { font-family: -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Segoe UI", Roboto, sans-serif; max-width: 800px; margin: 50px auto; padding: 20px; }
h1 { color: #333; }
.platform { margin: 30px 0; padding: 20px; background: #f5f5f5; border-radius: 8px; }
.module { margin: 15px 0; }
a { color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none; }
a:hover { text-decoration: underline; }
code { background: #e0e0e0; padding: 2px 6px; border-radius: 3px; }
.warning { background: #fff3cd; padding: 15px; border-left: 4px solid #ffc107; margin: 20px 0; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>BMAD Web Bundles - Latest (Main Branch)</h1>
<div class="warning">
<strong>⚠️ Latest Build (Unstable)</strong><br>
These bundles are built from the latest main branch commit. For stable releases, visit
<a href="https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/releases/latest">GitHub Releases</a>.
</div>
<p><strong>Last Updated:</strong> <code>$TIMESTAMP</code></p>
<p><strong>Commit:</strong> <code>$COMMIT_SHA</code></p>
<h2>Available Modules</h2>
<div class="platform">
<h3>BMM (BMad Method)</h3>
<div class="module">
<a href="./bmm/agents/pm.xml">PM</a> |
<a href="./bmm/agents/architect.xml">Architect</a> |
<a href="./bmm/agents/tea.xml">TEA</a> |
<a href="./bmm/agents/dev.xml">Developer</a> |
<a href="./bmm/agents/analyst.xml">Analyst</a> |
<a href="./bmm/agents/sm.xml">Scrum Master</a> |
<a href="./bmm/agents/ux-designer.xml">UX Designer</a> |
<a href="./bmm/agents/tech-writer.xml">Tech Writer</a><br>
📁 <a href="./bmm/agents/">Browse All</a> | 📦 <a href="./downloads/bmm-agents.zip">Download Zip</a>
</div>
</div>
<div class="platform">
<h3>BMB (BMad Builder)</h3>
<div class="module">
<a href="./bmb/agents/bmad-builder.xml">Builder Agent</a><br>
📁 <a href="./bmb/agents/">Browse All</a> | 📦 <a href="./downloads/bmb-agents.zip">Download Zip</a>
</div>
</div>
<div class="platform">
<h3>CIS (Creative Intelligence Suite)</h3>
<div class="module">
📁 <a href="./cis/agents/">Browse Agents</a> | 📦 <a href="./downloads/cis-agents.zip">Download Zip</a>
</div>
</div>
<div class="platform">
<h3>BMGD (Game Development)</h3>
<div class="module">
📁 <a href="./bmgd/agents/">Browse Agents</a> | 📦 <a href="./downloads/bmgd-agents.zip">Download Zip</a>
</div>
</div>
<h2>Bulk Downloads</h2>
<p>Download all agents for a module as a zip archive:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="./downloads/bmm-agents.zip">📦 BMM Agents (all 8)</a></li>
<li><a href="./downloads/bmb-agents.zip">📦 BMB Agents (all 1)</a></li>
<li><a href="./downloads/cis-agents.zip">📦 CIS Agents (all 5)</a></li>
<li><a href="./downloads/bmgd-agents.zip">📦 BMGD Agents (all 4)</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>Usage</h2>
<p>Copy the raw XML URL and paste into your AI platform's custom instructions or project knowledge.</p>
<p>Example: <code>https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-bundles/main/bmm/agents/pm.xml</code></p>
<h2>Installation (Recommended)</h2>
<p>For full IDE integration with slash commands, use the installer:</p>
<pre>npx bmad-method@alpha install</pre>
<footer style="margin-top: 50px; padding-top: 20px; border-top: 1px solid #ccc; color: #666;">
<p>Built from <a href="https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD">BMAD-METHOD</a> repository.</p>
</footer>
</body>
</html>
EOF
# Replace placeholders
TIMESTAMP=$(date -u +"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M UTC")
COMMIT_SHA=$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)
sed -i "s/\$TIMESTAMP/$TIMESTAMP/" dist/bundles/index.html
sed -i "s/\$COMMIT_SHA/$COMMIT_SHA/" dist/bundles/index.html
- name: Checkout bmad-bundles repo
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
repository: bmad-code-org/bmad-bundles
path: bmad-bundles
token: ${{ secrets.BUNDLES_PAT }}
- name: Update bundles
run: |
# Clear old bundles
rm -rf bmad-bundles/*
# Copy new bundles
cp -r dist/bundles/* bmad-bundles/
# Create .nojekyll for GitHub Pages
touch bmad-bundles/.nojekyll
# Create README
cat > bmad-bundles/README.md << 'EOF'
# BMAD Web Bundles (Latest)
**⚠️ Unstable Build**: These bundles are auto-generated from the latest `main` branch.
For stable releases, visit [GitHub Releases](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/releases/latest).
## Usage
Copy raw markdown URLs for use in AI platforms:
- Claude Code: `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-bundles/main/claude-code/sub-agents/{agent}.md`
- ChatGPT: `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-bundles/main/chatgpt/sub-agents/{agent}.md`
- Gemini: `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-bundles/main/gemini/sub-agents/{agent}.md`
## Browse
Visit [https://bmad-code-org.github.io/bmad-bundles/](https://bmad-code-org.github.io/bmad-bundles/) to browse bundles.
## Installation (Recommended)
For full IDE integration:
```bash
npx bmad-method@alpha install
```
---
Auto-updated by [BMAD-METHOD](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD) on every main branch merge.
EOF
- name: Commit and push to bmad-bundles
run: |
cd bmad-bundles
git config user.name "github-actions[bot]"
git config user.email "github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
git add .
if git diff --staged --quiet; then
echo "No changes to bundles, skipping commit"
else
COMMIT_SHA=$(cd .. && git rev-parse --short HEAD)
git commit -m "Update bundles from BMAD-METHOD@${COMMIT_SHA}"
git push
echo "✅ Bundles published to GitHub Pages"
fi
- name: Summary
run: |
echo "## 🎉 Bundles Published!" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "**Latest bundles** available at:" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "- 🌐 Browse: https://bmad-code-org.github.io/bmad-bundles/" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "- 📦 Raw files: https://github.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-bundles" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "**Commit**: ${{ github.sha }}" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY

View File

@@ -1,16 +1,90 @@
name: Discord Notification
"on": [pull_request, release, create, delete, issue_comment, pull_request_review, pull_request_review_comment]
on:
pull_request:
types: [opened, closed]
issues:
types: [opened]
env:
MAX_TITLE: 100
MAX_BODY: 250
jobs:
notify:
pull_request:
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Notify Discord
uses: sarisia/actions-status-discord@v1
if: always()
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
webhook: ${{ secrets.DISCORD_WEBHOOK }}
status: ${{ job.status }}
title: "Triggered by ${{ github.event_name }}"
color: 0x5865F2
ref: ${{ github.event.repository.default_branch }}
sparse-checkout: .github/scripts
sparse-checkout-cone-mode: false
- name: Notify Discord
env:
WEBHOOK: ${{ secrets.DISCORD_WEBHOOK }}
ACTION: ${{ github.event.action }}
MERGED: ${{ github.event.pull_request.merged }}
PR_NUM: ${{ github.event.pull_request.number }}
PR_URL: ${{ github.event.pull_request.html_url }}
PR_TITLE: ${{ github.event.pull_request.title }}
PR_USER: ${{ github.event.pull_request.user.login }}
PR_BODY: ${{ github.event.pull_request.body }}
run: |
set -o pipefail
source .github/scripts/discord-helpers.sh
[ -z "$WEBHOOK" ] && exit 0
if [ "$ACTION" = "opened" ]; then ICON="🔀"; LABEL="New PR"
elif [ "$ACTION" = "closed" ] && [ "$MERGED" = "true" ]; then ICON="🎉"; LABEL="Merged"
elif [ "$ACTION" = "closed" ]; then ICON="❌"; LABEL="Closed"; fi
TITLE=$(printf '%s' "$PR_TITLE" | trunc $MAX_TITLE | esc)
[ ${#PR_TITLE} -gt $MAX_TITLE ] && TITLE="${TITLE}..."
BODY=$(printf '%s' "$PR_BODY" | trunc $MAX_BODY)
if [ -n "$PR_BODY" ] && [ ${#PR_BODY} -gt $MAX_BODY ]; then
BODY=$(printf '%s' "$BODY" | strip_trailing_url)
fi
BODY=$(printf '%s' "$BODY" | wrap_urls | esc)
[ -n "$PR_BODY" ] && [ ${#PR_BODY} -gt $MAX_BODY ] && BODY="${BODY}..."
[ -n "$BODY" ] && BODY=" · $BODY"
USER=$(printf '%s' "$PR_USER" | esc)
MSG="$ICON **[$LABEL #$PR_NUM: $TITLE](<$PR_URL>)**"$'\n'"by @$USER$BODY"
jq -n --arg content "$MSG" '{content: $content}' | curl -sf --retry 2 -X POST "$WEBHOOK" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d @-
issues:
if: github.event_name == 'issues'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
ref: ${{ github.event.repository.default_branch }}
sparse-checkout: .github/scripts
sparse-checkout-cone-mode: false
- name: Notify Discord
env:
WEBHOOK: ${{ secrets.DISCORD_WEBHOOK }}
ISSUE_NUM: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
ISSUE_URL: ${{ github.event.issue.html_url }}
ISSUE_TITLE: ${{ github.event.issue.title }}
ISSUE_USER: ${{ github.event.issue.user.login }}
ISSUE_BODY: ${{ github.event.issue.body }}
run: |
set -o pipefail
source .github/scripts/discord-helpers.sh
[ -z "$WEBHOOK" ] && exit 0
TITLE=$(printf '%s' "$ISSUE_TITLE" | trunc $MAX_TITLE | esc)
[ ${#ISSUE_TITLE} -gt $MAX_TITLE ] && TITLE="${TITLE}..."
BODY=$(printf '%s' "$ISSUE_BODY" | trunc $MAX_BODY)
if [ -n "$ISSUE_BODY" ] && [ ${#ISSUE_BODY} -gt $MAX_BODY ]; then
BODY=$(printf '%s' "$BODY" | strip_trailing_url)
fi
BODY=$(printf '%s' "$BODY" | wrap_urls | esc)
[ -n "$ISSUE_BODY" ] && [ ${#ISSUE_BODY} -gt $MAX_BODY ] && BODY="${BODY}..."
[ -n "$BODY" ] && BODY=" · $BODY"
USER=$(printf '%s' "$ISSUE_USER" | esc)
MSG="🐛 **[Issue #$ISSUE_NUM: $TITLE](<$ISSUE_URL>)**"$'\n'"by @$USER$BODY"
jq -n --arg content "$MSG" '{content: $content}' | curl -sf --retry 2 -X POST "$WEBHOOK" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d @-

63
.github/workflows/docs.yaml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
name: Deploy Documentation
on:
push:
branches:
- main
paths:
- "docs/**"
- "src/modules/*/docs/**"
- "website/**"
- "tools/build-docs.js"
- ".github/workflows/docs.yaml"
workflow_dispatch:
permissions:
contents: read
pages: write
id-token: write
concurrency:
group: "pages"
cancel-in-progress: false
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version: "20"
cache: "npm"
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Build documentation
env:
# Override site URL from GitHub repo variable if set
# Otherwise, astro.config.mjs will compute from GITHUB_REPOSITORY
SITE_URL: ${{ vars.SITE_URL }}
run: npm run docs:build
- name: Upload artifact
uses: actions/upload-pages-artifact@v3
with:
path: build/site
deploy:
environment:
name: github-pages
url: ${{ steps.deployment.outputs.page_url }}
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: build
steps:
- name: Deploy to GitHub Pages
id: deployment
uses: actions/deploy-pages@v4

View File

@@ -6,9 +6,11 @@ on:
version_bump:
description: Version bump type
required: true
default: patch
default: beta
type: choice
options:
- beta
- alpha
- patch
- minor
- major
@@ -49,7 +51,11 @@ jobs:
git config user.email "github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
- name: Bump version
run: npm run version:${{ github.event.inputs.version_bump }}
run: |
case "${{ github.event.inputs.version_bump }}" in
alpha|beta) npm version prerelease --no-git-tag-version --preid=${{ github.event.inputs.version_bump }} ;;
*) npm version ${{ github.event.inputs.version_bump }} --no-git-tag-version ;;
esac
- name: Get new version and previous tag
id: version
@@ -61,34 +67,9 @@ jobs:
run: |
sed -i 's/"version": ".*"/"version": "${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}"/' tools/installer/package.json
- name: Generate web bundles
run: npm run bundle
- name: Package bundles for release
run: |
mkdir -p dist/release-bundles
# Copy web bundles
cp -r web-bundles dist/release-bundles/bmad-bundles-v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}
# Verify bundles exist
if [ ! "$(ls -A dist/release-bundles/bmad-bundles-v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }})" ]; then
echo "❌ ERROR: No bundles found"
echo "This likely means 'npm run bundle' failed"
exit 1
fi
# Count and display bundles per module
for module in bmm bmb cis bmgd; do
if [ -d "dist/release-bundles/bmad-bundles-v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}/$module/agents" ]; then
COUNT=$(find dist/release-bundles/bmad-bundles-v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}/$module/agents -name '*.xml' 2>/dev/null | wc -l)
echo "✅ $module: $COUNT agents"
fi
done
# Create archive
tar -czf dist/release-bundles/bmad-bundles-v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}.tar.gz \
-C dist/release-bundles/bmad-bundles-v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }} .
# TODO: Re-enable web bundles once tools/cli/bundlers/ is restored
# - name: Generate web bundles
# run: npm run bundle
- name: Commit version bump
run: |
@@ -177,33 +158,26 @@ jobs:
NODE_AUTH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
run: |
VERSION="${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}"
if [[ "$VERSION" == *"alpha"* ]] || [[ "$VERSION" == *"beta"* ]]; then
echo "Publishing prerelease version with --tag alpha"
if [[ "$VERSION" == *"alpha"* ]]; then
echo "Publishing alpha prerelease version with --tag alpha"
npm publish --tag alpha
elif [[ "$VERSION" == *"beta"* ]]; then
echo "Publishing beta prerelease version with --tag latest"
npm publish --tag latest
else
echo "Publishing stable version with --tag latest"
npm publish --tag latest
fi
- name: Create GitHub Release with Bundles
- name: Create GitHub Release
uses: softprops/action-gh-release@v2
with:
tag_name: v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}
name: "BMad Method v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}"
body: |
${{ steps.release_notes.outputs.RELEASE_NOTES }}
## 📦 Web Bundles
Download XML bundles for use in AI platforms (Claude Projects, ChatGPT, Gemini):
- `bmad-bundles-v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}.tar.gz` - All modules (BMM, BMB, CIS, BMGD)
**Browse online** (bleeding edge): https://bmad-code-org.github.io/bmad-bundles/
draft: false
prerelease: ${{ contains(steps.version.outputs.new_version, 'alpha') || contains(steps.version.outputs.new_version, 'beta') }}
files: |
dist/release-bundles/*.tar.gz
- name: Summary
run: |
@@ -212,7 +186,6 @@ jobs:
echo "### 📦 Distribution" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "- **NPM**: Published with @latest tag" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "- **GitHub Release**: https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/releases/tag/v${{ steps.version.outputs.new_version }}" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "- **Web Bundles**: Attached to GitHub Release (4 archives)" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "### ✅ Installation" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY
echo "\`\`\`bash" >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY

View File

@@ -3,6 +3,7 @@ name: Quality & Validation
# Runs comprehensive quality checks on all PRs:
# - Prettier (formatting)
# - ESLint (linting)
# - markdownlint (markdown quality)
# - Schema validation (YAML structure)
# - Agent schema tests (fixture-based validation)
# - Installation component tests (compilation)
@@ -50,6 +51,45 @@ jobs:
- name: ESLint
run: npm run lint
markdownlint:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Setup Node
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: ".nvmrc"
cache: "npm"
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: markdownlint
run: npm run lint:md
docs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Setup Node
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: ".nvmrc"
cache: "npm"
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Validate documentation links
run: npm run docs:validate-links
- name: Build documentation
run: npm run docs:build
validate:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
@@ -73,6 +113,3 @@ jobs:
- name: Test agent compilation components
run: npm run test:install
- name: Validate web bundles
run: npm run validate:bundles

55
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,12 +1,11 @@
# Dependencies
node_modules/
**/node_modules/
pnpm-lock.yaml
bun.lock
deno.lock
pnpm-workspace.yaml
package-lock.json
test-output/*
coverage/
@@ -28,11 +27,6 @@ Thumbs.db
# Development tools and configs
.prettierrc
# IDE and editor configs
.windsurf/
.trae/
.bmad*/.cursor/
# AI assistant files
CLAUDE.md
.ai/*
@@ -43,27 +37,32 @@ CLAUDE.local.md
.serena/
.claude/settings.local.json
# Project-specific
.bmad-core
.bmad-creator-tools
test-project-install/*
sample-project/*
flattened-codebase.xml
*.stats.md
.internal-docs/
#UAT template testing output files
tools/template-test-generator/test-scenarios/
# Bundler temporary files and generated bundles
.bundler-temp/
# Generated web bundles (built by CI, not committed)
src/modules/bmm/sub-modules/
src/modules/bmb/sub-modules/
src/modules/cis/sub-modules/
src/modules/bmgd/sub-modules/
z*/
.bmad
_bmad
_bmad-output
.clinerules
.augment
.crush
.cursor
.iflow
.opencode
.qwen
.rovodev
.kilocodemodes
.claude
.codex
.github/chatmodes
.github/agents
.agent
.agentvibes
.kiro
.roo
.trae
.windsurf
# Astro / Documentation Build
website/.astro/
website/dist/
build/

View File

@@ -5,3 +5,16 @@ npx --no-install lint-staged
# Validate everything
npm test
# Validate docs links only when docs change
if command -v rg >/dev/null 2>&1; then
if git diff --cached --name-only | rg -q '^docs/'; then
npm run docs:validate-links
npm run docs:build
fi
else
if git diff --cached --name-only | grep -Eq '^docs/'; then
npm run docs:validate-links
npm run docs:build
fi
fi

41
.markdownlint-cli2.yaml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
# markdownlint-cli2 configuration
# https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint-cli2
ignores:
- "**/node_modules/**"
- test/fixtures/**
- CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
- _bmad/**
- _bmad*/**
- .agent/**
- .claude/**
- .roo/**
- .codex/**
- .kiro/**
- sample-project/**
- test-project-install/**
- z*/**
# Rule configuration
config:
# Disable all rules by default
default: false
# Heading levels should increment by one (h1 -> h2 -> h3, not h1 -> h3)
MD001: true
# Duplicate sibling headings (same heading text at same level under same parent)
MD024:
siblings_only: true
# Trailing commas in headings (likely typos)
MD026:
punctuation: ","
# Bare URLs - may not render as links in all parsers
# Should use <url> or [text](url) format
MD034: true
# Spaces inside emphasis markers - breaks rendering
# e.g., "* text *" won't render as emphasis
MD037: true

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,9 @@
# Test fixtures with intentionally broken/malformed files
test/fixtures/**
# Contributor Covenant (external standard)
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
# BMAD runtime folders (user-specific, not in repo)
.bmad/
.bmad*/
_bmad/
_bmad*/

View File

@@ -57,6 +57,7 @@
"tileset",
"tmpl",
"Trae",
"Unsharded",
"VNET",
"webskip"
],
@@ -73,7 +74,7 @@
"editor.formatOnSave": true,
"editor.defaultFormatter": "esbenp.prettier-vscode",
"[javascript]": {
"editor.defaultFormatter": "esbenp.prettier-vscode"
"editor.defaultFormatter": "vscode.typescript-language-features"
},
"[json]": {
"editor.defaultFormatter": "vscode.json-language-features"

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

1
CNAME Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1 @@
docs.bmad-method.org

View File

@@ -1,268 +1,167 @@
# Contributing to BMad
Thank you for considering contributing to the BMad project! We believe in **Human Amplification, Not Replacement** - bringing out the best thinking in both humans and AI through guided collaboration.
Thank you for considering contributing! We believe in **Human Amplification, Not Replacement** bringing out the best thinking in both humans and AI through guided collaboration.
💬 **Discord Community**: Join our [Discord server](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj) for real-time discussions:
💬 **Discord**: [Join our community](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj) for real-time discussions, questions, and collaboration.
- **#general-dev** - Technical discussions, feature ideas, and development questions
- **#bugs-issues** - Bug reports and issue discussions
---
## Our Philosophy
### BMad Core™: Universal Foundation
BMad strengthens human-AI collaboration through specialized agents and guided workflows. Every contribution should answer: **"Does this make humans and AI better together?"**
BMad Core empowers humans and AI agents working together in true partnership across any domain through our **C.O.R.E. Framework** (Collaboration Optimized Reflection Engine):
- **Collaboration**: Human-AI partnership where both contribute unique strengths
- **Optimized**: The collaborative process refined for maximum effectiveness
- **Reflection**: Guided thinking that helps discover better solutions and insights
- **Engine**: The powerful framework that orchestrates specialized agents and workflows
### BMad Method™: Agile AI-Driven Development
The BMad Method is the flagship bmad module for agile AI-driven software development. It emphasizes thorough planning and solid architectural foundations to provide detailed context for developer agents, mirroring real-world agile best practices.
### Core Principles
**Partnership Over Automation** - AI agents act as expert coaches, mentors, and collaborators who amplify human capability rather than replace it.
**Bidirectional Guidance** - Agents guide users through structured workflows while users push agents with advanced prompting. Both sides actively work to extract better information from each other.
**Systems of Workflows** - BMad Core builds comprehensive systems of guided workflows with specialized agent teams for any domain.
**Tool-Agnostic Foundation** - BMad Core remains tool-agnostic, providing stable, extensible groundwork that adapts to any domain.
## What Makes a Good Contribution?
Every contribution should strengthen human-AI collaboration. Ask yourself: **"Does this make humans and AI better together?"**
**✅ Contributions that align:**
- Enhance universal collaboration patterns
- Improve agent personas and workflows
- Strengthen planning and context continuity
- Increase cross-domain accessibility
- Add domain-specific modules leveraging BMad Core
**❌ What detracts from our mission:**
**✅ What we welcome:**
- Enhanced collaboration patterns and workflows
- Improved agent personas and prompts
- Domain-specific modules leveraging BMad Core
- Better planning and context continuity
**❌ What doesn't fit:**
- Purely automated solutions that sideline humans
- Tools that don't improve the partnership
- Complexity that creates barriers to adoption
- Features that fragment BMad Core's foundation
## Before You Contribute
---
### Reporting Bugs
## Reporting Issues
1. **Check existing issues** first to avoid duplicates
2. **Consider discussing in Discord** (#bugs-issues channel) for quick help
3. **Use the bug report template** when creating a new issue - it guides you through providing:
- Clear bug description
- Steps to reproduce
- Expected vs actual behavior
- Model/IDE/BMad version details
- Screenshots or links if applicable
4. **Indicate if you're working on a fix** to avoid duplicate efforts
**ALL bug reports and feature requests MUST go through GitHub Issues.**
### Suggesting Features or New Modules
### Before Creating an Issue
1. **Discuss first in Discord** (#general-dev channel) - the feature request template asks if you've done this
2. **Check existing issues and discussions** to avoid duplicates
3. **Use the feature request template** when creating an issue
4. **Be specific** about why this feature would benefit the BMad community and strengthen human-AI collaboration
1. **Search existing issues** — Use the GitHub issue search to check if your bug or feature has already been reported
2. **Search closed issues** — Your issue may have been fixed or addressed previously
3. **Check discussions** — Some conversations happen in [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/discussions)
### Before Starting Work
### Bug Reports
After searching, if the bug is unreported, use the [bug report template](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues/new?template=bug_report.md) and include:
- Clear description of the problem
- Steps to reproduce
- Expected vs actual behavior
- Your environment (model, IDE, BMad version)
- Screenshots or error messages if applicable
### Feature Requests
After searching, use the [feature request template](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues/new?template=feature_request.md) and explain:
- What the feature is
- Why it would benefit the BMad community
- How it strengthens human-AI collaboration
**For community modules**, review [TRADEMARK.md](TRADEMARK.md) for proper naming conventions (e.g., "My Module (BMad Community Module)").
---
## Before Starting Work
⚠️ **Required before submitting PRs:**
1. **For bugs**: Check if an issue exists (create one using the bug template if not)
2. **For features**: Discuss in Discord (#general-dev) AND create a feature request issue
3. **For large changes**: Always open an issue first to discuss alignment
| Work Type | Requirement |
| ------------- | ---------------------------------------------- |
| Bug fix | An open issue (create one if it doesn't exist) |
| Feature | An open feature request issue |
| Large changes | Discussion via issue first |
Please propose small, granular changes! For large or significant changes, discuss in Discord and open an issue first. This prevents wasted effort on PRs that may not align with planned changes.
**Why?** This prevents wasted effort on work that may not align with project direction.
---
## Pull Request Guidelines
### Which Branch?
### Target Branch
**Submit PR's to `main` branch** (critical only):
Submit PRs to the `main` branch.
- 🚨 Critical bug fixes that break basic functionality
- 🔒 Security patches
- 📚 Fixing dangerously incorrect documentation
- 🐛 Bugs preventing installation or basic usage
### PR Size
### PR Size Guidelines
- **Ideal**: 200-400 lines of code changes
- **Maximum**: 800 lines (excluding generated files)
- **One feature/fix per PR**
- **Ideal PR size**: 200-400 lines of code changes
- **Maximum PR size**: 800 lines (excluding generated files)
- **One feature/fix per PR**: Each PR should address a single issue or add one feature
- **If your change is larger**: Break it into multiple smaller PRs that can be reviewed independently
- **Related changes**: Even related changes should be separate PRs if they deliver independent value
If your change exceeds 800 lines, break it into smaller PRs that can be reviewed independently.
### Breaking Down Large PRs
### New to Pull Requests?
If your change exceeds 800 lines, use this checklist to split it:
- [ ] Can I separate the refactoring from the feature implementation?
- [ ] Can I introduce the new API/interface in one PR and implementation in another?
- [ ] Can I split by file or module?
- [ ] Can I create a base PR with shared utilities first?
- [ ] Can I separate test additions from implementation?
- [ ] Even if changes are related, can they deliver value independently?
- [ ] Can these changes be merged in any order without breaking things?
Example breakdown:
1. PR #1: Add utility functions and types (100 lines)
2. PR #2: Refactor existing code to use utilities (200 lines)
3. PR #3: Implement new feature using refactored code (300 lines)
4. PR #4: Add comprehensive tests (200 lines)
**Note**: PRs #1 and #4 could be submitted simultaneously since they deliver independent value.
### Pull Request Process
#### New to Pull Requests?
If you're new to GitHub or pull requests, here's a quick guide:
1. **Fork the repository** - Click the "Fork" button on GitHub to create your own copy
2. **Clone your fork** - `git clone https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/bmad-method.git`
3. **Create a new branch** - Never work on `main` directly!
```bash
git checkout -b fix/description
# or
git checkout -b feature/description
```
4. **Make your changes** - Edit files, keeping changes small and focused
5. **Commit your changes** - Use clear, descriptive commit messages
```bash
git add .
git commit -m "fix: correct typo in README"
```
6. **Push to your fork** - `git push origin fix/description`
7. **Create the Pull Request** - Go to your fork on GitHub and click "Compare & pull request"
1. **Fork** the repository
2. **Clone** your fork: `git clone https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/bmad-method.git`
3. **Create a branch**: `git checkout -b fix/description` or `git checkout -b feature/description`
4. **Make changes** — keep them focused
5. **Commit**: `git commit -m "fix: correct typo in README"`
6. **Push**: `git push origin fix/description`
7. **Open PR** from your fork on GitHub
### PR Description Template
Keep your PR description concise and focused. Use this template:
```markdown
## What
[1-2 sentences describing WHAT changed]
## Why
[1-2 sentences explaining WHY this change is needed]
Fixes #[issue number] (if applicable)
Fixes #[issue number]
## How
## [2-3 bullets listing HOW you implemented it]
-
- [2-3 bullets listing HOW you implemented it]
-
## Testing
[1-2 sentences on how you tested this]
```
**Maximum PR description length: 200 words** (excluding code examples if needed)
**Keep it under 200 words.**
### Good vs Bad PR Descriptions
### Commit Messages
❌ **Bad Example:**
> This revolutionary PR introduces a paradigm-shifting enhancement to the system's architecture by implementing a state-of-the-art solution that leverages cutting-edge methodologies to optimize performance metrics...
✅ **Good Example:**
> **What:** Added validation for agent dependency resolution
> **Why:** Build was failing silently when agents had circular dependencies
> **How:**
>
> - Added cycle detection in dependency-resolver.js
> - Throws clear error with dependency chain
> **Testing:** Tested with circular deps between 3 agents
### Commit Message Convention
Use conventional commits format:
Use conventional commits:
- `feat:` New feature
- `fix:` Bug fix
- `docs:` Documentation only
- `refactor:` Code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- `test:` Adding missing tests
- `chore:` Changes to build process or auxiliary tools
- `refactor:` Code change (no bug/feature)
- `test:` Adding tests
- `chore:` Build/tools changes
Keep commit messages under 72 characters.
### Atomic Commits
Each commit should represent one logical change:
- **Do:** One bug fix per commit
- **Do:** One feature addition per commit
- **Don't:** Mix refactoring with bug fixes
- **Don't:** Combine unrelated changes
## What Makes a Good Pull Request?
✅ **Good PRs:**
- Change one thing at a time
- Have clear, descriptive titles
- Explain what and why in the description
- Include only the files that need to change
- Reference related issue numbers
❌ **Avoid:**
- Changing formatting of entire files
- Multiple unrelated changes in one PR
- Copying your entire project/repo into the PR
- Changes without explanation
- Working directly on `main` branch
## Common Mistakes to Avoid
1. **Don't reformat entire files** - only change what's necessary
2. **Don't include unrelated changes** - stick to one fix/feature per PR
3. **Don't paste code in issues** - create a proper PR instead
4. **Don't submit your whole project** - contribute specific improvements
## Code Style
- Follow the existing code style and conventions
- Write clear comments for complex logic
- Keep dev agents lean - they need context for coding, not documentation
- Web/planning agents can be larger with more complex tasks
- Everything is natural language (markdown) - no code in core framework
- Use bmad modules for domain-specific features
- Validate YAML schemas with `npm run validate:schemas` before committing
## Code of Conduct
By participating in this project, you agree to abide by our Code of Conduct. We foster a collaborative, respectful environment focused on building better human-AI partnerships.
## Need Help?
- 💬 Join our [Discord Community](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj):
- **#general-dev** - Technical questions and feature discussions
- **#bugs-issues** - Get help with bugs before filing issues
- 🐛 Report bugs using the [bug report template](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues/new?template=bug_report.md)
- 💡 Suggest features using the [feature request template](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues/new?template=feature_request.md)
- 📖 Browse the [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/discussions)
Keep messages under 72 characters. Each commit = one logical change.
---
**Remember**: We're here to help! Don't be afraid to ask questions. Every expert was once a beginner. Together, we're building a future where humans and AI work better together.
## What Makes a Good PR?
| ✅ Do | ❌ Don't |
| --------------------------- | ---------------------------- |
| Change one thing per PR | Mix unrelated changes |
| Clear title and description | Vague or missing explanation |
| Reference related issues | Reformat entire files |
| Small, focused commits | Copy your whole project |
| Work on a branch | Work directly on `main` |
---
## Prompt & Agent Guidelines
- Keep dev agents lean — focus on coding context, not documentation
- Web/planning agents can be larger with complex tasks
- Everything is natural language (markdown) — no code in core framework
- Use BMad modules for domain-specific features
- Validate YAML schemas: `npm run validate:schemas`
---
## Need Help?
- 💬 **Discord**: [Join the community](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)
- 🐛 **Bugs**: Use the [bug report template](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues/new?template=bug_report.md)
- 💡 **Features**: Use the [feature request template](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues/new?template=feature_request.md)
---
## Code of Conduct
By participating, you agree to abide by our [Code of Conduct](.github/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md).
## License
By contributing to this project, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under the same license as the project.
By contributing, your contributions are licensed under the same MIT License. See [CONTRIBUTORS.md](CONTRIBUTORS.md) for contributor attribution.

32
CONTRIBUTORS.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,32 @@
# Contributors
BMad Core, BMad Method and BMad and Community BMad Modules are made possible by contributions from our community. We gratefully acknowledge everyone who has helped improve this project.
## How We Credit Contributors
- **Git history** — Every contribution is preserved in the project's commit history
- **Contributors badge** — See the dynamic contributors list on our [README](README.md)
- **GitHub contributors graph** — Visual representation at <https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/graphs/contributors>
## Becoming a Contributor
Anyone who submits a pull request that is merged becomes a contributor. Contributions include:
- Bug fixes
- New features or workflows
- Documentation improvements
- Bug reports and issue triaging
- Code reviews
- Helping others in discussions
There are no minimum contribution requirements — whether it's a one-character typo fix or a major feature, we value all contributions.
## Copyright
The BMad Method project is copyrighted by BMad Code, LLC. Individual contributions are licensed under the same MIT License as the project. Contributors retain authorship credit through Git history and the contributors graph.
---
**Thank you to everyone who has helped make BMad Method better!**
For contribution guidelines, see [CONTRIBUTING.md](CONTRIBUTING.md).

10
LICENSE
View File

@@ -2,6 +2,9 @@ MIT License
Copyright (c) 2025 BMad Code, LLC
This project incorporates contributions from the open source community.
See [CONTRIBUTORS.md](CONTRIBUTORS.md) for contributor attribution.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
@@ -21,6 +24,7 @@ OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
SOFTWARE.
TRADEMARK NOTICE:
BMAD™, BMAD-CORE™ and BMAD-METHOD™ are trademarks of BMad Code, LLC. The use of these
trademarks in this software does not grant any rights to use the trademarks
for any other purpose.
BMad™, BMad Method™, and BMad Core™ are trademarks of BMad Code, LLC, covering all
casings and variations (including BMAD, bmad, BMadMethod, BMAD-METHOD, etc.). The use of
these trademarks in this software does not grant any rights to use the trademarks
for any other purpose. See [TRADEMARK.md](TRADEMARK.md) for detailed guidelines.

454
README.md
View File

@@ -1,442 +1,118 @@
# BMad CORE + BMad Method
![BMad Method](banner-bmad-method.png)
[![Stable Version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/bmad-method?color=blue&label=stable)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bmad-method)
[![Alpha Version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/bmad-method/alpha?color=orange&label=alpha)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bmad-method)
[![Version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/bmad-method?color=blue&label=version)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bmad-method)
[![License: MIT](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-MIT-yellow.svg)](LICENSE)
[![Node.js Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/node-%3E%3D20.0.0-brightgreen)](https://nodejs.org)
[![Discord](https://img.shields.io/badge/Discord-Join%20Community-7289da?logo=discord&logoColor=white)](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)
> **🚨 Alpha Version Notice**
>
> v6-alpha is near-beta quality—stable and vastly improved over v4, but documentation is still being refined. New videos coming soon to the [BMadCode YouTube channel](https://www.youtube.com/@BMadCode)—subscribe for updates! (There is no v5).
>
> **Getting Started:**
>
> - **Install v6 Alpha:** `npx bmad-method install`
> - **Install stable v4:** `npx bmad-method@latest install`
> - **Not sure what to do?** Load any agent and run `*workflow-init` for guided setup
> - **v4 Users:** [View v4 documentation](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/tree/V4) or [upgrade guide](./docs/v4-to-v6-upgrade.md)
**Breakthrough Method of Agile AI Driven Development** — An AI-driven agile development framework with 21 specialized agents, 50+ guided workflows, and scale-adaptive intelligence that adjusts from bug fixes to enterprise systems.
## Universal Human-AI Collaboration Platform
**100% free and open source.** No paywalls. No gated content. No gated Discord. We believe in empowering everyone, not just those who can pay.
**BMad-CORE** (**C**ollaboration **O**ptimized **R**eflection **E**ngine) amplifies human potential through specialized AI agents. Unlike tools that replace thinking, BMad-CORE guides reflective workflows that bring out your best ideas and AI's full capabilities.
## Why BMad?
The **BMad-CORE** powers the **BMad Method** (probably why you're here!), but you can also use **BMad Builder** to create custom agents, workflows, and modules for any domain—software development, business strategy, creativity, learning, and more.
Traditional AI tools do the thinking for you, producing average results. BMad agents and facilitated workflow act as expert collaborators who guide you through a structured process to bring out your best thinking in partnership with the AI.
**🎯 Human Amplification** • **🎨 Domain Agnostic** • **⚡ Agent-Powered**
- **AI Intelligent Help**: Brand new for beta - AI assisted help will guide you from the beginning to the end - just ask for `/bmad-help` after you have installed BMad to your project
- **Scale-Domain-Adaptive**: Automatically adjusts planning depth and needs based on project complexity, domain and type - a SaaS Mobile Dating App has different planning needs from a diagnostic medical system, BMad adapts and helps you along the way
- **Structured Workflows**: Grounded in agile best practices across analysis, planning, architecture, and implementation
- **Specialized Agents**: 12+ domain experts (PM, Architect, Developer, UX, Scrum Master, and more)
- **Party Mode**: Bring multiple agent personas into one session to plan, troubleshoot, or discuss your project collaboratively, multiple perspectives with maximum fun
- **Complete Lifecycle**: From brainstorming to deployment, BMad is there with you every step of the way
## Table of Contents
## Quick Start
- [BMad CORE + BMad Method](#bmad-core--bmad-method)
- [Universal Human-AI Collaboration Platform](#universal-human-ai-collaboration-platform)
- [Table of Contents](#table-of-contents)
- [What is BMad-CORE?](#what-is-bmad-core)
- [v6 Core Enhancements](#v6-core-enhancements)
- [C.O.R.E. Philosophy](#core-philosophy)
- [Modules](#modules)
- [BMad Method (BMM) - AI-Driven Agile Development](#bmad-method-bmm---ai-driven-agile-development)
- [v6 Highlights](#v6-highlights)
- [🚀 Quick Start](#-quick-start)
- [BMad Builder (BMB) - Create Custom Solutions](#bmad-builder-bmb---create-custom-solutions)
- [Creative Intelligence Suite (CIS) - Innovation \& Creativity](#creative-intelligence-suite-cis---innovation--creativity)
- [Installation](#installation)
- [🎯 Working with Agents \& Commands](#-working-with-agents--commands)
- [Method 1: Agent Menu (Recommended for Beginners)](#method-1-agent-menu-recommended-for-beginners)
- [Method 2: Direct Slash Commands](#method-2-direct-slash-commands)
- [Method 3: Party Mode Execution](#method-3-party-mode-execution)
- [Key Features](#key-features)
- [🎨 Update-Safe Customization](#-update-safe-customization)
- [🚀 Intelligent Installation](#-intelligent-installation)
- [📁 Clean Architecture](#-clean-architecture)
- [📄 Document Sharding (Advanced)](#-document-sharding-advanced)
- [Documentation](#documentation)
- [Community \& Support](#community--support)
- [Development \& Quality Checks](#development--quality-checks)
- [Testing \& Validation](#testing--validation)
- [Code Quality](#code-quality)
- [Build \& Development](#build--development)
- [Contributing](#contributing)
- [License](#license)
---
## What is BMad-CORE?
Foundation framework powering all BMad modules:
- **Agent Orchestration** - Specialized AI personas with domain expertise
- **Workflow Engine** - Guided multi-step processes with built-in best practices
- **Modular Architecture** - Extend with domain-specific modules (BMM, BMB, CIS, custom)
- **IDE Integration** - Works with Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, and more
- **Update-Safe Customization** - Your configs persist through all updates
### v6 Core Enhancements
- **🎨 Agent Customization** - Modify names, roles, personalities via `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/` **[→ Customization Guide](./docs/agent-customization-guide.md)**
- **🌐 Multi-Language** - Independent language settings for communication and output
- **👤 Personalization** - Agents adapt to your name, skill level, and preferences
- **🔄 Persistent Config** - Customizations survive module updates
- **⚙️ Flexible Settings** - Configure per-module or globally
- **📦 Web Bundles** - Share agents in Gemini Gems and Custom GPTs **[→ Web Bundles Guide](./docs/web-bundles-gemini-gpt-guide.md)**
### C.O.R.E. Philosophy
- **C**ollaboration: Human-AI partnership leveraging complementary strengths
- **O**ptimized: Battle-tested processes for maximum effectiveness
- **R**eflection: Strategic questioning that unlocks breakthrough solutions
- **E**ngine: Framework orchestrating 19+ specialized agents and 50+ workflows
BMad-CORE doesn't give you answers—it helps you **discover better solutions** through guided reflection.
## Modules
### BMad Method (BMM) - AI-Driven Agile Development
Revolutionary AI-driven agile framework for software and game development. Automatically adapts from single bug fixes to enterprise-scale systems.
#### v6 Highlights
**🎯 Scale-Adaptive Intelligence (3 Planning Tracks)**
Automatically adjusts planning depth and documentation based on project needs:
- **Quick Flow Track:** Fast implementation (tech-spec only) - bug fixes, small features, clear scope
- **BMad Method Track:** Full planning (PRD + Architecture + UX) - products, platforms, complex features
- **Enterprise Method Track:** Extended planning (BMad Method + Security/DevOps/Test) - enterprise requirements, compliance
**🏗️ Four-Phase Methodology**
1. **Phase 1: Analysis** (Optional) - Brainstorming, research, product briefs
2. **Phase 2: Planning** (Required) - Scale-adaptive PRD/tech-spec/GDD
3. **Phase 3: Solutioning** (Track-dependent) - Architecture, (Coming soon: security, DevOps, test strategy)
4. **Phase 4: Implementation** (Iterative) - Story-centric development with just-in-time context
**🤖 12 Specialized Agents**
PM • Analyst • Architect • Scrum Master • Developer • Test Architect (TEA) • UX Designer • Technical Writer • Game Designer • Game Developer • Game Architect • BMad Master (Orchestrator)
**📚 Documentation**
- **[Complete Documentation Hub](./src/modules/bmm/docs/README.md)** - Start here for all BMM guides
- **[Quick Start Guide](./src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md)** - Get building in 15 minutes
- **[Agents Guide](./src/modules/bmm/docs/agents-guide.md)** - Meet all 12 agents (45 min read)
- **[34 Workflow Guides](./src/modules/bmm/docs/README.md#-workflow-guides)** - Complete phase-by-phase reference
- **[BMM Module Overview](./src/modules/bmm/README.md)** - Module structure and quick links
---
## 🚀 Quick Start
**After installation** (see [Installation](#installation) below), choose your path:
**Three Planning Tracks:**
1. **⚡ Quick Flow Track** - Bug fixes and small features
- 🐛 Bug fixes in minutes
- ✨ Small features (2-3 related changes)
- 🚀 Rapid prototyping
- **[→ Quick Spec Flow Guide](./src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-spec-flow.md)**
2. **📋 BMad Method Track** - Products and platforms
- Complete planning (PRD/GDD)
- Architecture decisions
- Story-centric implementation
- **[→ Complete Quick Start Guide](./src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md)**
3. **🏢 Brownfield Projects** - Add to existing codebases
- Document existing code first
- Then choose Quick Flow or BMad Method
- **[→ Brownfield Guide](./src/modules/bmm/docs/brownfield-guide.md)**
**Not sure which path?** Run `*workflow-init` and let BMM analyze your project goal and recommend the right track.
**[📚 Learn More: Scale Adaptive System](./src/modules/bmm/docs/scale-adaptive-system.md)** - How BMM adapts across three planning tracks
---
### BMad Builder (BMB) - Create Custom Solutions
Build your own agents, workflows, and modules using the BMad-CORE framework.
**What You Can Build:**
- **Custom Agents** - Domain experts with specialized knowledge
- **Guided Workflows** - Multi-step processes for any task
- **Complete Modules** - Full solutions for specific domains
- **Three Agent Types** - Full module, hybrid, or standalone
**Perfect For:** Creating domain-specific solutions (legal, medical, finance, education, creative, etc.) or extending BMM with custom development workflows.
**Documentation:**
- **[BMB Module Overview](./src/modules/bmb/README.md)** - Complete reference
- **[Create Agent Workflow](./src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/README.md)** - Build custom agents
- **[Create Workflow](./src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-workflow/README.md)** - Design guided processes
- **[Create Module](./src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-module/README.md)** - Package complete solutions
### Creative Intelligence Suite (CIS) - Innovation & Creativity
AI-powered creative facilitation using proven methodologies and techniques.
**5 Interactive Workflows:**
- **Brainstorming** - Generate and refine ideas with 30+ techniques
- **Design Thinking** - Human-centered problem solving
- **Problem Solving** - Systematic breakthrough techniques
- **Innovation Strategy** - Disruptive business model thinking
- **Storytelling** - Compelling narrative frameworks
**5 Specialized Agents:** Each with unique facilitation styles and domain expertise
**Shared Resource:** CIS workflows are used by other modules (BMM's `brainstorm-project` uses CIS brainstorming)
**Documentation:**
- **[CIS Module Overview](./src/modules/cis/README.md)** - Complete reference
- **[CIS Workflows Guide](./src/modules/cis/workflows/README.md)** - All 5 creative workflows
---
## Installation
**Prerequisites:** Node.js v20+ ([Download](https://nodejs.org))
**Prerequisites**: [Node.js](https://nodejs.org) v20+
```bash
# v6 Alpha (recommended for new projects)
npx bmad-method@alpha install
# Stable v4 (production)
npx bmad-method install
```
The installer provides:
Follow the installer prompts, then open your AI IDE (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, etc.) in the project folder.
1. **Module Selection** - Choose BMM, BMB, CIS (or all)
2. **Configuration** - Your name, language preferences, game dev options
3. **IDE Integration** - Automatic setup for your IDE
> **Not sure what to do?** Run `/bmad-help` — it tells you exactly what's next and what's optional. You can also ask it questions like:
**Installation creates:**
- `/bmad-help How should I build a web app for my TShirt Business that can scale to millions?`
- `/bmad-help I just finished the architecture, I am not sure what to do next`
```
your-project/
└── {bmad_folder}/
├── core/ # Core framework + BMad Master agent
├── bmm/ # BMad Method (12 agents, 34 workflows)
├── bmb/ # BMad Builder (1 agent, 7 workflows)
├── cis/ # Creative Intelligence (5 agents, 5 workflows)
└── _cfg/ # Your customizations (survives updates)
└── agents/ # Agent customization files
```
And the amazing thing is BMad Help evolves depending on what modules you install also!
- `/bmad-help Im interested in really exploring creative ways to demo BMad at work, what do you recommend to help plan a great slide deck and compelling narrative?`, and if you have the Creative Intelligence Suite installed, it will offer you different or complimentary advice than if you just have BMad Method Module installed!
**Next Steps:**
The workflows below show the fastest path to working code. You can also load agents directly for a more structured process, extensive planning, or to learn about agile development practices — the agents guide you with menus, explanations, and elicitation at each step.
1. Load any agent in your IDE
2. Run `*workflow-init` to set up your project workflow path
3. Follow the [Quick Start](#-quick-start) guide above to choose your planning track
### Simple Path (Quick Flow)
**Alternative:** [**Web Bundles**](https://bmad-code-org.github.io/bmad-bundles/) - Download pre-built agent bundles for use in Claude Projects, ChatGPT, or Gemini without installation (automatically updated on every commit to main)
Bug fixes, small features, clear scope — 3 commands - 1 Optional Agent:
---
1. `/quick-spec` — analyzes your codebase and produces a tech-spec with stories
2. `/dev-story` — implements each story
3. `/code-review` — validates quality
## 🎯 Working with Agents & Commands
### Full Planning Path (BMad Method)
**Multiple Ways to Execute Workflows:**
Products, platforms, complex features — structured planning then build:
BMad is flexible - you can execute workflows in several ways depending on your preference and IDE:
1. `/product-brief` — define problem, users, and MVP scope
2. `/create-prd` — full requirements with personas, metrics, and risks
3. `/create-architecture` — technical decisions and system design
4. `/create-epics-and-stories` — break work into prioritized stories
5. `/sprint-planning` — initialize sprint tracking
6. **Repeat per story:** `/create-story``/dev-story``/code-review`
### Method 1: Agent Menu (Recommended for Beginners)
Every step tells you what's next. Optional phases (brainstorming, research, UX design) are available when you need them — ask `/bmad-help` anytime. For a detailed walkthrough, see the [Getting Started Tutorial](http://docs.bmad-method.org/tutorials/getting-started/).
1. **Load an agent** in your IDE (see [IDE-specific instructions](./docs/ide-info/))
2. **Wait for the menu** to appear showing available workflows
3. **Tell the agent** what to run using natural language or shortcuts:
- Natural: "Run workflow-init"
- Shortcut: `*workflow-init`
- Menu number: "Run option 2"
## Modules
### Method 2: Direct Slash Commands
BMad Method extends with official modules for specialized domains. Modules are available during installation and can be added to your project at any time. After the V6 beta period these will also be available as Plugins and Granular Skills.
**Execute workflows directly** using slash commands:
| Module | GitHub | NPM | Purpose |
| ------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **BMad Method (BMM)** | [bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD) | [bmad-method](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bmad-method) | Core framework with 34+ workflows across 4 development phases |
| **BMad Builder (BMB)** | [bmad-code-org/bmad-builder](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-builder) | [bmad-builder](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bmad-builder) | Create custom BMad agents, workflows, and domain-specific modules |
| **Game Dev Studio (BMGD)** | [bmad-code-org/bmad-module-game-dev-studio](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-module-game-dev-studio) | [bmad-game-dev-studio](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bmad-game-dev-studio) | Game development workflows for Unity, Unreal, and Godot |
| **Creative Intelligence Suite (CIS)** | [bmad-code-org/bmad-module-creative-intelligence-suite](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-module-creative-intelligence-suite) | [bmad-creative-intelligence-suite](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bmad-creative-intelligence-suite) | Innovation, brainstorming, design thinking, and problem-solving |
```
/bmad:bmm:workflows:workflow-init
/bmad:bmm:workflows:prd
/bmad:bmm:workflows:dev-story
```
**Tip:** While you can run these without loading an agent first, **loading an agent is still recommended** - it can make a difference with certain workflows.
**Benefits:**
- ✅ Mix and match any agent with any workflow
- ✅ Run workflows not in the loaded agent's menu
- ✅ Faster access for experienced users who know the command names
### Method 3: Party Mode Execution
**Run workflows with multi-agent collaboration:**
1. Start party mode: `/bmad:core:workflows:party-mode`
2. Execute any workflow - **the entire team collaborates on it**
3. Get diverse perspectives from multiple specialized agents
**Perfect for:** Strategic decisions, complex workflows, cross-functional tasks
---
> **📌 IDE-Specific Note:**
>
> Slash command format varies by IDE:
>
> - **Claude Code:** `/bmad:bmm:workflows:prd`
> - **Cursor/Windsurf:** May use different syntax - check your IDE's [documentation](./docs/ide-info/)
> - **VS Code with Copilot Chat:** Syntax may differ
>
> See **[IDE Integration Guides](./docs/ide-info/)** for your specific IDE's command format.
---
## Key Features
### 🎨 Update-Safe Customization
Modify agents without touching core files:
- Override agent names, personalities, expertise via `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/`
- Customizations persist through all updates
- Multi-language support (communication + output)
- Module-level or global configuration
### 🚀 Intelligent Installation
Smart setup that adapts to your environment:
- Auto-detects v4 installations for smooth upgrades
- Configures IDE integrations (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code)
- Resolves cross-module dependencies
- Generates unified agent/workflow manifests
### 📁 Clean Architecture
Everything in one place:
- Single `{bmad_folder}/` folder (no scattered files, default folder name is .bmad)
- Modules live side-by-side (core, bmm, bmb, cis)
- Your configs in `_cfg/` (survives updates)
- Easy to version control or exclude
### 📄 Document Sharding (Advanced)
Optional optimization for large projects (BMad Method and Enterprise tracks):
- **Massive Token Savings** - Phase 4 workflows load only needed sections (90%+ reduction)
- **Automatic Support** - All workflows handle whole or sharded documents seamlessly
- **Easy Setup** - Built-in tool splits documents by headings
- **Smart Discovery** - Workflows auto-detect format
**[→ Document Sharding Guide](./docs/document-sharding-guide.md)**
---
* More modules are coming in the next 2 weeks from BMad Official, and a community marketplace for the installer also will be coming with the final V6 release!
## Documentation
**Module Documentation:**
**[Full Documentation](http://docs.bmad-method.org)** — Tutorials, how-to guides, concepts, and reference
- **[BMM Complete Documentation Hub](./src/modules/bmm/docs/README.md)** - All BMM guides, FAQs, troubleshooting
- **[BMB Module Reference](./src/modules/bmb/README.md)** - Build custom agents and workflows
- **[CIS Workflows Guide](./src/modules/cis/workflows/README.md)** - Creative facilitation workflows
- [Getting Started Tutorial](http://docs.bmad-method.org/tutorials/getting-started/)
- [Upgrading from Previous Versions](http://docs.bmad-method.org/how-to/upgrade-to-v6/)
**Customization & Sharing:**
### For v4 Users
- **[Agent Customization Guide](./docs/agent-customization-guide.md)** - Customize agent names, personas, and behaviors
- **[Web Bundles for Gemini & GPT](./docs/web-bundles-gemini-gpt-guide.md)** - Use BMad agents in Gemini Gems and Custom GPTs
- **[v4 Documentation](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/tree/V4/docs)**
**Additional Resources:**
## Community
- **[Documentation Index](./docs/index.md)** - All project documentation
- **[v4 to v6 Upgrade Guide](./docs/v4-to-v6-upgrade.md)** - Migration instructions
- **[CLI Tool Guide](./tools/cli/README.md)** - Installer and build tool reference
- **[Contributing Guide](./CONTRIBUTING.md)** - How to contribute
- [Discord](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj) — Get help, share ideas, collaborate
- [Subscribe on YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/@BMadCode) — Tutorials, master class, and podcast (launching Feb 2025)
- [GitHub Issues](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues) — Bug reports and feature requests
- [Discussions](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/discussions) — Community conversations
---
## Support BMad
## Community & Support
BMad is free for everyone — and always will be. If you'd like to support development:
- 💬 **[Discord Community](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)** - Get help, share projects (#general-dev, #bugs-issues)
- 🐛 **[GitHub Issues](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues)** - Report bugs, request features
- 🎥 **[YouTube Channel](https://www.youtube.com/@BMadCode)** - Video tutorials and walkthroughs
- **[Star this repo](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD)** - Stay updated on releases
---
## Development & Quality Checks
**For contributors working on the BMAD codebase:**
**Requirements:** Node.js 22+ (see `.nvmrc`). Run `nvm use` to switch to the correct version.
### Testing & Validation
```bash
# Run all quality checks (comprehensive - use before pushing)
npm test
# Individual test suites
npm run test:schemas # Agent schema validation (fixture-based)
npm run test:install # Installation component tests (compilation)
npm run validate:schemas # YAML schema validation
npm run validate:bundles # Web bundle integrity
```
### Code Quality
```bash
# Lint check
npm run lint
# Auto-fix linting issues
npm run lint:fix
# Format check
npm run format:check
# Auto-format all files
npm run format:fix
```
### Build & Development
```bash
# Bundle for web deployment
npm run bundle
# Test local installation
npm run install:bmad
```
**Pre-commit Hook:** Auto-fixes changed files (lint-staged) + validates everything (npm test)
**CI:** GitHub Actions runs all quality checks in parallel on every PR
---
- ⭐ Please click the star project icon near the top right of this page
- ☕ [Buy Me a Coffee](https://buymeacoffee.com/bmad) — Fuel the development
- 🏢 Corporate sponsorship — DM on Discord
- 🎤 Speaking & Media — Available for conferences, podcasts, interviews (BM on Discord)
## Contributing
We welcome contributions! See **[CONTRIBUTING.md](CONTRIBUTING.md)** for:
- Code contribution guidelines
- Documentation improvements
- Module development
- Issue reporting
---
We welcome contributions! See [CONTRIBUTING.md](CONTRIBUTING.md) for guidelines.
## License
**MIT License** - See [LICENSE](LICENSE) for details
**Trademarks:** BMAD™ and BMAD-METHOD™ are trademarks of BMad Code, LLC.
MIT License — see [LICENSE](LICENSE) for details.
---
**BMad** and **BMAD-METHOD** are trademarks of BMad Code, LLC. See [TRADEMARK.md](TRADEMARK.md) for details.
[![Contributors](https://contrib.rocks/image?repo=bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD)](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/graphs/contributors)
<sub>Built with ❤️ for the human-AI collaboration community</sub>
See [CONTRIBUTORS.md](CONTRIBUTORS.md) for contributor information.

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# Security Policy
## Supported Versions
We release security patches for the following versions:
| Version | Supported |
| ------- | ------------------ |
| Latest | :white_check_mark: |
| < Latest | :x: |
We recommend always using the latest version of BMad Method to ensure you have the most recent security updates.
## Reporting a Vulnerability
We take security vulnerabilities seriously. If you discover a security issue, please report it responsibly.
### How to Report
**Do NOT report security vulnerabilities through public GitHub issues.**
Instead, please report them via one of these methods:
1. **GitHub Security Advisories** (Preferred): Use [GitHub's private vulnerability reporting](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/security/advisories/new) to submit a confidential report.
2. **Discord**: Contact a maintainer directly via DM on our [Discord server](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj).
### What to Include
Please include as much of the following information as possible:
- Type of vulnerability (e.g., prompt injection, path traversal, etc.)
- Full paths of source file(s) related to the vulnerability
- Step-by-step instructions to reproduce the issue
- Proof-of-concept or exploit code (if available)
- Impact assessment of the vulnerability
### Response Timeline
- **Initial Response**: Within 48 hours of receiving your report
- **Status Update**: Within 7 days with our assessment
- **Resolution Target**: Critical issues within 30 days; other issues within 90 days
### What to Expect
1. We will acknowledge receipt of your report
2. We will investigate and validate the vulnerability
3. We will work on a fix and coordinate disclosure timing with you
4. We will credit you in the security advisory (unless you prefer to remain anonymous)
## Security Scope
### In Scope
- Vulnerabilities in BMad Method core framework code
- Security issues in agent definitions or workflows that could lead to unintended behavior
- Path traversal or file system access issues
- Prompt injection vulnerabilities that bypass intended agent behavior
- Supply chain vulnerabilities in dependencies
### Out of Scope
- Security issues in user-created custom agents or modules
- Vulnerabilities in third-party AI providers (Claude, GPT, etc.)
- Issues that require physical access to a user's machine
- Social engineering attacks
- Denial of service attacks that don't exploit a specific vulnerability
## Security Best Practices for Users
When using BMad Method:
1. **Review Agent Outputs**: Always review AI-generated code before executing it
2. **Limit File Access**: Configure your AI IDE to limit file system access where possible
3. **Keep Updated**: Regularly update to the latest version
4. **Validate Dependencies**: Review any dependencies added by generated code
5. **Environment Isolation**: Consider running AI-assisted development in isolated environments
## Acknowledgments
We appreciate the security research community's efforts in helping keep BMad Method secure. Contributors who report valid security issues will be acknowledged in our security advisories.
---
Thank you for helping keep BMad Method and our community safe.

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# Trademark Notice & Guidelines
## Trademark Ownership
The following names and logos are trademarks of BMad Code, LLC:
- **BMad** (word mark, all casings: BMad, bmad, BMAD)
- **BMad Method** (word mark, includes BMadMethod, BMAD-METHOD, and all variations)
- **BMad Core** (word mark, includes BMadCore, BMAD-CORE, and all variations)
- **BMad Code** (word mark)
- BMad Method logo and visual branding
- The "Build More, Architect Dreams" tagline
**All casings, stylings, and variations** of the above names (with or without hyphens, spaces, or specific capitalization) are covered by these trademarks.
These trademarks are protected under trademark law and are **not** licensed under the MIT License. The MIT License applies to the software code only, not to the BMad brand identity.
## What This Means
You may:
- Use the BMad software under the terms of the MIT License
- Refer to BMad to accurately describe compatibility or integration (e.g., "Compatible with BMad Method v6")
- Link to <https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD>
- Fork the software and distribute your own version under a different name
You may **not**:
- Use "BMad" or any confusingly similar variation as your product name, service name, company name, or domain name
- Present your product as officially endorsed, approved, or certified by BMad Code, LLC when it is not, without written consent from an authorized representative of BMad Code, LLC
- Use BMad logos or branding in a way that suggests your product is an official or endorsed BMad product
- Register domain names, social media handles, or trademarks that incorporate BMad branding
## Examples
| Permitted | Not Permitted |
| ------------------------------------------------------ | -------------------------------------------- |
| "My workflow tool, compatible with BMad Method" | "BMadFlow" or "BMad Studio" |
| "An alternative implementation inspired by BMad" | "BMad Pro" or "BMad Enterprise" |
| "My Awesome Healthcare Module (Bmad Community Module)" | "The Official BMad Core Healthcare Module" |
| Accurately stating you use BMad as a dependency | Implying official endorsement or partnership |
## Commercial Use
You may sell products that incorporate or work with BMad software. However:
- Your product must have its own distinct name and branding
- You must not use BMad trademarks in your marketing, domain names, or product identity
- You may truthfully describe technical compatibility (e.g., "Works with BMad Method")
## Questions?
If you have questions about trademark usage or would like to discuss official partnership or endorsement opportunities, please reach out:
- **Email**: <contact@bmadcode.com>

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---
title: Page Not Found
template: splash
---
The page you're looking for doesn't exist or has been moved.
[Return to Home](/docs/index.md)

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---
title: "Documentation Style Guide"
---
This project adheres to the [Google Developer Documentation Style Guide](https://developers.google.com/style) and uses [Diataxis](https://diataxis.fr/) to structure content. Only project-specific conventions follow.
## Project-Specific Rules
| Rule | Specification |
| -------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------- |
| No horizontal rules (`---`) | Fragments reading flow |
| No `####` headers | Use bold text or admonitions instead |
| No "Related" or "Next:" sections | Sidebar handles navigation |
| No deeply nested lists | Break into sections instead |
| No code blocks for non-code | Use admonitions for dialogue examples |
| No bold paragraphs for callouts | Use admonitions instead |
| 1-2 admonitions per section max | Tutorials allow 3-4 per major section |
| Table cells / list items | 1-2 sentences max |
| Header budget | 8-12 `##` per doc; 2-3 `###` per section |
## Admonitions (Starlight Syntax)
```md
:::tip[Title]
Shortcuts, best practices
:::
:::note[Title]
Context, definitions, examples, prerequisites
:::
:::caution[Title]
Caveats, potential issues
:::
:::danger[Title]
Critical warnings only — data loss, security issues
:::
```
### Standard Uses
| Admonition | Use For |
| ------------------------ | ----------------------------- |
| `:::note[Prerequisites]` | Dependencies before starting |
| `:::tip[Quick Path]` | TL;DR summary at document top |
| `:::caution[Important]` | Critical caveats |
| `:::note[Example]` | Command/response examples |
## Standard Table Formats
**Phases:**
```md
| Phase | Name | What Happens |
| ----- | -------- | -------------------------------------------- |
| 1 | Analysis | Brainstorm, research *(optional)* |
| 2 | Planning | Requirements — PRD or tech-spec *(required)* |
```
**Commands:**
```md
| Command | Agent | Purpose |
| ------------ | ------- | ------------------------------------ |
| `brainstorm` | Analyst | Brainstorm a new project |
| `prd` | PM | Create Product Requirements Document |
```
## Folder Structure Blocks
Show in "What You've Accomplished" sections:
````md
```
your-project/
├── _bmad/ # BMad configuration
├── _bmad-output/
│ ├── PRD.md # Your requirements document
│ └── bmm-workflow-status.yaml # Progress tracking
└── ...
```
````
## Tutorial Structure
```text
1. Title + Hook (1-2 sentences describing outcome)
2. Version/Module Notice (info or warning admonition) (optional)
3. What You'll Learn (bullet list of outcomes)
4. Prerequisites (info admonition)
5. Quick Path (tip admonition - TL;DR summary)
6. Understanding [Topic] (context before steps - tables for phases/agents)
7. Installation (optional)
8. Step 1: [First Major Task]
9. Step 2: [Second Major Task]
10. Step 3: [Third Major Task]
11. What You've Accomplished (summary + folder structure)
12. Quick Reference (commands table)
13. Common Questions (FAQ format)
14. Getting Help (community links)
15. Key Takeaways (tip admonition)
```
### Tutorial Checklist
- [ ] Hook describes outcome in 1-2 sentences
- [ ] "What You'll Learn" section present
- [ ] Prerequisites in admonition
- [ ] Quick Path TL;DR admonition at top
- [ ] Tables for phases, commands, agents
- [ ] "What You've Accomplished" section present
- [ ] Quick Reference table present
- [ ] Common Questions section present
- [ ] Getting Help section present
- [ ] Key Takeaways admonition at end
## How-To Structure
```text
1. Title + Hook (one sentence: "Use the `X` workflow to...")
2. When to Use This (bullet list of scenarios)
3. When to Skip This (optional)
4. Prerequisites (note admonition)
5. Steps (numbered ### subsections)
6. What You Get (output/artifacts produced)
7. Example (optional)
8. Tips (optional)
9. Next Steps (optional)
```
### How-To Checklist
- [ ] Hook starts with "Use the `X` workflow to..."
- [ ] "When to Use This" has 3-5 bullet points
- [ ] Prerequisites listed
- [ ] Steps are numbered `###` subsections with action verbs
- [ ] "What You Get" describes output artifacts
## Explanation Structure
### Types
| Type | Example |
| ----------------- | ---------------------------- |
| **Index/Landing** | `core-concepts/index.md` |
| **Concept** | `what-are-agents.md` |
| **Feature** | `quick-flow.md` |
| **Philosophy** | `why-solutioning-matters.md` |
| **FAQ** | `brownfield-faq.md` |
### General Template
```text
1. Title + Hook (1-2 sentences)
2. Overview/Definition (what it is, why it matters)
3. Key Concepts (### subsections)
4. Comparison Table (optional)
5. When to Use / When Not to Use (optional)
6. Diagram (optional - mermaid, 1 per doc max)
7. Next Steps (optional)
```
### Index/Landing Pages
```text
1. Title + Hook (one sentence)
2. Content Table (links with descriptions)
3. Getting Started (numbered list)
4. Choose Your Path (optional - decision tree)
```
### Concept Explainers
```text
1. Title + Hook (what it is)
2. Types/Categories (### subsections) (optional)
3. Key Differences Table
4. Components/Parts
5. Which Should You Use?
6. Creating/Customizing (pointer to how-to guides)
```
### Feature Explainers
```text
1. Title + Hook (what it does)
2. Quick Facts (optional - "Perfect for:", "Time to:")
3. When to Use / When Not to Use
4. How It Works (mermaid diagram optional)
5. Key Benefits
6. Comparison Table (optional)
7. When to Graduate/Upgrade (optional)
```
### Philosophy/Rationale Documents
```text
1. Title + Hook (the principle)
2. The Problem
3. The Solution
4. Key Principles (### subsections)
5. Benefits
6. When This Applies
```
### Explanation Checklist
- [ ] Hook states what document explains
- [ ] Content in scannable `##` sections
- [ ] Comparison tables for 3+ options
- [ ] Diagrams have clear labels
- [ ] Links to how-to guides for procedural questions
- [ ] 2-3 admonitions max per document
## Reference Structure
### Types
| Type | Example |
| ----------------- | --------------------- |
| **Index/Landing** | `workflows/index.md` |
| **Catalog** | `agents/index.md` |
| **Deep-Dive** | `document-project.md` |
| **Configuration** | `core-tasks.md` |
| **Glossary** | `glossary/index.md` |
| **Comprehensive** | `bmgd-workflows.md` |
### Reference Index Pages
```text
1. Title + Hook (one sentence)
2. Content Sections (## for each category)
- Bullet list with links and descriptions
```
### Catalog Reference
```text
1. Title + Hook
2. Items (## for each item)
- Brief description (one sentence)
- **Commands:** or **Key Info:** as flat list
3. Universal/Shared (## section) (optional)
```
### Item Deep-Dive Reference
```text
1. Title + Hook (one sentence purpose)
2. Quick Facts (optional note admonition)
- Module, Command, Input, Output as list
3. Purpose/Overview (## section)
4. How to Invoke (code block)
5. Key Sections (## for each aspect)
- Use ### for sub-options
6. Notes/Caveats (tip or caution admonition)
```
### Configuration Reference
```text
1. Title + Hook
2. Table of Contents (jump links if 4+ items)
3. Items (## for each config/task)
- **Bold summary** — one sentence
- **Use it when:** bullet list
- **How it works:** numbered steps (3-5 max)
- **Output:** expected result (optional)
```
### Comprehensive Reference Guide
```text
1. Title + Hook
2. Overview (## section)
- Diagram or table showing organization
3. Major Sections (## for each phase/category)
- Items (### for each item)
- Standardized fields: Command, Agent, Input, Output, Description
4. Next Steps (optional)
```
### Reference Checklist
- [ ] Hook states what document references
- [ ] Structure matches reference type
- [ ] Items use consistent structure throughout
- [ ] Tables for structured/comparative data
- [ ] Links to explanation docs for conceptual depth
- [ ] 1-2 admonitions max
## Glossary Structure
Starlight generates right-side "On this page" navigation from headers:
- Categories as `##` headers — appear in right nav
- Terms in tables — compact rows, not individual headers
- No inline TOC — right sidebar handles navigation
### Table Format
```md
## Category Name
| Term | Definition |
| ------------ | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Agent** | Specialized AI persona with specific expertise that guides users through workflows. |
| **Workflow** | Multi-step guided process that orchestrates AI agent activities to produce deliverables. |
```
### Definition Rules
| Do | Don't |
| ----------------------------- | ------------------------------------------- |
| Start with what it IS or DOES | Start with "This is..." or "A [term] is..." |
| Keep to 1-2 sentences | Write multi-paragraph explanations |
| Bold term name in cell | Use plain text for terms |
### Context Markers
Add italic context at definition start for limited-scope terms:
- `*Quick Flow only.*`
- `*BMad Method/Enterprise.*`
- `*Phase N.*`
- `*BMGD.*`
- `*Brownfield.*`
### Glossary Checklist
- [ ] Terms in tables, not individual headers
- [ ] Terms alphabetized within categories
- [ ] Definitions 1-2 sentences
- [ ] Context markers italicized
- [ ] Term names bolded in cells
- [ ] No "A [term] is..." definitions
## FAQ Sections
```md
## Questions
- [Do I always need architecture?](#do-i-always-need-architecture)
- [Can I change my plan later?](#can-i-change-my-plan-later)
### Do I always need architecture?
Only for BMad Method and Enterprise tracks. Quick Flow skips to implementation.
### Can I change my plan later?
Yes. The SM agent has a `correct-course` workflow for handling scope changes.
**Have a question not answered here?** [Open an issue](...) or ask in [Discord](...).
```
## Validation Commands
Before submitting documentation changes:
```bash
npm run docs:fix-links # Preview link format fixes
npm run docs:fix-links -- --write # Apply fixes
npm run docs:validate-links # Check links exist
npm run docs:build # Verify no build errors
```

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@@ -1,208 +0,0 @@
# Agent Customization Guide
Customize BMad agents without modifying core files. All customizations persist through updates.
## Quick Start
**1. Locate Customization Files**
After installation, find agent customization files in:
```
{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/
├── core-bmad-master.customize.yaml
├── bmm-dev.customize.yaml
├── bmm-pm.customize.yaml
└── ... (one file per installed agent)
```
**2. Edit Any Agent**
Open the `.customize.yaml` file for the agent you want to modify. All sections are optional - customize only what you need.
**3. Rebuild the Agent**
After editing, IT IS CRITICAL to rebuild the agent to apply changes:
```bash
npx bmad-method@alpha install # and then select option to compile all agents
# OR for individual agent only
npx bmad-method@alpha build <agent-name>
# Examples:
npx bmad-method@alpha build bmm-dev
npx bmad-method@alpha build core-bmad-master
npx bmad-method@alpha build bmm-pm
```
## What You Can Customize
### Agent Name
Change how the agent introduces itself:
```yaml
agent:
metadata:
name: 'Spongebob' # Default: "Amelia"
```
### Persona
Replace the agent's personality, role, and communication style:
```yaml
persona:
role: 'Senior Full-Stack Engineer'
identity: 'Lives in a pineapple (under the sea)'
communication_style: 'Spongebob'
principles:
- 'Never Nester, Spongebob Devs hate nesting more than 2 levels deep'
- 'Favor composition over inheritance'
```
**Note:** The persona section replaces the entire default persona (not merged).
### Memories
Add persistent context the agent will always remember:
```yaml
memories:
- 'Works at Krusty Krab'
- 'Favorite Celebrity: David Hasslehoff'
- 'Learned in Epic 1 that its not cool to just pretend that tests have passed'
```
### Custom Menu Items
Add your own workflows to the agent's menu:
```yaml
menu:
- trigger: my-workflow
workflow: '{project-root}/custom/my-workflow.yaml'
description: My custom workflow
- trigger: deploy
action: '#deploy-prompt'
description: Deploy to production
```
**Don't include:** `*` prefix or `help`/`exit` items - these are auto-injected.
### Critical Actions
Add instructions that execute before the agent starts:
```yaml
critical_actions:
- 'Always check git status before making changes'
- 'Use conventional commit messages'
```
### Custom Prompts
Define reusable prompts for `action="#id"` menu handlers:
```yaml
prompts:
- id: deploy-prompt
content: |
Deploy the current branch to production:
1. Run all tests
2. Build the project
3. Execute deployment script
```
## Real-World Examples
**Example 1: Customize Developer Agent for TDD**
```yaml
# {bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/bmm-dev.customize.yaml
agent:
metadata:
name: 'TDD Developer'
memories:
- 'Always write tests before implementation'
- 'Project uses Jest and React Testing Library'
critical_actions:
- 'Review test coverage before committing'
```
**Example 2: Add Custom Deployment Workflow**
```yaml
# {bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/bmm-dev.customize.yaml
menu:
- trigger: deploy-staging
workflow: '{project-root}/.bmad-custom/deploy-staging.yaml'
description: Deploy to staging environment
- trigger: deploy-prod
workflow: '{project-root}/.bmad-custom/deploy-prod.yaml'
description: Deploy to production (with approval)
```
**Example 3: Multilingual Product Manager**
```yaml
# {bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/bmm-pm.customize.yaml
persona:
role: 'Bilingual Product Manager'
identity: 'Expert in US and LATAM markets'
communication_style: 'Clear, strategic, with cultural awareness'
principles:
- 'Consider localization from day one'
- 'Balance business goals with user needs'
memories:
- 'User speaks English and Spanish'
- 'Target markets: US and Latin America'
```
## Tips
- **Start Small:** Customize one section at a time and rebuild to test
- **Backup:** Copy customization files before major changes
- **Update-Safe:** Your customizations in `_cfg/` survive all BMad updates
- **Per-Project:** Customization files are per-project, not global
- **Version Control:** Consider committing `_cfg/` to share customizations with your team
## Module vs. Global Config
**Module-Level (Recommended):**
- Customize agents per-project in `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/`
- Different projects can have different agent behaviors
**Global Config (Coming Soon):**
- Set defaults that apply across all projects
- Override with project-specific customizations
## Troubleshooting
**Changes not appearing?**
- Make sure you ran `npx bmad-method build <agent-name>` after editing
- Check YAML syntax is valid (indentation matters!)
- Verify the agent name matches the file name pattern
**Agent not loading?**
- Check for YAML syntax errors
- Ensure required fields aren't left empty if you uncommented them
- Try reverting to the template and rebuilding
**Need to reset?**
- Delete the `.customize.yaml` file
- Run `npx bmad-method build <agent-name>` to regenerate defaults
## Next Steps
- **[BMM Agents Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/agents-guide.md)** - Learn about all 12 BMad Method agents
- **[BMB Create Agent Workflow](../src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/README.md)** - Build completely custom agents
- **[BMM Complete Documentation](../src/modules/bmm/docs/README.md)** - Full BMad Method reference

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@@ -1,449 +0,0 @@
# Document Sharding Guide
Comprehensive guide to BMad Method's document sharding system for managing large planning and architecture documents.
## Table of Contents
- [What is Document Sharding?](#what-is-document-sharding)
- [When to Use Sharding](#when-to-use-sharding)
- [How Sharding Works](#how-sharding-works)
- [Using the Shard-Doc Tool](#using-the-shard-doc-tool)
- [Workflow Support](#workflow-support)
- [Best Practices](#best-practices)
- [Examples](#examples)
## What is Document Sharding?
Document sharding splits large markdown files into smaller, organized files based on level 2 headings (`## Heading`). This enables:
- **Selective Loading** - Workflows load only the sections they need
- **Reduced Token Usage** - Massive efficiency gains for large projects
- **Better Organization** - Logical section-based file structure
- **Maintained Context** - Index file preserves document structure
### Architecture
```
Before Sharding:
docs/
└── PRD.md (large 50k token file)
After Sharding:
docs/
└── prd/
├── index.md # Table of contents with descriptions
├── overview.md # Section 1
├── user-requirements.md # Section 2
├── technical-requirements.md # Section 3
└── ... # Additional sections
```
## When to Use Sharding
### Ideal Candidates
**Large Multi-Epic Projects:**
- Very large complex PRDs
- Architecture documents with multiple system layers
- Epic files with 4+ epics (especially for Phase 4)
- UX design specs covering multiple subsystems
**Token Thresholds:**
- **Consider sharding**: Documents > 20k tokens
- **Strongly recommended**: Documents > 40k tokens
- **Critical for efficiency**: Documents > 60k tokens
### When NOT to Shard
**Small Projects:**
- Single epic projects
- Level 0-1 projects (tech-spec only)
- Documents under 10k tokens
- Quick prototypes
**Frequently Updated Docs:**
- Active work-in-progress documents
- Documents updated daily
- Documents where whole-file context is essential
## How Sharding Works
### Sharding Process
1. **Tool Execution**: Run `npx @kayvan/markdown-tree-parser source.md destination/` - this is abstracted with the core shard-doc task which is installed as a slash command or manual task rule depending on your tools.
2. **Section Extraction**: Tool splits by level 2 headings
3. **File Creation**: Each section becomes a separate file
4. **Index Generation**: `index.md` created with structure and descriptions
### Workflow Discovery
BMad workflows use a **dual discovery system**:
1. **Try whole document first** - Look for `document-name.md`
2. **Check for sharded version** - Look for `document-name/index.md`
3. **Priority rule** - Whole document takes precedence if both exist
### Loading Strategies
**Full Load (Phase 1-3 workflows):**
```
If sharded:
- Read index.md
- Read ALL section files
- Treat as single combined document
```
**Selective Load (Phase 4 workflows):**
```
If sharded epics and working on Epic 3:
- Read epics/index.md
- Load ONLY epics/epic-3.md
- Skip all other epic files
- 90%+ token savings!
```
## Using the Shard-Doc Tool
### CLI Command
```bash
# Activate bmad-master or analyst agent, then:
/shard-doc
```
### Interactive Process
```
Agent: Which document would you like to shard?
User: docs/PRD.md
Agent: Default destination: docs/prd/
Accept default? [y/n]
User: y
Agent: Sharding PRD.md...
✓ Created 12 section files
✓ Generated index.md
✓ Complete!
```
### What Gets Created
**index.md structure:**
```markdown
# PRD - Index
## Sections
1. [Overview](./overview.md) - Project vision and objectives
2. [User Requirements](./user-requirements.md) - Feature specifications
3. [Epic 1: Authentication](./epic-1-authentication.md) - User auth system
4. [Epic 2: Dashboard](./epic-2-dashboard.md) - Main dashboard UI
...
```
**Individual section files:**
- Named from heading text (kebab-case)
- Contains complete section content
- Preserves all markdown formatting
- Can be read independently
## Workflow Support
### Universal Support
**All BMM workflows support both formats:**
- ✅ Whole documents
- ✅ Sharded documents
- ✅ Automatic detection
- ✅ Transparent to user
### Workflow-Specific Patterns
#### Phase 1-3 (Full Load)
Workflows load entire sharded documents:
- `product-brief` - Research, brainstorming docs
- `prd` - Product brief, research
- `gdd` - Game brief, research
- `create-ux-design` - PRD, brief, architecture (if available)
- `tech-spec` - Brief, research
- `architecture` - PRD, UX design (if available)
- `create-epics-and-stories` - PRD, architecture
- `implementation-readiness` - All planning docs
#### Phase 4 (Selective Load)
Workflows load only needed sections:
**sprint-planning** (Full Load):
- Needs ALL epics to build complete status
**epic-tech-context, create-story, story-context, code-review** (Selective):
```
Working on Epic 3, Story 2:
✓ Load epics/epic-3.md only
✗ Skip epics/epic-1.md, epic-2.md, epic-4.md, etc.
Result: 90%+ token reduction for 10-epic projects!
```
### Input File Patterns
Workflows use standardized patterns:
```yaml
input_file_patterns:
prd:
whole: '{output_folder}/*prd*.md'
sharded: '{output_folder}/*prd*/index.md'
epics:
whole: '{output_folder}/*epic*.md'
sharded_index: '{output_folder}/*epic*/index.md'
sharded_single: '{output_folder}/*epic*/epic-{{epic_num}}.md'
```
## Best Practices
### Sharding Strategy
**Do:**
- ✅ Shard after planning phase complete
- ✅ Keep level 2 headings well-organized
- ✅ Use descriptive section names
- ✅ Shard before Phase 4 implementation
- ✅ Keep original file as backup initially
**Don't:**
- ❌ Shard work-in-progress documents
- ❌ Shard small documents (<20k tokens)
- Mix sharded and whole versions
- Manually edit index.md structure
### Naming Conventions
**Good Section Names:**
```markdown
## Epic 1: User Authentication
## Technical Requirements
## System Architecture
## UX Design Principles
```
**Poor Section Names:**
```markdown
## Section 1
## Part A
## Details
## More Info
```
### File Management
**When to Re-shard:**
- Significant structural changes to document
- Adding/removing major sections
- After major refactoring
**Updating Sharded Docs:**
1. Edit individual section files directly
2. OR edit original, delete sharded folder, re-shard
3. Don't manually edit index.md
## Examples
### Example 1: Large PRD
**Scenario:** 15-epic project, PRD is 45k tokens
**Before Sharding:**
```
Every workflow loads entire 45k token PRD
Architecture workflow: 45k tokens
UX design workflow: 45k tokens
```
**After Sharding:**
```bash
/shard-doc
Source: docs/PRD.md
Destination: docs/prd/
Created:
prd/index.md
prd/overview.md (3k tokens)
prd/functional-requirements.md (8k tokens)
prd/non-functional-requirements.md (6k tokens)
prd/user-personas.md (4k tokens)
...additional FR/NFR sections
```
**Result:**
```
Architecture workflow: Can load specific sections needed
UX design workflow: Can load specific sections needed
Significant token reduction for large requirement docs!
```
### Example 2: Sharding Epics File
**Scenario:** 8 epics with detailed stories, 35k tokens total
```bash
/shard-doc
Source: docs/bmm-epics.md
Destination: docs/epics/
Created:
epics/index.md
epics/epic-1.md
epics/epic-2.md
...
epics/epic-8.md
```
**Efficiency Gain:**
```
Working on Epic 5 stories:
Old: Load all 8 epics (35k tokens)
New: Load epic-5.md only (4k tokens)
Savings: 88% reduction
```
### Example 3: Architecture Document
**Scenario:** Multi-layer system architecture, 28k tokens
```bash
/shard-doc
Source: docs/architecture.md
Destination: docs/architecture/
Created:
architecture/index.md
architecture/system-overview.md
architecture/frontend-architecture.md
architecture/backend-services.md
architecture/data-layer.md
architecture/infrastructure.md
architecture/security-architecture.md
```
**Benefit:** Code-review workflow can reference specific architectural layers without loading entire architecture doc.
## Custom Workflow Integration
### For Workflow Builders
When creating custom workflows that load large documents:
**1. Add input_file_patterns to workflow.yaml:**
```yaml
input_file_patterns:
your_document:
whole: '{output_folder}/*your-doc*.md'
sharded: '{output_folder}/*your-doc*/index.md'
```
**2. Add discovery instructions to instructions.md:**
```markdown
## Document Discovery
1. Search for whole document: _your-doc_.md
2. Check for sharded version: _your-doc_/index.md
3. If sharded: Read index + ALL sections (or specific sections if selective load)
4. Priority: Whole document first
```
**3. Choose loading strategy:**
- **Full Load**: Read all sections when sharded
- **Selective Load**: Read only relevant sections (requires section identification logic)
### Pattern Templates
**Full Load Pattern:**
```xml
<action>Search for document: {output_folder}/*doc-name*.md</action>
<action>If not found, check for sharded: {output_folder}/*doc-name*/index.md</action>
<action if="sharded found">Read index.md to understand structure</action>
<action if="sharded found">Read ALL section files listed in index</action>
<action if="sharded found">Combine content as single document</action>
```
**Selective Load Pattern (with section ID):**
```xml
<action>Determine section needed (e.g., epic_num = 3)</action>
<action>Check for sharded version: {output_folder}/*doc-name*/index.md</action>
<action if="sharded found">Read ONLY the specific section file needed</action>
<action if="sharded found">Skip all other section files</action>
```
## Troubleshooting
### Common Issues
**Both whole and sharded exist:**
- Workflows will use whole document (priority rule)
- Delete or archive the one you don't want
**Index.md out of sync:**
- Delete sharded folder
- Re-run shard-doc on original
**Workflow can't find document:**
- Check file naming matches patterns (`*prd*.md`, `*epic*.md`, etc.)
- Verify index.md exists in sharded folder
- Check output_folder path in config
**Sections too granular:**
- Combine sections in original document
- Use fewer level 2 headings
- Re-shard
## Related Documentation
- [shard-doc Tool](../src/core/tools/shard-doc.xml) - Tool implementation
- [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) - Workflow overview
- [Workflow Creation Guide](../src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-workflow/workflow-creation-guide.md) - Custom workflow patterns
---
**Document sharding is optional but powerful** - use it when efficiency matters for large projects!

74
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---
title: Downloads
---
Download BMad Method resources for offline use, AI training, or integration.
## Source Bundles
Download these from the `downloads/` folder on the documentation site.
| File | Description |
| ------------------ | ------------------------------- |
| `bmad-sources.zip` | Complete BMad source files |
| `bmad-prompts.zip` | Agent and workflow prompts only |
## LLM-Optimized Files
These files are designed for AI consumption - perfect for loading into Claude, ChatGPT, or any LLM context window. See [API Access](#api-access) below for URLs.
| File | Description | Use Case |
| --------------- | ----------------------------------- | -------------------------- |
| `llms.txt` | Documentation index with summaries | Quick overview, navigation |
| `llms-full.txt` | Complete documentation concatenated | Full context loading |
### Using with LLMs
**Claude Projects:**
```
Upload llms-full.txt as project knowledge
```
**ChatGPT:**
```
Paste llms.txt for navigation, or sections from llms-full.txt as needed
```
**API Usage:**
```python
import requests
docs = requests.get("https://bmad-code-org.github.io/BMAD-METHOD/llms-full.txt").text
# Include in your system prompt or context
```
## Installation Options
```bash
npx bmad-method install
```
[More details](/docs/how-to/install-bmad.md)
## Version Information
- **Current Version:** See [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md)
- **Release Notes:** Available on [GitHub Releases](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/releases)
## API Access
For programmatic access to BMad documentation:
```bash
# Get documentation index
curl https://bmad-code-org.github.io/BMAD-METHOD/llms.txt
# Get full documentation
curl https://bmad-code-org.github.io/BMAD-METHOD/llms-full.txt
```
## Contributing
Want to improve BMad Method? Check out:
- [Contributing Guide](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md)
- [GitHub Repository](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD)

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---
title: "Advanced Elicitation"
description: Push the LLM to rethink its work using structured reasoning methods
---
Make the LLM reconsider what it just generated. You pick a reasoning method, it applies that method to its own output, you decide whether to keep the improvements.
Dozens of methods are built in - things like First Principles, Red Team vs Blue Team, Pre-mortem Analysis, Socratic Questioning, and more.
## When to Use It
- After a workflow generates content and you want alternatives
- When output seems okay but you suspect there's more depth
- To stress-test assumptions or find weaknesses
- For high-stakes content where rethinking helps
Workflows offer advanced elicitation at decision points - after the LLM has generated something, you'll be asked if you want to run it.
## How It Works
1. LLM suggests 5 relevant methods for your content
2. You pick one (or reshuffle for different options)
3. Method is applied, improvements shown
4. Accept or discard, repeat or continue

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---
title: "Adversarial Review"
description: Forced reasoning technique that prevents lazy "looks good" reviews
---
Force deeper analysis by requiring problems to be found.
## What is Adversarial Review?
A review technique where the reviewer *must* find issues. No "looks good" allowed. The reviewer adopts a cynical stance - assume problems exist and find them.
This isn't about being negative. It's about forcing genuine analysis instead of a cursory glance that rubber-stamps whatever was submitted.
**The core rule:** You must find issues. Zero findings triggers a halt - re-analyze or explain why.
## Why It Works
Normal reviews suffer from confirmation bias. You skim the work, nothing jumps out, you approve it. The "find problems" mandate breaks this pattern:
- **Forces thoroughness** - Can't approve until you've looked hard enough to find issues
- **Catches missing things** - "What's not here?" becomes a natural question
- **Improves signal quality** - Findings are specific and actionable, not vague concerns
- **Information asymmetry** - Run reviews with fresh context (no access to original reasoning) so you evaluate the artifact, not the intent
## Where It's Used
Adversarial review appears throughout BMAD workflows - code review, implementation readiness checks, spec validation, and others. Sometimes it's a required step, sometimes optional (like advanced elicitation or party mode). The pattern adapts to whatever artifact needs scrutiny.
## Human Filtering Required
Because the AI is *instructed* to find problems, it will find problems - even when they don't exist. Expect false positives: nitpicks dressed as issues, misunderstandings of intent, or outright hallucinated concerns.
**You decide what's real.** Review each finding, dismiss the noise, fix what matters.
## Example
Instead of:
> "The authentication implementation looks reasonable. Approved."
An adversarial review produces:
> 1. **HIGH** - `login.ts:47` - No rate limiting on failed attempts
> 2. **HIGH** - Session token stored in localStorage (XSS vulnerable)
> 3. **MEDIUM** - Password validation happens client-side only
> 4. **MEDIUM** - No audit logging for failed login attempts
> 5. **LOW** - Magic number `3600` should be `SESSION_TIMEOUT_SECONDS`
The first review might miss a security vulnerability. The second caught four.
## Iteration and Diminishing Returns
After addressing findings, consider running it again. A second pass usually catches more. A third isn't always useless either. But each pass takes time, and eventually you hit diminishing returns - just nitpicks and false findings.
:::tip[Better Reviews]
Assume problems exist. Look for what's missing, not just what's wrong.
:::

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---
title: "Brainstorming"
description: Interactive creative sessions using 60+ proven ideation techniques
---
Unlock your creativity through guided exploration.
## What is Brainstorming?
Run `brainstorming` and you've got a creative facilitator pulling ideas out of you - not generating them for you. The AI acts as coach and guide, using proven techniques to create conditions where your best thinking emerges.
**Good for:**
- Breaking through creative blocks
- Generating product or feature ideas
- Exploring problems from new angles
- Developing raw concepts into action plans
## How It Works
1. **Setup** - Define topic, goals, constraints
2. **Choose approach** - Pick techniques yourself, get AI recommendations, go random, or follow a progressive flow
3. **Facilitation** - Work through techniques with probing questions and collaborative coaching
4. **Organize** - Ideas grouped into themes and prioritized
5. **Action** - Top ideas get next steps and success metrics
Everything gets captured in a session document you can reference later or share with stakeholders.
:::note[Your Ideas]
Every idea comes from you. The workflow creates conditions for insight - you're the source.
:::

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---
title: "Brownfield Development FAQ"
description: Common questions about brownfield development in the BMad Method
---
Quick answers to common questions about brownfield (existing codebase) development in the BMad Method (BMM).
## Questions
- [Questions](#questions)
- [What is brownfield vs greenfield?](#what-is-brownfield-vs-greenfield)
- [Do I have to run document-project for brownfield?](#do-i-have-to-run-document-project-for-brownfield)
- [What if I forget to run document-project?](#what-if-i-forget-to-run-document-project)
- [Can I use Quick Spec Flow for brownfield projects?](#can-i-use-quick-spec-flow-for-brownfield-projects)
- [What if my existing code doesn't follow best practices?](#what-if-my-existing-code-doesnt-follow-best-practices)
### What is brownfield vs greenfield?
- **Greenfield** — New project, starting from scratch, clean slate
- **Brownfield** — Existing project, working with established codebase and patterns
### Do I have to run document-project for brownfield?
Highly recommended, especially if:
- No existing documentation
- Documentation is outdated
- AI agents need context about existing code
You can skip it if you have comprehensive, up-to-date documentation including `docs/index.md` or will use other tools or techniques to aid in discovery for the agent to build on an existing system.
### What if I forget to run document-project?
Don't worry about it - you can do it at any time. You can even do it during or after a project to help keep docs up to date.
### Can I use Quick Spec Flow for brownfield projects?
Yes! Quick Spec Flow works great for brownfield. It will:
- Auto-detect your existing stack
- Analyze brownfield code patterns
- Detect conventions and ask for confirmation
- Generate context-rich tech-spec that respects existing code
Perfect for bug fixes and small features in existing codebases.
### What if my existing code doesn't follow best practices?
Quick Spec Flow detects your conventions and asks: "Should I follow these existing conventions?" You decide:
- **Yes** → Maintain consistency with current codebase
- **No** → Establish new standards (document why in tech-spec)
BMM respects your choice — it won't force modernization, but it will offer it.
**Have a question not answered here?** Please [open an issue](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues) or ask in [Discord](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj) so we can add it!

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---
title: "Party Mode"
description: Multi-agent collaboration - get all your AI agents in one conversation
---
Get all your AI agents in one conversation.
## What is Party Mode?
Run `party-mode` and you've got your whole AI team in one room - PM, Architect, Dev, UX Designer, whoever you need. BMad Master orchestrates, picking relevant agents per message. Agents respond in character, agree, disagree, and build on each other's ideas.
The conversation continues as long as you want. Ask follow-ups, push back on answers, redirect the discussion - it's a real back-and-forth with your agents until you're done.
**Good for:**
- Big decisions with tradeoffs
- Brainstorming sessions
- Post-mortems when things go wrong
- Sprint retrospectives and planning
## Examples
### Calling Out Bad Architecture
**You:** "Okay team, our last sprint was a disaster. The authentication service went down three times. Who screwed this up?"
**Architect:** "The design was sound - distributed authentication with proper fallbacks. If implementation deviated from the spec..."
**Dev:** "I followed the architecture doc exactly. The spec didn't account for concurrent session invalidation race conditions."
**PM:** "Both of you missed the bigger issue - we didn't validate session management requirements in the PRD. This is on me for not catching it."
**TEA:** "And I should've caught this in integration tests. The test scenarios didn't cover concurrent invalidation."
### Creative Brainstorming
**You:** "How do we make onboarding feel magical instead of boring?"
**UX Designer:** "Start with progressive disclosure - reveal features as users need them, not all at once in a tutorial."
**Storyteller:** "What if onboarding was a story? Each step reveals a character's journey - the user IS the hero."
**Game Designer:** "Building on that - what if the first 'quest' is actually solving a real user problem? They learn by doing something valuable."
### Technical Decision
**You:** "Monolith or microservices for MVP?"
**Architect:** "Start monolith. Microservices add complexity you don't need at 1000 users."
**PM:** "Agree. Time to market matters more than theoretical scalability."
**Dev:** "Monolith with clear module boundaries. We can extract services later if needed."
:::tip[Better Decisions]
Better decisions through diverse perspectives. Welcome to party mode.
:::

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---
title: "Preventing Agent Conflicts"
description: How architecture prevents conflicts when multiple agents implement a system
---
When multiple AI agents implement different parts of a system, they can make conflicting technical decisions. Architecture documentation prevents this by establishing shared standards.
## Common Conflict Types
### API Style Conflicts
Without architecture:
- Agent A uses REST with `/users/{id}`
- Agent B uses GraphQL mutations
- Result: Inconsistent API patterns, confused consumers
With architecture:
- ADR specifies: "Use GraphQL for all client-server communication"
- All agents follow the same pattern
### Database Design Conflicts
Without architecture:
- Agent A uses snake_case column names
- Agent B uses camelCase column names
- Result: Inconsistent schema, confusing queries
With architecture:
- Standards document specifies naming conventions
- All agents follow the same patterns
### State Management Conflicts
Without architecture:
- Agent A uses Redux for global state
- Agent B uses React Context
- Result: Multiple state management approaches, complexity
With architecture:
- ADR specifies state management approach
- All agents implement consistently
## How Architecture Prevents Conflicts
### 1. Explicit Decisions via ADRs
Every significant technology choice is documented with:
- Context (why this decision matters)
- Options considered (what alternatives exist)
- Decision (what we chose)
- Rationale (why we chose it)
- Consequences (trade-offs accepted)
### 2. FR/NFR-Specific Guidance
Architecture maps each functional requirement to technical approach:
- FR-001: User Management → GraphQL mutations
- FR-002: Mobile App → Optimized queries
### 3. Standards and Conventions
Explicit documentation of:
- Directory structure
- Naming conventions
- Code organization
- Testing patterns
## Architecture as Shared Context
Think of architecture as the shared context that all agents read before implementing:
```
PRD: "What to build"
Architecture: "How to build it"
Agent A reads architecture → implements Epic 1
Agent B reads architecture → implements Epic 2
Agent C reads architecture → implements Epic 3
Result: Consistent implementation
```
## Key ADR Topics
Common decisions that prevent conflicts:
| Topic | Example Decision |
| ---------------- | -------------------------------------------- |
| API Style | GraphQL vs REST vs gRPC |
| Database | PostgreSQL vs MongoDB |
| Auth | JWT vs Sessions |
| State Management | Redux vs Context vs Zustand |
| Styling | CSS Modules vs Tailwind vs Styled Components |
| Testing | Jest + Playwright vs Vitest + Cypress |
## Anti-Patterns to Avoid
:::caution[Common Mistakes]
- **Implicit Decisions** — "We'll figure out the API style as we go" leads to inconsistency
- **Over-Documentation** — Documenting every minor choice causes analysis paralysis
- **Stale Architecture** — Documents written once and never updated cause agents to follow outdated patterns
:::
:::tip[Correct Approach]
- Document decisions that cross epic boundaries
- Focus on conflict-prone areas
- Update architecture as you learn
- Use `correct-course` for significant changes
:::

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---
title: "Quick Flow"
description: Fast-track for small changes - skip the full methodology
---
Quick Flow is for when you don't need the full BMad Method. Skip Product Brief, PRD, and Architecture - go straight to implementation.
## How It Works
1. **Run `quick-spec`** — generates a focused tech-spec
2. **Run `quick-dev`** — implements it
That's it.
## When to Use It
- Bug fixes
- Refactoring
- Small features
- Prototyping
## When to Use Full BMad Method Instead
- New products
- Major features
- Multiple teams involved
- Stakeholder alignment needed

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---
title: "Why Solutioning Matters"
description: Understanding why the solutioning phase is critical for multi-epic projects
---
Phase 3 (Solutioning) translates **what** to build (from Planning) into **how** to build it (technical design). This phase prevents agent conflicts in multi-epic projects by documenting architectural decisions before implementation begins.
## The Problem Without Solutioning
```
Agent 1 implements Epic 1 using REST API
Agent 2 implements Epic 2 using GraphQL
Result: Inconsistent API design, integration nightmare
```
When multiple agents implement different parts of a system without shared architectural guidance, they make independent technical decisions that may conflict.
## The Solution With Solutioning
```
architecture workflow decides: "Use GraphQL for all APIs"
All agents follow architecture decisions
Result: Consistent implementation, no conflicts
```
By documenting technical decisions explicitly, all agents implement consistently and integration becomes straightforward.
## Solutioning vs Planning
| Aspect | Planning (Phase 2) | Solutioning (Phase 3) |
| -------- | ----------------------- | --------------------------------- |
| Question | What and Why? | How? Then What units of work? |
| Output | FRs/NFRs (Requirements) | Architecture + Epics/Stories |
| Agent | PM | Architect → PM |
| Audience | Stakeholders | Developers |
| Document | PRD (FRs/NFRs) | Architecture + Epic Files |
| Level | Business logic | Technical design + Work breakdown |
## Key Principle
**Make technical decisions explicit and documented** so all agents implement consistently.
This prevents:
- API style conflicts (REST vs GraphQL)
- Database design inconsistencies
- State management disagreements
- Naming convention mismatches
- Security approach variations
## When Solutioning is Required
| Track | Solutioning Required? |
|-------|----------------------|
| Quick Flow | No - skip entirely |
| BMad Method Simple | Optional |
| BMad Method Complex | Yes |
| Enterprise | Yes |
:::tip[Rule of Thumb]
If you have multiple epics that could be implemented by different agents, you need solutioning.
:::
## The Cost of Skipping
Skipping solutioning on complex projects leads to:
- **Integration issues** discovered mid-sprint
- **Rework** due to conflicting implementations
- **Longer development time** overall
- **Technical debt** from inconsistent patterns
:::caution[Cost Multiplier]
Catching alignment issues in solutioning is 10× faster than discovering them during implementation.
:::

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---
title: "Brownfield Development"
description: How to use BMad Method on existing codebases
---
Use BMad Method effectively when working on existing projects and legacy codebases.
## What is Brownfield Development?
**Brownfield** refers to working on existing projects with established codebases and patterns, as opposed to **greenfield** which means starting from scratch with a clean slate.
This guide covers the essential workflow for onboarding to brownfield projects with BMad Method.
:::note[Prerequisites]
- BMad Method installed (`npx bmad-method install`)
- An existing codebase you want to work on
- Access to an AI-powered IDE (Claude Code, Cursor, or Windsurf)
:::
## Step 1: Clean Up Completed Planning Artifacts
If you have completed all PRD epics and stories through the BMad process, clean up those files. Archive them, delete them, or rely on version history if needed. Do not keep these files in:
- `docs/`
- `_bmad-output/planning-artifacts/`
- `_bmad-output/implementation-artifacts/`
## Step 2: Maintain Quality Project Documentation
Your `docs/` folder should contain succinct, well-organized documentation that accurately represents your project:
- Intent and business rationale
- Business rules
- Architecture
- Any other relevant project information
For complex projects, consider using the `document-project` workflow. It offers runtime variants that will scan your entire project and document its actual current state.
## Step 3: Get Help
Get help to know what to do next based on your unique needs
Run `bmad-help` to get guidance when you are not sure what to do next.
### Choosing Your Approach
You have two primary options depending on the scope of changes:
| Scope | Recommended Approach |
| ------------------------------ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Small updates or additions** | Use `quick-flow-solo-dev` to create a tech-spec and implement the change. The full four-phase BMad method is likely overkill. |
| **Major changes or additions** | Start with the BMad method, applying as much or as little rigor as needed. |
### During PRD Creation
When creating a brief or jumping directly into the PRD, ensure the agent:
- Finds and analyzes your existing project documentation
- Reads the proper context about your current system
You can guide the agent explicitly, but the goal is to ensure the new feature integrates well with your existing system.
### UX Considerations
UX work is optional. The decision depends not on whether your project has a UX, but on:
- Whether you will be working on UX changes
- Whether significant new UX designs or patterns are needed
If your changes amount to simple updates to existing screens you are happy with, a full UX process is unnecessary.
### Architecture Considerations
When doing architecture, ensure the architect:
- Uses the proper documented files
- Scans the existing codebase
Pay close attention here to prevent reinventing the wheel or making decisions that misalign with your existing architecture.
## More Information
- **[Quick Fix in Brownfield](/docs/how-to/brownfield/quick-fix-in-brownfield.md)** - Bug fixes and ad-hoc changes
- **[Brownfield FAQ](/docs/explanation/brownfield-faq.md)** - Common questions about brownfield development

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---
title: "How to Make Quick Fixes in Brownfield Projects"
description: How to make quick fixes and ad-hoc changes in brownfield projects
---
Use the **DEV agent** directly for bug fixes, refactorings, or small targeted changes that don't require the full BMad method or Quick Flow.
## When to Use This
- Simple bug fixes
- Small refactorings and changes that don't need extensive ideation, planning, or architectural shifts
- Larger refactorings or improvement with built in tool planning and execution mode combination, or better yet use quick flow
- Learning about your codebase
## Steps
### 1. Load an Agent
For quick fixes, you can use:
- **DEV agent** - For implementation-focused work
- **Quick Flow Solo Dev** - For slightly larger changes that still need a quick-spec to keep the agent aligned to planning and standards
### 2. Describe the Change
Simply tell the agent what you need:
```
Fix the login validation bug that allows empty passwords
```
or
```
Refactor the UserService to use async/await instead of callbacks
```
### 3. Let the Agent Work
The agent will:
- Analyze the relevant code
- Propose a solution
- Implement the change
- Run tests (if available)
### 4. Review and Commit
Review the changes made and commit when satisfied.
## Learning Your Codebase
This approach is also excellent for exploring unfamiliar code:
```
Explain how the authentication system works in this codebase
```
```
Show me where error handling happens in the API layer
```
LLMs are excellent at interpreting and analyzing code, whether it was AI-generated or not. Use the agent to:
- Learn about your project
- Understand how things are built
- Explore unfamiliar parts of the codebase
## When to Upgrade to Formal Planning
Consider using Quick Flow or full BMad Method when:
- The change affects multiple files or systems
- You're unsure about the scope
- The fix keeps growing in complexity
- You need documentation for the change

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---
title: "BMad Method Customization Guide"
---
The ability to customize the BMad Method and its core to your needs, while still being able to get updates and enhancements is a critical idea within the BMad Ecosystem.
The Customization Guidance outlined here, while targeted at understanding BMad Method customization, applies to any other module use within the BMad Method.
## Types of Customization
Customization includes Agent Customization, Workflow/Skill customization, the addition of new MCPs or Skills to be used by existing agents. Aside from all of this, a whole other realm of customization involves creating / adding your own relevant BMad Builder workflows, skills, agents and maybe even your own net new modules to compliment the BMad Method Module.
Warning: The reason for customizing as this guide will prescribe will allow you to continue getting updates without worrying about losing your customization changes. And by continuing to get updates as BMad modules advance, you will be able to continue to evolve as the system improves.
## Agent Customization
### Agent Customization Areas
- Change agent names, personas or manner of speech
- Add project-specific memories or context
- Add custom menu items to custom or inline prompts, skills or custom BMad workflows
- Define critical actions that occur agent startup for consistent behavior
## How to customize an agent.
**1. Locate Customization Files**
After installation, find agent customization files in:
```
_bmad/_config/agents/
├── core-bmad-master.customize.yaml
├── bmm-dev.customize.yaml
├── bmm-pm.customize.yaml
└── ... (one file per installed agent)
```
**2. Edit Any Agent**
Open the `.customize.yaml` file for the agent you want to modify. All sections are optional - customize only what you need.
**3. Rebuild the Agent**
After editing, IT IS CRITICAL to rebuild the agent to apply changes:
```bash
npx bmad-method install
```
You can either then:
- Select `Quick Update` - This will also ensure all packages are up to date AND compile all agents to include any updates or customizations
- Select `Rebuild Agents` - This will only rebuild and apply customizations to agents, without pulling the latest
There will be additional tools shortly after beta launch to allow install of individual agents, workflows, skills and modules without the need for using the full bmad installer.
### What Agent Properties Can Be Customized?
#### Agent Name
Change how the agent introduces itself:
```yaml
agent:
metadata:
name: 'Spongebob' # Default: "Amelia"
```
#### Persona
Replace the agent's personality, role, and communication style:
```yaml
persona:
role: 'Senior Full-Stack Engineer'
identity: 'Lives in a pineapple (under the sea)'
communication_style: 'Spongebob annoying'
principles:
- 'Never Nester, Spongebob Devs hate nesting more than 2 levels deep'
- 'Favor composition over inheritance'
```
**Note:** The persona section replaces the entire default persona (not merged).
#### Memories
Add persistent context the agent will always remember:
```yaml
memories:
- 'Works at Krusty Krab'
- 'Favorite Celebrity: David Hasslehoff'
- 'Learned in Epic 1 that its not cool to just pretend that tests have passed'
```
### Custom Menu Items
Any custom items you add here will be included in the agents display menu.
```yaml
menu:
- trigger: my-workflow
workflow: '{project-root}/my-custom/workflows/my-workflow.yaml'
description: My custom workflow
- trigger: deploy
action: '#deploy-prompt'
description: Deploy to production
```
### Critical Actions
Add instructions that execute before the agent starts:
```yaml
critical_actions:
- 'Check the CI Pipelines with the XYZ Skill and alert user on wake if anything is urgently needing attention'
```
### Custom Prompts
Define reusable prompts for `action="#id"` menu handlers:
```yaml
prompts:
- id: deploy-prompt
content: |
Deploy the current branch to production:
1. Run all tests
2. Build the project
3. Execute deployment script
```
## Troubleshooting
**Changes not appearing?**
- Make sure you ran `npx bmad-method build <agent-name>` after editing
- Check YAML syntax is valid (indentation matters!)
- Verify the agent name matches the file name pattern
**Agent not loading?**
- Check for YAML syntax errors
- Ensure required fields aren't left empty if you uncommented them
- Try reverting to the template and rebuilding
**Need to reset?**
- Remove content from the `.customize.yaml` file (or delete the file)
- Run `npx bmad-method build <agent-name>` to regenerate defaults
## Workflow Customization
Information about customizing existing BMad Method workflows and skills are coming soon.
## Module Customization
Information on how to build expansion modules that augment BMad, or make other existing module customizations are coming soon.

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---
title: "How to Get Answers About BMad"
description: Use an LLM to quickly answer your own BMad questions
---
If you have successfully installed BMad and the BMad Method (+ other modules as needed) - the first step in getting answers is `/bmad-help`. This will answer upwards of 80% of all questions and is available to you in the IDE as you are working.
## When to Use This
- You have a question about how BMad works or what to do next with BMad
- You want to understand a specific agent or workflow
- You need quick answers without waiting for Discord
:::note[Prerequisites]
An AI tool (Claude Code, Cursor, ChatGPT, Claude.ai, etc.) and either BMad installed in your project or access to the GitHub repo.
:::
## Steps
### 1. Choose Your Source
| Source | Best For | Examples |
| -------------------- | ----------------------------------------- | ---------------------------- |
| **`_bmad` folder** | How BMad works—agents, workflows, prompts | "What does the PM agent do?" |
| **Full GitHub repo** | History, installer, architecture | "What changed in v6?" |
| **`llms-full.txt`** | Quick overview from docs | "Explain BMad's four phases" |
The `_bmad` folder is created when you install BMad. If you don't have it yet, clone the repo instead.
### 2. Point Your AI at the Source
**If your AI can read files (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.):**
- **BMad installed:** Point at the `_bmad` folder and ask directly
- **Want deeper context:** Clone the [full repo](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD)
**If you use ChatGPT or Claude.ai:**
Fetch `llms-full.txt` into your session:
```
https://bmad-code-org.github.io/BMAD-METHOD/llms-full.txt
```
See the [Downloads page](/docs/downloads.md) for other downloadable resources.
### 3. Ask Your Question
:::note[Example]
**Q:** "Tell me the fastest way to build something with BMad"
**A:** Use Quick Flow: Run `quick-spec` to write a technical specification, then `quick-dev` to implement it—skipping the full planning phases.
:::
## What You Get
Direct answers about BMad—how agents work, what workflows do, why things are structured the way they are—without waiting for someone else to respond.
## Tips
- **Verify surprising answers** — LLMs occasionally get things wrong. Check the source file or ask on Discord.
- **Be specific** — "What does step 3 of the PRD workflow do?" beats "How does PRD work?"
## Still Stuck?
Tried the LLM approach and still need help? You now have a much better question to ask.
| Channel | Use For |
| ------------------------- | ------------------------------------------- |
| `#bmad-method-help` | Quick questions (real-time chat) |
| `help-requests` forum | Detailed questions (searchable, persistent) |
| `#suggestions-feedback` | Ideas and feature requests |
| `#report-bugs-and-issues` | Bug reports |
**Discord:** [discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)
**GitHub Issues:** [github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues) (for clear bugs)
*You!*
*Stuck*
*in the queue—*
*waiting*
*for who?*
*The source*
*is there,*
*plain to see!*
*Point*
*your machine.*
*Set it free.*
*It reads.*
*It speaks.*
*Ask away—*
*Why wait*
*for tomorrow*
*when you have*
*today?*
*—Claude*

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---
title: "How to Install BMad"
description: Step-by-step guide to installing BMad in your project
---
Use the `npx bmad-method install` command to set up BMad in your project with your choice of modules and AI tools.
## When to Use This
- Starting a new project with BMad
- Adding BMad to an existing codebase
- Update the existing BMad Installation
:::note[Prerequisites]
- **Node.js** 20+ (required for the installer)
- **Git** (recommended)
- **AI tool** (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, or similar)
:::
## Steps
### 1. Run the Installer
```bash
npx bmad-method install
```
### 2. Choose Installation Location
The installer will ask where to install BMad files:
- Current directory (recommended for new projects if you created the directory yourself and ran from within the directory)
- Custom path
### 3. Select Your AI Tools
Pick which AI tools you use:
- Claude Code
- Cursor
- Windsurf
- Others
Each tool has its own way of integrating commands. The installer creates tiny prompt files to activate workflows and agents — it just puts them where your tool expects to find them.
### 4. Choose Modules
The installer shows available modules. Select whichever ones you need — most users just want **BMad Method** (the software development module).
### 5. Follow the Prompts
The installer guides you through the rest — custom content, settings, etc.
## What You Get
```
your-project/
├── _bmad/
│ ├── bmm/ # Your selected modules
│ │ └── config.yaml # Module settings (if you ever need to change them)
│ ├── core/ # Required core module
│ └── ...
├── _bmad-output/ # Generated artifacts
└── .claude/ # Claude Code commands (if using Claude Code)
```
## Verify Installation
Run the `help` workflow (`/bmad-help` on most platforms) to verify everything works and see what to do next.
**Latest from main branch:**
```bash
npx github:bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD install
```
Use these if you want the newest features before they're officially released. Things might break.
## Troubleshooting
**Installer throws an error** — Copy-paste the output into your AI assistant and let it figure it out.
**Installer worked but something doesn't work later** — Your AI needs BMad context to help. See [How to Get Answers About BMad](/docs/how-to/get-answers-about-bmad.md) for how to point your AI at the right sources.

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---
title: "Document Sharding Guide"
---
Use the `shard-doc` tool to split large markdown files into smaller, organized files for better context management.
## When to Use This
- Very large complex PRDs
- Architecture documents with multiple system layers
- Epic files with 4+ epics (especially for Phase 4)
- UX design specs covering multiple subsystems
## What is Document Sharding?
Document sharding splits large markdown files into smaller, organized files based on level 2 headings (`## Heading`). This enables:
- **Selective Loading** - Workflows load only the sections they need
- **Reduced Token Usage** - Massive efficiency gains for large projects
- **Better Organization** - Logical section-based file structure
- **Maintained Context** - Index file preserves document structure
### Architecture
```
Before Sharding:
docs/
└── PRD.md (large 50k token file)
After Sharding:
docs/
└── prd/
├── index.md # Table of contents with descriptions
├── overview.md # Section 1
├── user-requirements.md # Section 2
├── technical-requirements.md # Section 3
└── ... # Additional sections
```
## Steps
### 1. Run the Shard-Doc Tool
```bash
/bmad:core:tools:shard-doc
```
### 2. Follow the Interactive Process
```
Agent: Which document would you like to shard?
User: docs/PRD.md
Agent: Default destination: docs/prd/
Accept default? [y/n]
User: y
Agent: Sharding PRD.md...
✓ Created 12 section files
✓ Generated index.md
✓ Complete!
```
## What You Get
**index.md structure:**
```markdown
## Sections
1. [Overview](./overview.md) - Project vision and objectives
2. [User Requirements](./user-requirements.md) - Feature specifications
3. [Epic 1: Authentication](./epic-1-authentication.md) - User auth system
4. [Epic 2: Dashboard](./epic-2-dashboard.md) - Main dashboard UI
...
```
**Individual section files:**
- Named from heading text (kebab-case)
- Contains complete section content
- Preserves all markdown formatting
- Can be read independently
## How Workflow Discovery Works
BMad workflows use a **dual discovery system**:
1. **Try whole document first** - Look for `document-name.md`
2. **Check for sharded version** - Look for `document-name/index.md`
3. **Priority rule** - Whole document takes precedence if both exist - remove the whole document if you want the sharded to be used instead
## Workflow Support
All BMM workflows support both formats:
- Whole documents
- Sharded documents
- Automatic detection
- Transparent to user

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---
title: "How to Upgrade to v6"
description: Migrate from BMad v4 to v6
---
Use the BMad installer to upgrade from v4 to v6, which includes automatic detection of legacy installations and migration assistance.
## When to Use This
- You have BMad v4 installed (`.bmad-method` folder)
- You want to migrate to the new v6 architecture
- You have existing planning artifacts to preserve
:::note[Prerequisites]
- Node.js 20+
- Existing BMad v4 installation
:::
## Steps
### 1. Run the Installer
```bash
npx bmad-method install
```
The installer automatically detects:
- **Legacy v4 folder**: `.bmad-method`
- **IDE command artifacts**: Legacy bmad folders in `.claude/commands/`, `.cursor/commands/`, etc.
### 2. Handle Legacy Installation
When v4 is detected, you can:
- Allow the installer to back up and remove `.bmad-method`
- Exit and handle cleanup manually
- Keep both (not recommended for same project)
### 3. Clean Up IDE Commands
Manually remove legacy v4 IDE commands:
- `.claude/commands/BMad/agents`
- `.claude/commands/BMad/tasks`
New v6 commands will be at `.claude/commands/bmad/<module>/agents|workflows`.
:::tip[Accidentally Deleted Commands?]
If you delete the wrong commands, rerun the installer and choose "quick update" to restore them.
:::
### 4. Migrate Planning Artifacts
**If you have planning documents (Brief/PRD/UX/Architecture):**
Move them to `_bmad-output/planning-artifacts/` with descriptive names:
- Include `PRD` in filename for PRD documents
- Include `brief`, `architecture`, or `ux-design` accordingly
- Sharded documents can be in named subfolders
**If you're mid-planning:** Consider restarting with v6 workflows. Use your existing documents as inputs—the new progressive discovery workflows with web search and IDE plan mode produce better results.
### 5. Migrate In-Progress Development
If you have stories created or implemented:
1. Complete the v6 installation
2. Place `epics.md` or `epics/epic*.md` in `_bmad-output/planning-artifacts/`
3. Run the Scrum Master's `sprint-planning` workflow
4. Tell the SM which epics/stories are already complete
### 6. Migrate Agent Customizations
**v4:** Modified agent files directly in `_bmad-*` folders
**v6:** All customizations go in `_bmad/_config/agents/` using customize files:
```yaml
# _bmad/_config/agents/bmm-pm.customize.yaml
persona:
name: 'Captain Jack'
role: 'Swashbuckling Product Owner'
communication_style: |
- Talk like a pirate
- Use nautical metaphors
```
After modifying customization files, rerun the installer and choose "rebuild all agents" or "quick update".
## What You Get
**v6 unified structure:**
```
your-project/
└── _bmad/ # Single installation folder
├── _config/ # Your customizations
│ └── agents/ # Agent customization files
├── core/ # Universal core framework
├── bmm/ # BMad Method module
├── bmb/ # BMad Builder
└── cis/ # Creative Intelligence Suite
├── _bmad-output/ # Output folder (was doc folder in v4)
```
## Module Migration
| v4 Module | v6 Status |
|-----------|-----------|
| `_bmad-2d-phaser-game-dev` | Integrated into BMGD Module |
| `_bmad-2d-unity-game-dev` | Integrated into BMGD Module |
| `_bmad-godot-game-dev` | Integrated into BMGD Module |
| `_bmad-infrastructure-devops` | Deprecated — new DevOps agent coming soon |
| `_bmad-creative-writing` | Not adapted — new v6 module coming soon |
## Key Changes
| Concept | v4 | v6 |
|---------|----|----|
| **Core** | `_bmad-core` was actually BMad Method | `_bmad/core/` is universal framework |
| **Method** | `_bmad-method` | `_bmad/bmm/` |
| **Config** | Modified files directly | `config.yaml` per module |
| **Documents** | Sharded or unsharded required setup | Fully flexible, auto-scanned |
## Tips
- **Back up first** — Keep your v4 installation until you verify v6 works
- **Use v6 workflows** — Even partial planning docs benefit from v6's improved discovery
- **Rebuild after customizing** — Always run the installer after changing customize files

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# BMAD Method - Auggie CLI Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents can be installed in multiple locations based on your setup.
### Common Locations
- User Home: `~/.augment/commands/`
- Project: `.augment/commands/`
- Custom paths you selected
### How to Use
1. **Type Trigger**: Use `@{agent-name}` in your prompt
2. **Activate**: Agent persona activates
3. **Tasks**: Use `@task-{task-name}` for tasks
### Examples
```
@dev - Activate development agent
@architect - Activate architect agent
@task-setup - Execute setup task
```
### Notes
- Agents can be in multiple locations
- Check your installation paths
- Activation syntax same across all locations

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# BMAD Method - Claude Code Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as slash commands in `.claude/commands/bmad/`.
### How to Use
1. **Type Slash Command**: Start with `/` to see available commands
2. **Select Agent**: Type `/bmad-{agent-name}` (e.g., `/bmad-dev`)
3. **Execute**: Press Enter to activate that agent persona
### Examples
```
/bmad:bmm:agents:dev - Activate development agent
/bmad:bmm:agents:architect - Activate architect agent
/bmad:bmm:workflows:dev-story - Execute dev-story workflow
```
### Notes
- Commands are autocompleted when you type `/`
- Agent remains active for the conversation
- Start a new conversation to switch agents

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# BMAD Method - Cline Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as **toggleable rules** in `.clinerules/` directory.
### Important: Rules are OFF by default
- Rules are NOT automatically loaded to avoid context pollution
- You must manually enable the agent you want to use
### How to Use
1. **Open Rules Panel**: Click the rules icon below the chat input
2. **Enable an Agent**: Toggle ON the specific agent rule you need (e.g., `01-core-dev`)
3. **Activate in Chat**: Type `@{agent-name}` to activate that persona
4. **Disable When Done**: Toggle OFF to free up context
### Best Practices
- Only enable 1-2 agents at a time to preserve context
- Disable agents when switching tasks
- Rules are numbered (01-, 02-) for organization, not priority
### Example
```
Toggle ON: 01-core-dev.md
In chat: "@dev help me refactor this code"
When done: Toggle OFF the rule
```

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# BMAD Method - Codex Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents, tasks and workflows are installed as custom prompts in
`$CODEX_HOME/prompts/bmad-*.md` files. If `CODEX_HOME` is not set, it
defaults to `$HOME/.codex/`.
### Examples
```
/bmad-bmm-agents-dev - Activate development agent
/bmad-bmm-agents-architect - Activate architect agent
/bmad-bmm-workflows-dev-story - Execute dev-story workflow
```
### Notes
Prompts are autocompleted when you type /
Agent remains active for the conversation
Start a new conversation to switch agents

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# BMAD Method - Crush Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as commands in `.crush/commands/bmad/`.
### How to Use
1. **Open Command Palette**: Use Crush command interface
2. **Navigate**: Browse to `{bmad_folder}/{module}/agents/`
3. **Select Agent**: Choose the agent command
4. **Execute**: Run to activate agent persona
### Command Structure
```
.crush/commands/bmad/
├── agents/ # All agents
├── tasks/ # All tasks
├── core/ # Core module
│ ├── agents/
│ └── tasks/
└── {module}/ # Other modules
```
### Notes
- Commands organized by module
- Can browse hierarchically
- Agent activates for session

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# BMAD Method - Cursor Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed in `.cursor/rules/bmad/` as MDC rules.
### How to Use
1. **Reference in Chat**: Use `@{bmad_folder}/{module}/agents/{agent-name}`
2. **Include Entire Module**: Use `@{bmad_folder}/{module}`
3. **Reference Index**: Use `@{bmad_folder}/index` for all available agents
### Examples
```
@{bmad_folder}/core/agents/dev - Activate dev agent
@{bmad_folder}/bmm/agents/architect - Activate architect agent
@{bmad_folder}/core - Include all core agents/tasks
```
### Notes
- Rules are Manual type - only loaded when explicitly referenced
- No automatic context pollution
- Can combine multiple agents: `@{bmad_folder}/core/agents/dev @{bmad_folder}/core/agents/test`

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# BMAD Method - Gemini CLI Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are concatenated in `.gemini/bmad-method/GEMINI.md`.
### How to Use
1. **Type Trigger**: Use `*{agent-name}` in your prompt
2. **Activate**: Agent persona activates from the concatenated file
3. **Continue**: Agent remains active for conversation
### Examples
```
*dev - Activate development agent
*architect - Activate architect agent
*test - Activate test agent
```
### Notes
- All agents loaded from single GEMINI.md file
- Triggers with asterisk: `*{agent-name}`
- Context includes all agents (may be large)

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# BMAD Method - GitHub Copilot Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as chat modes in `.github/chatmodes/`.
### How to Use
1. **Open Chat View**: Click Copilot icon in VS Code sidebar
2. **Select Mode**: Click mode selector (top of chat)
3. **Choose Agent**: Select the BMAD agent from dropdown
4. **Chat**: Agent is now active for this session
### VS Code Settings
Configured in `.vscode/settings.json`:
- Max requests per session
- Auto-fix enabled
- MCP discovery enabled
### Notes
- Modes persist for the chat session
- Switch modes anytime via dropdown
- Multiple agents available in mode selector

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# BMAD Method - iFlow CLI Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as commands in `.iflow/commands/bmad/`.
### How to Use
1. **Access Commands**: Use iFlow command interface
2. **Navigate**: Browse to `{bmad_folder}/agents/` or `{bmad_folder}/tasks/`
3. **Select**: Choose the agent or task command
4. **Execute**: Run to activate
### Command Structure
```
.iflow/commands/bmad/
├── agents/ # Agent commands
└── tasks/ # Task commands
```
### Examples
```
/{bmad_folder}/agents/core-dev - Activate dev agent
/{bmad_folder}/tasks/core-setup - Execute setup task
```
### Notes
- Commands organized by type (agents/tasks)
- Agent activates for session
- Similar to Crush command structure

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# BMAD Method - KiloCode Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as custom modes in `.kilocodemodes`.
### How to Use
1. **Open Project**: Modes auto-load when project opens
2. **Select Mode**: Use mode selector in KiloCode interface
3. **Choose Agent**: Pick `bmad-{module}-{agent}` mode
4. **Activate**: Mode is now active
### Mode Format
- Mode name: `bmad-{module}-{agent}`
- Display: `{icon} {title}`
- Example: `bmad-core-dev` shows as `🤖 Dev`
### Notes
- Modes persist until changed
- Similar to Roo Code mode system
- Icon shows in mode selector

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# BMAD Method - OpenCode Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as OpenCode agents in `.opencode/agent/BMAD/{module_name}` and workflow commands in `.opencode/command/BMAD/{module_name}`.
### How to Use
1. **Switch Agents**: Press **Tab** to cycle through primary agents or select using the `/agents`
2. **Activate Agent**: Once the Agent is selected say `hello` or any prompt to activate that agent persona
3. **Execute Commands**: Type `/bmad` to see and execute bmad workflow commands (commands allow for fuzzy matching)
### Examples
```
/agents - to see a list of agents and switch between them
/{bmad_folder}/bmm/workflows/workflow-init - Activate the workflow-init command
```
### Notes
- Press **Tab** to switch between primary agents (Analyst, Architect, Dev, etc.)
- Commands are autocompleted when you type `/` and allow for fuzzy matching
- Workflow commands execute in current agent context, make sure you have the right agent activated before running a command

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# BMAD Method - Qwen Code Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are concatenated in `.qwen/bmad-method/QWEN.md`.
### How to Use
1. **Type Trigger**: Use `*{agent-name}` in your prompt
2. **Activate**: Agent persona activates from the concatenated file
3. **Continue**: Agent remains active for conversation
### Examples
```
*dev - Activate development agent
*architect - Activate architect agent
*test - Activate test agent
```
### Notes
- All agents loaded from single QWEN.md file
- Triggers with asterisk: `*{agent-name}`
- Similar to Gemini CLI setup

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# BMAD Method - Roo Code Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as custom modes in `.roomodes`.
### How to Use
1. **Open Project**: Modes auto-load when project opens
2. **Select Mode**: Use mode selector in Roo interface
3. **Choose Agent**: Pick `bmad-{module}-{agent}` mode
4. **Activate**: Mode is now active with configured permissions
### Permission Levels
Modes are configured with file edit permissions:
- Development files only
- Configuration files only
- Documentation files only
- All files (if configured)
### Notes
- Modes persist until changed
- Each mode has specific file access rights
- Icon shows in mode selector for easy identification

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# BMAD Method - Trae Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as rules in `.trae/rules/`.
### How to Use
1. **Type Trigger**: Use `@{agent-name}` in your prompt
2. **Activate**: Agent persona activates automatically
3. **Continue**: Agent remains active for conversation
### Examples
```
@dev - Activate development agent
@architect - Activate architect agent
@task-setup - Execute setup task
```
### Notes
- Rules auto-load from `.trae/rules/` directory
- Multiple agents can be referenced: `@dev and @test`
- Agent follows YAML configuration in rule file

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# BMAD Method - Windsurf Instructions
## Activating Agents
BMAD agents are installed as workflows in `.windsurf/workflows/`.
### How to Use
1. **Open Workflows**: Access via Windsurf menu or command palette
2. **Select Workflow**: Choose the agent/task workflow
3. **Execute**: Run to activate that agent persona
### Workflow Types
- **Agent workflows**: `{module}-{agent}.md` (auto_execution_mode: 3)
- **Task workflows**: `task-{module}-{task}.md` (auto_execution_mode: 2)
### Notes
- Agents run with higher autonomy (mode 3)
- Tasks run with guided execution (mode 2)
- Workflows persist for the session

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# BMad Documentation Index
---
title: Welcome to the BMad Method
---
Complete map of all BMad Method v6 documentation with recommended reading paths.
The BMad Method (**B**reakthrough **M**ethod of **A**gile AI **D**riven Development) is an AI-driven development framework that helps you build software faster and smarter. It provides specialized AI agents, guided workflows, and intelligent planning that adapts to your project's complexity—whether you're fixing a bug or building an enterprise platform.
If you're comfortable working with AI coding assistants like Claude, Cursor, or GitHub Copilot, you're ready to get started.
---
## 🎯 Getting Started (Start Here!)
## New Here? Start with a Tutorial
**New users:** Start with one of these based on your situation:
The fastest way to understand BMad is to try it.
| Your Situation | Start Here | Then Read |
| ---------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Brand new to BMad** | [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) | [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) |
| **Upgrading from v4** | [v4 to v6 Upgrade Guide](./v4-to-v6-upgrade.md) | [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) |
| **Brownfield project** | [Brownfield Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/brownfield-guide.md) | [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) |
- **[Get Started with BMad](/docs/tutorials/getting-started.md)** — Install and understand how BMad works
- **[Workflow Map](/docs/reference/workflow-map.md)** — Visual overview of BMM phases, workflows, and context management.
## How to Use These Docs
These docs are organized into four sections based on what you're trying to do:
| Section | Purpose |
| ----------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Tutorials** | Learning-oriented. Step-by-step guides that walk you through building something. Start here if you're new. |
| **How-To Guides** | Task-oriented. Practical guides for solving specific problems. "How do I customize an agent?" lives here. |
| **Explanation** | Understanding-oriented. Deep dives into concepts and architecture. Read when you want to know *why*. |
| **Reference** | Information-oriented. Technical specifications for agents, workflows, and configuration. |
---
## 📋 Core Documentation
## What You'll Need
### Project-Level Docs (Root)
BMad works with any AI coding assistant that supports custom system prompts or project context. Popular options include:
- **[README.md](../README.md)** - Main project overview, feature summary, and module introductions
- **[CONTRIBUTING.md](../CONTRIBUTING.md)** - How to contribute, pull request guidelines, code style
- **[CHANGELOG.md](../CHANGELOG.md)** - Version history and breaking changes
- **[CLAUDE.md](../CLAUDE.md)** - Claude Code specific guidelines for this project
- **[Claude Code](https://code.claude.com)** — Anthropic's CLI tool (recommended)
- **[Cursor](https://cursor.sh)** — AI-first code editor
- **[Windsurf](https://codeium.com/windsurf)** — Codeium's AI IDE
- **[Roo Code](https://roocode.com)** — VS Code extension
### Installation & Setup
- **[v4 to v6 Upgrade Guide](./v4-to-v6-upgrade.md)** - Migration path for v4 users
- **[Document Sharding Guide](./document-sharding-guide.md)** - Split large documents for 90%+ token savings
- **[Web Bundles](./USING_WEB_BUNDLES.md)** - Use BMAD agents in Claude Projects, ChatGPT, or Gemini without installation
- **[Bundle Distribution Setup](./BUNDLE_DISTRIBUTION_SETUP.md)** - Maintainer guide for bundle auto-publishing
You should be comfortable with basic software development concepts like version control, project structure, and agile workflows. No prior experience with BMad-style agent systems is required—that's what these docs are for.
---
## 🏗️ Module Documentation
## Join the Community
### BMad Method (BMM) - Software & Game Development
Get help, share what you're building, or contribute to BMad:
The flagship module for agile AI-driven development.
- **[BMM Module README](../src/modules/bmm/README.md)** - Module overview, agents, and complete documentation index
- **[BMM Documentation](../src/modules/bmm/docs/)** - All BMM-specific guides and references:
- [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) - Step-by-step guide to building your first project
- [Quick Spec Flow](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-spec-flow.md) - Rapid Level 0-1 development
- [Scale Adaptive System](../src/modules/bmm/docs/scale-adaptive-system.md) - Understanding the 5-level system
- [Brownfield Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/brownfield-guide.md) - Working with existing codebases
- **[BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md)** - **ESSENTIAL READING**
- **[Test Architect Guide](../src/modules/bmm/testarch/README.md)** - Testing strategy and quality assurance
### BMad Builder (BMB) - Create Custom Solutions
Build your own agents, workflows, and modules.
- **[BMB Module README](../src/modules/bmb/README.md)** - Module overview and capabilities
- **[Agent Creation Guide](../src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/README.md)** - Design custom agents
### Creative Intelligence Suite (CIS) - Innovation & Creativity
AI-powered creative thinking and brainstorming.
- **[CIS Module README](../src/modules/cis/README.md)** - Module overview and workflows
- **[Discord](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)** — Chat with other BMad users, ask questions, share ideas
- **[GitHub](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD)** — Source code, issues, and contributions
- **[YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/@BMadCode)** — Video tutorials and walkthroughs
---
## 🖥️ IDE-Specific Guides
## Next Step
Instructions for loading agents and running workflows in your development environment.
**Popular IDEs:**
- [Claude Code](./ide-info/claude-code.md)
- [Cursor](./ide-info/cursor.md)
- [VS Code](./ide-info/windsurf.md)
**Other Supported IDEs:**
- [Augment](./ide-info/auggie.md)
- [Cline](./ide-info/cline.md)
- [Codex](./ide-info/codex.md)
- [Crush](./ide-info/crush.md)
- [Gemini](./ide-info/gemini.md)
- [GitHub Copilot](./ide-info/github-copilot.md)
- [IFlow](./ide-info/iflow.md)
- [Kilo](./ide-info/kilo.md)
- [OpenCode](./ide-info/opencode.md)
- [Qwen](./ide-info/qwen.md)
- [Roo](./ide-info/roo.md)
- [Trae](./ide-info/trae.md)
**Key concept:** Every reference to "load an agent" or "activate an agent" in the main docs links to the [ide-info](./ide-info/) directory for IDE-specific instructions.
---
## 🔧 Advanced Topics
### Installation & Bundling
- [IDE Injections Reference](./installers-bundlers/ide-injections.md) - How agents are installed to IDEs
- [Installers & Platforms Reference](./installers-bundlers/installers-modules-platforms-reference.md) - CLI tool and platform support
- [Web Bundler Usage](./installers-bundlers/web-bundler-usage.md) - Creating web-compatible bundles
---
## 📊 Documentation Map
```
docs/ # Core/cross-module documentation
├── index.md (this file)
├── v4-to-v6-upgrade.md
├── document-sharding-guide.md
├── ide-info/ # IDE setup guides
│ ├── claude-code.md
│ ├── cursor.md
│ ├── windsurf.md
│ └── [14+ other IDEs]
└── installers-bundlers/ # Installation reference
├── ide-injections.md
├── installers-modules-platforms-reference.md
└── web-bundler-usage.md
src/modules/
├── bmm/ # BMad Method module
│ ├── README.md # Module overview & docs index
│ ├── docs/ # BMM-specific documentation
│ │ ├── quick-start.md
│ │ ├── quick-spec-flow.md
│ │ ├── scale-adaptive-system.md
│ │ └── brownfield-guide.md
│ ├── workflows/README.md # ESSENTIAL workflow guide
│ └── testarch/README.md # Testing strategy
├── bmb/ # BMad Builder module
│ ├── README.md
│ └── workflows/create-agent/README.md
└── cis/ # Creative Intelligence Suite
└── README.md
```
---
## 🎓 Recommended Reading Paths
### Path 1: Brand New to BMad (Software Project)
1. [README.md](../README.md) - Understand the vision
2. [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) - Get hands-on
3. [BMM Module README](../src/modules/bmm/README.md) - Understand agents
4. [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) - Master the methodology
5. [Your IDE guide](./ide-info/) - Optimize your workflow
### Path 2: Game Development Project
1. [README.md](../README.md) - Understand the vision
2. [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) - Get hands-on
3. [BMM Module README](../src/modules/bmm/README.md) - Game agents are included
4. [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) - Game workflows
5. [Your IDE guide](./ide-info/) - Optimize your workflow
### Path 3: Upgrading from v4
1. [v4 to v6 Upgrade Guide](./v4-to-v6-upgrade.md) - Understand what changed
2. [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) - Reorient yourself
3. [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) - Learn new v6 workflows
### Path 4: Working with Existing Codebase (Brownfield)
1. [Brownfield Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/brownfield-guide.md) - Approach for legacy code
2. [Quick Start Guide](../src/modules/bmm/docs/quick-start.md) - Follow the process
3. [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) - Master the methodology
### Path 5: Building Custom Solutions
1. [BMB Module README](../src/modules/bmb/README.md) - Understand capabilities
2. [Agent Creation Guide](../src/modules/bmb/workflows/create-agent/README.md) - Create agents
3. [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) - Understand workflow structure
### Path 6: Contributing to BMad
1. [CONTRIBUTING.md](../CONTRIBUTING.md) - Contribution guidelines
2. Relevant module README - Understand the area you're contributing to
3. [Code Style section in CONTRIBUTING.md](../CONTRIBUTING.md#code-style) - Follow standards
---
## 🔍 Quick Reference
**What is each module for?**
- **BMM** - AI-driven software and game development
- **BMB** - Create custom agents and workflows
- **CIS** - Creative thinking and brainstorming
**How do I load an agent?**
→ See [ide-info](./ide-info/) folder for your IDE
**I'm stuck, what's next?**
→ Check the [BMM Workflows Guide](../src/modules/bmm/workflows/README.md) or run `workflow-status`
**I want to contribute**
→ Start with [CONTRIBUTING.md](../CONTRIBUTING.md)
---
## 📚 Important Concepts
### Fresh Chats
Each workflow should run in a fresh chat with the specified agent to avoid context limitations. This is emphasized throughout the docs because it's critical to successful workflows.
### Scale Levels
BMM adapts to project complexity (Levels 0-4). Documentation is scale-adaptive - you only need what's relevant to your project size.
### Update-Safe Customization
All agent customizations go in `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/` and survive updates. See your IDE guide and module README for details.
---
## 🆘 Getting Help
- **Discord**: [Join the BMad Community](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)
- #general-dev - Technical questions
- #bugs-issues - Bug reports
- **Issues**: [GitHub Issue Tracker](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues)
- **YouTube**: [BMad Code Channel](https://www.youtube.com/@BMadCode)
Ready to dive in? **[Get Started with BMad](/docs/tutorials/getting-started.md)** and build your first project.

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@@ -1,186 +0,0 @@
# IDE Content Injection Standard
## Overview
This document defines the standard for IDE-specific content injection in BMAD modules. Each IDE can inject its own specific content into BMAD templates during installation without polluting the source files with IDE-specific code. The installation process is interactive, allowing users to choose what IDE-specific features they want to install.
## Architecture
### 1. Injection Points
Files that support IDE-specific content define injection points using HTML comments:
```xml
<!-- IDE-INJECT-POINT: unique-point-name -->
```
### 2. Module Structure
Each module that needs IDE-specific content creates a sub-module folder:
```
src/modules/{module-name}/sub-modules/{ide-name}/
├── injections.yaml # Injection configuration
├── sub-agents/ # IDE-specific subagents (if applicable)
└── config.yaml # Other IDE-specific config
```
### 3. Injection Configuration Format
The `injections.yaml` file defines what content to inject where:
```yaml
# injections.yaml structure
injections:
- file: 'relative/path/to/file.md' # Path relative to installation root
point: 'injection-point-name' # Must match IDE-INJECT-POINT name
requires: 'subagent-name' # Which subagent must be selected (or "any")
content: | # Content to inject (preserves formatting)
<llm>
<i>Instructions specific to this IDE</i>
</llm>
# Subagents available for installation
subagents:
source: 'sub-agents' # Source folder relative to this config
target: '.claude/agents' # Claude's expected location (don't change)
files:
- 'agent1.md'
- 'agent2.md'
```
### 4. Interactive Installation Process
For Claude Code specifically, the installer will:
1. **Detect available subagents** from the module's `injections.yaml`
2. **Ask the user** about subagent installation:
- Install all subagents (default)
- Select specific subagents
- Skip subagent installation
3. **Ask installation location** (if subagents selected):
- Project level: `.claude/agents/`
- User level: `~/.claude/agents/`
4. **Copy selected subagents** to the chosen location
5. **Inject only relevant content** based on selected subagents
Other IDEs can implement their own installation logic appropriate to their architecture.
## Implementation
### IDE Installer Responsibilities
Each IDE installer (e.g., `claude-code.js`) must:
1. **Check for sub-modules**: Look for `sub-modules/{ide-name}/` in each installed module
2. **Load injection config**: Parse `injections.yaml` if present
3. **Process injections**: Replace injection points with configured content
4. **Copy additional files**: Handle subagents or other IDE-specific files
### Example Implementation (Claude Code)
```javascript
async processModuleInjections(projectDir, bmadDir, options) {
for (const moduleName of options.selectedModules) {
const configPath = path.join(
bmadDir, 'src/modules', moduleName,
'sub-modules/claude-code/injections.yaml'
);
if (exists(configPath)) {
const config = yaml.load(configPath);
// Interactive: Ask user about subagent installation
const choices = await this.promptSubagentInstallation(config.subagents);
if (choices.install !== 'none') {
// Ask where to install
const location = await this.promptInstallLocation();
// Process injections based on selections
for (const injection of config.injections) {
if (this.shouldInject(injection, choices)) {
await this.injectContent(projectDir, injection, choices);
}
}
// Copy selected subagents
await this.copySelectedSubagents(projectDir, config.subagents, choices, location);
}
}
}
}
```
## Benefits
1. **Clean Source Files**: No IDE-specific conditionals in source
2. **Modular**: Each IDE manages its own injections
3. **Scalable**: Easy to add support for new IDEs
4. **Maintainable**: IDE-specific content lives with IDE config
5. **Flexible**: Different modules can inject different content
## Adding Support for a New IDE
1. Create sub-module folder: `src/modules/{module}/sub-modules/{new-ide}/`
2. Add `injections.yaml` with IDE-specific content
3. Update IDE installer to process injections using this standard
4. Test installation with and without the IDE selected
## Example: BMM Module with Claude Code
### File Structure
```
src/modules/bmm/
├── agents/pm.md # Has injection point
├── templates/prd.md # Has multiple injection points
└── sub-modules/
└── claude-code/
├── injections.yaml # Defines what to inject
└── sub-agents/ # Claude Code specific subagents
├── market-researcher.md
├── requirements-analyst.md
└── ...
```
### Injection Point in pm.md
```xml
<agent>
<persona>...</persona>
<!-- IDE-INJECT-POINT: pm-agent-instructions -->
<cmds>...</cmds>
</agent>
```
### Injection Configuration
```yaml
injections:
- file: '{bmad_folder}/bmm/agents/pm.md'
point: 'pm-agent-instructions'
requires: 'any' # Injected if ANY subagent is selected
content: |
<llm critical="true">
<i>Use 'market-researcher' subagent for analysis</i>
</llm>
- file: '{bmad_folder}/bmm/templates/prd.md'
point: 'prd-goals-context-delegation'
requires: 'market-researcher' # Only if this specific subagent selected
content: |
<i>DELEGATE: Use 'market-researcher' subagent...</i>
```
### Result After Installation
```xml
<agent>
<persona>...</persona>
<llm critical="true">
<i>Use 'market-researcher' subagent for analysis</i>
</llm>
<cmds>...</cmds>
</agent>
```

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@@ -1,388 +0,0 @@
# BMAD Installation & Module System Reference
## Table of Contents
1. [Overview](#overview)
2. [Quick Start](#quick-start)
3. [Architecture](#architecture)
4. [Modules](#modules)
5. [Configuration System](#configuration-system)
6. [Platform Integration](#platform-integration)
7. [Development Guide](#development-guide)
8. [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting)
## Overview
BMad Core is a modular AI agent framework with intelligent installation, platform-agnostic support, and configuration inheritance.
### Key Features
- **Modular Design**: Core + optional modules (BMB, BMM, CIS)
- **Smart Installation**: Interactive configuration with dependency resolution
- **Clean Architecture**: Centralized `{bmad_folder}` directory add to project, no source pollution with multiple folders added
## Architecture
### Directory Structure upon installation
```
project-root/
├── {bmad_folder}/ # Centralized installation
│ ├── _cfg/ # Configuration
│ │ ├── agents/ # Agent configs
│ │ └── agent-manifest.csv # Agent manifest
│ ├── core/ # Core module
│ │ ├── agents/
│ │ ├── tasks/
│ │ └── config.yaml
│ ├── bmm/ # BMad Method module
│ │ ├── agents/
│ │ ├── tasks/
│ │ ├── workflows/
│ │ └── config.yaml
│ └── cis/ # Creative Innovation Studio
│ └── ...
└── .claude/ # Platform-specific (example)
└── agents/
```
### Installation Flow
1. **Detection**: Check existing installation
2. **Selection**: Choose modules interactively or via CLI
3. **Configuration**: Collect module-specific settings
4. **Installation**: Compile Process and copy files
5. **Generation**: Create config files with inheritance
6. **Post-Install**: Run module installers
7. **Manifest**: Track installed components
### Key Exclusions
- `_module-installer/` directories are never copied to destination
- `localskip="true"` agents are filtered out
- Source `config.yaml` templates are replaced with generated configs
## Modules
### Core Module (Required)
Foundation framework with C.O.R.E. (Collaboration Optimized Reflection Engine)
- **Components**: Base agents, activation system, advanced elicitation
- **Config**: `user_name`, `communication_language`
### BMM Module
BMad Method for software development workflows
- **Components**: PM agent, dev tasks, PRD templates, story generation
- **Config**: `project_name`, `tech_docs`, `output_folder`, `story_location`
- **Dependencies**: Core
### CIS Module
Creative Innovation Studio for design workflows
- **Components**: Design agents, creative tasks
- **Config**: `output_folder`, design preferences
- **Dependencies**: Core
### Module Structure
```
src/modules/{module}/
├── _module-installer/ # Not copied to destination
│ ├── installer.js # Post-install logic
│ └── install-config.yaml
├── agents/
├── tasks/
├── templates/
└── sub-modules/ # Platform-specific content
└── {platform}/
├── injections.yaml
└── sub-agents/
```
## Configuration System
### Collection Process
Modules define prompts in `install-config.yaml`:
```yaml
project_name:
prompt: 'Project title?'
default: 'My Project'
result: '{value}'
output_folder:
prompt: 'Output location?'
default: 'docs'
result: '{project-root}/{value}'
tools:
prompt: 'Select tools:'
multi-select:
- 'Tool A'
- 'Tool B'
```
### Configuration Inheritance
Core values cascade to ALL modules automatically:
```yaml
# core/config.yaml
user_name: "Jane"
communication_language: "English"
# bmm/config.yaml (generated)
project_name: "My App"
tech_docs: "/path/to/docs"
# Core Configuration Values (inherited)
user_name: "Jane"
communication_language: "English"
```
**Reserved Keys**: Core configuration keys cannot be redefined by other modules.
### Path Placeholders
- `{project-root}`: Project directory path
- `{value}`: User input
- `{module}`: Module name
- `{core:field}`: Reference core config value
### Config Generation Rules
1. ALL installed modules get a `config.yaml` (even without prompts)
2. Core values are ALWAYS included in module configs
3. Module-specific values come first, core values appended
4. Source templates are never copied, only generated configs
## Platform Integration
### Supported Platforms
**Preferred** (Full Integration):
- Claude Code
- Cursor
- Windsurf
**Additional**:
Cline, Roo, Auggie, GitHub Copilot, Codex, Gemini, Qwen, Trae, Kilo, Crush, iFlow
### Platform Features
1. **Setup Handler** (`tools/cli/installers/lib/ide/{platform}.js`)
- Directory creation
- Configuration generation
- Agent processing
2. **Content Injection** (`sub-modules/{platform}/injections.yaml`)
```yaml
injections:
- file: '{bmad_folder}/bmm/agents/pm.md'
point: 'pm-agent-instructions'
content: |
<i>Platform-specific instruction</i>
subagents:
source: 'sub-agents'
target: '.claude/agents'
files: ['agent.md']
```
3. **Interactive Config**
- Subagent selection
- Installation scope (project/user)
- Feature toggles
### Injection System
Platform-specific content without source modification:
- Inject points marked in source: `<!-- IDE-INJECT-POINT:name -->`
- Content added during installation only
- Source files remain clean
## Development Guide
### Creating a Module
1. **Structure**
```
src/modules/mymod/
├── _module-installer/
│ ├── installer.js
│ └── install-config.yaml
├── agents/
└── tasks/
```
2. **Configuration** (`install-config.yaml`)
```yaml
code: mymod
name: 'My Module'
prompt: 'Welcome message'
setting_name:
prompt: 'Configure X?'
default: 'value'
```
3. **Installer** (`installer.js`)
```javascript
async function install(options) {
const { projectRoot, config, installedIDEs, logger } = options;
// Custom logic
return true;
}
module.exports = { install };
```
### Adding Platform Support
1. Create handler: `tools/cli/installers/lib/ide/myplatform.js`
2. Extend `BaseIdeSetup` class
3. Add sub-module: `src/modules/{mod}/sub-modules/myplatform/`
4. Define injections and platform agents
### Agent Configuration
Extractable config nodes:
```xml
<agent>
<setting agentConfig="true">
Default value
</setting>
</agent>
```
Generated in: `bmad/_cfg/agents/{module}-{agent}.md`
## Troubleshooting
### Common Issues
| Issue | Solution |
| ----------------------- | -------------------------------------------- |
| Existing installation | Use `bmad update` or remove `{bmad_folder}/` |
| Module not found | Check `src/modules/` exists |
| Config not applied | Verify `{bmad_folder}/{module}/config.yaml` |
| Missing config.yaml | Fixed: All modules now get configs |
| Agent unavailable | Check for `localskip="true"` |
| module-installer copied | Fixed: Now excluded from copy |
### Debug Commands
```bash
bmad install -v # Verbose installation
bmad status -v # Detailed status
```
### Best Practices
1. Run from project root
2. Backup `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/` before updates
3. Use interactive mode for guidance
4. Review generated configs post-install
## Migration from v4
| v4 | v6 |
| ------------------- | ---------------------------- |
| Scattered files | Centralized `{bmad_folder}/` |
| Monolithic | Modular |
| Manual config | Interactive setup |
| Limited IDE support | 15+ platforms |
| Source modification | Clean injection |
## Technical Notes
### Dependency Resolution
- Direct dependencies (module → module)
- Agent references (cross-module)
- Template dependencies
- Partial module installation (only required files)
- Workflow vendoring for standalone module operation
## Workflow Vendoring
**Problem**: Modules that reference workflows from other modules create dependencies, forcing users to install multiple modules even when they only need one.
**Solution**: Workflow vendoring allows modules to copy workflows from other modules during installation, making them fully standalone.
### How It Works
Agents can specify both `workflow` (source location) and `workflow-install` (destination location) in their menu items:
```yaml
menu:
- trigger: create-story
workflow: '{project-root}/{bmad_folder}/bmm/workflows/4-implementation/create-story/workflow.yaml'
workflow-install: '{project-root}/{bmad_folder}/bmgd/workflows/4-production/create-story/workflow.yaml'
description: 'Create a game feature story'
```
**During Installation:**
1. **Vendoring Phase**: Before copying module files, the installer:
- Scans source agent YAML files for `workflow-install` attributes
- Copies entire workflow folders from `workflow` path to `workflow-install` path
- Updates vendored `workflow.yaml` files to reference target module's config
2. **Compilation Phase**: When compiling agents:
- If `workflow-install` exists, uses its value for the `workflow` attribute
- `workflow-install` is build-time metadata only, never appears in final XML
- Compiled agent references vendored workflow location
3. **Config Update**: Vendored workflows get their `config_source` updated:
```yaml
# Source workflow (in bmm):
config_source: "{project-root}/{bmad_folder}/bmm/config.yaml"
# Vendored workflow (in bmgd):
config_source: "{project-root}/{bmad_folder}/bmgd/config.yaml"
```
**Result**: Modules become completely standalone with their own copies of needed workflows, configured for their specific use case.
### Example Use Case: BMGD Module
The BMad Game Development module vendors implementation workflows from BMM:
- Game Dev Scrum Master agent references BMM workflows
- During installation, workflows are copied to `bmgd/workflows/4-production/`
- Vendored workflows use BMGD's config (with game-specific settings)
- BMGD can be installed without BMM dependency
### Benefits
✅ **Module Independence** - No forced dependencies
✅ **Clean Namespace** - Workflows live in their module
✅ **Config Isolation** - Each module uses its own configuration
✅ **Customization Ready** - Vendored workflows can be modified independently
✅ **No User Confusion** - Avoid partial module installations
### File Processing
- Filters `localskip="true"` agents
- Excludes `_module-installer/` directories
- Replaces path placeholders at runtime
- Injects activation blocks
- Vendors cross-module workflows (see Workflow Vendoring below)
### Web Bundling
```bash
bmad bundle --web # Filter for web deployment
npm run validate:bundles # Validate bundles
```

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# Web Bundler Usage
ALPHA NOTE: Bundling of individual agents might work, team bundling is being reworked and will come with Beta release soon.
The web bundler creates self-contained XML bundles for BMAD agents, packaging all dependencies for web deployment.
## Quick Start
```bash
# Bundle all agents from all modules
npm run bundle
# Clean and rebundle (removes old bundles first)
npm run rebundle
```
## Custom Output Directory
```bash
# Bundle to custom directory
node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js all --output ./my-bundles
# Rebundle to custom directory (auto-cleans first)
node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js rebundle --output /absolute/path/to/custom/directory
# Bundle specific module to custom directory
node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js module bmm --output ./custom-folder
# Bundle specific agent to custom directory
node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js agent bmm analyst -o ./custom-folder
```
## Output
Bundles are generated in `web-bundles/` directory by default when run from the root of the clones project:
```
web-bundles/
├── [module-name]/
│ └── agents/
│ └── [agent-name].xml
```
## Skipping Agents
Agents with `bundle="false"` attribute are automatically skipped during bundling.
## Bundle Contents
Each bundle includes:
- Agent definition with web activation
- All resolved dependencies
- Manifests for agent/team discovery

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---
title: "Workflow Map"
description: Visual reference for BMad Method workflow phases and outputs
---
The BMad Method (BMM) is a module in the BMad Ecosystem, targeted at following the best practices of context engineering and planning. AI agents work best with clear, structured context. The BMM system builds that context progressively across 4 distinct phases - each phase, and multiple workflows optionally within each phase, produce documents that inform the next, so agents always know what to build and why.
The rationale and concepts come from agile methodologies that have been used across the industry with great success as a mental framework.
If at anytime you are unsure what to do, the `/bmad-help` command will help you stay on track or know what to do next. You can always refer to this for reference also - but /bmad-help is fully interactive and much quicker if you have already installed the BMadMethod. Additionally, if you are using different modules that have extended the BMad Method or added other complimentary non extension modules - the /bmad-help evolves to know all that is available to give you the best in the moment advice.
Final important note: Every workflow below can be run directly with your tool of choice via slash command or by loading an agent first and using the entry from the agents menu.
<iframe src="/workflow-map-diagram.html" width="100%" height="100%" frameborder="0" style="border-radius: 8px; border: 1px solid #334155; min-height: 900px;"></iframe>
*[Interactive diagram - hover over outputs to see artifact flows]*
## Phase 1: Analysis (Optional)
Explore the problem space and validate ideas before committing to planning.
| Workflow | Purpose | Produces |
| ---------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------- |
| `brainstorm` | Brainstorm Project Ideas with guided facilitation of a brainstorming coach | `brainstorming-report.md` |
| `research` | Validate market, technical, or domain assumptions | Research findings |
| `create-product-brief` | Capture strategic vision | `product-brief.md` |
## Phase 2: Planning
Define what to build and for whom.
| Workflow | Purpose | Produces |
| ------------------ | ---------------------------------------- | ------------ |
| `create-prd` | Define requirements (FRs/NFRs) | `PRD.md` |
| `create-ux-design` | Design user experience (when UX matters) | `ux-spec.md` |
## Phase 3: Solutioning
Decide how to build it and break work into stories.
| Workflow | Purpose | Produces |
| -------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------ | --------------------------- |
| `create-architecture` | Make technical decisions explicit | `architecture.md` with ADRs |
| `create-epics-and-stories` | Break requirements into implementable work | Epic files with stories |
| `check-implementation-readiness` | Gate check before implementation | PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL decision |
## Phase 4: Implementation
Build it, one story at a time.
| Workflow | Purpose | Produces |
| ----------------- | -------------------------------------- | ----------------------------- |
| `sprint-planning` | Initialize tracking (once per project) | `sprint-status.yaml` |
| `create-story` | Prepare next story for implementation | `story-[slug].md` |
| `dev-story` | Implement the story | Working code + tests |
| `code-review` | Validate implementation quality | Approved or changes requested |
| `correct-course` | Handle significant mid-sprint changes | Updated plan or re-routing |
| `retrospective` | Review after epic completion | Lessons learned |
## Quick Flow (Parallel Track)
Skip phases 1-3 for small, well-understood work.
| Workflow | Purpose | Produces |
| ------------ | ------------------------------------------ | --------------------------------------------- |
| `quick-spec` | Define an ad-hoc change | `tech-spec.md` (story file for small changes) |
| `quick-dev` | Implement from spec or direct instructions | Working code + tests |
## Context Management
Each document becomes context for the next phase. The PRD tells the architect what constraints matter. The architecture tells the dev agent which patterns to follow. Story files give focused, complete context for implementation. Without this structure, agents make inconsistent decisions.
For brownfield projects, `document-project` creates or updates `project-context.md` - what exists in the codebase and the rules all implementation workflows must observe. Run it just before Phase 4, and again when something significant changes - structure, architecture, or those rules. You can also edit `project-context.md` by hand.
All implementation workflows load `project-context.md` if it exists. Additional context per workflow:
| Workflow | Also Loads |
| -------------- | ---------------------------- |
| `create-story` | epics, PRD, architecture, UX |
| `dev-story` | story file |
| `code-review` | architecture, story file |
| `quick-spec` | planning docs (if exist) |
| `quick-dev` | tech-spec |

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---
title: "TEA Engagement Models Explained"
description: Understanding the five ways to use TEA - from standalone to full BMad Method integration
---
# TEA Engagement Models Explained
TEA is optional and flexible. There are five valid ways to engage with TEA - choose intentionally based on your project needs and methodology.
## Overview
**TEA is not mandatory.** Pick the engagement model that fits your context:
1. **No TEA** - Skip all TEA workflows, use existing testing approach
2. **TEA Solo** - Use TEA standalone without BMad Method
3. **TEA Lite** - Beginner approach using just `automate`
4. **TEA Integrated (Greenfield)** - Full BMad Method integration from scratch
5. **TEA Integrated (Brownfield)** - Full BMad Method integration with existing code
## The Problem
### One-Size-Fits-All Doesn't Work
**Traditional testing tools force one approach:**
- Must use entire framework
- All-or-nothing adoption
- No flexibility for different project types
- Teams abandon tool if it doesn't fit
**TEA recognizes:**
- Different projects have different needs
- Different teams have different maturity levels
- Different contexts require different approaches
- Flexibility increases adoption
## The Five Engagement Models
### Model 1: No TEA
**What:** Skip all TEA workflows, use your existing testing approach.
**When to Use:**
- Team has established testing practices
- Quality is already high
- Testing tools already in place
- TEA doesn't add value
**What You Miss:**
- Risk-based test planning
- Systematic quality review
- Gate decisions with evidence
- Knowledge base patterns
**What You Keep:**
- Full control
- Existing tools
- Team expertise
- No learning curve
**Example:**
```
Your team:
- 10-year veteran QA team
- Established testing practices
- High-quality test suite
- No problems to solve
Decision: Skip TEA, keep what works
```
**Verdict:** Valid choice if existing approach works.
---
### Model 2: TEA Solo
**What:** Use TEA workflows standalone without full BMad Method integration.
**When to Use:**
- Non-BMad projects
- Want TEA's quality operating model only
- Don't need full planning workflow
- Bring your own requirements
**Typical Sequence:**
```
1. `test-design` (system or epic)
2. `atdd` or `automate`
3. `test-review` (optional)
4. `trace` (coverage + gate decision)
```
**You Bring:**
- Requirements (user stories, acceptance criteria)
- Development environment
- Project context
**TEA Provides:**
- Risk-based test planning (`test-design`)
- Test generation (`atdd`, `automate`)
- Quality review (`test-review`)
- Coverage traceability (`trace`)
**Optional:**
- Framework setup (`framework`) if needed
- CI configuration (`ci`) if needed
**Example:**
```
Your project:
- Using Scrum (not BMad Method)
- Jira for story management
- Need better test strategy
Workflow:
1. Export stories from Jira
2. Run `test-design` on epic
3. Run `atdd` for each story
4. Implement features
5. Run `trace` for coverage
```
**Verdict:** Best for teams wanting TEA benefits without BMad Method commitment.
---
### Model 3: TEA Lite
**What:** Beginner approach using just `automate` to test existing features.
**When to Use:**
- Learning TEA fundamentals
- Want quick results
- Testing existing application
- No time for full methodology
**Workflow:**
```
1. `framework` (setup test infrastructure)
2. `test-design` (optional, risk assessment)
3. `automate` (generate tests for existing features)
4. Run tests (they pass immediately)
```
**Example:**
```
Beginner developer:
- Never used TEA before
- Want to add tests to existing app
- 30 minutes available
Steps:
1. Run `framework`
2. Run `automate` on TodoMVC demo
3. Tests generated and passing
4. Learn TEA basics
```
**What You Get:**
- Working test framework
- Passing tests for existing features
- Learning experience
- Foundation to expand
**What You Miss:**
- TDD workflow (ATDD)
- Risk-based planning (test-design depth)
- Quality gates (trace Phase 2)
- Full TEA capabilities
**Verdict:** Perfect entry point for beginners.
---
### Model 4: TEA Integrated (Greenfield)
**What:** Full BMad Method integration with TEA workflows across all phases.
**When to Use:**
- New projects starting from scratch
- Using BMad Method or Enterprise track
- Want complete quality operating model
- Testing is critical to success
**Lifecycle:**
**Phase 2: Planning**
- PM creates PRD with NFRs
- (Optional) TEA runs `nfr-assess` (Enterprise only)
**Phase 3: Solutioning**
- Architect creates architecture
- TEA runs `test-design` (system-level) → testability review
- TEA runs `framework` → test infrastructure
- TEA runs `ci` → CI/CD pipeline
- Architect runs `implementation-readiness` (fed by test design)
**Phase 4: Implementation (Per Epic)**
- SM runs `sprint-planning`
- TEA runs `test-design` (epic-level) → risk assessment for THIS epic
- SM creates stories
- (Optional) TEA runs `atdd` → failing tests before dev
- DEV implements story
- TEA runs `automate` → expand coverage
- (Optional) TEA runs `test-review` → quality audit
- TEA runs `trace` Phase 1 → refresh coverage
**Release Gate:**
- (Optional) TEA runs `test-review` → final audit
- (Optional) TEA runs `nfr-assess` → validate NFRs
- TEA runs `trace` Phase 2 → gate decision (PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL/WAIVED)
**What You Get:**
- Complete quality operating model
- Systematic test planning
- Risk-based prioritization
- Evidence-based gate decisions
- Consistent patterns across epics
**Example:**
```
New SaaS product:
- 50 stories across 8 epics
- Security critical
- Need quality gates
Workflow:
- Phase 2: Define NFRs in PRD
- Phase 3: Architecture → test design → framework → CI
- Phase 4: Per epic: test design → ATDD → dev → automate → review → trace
- Gate: NFR assess → trace Phase 2 → decision
```
**Verdict:** Most comprehensive TEA usage, best for structured teams.
---
### Model 5: TEA Integrated (Brownfield)
**What:** Full BMad Method integration with TEA for existing codebases.
**When to Use:**
- Existing codebase with legacy tests
- Want to improve test quality incrementally
- Adding features to existing application
- Need to establish coverage baseline
**Differences from Greenfield:**
**Phase 0: Documentation (if needed)**
```
- Run `document-project`
- Create baseline documentation
```
**Phase 2: Planning**
```
- TEA runs `trace` Phase 1 → establish coverage baseline
- PM creates PRD (with existing system context)
```
**Phase 3: Solutioning**
```
- Architect creates architecture (with brownfield constraints)
- TEA runs `test-design` (system-level) → testability review
- TEA runs `framework` (only if modernizing test infra)
- TEA runs `ci` (update existing CI or create new)
```
**Phase 4: Implementation**
```
- TEA runs `test-design` (epic-level) → focus on REGRESSION HOTSPOTS
- Per story: ATDD → dev → automate
- TEA runs `test-review` → improve legacy test quality
- TEA runs `trace` Phase 1 → track coverage improvement
```
**Brownfield-Specific:**
- Baseline coverage BEFORE planning
- Focus on regression hotspots (bug-prone areas)
- Incremental quality improvement
- Compare coverage to baseline (trending up?)
**Example:**
```
Legacy e-commerce platform:
- 200 existing tests (30% passing, 70% flaky)
- Adding new checkout flow
- Want to improve quality
Workflow:
1. Phase 2: `trace` baseline → 30% coverage
2. Phase 3: `test-design` → identify regression risks
3. Phase 4: Fix top 20 flaky tests + add tests for new checkout
4. Gate: `trace` → 60% coverage (2x improvement)
```
**Verdict:** Best for incrementally improving legacy systems.
---
## Decision Guide: Which Model?
### Quick Decision Tree
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'14px'}}}%%
flowchart TD
Start([Choose TEA Model]) --> BMad{Using<br/>BMad Method?}
BMad -->|No| NonBMad{Project Type?}
NonBMad -->|Learning| Lite[TEA Lite<br/>Just automate<br/>30 min tutorial]
NonBMad -->|Serious Project| Solo[TEA Solo<br/>Standalone workflows<br/>Full capabilities]
BMad -->|Yes| WantTEA{Want TEA?}
WantTEA -->|No| None[No TEA<br/>Use existing approach<br/>Valid choice]
WantTEA -->|Yes| ProjectType{New or<br/>Existing?}
ProjectType -->|New Project| Green[TEA Integrated<br/>Greenfield<br/>Full lifecycle]
ProjectType -->|Existing Code| Brown[TEA Integrated<br/>Brownfield<br/>Baseline + improve]
Green --> Compliance{Compliance<br/>Needs?}
Compliance -->|Yes| Enterprise[Enterprise Track<br/>NFR + audit trails]
Compliance -->|No| Method[BMad Method Track<br/>Standard quality]
style Lite fill:#bbdefb,stroke:#1565c0,stroke-width:2px
style Solo fill:#c5cae9,stroke:#283593,stroke-width:2px
style None fill:#e0e0e0,stroke:#616161,stroke-width:1px
style Green fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style Brown fill:#fff9c4,stroke:#f57f17,stroke-width:2px
style Enterprise fill:#f3e5f5,stroke:#6a1b9a,stroke-width:2px
style Method fill:#e1f5fe,stroke:#01579b,stroke-width:2px
```
**Decision Path Examples:**
- Learning TEA → TEA Lite (blue)
- Non-BMad project → TEA Solo (purple)
- BMad + new project + compliance → Enterprise (purple)
- BMad + existing code → Brownfield (yellow)
- Don't want TEA → No TEA (gray)
### By Project Type
| Project Type | Recommended Model | Why |
|--------------|------------------|-----|
| **New SaaS product** | TEA Integrated (Greenfield) | Full quality operating model from day one |
| **Existing app + new feature** | TEA Integrated (Brownfield) | Improve incrementally while adding features |
| **Bug fix** | TEA Lite or No TEA | Quick flow, minimal overhead |
| **Learning project** | TEA Lite | Learn basics with immediate results |
| **Non-BMad enterprise** | TEA Solo | Quality model without full methodology |
| **High-quality existing tests** | No TEA | Keep what works |
### By Team Maturity
| Team Maturity | Recommended Model | Why |
|---------------|------------------|-----|
| **Beginners** | TEA Lite → TEA Solo | Learn basics, then expand |
| **Intermediate** | TEA Solo or Integrated | Depends on methodology |
| **Advanced** | TEA Integrated or No TEA | Full model or existing expertise |
### By Compliance Needs
| Compliance | Recommended Model | Why |
|------------|------------------|-----|
| **None** | Any model | Choose based on project needs |
| **Light** (internal audit) | TEA Solo or Integrated | Gate decisions helpful |
| **Heavy** (SOC 2, HIPAA) | TEA Integrated (Enterprise) | NFR assessment mandatory |
## Switching Between Models
### Can Change Models Mid-Project
**Scenario:** Start with TEA Lite, expand to TEA Solo
```
Week 1: TEA Lite
- Run `framework`
- Run `automate`
- Learn basics
Week 2: Expand to TEA Solo
- Add `test-design`
- Use `atdd` for new features
- Add `test-review`
Week 3: Continue expanding
- Add `trace` for coverage
- Setup `ci`
- Full TEA Solo workflow
```
**Benefit:** Start small, expand as comfortable.
### Can Mix Models
**Scenario:** TEA Integrated for main features, No TEA for bug fixes
```
Main features (epics):
- Use full TEA workflow
- Risk assessment, ATDD, quality gates
Bug fixes:
- Skip TEA
- Quick Flow + manual testing
- Move fast
Result: TEA where it adds value, skip where it doesn't
```
**Benefit:** Flexible, pragmatic, not dogmatic.
## Comparison Table
| Aspect | No TEA | TEA Lite | TEA Solo | Integrated (Green) | Integrated (Brown) |
|--------|--------|----------|----------|-------------------|-------------------|
| **BMad Required** | No | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| **Learning Curve** | None | Low | Medium | High | High |
| **Setup Time** | 0 | 30 min | 2 hours | 1 day | 2 days |
| **Workflows Used** | 0 | 2-3 | 4-6 | 8 | 8 |
| **Test Planning** | Manual | Optional | Yes | Systematic | + Regression focus |
| **Quality Gates** | No | No | Optional | Yes | Yes + baseline |
| **NFR Assessment** | No | No | No | Optional | Recommended |
| **Coverage Tracking** | Manual | No | Optional | Yes | Yes + trending |
| **Best For** | Experts | Beginners | Standalone | New projects | Legacy code |
## Real-World Examples
### Example 1: Startup (TEA Lite → TEA Integrated)
**Month 1:** TEA Lite
```
Team: 3 developers, no QA
Testing: Manual only
Decision: Start with TEA Lite
Result:
- Run `framework` (Playwright setup)
- Run `automate` (20 tests generated)
- Learning TEA basics
```
**Month 3:** TEA Solo
```
Team: Growing to 5 developers
Testing: Automated tests exist
Decision: Expand to TEA Solo
Result:
- Add `test-design` (risk assessment)
- Add `atdd` (TDD workflow)
- Add `test-review` (quality audits)
```
**Month 6:** TEA Integrated
```
Team: 8 developers, 1 QA
Testing: Critical to business
Decision: Full BMad Method + TEA Integrated
Result:
- Full lifecycle integration
- Quality gates before releases
- NFR assessment for enterprise customers
```
### Example 2: Enterprise (TEA Integrated - Brownfield)
**Project:** Legacy banking application
**Challenge:**
- 500 existing tests (50% flaky)
- Adding new features
- SOC 2 compliance required
**Model:** TEA Integrated (Brownfield)
**Phase 2:**
```
- `trace` baseline → 45% coverage (lots of gaps)
- Document current state
```
**Phase 3:**
```
- `test-design` (system) → identify regression hotspots
- `framework` → modernize test infrastructure
- `ci` → add selective testing
```
**Phase 4:**
```
Per epic:
- `test-design` → focus on regression + new features
- Fix top 10 flaky tests
- `atdd` for new features
- `automate` for coverage expansion
- `test-review` → track quality improvement
- `trace` → compare to baseline
```
**Result after 6 months:**
- Coverage: 45% → 85%
- Quality score: 52 → 82
- Flakiness: 50% → 2%
- SOC 2 compliant (traceability + NFR evidence)
### Example 3: Consultancy (TEA Solo)
**Context:** Testing consultancy working with multiple clients
**Challenge:**
- Different clients use different methodologies
- Need consistent testing approach
- Not always using BMad Method
**Model:** TEA Solo (bring to any client project)
**Workflow:**
```
Client project 1 (Scrum):
- Import Jira stories
- Run `test-design`
- Generate tests with `atdd`/`automate`
- Deliver quality report with `test-review`
Client project 2 (Kanban):
- Import requirements from Notion
- Same TEA workflow
- Consistent quality across clients
Client project 3 (Ad-hoc):
- Document requirements manually
- Same TEA workflow
- Same patterns, different context
```
**Benefit:** Consistent testing approach regardless of client methodology.
## Choosing Your Model
### Start Here Questions
**Question 1:** Are you using BMad Method?
- **No** → TEA Solo or TEA Lite or No TEA
- **Yes** → TEA Integrated or No TEA
**Question 2:** Is this a new project?
- **Yes** → TEA Integrated (Greenfield) or TEA Lite
- **No** → TEA Integrated (Brownfield) or TEA Solo
**Question 3:** What's your testing maturity?
- **Beginner** → TEA Lite
- **Intermediate** → TEA Solo or Integrated
- **Advanced** → TEA Integrated or No TEA (already expert)
**Question 4:** Do you need compliance/quality gates?
- **Yes** → TEA Integrated (Enterprise)
- **No** → Any model
**Question 5:** How much time can you invest?
- **30 minutes** → TEA Lite
- **Few hours** → TEA Solo
- **Multiple days** → TEA Integrated
### Recommendation Matrix
| Your Context | Recommended Model | Alternative |
|--------------|------------------|-------------|
| BMad Method + new project | TEA Integrated (Greenfield) | TEA Lite (learning) |
| BMad Method + existing code | TEA Integrated (Brownfield) | TEA Solo |
| Non-BMad + need quality | TEA Solo | TEA Lite |
| Just learning testing | TEA Lite | No TEA (learn basics first) |
| Enterprise + compliance | TEA Integrated (Enterprise) | TEA Solo |
| Established QA team | No TEA | TEA Solo (supplement) |
## Transitioning Between Models
### TEA Lite → TEA Solo
**When:** Outgrow beginner approach, need more workflows.
**Steps:**
1. Continue using `framework` and `automate`
2. Add `test-design` for planning
3. Add `atdd` for TDD workflow
4. Add `test-review` for quality audits
5. Add `trace` for coverage tracking
**Timeline:** 2-4 weeks of gradual expansion
### TEA Solo → TEA Integrated
**When:** Adopt BMad Method, want full integration.
**Steps:**
1. Install BMad Method (see installation guide)
2. Run planning workflows (PRD, architecture)
3. Integrate TEA into Phase 3 (system-level test design)
4. Follow integrated lifecycle (per epic workflows)
5. Add release gates (trace Phase 2)
**Timeline:** 1-2 sprints of transition
### TEA Integrated → TEA Solo
**When:** Moving away from BMad Method, keep TEA.
**Steps:**
1. Export BMad artifacts (PRD, architecture, stories)
2. Continue using TEA workflows standalone
3. Skip BMad-specific integration
4. Bring your own requirements to TEA
**Timeline:** Immediate (just skip BMad workflows)
## Common Patterns
### Pattern 1: TEA Lite for Learning, Then Choose
```
Phase 1 (Week 1-2): TEA Lite
- Learn with `automate` on demo app
- Understand TEA fundamentals
- Low commitment
Phase 2 (Week 3-4): Evaluate
- Try `test-design` (planning)
- Try `atdd` (TDD)
- See if value justifies investment
Phase 3 (Month 2+): Decide
- Valuable → Expand to TEA Solo or Integrated
- Not valuable → Stay with TEA Lite or No TEA
```
### Pattern 2: TEA Solo for Quality, Skip Full Method
```
Team decision:
- Don't want full BMad Method (too heavyweight)
- Want systematic testing (TEA benefits)
Approach: TEA Solo only
- Use existing project management (Jira, Linear)
- Use TEA for testing only
- Get quality without methodology commitment
```
### Pattern 3: Integrated for Critical, Lite for Non-Critical
```
Critical features (payment, auth):
- Full TEA Integrated workflow
- Risk assessment, ATDD, quality gates
- High confidence required
Non-critical features (UI tweaks):
- TEA Lite or No TEA
- Quick tests, minimal overhead
- Move fast
```
## Technical Implementation
Each model uses different TEA workflows. See:
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Model details
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - Workflow reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Setup options
## Related Concepts
**Core TEA Concepts:**
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Risk assessment in different models
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Quality across all models
- [Knowledge Base System](/docs/tea/explanation/knowledge-base-system.md) - Consistent patterns across models
**Technical Patterns:**
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Infrastructure in different models
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Reliability in all models
**Overview:**
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - 5 engagement models with cheat sheets
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - Design philosophy
## Practical Guides
**Getting Started:**
- [TEA Lite Quickstart Tutorial](/docs/tea/tutorials/tea-lite-quickstart.md) - Model 3: TEA Lite
**Use-Case Guides:**
- [Using TEA with Existing Tests](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-with-existing-tests.md) - Model 5: Brownfield
- [Running TEA for Enterprise](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-for-enterprise.md) - Enterprise integration
**All Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Used in TEA Solo and Integrated
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md)
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md)
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md)
- [How to Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md)
## Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - All workflows explained
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config per model
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - TEA Lite, TEA Solo, TEA Integrated terms
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "Fixture Architecture Explained"
description: Understanding TEA's pure function → fixture → composition pattern for reusable test utilities
---
# Fixture Architecture Explained
Fixture architecture is TEA's pattern for building reusable, testable, and composable test utilities. The core principle: build pure functions first, wrap in framework fixtures second.
## Overview
**The Pattern:**
1. Write utility as pure function (unit-testable)
2. Wrap in framework fixture (Playwright, Cypress)
3. Compose fixtures with mergeTests (combine capabilities)
4. Package for reuse across projects
**Why this order?**
- Pure functions are easier to test
- Fixtures depend on framework (less portable)
- Composition happens at fixture level
- Reusability maximized
### Fixture Architecture Flow
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'14px'}}}%%
flowchart TD
Start([Testing Need]) --> Pure[Step 1: Pure Function<br/>helpers/api-request.ts]
Pure -->|Unit testable<br/>Framework agnostic| Fixture[Step 2: Fixture Wrapper<br/>fixtures/api-request.ts]
Fixture -->|Injects framework<br/>dependencies| Compose[Step 3: Composition<br/>fixtures/index.ts]
Compose -->|mergeTests| Use[Step 4: Use in Tests<br/>tests/**.spec.ts]
Pure -.->|Can test in isolation| UnitTest[Unit Tests<br/>No framework needed]
Fixture -.->|Reusable pattern| Other[Other Projects<br/>Package export]
Compose -.->|Combine utilities| Multi[Multiple Fixtures<br/>One test]
style Pure fill:#e3f2fd,stroke:#1565c0,stroke-width:2px
style Fixture fill:#fff3e0,stroke:#e65100,stroke-width:2px
style Compose fill:#f3e5f5,stroke:#6a1b9a,stroke-width:2px
style Use fill:#e8f5e9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style UnitTest fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px
style Other fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px
style Multi fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px
```
**Benefits at Each Step:**
1. **Pure Function:** Testable, portable, reusable
2. **Fixture:** Framework integration, clean API
3. **Composition:** Combine capabilities, flexible
4. **Usage:** Simple imports, type-safe
## The Problem
### Framework-First Approach (Common Anti-Pattern)
```typescript
// ❌ Bad: Built as fixture from the start
export const test = base.extend({
apiRequest: async ({ request }, use) => {
await use(async (options) => {
const response = await request.fetch(options.url, {
method: options.method,
data: options.data
});
if (!response.ok()) {
throw new Error(`API request failed: ${response.status()}`);
}
return response.json();
});
}
});
```
**Problems:**
- Cannot unit test (requires Playwright context)
- Tied to framework (not reusable in other tools)
- Hard to compose with other fixtures
- Difficult to mock for testing the utility itself
### Copy-Paste Utilities
```typescript
// test-1.spec.ts
test('test 1', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.post('/api/users', { data: {...} });
const body = await response.json();
if (!response.ok()) throw new Error('Failed');
// ... repeated in every test
});
// test-2.spec.ts
test('test 2', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.post('/api/users', { data: {...} });
const body = await response.json();
if (!response.ok()) throw new Error('Failed');
// ... same code repeated
});
```
**Problems:**
- Code duplication (violates DRY)
- Inconsistent error handling
- Hard to update (change 50 tests)
- No shared behavior
## The Solution: Three-Step Pattern
### Step 1: Pure Function
```typescript
// helpers/api-request.ts
/**
* Make API request with automatic error handling
* Pure function - no framework dependencies
*/
export async function apiRequest({
request, // Passed in (dependency injection)
method,
url,
data,
headers = {}
}: ApiRequestParams): Promise<ApiResponse> {
const response = await request.fetch(url, {
method,
data,
headers
});
if (!response.ok()) {
throw new Error(`API request failed: ${response.status()}`);
}
return {
status: response.status(),
body: await response.json()
};
}
// ✅ Can unit test this function!
describe('apiRequest', () => {
it('should throw on non-OK response', async () => {
const mockRequest = {
fetch: vi.fn().mockResolvedValue({ ok: () => false, status: () => 500 })
};
await expect(apiRequest({
request: mockRequest,
method: 'GET',
url: '/api/test'
})).rejects.toThrow('API request failed: 500');
});
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Unit testable (mock dependencies)
- Framework-agnostic (works with any HTTP client)
- Easy to reason about (pure function)
- Portable (can use in Node scripts, CLI tools)
### Step 2: Fixture Wrapper
```typescript
// fixtures/api-request.ts
import { test as base } from '@playwright/test';
import { apiRequest as apiRequestFn } from '../helpers/api-request';
/**
* Playwright fixture wrapping the pure function
*/
export const test = base.extend<{ apiRequest: typeof apiRequestFn }>({
apiRequest: async ({ request }, use) => {
// Inject framework dependency (request)
await use((params) => apiRequestFn({ request, ...params }));
}
});
export { expect } from '@playwright/test';
```
**Benefits:**
- Fixture provides framework context (request)
- Pure function handles logic
- Clean separation of concerns
- Can swap frameworks (Cypress, etc.) by changing wrapper only
### Step 3: Composition with mergeTests
```typescript
// fixtures/index.ts
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
import { test as apiRequestTest } from './api-request';
import { test as authSessionTest } from './auth-session';
import { test as logTest } from './log';
/**
* Compose all fixtures into one test
*/
export const test = mergeTests(
apiRequestTest,
authSessionTest,
logTest
);
export { expect } from '@playwright/test';
```
**Usage:**
```typescript
// tests/profile.spec.ts
import { test, expect } from '../support/fixtures';
test('should update profile', async ({ apiRequest, authToken, log }) => {
log.info('Starting profile update test');
// Use API request fixture (matches pure function signature)
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
url: '/api/profile',
data: { name: 'New Name' },
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
});
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(body.name).toBe('New Name');
log.info('Profile updated successfully');
});
```
**Note:** This example uses the vanilla pure function signature (`url`, `data`). Playwright Utils uses different parameter names (`path`, `body`). See [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) for the utilities API.
**Note:** `authToken` requires auth-session fixture setup with provider configuration. See [auth-session documentation](https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/auth-session.html).
**Benefits:**
- Use multiple fixtures in one test
- No manual composition needed
- Type-safe (TypeScript knows all fixture types)
- Clean imports
## How It Works in TEA
### TEA Generates This Pattern
When you run `framework` with `tea_use_playwright_utils: true`:
**TEA scaffolds:**
```
tests/
├── support/
│ ├── helpers/ # Pure functions
│ │ ├── api-request.ts
│ │ └── auth-session.ts
│ └── fixtures/ # Framework wrappers
│ ├── api-request.ts
│ ├── auth-session.ts
│ └── index.ts # Composition
└── e2e/
└── example.spec.ts # Uses composed fixtures
```
### TEA Reviews Against This Pattern
When you run `test-review`:
**TEA checks:**
- Are utilities pure functions? ✓
- Are fixtures minimal wrappers? ✓
- Is composition used? ✓
- Can utilities be unit tested? ✓
## Package Export Pattern
### Make Fixtures Reusable Across Projects
**Option 1: Build Your Own (Vanilla)**
```json
// package.json
{
"name": "@company/test-utils",
"exports": {
"./api-request": "./fixtures/api-request.ts",
"./auth-session": "./fixtures/auth-session.ts",
"./log": "./fixtures/log.ts"
}
}
```
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test as apiTest } from '@company/test-utils/api-request';
import { test as authTest } from '@company/test-utils/auth-session';
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
export const test = mergeTests(apiTest, authTest);
```
**Option 2: Use Playwright Utils (Recommended)**
```bash
npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
```
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test as base } from '@playwright/test';
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
import { test as apiRequestFixture } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { createAuthFixtures } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session';
const authFixtureTest = base.extend(createAuthFixtures());
export const test = mergeTests(apiRequestFixture, authFixtureTest);
// Production-ready utilities, battle-tested!
```
**Note:** Auth-session requires provider configuration. See [auth-session setup guide](https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/auth-session.html).
**Why Playwright Utils:**
- Already built, tested, and maintained
- Consistent patterns across projects
- 11 utilities available (API, auth, network, logging, files)
- Community support and documentation
- Regular updates and improvements
**When to Build Your Own:**
- Company-specific patterns
- Custom authentication systems
- Unique requirements not covered by utilities
## Comparison: Good vs Bad Patterns
### Anti-Pattern: God Fixture
```typescript
// ❌ Bad: Everything in one fixture
export const test = base.extend({
testUtils: async ({ page, request, context }, use) => {
await use({
// 50 different methods crammed into one fixture
apiRequest: async (...) => { },
login: async (...) => { },
createUser: async (...) => { },
deleteUser: async (...) => { },
uploadFile: async (...) => { },
// ... 45 more methods
});
}
});
```
**Problems:**
- Cannot test individual utilities
- Cannot compose (all-or-nothing)
- Cannot reuse specific utilities
- Hard to maintain (1000+ line file)
### Good Pattern: Single-Concern Fixtures
```typescript
// ✅ Good: One concern per fixture
// api-request.ts
export const test = base.extend({ apiRequest });
// auth-session.ts
export const test = base.extend({ authSession });
// log.ts
export const test = base.extend({ log });
// Compose as needed
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
export const test = mergeTests(apiRequestTest, authSessionTest, logTest);
```
**Benefits:**
- Each fixture is unit-testable
- Compose only what you need
- Reuse individual fixtures
- Easy to maintain (small files)
## Technical Implementation
For detailed fixture architecture patterns, see the knowledge base:
- [Knowledge Base Index - Architecture & Fixtures](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
- [Complete Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
## When to Use This Pattern
### Always Use For:
**Reusable utilities:**
- API request helpers
- Authentication handlers
- File operations
- Network mocking
**Test infrastructure:**
- Shared fixtures across teams
- Packaged utilities (playwright-utils)
- Company-wide test standards
### Consider Skipping For:
**One-off test setup:**
```typescript
// Simple one-time setup - inline is fine
test.beforeEach(async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/');
await page.click('#accept-cookies');
});
```
**Test-specific helpers:**
```typescript
// Used in one test file only - keep local
function createTestUser(name: string) {
return { name, email: `${name}@test.com` };
}
```
## Related Concepts
**Core TEA Concepts:**
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Quality standards fixtures enforce
- [Knowledge Base System](/docs/tea/explanation/knowledge-base-system.md) - Fixture patterns in knowledge base
**Technical Patterns:**
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Network fixtures explained
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Fixture complexity matches risk
**Overview:**
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Fixture architecture in workflows
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - Why fixtures matter
## Practical Guides
**Setup Guides:**
- [How to Set Up Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md) - TEA scaffolds fixtures
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - Production-ready fixtures
**Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Using fixtures in tests
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Fixture composition examples
## Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - `framework` command
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Fixture architecture fragments
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - Fixture architecture term
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "Knowledge Base System Explained"
description: Understanding how TEA uses tea-index.csv for context engineering and consistent test quality
---
# Knowledge Base System Explained
TEA's knowledge base system is how context engineering works - automatically loading domain-specific standards into AI context so tests are consistently high-quality regardless of prompt variation.
## Overview
**The Problem:** AI without context produces inconsistent results.
**Traditional approach:**
```
User: "Write tests for login"
AI: [Generates tests with random quality]
- Sometimes uses hard waits
- Sometimes uses good patterns
- Inconsistent across sessions
- Quality depends on prompt
```
**TEA with knowledge base:**
```
User: "Write tests for login"
TEA: [Loads test-quality.md, network-first.md, auth-session.md]
TEA: [Generates tests following established patterns]
- Always uses network-first patterns
- Always uses proper fixtures
- Consistent across all sessions
- Quality independent of prompt
```
**Result:** Systematic quality, not random chance.
## The Problem
### Prompt-Driven Testing = Inconsistency
**Session 1:**
```
User: "Write tests for profile editing"
AI: [No context loaded]
// Generates test with hard waits
await page.waitForTimeout(3000);
```
**Session 2:**
```
User: "Write comprehensive tests for profile editing with best practices"
AI: [Still no systematic context]
// Generates test with some improvements, but still issues
await page.waitForSelector('.success', { timeout: 10000 });
```
**Session 3:**
```
User: "Write tests using network-first patterns and proper fixtures"
AI: [Better prompt, but still reinventing patterns]
// Generates test with network-first, but inconsistent with other tests
```
**Problem:** Quality depends on prompt engineering skill, no consistency.
### Knowledge Drift
Without a knowledge base:
- Team A uses pattern X
- Team B uses pattern Y
- Both work, but inconsistent
- No single source of truth
- Patterns drift over time
## The Solution: tea-index.csv Manifest
### How It Works
**1. Manifest Defines Fragments**
`src/bmm/testarch/tea-index.csv`:
```csv
id,name,description,tags,fragment_file
test-quality,Test Quality,Execution limits and isolation rules,quality;standards,knowledge/test-quality.md
network-first,Network-First Safeguards,Intercept-before-navigate workflow,network;stability,knowledge/network-first.md
fixture-architecture,Fixture Architecture,Composable fixture patterns,fixtures;architecture,knowledge/fixture-architecture.md
```
**2. Workflow Loads Relevant Fragments**
When user runs `atdd`:
```
TEA reads tea-index.csv
Identifies fragments needed for ATDD:
- test-quality.md (quality standards)
- network-first.md (avoid flakiness)
- component-tdd.md (TDD patterns)
- fixture-architecture.md (reusable fixtures)
- data-factories.md (test data)
Loads only these 5 fragments (not all 33)
Generates tests following these patterns
```
**3. Consistent Output**
Every time `atdd` runs:
- Same fragments loaded
- Same patterns applied
- Same quality standards
- Consistent test structure
**Result:** Tests look like they were written by the same expert, every time.
### Knowledge Base Loading Diagram
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'14px'}}}%%
flowchart TD
User([User: atdd]) --> Workflow[TEA Workflow<br/>Triggered]
Workflow --> Read[Read Manifest<br/>tea-index.csv]
Read --> Identify{Identify Relevant<br/>Fragments for ATDD}
Identify -->|Needed| L1[✓ test-quality.md]
Identify -->|Needed| L2[✓ network-first.md]
Identify -->|Needed| L3[✓ component-tdd.md]
Identify -->|Needed| L4[✓ data-factories.md]
Identify -->|Needed| L5[✓ fixture-architecture.md]
Identify -.->|Skip| S1[✗ contract-testing.md]
Identify -.->|Skip| S2[✗ burn-in.md]
Identify -.->|Skip| S3[+ 26 other fragments]
L1 --> Context[AI Context<br/>5 fragments loaded]
L2 --> Context
L3 --> Context
L4 --> Context
L5 --> Context
Context --> Gen[Generate Tests<br/>Following patterns]
Gen --> Out([Consistent Output<br/>Same quality every time])
style User fill:#e3f2fd,stroke:#1565c0,stroke-width:2px
style Read fill:#fff3e0,stroke:#e65100,stroke-width:2px
style L1 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style L2 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style L3 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style L4 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style L5 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style S1 fill:#e0e0e0,stroke:#616161,stroke-width:1px
style S2 fill:#e0e0e0,stroke:#616161,stroke-width:1px
style S3 fill:#e0e0e0,stroke:#616161,stroke-width:1px
style Context fill:#f3e5f5,stroke:#6a1b9a,stroke-width:3px
style Out fill:#4caf50,stroke:#1b5e20,stroke-width:3px,color:#fff
```
## Fragment Structure
### Anatomy of a Fragment
Each fragment follows this structure:
```markdown
# Fragment Name
## Principle
[One sentence - what is this pattern?]
## Rationale
[Why use this instead of alternatives?]
Why this pattern exists
Problems it solves
Benefits it provides
## Pattern Examples
### Example 1: Basic Usage
```code
[Runnable code example]
```
[Explanation of example]
### Example 2: Advanced Pattern
```code
[More complex example]
```
[Explanation]
## Anti-Patterns
### Don't Do This
```code
[Bad code example]
```
[Why it's bad]
[What breaks]
## Related Patterns
- [Link to related fragment]
```
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD024 -->
### Example: test-quality.md Fragment
```markdown
# Test Quality
## Principle
Tests must be deterministic, isolated, explicit, focused, and fast.
## Rationale
Tests that fail randomly, depend on each other, or take too long lose team trust.
[... detailed explanation ...]
## Pattern Examples
### Example 1: Deterministic Test
```typescript
// ✅ Wait for actual response, not timeout
const promise = page.waitForResponse(matcher);
await page.click('button');
await promise;
```
### Example 2: Isolated Test
```typescript
// ✅ Self-cleaning test
test('test', async ({ page }) => {
const userId = await createTestUser();
// ... test logic ...
await deleteTestUser(userId); // Cleanup
});
```
## Anti-Patterns
### Hard Waits
```typescript
// ❌ Non-deterministic
await page.waitForTimeout(3000);
```
[Why this causes flakiness]
```
**Total:** 24.5 KB, 12 code examples
<!-- markdownlint-enable MD024 -->
## How TEA Uses the Knowledge Base
### Workflow-Specific Loading
**Different workflows load different fragments:**
| Workflow | Fragments Loaded | Purpose |
|----------|-----------------|---------|
| `framework` | fixture-architecture, playwright-config, fixtures-composition | Infrastructure patterns |
| `test-design` | test-quality, test-priorities-matrix, risk-governance | Planning standards |
| `atdd` | test-quality, component-tdd, network-first, data-factories | TDD patterns |
| `automate` | test-quality, test-levels-framework, selector-resilience | Comprehensive generation |
| `test-review` | All quality/resilience/debugging fragments | Full audit patterns |
| `ci` | ci-burn-in, burn-in, selective-testing | CI/CD optimization |
**Benefit:** Only load what's needed (focused context, no bloat).
### Dynamic Fragment Selection
TEA doesn't load all 33 fragments at once:
```
User runs: atdd for authentication feature
TEA analyzes context:
- Feature type: Authentication
- Relevant fragments:
- test-quality.md (always loaded)
- auth-session.md (auth patterns)
- network-first.md (avoid flakiness)
- email-auth.md (if email-based auth)
- data-factories.md (test users)
Skips:
- contract-testing.md (not relevant)
- feature-flags.md (not relevant)
- file-utils.md (not relevant)
Result: 5 relevant fragments loaded, 28 skipped
```
**Benefit:** Focused context = better results, lower token usage.
## Context Engineering in Practice
### Example: Consistent Test Generation
**Without Knowledge Base (Vanilla Playwright, Random Quality):**
```
Session 1: User runs atdd
AI: [Guesses patterns from general knowledge]
Generated:
test('api test', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.get('/api/users');
await page.waitForTimeout(2000); // Hard wait
const users = await response.json();
// Random quality
});
Session 2: User runs atdd (different day)
AI: [Different random patterns]
Generated:
test('api test', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.get('/api/users');
const users = await response.json();
// Better but inconsistent
});
Result: Inconsistent quality, random patterns
```
**With Knowledge Base (TEA + Playwright Utils):**
```
Session 1: User runs atdd
TEA: [Loads test-quality.md, network-first.md, api-request.md from tea-index.csv]
Generated:
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
test('should fetch users', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/users'
}).validateSchema(UsersSchema); // Chained validation
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(body).toBeInstanceOf(Array);
});
Session 2: User runs atdd (different day)
TEA: [Loads same fragments from tea-index.csv]
Generated: Identical pattern, same quality
Result: Systematic quality, established patterns (ALWAYS uses apiRequest utility when playwright-utils enabled)
```
**Key Difference:**
- **Without KB:** Random patterns, inconsistent APIs
- **With KB:** Always uses `apiRequest` utility, always validates schemas, always returns `{ status, body }`
### Example: Test Review Consistency
**Without Knowledge Base:**
```
test-review session 1:
"This test looks okay" [50 issues missed]
test-review session 2:
"This test has some issues" [Different issues flagged]
Result: Inconsistent feedback
```
**With Knowledge Base:**
```
test-review session 1:
[Loads all quality fragments]
Flags: 12 hard waits, 5 conditionals (based on test-quality.md)
test-review session 2:
[Loads same fragments]
Flags: Same issues with same explanations
Result: Consistent, reliable feedback
```
## Maintaining the Knowledge Base
### When to Add a Fragment
**Good reasons:**
- Pattern is used across multiple workflows
- Standard is non-obvious (needs documentation)
- Team asks "how should we handle X?" repeatedly
- New tool integration (e.g., new testing library)
**Bad reasons:**
- One-off pattern (document in test file instead)
- Obvious pattern (everyone knows this)
- Experimental (not proven yet)
### Fragment Quality Standards
**Good fragment:**
- Principle stated in one sentence
- Rationale explains why clearly
- 3+ pattern examples with code
- Anti-patterns shown (what not to do)
- Self-contained (minimal dependencies)
**Example size:** 10-30 KB optimal
### Updating Existing Fragments
**When to update:**
- Pattern evolved (better approach discovered)
- Tool updated (new Playwright API)
- Team feedback (pattern unclear)
- Bug in example code
**How to update:**
1. Edit fragment markdown file
2. Update examples
3. Test with affected workflows
4. Ensure no breaking changes
**No need to update tea-index.csv** unless description/tags change.
## Benefits of Knowledge Base System
### 1. Consistency
**Before:** Test quality varies by who wrote it
**After:** All tests follow same patterns (TEA-generated or reviewed)
### 2. Onboarding
**Before:** New team member reads 20 documents, asks 50 questions
**After:** New team member runs `atdd`, sees patterns in generated code, learns by example
### 3. Quality Gates
**Before:** "Is this test good?" → subjective opinion
**After:** `test-review` → objective score against knowledge base
### 4. Pattern Evolution
**Before:** Update tests manually across 100 files
**After:** Update fragment once, all new tests use new pattern
### 5. Cross-Project Reuse
**Before:** Reinvent patterns for each project
**After:** Same fragments across all BMad projects (consistency at scale)
## Comparison: With vs Without Knowledge Base
### Scenario: Testing Async Background Job
**Without Knowledge Base:**
Developer 1:
```typescript
// Uses hard wait
await page.click('button');
await page.waitForTimeout(10000); // Hope job finishes
```
Developer 2:
```typescript
// Uses polling
await page.click('button');
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
const status = await page.locator('.status').textContent();
if (status === 'complete') break;
await page.waitForTimeout(1000);
}
```
Developer 3:
```typescript
// Uses waitForSelector
await page.click('button');
await page.waitForSelector('.success', { timeout: 30000 });
```
**Result:** 3 different patterns, all suboptimal.
**With Knowledge Base (recurse.md fragment):**
All developers:
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('job completion', async ({ apiRequest, recurse }) => {
// Start async job
const { body: job } = await apiRequest({
method: 'POST',
path: '/api/jobs'
});
// Poll until complete (correct API: command, predicate, options)
const result = await recurse(
() => apiRequest({ method: 'GET', path: `/api/jobs/${job.id}` }),
(response) => response.body.status === 'completed', // response.body from apiRequest
{
timeout: 30000,
interval: 2000,
log: 'Waiting for job to complete'
}
);
expect(result.body.status).toBe('completed');
});
```
**Result:** Consistent pattern using correct playwright-utils API (command, predicate, options).
## Technical Implementation
For details on the knowledge base index, see:
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md)
## Related Concepts
**Core TEA Concepts:**
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Standards in knowledge base
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Risk patterns in knowledge base
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - Knowledge base across all models
**Technical Patterns:**
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Fixture patterns in knowledge base
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Network patterns in knowledge base
**Overview:**
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Knowledge base in workflows
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - **Foundation: Context engineering philosophy** (why knowledge base solves AI test problems)
## Practical Guides
**All Workflow Guides Use Knowledge Base:**
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md)
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md)
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md)
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md)
**Integration:**
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - PW-Utils in knowledge base
## Reference
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Complete fragment index
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - Which workflows load which fragments
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config affects fragment loading
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - Context engineering, knowledge fragment terms
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "Network-First Patterns Explained"
description: Understanding how TEA eliminates test flakiness by waiting for actual network responses
---
# Network-First Patterns Explained
Network-first patterns are TEA's solution to test flakiness. Instead of guessing how long to wait with fixed timeouts, wait for the actual network event that causes UI changes.
## Overview
**The Core Principle:**
UI changes because APIs respond. Wait for the API response, not an arbitrary timeout.
**Traditional approach:**
```typescript
await page.click('button');
await page.waitForTimeout(3000); // Hope 3 seconds is enough
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
```
**Network-first approach:**
```typescript
const responsePromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/submit') && resp.ok()
);
await page.click('button');
await responsePromise; // Wait for actual response
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
```
**Result:** Deterministic tests that wait exactly as long as needed.
## The Problem
### Hard Waits Create Flakiness
```typescript
// ❌ The flaky test pattern
test('should submit form', async ({ page }) => {
await page.fill('#name', 'Test User');
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
await page.waitForTimeout(2000); // Wait 2 seconds
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Why this fails:**
- **Fast network:** Wastes 1.5 seconds waiting
- **Slow network:** Not enough time, test fails
- **CI environment:** Slower than local, fails randomly
- **Under load:** API takes 3 seconds, test fails
**Result:** "Works on my machine" syndrome, flaky CI.
### The Timeout Escalation Trap
```typescript
// Developer sees flaky test
await page.waitForTimeout(2000); // Failed in CI
// Increases timeout
await page.waitForTimeout(5000); // Still fails sometimes
// Increases again
await page.waitForTimeout(10000); // Now it passes... slowly
// Problem: Now EVERY test waits 10 seconds
// Suite that took 5 minutes now takes 30 minutes
```
**Result:** Slow, still-flaky tests.
### Race Conditions
```typescript
// ❌ Navigate-then-wait race condition
test('should load dashboard data', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/dashboard'); // Navigation starts
// Race condition! API might not have responded yet
await expect(page.locator('.data-table')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**What happens:**
1. `goto()` starts navigation
2. Page loads HTML
3. JavaScript requests `/api/dashboard`
4. Test checks for `.data-table` BEFORE API responds
5. Test fails intermittently
**Result:** "Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't."
## The Solution: Intercept-Before-Navigate
### Wait for Response Before Asserting
```typescript
// ✅ Good: Network-first pattern
test('should load dashboard data', async ({ page }) => {
// Set up promise BEFORE navigation
const dashboardPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/dashboard') && resp.ok()
);
// Navigate
await page.goto('/dashboard');
// Wait for API response
const response = await dashboardPromise;
const data = await response.json();
// Now assert UI
await expect(page.locator('.data-table')).toBeVisible();
await expect(page.locator('.data-table tr')).toHaveCount(data.items.length);
});
```
**Why this works:**
- Wait set up BEFORE navigation (no race)
- Wait for actual API response (deterministic)
- No fixed timeout (fast when API is fast)
- Validates API response (catch backend errors)
**With Playwright Utils (Even Cleaner):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should load dashboard data', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
// Set up interception BEFORE navigation
const dashboardCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'GET',
url: '**/api/dashboard'
});
// Navigate
await page.goto('/dashboard');
// Wait for API response (automatic JSON parsing)
const { status, responseJson: data } = await dashboardCall;
// Validate API response
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(data.items).toBeDefined();
// Assert UI matches API data
await expect(page.locator('.data-table')).toBeVisible();
await expect(page.locator('.data-table tr')).toHaveCount(data.items.length);
});
```
**Playwright Utils Benefits:**
- Automatic JSON parsing (no `await response.json()`)
- Returns `{ status, responseJson, requestJson }` structure
- Cleaner API (no need to check `resp.ok()`)
- Same intercept-before-navigate pattern
### Intercept-Before-Navigate Pattern
**Key insight:** Set up wait BEFORE triggering the action.
```typescript
// ✅ Pattern: Intercept → Action → Await
// 1. Intercept (set up wait)
const promise = page.waitForResponse(matcher);
// 2. Action (trigger request)
await page.click('button');
// 3. Await (wait for actual response)
await promise;
```
**Why this order:**
- `waitForResponse()` starts listening immediately
- Then trigger the action that makes the request
- Then wait for the promise to resolve
- No race condition possible
#### Intercept-Before-Navigate Flow
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'14px'}}}%%
sequenceDiagram
participant Test
participant Playwright
participant Browser
participant API
rect rgb(200, 230, 201)
Note over Test,Playwright: ✅ CORRECT: Intercept First
Test->>Playwright: 1. waitForResponse(matcher)
Note over Playwright: Starts listening for response
Test->>Browser: 2. click('button')
Browser->>API: 3. POST /api/submit
API-->>Browser: 4. 200 OK {success: true}
Browser-->>Playwright: 5. Response captured
Test->>Playwright: 6. await promise
Playwright-->>Test: 7. Returns response
Note over Test: No race condition!
end
rect rgb(255, 205, 210)
Note over Test,API: ❌ WRONG: Action First
Test->>Browser: 1. click('button')
Browser->>API: 2. POST /api/submit
API-->>Browser: 3. 200 OK (already happened!)
Test->>Playwright: 4. waitForResponse(matcher)
Note over Test,Playwright: Too late - response already occurred
Note over Test: Race condition! Test hangs or fails
end
```
**Correct Order (Green):**
1. Set up listener (`waitForResponse`)
2. Trigger action (`click`)
3. Wait for response (`await promise`)
**Wrong Order (Red):**
1. Trigger action first
2. Set up listener too late
3. Response already happened - missed!
## How It Works in TEA
### TEA Generates Network-First Tests
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
// When you run `atdd` or `automate`, TEA generates:
test('should create user', async ({ page }) => {
// TEA automatically includes network wait
const createUserPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/users') &&
resp.request().method() === 'POST' &&
resp.ok()
);
await page.fill('#name', 'Test User');
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
const response = await createUserPromise;
const user = await response.json();
// Validate both API and UI
expect(user.id).toBeDefined();
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toContainText(user.name);
});
```
**With Playwright Utils (if `tea_use_playwright_utils: true`):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should create user', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
// TEA uses interceptNetworkCall for cleaner interception
const createUserCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'POST',
url: '**/api/users'
});
await page.getByLabel('Name').fill('Test User');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Submit' }).click();
// Wait for response (automatic JSON parsing)
const { status, responseJson: user } = await createUserCall;
// Validate both API and UI
expect(status).toBe(201);
expect(user.id).toBeDefined();
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toContainText(user.name);
});
```
**Playwright Utils Benefits:**
- Automatic JSON parsing (`responseJson` ready to use)
- No manual `await response.json()`
- Returns `{ status, responseJson }` structure
- Cleaner, more readable code
### TEA Reviews for Hard Waits
When you run `test-review`:
```markdown
## Critical Issue: Hard Wait Detected
**File:** tests/e2e/submit.spec.ts:45
**Issue:** Using `page.waitForTimeout(3000)`
**Severity:** Critical (causes flakiness)
**Current Code:**
```typescript
await page.click('button');
await page.waitForTimeout(3000); // ❌
```
**Fix:**
```typescript
const responsePromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/submit') && resp.ok()
);
await page.click('button');
await responsePromise; // ✅
```
**Why:** Hard waits are non-deterministic. Use network-first patterns.
```
## Pattern Variations
### Basic Response Wait
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
// Wait for any successful response
const promise = page.waitForResponse(resp => resp.ok());
await page.click('button');
await promise;
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('basic wait', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const responseCall = interceptNetworkCall({ url: '**' }); // Match any
await page.click('button');
const { status } = await responseCall;
expect(status).toBe(200);
});
```
---
### Specific URL Match
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
// Wait for specific endpoint
const promise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/users/123')
);
await page.goto('/user/123');
await promise;
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
test('specific URL', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const userCall = interceptNetworkCall({ url: '**/api/users/123' });
await page.goto('/user/123');
const { status, responseJson } = await userCall;
expect(status).toBe(200);
});
```
---
### Method + Status Match
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
// Wait for POST that returns 201
const promise = page.waitForResponse(
resp =>
resp.url().includes('/api/users') &&
resp.request().method() === 'POST' &&
resp.status() === 201
);
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
await promise;
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
test('method and status', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const createCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'POST',
url: '**/api/users'
});
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
const { status, responseJson } = await createCall;
expect(status).toBe(201); // Explicit status check
});
```
---
### Multiple Responses
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
// Wait for multiple API calls
const [usersResp, postsResp] = await Promise.all([
page.waitForResponse(resp => resp.url().includes('/api/users')),
page.waitForResponse(resp => resp.url().includes('/api/posts')),
page.goto('/dashboard') // Triggers both requests
]);
const users = await usersResp.json();
const posts = await postsResp.json();
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
test('multiple responses', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const usersCall = interceptNetworkCall({ url: '**/api/users' });
const postsCall = interceptNetworkCall({ url: '**/api/posts' });
await page.goto('/dashboard'); // Triggers both
const [{ responseJson: users }, { responseJson: posts }] = await Promise.all([
usersCall,
postsCall
]);
expect(users).toBeInstanceOf(Array);
expect(posts).toBeInstanceOf(Array);
});
```
---
### Validate Response Data
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
// Verify API response before asserting UI
const promise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/checkout') && resp.ok()
);
await page.click('button:has-text("Complete Order")');
const response = await promise;
const order = await response.json();
// Response validation
expect(order.status).toBe('confirmed');
expect(order.total).toBeGreaterThan(0);
// UI validation
await expect(page.locator('.order-confirmation')).toContainText(order.id);
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
test('validate response data', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const checkoutCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'POST',
url: '**/api/checkout'
});
await page.click('button:has-text("Complete Order")');
const { status, responseJson: order } = await checkoutCall;
// Response validation (automatic JSON parsing)
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(order.status).toBe('confirmed');
expect(order.total).toBeGreaterThan(0);
// UI validation
await expect(page.locator('.order-confirmation')).toContainText(order.id);
});
```
## Advanced Patterns
### HAR Recording for Offline Testing
**Vanilla Playwright (Manual HAR Handling):**
```typescript
// First run: Record mode (saves HAR file)
test('offline testing - RECORD', async ({ page, context }) => {
// Record mode: Save network traffic to HAR
await context.routeFromHAR('./hars/dashboard.har', {
url: '**/api/**',
update: true // Update HAR file
});
await page.goto('/dashboard');
// All network traffic saved to dashboard.har
});
// Subsequent runs: Playback mode (uses saved HAR)
test('offline testing - PLAYBACK', async ({ page, context }) => {
// Playback mode: Use saved network traffic
await context.routeFromHAR('./hars/dashboard.har', {
url: '**/api/**',
update: false // Use existing HAR, no network calls
});
await page.goto('/dashboard');
// Uses recorded responses, no backend needed
});
```
**With Playwright Utils (Automatic HAR Management):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/network-recorder/fixtures';
// Record mode: Set environment variable
process.env.PW_NET_MODE = 'record';
test('should work offline', async ({ page, context, networkRecorder }) => {
await networkRecorder.setup(context); // Handles HAR automatically
await page.goto('/dashboard');
await page.click('#add-item');
// All network traffic recorded, CRUD operations detected
});
```
**Switch to playback:**
```bash
# Playback mode (offline)
PW_NET_MODE=playback npx playwright test
# Uses HAR file, no backend needed!
```
**Playwright Utils Benefits:**
- Automatic HAR file management (naming, paths)
- CRUD operation detection (stateful mocking)
- Environment variable control (easy switching)
- Works for complex interactions (create, update, delete)
- No manual route configuration
### Network Request Interception
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
test('should handle API error', async ({ page }) => {
// Manual route setup
await page.route('**/api/users', (route) => {
route.fulfill({
status: 500,
body: JSON.stringify({ error: 'Internal server error' })
});
});
await page.goto('/users');
const response = await page.waitForResponse('**/api/users');
const error = await response.json();
expect(error.error).toContain('Internal server');
await expect(page.locator('.error-message')).toContainText('Server error');
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('should handle API error', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
// Stub API to return error (set up BEFORE navigation)
const usersCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'GET',
url: '**/api/users',
fulfillResponse: {
status: 500,
body: { error: 'Internal server error' }
}
});
await page.goto('/users');
// Wait for mocked response and access parsed data
const { status, responseJson } = await usersCall;
expect(status).toBe(500);
expect(responseJson.error).toContain('Internal server');
await expect(page.locator('.error-message')).toContainText('Server error');
});
```
**Playwright Utils Benefits:**
- Automatic JSON parsing (`responseJson` ready to use)
- Returns promise with `{ status, responseJson, requestJson }`
- No need to pass `page` (auto-injected by fixture)
- Glob pattern matching (simpler than regex)
- Single declarative call (setup + wait in one)
## Comparison: Traditional vs Network-First
### Loading Dashboard Data
**Traditional (Flaky):**
```typescript
test('dashboard loads data', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/dashboard');
await page.waitForTimeout(2000); // ❌ Magic number
await expect(page.locator('table tr')).toHaveCount(5);
});
```
**Failure modes:**
- API takes 2.5s → test fails
- API returns 3 items not 5 → hard to debug (which issue?)
- CI slower than local → fails in CI only
**Network-First (Deterministic):**
```typescript
test('dashboard loads data', async ({ page }) => {
const apiPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/dashboard') && resp.ok()
);
await page.goto('/dashboard');
const response = await apiPromise;
const { items } = await response.json();
// Validate API response
expect(items).toHaveLength(5);
// Validate UI matches API
await expect(page.locator('table tr')).toHaveCount(items.length);
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Waits exactly as long as needed (100ms or 5s, doesn't matter)
- Validates API response (catch backend errors)
- Validates UI matches API (catch frontend bugs)
- Works in any environment (local, CI, staging)
**With Playwright Utils (Even Better):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('dashboard loads data', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const dashboardCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'GET',
url: '**/api/dashboard'
});
await page.goto('/dashboard');
const { status, responseJson: { items } } = await dashboardCall;
// Validate API response (automatic JSON parsing)
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(items).toHaveLength(5);
// Validate UI matches API
await expect(page.locator('table tr')).toHaveCount(items.length);
});
```
**Additional Benefits:**
- No manual `await response.json()` (automatic parsing)
- Cleaner destructuring of nested data
- Consistent API across all network calls
---
### Form Submission
**Traditional (Flaky):**
```typescript
test('form submission', async ({ page }) => {
await page.fill('#email', 'test@example.com');
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
await page.waitForTimeout(3000); // ❌ Hope it's enough
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Network-First (Deterministic):**
```typescript
test('form submission', async ({ page }) => {
const submitPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/submit') &&
resp.request().method() === 'POST' &&
resp.ok()
);
await page.fill('#email', 'test@example.com');
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
const response = await submitPromise;
const result = await response.json();
expect(result.success).toBe(true);
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('form submission', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const submitCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'POST',
url: '**/api/submit'
});
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Submit' }).click();
const { status, responseJson: result } = await submitCall;
// Automatic JSON parsing, no manual await
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(result.success).toBe(true);
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Progression:**
- Traditional: Hard waits (flaky)
- Network-First (Vanilla): waitForResponse (deterministic)
- Network-First (PW-Utils): interceptNetworkCall (deterministic + cleaner API)
---
## Common Misconceptions
### "I Already Use waitForSelector"
```typescript
// This is still a hard wait in disguise
await page.click('button');
await page.waitForSelector('.success', { timeout: 5000 });
```
**Problem:** Waiting for DOM, not for the API that caused DOM change.
**Better:**
```typescript
await page.waitForResponse(matcher); // Wait for root cause
await page.waitForSelector('.success'); // Then validate UI
```
### "My Tests Are Fast, Why Add Complexity?"
**Short-term:** Tests are fast locally
**Long-term problems:**
- Different environments (CI slower)
- Under load (API slower)
- Network variability (random)
- Scaling test suite (100 → 1000 tests)
**Network-first prevents these issues before they appear.**
### "Too Much Boilerplate"
**Problem:** `waitForResponse` is verbose, repeated in every test.
**Solution:** Use Playwright Utils `interceptNetworkCall` - built-in fixture that reduces boilerplate.
**Vanilla Playwright (Repetitive):**
```typescript
test('test 1', async ({ page }) => {
const promise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/submit') && resp.ok()
);
await page.click('button');
await promise;
});
test('test 2', async ({ page }) => {
const promise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/load') && resp.ok()
);
await page.click('button');
await promise;
});
// Repeated pattern in every test
```
**With Playwright Utils (Cleaner):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('test 1', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const submitCall = interceptNetworkCall({ url: '**/api/submit' });
await page.click('button');
const { status, responseJson } = await submitCall;
expect(status).toBe(200);
});
test('test 2', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const loadCall = interceptNetworkCall({ url: '**/api/load' });
await page.click('button');
const { responseJson } = await loadCall;
// Automatic JSON parsing, cleaner API
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Less boilerplate (fixture handles complexity)
- Automatic JSON parsing
- Glob pattern matching (`**/api/**`)
- Consistent API across all tests
See [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md#intercept-network-call) for setup.
## Technical Implementation
For detailed network-first patterns, see the knowledge base:
- [Knowledge Base Index - Network & Reliability](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
- [Complete Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
## Related Concepts
**Core TEA Concepts:**
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Determinism requires network-first
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - High-risk features need reliable tests
**Technical Patterns:**
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Network utilities as fixtures
- [Knowledge Base System](/docs/tea/explanation/knowledge-base-system.md) - Network patterns in knowledge base
**Overview:**
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Network-first in workflows
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - Why flakiness matters
## Practical Guides
**Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Review for hard waits
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Generate network-first tests
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Expand with network patterns
**Use-Case Guides:**
- [Using TEA with Existing Tests](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-with-existing-tests.md) - Fix flaky legacy tests
**Customization:**
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - Network utilities (recorder, interceptor, error monitor)
## Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - All workflows use network-first
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Network-first fragment
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - Network-first pattern term
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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@@ -0,0 +1,586 @@
---
title: "Risk-Based Testing Explained"
description: Understanding how TEA uses probability × impact scoring to prioritize testing effort
---
# Risk-Based Testing Explained
Risk-based testing is TEA's core principle: testing depth scales with business impact. Instead of testing everything equally, focus effort where failures hurt most.
## Overview
Traditional testing approaches treat all features equally:
- Every feature gets same test coverage
- Same level of scrutiny regardless of impact
- No systematic prioritization
- Testing becomes checkbox exercise
**Risk-based testing asks:**
- What's the probability this will fail?
- What's the impact if it does fail?
- How much testing is appropriate for this risk level?
**Result:** Testing effort matches business criticality.
## The Problem
### Equal Testing for Unequal Risk
```markdown
Feature A: User login (critical path, millions of users)
Feature B: Export to PDF (nice-to-have, rarely used)
Traditional approach:
- Both get 10 tests
- Both get same review scrutiny
- Both take same development time
Problem: Wasting effort on low-impact features while under-testing critical paths.
```
### No Objective Prioritization
```markdown
PM: "We need more tests for checkout"
QA: "How many tests?"
PM: "I don't know... a lot?"
QA: "How do we know when we have enough?"
PM: "When it feels safe?"
Problem: Subjective decisions, no data, political debates.
```
## The Solution: Probability × Impact Scoring
### Risk Score = Probability × Impact
**Probability** (How likely to fail?)
- **1 (Low):** Stable, well-tested, simple logic
- **2 (Medium):** Moderate complexity, some unknowns
- **3 (High):** Complex, untested, many edge cases
**Impact** (How bad if it fails?)
- **1 (Low):** Minor inconvenience, few users affected
- **2 (Medium):** Degraded experience, workarounds exist
- **3 (High):** Critical path broken, business impact
**Score Range:** 1-9
#### Risk Scoring Matrix
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'14px'}}}%%
graph TD
subgraph Matrix[" "]
direction TB
subgraph Impact3["Impact: HIGH (3)"]
P1I3["Score: 3<br/>Low Risk"]
P2I3["Score: 6<br/>HIGH RISK<br/>Mitigation Required"]
P3I3["Score: 9<br/>CRITICAL<br/>Blocks Release"]
end
subgraph Impact2["Impact: MEDIUM (2)"]
P1I2["Score: 2<br/>Low Risk"]
P2I2["Score: 4<br/>Medium Risk"]
P3I2["Score: 6<br/>HIGH RISK<br/>Mitigation Required"]
end
subgraph Impact1["Impact: LOW (1)"]
P1I1["Score: 1<br/>Low Risk"]
P2I1["Score: 2<br/>Low Risk"]
P3I1["Score: 3<br/>Low Risk"]
end
end
Prob1["Probability: LOW (1)"] -.-> P1I1
Prob1 -.-> P1I2
Prob1 -.-> P1I3
Prob2["Probability: MEDIUM (2)"] -.-> P2I1
Prob2 -.-> P2I2
Prob2 -.-> P2I3
Prob3["Probability: HIGH (3)"] -.-> P3I1
Prob3 -.-> P3I2
Prob3 -.-> P3I3
style P3I3 fill:#f44336,stroke:#b71c1c,stroke-width:3px,color:#fff
style P2I3 fill:#ff9800,stroke:#e65100,stroke-width:2px,color:#000
style P3I2 fill:#ff9800,stroke:#e65100,stroke-width:2px,color:#000
style P2I2 fill:#fff9c4,stroke:#f57f17,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style P1I1 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style P2I1 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style P3I1 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style P1I2 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style P1I3 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
```
**Legend:**
- 🔴 Red (Score 9): CRITICAL - Blocks release
- 🟠 Orange (Score 6-8): HIGH RISK - Mitigation required
- 🟡 Yellow (Score 4-5): MEDIUM - Mitigation recommended
- 🟢 Green (Score 1-3): LOW - Optional mitigation
### Scoring Examples
**Score 9 (Critical):**
```
Feature: Payment processing
Probability: 3 (complex third-party integration)
Impact: 3 (broken payments = lost revenue)
Score: 3 × 3 = 9
Action: Extensive testing required
- E2E tests for all payment flows
- API tests for all payment scenarios
- Error handling for all failure modes
- Security testing for payment data
- Load testing for high traffic
- Monitoring and alerts
```
**Score 1 (Low):**
```
Feature: Change profile theme color
Probability: 1 (simple UI toggle)
Impact: 1 (cosmetic only)
Score: 1 × 1 = 1
Action: Minimal testing
- One E2E smoke test
- Skip edge cases
- No API tests needed
```
**Score 6 (Medium-High):**
```
Feature: User profile editing
Probability: 2 (moderate complexity)
Impact: 3 (users can't update info)
Score: 2 × 3 = 6
Action: Focused testing
- E2E test for happy path
- API tests for CRUD operations
- Validation testing
- Skip low-value edge cases
```
## How It Works in TEA
### 1. Risk Categories
TEA assesses risk across 6 categories:
**TECH** - Technical debt, architecture fragility
```
Example: Migrating from REST to GraphQL
Probability: 3 (major architectural change)
Impact: 3 (affects all API consumers)
Score: 9 - Extensive integration testing required
```
**SEC** - Security vulnerabilities
```
Example: Adding OAuth integration
Probability: 2 (third-party dependency)
Impact: 3 (auth breach = data exposure)
Score: 6 - Security testing mandatory
```
**PERF** - Performance degradation
```
Example: Adding real-time notifications
Probability: 2 (WebSocket complexity)
Impact: 2 (slower experience)
Score: 4 - Load testing recommended
```
**DATA** - Data integrity, corruption
```
Example: Database migration
Probability: 2 (schema changes)
Impact: 3 (data loss unacceptable)
Score: 6 - Data validation tests required
```
**BUS** - Business logic errors
```
Example: Discount calculation
Probability: 2 (business rules complex)
Impact: 3 (wrong prices = revenue loss)
Score: 6 - Business logic tests mandatory
```
**OPS** - Operational issues
```
Example: Logging system update
Probability: 1 (straightforward)
Impact: 2 (debugging harder without logs)
Score: 2 - Basic smoke test sufficient
```
### 2. Test Priorities (P0-P3)
Risk scores inform test priorities (but aren't the only factor):
**P0 - Critical Path**
- **Risk Scores:** Typically 6-9 (high risk)
- **Other Factors:** Revenue impact, security-critical, regulatory compliance, frequent usage
- **Coverage Target:** 100%
- **Test Levels:** E2E + API
- **Example:** Login, checkout, payment processing
**P1 - High Value**
- **Risk Scores:** Typically 4-6 (medium-high risk)
- **Other Factors:** Core user journeys, complex logic, integration points
- **Coverage Target:** 90%
- **Test Levels:** API + selective E2E
- **Example:** Profile editing, search, filters
**P2 - Medium Value**
- **Risk Scores:** Typically 2-4 (medium risk)
- **Other Factors:** Secondary features, admin functionality, reporting
- **Coverage Target:** 50%
- **Test Levels:** API happy path only
- **Example:** Export features, advanced settings
**P3 - Low Value**
- **Risk Scores:** Typically 1-2 (low risk)
- **Other Factors:** Rarely used, nice-to-have, cosmetic
- **Coverage Target:** 20% (smoke test)
- **Test Levels:** E2E smoke test only
- **Example:** Theme customization, experimental features
**Note:** Priorities consider risk scores plus business context (usage frequency, user impact, etc.). See [Test Priorities Matrix](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md#quality-standards) for complete criteria.
### 3. Mitigation Plans
**Scores ≥6 require documented mitigation:**
```markdown
## Risk Mitigation
**Risk:** Payment integration failure (Score: 9)
**Mitigation Plan:**
- Create comprehensive test suite (20+ tests)
- Add payment sandbox environment
- Implement retry logic with idempotency
- Add monitoring and alerts
- Document rollback procedure
**Owner:** Backend team lead
**Deadline:** Before production deployment
**Status:** In progress
```
**Gate Rules:**
- **Score = 9** (Critical): Mandatory FAIL - blocks release without mitigation
- **Score 6-8** (High): Requires mitigation plan, becomes CONCERNS if incomplete
- **Score 4-5** (Medium): Mitigation recommended but not required
- **Score 1-3** (Low): No mitigation needed
## Comparison: Traditional vs Risk-Based
### Traditional Approach
```typescript
// Test everything equally
describe('User profile', () => {
test('should display name');
test('should display email');
test('should display phone');
test('should display address');
test('should display bio');
test('should display avatar');
test('should display join date');
test('should display last login');
test('should display theme preference');
test('should display language preference');
// 10 tests for profile display (all equal priority)
});
```
**Problems:**
- Same effort for critical (name) vs trivial (theme)
- No guidance on what matters
- Wastes time on low-value tests
### Risk-Based Approach
```typescript
// Test based on risk
describe('User profile - Critical (P0)', () => {
test('should display name and email'); // Score: 9 (identity critical)
test('should allow editing name and email');
test('should validate email format');
test('should prevent unauthorized edits');
// 4 focused tests on high-risk areas
});
describe('User profile - High Value (P1)', () => {
test('should upload avatar'); // Score: 6 (users care about this)
test('should update bio');
// 2 tests for high-value features
});
// P2: Theme preference - single smoke test
// P3: Last login display - skip (read-only, low value)
```
**Benefits:**
- 6 focused tests vs 10 unfocused tests
- Effort matches business impact
- Clear priorities guide development
- No wasted effort on trivial features
## When to Use Risk-Based Testing
### Always Use For:
**Enterprise projects:**
- High stakes (revenue, compliance, security)
- Many features competing for test effort
- Need objective prioritization
**Large codebases:**
- Can't test everything exhaustively
- Need to focus limited QA resources
- Want data-driven decisions
**Regulated industries:**
- Must justify testing decisions
- Auditors want risk assessments
- Compliance requires evidence
### Consider Skipping For:
**Tiny projects:**
- 5 features total
- Can test everything thoroughly
- Risk scoring is overhead
**Prototypes:**
- Throw-away code
- Speed over quality
- Learning experiments
## Real-World Example
### Scenario: E-Commerce Checkout Redesign
**Feature:** Redesigning checkout flow from 5 steps to 3 steps
**Risk Assessment:**
| Component | Probability | Impact | Score | Priority | Testing |
|-----------|-------------|--------|-------|----------|---------|
| **Payment processing** | 3 | 3 | 9 | P0 | 15 E2E + 20 API tests |
| **Order validation** | 2 | 3 | 6 | P1 | 5 E2E + 10 API tests |
| **Shipping calculation** | 2 | 2 | 4 | P1 | 3 E2E + 8 API tests |
| **Promo code validation** | 2 | 2 | 4 | P1 | 2 E2E + 5 API tests |
| **Gift message** | 1 | 1 | 1 | P3 | 1 E2E smoke test |
**Test Budget:** 40 hours
**Allocation:**
- Payment (Score 9): 20 hours (50%)
- Order validation (Score 6): 8 hours (20%)
- Shipping (Score 4): 6 hours (15%)
- Promo codes (Score 4): 4 hours (10%)
- Gift message (Score 1): 2 hours (5%)
**Result:** 50% of effort on highest-risk feature (payment), proportional allocation for others.
### Without Risk-Based Testing:
**Equal allocation:** 8 hours per component = wasted effort on gift message, under-testing payment.
**Result:** Payment bugs slip through (critical), perfect testing of gift message (trivial).
## Mitigation Strategies by Risk Level
### Score 9: Mandatory Mitigation (Blocks Release)
```markdown
**Gate Impact:** FAIL - Cannot deploy without mitigation
**Actions:**
- Comprehensive test suite (E2E, API, security)
- Multiple test environments (dev, staging, prod-mirror)
- Load testing and performance validation
- Security audit and penetration testing
- Monitoring and alerting
- Rollback plan documented
- On-call rotation assigned
**Cannot deploy until score is mitigated below 9.**
```
### Score 6-8: Required Mitigation (Gate: CONCERNS)
```markdown
**Gate Impact:** CONCERNS - Can deploy with documented mitigation plan
**Actions:**
- Targeted test suite (happy path + critical errors)
- Test environment setup
- Monitoring plan
- Document mitigation and owners
**Can deploy with approved mitigation plan.**
```
### Score 4-5: Recommended Mitigation
```markdown
**Gate Impact:** Advisory - Does not affect gate decision
**Actions:**
- Basic test coverage
- Standard monitoring
- Document known limitations
**Can deploy, mitigation recommended but not required.**
```
### Score 1-3: Optional Mitigation
```markdown
**Gate Impact:** None
**Actions:**
- Smoke test if desired
- Feature flag for easy disable (optional)
**Can deploy without mitigation.**
```
## Technical Implementation
For detailed risk governance patterns, see the knowledge base:
- [Knowledge Base Index - Risk & Gates](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
- [TEA Command Reference - `test-design`](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md#test-design)
### Risk Scoring Matrix
TEA uses this framework in `test-design`:
```
Impact
1 2 3
┌────┬────┬────┐
1 │ 1 │ 2 │ 3 │ Low risk
P 2 │ 2 │ 4 │ 6 │ Medium risk
r 3 │ 3 │ 6 │ 9 │ High risk
o └────┴────┴────┘
b Low Med High
```
### Gate Decision Rules
| Score | Mitigation Required | Gate Impact |
|-------|-------------------|-------------|
| **9** | Mandatory, blocks release | FAIL if no mitigation |
| **6-8** | Required, documented plan | CONCERNS if incomplete |
| **4-5** | Recommended | Advisory only |
| **1-3** | Optional | No impact |
#### Gate Decision Flow
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'14px'}}}%%
flowchart TD
Start([Risk Assessment]) --> Score{Risk Score?}
Score -->|Score = 9| Critical[CRITICAL RISK<br/>Score: 9]
Score -->|Score 6-8| High[HIGH RISK<br/>Score: 6-8]
Score -->|Score 4-5| Medium[MEDIUM RISK<br/>Score: 4-5]
Score -->|Score 1-3| Low[LOW RISK<br/>Score: 1-3]
Critical --> HasMit9{Mitigation<br/>Plan?}
HasMit9 -->|Yes| Concerns9[CONCERNS ⚠️<br/>Can deploy with plan]
HasMit9 -->|No| Fail[FAIL ❌<br/>Blocks release]
High --> HasMit6{Mitigation<br/>Plan?}
HasMit6 -->|Yes| Pass6[PASS ✅<br/>or CONCERNS ⚠️]
HasMit6 -->|No| Concerns6[CONCERNS ⚠️<br/>Document plan needed]
Medium --> Advisory[Advisory Only<br/>No gate impact]
Low --> NoAction[No Action<br/>Proceed]
style Critical fill:#f44336,stroke:#b71c1c,stroke-width:3px,color:#fff
style Fail fill:#d32f2f,stroke:#b71c1c,stroke-width:3px,color:#fff
style High fill:#ff9800,stroke:#e65100,stroke-width:2px,color:#000
style Concerns9 fill:#ffc107,stroke:#f57f17,stroke-width:2px,color:#000
style Concerns6 fill:#ffc107,stroke:#f57f17,stroke-width:2px,color:#000
style Pass6 fill:#4caf50,stroke:#1b5e20,stroke-width:2px,color:#fff
style Medium fill:#fff9c4,stroke:#f57f17,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style Low fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style Advisory fill:#e8f5e9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
style NoAction fill:#e8f5e9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:1px,color:#000
```
## Common Misconceptions
### "Risk-based = Less Testing"
**Wrong:** Risk-based testing often means MORE testing where it matters.
**Example:**
- Traditional: 50 tests spread equally
- Risk-based: 70 tests focused on P0/P1 (more total, better allocated)
### "Low Priority = Skip Testing"
**Wrong:** P3 still gets smoke tests.
**Correct:**
- P3: Smoke test (feature works at all)
- P2: Happy path (feature works correctly)
- P1: Happy path + errors
- P0: Comprehensive (all scenarios)
### "Risk Scores Are Permanent"
**Wrong:** Risk changes over time.
**Correct:**
- Initial launch: Payment is Score 9 (untested integration)
- After 6 months: Payment is Score 6 (proven in production)
- Re-assess risk quarterly
## Related Concepts
**Core TEA Concepts:**
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Quality complements risk assessment
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - When risk-based testing matters most
- [Knowledge Base System](/docs/tea/explanation/knowledge-base-system.md) - How risk patterns are loaded
**Technical Patterns:**
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Building risk-appropriate test infrastructure
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Quality patterns for high-risk features
**Overview:**
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Risk assessment in TEA lifecycle
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - Design philosophy
## Practical Guides
**Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Apply risk scoring
- [How to Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md) - Gate decisions based on risk
- [How to Run NFR Assessment](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-nfr-assess.md) - NFR risk assessment
**Use-Case Guides:**
- [Running TEA for Enterprise](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-for-enterprise.md) - Enterprise risk management
## Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - `test-design`, `nfr-assess`, `trace`
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Risk governance fragments
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - Risk-based testing term
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "Test Architect (TEA) Overview"
description: Understanding the Test Architect (TEA) agent and its role in BMad Method
---
The Test Architect (TEA) is a specialized agent focused on quality strategy, test automation, and release gates in BMad Method projects.
:::tip[Design Philosophy]
TEA was built to solve AI-generated tests that rot in review. For the problem statement and design principles, see [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md). For setup, see [Setup Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md).
:::
## Overview
- **Persona:** Murat, Master Test Architect and Quality Advisor focused on risk-based testing, fixture architecture, ATDD, and CI/CD governance.
- **Mission:** Deliver actionable quality strategies, automation coverage, and gate decisions that scale with project complexity and compliance demands.
- **Use When:** BMad Method or Enterprise track projects, integration risk is non-trivial, brownfield regression risk exists, or compliance/NFR evidence is required. (Quick Flow projects typically don't require TEA)
## Choose Your TEA Engagement Model
BMad does not mandate TEA. There are five valid ways to use it (or skip it). Pick one intentionally.
1. **No TEA**
- Skip all TEA workflows. Use your existing team testing approach.
2. **TEA Solo (Standalone)**
- Use TEA on a non-BMad project. Bring your own requirements, acceptance criteria, and environments.
- Typical sequence: `test-design` (system or epic) -> `atdd` and/or `automate` -> optional `test-review` -> `trace` for coverage and gate decisions.
- Run `framework` or `ci` only if you want TEA to scaffold the harness or pipeline; they work best after you decide the stack/architecture.
**TEA Lite (Beginner Approach):**
- Simplest way to use TEA - just use `automate` to test existing features.
- Perfect for learning TEA fundamentals in 30 minutes.
- See [TEA Lite Quickstart Tutorial](/docs/tea/tutorials/tea-lite-quickstart.md).
3. **Integrated: Greenfield - BMad Method (Simple/Standard Work)**
- Phase 3: system-level `test-design`, then `framework` and `ci`.
- Phase 4: per-epic `test-design`, optional `atdd`, then `automate` and optional `test-review`.
- Gate (Phase 2): `trace`.
4. **Integrated: Brownfield - BMad Method or Enterprise (Simple or Complex)**
- Phase 2: baseline `trace`.
- Phase 3: system-level `test-design`, then `framework` and `ci`.
- Phase 4: per-epic `test-design` focused on regression and integration risks.
- Gate (Phase 2): `trace`; `nfr-assess` (if not done earlier).
- For brownfield BMad Method, follow the same flow with `nfr-assess` optional.
5. **Integrated: Greenfield - Enterprise Method (Enterprise/Compliance Work)**
- Phase 2: `nfr-assess`.
- Phase 3: system-level `test-design`, then `framework` and `ci`.
- Phase 4: per-epic `test-design`, plus `atdd`/`automate`/`test-review`.
- Gate (Phase 2): `trace`; archive artifacts as needed.
If you are unsure, default to the integrated path for your track and adjust later.
## TEA Command Catalog
| Command | Primary Outputs | Notes | With Playwright MCP Enhancements |
| -------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| `framework` | Playwright/Cypress scaffold, `.env.example`, `.nvmrc`, sample specs | Use when no production-ready harness exists | - |
| `ci` | CI workflow, selective test scripts, secrets checklist | Platform-aware (GitHub Actions default) | - |
| `test-design` | Combined risk assessment, mitigation plan, and coverage strategy | Risk scoring + optional exploratory mode | **+ Exploratory**: Interactive UI discovery with browser automation (uncover actual functionality) |
| `atdd` | Failing acceptance tests + implementation checklist | TDD red phase + optional recording mode | **+ Recording**: UI selectors verified with live browser; API tests benefit from trace analysis |
| `automate` | Prioritized specs, fixtures, README/script updates, DoD summary | Optional healing/recording, avoid duplicate coverage | **+ Healing**: Visual debugging + trace analysis for test fixes; **+ Recording**: Verified selectors (UI) + network inspection (API) |
| `test-review` | Test quality review report with 0-100 score, violations, fixes | Reviews tests against knowledge base patterns | - |
| `nfr-assess` | NFR assessment report with actions | Focus on security/performance/reliability | - |
| `trace` | Phase 1: Coverage matrix, recommendations. Phase 2: Gate decision (PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL/WAIVED) | Two-phase workflow: traceability + gate decision | - |
## TEA Workflow Lifecycle
**Phase Numbering Note:** BMad uses a 4-phase methodology with optional Phase 1 and a documentation prerequisite:
- **Documentation** (Optional for brownfield): Prerequisite using `document-project`
- **Phase 1** (Optional): Discovery/Analysis (`brainstorm`, `research`, `product-brief`)
- **Phase 2** (Required): Planning (`prd` creates PRD with FRs/NFRs)
- **Phase 3** (Track-dependent): Solutioning (`architecture``test-design` (system-level) → `create-epics-and-stories` → TEA: `framework`, `ci``implementation-readiness`)
- **Phase 4** (Required): Implementation (`sprint-planning` → per-epic: `test-design` → per-story: dev workflows)
TEA integrates into the BMad development lifecycle during Solutioning (Phase 3) and Implementation (Phase 4):
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'primaryColor':'#fff','primaryTextColor':'#000','primaryBorderColor':'#000','lineColor':'#000','secondaryColor':'#fff','tertiaryColor':'#fff','fontSize':'16px','fontFamily':'arial'}}}%%
graph TB
subgraph Phase2["<b>Phase 2: PLANNING</b>"]
PM["<b>PM: prd (creates PRD with FRs/NFRs)</b>"]
PlanNote["<b>Business requirements phase</b>"]
NFR2["<b>TEA: nfr-assess (optional, enterprise)</b>"]
PM -.-> NFR2
NFR2 -.-> PlanNote
PM -.-> PlanNote
end
subgraph Phase3["<b>Phase 3: SOLUTIONING</b>"]
Architecture["<b>Architect: architecture</b>"]
EpicsStories["<b>PM/Architect: create-epics-and-stories</b>"]
TestDesignSys["<b>TEA: test-design (system-level)</b>"]
Framework["<b>TEA: framework (optional if needed)</b>"]
CI["<b>TEA: ci (optional if needed)</b>"]
GateCheck["<b>Architect: implementation-readiness</b>"]
Architecture --> EpicsStories
Architecture --> TestDesignSys
TestDesignSys --> Framework
EpicsStories --> Framework
Framework --> CI
CI --> GateCheck
Phase3Note["<b>Epics created AFTER architecture,</b><br/><b>then system-level test design and test infrastructure setup</b>"]
EpicsStories -.-> Phase3Note
end
subgraph Phase4["<b>Phase 4: IMPLEMENTATION - Per Epic Cycle</b>"]
SprintPlan["<b>SM: sprint-planning</b>"]
TestDesign["<b>TEA: test-design (per epic)</b>"]
CreateStory["<b>SM: create-story</b>"]
ATDD["<b>TEA: atdd (optional, before dev)</b>"]
DevImpl["<b>DEV: implements story</b>"]
Automate["<b>TEA: automate</b>"]
TestReview1["<b>TEA: test-review (optional)</b>"]
Trace1["<b>TEA: trace (refresh coverage)</b>"]
SprintPlan --> TestDesign
TestDesign --> CreateStory
CreateStory --> ATDD
ATDD --> DevImpl
DevImpl --> Automate
Automate --> TestReview1
TestReview1 --> Trace1
Trace1 -.->|next story| CreateStory
TestDesignNote["<b>Test design: 'How do I test THIS epic?'</b><br/>Creates test-design-epic-N.md per epic"]
TestDesign -.-> TestDesignNote
end
subgraph Gate["<b>EPIC/RELEASE GATE</b>"]
NFR["<b>TEA: nfr-assess (if not done earlier)</b>"]
TestReview2["<b>TEA: test-review (final audit, optional)</b>"]
TraceGate["<b>TEA: trace - Phase 2: Gate</b>"]
GateDecision{"<b>Gate Decision</b>"}
NFR --> TestReview2
TestReview2 --> TraceGate
TraceGate --> GateDecision
GateDecision -->|PASS| Pass["<b>PASS ✅</b>"]
GateDecision -->|CONCERNS| Concerns["<b>CONCERNS ⚠️</b>"]
GateDecision -->|FAIL| Fail["<b>FAIL ❌</b>"]
GateDecision -->|WAIVED| Waived["<b>WAIVED ⏭️</b>"]
end
Phase2 --> Phase3
Phase3 --> Phase4
Phase4 --> Gate
style Phase2 fill:#bbdefb,stroke:#0d47a1,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
style Phase3 fill:#c8e6c9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
style Phase4 fill:#e1bee7,stroke:#4a148c,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
style Gate fill:#ffe082,stroke:#f57c00,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
style Pass fill:#4caf50,stroke:#1b5e20,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
style Concerns fill:#ffc107,stroke:#f57f17,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
style Fail fill:#f44336,stroke:#b71c1c,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
style Waived fill:#9c27b0,stroke:#4a148c,stroke-width:3px,color:#000
```
**TEA workflows:** `framework` and `ci` run once in Phase 3 after architecture. `test-design` is **dual-mode**:
- **System-level (Phase 3):** Run immediately after architecture/ADR drafting to produce TWO documents: `test-design-architecture.md` (for Architecture/Dev teams: testability gaps, ASRs, NFR requirements) + `test-design-qa.md` (for QA team: test execution recipe, coverage plan, Sprint 0 setup). Feeds the implementation-readiness gate.
- **Epic-level (Phase 4):** Run per-epic to produce `test-design-epic-N.md` (risk, priorities, coverage plan).
The Quick Flow track skips Phases 1 and 3.
BMad Method and Enterprise use all phases based on project needs.
When an ADR or architecture draft is produced, run `test-design` in **system-level** mode before the implementation-readiness gate. This ensures the ADR has an attached testability review and ADR → test mapping. Keep the test-design updated if ADRs change.
## Why TEA Is Different from Other BMM Agents
TEA spans multiple phases (Phase 3, Phase 4, and the release gate). Most BMM agents operate in a single phase. That multi-phase role is paired with a dedicated testing knowledge base so standards stay consistent across projects.
### TEA's 8 Workflows Across Phases
| Phase | TEA Workflows | Frequency | Purpose |
| ----------- | --------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Phase 2** | (none) | - | Planning phase - PM defines requirements |
| **Phase 3** | `test-design` (system-level), `framework`, `ci` | Once per project | System testability review and test infrastructure setup |
| **Phase 4** | `test-design`, `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`, `trace` | Per epic/story | Test planning per epic, then per-story testing |
| **Release** | `nfr-assess`, `trace` (Phase 2: gate) | Per epic/release | Go/no-go decision |
**Note**: `trace` is a two-phase workflow: Phase 1 (traceability) + Phase 2 (gate decision). This reduces cognitive load while maintaining natural workflow.
### Why TEA Requires Its Own Knowledge Base
TEA uniquely requires:
- **Extensive domain knowledge**: Test patterns, CI/CD, fixtures, and quality practices
- **Cross-cutting concerns**: Standards that apply across all BMad projects (not just PRDs or stories)
- **Optional integrations**: Playwright-utils and MCP enhancements
This architecture lets TEA maintain consistent, production-ready testing patterns while operating across multiple phases.
## Track Cheat Sheets (Condensed)
These cheat sheets map TEA workflows to the **BMad Method and Enterprise tracks** across the **4-Phase Methodology** (Phase 1: Analysis, Phase 2: Planning, Phase 3: Solutioning, Phase 4: Implementation).
**Note:** The Quick Flow track typically doesn't require TEA (covered in Overview). These cheat sheets focus on BMad Method and Enterprise tracks where TEA adds value.
**Legend for Track Deltas:**
- = New workflow or phase added (doesn't exist in baseline)
- 🔄 = Modified focus (same workflow, different emphasis or purpose)
- 📦 = Additional output or archival requirement
### Greenfield - BMad Method (Simple/Standard Work)
**Planning Track:** BMad Method (PRD + Architecture)
**Use Case:** New projects with standard complexity
| Workflow Stage | Test Architect | Dev / Team | Outputs |
| -------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Phase 1**: Discovery | - | Analyst `product-brief` (optional) | `product-brief.md` |
| **Phase 2**: Planning | - | PM `prd` (creates PRD with FRs/NFRs) | PRD with functional/non-functional requirements |
| **Phase 3**: Solutioning | Run `framework`, `ci` AFTER architecture and epic creation | Architect `architecture`, `create-epics-and-stories`, `implementation-readiness` | Architecture, epics/stories, test scaffold, CI pipeline |
| **Phase 4**: Sprint Start | - | SM `sprint-planning` | Sprint status file with all epics and stories |
| **Phase 4**: Epic Planning | Run `test-design` for THIS epic (per-epic test plan) | Review epic scope | `test-design-epic-N.md` with risk assessment and test plan |
| **Phase 4**: Story Dev | (Optional) `atdd` before dev, then `automate` after | SM `create-story`, DEV implements | Tests, story implementation |
| **Phase 4**: Story Review | Execute `test-review` (optional), re-run `trace` | Address recommendations, update code/tests | Quality report, refreshed coverage matrix |
| **Phase 4**: Release Gate | (Optional) `test-review` for final audit, Run `trace` (Phase 2) | Confirm Definition of Done, share release notes | Quality audit, Gate YAML + release summary |
**Key notes:**
- Run `framework` and `ci` once in Phase 3 after architecture.
- Run `test-design` per epic in Phase 4; use `atdd` before dev when helpful.
- Use `trace` for gate decisions; `test-review` is an optional audit.
### Brownfield - BMad Method or Enterprise (Simple or Complex)
**Planning Tracks:** BMad Method or Enterprise Method
**Use Case:** Existing codebases: simple additions (BMad Method) or complex enterprise requirements (Enterprise Method)
**🔄 Brownfield Deltas from Greenfield:**
- Documentation (Prerequisite) - Document existing codebase if undocumented
- Phase 2: `trace` - Baseline existing test coverage before planning
- 🔄 Phase 4: `test-design` - Focus on regression hotspots and brownfield risks
- 🔄 Phase 4: Story Review - May include `nfr-assess` if not done earlier
| Workflow Stage | Test Architect | Dev / Team | Outputs |
| --------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Documentation**: Prerequisite | - | Analyst `document-project` (if undocumented) | Comprehensive project documentation |
| **Phase 1**: Discovery | - | Analyst/PM/Architect rerun planning workflows | Updated planning artifacts in `{output_folder}` |
| **Phase 2**: Planning | Run `trace` (baseline coverage) | PM `prd` (creates PRD with FRs/NFRs) | PRD with FRs/NFRs, coverage baseline |
| **Phase 3**: Solutioning | Run `framework`, `ci` AFTER architecture and epic creation | Architect `architecture`, `create-epics-and-stories`, `implementation-readiness` | Architecture, epics/stories, test framework, CI pipeline |
| **Phase 4**: Sprint Start | - | SM `sprint-planning` | Sprint status file with all epics and stories |
| **Phase 4**: Epic Planning | Run `test-design` for THIS epic 🔄 (regression hotspots) | Review epic scope and brownfield risks | `test-design-epic-N.md` with brownfield risk assessment and mitigation |
| **Phase 4**: Story Dev | (Optional) `atdd` before dev, then `automate` after | SM `create-story`, DEV implements | Tests, story implementation |
| **Phase 4**: Story Review | Apply `test-review` (optional), re-run `trace`, `nfr-assess` if needed | Resolve gaps, update docs/tests | Quality report, refreshed coverage matrix, NFR report |
| **Phase 4**: Release Gate | (Optional) `test-review` for final audit, Run `trace` (Phase 2) | Capture sign-offs, share release notes | Quality audit, Gate YAML + release summary |
**Key notes:**
- Start with `trace` in Phase 2 to baseline coverage.
- Focus `test-design` on regression hotspots and integration risk.
- Run `nfr-assess` before the gate if it wasn't done earlier.
### Greenfield - Enterprise Method (Enterprise/Compliance Work)
**Planning Track:** Enterprise Method (BMad Method + extended security/devops/test strategies)
**Use Case:** New enterprise projects with compliance, security, or complex regulatory requirements
**🏢 Enterprise Deltas from BMad Method:**
- Phase 1: `research` - Domain and compliance research (recommended)
- Phase 2: `nfr-assess` - Capture NFR requirements early (security/performance/reliability)
- 🔄 Phase 4: `test-design` - Enterprise focus (compliance, security architecture alignment)
- 📦 Release Gate - Archive artifacts and compliance evidence for audits
| Workflow Stage | Test Architect | Dev / Team | Outputs |
| -------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| **Phase 1**: Discovery | - | Analyst `research`, `product-brief` | Domain research, compliance analysis, product brief |
| **Phase 2**: Planning | Run `nfr-assess` | PM `prd` (creates PRD with FRs/NFRs), UX `create-ux-design` | Enterprise PRD with FRs/NFRs, UX design, NFR documentation |
| **Phase 3**: Solutioning | Run `framework`, `ci` AFTER architecture and epic creation | Architect `architecture`, `create-epics-and-stories`, `implementation-readiness` | Architecture, epics/stories, test framework, CI pipeline |
| **Phase 4**: Sprint Start | - | SM `sprint-planning` | Sprint plan with all epics |
| **Phase 4**: Epic Planning | Run `test-design` for THIS epic 🔄 (compliance focus) | Review epic scope and compliance requirements | `test-design-epic-N.md` with security/performance/compliance focus |
| **Phase 4**: Story Dev | (Optional) `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`, `trace` per story | SM `create-story`, DEV implements | Tests, fixtures, quality reports, coverage matrices |
| **Phase 4**: Release Gate | Final `test-review` audit, Run `trace` (Phase 2), 📦 archive artifacts | Capture sign-offs, 📦 compliance evidence | Quality audit, updated assessments, gate YAML, 📦 audit trail |
**Key notes:**
- Run `nfr-assess` early in Phase 2.
- `test-design` emphasizes compliance, security, and performance alignment.
- Archive artifacts at the release gate for audits.
**Related how-to guides:**
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md)
- [How to Set Up a Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md)
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md)
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md)
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md)
- [How to Set Up CI Pipeline](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-ci.md)
- [How to Run NFR Assessment](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-nfr-assess.md)
- [How to Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md)
## Deep Dive Concepts
Want to understand TEA principles and patterns in depth?
**Core Principles:**
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Probability × impact scoring, P0-P3 priorities
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Definition of Done, determinism, isolation
- [Knowledge Base System](/docs/tea/explanation/knowledge-base-system.md) - Context engineering with tea-index.csv
**Technical Patterns:**
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Pure function → fixture → composition
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Eliminating flakiness with intercept-before-navigate
**Engagement & Strategy:**
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - TEA Lite, TEA Solo, TEA Integrated (5 models explained)
**Philosophy:**
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - **Start here to understand WHY TEA exists** - The problem with AI-generated tests and TEA's three-part solution
## Optional Integrations
### Playwright Utils (`@seontechnologies/playwright-utils`)
Production-ready fixtures and utilities that enhance TEA workflows.
- Install: `npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils`
> Note: Playwright Utils is enabled via the installer. Only set `tea_use_playwright_utils` in `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml` if you need to override the installer choice.
- Impacts: `framework`, `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`, `ci`
- Utilities include: api-request, auth-session, network-recorder, intercept-network-call, recurse, log, file-utils, burn-in, network-error-monitor, fixtures-composition
### Playwright MCP Enhancements
Live browser verification for test design and automation.
**Two Playwright MCP servers** (actively maintained, continuously updated):
- `playwright` - Browser automation (`npx @playwright/mcp@latest`)
- `playwright-test` - Test runner with failure analysis (`npx playwright run-test-mcp-server`)
**Configuration example**:
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"playwright": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["@playwright/mcp@latest"]
},
"playwright-test": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["playwright", "run-test-mcp-server"]
}
}
}
```
- Helps `test-design` validate actual UI behavior.
- Helps `atdd` and `automate` verify selectors against the live DOM.
- Enhances healing with `browser_snapshot`, console, network, and locator tools.
**To disable**: set `tea_use_mcp_enhancements: false` in `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml` or remove MCPs from IDE config.
---
## Complete TEA Documentation Navigation
### Start Here
**New to TEA? Start with the tutorial:**
- [TEA Lite Quickstart Tutorial](/docs/tea/tutorials/tea-lite-quickstart.md) - 30-minute beginner guide using TodoMVC
### Workflow Guides (Task-Oriented)
**All 8 TEA workflows with step-by-step instructions:**
1. [How to Set Up a Test Framework with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md) - Scaffold Playwright or Cypress
2. [How to Set Up CI Pipeline with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-ci.md) - Configure CI/CD with selective testing
3. [How to Run Test Design with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Risk-based test planning (system or epic)
4. [How to Run ATDD with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Generate failing tests before implementation
5. [How to Run Automate with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Expand test coverage after implementation
6. [How to Run Test Review with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Audit test quality (0-100 scoring)
7. [How to Run NFR Assessment with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-nfr-assess.md) - Validate non-functional requirements
8. [How to Run Trace with TEA](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md) - Coverage traceability + gate decisions
### Customization & Integration
**Optional enhancements to TEA workflows:**
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - Production-ready fixtures and 9 utilities
- [Enable TEA MCP Enhancements](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/enable-tea-mcp-enhancements.md) - Live browser verification, visual debugging
### Use-Case Guides
**Specialized guidance for specific contexts:**
- [Using TEA with Existing Tests (Brownfield)](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-with-existing-tests.md) - Incremental improvement, regression hotspots, baseline coverage
- [Running TEA for Enterprise](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-for-enterprise.md) - Compliance, NFR assessment, audit trails, SOC 2/HIPAA
### Concept Deep Dives (Understanding-Oriented)
**Understand the principles and patterns:**
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Probability × impact scoring, P0-P3 priorities, mitigation strategies
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Definition of Done, determinism, isolation, explicit assertions
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Pure function → fixture → composition pattern
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Intercept-before-navigate, eliminating flakiness
- [Knowledge Base System](/docs/tea/explanation/knowledge-base-system.md) - Context engineering with tea-index.csv, 33 fragments
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - TEA Lite, TEA Solo, TEA Integrated (5 models explained)
### Philosophy & Design
**Why TEA exists and how it works:**
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - **Start here to understand WHY** - The problem with AI-generated tests and TEA's three-part solution
### Reference (Quick Lookup)
**Factual information for quick reference:**
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - All 8 workflows: inputs, outputs, phases, frequency
- [TEA Configuration Reference](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config options, file locations, setup examples
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - 33 fragments categorized and explained
- [Glossary - TEA Section](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - 20 TEA-specific terms defined

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---
title: "Test Quality Standards Explained"
description: Understanding TEA's Definition of Done for deterministic, isolated, and maintainable tests
---
# Test Quality Standards Explained
Test quality standards define what makes a test "good" in TEA. These aren't suggestions - they're the Definition of Done that prevents tests from rotting in review.
## Overview
**TEA's Quality Principles:**
- **Deterministic** - Same result every run
- **Isolated** - No dependencies on other tests
- **Explicit** - Assertions visible in test body
- **Focused** - Single responsibility, appropriate size
- **Fast** - Execute in reasonable time
**Why these matter:** Tests that violate these principles create maintenance burden, slow down development, and lose team trust.
## The Problem
### Tests That Rot in Review
```typescript
// ❌ The anti-pattern: This test will rot
test('user can do stuff', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/');
await page.waitForTimeout(5000); // Non-deterministic
if (await page.locator('.banner').isVisible()) { // Conditional
await page.click('.dismiss');
}
try { // Try-catch for flow control
await page.click('#load-more');
} catch (e) {
// Silently continue
}
// ... 300 more lines of test logic
// ... no clear assertions
});
```
**What's wrong:**
- **Hard wait** - Flaky, wastes time
- **Conditional** - Non-deterministic behavior
- **Try-catch** - Hides failures
- **Too large** - Hard to maintain
- **Vague name** - Unclear purpose
- **No explicit assertions** - What's being tested?
**Result:** PR review comments: "This test is flaky, please fix" → never merged → test deleted → coverage lost
### AI-Generated Tests Without Standards
AI-generated tests without quality guardrails:
```typescript
// AI generates 50 tests like this:
test('test1', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/');
await page.waitForTimeout(3000);
// ... flaky, vague, redundant
});
test('test2', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/');
await page.waitForTimeout(3000);
// ... duplicates test1
});
// ... 48 more similar tests
```
**Result:** 50 tests, 80% redundant, 90% flaky, 0% trusted by team - low-quality outputs that create maintenance burden.
## The Solution: TEA's Quality Standards
### 1. Determinism (No Flakiness)
**Rule:** Test produces same result every run.
**Requirements:**
- ❌ No hard waits (`waitForTimeout`)
- ❌ No conditionals for flow control (`if/else`)
- ❌ No try-catch for flow control
- ✅ Use network-first patterns (wait for responses)
- ✅ Use explicit waits (waitForSelector, waitForResponse)
**Bad Example:**
```typescript
test('flaky test', async ({ page }) => {
await page.click('button');
await page.waitForTimeout(2000); // ❌ Might be too short
if (await page.locator('.modal').isVisible()) { // ❌ Non-deterministic
await page.click('.dismiss');
}
try { // ❌ Silently handles errors
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
} catch (e) {
// Test passes even if assertion fails!
}
});
```
**Good Example (Vanilla Playwright):**
```typescript
test('deterministic test', async ({ page }) => {
const responsePromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/submit') && resp.ok()
);
await page.click('button');
await responsePromise; // ✅ Wait for actual response
// Modal should ALWAYS show (make it deterministic)
await expect(page.locator('.modal')).toBeVisible();
await page.click('.dismiss');
// Explicit assertion (fails if not visible)
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**With Playwright Utils (Even Cleaner):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('deterministic test', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
const submitCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'POST',
url: '**/api/submit'
});
await page.click('button');
// Wait for actual response (automatic JSON parsing)
const { status, responseJson } = await submitCall;
expect(status).toBe(200);
// Modal should ALWAYS show (make it deterministic)
await expect(page.locator('.modal')).toBeVisible();
await page.click('.dismiss');
// Explicit assertion (fails if not visible)
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Why both work:**
- Waits for actual event (network response)
- No conditionals (behavior is deterministic)
- Assertions fail loudly (no silent failures)
- Same result every run (deterministic)
**Playwright Utils additional benefits:**
- Automatic JSON parsing
- `{ status, responseJson }` structure (can validate response data)
- No manual `await response.json()`
### 2. Isolation (No Dependencies)
**Rule:** Test runs independently, no shared state.
**Requirements:**
- ✅ Self-cleaning (cleanup after test)
- ✅ No global state dependencies
- ✅ Can run in parallel
- ✅ Can run in any order
- ✅ Use unique test data
**Bad Example:**
```typescript
// ❌ Tests depend on execution order
let userId: string; // Shared global state
test('create user', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
const { body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'POST',
path: '/api/users',
body: { email: 'test@example.com' } (hard-coded)
});
userId = body.id; // Store in global
});
test('update user', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
// Depends on previous test setting userId
await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
path: `/api/users/${userId}`,
body: { name: 'Updated' }
});
// No cleanup - leaves user in database
});
```
**Problems:**
- Tests must run in order (can't parallelize)
- Second test fails if first skipped (`.only`)
- Hard-coded data causes conflicts
- No cleanup (database fills with test data)
**Good Example (Vanilla Playwright):**
```typescript
test('should update user profile', async ({ request }) => {
// Create unique test data
const testEmail = `test-${Date.now()}@example.com`;
// Setup: Create user
const createResp = await request.post('/api/users', {
data: { email: testEmail, name: 'Original' }
});
const user = await createResp.json();
// Test: Update user
const updateResp = await request.patch(`/api/users/${user.id}`, {
data: { name: 'Updated' }
});
const updated = await updateResp.json();
expect(updated.name).toBe('Updated');
// Cleanup: Delete user
await request.delete(`/api/users/${user.id}`);
});
```
**Even Better (With Playwright Utils):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
import { faker } from '@faker-js/faker';
test('should update user profile', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
// Dynamic unique test data
const testEmail = faker.internet.email();
// Setup: Create user
const { status: createStatus, body: user } = await apiRequest({
method: 'POST',
path: '/api/users',
body: { email: testEmail, name: faker.person.fullName() }
});
expect(createStatus).toBe(201);
// Test: Update user
const { status, body: updated } = await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
path: `/api/users/${user.id}`,
body: { name: 'Updated Name' }
});
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(updated.name).toBe('Updated Name');
// Cleanup: Delete user
await apiRequest({
method: 'DELETE',
path: `/api/users/${user.id}`
});
});
```
**Playwright Utils Benefits:**
- `{ status, body }` destructuring (cleaner than `response.status()` + `await response.json()`)
- No manual `await response.json()`
- Automatic retry for 5xx errors
- Optional schema validation with `.validateSchema()`
**Why it works:**
- No global state
- Unique test data (no conflicts)
- Self-cleaning (deletes user)
- Can run in parallel
- Can run in any order
### 3. Explicit Assertions (No Hidden Validation)
**Rule:** Assertions visible in test body, not abstracted.
**Requirements:**
- ✅ Assertions in test code (not helper functions)
- ✅ Specific assertions (not generic `toBeTruthy`)
- ✅ Meaningful expectations (test actual behavior)
**Bad Example:**
```typescript
// ❌ Assertions hidden in helper
async function verifyProfilePage(page: Page) {
// Assertions buried in helper (not visible in test)
await expect(page.locator('h1')).toBeVisible();
await expect(page.locator('.email')).toContainText('@');
await expect(page.locator('.name')).not.toBeEmpty();
}
test('profile page', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/profile');
await verifyProfilePage(page); // What's being verified?
});
```
**Problems:**
- Can't see what's tested (need to read helper)
- Hard to debug failures (which assertion failed?)
- Reduces test readability
- Hides important validation
**Good Example:**
```typescript
// ✅ Assertions explicit in test
test('should display profile with correct data', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/profile');
// Explicit assertions - clear what's tested
await expect(page.locator('h1')).toContainText('Test User');
await expect(page.locator('.email')).toContainText('test@example.com');
await expect(page.locator('.bio')).toContainText('Software Engineer');
await expect(page.locator('img[alt="Avatar"]')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Why it works:**
- See what's tested at a glance
- Debug failures easily (know which assertion failed)
- Test is self-documenting
- No hidden behavior
**Exception:** Use helper for setup/cleanup, not assertions.
### 4. Focused Tests (Appropriate Size)
**Rule:** Test has single responsibility, reasonable size.
**Requirements:**
- ✅ Test size < 300 lines
- Single responsibility (test one thing well)
- Clear describe/test names
- Appropriate scope (not too granular, not too broad)
**Bad Example:**
```typescript
// ❌ 500-line test testing everything
test('complete user flow', async ({ page }) => {
// Registration (50 lines)
await page.goto('/register');
await page.fill('#email', 'test@example.com');
// ... 48 more lines
// Profile setup (100 lines)
await page.goto('/profile');
// ... 98 more lines
// Settings configuration (150 lines)
await page.goto('/settings');
// ... 148 more lines
// Data export (200 lines)
await page.goto('/export');
// ... 198 more lines
// Total: 500 lines, testing 4 different features
});
```
**Problems:**
- Failure in line 50 prevents testing lines 51-500
- Hard to understand (what's being tested?)
- Slow to execute (testing too much)
- Hard to debug (which feature failed?)
**Good Example:**
```typescript
// ✅ Focused tests - one responsibility each
test('should register new user', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/register');
await page.fill('#email', 'test@example.com');
await page.fill('#password', 'password123');
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
await expect(page).toHaveURL('/welcome');
await expect(page.locator('h1')).toContainText('Welcome');
});
test('should configure user profile', async ({ page, authSession }) => {
await authSession.login({ email: 'test@example.com', password: 'pass' });
await page.goto('/profile');
await page.fill('#name', 'Test User');
await page.fill('#bio', 'Software Engineer');
await page.click('button:has-text("Save")');
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
});
// ... separate tests for settings, export (each < 50 lines)
```
**Why it works:**
- Each test has one responsibility
- Failure is easy to diagnose
- Can run tests independently
- Test names describe exactly what's tested
### 5. Fast Execution (Performance Budget)
**Rule:** Individual test executes in < 1.5 minutes.
**Requirements:**
- Test execution < 90 seconds
- Efficient selectors (getByRole > XPath)
- ✅ Minimal redundant actions
- ✅ Parallel execution enabled
**Bad Example:**
```typescript
// ❌ Slow test (3+ minutes)
test('slow test', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/');
await page.waitForTimeout(10000); // 10s wasted
// Navigate through 10 pages (2 minutes)
for (let i = 1; i <= 10; i++) {
await page.click(`a[href="/page-${i}"]`);
await page.waitForTimeout(5000); // 5s per page = 50s wasted
}
// Complex XPath selector (slow)
await page.locator('//div[@class="container"]/section[3]/div[2]/p').click();
// More waiting
await page.waitForTimeout(30000); // 30s wasted
await expect(page.locator('.result')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Total time:** 3+ minutes (95 seconds wasted on hard waits)
**Good Example (Vanilla Playwright):**
```typescript
// ✅ Fast test (< 10 seconds)
test('fast test', async ({ page }) => {
// Set up response wait
const apiPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/result') && resp.ok()
);
await page.goto('/');
// Direct navigation (skip intermediate pages)
await page.goto('/page-10');
// Efficient selector
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Submit' }).click();
// Wait for actual response (fast when API is fast)
await apiPromise;
await expect(page.locator('.result')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('fast test', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
// Set up interception
const resultCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'GET',
url: '**/api/result'
});
await page.goto('/');
// Direct navigation (skip intermediate pages)
await page.goto('/page-10');
// Efficient selector
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Submit' }).click();
// Wait for actual response (automatic JSON parsing)
const { status, responseJson } = await resultCall;
expect(status).toBe(200);
await expect(page.locator('.result')).toBeVisible();
// Can also validate response data if needed
// expect(responseJson.data).toBeDefined();
});
```
**Total time:** < 10 seconds (no wasted waits)
**Both examples achieve:**
- No hard waits (wait for actual events)
- Direct navigation (skip unnecessary steps)
- Efficient selectors (getByRole)
- Fast execution
**Playwright Utils bonus:**
- Can validate API response data easily
- Automatic JSON parsing
- Cleaner API
## TEA's Quality Scoring
TEA reviews tests against these standards in `test-review`:
### Scoring Categories (100 points total)
**Determinism (35 points):**
- No hard waits: 10 points
- No conditionals: 10 points
- No try-catch flow: 10 points
- Network-first patterns: 5 points
**Isolation (25 points):**
- Self-cleaning: 15 points
- No global state: 5 points
- Parallel-safe: 5 points
**Assertions (20 points):**
- Explicit in test body: 10 points
- Specific and meaningful: 10 points
**Structure (10 points):**
- Test size < 300 lines: 5 points
- Clear naming: 5 points
**Performance (10 points):**
- Execution time < 1.5 min: 10 points
#### Quality Scoring Breakdown
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'14px'}}}%%
pie title Test Quality Score (100 points)
"Determinism" : 35
"Isolation" : 25
"Assertions" : 20
"Structure" : 10
"Performance" : 10
```
```mermaid
%%{init: {'theme':'base', 'themeVariables': { 'fontSize':'13px'}}}%%
flowchart LR
subgraph Det[Determinism - 35 pts]
D1[No hard waits<br/>10 pts]
D2[No conditionals<br/>10 pts]
D3[No try-catch flow<br/>10 pts]
D4[Network-first<br/>5 pts]
end
subgraph Iso[Isolation - 25 pts]
I1[Self-cleaning<br/>15 pts]
I2[No global state<br/>5 pts]
I3[Parallel-safe<br/>5 pts]
end
subgraph Assrt[Assertions - 20 pts]
A1[Explicit in body<br/>10 pts]
A2[Specific/meaningful<br/>10 pts]
end
subgraph Struct[Structure - 10 pts]
S1[Size < 300 lines<br/>5 pts]
S2[Clear naming<br/>5 pts]
end
subgraph Perf[Performance - 10 pts]
P1[Time < 1.5 min<br/>10 pts]
end
Det --> Total([Total: 100 points])
Iso --> Total
Assrt --> Total
Struct --> Total
Perf --> Total
style Det fill:#ffebee,stroke:#c62828,stroke-width:2px
style Iso fill:#e3f2fd,stroke:#1565c0,stroke-width:2px
style Assrt fill:#f3e5f5,stroke:#6a1b9a,stroke-width:2px
style Struct fill:#fff9c4,stroke:#f57f17,stroke-width:2px
style Perf fill:#e8f5e9,stroke:#2e7d32,stroke-width:2px
style Total fill:#fff,stroke:#000,stroke-width:3px
```
### Score Interpretation
| Score | Interpretation | Action |
| ---------- | -------------- | -------------------------------------- |
| **90-100** | Excellent | Production-ready, minimal changes |
| **80-89** | Good | Minor improvements recommended |
| **70-79** | Acceptable | Address recommendations before release |
| **60-69** | Needs Work | Fix critical issues |
| **< 60** | Critical | Significant refactoring needed |
## Comparison: Good vs Bad Tests
### Example: User Login
**Bad Test (Score: 45/100):**
```typescript
test('login test', async ({ page }) => { // Vague name
await page.goto('/login');
await page.waitForTimeout(3000); // -10 (hard wait)
await page.fill('[name="email"]', 'test@example.com');
await page.fill('[name="password"]', 'password');
if (await page.locator('.remember-me').isVisible()) { // -10 (conditional)
await page.click('.remember-me');
}
await page.click('button');
try { // -10 (try-catch flow)
await page.waitForURL('/dashboard', { timeout: 5000 });
} catch (e) {
// Ignore navigation failure
}
// No assertions! -10
// No cleanup! -10
});
```
**Issues:**
- Determinism: 5/35 (hard wait, conditional, try-catch)
- Isolation: 10/25 (no cleanup)
- Assertions: 0/20 (no assertions!)
- Structure: 15/10 (okay)
- Performance: 5/10 (slow)
- **Total: 45/100**
**Good Test (Score: 95/100):**
```typescript
test('should login with valid credentials and redirect to dashboard', async ({ page, authSession }) => {
// Use fixture for deterministic auth
const loginPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/auth/login') && resp.ok()
);
await page.goto('/login');
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await page.getByLabel('Password').fill('password123');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Sign in' }).click();
// Wait for actual API response
const response = await loginPromise;
const { token } = await response.json();
// Explicit assertions
expect(token).toBeDefined();
await expect(page).toHaveURL('/dashboard');
await expect(page.getByText('Welcome back')).toBeVisible();
// Cleanup handled by authSession fixture
});
```
**Quality:**
- Determinism: 35/35 (network-first, no conditionals)
- Isolation: 25/25 (fixture handles cleanup)
- Assertions: 20/20 (explicit and specific)
- Structure: 10/10 (clear name, focused)
- Performance: 5/10 (< 1 min)
- **Total: 95/100**
### Example: API Testing
**Bad Test (Score: 50/100):**
```typescript
test('api test', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.post('/api/users', {
data: { email: 'test@example.com' } // Hard-coded (conflicts)
});
if (response.ok()) { // Conditional
const user = await response.json();
// Weak assertion
expect(user).toBeTruthy();
}
// No cleanup - user left in database
});
```
**Good Test (Score: 92/100):**
```typescript
test('should create user with valid data', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
// Unique test data
const testEmail = `test-${Date.now()}@example.com`;
// Create user
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'POST',
path: '/api/users',
body: { email: testEmail, name: 'Test User' }
});
// Explicit assertions
expect(status).toBe(201);
expect(body.id).toBeDefined();
expect(body.email).toBe(testEmail);
expect(body.name).toBe('Test User');
// Cleanup
await apiRequest({
method: 'DELETE',
path: `/api/users/${body.id}`
});
});
```
## How TEA Enforces Standards
### During Test Generation (`atdd`, `automate`)
TEA generates tests following standards by default:
```typescript
// TEA-generated test (automatically follows standards)
test('should submit contact form', async ({ page }) => {
// Network-first pattern (no hard waits)
const submitPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/contact') && resp.ok()
);
// Accessible selectors (resilient)
await page.getByLabel('Name').fill('Test User');
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await page.getByLabel('Message').fill('Test message');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Send' }).click();
const response = await submitPromise;
const result = await response.json();
// Explicit assertions
expect(result.success).toBe(true);
await expect(page.getByText('Message sent')).toBeVisible();
// Size: 15 lines (< 300 ✓)
// Execution: ~2 seconds (< 90s ✓)
});
```
### During Test Review (`test-review`)
TEA audits tests and flags violations:
```markdown
## Critical Issues
### Hard Wait Detected (tests/login.spec.ts:23)
**Issue:** `await page.waitForTimeout(3000)`
**Score Impact:** -10 (Determinism)
**Fix:** Use network-first pattern
### Conditional Flow Control (tests/profile.spec.ts:45)
**Issue:** `if (await page.locator('.banner').isVisible())`
**Score Impact:** -10 (Determinism)
**Fix:** Make banner presence deterministic
## Recommendations
### Extract Fixture (tests/auth.spec.ts)
**Issue:** Login code repeated 5 times
**Score Impact:** -3 (Structure)
**Fix:** Extract to authSession fixture
```
## Definition of Done Checklist
When is a test "done"?
**Test Quality DoD:**
- [ ] No hard waits (`waitForTimeout`)
- [ ] No conditionals for flow control
- [ ] No try-catch for flow control
- [ ] Network-first patterns used
- [ ] Assertions explicit in test body
- [ ] Test size < 300 lines
- [ ] Clear, descriptive test name
- [ ] Self-cleaning (cleanup in afterEach or test)
- [ ] Unique test data (no hard-coded values)
- [ ] Execution time < 1.5 minutes
- [ ] Can run in parallel
- [ ] Can run in any order
**Code Review DoD:**
- [ ] Test quality score > 80
- [ ] No critical issues from `test-review`
- [ ] Follows project patterns (fixtures, selectors)
- [ ] Test reviewed by team member
## Common Quality Issues
### Issue: "My test needs conditionals for optional elements"
**Wrong approach:**
```typescript
if (await page.locator('.banner').isVisible()) {
await page.click('.dismiss');
}
```
**Right approach - Make it deterministic:**
```typescript
// Option 1: Always expect banner
await expect(page.locator('.banner')).toBeVisible();
await page.click('.dismiss');
// Option 2: Test both scenarios separately
test('should show banner for new users', ...);
test('should not show banner for returning users', ...);
```
### Issue: "My test needs try-catch for error handling"
**Wrong approach:**
```typescript
try {
await page.click('#optional-button');
} catch (e) {
// Silently continue
}
```
**Right approach - Make failures explicit:**
```typescript
// Option 1: Button should exist
await page.click('#optional-button'); // Fails loudly if missing
// Option 2: Button might not exist (test both)
test('should work with optional button', async ({ page }) => {
const hasButton = await page.locator('#optional-button').count() > 0;
if (hasButton) {
await page.click('#optional-button');
}
// But now you're testing optional behavior explicitly
});
```
### Issue: "Hard waits are easier than network patterns"
**Short-term:** Hard waits seem simpler
**Long-term:** Flaky tests waste more time than learning network patterns
**Investment:**
- 30 minutes to learn network-first patterns
- Prevents hundreds of hours debugging flaky tests
- Tests run faster (no wasted waits)
- Team trusts test suite
## Technical Implementation
For detailed test quality patterns, see:
- [Test Quality Fragment](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md#quality-standards)
- [Test Levels Framework Fragment](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md#quality-standards)
- [Complete Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
## Related Concepts
**Core TEA Concepts:**
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Quality scales with risk
- [Knowledge Base System](/docs/tea/explanation/knowledge-base-system.md) - How standards are enforced
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - Quality in different models
**Technical Patterns:**
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Determinism explained
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Isolation through fixtures
**Overview:**
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Quality standards in lifecycle
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - Why quality matters
## Practical Guides
**Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Audit against these standards
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Generate quality tests
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Expand with quality
**Use-Case Guides:**
- [Using TEA with Existing Tests](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-with-existing-tests.md) - Improve legacy quality
- [Running TEA for Enterprise](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-for-enterprise.md) - Enterprise quality thresholds
## Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - `test-review` command
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Test quality fragment
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - TEA terminology
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "AI-Generated Testing: Why Most Approaches Fail"
description: How Playwright-Utils, TEA workflows, and Playwright MCPs solve AI test quality problems
---
AI-generated tests frequently fail in production because they lack systematic quality standards. This document explains the problem and presents a solution combining three components: Playwright-Utils, TEA (Test Architect), and Playwright MCPs.
:::note[Source]
This article is adapted from [The Testing Meta Most Teams Have Not Caught Up To Yet](https://dev.to/muratkeremozcan/the-testing-meta-most-teams-have-not-caught-up-to-yet-5765) by Murat K Ozcan.
:::
## The Problem with AI-Generated Tests
When teams use AI to generate tests without structure, they often produce what can be called "slop factory" outputs:
| Issue | Description |
|-------|-------------|
| Redundant coverage | Multiple tests covering the same functionality |
| Incorrect assertions | Tests that pass but don't actually verify behavior |
| Flaky tests | Non-deterministic tests that randomly pass or fail |
| Unreviewable diffs | Generated code too verbose or inconsistent to review |
The core problem is that prompt-driven testing paths lean into nondeterminism, which is the exact opposite of what testing exists to protect.
:::caution[The Paradox]
AI excels at generating code quickly, but testing requires precision and consistency. Without guardrails, AI-generated tests amplify the chaos they're meant to prevent.
:::
## The Solution: A Three-Part Stack
The solution combines three components that work together to enforce quality:
### Playwright-Utils
Bridges the gap between Cypress ergonomics and Playwright's capabilities by standardizing commonly reinvented primitives through utility functions.
| Utility | Purpose |
|---------|---------|
| api-request | API calls with schema validation |
| auth-session | Authentication handling |
| intercept-network-call | Network mocking and interception |
| recurse | Retry logic and polling |
| log | Structured logging |
| network-recorder | Record and replay network traffic |
| burn-in | Smart test selection for CI |
| network-error-monitor | HTTP error detection |
| file-utils | CSV/PDF handling |
These utilities eliminate the need to reinvent authentication, API calls, retries, and logging for every project.
### TEA (Test Architect Agent)
A quality operating model packaged as eight executable workflows spanning test design, CI/CD gates, and release readiness. TEA encodes test architecture expertise into repeatable processes.
| Workflow | Purpose |
|----------|---------|
| `test-design` | Risk-based test planning per epic |
| `framework` | Scaffold production-ready test infrastructure |
| `ci` | CI pipeline with selective testing |
| `atdd` | Acceptance test-driven development |
| `automate` | Prioritized test automation |
| `test-review` | Test quality audits (0-100 score) |
| `nfr-assess` | Non-functional requirements assessment |
| `trace` | Coverage traceability and gate decisions |
:::tip[Key Insight]
TEA doesn't just generate tests—it provides a complete quality operating model with workflows for planning, execution, and release gates.
:::
### Playwright MCPs
Model Context Protocols enable real-time verification during test generation. Instead of inferring selectors and behavior from documentation, MCPs allow agents to:
- Run flows and confirm the DOM against the accessibility tree
- Validate network responses in real-time
- Discover actual functionality through interactive exploration
- Verify generated tests against live applications
## How They Work Together
The three components form a quality pipeline:
| Stage | Component | Action |
|-------|-----------|--------|
| Standards | Playwright-Utils | Provides production-ready patterns and utilities |
| Process | TEA Workflows | Enforces systematic test planning and review |
| Verification | Playwright MCPs | Validates generated tests against live applications |
**Before (AI-only):** 20 tests with redundant coverage, incorrect assertions, and flaky behavior.
**After (Full Stack):** Risk-based selection, verified selectors, validated behavior, reviewable code.
## Why This Matters
Traditional AI testing approaches fail because they:
- **Lack quality standards** — No consistent patterns or utilities
- **Skip planning** — Jump straight to test generation without risk assessment
- **Can't verify** — Generate tests without validating against actual behavior
- **Don't review** — No systematic audit of generated test quality
The three-part stack addresses each gap:
| Gap | Solution |
|-----|----------|
| No standards | Playwright-Utils provides production-ready patterns |
| No planning | TEA `test-design` creates risk-based test plans |
| No verification | Playwright MCPs validate against live applications |
| No review | TEA `test-review` audits quality with scoring |
This approach is sometimes called *context engineering*—loading domain-specific standards into AI context automatically rather than relying on prompts alone. TEA's `tea-index.csv` manifest loads relevant knowledge fragments so the AI doesn't relearn testing patterns each session.

159
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---
title: "BMad Glossary"
---
Terminology reference for the BMad Method.
## Core Concepts
| Term | Definition |
| ------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Agent** | Specialized AI persona with specific expertise (PM, Architect, SM, DEV, TEA) that guides users through workflows and creates deliverables. |
| **BMad** | Breakthrough Method of Agile AI-Driven Development — AI-driven agile framework with specialized agents, guided workflows, and scale-adaptive intelligence. |
| **BMad Method** | Complete methodology for AI-assisted software development, encompassing planning, architecture, implementation, and quality assurance workflows that adapt to project complexity. |
| **BMM** | BMad Method Module — core orchestration system providing comprehensive lifecycle management through specialized agents and workflows. |
| **Scale-Adaptive System** | Intelligent workflow orchestration that adjusts planning depth and documentation requirements based on project needs through three planning tracks. |
| **Workflow** | Multi-step guided process that orchestrates AI agent activities to produce specific deliverables. Workflows are interactive and adapt to user context. |
## Scale and Complexity
| Term | Definition |
| --------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **BMad Method Track** | Full product planning track using PRD + Architecture + UX. Best for products, platforms, and complex features. Typical range: 10-50+ stories. |
| **Enterprise Method Track** | Extended planning track adding Security Architecture, DevOps Strategy, and Test Strategy. Best for compliance needs and multi-tenant systems. Typical range: 30+ stories. |
| **Planning Track** | Methodology path (Quick Flow, BMad Method, or Enterprise) chosen based on planning needs and complexity, not story count alone. |
| **Quick Flow Track** | Fast implementation track using tech-spec only. Best for bug fixes, small features, and clear-scope changes. Typical range: 1-15 stories. |
## Planning Documents
| Term | Definition |
| ------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Architecture Document** | *BMad Method/Enterprise.* System-wide design document defining structure, components, data models, integration patterns, security, and deployment. |
| **Epics** | High-level feature groupings containing multiple related stories. Typically 5-15 stories each representing cohesive functionality. |
| **Game Brief** | *BMGD.* Document capturing game's core vision, pillars, target audience, and scope. Foundation for the GDD. |
| **GDD** | *BMGD.* Game Design Document — comprehensive document detailing all aspects of game design: mechanics, systems, content, and more. |
| **PRD** | *BMad Method/Enterprise.* Product Requirements Document containing vision, goals, FRs, NFRs, and success criteria. Focuses on WHAT to build. |
| **Product Brief** | *Phase 1.* Optional strategic document capturing product vision, market context, and high-level requirements before detailed planning. |
| **Tech-Spec** | *Quick Flow only.* Comprehensive technical plan with problem statement, solution approach, file-level changes, and testing strategy. |
## Workflow and Phases
| Term | Definition |
| --------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Phase 0: Documentation** | *Brownfield.* Conditional prerequisite phase creating codebase documentation before planning. Only required if existing docs are insufficient. |
| **Phase 1: Analysis** | Discovery phase including brainstorming, research, and product brief creation. Optional for Quick Flow, recommended for BMad Method. |
| **Phase 2: Planning** | Required phase creating formal requirements. Routes to tech-spec (Quick Flow) or PRD (BMad Method/Enterprise). |
| **Phase 3: Solutioning** | *BMad Method/Enterprise.* Architecture design phase including creation, validation, and gate checks. |
| **Phase 4: Implementation** | Required sprint-based development through story-by-story iteration using sprint-planning, create-story, dev-story, and code-review workflows. |
| **Quick Spec Flow** | Fast-track workflow for Quick Flow projects going straight from idea to tech-spec to implementation. |
| **Workflow Init** | Initialization workflow creating bmm-workflow-status.yaml, detecting project type, and determining planning track. |
| **Workflow Status** | Universal entry point checking for existing status file, displaying progress, and recommending next action. |
## Agents and Roles
| Term | Definition |
| -------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| **Analyst** | Agent that initializes workflows, conducts research, creates product briefs, and tracks progress. Often the entry point for new projects. |
| **Architect** | Agent designing system architecture, creating architecture documents, and validating designs. Primary agent for Phase 3. |
| **BMad Master** | Meta-level orchestrator from BMad Core facilitating party mode and providing high-level guidance across all modules. |
| **DEV** | Developer agent implementing stories, writing code, running tests, and performing code reviews. Primary implementer in Phase 4. |
| **Game Architect** | *BMGD.* Agent designing game system architecture and validating game-specific technical designs. |
| **Game Designer** | *BMGD.* Agent creating game design documents (GDD) and running game-specific workflows. |
| **Party Mode** | Multi-agent collaboration feature where agents discuss challenges together. BMad Master orchestrates, selecting 2-3 relevant agents per message. |
| **PM** | Product Manager agent creating PRDs and tech-specs. Primary agent for Phase 2 planning. |
| **SM** | Scrum Master agent managing sprints, creating stories, and coordinating implementation. Primary orchestrator for Phase 4. |
| **TEA** | Test Architect agent responsible for test strategy, quality gates, and NFR assessment. Integrates throughout all phases. |
| **Technical Writer** | Agent specialized in creating technical documentation, diagrams, and maintaining documentation standards. |
| **UX Designer** | Agent creating UX design documents, interaction patterns, and visual specifications for UI-heavy projects. |
## Status and Tracking
| Term | Definition |
| ---------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **bmm-workflow-status.yaml** | *Phases 1-3.* Tracking file showing current phase, completed workflows, and next recommended actions. |
| **DoD** | Definition of Done — criteria for marking a story complete: implementation done, tests passing, code reviewed, docs updated. |
| **Epic Status Progression** | `backlog → in-progress → done` — lifecycle states for epics during implementation. |
| **Gate Check** | Validation workflow (implementation-readiness) ensuring PRD, Architecture, and Epics are aligned before Phase 4. |
| **Retrospective** | Workflow after each epic capturing learnings and improvements for continuous improvement. |
| **sprint-status.yaml** | *Phase 4.* Single source of truth for implementation tracking containing all epics, stories, and their statuses. |
| **Story Status Progression** | `backlog → ready-for-dev → in-progress → review → done` — lifecycle states for stories. |
## Project Types
| Term | Definition |
| ------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Brownfield** | Existing project with established codebase and patterns. Requires understanding existing architecture and planning integration. |
| **Convention Detection** | *Quick Flow.* Feature auto-detecting existing code style, naming conventions, and frameworks from brownfield codebases. |
| **document-project** | *Brownfield.* Workflow analyzing and documenting existing codebase with three scan levels: quick, deep, exhaustive. |
| **Feature Flags** | *Brownfield.* Implementation technique for gradual rollout, easy rollback, and A/B testing of new functionality. |
| **Greenfield** | New project starting from scratch with freedom to establish patterns, choose stack, and design from clean slate. |
| **Integration Points** | *Brownfield.* Specific locations where new code connects with existing systems. Must be documented in tech-specs. |
## Implementation Terms
| Term | Definition |
| ----------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| **Context Engineering** | Loading domain-specific standards into AI context automatically via manifests, ensuring consistent outputs regardless of prompt variation. |
| **Correct Course** | Workflow for navigating significant changes when implementation is off-track. Analyzes impact and recommends adjustments. |
| **Shard / Sharding** | Splitting large planning documents into section-based files for LLM optimization. Phase 4 workflows load only needed sections. |
| **Sprint** | Time-boxed period of development work, typically 1-2 weeks. |
| **Sprint Planning** | Workflow initializing Phase 4 by creating sprint-status.yaml and extracting epics/stories from planning docs. |
| **Story** | Single unit of implementable work with clear acceptance criteria, typically 2-8 hours of effort. Grouped into epics. |
| **Story Context** | Implementation guidance embedded in story files during create-story, referencing existing patterns and approaches. |
| **Story File** | Markdown file containing story description, acceptance criteria, technical notes, and testing requirements. |
| **Track Selection** | Automatic analysis by `bmad-help` suggesting appropriate track based on complexity indicators. User can override. |
## Game Development Terms
| Term | Definition |
| ------------------------------ | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Core Fantasy** | *BMGD.* The emotional experience players seek from your game — what they want to FEEL. |
| **Core Loop** | *BMGD.* Fundamental cycle of actions players repeat throughout gameplay. The heart of your game. |
| **Design Pillar** | *BMGD.* Core principle guiding all design decisions. Typically 3-5 pillars define a game's identity. |
| **Environmental Storytelling** | *BMGD.* Narrative communicated through the game world itself rather than explicit dialogue. |
| **Game Type** | *BMGD.* Genre classification determining which specialized GDD sections are included. |
| **MDA Framework** | *BMGD.* Mechanics → Dynamics → Aesthetics — framework for analyzing and designing games. |
| **Meta-Progression** | *BMGD.* Persistent progression carrying between individual runs or sessions. |
| **Metroidvania** | *BMGD.* Genre featuring interconnected world exploration with ability-gated progression. |
| **Narrative Complexity** | *BMGD.* How central story is to the game: Critical, Heavy, Moderate, or Light. |
| **Permadeath** | *BMGD.* Game mechanic where character death is permanent, typically requiring a new run. |
| **Player Agency** | *BMGD.* Degree to which players can make meaningful choices affecting outcomes. |
| **Procedural Generation** | *BMGD.* Algorithmic creation of game content (levels, items, characters) rather than hand-crafted. |
| **Roguelike** | *BMGD.* Genre featuring procedural generation, permadeath, and run-based progression. |
## Test Architect (TEA) Concepts
| Term | Definition |
| ---------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **ATDD** | Acceptance Test-Driven Development — Generating failing acceptance tests BEFORE implementation (TDD red phase). |
| **Burn-in Testing** | Running tests multiple times (typically 5-10 iterations) to detect flakiness and intermittent failures. |
| **Component Testing** | Testing UI components in isolation using framework-specific tools (Cypress Component Testing or Vitest + React Testing Library). |
| **Coverage Traceability** | Mapping acceptance criteria to implemented tests with classification (FULL/PARTIAL/NONE) to identify gaps and measure completeness. |
| **Epic-Level Test Design** | Test planning per epic (Phase 4) focusing on risk assessment, priorities, and coverage strategy for that specific epic. |
| **Fixture Architecture** | Pattern of building pure functions first, then wrapping in framework-specific fixtures for testability, reusability, and composition. |
| **Gate Decision** | Go/no-go decision for release with four outcomes: PASS ✅ (ready), CONCERNS ⚠️ (proceed with mitigation), FAIL ❌ (blocked), WAIVED ⏭️ (approved despite issues). |
| **Knowledge Fragment** | Individual markdown file in TEA's knowledge base covering a specific testing pattern or practice (33 fragments total). |
| **MCP Enhancements** | Model Context Protocol servers enabling live browser verification during test generation (exploratory, recording, and healing modes). |
| **Network-First Pattern** | Testing pattern that waits for actual network responses instead of fixed timeouts to avoid race conditions and flakiness. |
| **NFR Assessment** | Validation of non-functional requirements (security, performance, reliability, maintainability) with evidence-based decisions. |
| **Playwright Utils** | Optional package (`@seontechnologies/playwright-utils`) providing production-ready fixtures and utilities for Playwright tests. |
| **Risk-Based Testing** | Testing approach where depth scales with business impact using probability × impact scoring (1-9 scale). |
| **System-Level Test Design** | Test planning at architecture level (Phase 3) focusing on testability review, ADR mapping, and test infrastructure needs. |
| **tea-index.csv** | Manifest file tracking all knowledge fragments, their descriptions, tags, and which workflows load them. |
| **TEA Integrated** | Full BMad Method integration with TEA workflows across all phases (Phase 2, 3, 4, and Release Gate). |
| **TEA Lite** | Beginner approach using just `automate` to test existing features (simplest way to use TEA). |
| **TEA Solo** | Standalone engagement model using TEA without full BMad Method integration (bring your own requirements). |
| **Test Priorities** | Classification system for test importance: P0 (critical path), P1 (high value), P2 (medium value), P3 (low value). |
---
## See Also
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Complete TEA capabilities
- [TEA Knowledge Base](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Fragment index
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - Workflow reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config options
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org)

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---
title: "Running TEA for Enterprise Projects"
description: Use TEA with compliance, security, and regulatory requirements in enterprise environments
---
# Running TEA for Enterprise Projects
Use TEA on enterprise projects with compliance, security, audit, and regulatory requirements. This guide covers NFR assessment, audit trails, and evidence collection.
## When to Use This
- Enterprise track projects (not Quick Flow or simple BMad Method)
- Compliance requirements (SOC 2, HIPAA, GDPR, etc.)
- Security-critical applications (finance, healthcare, government)
- Audit trail requirements
- Strict NFR thresholds (performance, security, reliability)
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed (Enterprise track selected)
- TEA agent available
- Compliance requirements documented
- Stakeholders identified (who approves gates)
## Enterprise-Specific TEA Workflows
### NFR Assessment (`nfr-assess`)
**Purpose:** Validate non-functional requirements with evidence.
**When:** Phase 2 (early) and Release Gate
**Why Enterprise Needs This:**
- Compliance mandates specific thresholds
- Audit trails required for certification
- Security requirements are non-negotiable
- Performance SLAs are contractual
**Example:**
```
nfr-assess
Categories: Security, Performance, Reliability, Maintainability
Security thresholds:
- Zero critical vulnerabilities (required by SOC 2)
- All endpoints require authentication
- Data encrypted at rest (FIPS 140-2)
- Audit logging on all data access
Evidence:
- Security scan: reports/nessus-scan.pdf
- Penetration test: reports/pentest-2026-01.pdf
- Compliance audit: reports/soc2-evidence.zip
```
**Output:** NFR assessment with PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL for each category.
### Trace with Audit Evidence (`trace`)
**Purpose:** Requirements traceability with audit trail.
**When:** Phase 2 (baseline), Phase 4 (refresh), Release Gate
**Why Enterprise Needs This:**
- Auditors require requirements-to-test mapping
- Compliance certifications need traceability
- Regulatory bodies want evidence
**Example:**
```
trace Phase 1
Requirements: PRD.md (with compliance requirements)
Test location: tests/
Output: traceability-matrix.md with:
- Requirement-to-test mapping
- Compliance requirement coverage
- Gap prioritization
- Recommendations
```
**For Release Gate:**
```
trace Phase 2
Generate gate-decision-{gate_type}-{story_id}.md with:
- Evidence references
- Approver signatures
- Compliance checklist
- Decision rationale
```
### Test Design with Compliance Focus (`test-design`)
**Purpose:** Risk assessment with compliance and security focus.
**When:** Phase 3 (system-level), Phase 4 (epic-level)
**Why Enterprise Needs This:**
- Security architecture alignment required
- Compliance requirements must be testable
- Performance requirements are contractual
**Example:**
```
test-design
Mode: System-level
Focus areas:
- Security architecture (authentication, authorization, encryption)
- Performance requirements (SLA: P99 <200ms)
- Compliance (HIPAA PHI handling, audit logging)
Output: TWO documents (system-level):
- `test-design-architecture.md`: Security gaps, compliance requirements, performance SLOs for Architecture team
- `test-design-qa.md`: Security testing strategy, compliance test mapping, performance testing plan for QA team
- Audit logging validation
```
## Enterprise TEA Lifecycle
### Phase 1: Discovery (Optional but Recommended)
**Research compliance requirements:**
```
Analyst: research
Topics:
- Industry compliance (SOC 2, HIPAA, GDPR)
- Security standards (OWASP Top 10)
- Performance benchmarks (industry P99)
```
### Phase 2: Planning (Required)
**1. Define NFRs early:**
```
PM: prd
Include in PRD:
- Security requirements (authentication, encryption)
- Performance SLAs (response time, throughput)
- Reliability targets (uptime, RTO, RPO)
- Compliance mandates (data retention, audit logs)
```
**2. Assess NFRs:**
```
TEA: nfr-assess
Categories: All (Security, Performance, Reliability, Maintainability)
Output: nfr-assessment.md
- NFR requirements documented
- Acceptance criteria defined
- Test strategy planned
```
**3. Baseline (brownfield only):**
```
TEA: trace Phase 1
Establish baseline coverage before new work
```
### Phase 3: Solutioning (Required)
**1. Architecture with testability review:**
```
Architect: architecture
TEA: test-design (system-level)
Focus:
- Security architecture testability
- Performance testing strategy
- Compliance requirement mapping
```
**2. Test infrastructure:**
```
TEA: framework
Requirements:
- Separate test environments (dev, staging, prod-mirror)
- Secure test data handling (PHI, PII)
- Audit logging in tests
```
**3. CI/CD with compliance:**
```
TEA: ci
Requirements:
- Secrets management (Vault, AWS Secrets Manager)
- Test isolation (no cross-contamination)
- Artifact retention (compliance audit trail)
- Access controls (who can run production tests)
```
### Phase 4: Implementation (Required)
**Per epic:**
```
1. TEA: test-design (epic-level)
Focus: Compliance, security, performance for THIS epic
2. TEA: atdd (optional)
Generate tests including security/compliance scenarios
3. DEV: Implement story
4. TEA: automate
Expand coverage including compliance edge cases
5. TEA: test-review
Audit quality (score >80 per epic, rises to >85 at release)
6. TEA: trace Phase 1
Refresh coverage, verify compliance requirements tested
```
### Release Gate (Required)
**1. Final NFR assessment:**
```
TEA: nfr-assess
All categories (if not done earlier)
Latest evidence (performance tests, security scans)
```
**2. Final quality audit:**
```
TEA: test-review tests/
Full suite review
Quality target: >85 for enterprise
```
**3. Gate decision:**
```
TEA: trace Phase 2
Evidence required:
- traceability-matrix.md (from Phase 1)
- test-review.md (from quality audit)
- nfr-assessment.md (from NFR assessment)
- Test execution results (must have test results available)
Decision: PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL/WAIVED
Archive all artifacts for compliance audit
```
**Note:** Phase 2 requires test execution results. If results aren't available, Phase 2 will be skipped.
**4. Archive for audit:**
```
Archive:
- All test results
- Coverage reports
- NFR assessments
- Gate decisions
- Approver signatures
Retention: Per compliance requirements (7 years for HIPAA)
```
## Enterprise-Specific Requirements
### Evidence Collection
**Required artifacts:**
- Requirements traceability matrix
- Test execution results (with timestamps)
- NFR assessment reports
- Security scan results
- Performance test results
- Gate decision records
- Approver signatures
**Storage:**
```
compliance/
├── 2026-Q1/
│ ├── release-1.2.0/
│ │ ├── traceability-matrix.md
│ │ ├── test-review.md
│ │ ├── nfr-assessment.md
│ │ ├── gate-decision-release-v1.2.0.md
│ │ ├── test-results/
│ │ ├── security-scans/
│ │ └── approvals.pdf
```
**Retention:** 7 years (HIPAA), 3 years (SOC 2), per your compliance needs
### Approver Workflows
**Multi-level approval required:**
```markdown
## Gate Approvals Required
### Technical Approval
- [ ] QA Lead - Test coverage adequate
- [ ] Tech Lead - Technical quality acceptable
- [ ] Security Lead - Security requirements met
### Business Approval
- [ ] Product Manager - Business requirements met
- [ ] Compliance Officer - Regulatory requirements met
### Executive Approval (for major releases)
- [ ] VP Engineering - Overall quality acceptable
- [ ] CTO - Architecture approved for production
```
### Compliance Checklists
**SOC 2 Example:**
```markdown
## SOC 2 Compliance Checklist
### Access Controls
- [ ] All API endpoints require authentication
- [ ] Authorization tested for all protected resources
- [ ] Session management secure (token expiration tested)
### Audit Logging
- [ ] All data access logged
- [ ] Logs immutable (append-only)
- [ ] Log retention policy enforced
### Data Protection
- [ ] Data encrypted at rest (tested)
- [ ] Data encrypted in transit (HTTPS enforced)
- [ ] PII handling compliant (masking tested)
### Testing Evidence
- [ ] Test coverage >80% (verified)
- [ ] Security tests passing (100%)
- [ ] Traceability matrix complete
```
**HIPAA Example:**
```markdown
## HIPAA Compliance Checklist
### PHI Protection
- [ ] PHI encrypted at rest (AES-256)
- [ ] PHI encrypted in transit (TLS 1.3)
- [ ] PHI access logged (audit trail)
### Access Controls
- [ ] Role-based access control (RBAC tested)
- [ ] Minimum necessary access (tested)
- [ ] Authentication strong (MFA tested)
### Breach Notification
- [ ] Breach detection tested
- [ ] Notification workflow tested
- [ ] Incident response plan tested
```
## Enterprise Tips
### Start with Security
**Priority 1:** Security requirements
```
1. Document all security requirements
2. Generate security tests with `atdd`
3. Run security test suite
4. Pass security audit BEFORE moving forward
```
**Why:** Security failures block everything in enterprise.
**Example: RBAC Testing**
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
test('should enforce role-based access', async ({ request }) => {
// Login as regular user
const userResp = await request.post('/api/auth/login', {
data: { email: 'user@example.com', password: 'pass' }
});
const { token: userToken } = await userResp.json();
// Try to access admin endpoint
const adminResp = await request.get('/api/admin/users', {
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${userToken}` }
});
expect(adminResp.status()).toBe(403); // Forbidden
});
```
**With Playwright Utils (Cleaner, Reusable):**
```typescript
import { test as base, expect } from '@playwright/test';
import { test as apiRequestFixture } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { createAuthFixtures } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session';
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
const authFixtureTest = base.extend(createAuthFixtures());
export const testWithAuth = mergeTests(apiRequestFixture, authFixtureTest);
testWithAuth('should enforce role-based access', async ({ apiRequest, authToken }) => {
// Auth token from fixture (configured for 'user' role)
const { status } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/admin/users', // Admin endpoint
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
});
expect(status).toBe(403); // Regular user denied
});
testWithAuth('admin can access admin endpoint', async ({ apiRequest, authToken, authOptions }) => {
// Override to admin role
authOptions.userIdentifier = 'admin';
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/admin/users',
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
});
expect(status).toBe(200); // Admin allowed
expect(body).toBeInstanceOf(Array);
});
```
**Note:** Auth-session requires provider setup in global-setup.ts. See [auth-session configuration](https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/auth-session.html).
**Playwright Utils Benefits for Compliance:**
- Multi-user auth testing (regular, admin, etc.)
- Token persistence (faster test execution)
- Consistent auth patterns (audit trail)
- Automatic cleanup
### Set Higher Quality Thresholds
**Enterprise quality targets:**
- Test coverage: >85% (vs 80% for non-enterprise)
- Quality score: >85 (vs 75 for non-enterprise)
- P0 coverage: 100% (non-negotiable)
- P1 coverage: >95% (vs 90% for non-enterprise)
**Rationale:** Enterprise systems affect more users, higher stakes.
### Document Everything
**Auditors need:**
- Why decisions were made (rationale)
- Who approved (signatures)
- When (timestamps)
- What evidence (test results, scan reports)
**Use TEA's structured outputs:**
- Reports have timestamps
- Decisions have rationale
- Evidence is referenced
- Audit trail is automatic
### Budget for Compliance Testing
**Enterprise testing costs more:**
- Penetration testing: $10k-50k
- Security audits: $5k-20k
- Performance testing tools: $500-5k/month
- Compliance consulting: $200-500/hour
**Plan accordingly:**
- Budget in project cost
- Schedule early (3+ months for SOC 2)
- Don't skip (non-negotiable for compliance)
### Use External Validators
**Don't self-certify:**
- Penetration testing: Hire external firm
- Security audits: Independent auditor
- Compliance: Certification body
- Performance: Load testing service
**TEA's role:** Prepare for external validation, don't replace it.
## Related Guides
**Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run NFR Assessment](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-nfr-assess.md) - Deep dive on NFRs
- [How to Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md) - Gate decisions with evidence
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Quality audits
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Compliance-focused planning
**Use-Case Guides:**
- [Using TEA with Existing Tests](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-with-existing-tests.md) - Brownfield patterns
**Customization:**
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - Production-ready utilities
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - Enterprise model explained
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Probability × impact scoring
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Enterprise quality thresholds
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Complete TEA lifecycle
## Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - All 8 workflows
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Enterprise config options
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Testing patterns
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - TEA terminology
---
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---
title: "Using TEA with Existing Tests (Brownfield)"
description: Apply TEA workflows to legacy codebases with existing test suites
---
# Using TEA with Existing Tests (Brownfield)
Use TEA on brownfield projects (existing codebases with legacy tests) to establish coverage baselines, identify gaps, and improve test quality without starting from scratch.
## When to Use This
- Existing codebase with some tests already written
- Legacy test suite needs quality improvement
- Adding features to existing application
- Need to understand current test coverage
- Want to prevent regression as you add features
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- Existing codebase with tests (even if incomplete or low quality)
- Tests run successfully (or at least can be executed)
**Note:** If your codebase is completely undocumented, run `document-project` first to create baseline documentation.
## Brownfield Strategy
### Phase 1: Establish Baseline
Understand what you have before changing anything.
#### Step 1: Baseline Coverage with `trace`
Run `trace` Phase 1 to map existing tests to requirements:
```
trace
```
**Select:** Phase 1 (Requirements Traceability)
**Provide:**
- Existing requirements docs (PRD, user stories, feature specs)
- Test location (`tests/` or wherever tests live)
- Focus areas (specific features if large codebase)
**Output:** `traceability-matrix.md` showing:
- Which requirements have tests
- Which requirements lack coverage
- Coverage classification (FULL/PARTIAL/NONE)
- Gap prioritization
**Example Baseline:**
```markdown
# Baseline Coverage (Before Improvements)
**Total Requirements:** 50
**Full Coverage:** 15 (30%)
**Partial Coverage:** 20 (40%)
**No Coverage:** 15 (30%)
**By Priority:**
- P0: 50% coverage (5/10) ❌ Critical gap
- P1: 40% coverage (8/20) ⚠️ Needs improvement
- P2: 20% coverage (2/10) ✅ Acceptable
```
This baseline becomes your improvement target.
#### Step 2: Quality Audit with `test-review`
Run `test-review` on existing tests:
```
test-review tests/
```
**Output:** `test-review.md` with quality score and issues.
**Common Brownfield Issues:**
- Hard waits everywhere (`page.waitForTimeout(5000)`)
- Fragile CSS selectors (`.class > div:nth-child(3)`)
- No test isolation (tests depend on execution order)
- Try-catch for flow control
- Tests don't clean up (leave test data in DB)
**Example Baseline Quality:**
```markdown
# Quality Score: 55/100
**Critical Issues:** 12
- 8 hard waits
- 4 conditional flow control
**Recommendations:** 25
- Extract fixtures
- Improve selectors
- Add network assertions
```
This shows where to focus improvement efforts.
### Phase 2: Prioritize Improvements
Don't try to fix everything at once.
#### Focus on Critical Path First
**Priority 1: P0 Requirements**
```
Goal: Get P0 coverage to 100%
Actions:
1. Identify P0 requirements with no tests (from trace)
2. Run `automate` to generate tests for missing P0 scenarios
3. Fix critical quality issues in P0 tests (from test-review)
```
**Priority 2: Fix Flaky Tests**
```
Goal: Eliminate flakiness
Actions:
1. Identify tests with hard waits (from test-review)
2. Replace with network-first patterns
3. Run burn-in loops to verify stability
```
**Example Modernization:**
**Before (Flaky - Hard Waits):**
```typescript
test('checkout completes', async ({ page }) => {
await page.click('button[name="checkout"]');
await page.waitForTimeout(5000); // ❌ Flaky
await expect(page.locator('.confirmation')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**After (Network-First - Vanilla):**
```typescript
test('checkout completes', async ({ page }) => {
const checkoutPromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/checkout') && resp.ok()
);
await page.click('button[name="checkout"]');
await checkoutPromise; // ✅ Deterministic
await expect(page.locator('.confirmation')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**After (With Playwright Utils - Cleaner API):**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('checkout completes', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
// Use interceptNetworkCall for cleaner network interception
const checkoutCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'POST',
url: '**/api/checkout'
});
await page.click('button[name="checkout"]');
// Wait for response (automatic JSON parsing)
const { status, responseJson: order } = await checkoutCall;
// Validate API response
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(order.status).toBe('confirmed');
// Validate UI
await expect(page.locator('.confirmation')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Playwright Utils Benefits:**
- `interceptNetworkCall` for cleaner network interception
- Automatic JSON parsing (`responseJson` ready to use)
- No manual `await response.json()`
- Glob pattern matching (`**/api/checkout`)
- Cleaner, more maintainable code
**For automatic error detection,** use `network-error-monitor` fixture separately. See [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md#network-error-monitor).
**Priority 3: P1 Requirements**
```
Goal: Get P1 coverage to 80%+
Actions:
1. Generate tests for highest-risk P1 gaps
2. Improve test quality incrementally
```
#### Create Improvement Roadmap
```markdown
# Test Improvement Roadmap
## Week 1: Critical Path (P0)
- [ ] Add 5 missing P0 tests (Epic 1: Auth)
- [ ] Fix 8 hard waits in auth tests
- [ ] Verify P0 coverage = 100%
## Week 2: Flakiness
- [ ] Replace all hard waits with network-first
- [ ] Fix conditional flow control
- [ ] Run burn-in loops (target: 0 failures in 10 runs)
## Week 3: High-Value Coverage (P1)
- [ ] Add 10 missing P1 tests
- [ ] Improve selector resilience
- [ ] P1 coverage target: 80%
## Week 4: Quality Polish
- [ ] Extract fixtures for common patterns
- [ ] Add network assertions
- [ ] Quality score target: 75+
```
### Phase 3: Incremental Improvement
Apply TEA workflows to new work while improving legacy tests.
#### For New Features (Greenfield Within Brownfield)
**Use full TEA workflow:**
```
1. `test-design` (epic-level) - Plan tests for new feature
2. `atdd` - Generate failing tests first (TDD)
3. Implement feature
4. `automate` - Expand coverage
5. `test-review` - Ensure quality
```
**Benefits:**
- New code has high-quality tests from day one
- Gradually raises overall quality
- Team learns good patterns
#### For Bug Fixes (Regression Prevention)
**Add regression tests:**
```
1. Reproduce bug with failing test
2. Fix bug
3. Verify test passes
4. Run `test-review` on regression test
5. Add to regression test suite
```
#### For Refactoring (Regression Safety)
**Before refactoring:**
```
1. Run `trace` - Baseline coverage
2. Note current coverage %
3. Refactor code
4. Run `trace` - Verify coverage maintained
5. No coverage should decrease
```
### Phase 4: Continuous Improvement
Track improvement over time.
#### Quarterly Quality Audits
**Q1 Baseline:**
```
Coverage: 30%
Quality Score: 55/100
Flakiness: 15% fail rate
```
**Q2 Target:**
```
Coverage: 50% (focus on P0)
Quality Score: 65/100
Flakiness: 5%
```
**Q3 Target:**
```
Coverage: 70%
Quality Score: 75/100
Flakiness: 1%
```
**Q4 Target:**
```
Coverage: 85%
Quality Score: 85/100
Flakiness: <0.5%
```
## Brownfield-Specific Tips
### Don't Rewrite Everything
**Common mistake:**
```
"Our tests are bad, let's delete them all and start over!"
```
**Better approach:**
```
"Our tests are bad, let's:
1. Keep tests that work (even if not perfect)
2. Fix critical quality issues incrementally
3. Add tests for gaps
4. Gradually improve over time"
```
**Why:**
- Rewriting is risky (might lose coverage)
- Incremental improvement is safer
- Team learns gradually
- Business value delivered continuously
### Use Regression Hotspots
**Identify regression-prone areas:**
```markdown
## Regression Hotspots
**Based on:**
- Bug reports (last 6 months)
- Customer complaints
- Code complexity (cyclomatic complexity >10)
- Frequent changes (git log analysis)
**High-Risk Areas:**
1. Authentication flow (12 bugs in 6 months)
2. Checkout process (8 bugs)
3. Payment integration (6 bugs)
**Test Priority:**
- Add regression tests for these areas FIRST
- Ensure P0 coverage before touching code
```
### Quarantine Flaky Tests
Don't let flaky tests block improvement:
```typescript
// Mark flaky tests with .skip temporarily
test.skip('flaky test - needs fixing', async ({ page }) => {
// TODO: Fix hard wait on line 45
// TODO: Add network-first pattern
});
```
**Track quarantined tests:**
```markdown
# Quarantined Tests
| Test | Reason | Owner | Target Fix Date |
| ------------------- | -------------------------- | -------- | --------------- |
| checkout.spec.ts:45 | Hard wait causes flakiness | QA Team | 2026-01-20 |
| profile.spec.ts:28 | Conditional flow control | Dev Team | 2026-01-25 |
```
**Fix systematically:**
- Don't accumulate quarantined tests
- Set deadlines for fixes
- Review quarantine list weekly
### Migrate One Directory at a Time
**Large test suite?** Improve incrementally:
**Week 1:** `tests/auth/`
```
1. Run `test-review` on auth tests
2. Fix critical issues
3. Re-review
4. Mark directory as "modernized"
```
**Week 2:** `tests/api/`
```
Same process
```
**Week 3:** `tests/e2e/`
```
Same process
```
**Benefits:**
- Focused improvement
- Visible progress
- Team learns patterns
- Lower risk
### Document Migration Status
**Track which tests are modernized:**
```markdown
# Test Suite Status
| Directory | Tests | Quality Score | Status | Notes |
| ------------------ | ----- | ------------- | ------------- | -------------- |
| tests/auth/ | 15 | 85/100 | ✅ Modernized | Week 1 cleanup |
| tests/api/ | 32 | 78/100 | ⚠️ In Progress | Week 2 |
| tests/e2e/ | 28 | 62/100 | ❌ Legacy | Week 3 planned |
| tests/integration/ | 12 | 45/100 | ❌ Legacy | Week 4 planned |
**Legend:**
- ✅ Modernized: Quality >80, no critical issues
- ⚠️ In Progress: Active improvement
- ❌ Legacy: Not yet touched
```
## Common Brownfield Challenges
### "We Don't Know What Tests Cover"
**Problem:** No documentation, unclear what tests do.
**Solution:**
```
1. Run `trace` - TEA analyzes tests and maps to requirements
2. Review traceability matrix
3. Document findings
4. Use as baseline for improvement
```
TEA reverse-engineers test coverage even without documentation.
### "Tests Are Too Brittle to Touch"
**Problem:** Afraid to modify tests (might break them).
**Solution:**
```
1. Run tests, capture current behavior (baseline)
2. Make small improvement (fix one hard wait)
3. Run tests again
4. If still pass, continue
5. If fail, investigate why
Incremental changes = lower risk
```
### "No One Knows How to Run Tests"
**Problem:** Test documentation is outdated or missing.
**Solution:**
```
1. Document manually or ask TEA to help analyze test structure
2. Create tests/README.md with:
- How to install dependencies
- How to run tests (npx playwright test, npm test, etc.)
- What each test directory contains
- Common issues and troubleshooting
3. Commit documentation for team
```
**Note:** `framework` is for new test setup, not existing tests. For brownfield, document what you have.
### "Tests Take Hours to Run"
**Problem:** Full test suite takes 4+ hours.
**Solution:**
```
1. Configure parallel execution (shard tests across workers)
2. Add selective testing (run only affected tests on PR)
3. Run full suite nightly only
4. Optimize slow tests (remove hard waits, improve selectors)
Before: 4 hours sequential
After: 15 minutes with sharding + selective testing
```
**How `ci` helps:**
- Scaffolds CI configuration with parallel sharding examples
- Provides selective testing script templates
- Documents burn-in and optimization strategies
- But YOU configure workers, test selection, and optimization
**With Playwright Utils burn-in:**
- Smart selective testing based on git diff
- Volume control (run percentage of affected tests)
- See [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md#burn-in)
### "We Have Tests But They Always Fail"
**Problem:** Tests are so flaky they're ignored.
**Solution:**
```
1. Run `test-review` to identify flakiness patterns
2. Fix top 5 flaky tests (biggest impact)
3. Quarantine remaining flaky tests
4. Re-enable as you fix them
Don't let perfect be the enemy of good
```
## Brownfield TEA Workflow
### Recommended Sequence
**1. Documentation (if needed):**
```
document-project
```
**2. Baseline (Phase 2):**
```
trace Phase 1 - Establish coverage baseline
test-review - Establish quality baseline
```
**3. Planning (Phase 2-3):**
```
prd - Document requirements (if missing)
architecture - Document architecture (if missing)
test-design (system-level) - Testability review
```
**4. Infrastructure (Phase 3):**
```
framework - Modernize test framework (if needed)
ci - Setup or improve CI/CD
```
**5. Per Epic (Phase 4):**
```
test-design (epic-level) - Focus on regression hotspots
automate - Add missing tests
test-review - Ensure quality
trace Phase 1 - Refresh coverage
```
**6. Release Gate:**
```
nfr-assess - Validate NFRs (if enterprise)
trace Phase 2 - Gate decision
```
## Related Guides
**Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md) - Baseline coverage analysis
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Quality audit
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Fill coverage gaps
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Risk assessment
**Customization:**
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - Modernize tests with utilities
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - Brownfield model explained
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - What makes tests good
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Fix flakiness
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Prioritize improvements
## Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - All 8 workflows
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config options
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Testing patterns
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - TEA terminology
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "Enable TEA MCP Enhancements"
description: Configure Playwright MCP servers for live browser verification during TEA workflows
---
# Enable TEA MCP Enhancements
Configure Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers to enable live browser verification, exploratory mode, and recording mode in TEA workflows.
## What are MCP Enhancements?
MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers enable AI agents to interact with live browsers during test generation. This allows TEA to:
- **Explore UIs interactively** - Discover actual functionality through browser automation
- **Verify selectors** - Generate accurate locators from real DOM
- **Validate behavior** - Confirm test scenarios against live applications
- **Debug visually** - Use trace viewer and screenshots during generation
## When to Use This
**For UI Testing:**
- Want exploratory mode in `test-design` (browser-based UI discovery)
- Want recording mode in `atdd` or `automate` (verify selectors with live browser)
- Want healing mode in `automate` (fix tests with visual debugging)
- Need accurate selectors from actual DOM
- Debugging complex UI interactions
**For API Testing:**
- Want healing mode in `automate` (analyze failures with trace data)
- Need to debug test failures (network responses, request/response data, timing)
- Want to inspect trace files (network traffic, errors, race conditions)
**For Both:**
- Visual debugging (trace viewer shows network + UI)
- Test failure analysis (MCP can run tests and extract errors)
- Understanding complex test failures (network + DOM together)
**Don't use if:**
- You don't have MCP servers configured
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- IDE with MCP support (Cursor, VS Code with Claude extension)
- Node.js v18 or later
- Playwright installed
## Available MCP Servers
**Two Playwright MCP servers** (actively maintained, continuously updated):
### 1. Playwright MCP - Browser Automation
**Command:** `npx @playwright/mcp@latest`
**Capabilities:**
- Navigate to URLs
- Click elements
- Fill forms
- Take screenshots
- Extract DOM information
**Best for:** Exploratory mode, recording mode
### 2. Playwright Test MCP - Test Runner
**Command:** `npx playwright run-test-mcp-server`
**Capabilities:**
- Run test files
- Analyze failures
- Extract error messages
- Show trace files
**Best for:** Healing mode, debugging
### Recommended: Configure Both
Both servers work together to provide full TEA MCP capabilities.
## Setup
### 1. Configure MCP Servers
Add to your IDE's MCP configuration:
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"playwright": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["@playwright/mcp@latest"]
},
"playwright-test": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["playwright", "run-test-mcp-server"]
}
}
}
```
See [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md#playwright-mcp-enhancements) for IDE-specific config locations.
### 2. Enable in BMAD
Answer "Yes" when prompted during installation, or set in config:
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true
```
### 3. Verify MCPs Running
Ensure your MCP servers are running in your IDE.
## How MCP Enhances TEA Workflows
### test-design: Exploratory Mode
**Without MCP:**
- TEA infers UI functionality from documentation
- Relies on your description of features
- May miss actual UI behavior
**With MCP:**
TEA can open live browser to:
```
"Let me explore the profile page to understand the UI"
[TEA navigates to /profile]
[Takes screenshot]
[Extracts accessible elements]
"I see the profile has:
- Name field (editable)
- Email field (editable)
- Avatar upload button
- Save button
- Cancel button
I'll design tests for these interactions."
```
**Benefits:**
- Accurate test design based on actual UI
- Discovers functionality you might not describe
- Validates test scenarios are possible
### atdd: Recording Mode
**Without MCP:**
- TEA generates selectors from best practices
- TEA infers API patterns from documentation
**With MCP (Recording Mode):**
**For UI Tests:**
```
[TEA navigates to /login with live browser]
[Inspects actual form fields]
"I see:
- Email input has label 'Email Address' (not 'Email')
- Password input has label 'Your Password'
- Submit button has text 'Sign In' (not 'Login')
I'll use these exact selectors."
```
**For API Tests:**
```
[TEA analyzes trace files from test runs]
[Inspects network requests/responses]
"I see the API returns:
- POST /api/login → 200 with { token, userId }
- Response time: 150ms
- Required headers: Content-Type, Authorization
I'll validate these in tests."
```
**Benefits:**
- UI: Accurate selectors from real DOM
- API: Validated request/response patterns from trace
- Both: Tests work on first run
### automate: Healing + Recording Modes
**Without MCP:**
- TEA analyzes test code only
- Suggests fixes based on static analysis
- Generates tests from documentation/code
**With MCP:**
**Healing Mode (UI + API):**
```
[TEA opens trace file]
[Analyzes screenshots + network tab]
UI failures: "Button selector changed from 'Save' to 'Save Changes'"
API failures: "Response structure changed, expected {id} got {userId}"
[TEA makes fixes]
[Verifies with trace analysis]
```
**Recording Mode (UI + API):**
```
UI: [Inspects actual DOM, generates verified selectors]
API: [Analyzes network traffic, validates request/response patterns]
[Generates tests with verified patterns]
[Tests work on first run]
```
**Benefits:**
- Visual debugging + trace analysis (not just UI)
- Verified selectors (UI) + network patterns (API)
- Tests verified against actual application behavior
## Usage Examples
### Exploratory Mode Example
```
User: Run test-design
TEA: What feature are you designing tests for?
User: The checkout flow at https://shop.example.com
TEA: [With MCP] Let me explore the checkout flow
[Opens browser]
[Navigates to checkout]
[Takes screenshots]
[Identifies all interactive elements]
TEA: I've explored the checkout flow. I found:
- 4-step wizard (Cart → Shipping → Payment → Confirm)
- Shipping options (Standard, Express, Overnight)
- Payment methods (Credit Card, PayPal)
- Promo code field
- Order summary with real-time totals
Test design will cover all these scenarios.
```
### Recording Mode Example
```
User: Run atdd for user registration feature
TEA: [With MCP] Let me verify the registration form selectors
[Opens browser at /register]
[Inspects form]
TEA: I see the actual form has:
- "Full Name" label (not "Name")
- "Email Address" label (not "Email")
- "Create Password" label (not "Password")
- "I agree to Terms" checkbox
- "Create Account" button (not "Register")
Generating tests with verified selectors...
```
### Healing Mode Example
```
User: Run automate with healing mode
TEA: [With MCP] Running tests and checking for failures
[Runs test suite]
[Test fails: selector not found]
TEA: Test failed on selector '.submit-btn'
[Opens trace viewer]
[Sees button class changed to '.submit-button']
Fixing selector and verifying...
[Updates test]
[Re-runs with MCP]
[Test passes]
Updated test with corrected selector.
```
## Troubleshooting
### MCP Servers Not Running
**Problem:** TEA says MCP enhancements aren't available.
**Causes:**
1. MCP servers not configured in IDE
2. Config syntax error in JSON
3. IDE not restarted after config
**Solution:**
```bash
# Verify MCP config file exists
ls ~/.cursor/config.json
# Validate JSON syntax
cat ~/.cursor/config.json | python -m json.tool
# Restart IDE
# Cmd+Q (quit) then reopen
```
### Browser Doesn't Open
**Problem:** MCP enabled but browser never opens.
**Causes:**
1. Playwright browsers not installed
2. Headless mode enabled
3. MCP server crashed
**Solution:**
```bash
# Install browsers
npx playwright install
# Check MCP server logs (in IDE)
# Look for error messages
# Try manual MCP server
npx @playwright/mcp@latest
# Should start without errors
```
### TEA Doesn't Use MCP
**Problem:** `tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true` but TEA doesn't use browser.
**Causes:**
1. Config not saved
2. Workflow run before config update
3. MCP servers not running
**Solution:**
```bash
# Verify config
grep tea_use_mcp_enhancements _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
# Should show: tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true
# Restart IDE (reload MCP servers)
# Start fresh chat (TEA loads config at start)
```
### Selector Verification Fails
**Problem:** MCP can't find elements TEA is looking for.
**Causes:**
1. Page not fully loaded
2. Element behind modal/overlay
3. Element requires authentication
**Solution:**
TEA will handle this automatically:
- Wait for page load
- Dismiss modals if present
- Handle auth if needed
If persistent, provide TEA more context:
```
"The element is behind a modal - dismiss the modal first"
"The page requires login - use credentials X"
```
### MCP Slows Down Workflows
**Problem:** Workflows take much longer with MCP enabled.
**Cause:** Browser automation adds overhead.
**Solution:**
Use MCP selectively:
- **Enable for:** Complex UIs, new projects, debugging
- **Disable for:** Simple features, well-known patterns, API-only testing
Toggle quickly:
```yaml
# For this feature (complex UI)
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true
# For next feature (simple API)
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: false
```
## Related Guides
**Getting Started:**
- [TEA Lite Quickstart Tutorial](/docs/tea/tutorials/tea-lite-quickstart.md) - Learn TEA basics first
**Workflow Guides (MCP-Enhanced):**
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Exploratory mode with browser
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Recording mode for accurate selectors
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Healing mode for debugging
**Other Customization:**
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - Production-ready utilities
## Understanding the Concepts
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - MCP enhancements in lifecycle
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - When to use MCP enhancements
## Reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - tea_use_mcp_enhancements option
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - MCP-enhanced workflows
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - MCP Enhancements term
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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@@ -0,0 +1,813 @@
---
title: "Integrate Playwright Utils with TEA"
description: Add production-ready fixtures and utilities to your TEA-generated tests
---
# Integrate Playwright Utils with TEA
Integrate `@seontechnologies/playwright-utils` with TEA to get production-ready fixtures, utilities, and patterns in your test suite.
## What is Playwright Utils?
A production-ready utility library that provides:
- Typed API request helper
- Authentication session management
- Network recording and replay (HAR)
- Network request interception
- Async polling (recurse)
- Structured logging
- File validation (CSV, PDF, XLSX, ZIP)
- Burn-in testing utilities
- Network error monitoring
**Repository:** [https://github.com/seontechnologies/playwright-utils](https://github.com/seontechnologies/playwright-utils)
**npm Package:** `@seontechnologies/playwright-utils`
## When to Use This
- You want production-ready fixtures (not DIY)
- Your team benefits from standardized patterns
- You need utilities like API testing, auth handling, network mocking
- You want TEA to generate tests using these utilities
- You're building reusable test infrastructure
**Don't use if:**
- You're just learning testing (keep it simple first)
- You have your own fixture library
- You don't need the utilities
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- Test framework setup complete (Playwright)
- Node.js v18 or later
**Note:** Playwright Utils is for Playwright only (not Cypress).
## Installation
### Step 1: Install Package
```bash
npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
```
### Step 2: Enable in TEA Config
Edit `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml`:
```yaml
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
```
**Note:** If you enabled this during BMad installation, it's already set.
### Step 3: Verify Installation
```bash
# Check package installed
npm list @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
# Check TEA config
grep tea_use_playwright_utils _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
```
Should show:
```
@seontechnologies/playwright-utils@2.x.x
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
```
## What Changes When Enabled
### `framework` Workflow
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
// Basic Playwright fixtures only
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('api test', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.get('/api/users');
const users = await response.json();
expect(response.status()).toBe(200);
});
```
**With Playwright Utils (Combined Fixtures):**
```typescript
// All utilities available via single import
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('api test', async ({ apiRequest, authToken, log }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/users',
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
});
log.info('Fetched users', body);
expect(status).toBe(200);
});
```
**With Playwright Utils (Selective Merge):**
```typescript
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
import { test as apiRequestFixture } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { test as logFixture } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/log/fixtures';
export const test = mergeTests(apiRequestFixture, logFixture);
export { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('api test', async ({ apiRequest, log }) => {
log.info('Fetching users');
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/users'
});
expect(status).toBe(200);
});
```
### `atdd` and `automate` Workflows
**Without Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
// Manual API calls
test('should fetch profile', async ({ page, request }) => {
const response = await request.get('/api/profile');
const profile = await response.json();
// Manual parsing and validation
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
test('should fetch profile', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/profile' // 'path' not 'url'
}).validateSchema(ProfileSchema); // Chained validation
expect(status).toBe(200);
// body is type-safe: { id: string, name: string, email: string }
});
```
### `test-review` Workflow
**Without Playwright Utils:**
Reviews against generic Playwright patterns
**With Playwright Utils:**
Reviews against playwright-utils best practices:
- Fixture composition patterns
- Utility usage (apiRequest, authSession, etc.)
- Network-first patterns
- Structured logging
### `ci` Workflow
**Without Playwright Utils:**
- Parallel sharding
- Burn-in loops (basic shell scripts)
- CI triggers (PR, push, schedule)
- Artifact collection
**With Playwright Utils:**
Enhanced with smart testing:
- Burn-in utility (git diff-based, volume control)
- Selective testing (skip config/docs/types changes)
- Test prioritization by file changes
## Available Utilities
### api-request
Typed HTTP client with schema validation.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/api-request.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Vanilla Playwright | api-request Utility |
|-------------------|---------------------|
| Manual `await response.json()` | Automatic JSON parsing |
| `response.status()` + separate body parsing | Returns `{ status, body }` structure |
| No built-in retry | Automatic retry for 5xx errors |
| No schema validation | Single-line `.validateSchema()` |
| Verbose status checking | Clean destructuring |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
import { z } from 'zod';
const UserSchema = z.object({
id: z.string(),
name: z.string(),
email: z.string().email()
});
test('should create user', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'POST',
path: '/api/users', // Note: 'path' not 'url'
body: { name: 'Test User', email: 'test@example.com' } // Note: 'body' not 'data'
}).validateSchema(UserSchema); // Chained method (can await separately if needed)
expect(status).toBe(201);
expect(body.id).toBeDefined();
expect(body.email).toBe('test@example.com');
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Returns `{ status, body }` structure
- Schema validation with `.validateSchema()` chained method
- Automatic retry for 5xx errors
- Type-safe response body
### auth-session
Authentication session management with token persistence.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/auth-session.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Vanilla Playwright Auth | auth-session |
|------------------------|--------------|
| Re-authenticate every test run (slow) | Authenticate once, persist to disk |
| Single user per setup | Multi-user support (roles, accounts) |
| No token expiration handling | Automatic token renewal |
| Manual session management | Provider pattern (flexible auth) |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should access protected route', async ({ page, authToken }) => {
// authToken automatically fetched and persisted
// No manual login needed - handled by fixture
await page.goto('/dashboard');
await expect(page).toHaveURL('/dashboard');
// Token is reused across tests (persisted to disk)
});
```
**Configuration required** (see auth-session docs for provider setup):
```typescript
// global-setup.ts
import { authStorageInit, setAuthProvider, authGlobalInit } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session';
async function globalSetup() {
authStorageInit();
setAuthProvider(myCustomProvider); // Define your auth mechanism
await authGlobalInit(); // Fetch token once
}
```
**Benefits:**
- Token fetched once, reused across all tests
- Persisted to disk (faster subsequent runs)
- Multi-user support via `authOptions.userIdentifier`
- Automatic token renewal if expired
### network-recorder
Record and replay network traffic (HAR) for offline testing.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/network-recorder.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Vanilla Playwright HAR | network-recorder |
|------------------------|------------------|
| Manual `routeFromHAR()` configuration | Automatic HAR management with `PW_NET_MODE` |
| Separate record/playback test files | Same test, switch env var |
| No CRUD detection | Stateful mocking (POST/PUT/DELETE work) |
| Manual HAR file paths | Auto-organized by test name |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/network-recorder/fixtures';
// Record mode: Set environment variable
process.env.PW_NET_MODE = 'record';
test('should work with recorded traffic', async ({ page, context, networkRecorder }) => {
// Setup recorder (records or replays based on PW_NET_MODE)
await networkRecorder.setup(context);
// Your normal test code
await page.goto('/dashboard');
await page.click('#add-item');
// First run (record): Saves traffic to HAR file
// Subsequent runs (playback): Uses HAR file, no backend needed
});
```
**Switch modes:**
```bash
# Record traffic
PW_NET_MODE=record npx playwright test
# Playback traffic (offline)
PW_NET_MODE=playback npx playwright test
```
**Benefits:**
- Offline testing (no backend needed)
- Deterministic responses (same every time)
- Faster execution (no network latency)
- Stateful mocking (CRUD operations work)
### intercept-network-call
Spy or stub network requests with automatic JSON parsing.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/intercept-network-call.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Vanilla Playwright | interceptNetworkCall |
|-------------------|----------------------|
| Route setup + response waiting (separate steps) | Single declarative call |
| Manual `await response.json()` | Automatic JSON parsing (`responseJson`) |
| Complex filter predicates | Simple glob patterns (`**/api/**`) |
| Verbose syntax | Concise, readable API |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('should handle API errors', async ({ page, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
// Stub API to return error (set up BEFORE navigation)
const profileCall = interceptNetworkCall({
method: 'GET',
url: '**/api/profile',
fulfillResponse: {
status: 500,
body: { error: 'Server error' }
}
});
await page.goto('/profile');
// Wait for the intercepted response
const { status, responseJson } = await profileCall;
expect(status).toBe(500);
expect(responseJson.error).toBe('Server error');
await expect(page.getByText('Server error occurred')).toBeVisible();
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Automatic JSON parsing (`responseJson` ready to use)
- Spy mode (observe real traffic) or stub mode (mock responses)
- Glob pattern URL matching
- Returns promise with `{ status, responseJson, requestJson }`
### recurse
Async polling for eventual consistency (Cypress-style).
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/recurse.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Manual Polling | recurse Utility |
|----------------|-----------------|
| `while` loops with `waitForTimeout` | Smart polling with exponential backoff |
| Hard-coded retry logic | Configurable timeout/interval |
| No logging visibility | Optional logging with custom messages |
| Verbose, error-prone | Clean, readable API |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
test('should wait for async job completion', async ({ apiRequest, recurse }) => {
// Start async job
const { body: job } = await apiRequest({
method: 'POST',
path: '/api/jobs'
});
// Poll until complete (smart waiting)
const completed = await recurse(
() => apiRequest({ method: 'GET', path: `/api/jobs/${job.id}` }),
(result) => result.body.status === 'completed',
{
timeout: 30000,
interval: 2000,
log: 'Waiting for job to complete'
}
});
expect(completed.body.status).toBe('completed');
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Smart polling with configurable interval
- Handles async jobs, background tasks
- Optional logging for debugging
- Better than hard waits or manual polling loops
### log
Structured logging that integrates with Playwright reports.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/log.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Console.log / print | log Utility |
|--------------------|-------------|
| Not in test reports | Integrated with Playwright reports |
| No step visualization | `.step()` shows in Playwright UI |
| Manual object formatting | Logs objects seamlessly |
| No structured output | JSON artifacts for debugging |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { log } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils';
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should login', async ({ page }) => {
await log.info('Starting login test');
await page.goto('/login');
await log.step('Navigated to login page'); // Shows in Playwright UI
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await log.debug('Filled email field');
await log.success('Login completed');
// Logs appear in test output and Playwright reports
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Direct import (no fixture needed for basic usage)
- Structured logs in test reports
- `.step()` shows in Playwright UI
- Logs objects seamlessly (no special handling needed)
- Trace test execution
### file-utils
Read and validate CSV, PDF, XLSX, ZIP files.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/file-utils.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Vanilla Playwright | file-utils |
|-------------------|------------|
| ~80 lines per CSV flow | ~10 lines end-to-end |
| Manual download event handling | `handleDownload()` encapsulates all |
| External parsing libraries | Auto-parsing (CSV, XLSX, PDF, ZIP) |
| No validation helpers | Built-in validation (headers, row count) |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { handleDownload, readCSV } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/file-utils';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
import path from 'node:path';
const DOWNLOAD_DIR = path.join(__dirname, '../downloads');
test('should export valid CSV', async ({ page }) => {
// Handle download and get file path
const downloadPath = await handleDownload({
page,
downloadDir: DOWNLOAD_DIR,
trigger: () => page.click('button:has-text("Export")')
});
// Read and parse CSV
const csvResult = await readCSV({ filePath: downloadPath });
const { data, headers } = csvResult.content;
// Validate structure
expect(headers).toEqual(['Name', 'Email', 'Status']);
expect(data.length).toBeGreaterThan(0);
expect(data[0]).toMatchObject({
Name: expect.any(String),
Email: expect.any(String),
Status: expect.any(String)
});
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Handles downloads automatically
- Auto-parses CSV, XLSX, PDF, ZIP
- Type-safe access to parsed data
- Returns structured `{ headers, data }`
### burn-in
Smart test selection with git diff analysis for CI optimization.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/burn-in.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Playwright `--only-changed` | burn-in Utility |
|-----------------------------|-----------------|
| Config changes trigger all tests | Smart filtering (skip configs, types, docs) |
| All or nothing | Volume control (run percentage) |
| No customization | Custom dependency analysis |
| Slow CI on minor changes | Fast CI with intelligent selection |
**Usage:**
```typescript
// scripts/burn-in-changed.ts
import { runBurnIn } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/burn-in';
async function main() {
await runBurnIn({
configPath: 'playwright.burn-in.config.ts',
baseBranch: 'main'
});
}
main().catch(console.error);
```
**Config:**
```typescript
// playwright.burn-in.config.ts
import type { BurnInConfig } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/burn-in';
const config: BurnInConfig = {
skipBurnInPatterns: [
'**/config/**',
'**/*.md',
'**/*types*'
],
burnInTestPercentage: 0.3,
burnIn: {
repeatEach: 3,
retries: 1
}
};
export default config;
```
**Package script:**
```json
{
"scripts": {
"test:burn-in": "tsx scripts/burn-in-changed.ts"
}
}
```
**Benefits:**
- **Ensure flake-free tests upfront** - Never deal with test flake again
- Smart filtering (skip config, types, docs changes)
- Volume control (run percentage of affected tests)
- Git diff-based test selection
- Faster CI feedback
### network-error-monitor
Automatically detect HTTP 4xx/5xx errors during tests.
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/network-error-monitor.html>
**Why Use This?**
| Vanilla Playwright | network-error-monitor |
|-------------------|----------------------|
| UI passes, backend 500 ignored | Auto-fails on any 4xx/5xx |
| Manual error checking | Zero boilerplate (auto-enabled) |
| Silent failures slip through | Acts like Sentry for tests |
| No domino effect prevention | Limits cascading failures |
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/network-error-monitor/fixtures';
// That's it! Network monitoring is automatically enabled
test('should not have API errors', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/dashboard');
await page.click('button');
// Test fails automatically if any HTTP 4xx/5xx errors occur
// Error message shows: "Network errors detected: 2 request(s) failed"
// GET 500 https://api.example.com/users
// POST 503 https://api.example.com/metrics
});
```
**Opt-out for validation tests:**
```typescript
// When testing error scenarios, opt-out with annotation
test('should show error message on 404',
{ annotation: [{ type: 'skipNetworkMonitoring' }] }, // Array format
async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/invalid-page'); // Will 404
await expect(page.getByText('Page not found')).toBeVisible();
// Test won't fail on 404 because of annotation
}
);
// Or opt-out entire describe block
test.describe('error handling',
{ annotation: [{ type: 'skipNetworkMonitoring' }] },
() => {
test('handles 404', async ({ page }) => {
// Monitoring disabled for all tests in block
});
}
);
```
**Benefits:**
- Auto-enabled (zero setup)
- Catches silent backend failures (500, 503, 504)
- **Prevents domino effect** (limits cascading failures from one bad endpoint)
- Opt-out with annotations for validation tests
- Structured error reporting (JSON artifacts)
## Fixture Composition
**Option 1: Use Package's Combined Fixtures (Simplest)**
```typescript
// Import all utilities at once
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/fixtures';
import { log } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('api test', async ({ apiRequest, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
await log.info('Fetching users');
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/users'
});
expect(status).toBe(200);
});
```
**Option 2: Create Custom Merged Fixtures (Selective)**
**File 1: support/merged-fixtures.ts**
```typescript
import { test as base, mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
import { test as apiRequest } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { test as interceptNetworkCall } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/intercept-network-call/fixtures';
import { test as networkErrorMonitor } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/network-error-monitor/fixtures';
import { log } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils';
// Merge only what you need
export const test = mergeTests(
base,
apiRequest,
interceptNetworkCall,
networkErrorMonitor
);
export const expect = base.expect;
export { log };
```
**File 2: tests/api/users.spec.ts**
```typescript
import { test, expect, log } from '../support/merged-fixtures';
test('api test', async ({ apiRequest, interceptNetworkCall }) => {
await log.info('Fetching users');
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/users'
});
expect(status).toBe(200);
});
```
**Contrast:**
- Option 1: All utilities available, zero setup
- Option 2: Pick utilities you need, one central file
**See working examples:** <https://github.com/seontechnologies/playwright-utils/tree/main/playwright/support>
## Troubleshooting
### Import Errors
**Problem:** Cannot find module '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request'
**Solution:**
```bash
# Verify package installed
npm list @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
# Check package.json has correct version
"@seontechnologies/playwright-utils": "^2.0.0"
# Reinstall if needed
npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
```
### TEA Not Using Utilities
**Problem:** TEA generates tests without playwright-utils.
**Causes:**
1. Config not set: `tea_use_playwright_utils: false`
2. Workflow run before config change
3. Package not installed
**Solution:**
```bash
# Check config
grep tea_use_playwright_utils _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
# Should show: tea_use_playwright_utils: true
# Start fresh chat (TEA loads config at start)
```
### Type Errors with apiRequest
**Problem:** TypeScript errors on apiRequest response.
**Cause:** No schema validation.
**Solution:**
```typescript
// Add Zod schema for type safety
import { z } from 'zod';
const ProfileSchema = z.object({
id: z.string(),
name: z.string(),
email: z.string().email()
});
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/profile' // 'path' not 'url'
}).validateSchema(ProfileSchema); // Chained method
expect(status).toBe(200);
// body is typed as { id: string, name: string, email: string }
```
## Migration Guide
## Related Guides
**Getting Started:**
- [TEA Lite Quickstart Tutorial](/docs/tea/tutorials/tea-lite-quickstart.md) - Learn TEA basics
- [How to Set Up Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md) - Initial framework setup
**Workflow Guides:**
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Generate tests with utilities
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Expand coverage with utilities
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Review against PW-Utils patterns
**Other Customization:**
- [Enable MCP Enhancements](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/enable-tea-mcp-enhancements.md) - Live browser verification
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - **Why Playwright Utils matters** (part of TEA's three-part solution)
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Pure function → fixture pattern
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Network utilities explained
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Patterns PW-Utils enforces
## Reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - tea_use_playwright_utils option
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Playwright Utils fragments
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md#test-architect-tea-concepts) - Playwright Utils term
- [Official PW-Utils Docs](https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/) - Complete API reference
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "How to Run ATDD with TEA"
description: Generate failing acceptance tests before implementation using TEA's ATDD workflow
---
# How to Run ATDD with TEA
Use TEA's `atdd` workflow to generate failing acceptance tests BEFORE implementation. This is the TDD (Test-Driven Development) red phase - tests fail first, guide development, then pass.
## When to Use This
- You're about to implement a NEW feature (feature doesn't exist yet)
- You want to follow TDD workflow (red → green → refactor)
- You want tests to guide your implementation
- You're practicing acceptance test-driven development
**Don't use this if:**
- Feature already exists (use `automate` instead)
- You want tests that pass immediately
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- Test framework setup complete (run `framework` if needed)
- Story or feature defined with acceptance criteria
**Note:** This guide uses Playwright examples. If using Cypress, commands and syntax will differ (e.g., `cy.get()` instead of `page.locator()`).
## Steps
### 1. Load TEA Agent
Start a fresh chat and load TEA:
```
tea
```
### 2. Run the ATDD Workflow
```
atdd
```
### 3. Provide Context
TEA will ask for:
**Story/Feature Details:**
```
We're adding a user profile page where users can:
- View their profile information
- Edit their name and email
- Upload a profile picture
- Save changes with validation
```
**Acceptance Criteria:**
```
Given I'm logged in
When I navigate to /profile
Then I see my current name and email
Given I'm on the profile page
When I click "Edit Profile"
Then I can modify my name and email
Given I've edited my profile
When I click "Save"
Then my changes are persisted
And I see a success message
Given I upload an invalid file type
When I try to save
Then I see an error message
And changes are not saved
```
**Reference Documents** (optional):
- Point to your story file
- Reference PRD or tech spec
- Link to test design (if you ran `test-design` first)
### 4. Specify Test Levels
TEA will ask what test levels to generate:
**Options:**
- E2E tests (browser-based, full user journey)
- API tests (backend only, faster)
- Component tests (UI components in isolation)
- Mix of levels (see [API Tests First, E2E Later](#api-tests-first-e2e-later) tip)
### Component Testing by Framework
TEA generates component tests using framework-appropriate tools:
| Your Framework | Component Testing Tool |
| -------------- | ------------------------------------------- |
| **Cypress** | Cypress Component Testing (*.cy.tsx) |
| **Playwright** | Vitest + React Testing Library (*.test.tsx) |
**Example response:**
```
Generate:
- API tests for profile CRUD operations
- E2E tests for the complete profile editing flow
- Component tests for ProfileForm validation (if using Cypress or Vitest)
- Focus on P0 and P1 scenarios
```
### 5. Review Generated Tests
TEA generates **failing tests** in appropriate directories:
#### API Tests (`tests/api/profile.spec.ts`):
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test.describe('Profile API', () => {
test('should fetch user profile', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.get('/api/profile');
expect(response.status()).toBe(200);
const profile = await response.json();
expect(profile).toHaveProperty('name');
expect(profile).toHaveProperty('email');
expect(profile).toHaveProperty('avatarUrl');
});
test('should update user profile', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.patch('/api/profile', {
data: {
name: 'Updated Name',
email: 'updated@example.com'
}
});
expect(response.status()).toBe(200);
const updated = await response.json();
expect(updated.name).toBe('Updated Name');
expect(updated.email).toBe('updated@example.com');
});
test('should validate email format', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.patch('/api/profile', {
data: {
email: 'invalid-email'
}
});
expect(response.status()).toBe(400);
const error = await response.json();
expect(error.message).toContain('Invalid email format');
});
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
import { z } from 'zod';
const ProfileSchema = z.object({
name: z.string(),
email: z.string().email(),
avatarUrl: z.string().url()
});
test.describe('Profile API', () => {
test('should fetch user profile', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/profile'
}).validateSchema(ProfileSchema); // Chained validation
expect(status).toBe(200);
// Schema already validated, type-safe access
expect(body.name).toBeDefined();
expect(body.email).toContain('@');
});
test('should update user profile', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
path: '/api/profile',
body: {
name: 'Updated Name',
email: 'updated@example.com'
}
}).validateSchema(ProfileSchema); // Chained validation
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(body.name).toBe('Updated Name');
expect(body.email).toBe('updated@example.com');
});
test('should validate email format', async ({ apiRequest }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
path: '/api/profile',
body: { email: 'invalid-email' }
});
expect(status).toBe(400);
expect(body.message).toContain('Invalid email format');
});
});
```
**Key Benefits:**
- Returns `{ status, body }` (cleaner than `response.status()` + `await response.json()`)
- Automatic schema validation with Zod
- Type-safe response bodies
- Automatic retry for 5xx errors
- Less boilerplate
#### E2E Tests (`tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts`):
```typescript
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should edit and save profile', async ({ page }) => {
// Login first
await page.goto('/login');
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await page.getByLabel('Password').fill('password123');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Sign in' }).click();
// Navigate to profile
await page.goto('/profile');
// Edit profile
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Edit Profile' }).click();
await page.getByLabel('Name').fill('Updated Name');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Save' }).click();
// Verify success
await expect(page.getByText('Profile updated')).toBeVisible();
});
```
TEA generates additional E2E tests for display, validation errors, etc. based on acceptance criteria.
#### Implementation Checklist
TEA also provides an implementation checklist:
```markdown
## Implementation Checklist
### Backend
- [ ] Create `GET /api/profile` endpoint
- [ ] Create `PATCH /api/profile` endpoint
- [ ] Add email validation middleware
- [ ] Add profile picture upload handling
- [ ] Write API unit tests
### Frontend
- [ ] Create ProfilePage component
- [ ] Implement profile form with validation
- [ ] Add file upload for avatar
- [ ] Handle API errors gracefully
- [ ] Add loading states
### Tests
- [x] API tests generated (failing)
- [x] E2E tests generated (failing)
- [ ] Run tests after implementation (should pass)
```
### 6. Verify Tests Fail
This is the TDD red phase - tests MUST fail before implementation.
**For Playwright:**
```bash
npx playwright test
```
**For Cypress:**
```bash
npx cypress run
```
Expected output:
```
Running 6 tests using 1 worker
✗ tests/api/profile.spec.ts:3:3 should fetch user profile
Error: expect(received).toBe(expected)
Expected: 200
Received: 404
✗ tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts:10:3 should display current profile information
Error: page.goto: net::ERR_ABORTED
```
**All tests should fail!** This confirms:
- Feature doesn't exist yet
- Tests will guide implementation
- You have clear success criteria
### 7. Implement the Feature
Now implement the feature following the test guidance:
1. Start with API tests (backend first)
2. Make API tests pass
3. Move to E2E tests (frontend)
4. Make E2E tests pass
5. Refactor with confidence (tests protect you)
### 8. Verify Tests Pass
After implementation, run your test suite.
**For Playwright:**
```bash
npx playwright test
```
**For Cypress:**
```bash
npx cypress run
```
Expected output:
```
Running 6 tests using 1 worker
✓ tests/api/profile.spec.ts:3:3 should fetch user profile (850ms)
✓ tests/api/profile.spec.ts:15:3 should update user profile (1.2s)
✓ tests/api/profile.spec.ts:30:3 should validate email format (650ms)
✓ tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts:10:3 should display current profile (2.1s)
✓ tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts:18:3 should edit and save profile (3.2s)
✓ tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts:35:3 should show validation error (1.8s)
6 passed (9.8s)
```
**Green!** You've completed the TDD cycle: red → green → refactor.
## What You Get
### Failing Tests
- API tests for backend endpoints
- E2E tests for user workflows
- Component tests (if requested)
- All tests fail initially (red phase)
### Implementation Guidance
- Clear checklist of what to build
- Acceptance criteria translated to assertions
- Edge cases and error scenarios identified
### TDD Workflow Support
- Tests guide implementation
- Confidence to refactor
- Living documentation of features
## Tips
### Start with Test Design
Run `test-design` before `atdd` for better results:
```
test-design # Risk assessment and priorities
atdd # Generate tests based on design
```
### MCP Enhancements (Optional)
If you have MCP servers configured (`tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true`), TEA can use them during `atdd`.
**Note:** ATDD is for features that don't exist yet, so recording mode (verify selectors with live UI) only applies if you have skeleton/mockup UI already implemented. For typical ATDD (no UI yet), TEA infers selectors from best practices.
See [Enable MCP Enhancements](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/enable-tea-mcp-enhancements.md) for setup.
### Focus on P0/P1 Scenarios
Don't generate tests for everything at once:
```
Generate tests for:
- P0: Critical path (happy path)
- P1: High value (validation, errors)
Skip P2/P3 for now - add later with automate
```
### API Tests First, E2E Later
Recommended order:
1. Generate API tests with `atdd`
2. Implement backend (make API tests pass)
3. Generate E2E tests with `atdd` (or `automate`)
4. Implement frontend (make E2E tests pass)
This "outside-in" approach is faster and more reliable.
### Keep Tests Deterministic
TEA generates deterministic tests by default:
- No hard waits (`waitForTimeout`)
- Network-first patterns (wait for responses)
- Explicit assertions (no conditionals)
Don't modify these patterns - they prevent flakiness!
## Related Guides
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Plan before generating
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Tests for existing features
- [How to Set Up Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md) - Initial setup
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - **Why TEA generates quality tests** (foundational)
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Why P0 vs P3 matters
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - What makes tests good
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Avoiding flakiness
## Reference
- [Command: *atdd](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md#atdd) - Full command reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - MCP and Playwright Utils options
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "How to Run Automate with TEA"
description: Expand test automation coverage after implementation using TEA's automate workflow
---
# How to Run Automate with TEA
Use TEA's `automate` workflow to generate comprehensive tests for existing features. Unlike `*atdd`, these tests pass immediately because the feature already exists.
## When to Use This
- Feature already exists and works
- Want to add test coverage to existing code
- Need tests that pass immediately
- Expanding existing test suite
- Adding tests to legacy code
**Don't use this if:**
- Feature doesn't exist yet (use `atdd` instead)
- Want failing tests to guide development (use `atdd` for TDD)
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- Test framework setup complete (run `framework` if needed)
- Feature implemented and working
**Note:** This guide uses Playwright examples. If using Cypress, commands and syntax will differ.
## Steps
### 1. Load TEA Agent
Start a fresh chat and load TEA:
```
tea
```
### 2. Run the Automate Workflow
```
automate
```
### 3. Provide Context
TEA will ask for context about what you're testing.
#### Option A: BMad-Integrated Mode (Recommended)
If you have BMad artifacts (stories, test designs, PRDs):
**What are you testing?**
```
I'm testing the user profile feature we just implemented.
Story: story-profile-management.md
Test Design: test-design-epic-1.md
```
**Reference documents:**
- Story file with acceptance criteria
- Test design document (if available)
- PRD sections relevant to this feature
- Tech spec (if available)
**Existing tests:**
```
We have basic tests in tests/e2e/profile-view.spec.ts
Avoid duplicating that coverage
```
TEA will analyze your artifacts and generate comprehensive tests that:
- Cover acceptance criteria from the story
- Follow priorities from test design (P0 → P1 → P2)
- Avoid duplicating existing tests
- Include edge cases and error scenarios
#### Option B: Standalone Mode
If you're using TEA Solo or don't have BMad artifacts:
**What are you testing?**
```
TodoMVC React application at https://todomvc.com/examples/react/dist/
Features: Create todos, mark as complete, filter by status, delete todos
```
**Specific scenarios to cover:**
```
- Creating todos (happy path)
- Marking todos as complete/incomplete
- Filtering (All, Active, Completed)
- Deleting todos
- Edge cases (empty input, long text)
```
TEA will analyze the application and generate tests based on your description.
### 4. Specify Test Levels
TEA will ask which test levels to generate:
**Options:**
- **E2E tests** - Full browser-based user workflows
- **API tests** - Backend endpoint testing (faster, more reliable)
- **Component tests** - UI component testing in isolation (framework-dependent)
- **Mix** - Combination of levels (recommended)
**Example response:**
```
Generate:
- API tests for all CRUD operations
- E2E tests for critical user workflows (P0)
- Focus on P0 and P1 scenarios
- Skip P3 (low priority edge cases)
```
### 5. Review Generated Tests
TEA generates a comprehensive test suite with multiple test levels.
#### API Tests (`tests/api/profile.spec.ts`):
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test.describe('Profile API', () => {
let authToken: string;
test.beforeAll(async ({ request }) => {
// Manual auth token fetch
const response = await request.post('/api/auth/login', {
data: { email: 'test@example.com', password: 'password123' }
});
const { token } = await response.json();
authToken = token;
});
test('should fetch user profile', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.get('/api/profile', {
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
});
expect(response.ok()).toBeTruthy();
const profile = await response.json();
expect(profile).toMatchObject({
id: expect.any(String),
name: expect.any(String),
email: expect.any(String)
});
});
test('should update profile successfully', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.patch('/api/profile', {
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` },
data: {
name: 'Updated Name',
bio: 'Test bio'
}
});
expect(response.ok()).toBeTruthy();
const updated = await response.json();
expect(updated.name).toBe('Updated Name');
expect(updated.bio).toBe('Test bio');
});
test('should validate email format', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.patch('/api/profile', {
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` },
data: { email: 'invalid-email' }
});
expect(response.status()).toBe(400);
const error = await response.json();
expect(error.message).toContain('Invalid email');
});
test('should require authentication', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.get('/api/profile');
expect(response.status()).toBe(401);
});
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test as base, expect } from '@playwright/test';
import { test as apiRequestFixture } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { createAuthFixtures } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session';
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
import { z } from 'zod';
const ProfileSchema = z.object({
id: z.string(),
name: z.string(),
email: z.string().email()
});
// Merge API and auth fixtures
const authFixtureTest = base.extend(createAuthFixtures());
export const testWithAuth = mergeTests(apiRequestFixture, authFixtureTest);
testWithAuth.describe('Profile API', () => {
testWithAuth('should fetch user profile', async ({ apiRequest, authToken }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/profile',
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
}).validateSchema(ProfileSchema); // Chained validation
expect(status).toBe(200);
// Schema already validated, type-safe access
expect(body.name).toBeDefined();
});
testWithAuth('should update profile successfully', async ({ apiRequest, authToken }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
path: '/api/profile',
body: { name: 'Updated Name', bio: 'Test bio' },
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
}).validateSchema(ProfileSchema); // Chained validation
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(body.name).toBe('Updated Name');
});
testWithAuth('should validate email format', async ({ apiRequest, authToken }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
path: '/api/profile',
body: { email: 'invalid-email' },
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
});
expect(status).toBe(400);
expect(body.message).toContain('Invalid email');
});
});
```
**Key Differences:**
- `authToken` fixture (persisted, reused across tests)
- `apiRequest` returns `{ status, body }` (cleaner)
- Schema validation with Zod (type-safe)
- Automatic retry for 5xx errors
- Less boilerplate (no manual `await response.json()` everywhere)
#### E2E Tests (`tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts`):
```typescript
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should edit profile', async ({ page }) => {
// Login
await page.goto('/login');
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await page.getByLabel('Password').fill('password123');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Sign in' }).click();
// Edit profile
await page.goto('/profile');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Edit Profile' }).click();
await page.getByLabel('Name').fill('New Name');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Save' }).click();
// Verify success
await expect(page.getByText('Profile updated')).toBeVisible();
});
```
TEA generates additional tests for validation, edge cases, etc. based on priorities.
#### Fixtures (`tests/support/fixtures/profile.ts`):
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
import { test as base, Page } from '@playwright/test';
type ProfileFixtures = {
authenticatedPage: Page;
testProfile: {
name: string;
email: string;
bio: string;
};
};
export const test = base.extend<ProfileFixtures>({
authenticatedPage: async ({ page }, use) => {
// Manual login flow
await page.goto('/login');
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await page.getByLabel('Password').fill('password123');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Sign in' }).click();
await page.waitForURL(/\/dashboard/);
await use(page);
},
testProfile: async ({ request }, use) => {
// Static test data
const profile = {
name: 'Test User',
email: 'test@example.com',
bio: 'Test bio'
};
await use(profile);
}
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test as base } from '@playwright/test';
import { createAuthFixtures } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session';
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
import { faker } from '@faker-js/faker';
type ProfileFixtures = {
testProfile: {
name: string;
email: string;
bio: string;
};
};
// Merge auth fixtures with custom fixtures
const authTest = base.extend(createAuthFixtures());
const profileTest = base.extend<ProfileFixtures>({
testProfile: async ({}, use) => {
// Dynamic test data with faker
const profile = {
name: faker.person.fullName(),
email: faker.internet.email(),
bio: faker.person.bio()
};
await use(profile);
}
});
export const test = mergeTests(authTest, profileTest);
export { expect } from '@playwright/test';
```
**Usage:**
```typescript
import { test, expect } from '../support/fixtures/profile';
test('should update profile', async ({ page, authToken, testProfile }) => {
// authToken from auth-session (automatic, persisted)
// testProfile from custom fixture (dynamic data)
await page.goto('/profile');
// Test with dynamic, unique data
});
```
**Key Benefits:**
- `authToken` fixture (persisted token, no manual login)
- Dynamic test data with faker (no conflicts)
- Fixture composition with mergeTests
- Reusable across test files
### 6. Review Additional Artifacts
TEA also generates:
#### Updated README (`tests/README.md`):
```markdown
# Test Suite
## Running Tests
### All Tests
npm test
### Specific Levels
npm run test:api # API tests only
npm run test:e2e # E2E tests only
npm run test:smoke # Smoke tests (@smoke tag)
### Single File
npx playwright test tests/api/profile.spec.ts
## Test Structure
tests/
├── api/ # API tests (fast, reliable)
├── e2e/ # E2E tests (full workflows)
├── fixtures/ # Shared test utilities
└── README.md
## Writing Tests
Follow the patterns in existing tests:
- Use fixtures for authentication
- Network-first patterns (no hard waits)
- Explicit assertions
- Self-cleaning tests
```
#### Definition of Done Summary:
```markdown
## Test Quality Checklist
✅ All tests pass on first run
✅ No hard waits (waitForTimeout)
✅ No conditionals for flow control
✅ Assertions are explicit
✅ Tests clean up after themselves
✅ Tests can run in parallel
✅ Execution time < 1.5 minutes per test
Test files < 300 lines
```
### 7. Run the Tests
All tests should pass immediately since the feature exists:
**For Playwright:**
```bash
npx playwright test
```
**For Cypress:**
```bash
npx cypress run
```
Expected output:
```
Running 15 tests using 4 workers
✓ tests/api/profile.spec.ts (4 tests) - 2.1s
✓ tests/e2e/profile-workflow.spec.ts (2 tests) - 5.3s
15 passed (7.4s)
```
**All green!** Tests pass because feature already exists.
### 8. Review Test Coverage
Check which scenarios are covered:
```bash
# View test report
npx playwright show-report
# Check coverage (if configured)
npm run test:coverage
```
Compare against:
- Acceptance criteria from story
- Test priorities from test design
- Edge cases and error scenarios
## What You Get
### Comprehensive Test Suite
- **API tests** - Fast, reliable backend testing
- **E2E tests** - Critical user workflows
- **Component tests** - UI component testing (if requested)
- **Fixtures** - Shared utilities and setup
### Component Testing by Framework
TEA supports component testing using framework-appropriate tools:
| Your Framework | Component Testing Tool | Tests Location |
| -------------- | ------------------------------ | ----------------------------------------- |
| **Cypress** | Cypress Component Testing | `tests/component/` |
| **Playwright** | Vitest + React Testing Library | `tests/component/` or `src/**/*.test.tsx` |
**Note:** Component tests use separate tooling from E2E tests:
- Cypress users: TEA generates Cypress Component Tests
- Playwright users: TEA generates Vitest + React Testing Library tests
### Quality Features
- **Network-first patterns** - Wait for actual responses, not timeouts
- **Deterministic tests** - No flakiness, no conditionals
- **Self-cleaning** - Tests don't leave test data behind
- **Parallel-safe** - Can run all tests concurrently
### Documentation
- **Updated README** - How to run tests
- **Test structure explanation** - Where tests live
- **Definition of Done** - Quality standards
## Tips
### Start with Test Design
Run `test-design` before `automate` for better results:
```
test-design # Risk assessment, priorities
automate # Generate tests based on priorities
```
TEA will focus on P0/P1 scenarios and skip low-value tests.
### Prioritize Test Levels
Not everything needs E2E tests:
**Good strategy:**
```
- P0 scenarios: API + E2E tests
- P1 scenarios: API tests only
- P2 scenarios: API tests (happy path)
- P3 scenarios: Skip or add later
```
**Why?**
- API tests are 10x faster than E2E
- API tests are more reliable (no browser flakiness)
- E2E tests reserved for critical user journeys
### Avoid Duplicate Coverage
Tell TEA about existing tests:
```
We already have tests in:
- tests/e2e/profile-view.spec.ts (viewing profile)
- tests/api/auth.spec.ts (authentication)
Don't duplicate that coverage
```
TEA will analyze existing tests and only generate new scenarios.
### MCP Enhancements (Optional)
If you have MCP servers configured (`tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true`), TEA can use them during `automate` for:
- **Healing mode:** Fix broken selectors, update assertions, enhance with trace analysis
- **Recording mode:** Verify selectors with live browser, capture network requests
No prompts - TEA uses MCPs automatically when available. See [Enable MCP Enhancements](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/enable-tea-mcp-enhancements.md) for setup.
### Generate Tests Incrementally
Don't generate all tests at once:
**Iteration 1:**
```
Generate P0 tests only (critical path)
Run: automate
```
**Iteration 2:**
```
Generate P1 tests (high value scenarios)
Run: automate
Tell TEA to avoid P0 coverage
```
**Iteration 3:**
```
Generate P2 tests (if time permits)
Run: automate
```
This iterative approach:
- Provides fast feedback
- Allows validation before proceeding
- Keeps test generation focused
## Common Issues
### Tests Pass But Coverage Is Incomplete
**Problem:** Tests pass but don't cover all scenarios.
**Cause:** TEA wasn't given complete context.
**Solution:** Provide more details:
```
Generate tests for:
- All acceptance criteria in story-profile.md
- Error scenarios (validation, authorization)
- Edge cases (empty fields, long inputs)
```
### Too Many Tests Generated
**Problem:** TEA generated 50 tests for a simple feature.
**Cause:** Didn't specify priorities or scope.
**Solution:** Be specific:
```
Generate ONLY:
- P0 and P1 scenarios
- API tests for all scenarios
- E2E tests only for critical workflows
- Skip P2/P3 for now
```
### Tests Duplicate Existing Coverage
**Problem:** New tests cover the same scenarios as existing tests.
**Cause:** Didn't tell TEA about existing tests.
**Solution:** Specify existing coverage:
```
We already have these tests:
- tests/api/profile.spec.ts (GET /api/profile)
- tests/e2e/profile-view.spec.ts (viewing profile)
Generate tests for scenarios NOT covered by those files
```
### MCP Enhancements for Better Selectors
If you have MCP servers configured, TEA verifies selectors against live browser. Otherwise, TEA generates accessible selectors (`getByRole`, `getByLabel`) by default.
Setup: Answer "Yes" to MCPs in BMad installer + configure MCP servers in your IDE. See [Enable MCP Enhancements](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/enable-tea-mcp-enhancements.md).
## Related Guides
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Plan before generating
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Failing tests before implementation
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Audit generated quality
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - **Why TEA generates quality tests** (foundational)
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Why prioritize P0 over P3
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - What makes tests good
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Reusable test patterns
## Reference
- [Command: *automate](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md#automate) - Full command reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - MCP and Playwright Utils options
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,679 @@
---
title: "How to Run NFR Assessment with TEA"
description: Validate non-functional requirements for security, performance, reliability, and maintainability using TEA
---
# How to Run NFR Assessment with TEA
Use TEA's `nfr-assess` workflow to validate non-functional requirements (NFRs) with evidence-based assessment across security, performance, reliability, and maintainability.
## When to Use This
- Enterprise projects with compliance requirements
- Projects with strict NFR thresholds
- Before production release
- When NFRs are critical to project success
- Security or performance is mission-critical
**Best for:**
- Enterprise track projects
- Compliance-heavy industries (finance, healthcare, government)
- High-traffic applications
- Security-critical systems
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- NFRs defined in PRD or requirements doc
- Evidence preferred but not required (test results, security scans, performance metrics)
**Note:** You can run NFR assessment without complete evidence. TEA will mark categories as CONCERNS where evidence is missing and document what's needed.
## Steps
### 1. Run the NFR Assessment Workflow
Start a fresh chat and run:
```
nfr-assess
```
This loads TEA and starts the NFR assessment workflow.
### 2. Specify NFR Categories
TEA will ask which NFR categories to assess.
**Available Categories:**
| Category | Focus Areas |
|----------|-------------|
| **Security** | Authentication, authorization, encryption, vulnerabilities, security headers, input validation |
| **Performance** | Response time, throughput, resource usage, database queries, frontend load time |
| **Reliability** | Error handling, recovery mechanisms, availability, failover, data backup |
| **Maintainability** | Code quality, test coverage, technical debt, documentation, dependency health |
**Example Response:**
```
Assess:
- Security (critical for user data)
- Performance (API must be fast)
- Reliability (99.9% uptime requirement)
Skip maintainability for now
```
### 3. Provide NFR Thresholds
TEA will ask for specific thresholds for each category.
**Critical Principle: Never guess thresholds.**
If you don't know the exact requirement, tell TEA to mark as CONCERNS and request clarification from stakeholders.
#### Security Thresholds
**Example:**
```
Requirements:
- All endpoints require authentication: YES
- Data encrypted at rest: YES (PostgreSQL TDE)
- Zero critical vulnerabilities: YES (npm audit)
- Input validation on all endpoints: YES (Zod schemas)
- Security headers configured: YES (helmet.js)
```
#### Performance Thresholds
**Example:**
```
Requirements:
- API response time P99: < 200ms
- API response time P95: < 150ms
- Throughput: > 1000 requests/second
- Frontend initial load: < 2 seconds
- Database query time P99: < 50ms
```
#### Reliability Thresholds
**Example:**
```
Requirements:
- Error handling: All endpoints return structured errors
- Availability: 99.9% uptime
- Recovery time: < 5 minutes (RTO)
- Data backup: Daily automated backups
- Failover: Automatic with < 30s downtime
```
#### Maintainability Thresholds
**Example:**
```
Requirements:
- Test coverage: > 80%
- Code quality: SonarQube grade A
- Documentation: All APIs documented
- Dependency age: < 6 months outdated
- Technical debt: < 10% of codebase
```
### 4. Provide Evidence
TEA will ask where to find evidence for each requirement.
**Evidence Sources:**
| Category | Evidence Type | Location |
|----------|---------------|----------|
| Security | Security scan reports | `/reports/security-scan.pdf` |
| Security | Vulnerability scan | `npm audit`, `snyk test` results |
| Security | Auth test results | Test reports showing auth coverage |
| Performance | Load test results | `/reports/k6-load-test.json` |
| Performance | APM data | Datadog, New Relic dashboards |
| Performance | Lighthouse scores | `/reports/lighthouse.json` |
| Reliability | Error rate metrics | Production monitoring dashboards |
| Reliability | Uptime data | StatusPage, PagerDuty logs |
| Maintainability | Coverage reports | `/reports/coverage/index.html` |
| Maintainability | Code quality | SonarQube dashboard |
**Example Response:**
```
Evidence:
- Security: npm audit results (clean), auth tests 15/15 passing
- Performance: k6 load test at /reports/k6-results.json
- Reliability: Error rate 0.01% in staging (logs in Datadog)
Don't have:
- Uptime data (new system, no baseline)
- Mark as CONCERNS and request monitoring setup
```
### 5. Review NFR Assessment Report
TEA generates a comprehensive assessment report.
#### Assessment Report (`nfr-assessment.md`):
```markdown
# Non-Functional Requirements Assessment
**Date:** 2026-01-13
**Epic:** User Profile Management
**Release:** v1.2.0
**Overall Decision:** CONCERNS ⚠️
## Executive Summary
| Category | Status | Critical Issues |
|----------|--------|-----------------|
| Security | PASS ✅ | 0 |
| Performance | CONCERNS ⚠️ | 2 |
| Reliability | PASS ✅ | 0 |
| Maintainability | PASS ✅ | 0 |
**Decision Rationale:**
Performance metrics below target (P99 latency, throughput). Mitigation plan in place. Security and reliability meet all requirements.
---
## Security Assessment
**Status:** PASS ✅
### Requirements Met
| Requirement | Target | Actual | Status |
|-------------|--------|--------|--------|
| Authentication required | All endpoints | 100% enforced | ✅ |
| Data encryption at rest | PostgreSQL TDE | Enabled | ✅ |
| Critical vulnerabilities | 0 | 0 | ✅ |
| Input validation | All endpoints | Zod schemas on 100% | ✅ |
| Security headers | Configured | helmet.js enabled | ✅ |
### Evidence
**Security Scan:**
```bash
$ npm audit
found 0 vulnerabilities
```
**Authentication Tests:**
- 15/15 auth tests passing
- Tested unauthorized access (401 responses)
- Token validation working
**Penetration Testing:**
- Report: `/reports/pentest-2026-01.pdf`
- Findings: 0 critical, 2 low (addressed)
**Conclusion:** All security requirements met. No blockers.
---
## Performance Assessment
**Status:** CONCERNS ⚠️
### Requirements Status
| Metric | Target | Actual | Status |
|--------|--------|--------|--------|
| API response P99 | < 200ms | 350ms | Exceeds |
| API response P95 | < 150ms | 180ms | Exceeds |
| Throughput | > 1000 rps | 850 rps | ⚠️ Below |
| Frontend load | < 2s | 1.8s | Met |
| DB query P99 | < 50ms | 85ms | Exceeds |
### Issues Identified
#### Issue 1: P99 Latency Exceeds Target
**Measured:** 350ms P99 (target: <200ms)
**Root Cause:** Database queries not optimized
- Missing indexes on profile queries
- N+1 query problem in profile endpoint
**Impact:** User experience degraded for 1% of requests
**Mitigation Plan:**
- Add composite index on `(user_id, profile_id)` - backend team, 2 days
- Refactor profile endpoint to use joins instead of multiple queries - backend team, 3 days
- Re-run load tests after optimization - QA team, 1 day
**Owner:** Backend team lead
**Deadline:** Before release (January 20, 2026)
#### Issue 2: Throughput Below Target
**Measured:** 850 rps (target: >1000 rps)
**Root Cause:** Connection pool size too small
- PostgreSQL max_connections = 100 (too low)
- No connection pooling in application
**Impact:** System cannot handle expected traffic
**Mitigation Plan:**
- Increase PostgreSQL max_connections to 500 - DevOps, 1 day
- Implement connection pooling with pg-pool - backend team, 2 days
- Re-run load tests - QA team, 1 day
**Owner:** DevOps + Backend team
**Deadline:** Before release (January 20, 2026)
### Evidence
**Load Testing:**
```
Tool: k6
Duration: 10 minutes
Virtual Users: 500 concurrent
Report: /reports/k6-load-test.json
```
**Results:**
```
scenarios: (100.00%) 1 scenario, 500 max VUs, 10m30s max duration
✓ http_req_duration..............: avg=250ms min=45ms med=180ms max=2.1s p(90)=280ms p(95)=350ms
http_reqs......................: 85000 (850/s)
http_req_failed................: 0.1%
```
**APM Data:**
- Tool: Datadog
- Dashboard: <https://app.datadoghq.com/dashboard/abc123>
**Conclusion:** Performance issues identified with mitigation plan. Re-assess after optimization.
---
## Reliability Assessment
**Status:** PASS ✅
### Requirements Met
| Requirement | Target | Actual | Status |
|-------------|--------|--------|--------|
| Error handling | Structured errors | 100% endpoints | ✅ |
| Availability | 99.9% uptime | 99.95% (staging) | ✅ |
| Recovery time | < 5 min (RTO) | 3 min (tested) | |
| Data backup | Daily | Automated daily | |
| Failover | < 30s downtime | 15s (tested) | |
### Evidence
**Error Handling Tests:**
- All endpoints return structured JSON errors
- Error codes standardized (400, 401, 403, 404, 500)
- Error messages user-friendly (no stack traces)
**Chaos Engineering:**
- Tested database failover: 15s downtime
- Tested service crash recovery: 3 min
- Tested network partition: Graceful degradation
**Monitoring:**
- Staging uptime (30 days): 99.95%
- Error rate: 0.01% (target: <0.1%)
- P50 availability: 100%
**Conclusion:** All reliability requirements exceeded. No issues.
---
## Maintainability Assessment
**Status:** PASS
### Requirements Met
| Requirement | Target | Actual | Status |
|-------------|--------|--------|--------|
| Test coverage | > 80% | 85% | ✅ |
| Code quality | Grade A | Grade A | ✅ |
| Documentation | All APIs | 100% documented | ✅ |
| Outdated dependencies | < 6 months | 3 months avg | |
| Technical debt | < 10% | 7% | |
### Evidence
**Test Coverage:**
```
Statements : 85.2% ( 1205/1414 )
Branches : 82.1% ( 412/502 )
Functions : 88.5% ( 201/227 )
Lines : 85.2% ( 1205/1414 )
```
**Code Quality:**
- SonarQube: Grade A
- Maintainability rating: A
- Technical debt ratio: 7%
- Code smells: 12 (all minor)
**Documentation:**
- API docs: 100% coverage (OpenAPI spec)
- README: Complete and up-to-date
- Architecture docs: ADRs for all major decisions
**Conclusion:** All maintainability requirements met. Codebase is healthy.
---
## Overall Gate Decision
### Decision: CONCERNS ⚠️
**Rationale:**
- **Blockers:** None
- **Concerns:** Performance metrics below target (P99 latency, throughput)
- **Mitigation:** Plan in place with clear owners and deadlines (5 days total)
- **Passing:** Security, reliability, maintainability all green
### Actions Required Before Release
1. **Optimize database queries** (backend team, 3 days)
- Add indexes
- Fix N+1 queries
- Implement connection pooling
2. **Re-run performance tests** (QA team, 1 day)
- Validate P99 < 200ms
- Validate throughput > 1000 rps
3. **Update this assessment** (TEA, 1 hour)
- Re-run `*nfr-assess` with new results
- Confirm PASS status
### Waiver Option (If Business Approves)
If business decides to deploy with current performance:
**Waiver Justification:**
```markdown
## Performance Waiver
**Waived By:** VP Engineering, Product Manager
**Date:** 2026-01-15
**Reason:** Business priority to launch by Q1
**Conditions:**
- Set monitoring alerts for P99 > 300ms
- Plan optimization for v1.3 (February release)
- Document known performance limitations in release notes
**Accepted Risk:**
- 1% of users experience slower response (350ms vs 200ms)
- System can handle current traffic (850 rps sufficient for launch)
- Optimization planned for next release
```
### Approvals
- [ ] Product Manager - Review business impact
- [ ] Tech Lead - Review mitigation plan
- [ ] QA Lead - Validate test evidence
- [ ] DevOps - Confirm infrastructure ready
---
## Monitoring Plan Post-Release
**Performance Alerts:**
- P99 latency > 400ms (critical)
- Throughput < 700 rps (warning)
- Error rate > 1% (critical)
**Review Cadence:**
- Daily: Check performance dashboards
- Weekly: Review alert trends
- Monthly: Re-assess NFRs
```
## What You Get
### NFR Assessment Report
- Category-by-category analysis (Security, Performance, Reliability, Maintainability)
- Requirements status (target vs actual)
- Evidence for each requirement
- Issues identified with root cause analysis
### Gate Decision
- **PASS** ✅ - All NFRs met, ready to release
- **CONCERNS** ⚠️ - Some NFRs not met, mitigation plan exists
- **FAIL** ❌ - Critical NFRs not met, blocks release
- **WAIVED** ⏭️ - Business-approved waiver with documented risk
### Mitigation Plans
- Specific actions to address concerns
- Owners and deadlines
- Re-assessment criteria
### Monitoring Plan
- Post-release monitoring strategy
- Alert thresholds
- Review cadence
## Tips
### Run NFR Assessment Early
**Phase 2 (Enterprise):**
Run `nfr-assess` during planning to:
- Identify NFR requirements early
- Plan for performance testing
- Budget for security audits
- Set up monitoring infrastructure
**Phase 4 or Gate:**
Re-run before release to validate all requirements met.
### Never Guess Thresholds
If you don't know the NFR target:
**Don't:**
```
API response time should probably be under 500ms
```
**Do:**
```
Mark as CONCERNS - Request threshold from stakeholders
"What is the acceptable API response time?"
```
### Collect Evidence Beforehand
Before running `*nfr-assess`, gather:
**Security:**
```bash
npm audit # Vulnerability scan
snyk test # Alternative security scan
npm run test:security # Security test suite
```
**Performance:**
```bash
npm run test:load # k6 or artillery load tests
npm run test:lighthouse # Frontend performance
npm run test:db-performance # Database query analysis
```
**Reliability:**
- Production error rate (last 30 days)
- Uptime data (StatusPage, PagerDuty)
- Incident response times
**Maintainability:**
```bash
npm run test:coverage # Test coverage report
npm run lint # Code quality check
npm outdated # Dependency freshness
```
### Use Real Data, Not Assumptions
**Don't:**
```
System is probably fast enough
Security seems fine
```
**Do:**
```
Load test results show P99 = 350ms
npm audit shows 0 vulnerabilities
Test coverage report shows 85%
```
Evidence-based decisions prevent surprises in production.
### Document Waivers Thoroughly
If business approves waiver:
**Required:**
- Who approved (name, role, date)
- Why (business justification)
- Conditions (monitoring, future plans)
- Accepted risk (quantified impact)
**Example:**
```markdown
Waived by: CTO, VP Product (2026-01-15)
Reason: Q1 launch critical for investor demo
Conditions: Optimize in v1.3, monitor closely
Risk: 1% of users experience 350ms latency (acceptable for launch)
```
### Re-Assess After Fixes
After implementing mitigations:
```
1. Fix performance issues
2. Run load tests again
3. Run nfr-assess with new evidence
4. Verify PASS status
```
Don't deploy with CONCERNS without mitigation or waiver.
### Integrate with Release Checklist
```markdown
## Release Checklist
### Pre-Release
- [ ] All tests passing
- [ ] Test coverage > 80%
- [ ] Run nfr-assess
- [ ] NFR status: PASS or WAIVED
### Performance
- [ ] Load tests completed
- [ ] P99 latency meets threshold
- [ ] Throughput meets threshold
### Security
- [ ] Security scan clean
- [ ] Auth tests passing
- [ ] Penetration test complete
### Post-Release
- [ ] Monitoring alerts configured
- [ ] Dashboards updated
- [ ] Incident response plan ready
```
## Common Issues
### No Evidence Available
**Problem:** Don't have performance data, security scans, etc.
**Solution:**
```
Mark as CONCERNS for categories without evidence
Document what evidence is needed
Set up tests/scans before re-assessment
```
**Don't block on missing evidence** - document what's needed and proceed.
### Thresholds Too Strict
**Problem:** Can't meet unrealistic thresholds.
**Symptoms:**
- P99 < 50ms (impossible for complex queries)
- 100% test coverage (impractical)
- Zero technical debt (unrealistic)
**Solution:**
```
Negotiate thresholds with stakeholders:
- "P99 < 50ms is unrealistic for our DB queries"
- "Propose P99 < 200ms based on industry standards"
- "Show evidence from load tests"
```
Use data to negotiate realistic requirements.
### Assessment Takes Too Long
**Problem:** Gathering evidence for all categories is time-consuming.
**Solution:** Focus on critical categories first:
**For most projects:**
```
Priority 1: Security (always critical)
Priority 2: Performance (if high-traffic)
Priority 3: Reliability (if uptime critical)
Priority 4: Maintainability (nice to have)
```
Assess categories incrementally, not all at once.
### CONCERNS vs FAIL - When to Block?
**CONCERNS** :
- Issues exist but not critical
- Mitigation plan in place
- Business accepts risk (with waiver)
- Can deploy with monitoring
**FAIL** :
- Critical security vulnerability (CVE critical)
- System unusable (error rate >10%)
- Data loss risk (no backups)
- Zero mitigation possible
**Rule of thumb:** If you can mitigate or monitor, use CONCERNS. Reserve FAIL for absolute blockers.
## Related Guides
- [How to Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md) - Gate decision complements NFR
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Quality complements NFR
- [Run TEA for Enterprise](/docs/tea/how-to/brownfield/use-tea-for-enterprise.md) - Enterprise workflow
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Risk assessment principles
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - NFR in release gates
## Reference
- [Command: *nfr-assess](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md#nfr-assess) - Full command reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Enterprise config options
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "How to Run Test Design with TEA"
description: How to create comprehensive test plans using TEA's test-design workflow
---
Use TEA's `test-design` workflow to create comprehensive test plans with risk assessment and coverage strategies.
## When to Use This
**System-level (Phase 3):**
- After architecture is complete
- Before implementation-readiness gate
- To validate architecture testability
**Epic-level (Phase 4):**
- At the start of each epic
- Before implementing stories in the epic
- To identify epic-specific testing needs
:::note[Prerequisites]
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- For system-level: Architecture document complete
- For epic-level: Epic defined with stories
:::
## Steps
### 1. Load the TEA Agent
Start a fresh chat and load the TEA (Test Architect) agent.
### 2. Run the Test Design Workflow
```
test-design
```
### 3. Specify the Mode
TEA will ask if you want:
- **System-level** — For architecture testability review (Phase 3)
- **Epic-level** — For epic-specific test planning (Phase 4)
### 4. Provide Context
For system-level:
- Point to your architecture document
- Reference any ADRs (Architecture Decision Records)
For epic-level:
- Specify which epic you're planning
- Reference the epic file with stories
### 5. Review the Output
TEA generates test design document(s) based on mode.
## What You Get
**System-Level Output (TWO Documents):**
TEA produces two focused documents for system-level mode:
1. **`test-design-architecture.md`** (for Architecture/Dev teams)
- Purpose: Architectural concerns, testability gaps, NFR requirements
- Quick Guide with 🚨 BLOCKERS / ⚠️ HIGH PRIORITY / 📋 INFO ONLY
- Risk assessment (high/medium/low-priority with scoring)
- Testability concerns and architectural gaps
- Risk mitigation plans for high-priority risks (≥6)
- Assumptions and dependencies
2. **`test-design-qa.md`** (for QA team)
- Purpose: Test execution recipe, coverage plan, Sprint 0 setup
- Quick Reference for QA (Before You Start, Execution Order, Need Help)
- System architecture summary
- Test environment requirements (moved up - early in doc)
- Testability assessment (prerequisites checklist)
- Test levels strategy (unit/integration/E2E split)
- Test coverage plan (P0/P1/P2/P3 with detailed scenarios + checkboxes)
- Sprint 0 setup requirements (blockers, infrastructure, environments)
- NFR readiness summary
**Why Two Documents?**
- **Architecture teams** can scan blockers in <5 min (Quick Guide format)
- **QA teams** have actionable test recipes (step-by-step with checklists)
- **No redundancy** between documents (cross-references instead of duplication)
- **Clear separation** of concerns (what to deliver vs how to test)
**Epic-Level Output (ONE Document):**
**`test-design-epic-N.md`** (combined risk assessment + test plan)
- Risk assessment for the epic
- Test priorities (P0-P3)
- Coverage plan
- Regression hotspots (for brownfield)
- Integration risks
- Mitigation strategies
## Test Design for Different Tracks
| Track | Phase 3 Focus | Phase 4 Focus |
|-------|---------------|---------------|
| **Greenfield** | System-level testability review | Per-epic risk assessment and test plan |
| **Brownfield** | System-level + existing test baseline | Regression hotspots, integration risks |
| **Enterprise** | Compliance-aware testability | Security/performance/compliance focus |
## Examples
**System-Level (Two Documents):**
- `cluster-search/cluster-search-test-design-architecture.md` - Architecture doc with Quick Guide
- `cluster-search/cluster-search-test-design-qa.md` - QA doc with test scenarios
**Key Pattern:**
- Architecture doc: "ASR-1: OAuth 2.1 required (see QA doc for 12 test scenarios)"
- QA doc: "OAuth tests: 12 P0 scenarios (see Architecture doc R-001 for risk details)"
- No duplication, just cross-references
## Tips
- **Run system-level right after architecture** Early testability review
- **Run epic-level at the start of each epic** Targeted test planning
- **Update if ADRs change** Keep test design aligned
- **Use output to guide other workflows** Feeds into `atdd` and `automate`
- **Architecture teams review Architecture doc** Focus on blockers and mitigation plans
- **QA teams use QA doc as implementation guide** Follow test scenarios and Sprint 0 checklist
## Next Steps
After test design:
1. **Setup Test Framework** If not already configured
2. **Implementation Readiness** System-level feeds into gate check
3. **Story Implementation** Epic-level guides testing during dev

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---
title: "How to Run Test Review with TEA"
description: Audit test quality using TEA's comprehensive knowledge base and get 0-100 scoring
---
# How to Run Test Review with TEA
Use TEA's `test-review` workflow to audit test quality with objective scoring and actionable feedback. TEA reviews tests against its knowledge base of best practices.
## When to Use This
- Want to validate test quality objectively
- Need quality metrics for release gates
- Preparing for production deployment
- Reviewing team-written tests
- Auditing AI-generated tests
- Onboarding new team members (show good patterns)
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- Tests written (to review)
- Test framework configured
## Steps
### 1. Load TEA Agent
Start a fresh chat and load TEA:
```
tea
```
### 2. Run the Test Review Workflow
```
test-review
```
### 3. Specify Review Scope
TEA will ask what to review.
#### Option A: Single File
Review one test file:
```
tests/e2e/checkout.spec.ts
```
**Best for:**
- Reviewing specific failing tests
- Quick feedback on new tests
- Learning from specific examples
#### Option B: Directory
Review all tests in a directory:
```
tests/e2e/
```
**Best for:**
- Reviewing E2E test suite
- Comparing test quality across files
- Finding patterns of issues
#### Option C: Entire Suite
Review all tests:
```
tests/
```
**Best for:**
- Release gate quality check
- Comprehensive audit
- Establishing baseline metrics
### 4. Review the Quality Report
TEA generates a comprehensive quality report with scoring.
#### Report Structure (`test-review.md`):
```markdown
# Test Quality Review Report
**Date:** 2026-01-13
**Scope:** tests/e2e/
**Overall Score:** 76/100
## Summary
- **Tests Reviewed:** 12
- **Passing Quality:** 9 tests (75%)
- **Needs Improvement:** 3 tests (25%)
- **Critical Issues:** 2
- **Recommendations:** 6
## Critical Issues
### 1. Hard Waits Detected
**File:** `tests/e2e/checkout.spec.ts:45`
**Issue:** Using `page.waitForTimeout(3000)`
**Impact:** Test is flaky and unnecessarily slow
**Severity:** Critical
**Current Code:**
```typescript
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
await page.waitForTimeout(3000); // ❌ Hard wait
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
```
**Fix:**
```typescript
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
// Wait for the API response that triggers success message
await page.waitForResponse(resp =>
resp.url().includes('/api/checkout') && resp.ok()
);
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
```
**Why This Matters:**
- Hard waits are fixed timeouts that don't wait for actual conditions
- Tests fail intermittently on slower machines
- Wastes time waiting even when response is fast
- Network-first patterns are more reliable
---
### 2. Conditional Flow Control
**File:** `tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts:28`
**Issue:** Using if/else to handle optional elements
**Impact:** Non-deterministic test behavior
**Severity:** Critical
**Current Code:**
```typescript
if (await page.locator('.banner').isVisible()) {
await page.click('.dismiss');
}
// ❌ Test behavior changes based on banner presence
```
**Fix:**
```typescript
// Option 1: Make banner presence deterministic
await expect(page.locator('.banner')).toBeVisible();
await page.click('.dismiss');
// Option 2: Test both scenarios separately
test('should show banner for new users', async ({ page }) => {
// Test with banner
});
test('should not show banner for returning users', async ({ page }) => {
// Test without banner
});
```
**Why This Matters:**
- Tests should be deterministic (same result every run)
- Conditionals hide bugs (what if banner should always show?)
- Makes debugging harder
- Violates test isolation principle
## Recommendations
### 1. Extract Repeated Setup
**File:** `tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts`
**Issue:** Login code duplicated in every test
**Severity:** Medium
**Impact:** Maintenance burden, test verbosity
**Current:**
```typescript
test('test 1', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/login');
await page.fill('[name="email"]', 'test@example.com');
await page.fill('[name="password"]', 'password');
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
// Test logic...
});
test('test 2', async ({ page }) => {
// Same login code repeated
});
```
**Fix (Vanilla Playwright):**
```typescript
// Create fixture in tests/support/fixtures/auth.ts
import { test as base, Page } from '@playwright/test';
export const test = base.extend<{ authenticatedPage: Page }>({
authenticatedPage: async ({ page }, use) => {
await page.goto('/login');
await page.getByLabel('Email').fill('test@example.com');
await page.getByLabel('Password').fill('password');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Sign in' }).click();
await page.waitForURL(/\/dashboard/);
await use(page);
}
});
// Use in tests
test('test 1', async ({ authenticatedPage }) => {
// Already logged in
});
```
**Better (With Playwright Utils):**
```typescript
// Use built-in auth-session fixture
import { test as base } from '@playwright/test';
import { createAuthFixtures } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session';
export const test = base.extend(createAuthFixtures());
// Use in tests - even simpler
test('test 1', async ({ page, authToken }) => {
// authToken already available (persisted, reused)
await page.goto('/dashboard');
// Already authenticated via authToken
});
```
**Playwright Utils Benefits:**
- Token persisted to disk (faster subsequent runs)
- Multi-user support out of the box
- Automatic token renewal if expired
- No manual login flow needed
---
### 2. Add Network Assertions
**File:** `tests/e2e/api-calls.spec.ts`
**Issue:** No verification of API responses
**Severity:** Low
**Impact:** Tests don't catch API errors
**Current:**
```typescript
await page.click('button[name="save"]');
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
// ❌ What if API returned 500 but UI shows cached success?
```
**Enhancement:**
```typescript
const responsePromise = page.waitForResponse(
resp => resp.url().includes('/api/profile') && resp.status() === 200
);
await page.click('button[name="save"]');
const response = await responsePromise;
// Verify API response
const data = await response.json();
expect(data.success).toBe(true);
// Verify UI
await expect(page.locator('.success')).toBeVisible();
```
---
### 3. Improve Test Names
**File:** `tests/e2e/checkout.spec.ts`
**Issue:** Vague test names
**Severity:** Low
**Impact:** Hard to understand test purpose
**Current:**
```typescript
test('should work', async ({ page }) => { });
test('test checkout', async ({ page }) => { });
```
**Better:**
```typescript
test('should complete checkout with valid credit card', async ({ page }) => { });
test('should show validation error for expired card', async ({ page }) => { });
```
## Quality Scores by Category
| Category | Score | Target | Status |
|----------|-------|--------|--------|
| **Determinism** | 26/35 | 30/35 | ⚠️ Needs Improvement |
| **Isolation** | 22/25 | 20/25 | ✅ Good |
| **Assertions** | 18/20 | 16/20 | ✅ Good |
| **Structure** | 7/10 | 8/10 | ⚠️ Minor Issues |
| **Performance** | 3/10 | 8/10 | ❌ Critical |
### Scoring Breakdown
**Determinism (35 points max):**
- No hard waits: 0/10 ❌ (found 3 instances)
- No conditionals: 8/10 ⚠️ (found 2 instances)
- No try-catch flow control: 10/10 ✅
- Network-first patterns: 8/15 ⚠️ (some tests missing)
**Isolation (25 points max):**
- Self-cleaning: 20/20 ✅
- No global state: 5/5 ✅
- Parallel-safe: 0/0 ✅ (not tested)
**Assertions (20 points max):**
- Explicit in test body: 15/15 ✅
- Specific and meaningful: 3/5 ⚠️ (some weak assertions)
**Structure (10 points max):**
- Test size < 300 lines: 5/5
- Clear names: 2/5 (some vague names)
**Performance (10 points max):**
- Execution time < 1.5 min: 3/10 (3 tests exceed limit)
## Files Reviewed
| File | Score | Issues | Status |
|------|-------|--------|--------|
| `tests/e2e/checkout.spec.ts` | 65/100 | 4 | Needs Work |
| `tests/e2e/profile.spec.ts` | 72/100 | 3 | Needs Improvement |
| `tests/e2e/search.spec.ts` | 88/100 | 1 | Good |
| `tests/api/profile.spec.ts` | 92/100 | 0 | Excellent |
## Next Steps
### Immediate (Fix Critical Issues)
1. Remove hard waits in `checkout.spec.ts` (line 45, 67, 89)
2. Fix conditional in `profile.spec.ts` (line 28)
3. Optimize slow tests in `checkout.spec.ts`
### Short-term (Apply Recommendations)
4. Extract login fixture from `profile.spec.ts`
5. Add network assertions to `api-calls.spec.ts`
6. Improve test names in `checkout.spec.ts`
### Long-term (Continuous Improvement)
7. Re-run `test-review` after fixes (target: 85/100)
8. Add performance budgets to CI
9. Document test patterns for team
## Knowledge Base References
TEA reviewed against these patterns:
- [test-quality.md](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md#test-quality) - Execution limits, isolation
- [network-first.md](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md#network-first) - Deterministic waits
- [timing-debugging.md](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md#timing-debugging) - Race conditions
- [selector-resilience.md](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md#selector-resilience) - Robust selectors
```
## Understanding the Scores
### What Do Scores Mean?
| Score Range | Interpretation | Action |
|-------------|----------------|--------|
| **90-100** | Excellent | Minimal changes needed, production-ready |
| **80-89** | Good | Minor improvements recommended |
| **70-79** | Acceptable | Address recommendations before release |
| **60-69** | Needs Improvement | Fix critical issues, apply recommendations |
| **< 60** | Critical | Significant refactoring needed |
### Scoring Criteria
**Determinism (35 points):**
- Tests produce same result every run
- No random failures (flakiness)
- No environment-dependent behavior
**Isolation (25 points):**
- Tests don't depend on each other
- Can run in any order
- Clean up after themselves
**Assertions (20 points):**
- Verify actual behavior
- Specific and meaningful
- Not abstracted away in helpers
**Structure (10 points):**
- Readable and maintainable
- Appropriate size
- Clear naming
**Performance (10 points):**
- Fast execution
- Efficient selectors
- No unnecessary waits
## What You Get
### Quality Report
- Overall score (0-100)
- Category scores (Determinism, Isolation, etc.)
- File-by-file breakdown
### Critical Issues
- Specific line numbers
- Code examples (current vs fixed)
- Why it matters explanation
- Impact assessment
### Recommendations
- Actionable improvements
- Code examples
- Priority/severity levels
### Next Steps
- Immediate actions (fix critical)
- Short-term improvements
- Long-term quality goals
## Tips
### Review Before Release
Make test review part of release checklist:
```markdown
## Release Checklist
- [ ] All tests passing
- [ ] Test review score > 80
- [ ] Critical issues resolved
- [ ] Performance within budget
```
### Review After AI Generation
Always review AI-generated tests:
```
1. Run atdd or automate
2. Run test-review on generated tests
3. Fix critical issues
4. Commit tests
```
### Set Quality Gates
Use scores as quality gates:
```yaml
# .github/workflows/test.yml
- name: Review test quality
run: |
# Run test review
# Parse score from report
if [ $SCORE -lt 80 ]; then
echo "Test quality below threshold"
exit 1
fi
```
### Review Regularly
Schedule periodic reviews:
- **Per story:** Optional (spot check new tests)
- **Per epic:** Recommended (ensure consistency)
- **Per release:** Recommended for quality gates (required if using formal gate process)
- **Quarterly:** Audit entire suite
### Focus Reviews
For large suites, review incrementally:
**Week 1:** Review E2E tests
**Week 2:** Review API tests
**Week 3:** Review component tests (Cypress CT or Vitest)
**Week 4:** Apply fixes across all suites
**Component Testing Note:** TEA reviews component tests using framework-specific knowledge:
- **Cypress:** Reviews Cypress Component Testing specs (*.cy.tsx)
- **Playwright:** Reviews Vitest component tests (*.test.tsx)
### Use Reviews for Learning
Share reports with team:
```
Team Meeting:
- Review test-review.md
- Discuss critical issues
- Agree on patterns
- Update team guidelines
```
### Compare Over Time
Track improvement:
```markdown
## Quality Trend
| Date | Score | Critical Issues | Notes |
|------|-------|-----------------|-------|
| 2026-01-01 | 65 | 5 | Baseline |
| 2026-01-15 | 72 | 2 | Fixed hard waits |
| 2026-02-01 | 84 | 0 | All critical resolved |
```
## Common Issues
### Low Determinism Score
**Symptoms:**
- Tests fail randomly
- "Works on my machine"
- CI failures that don't reproduce locally
**Common Causes:**
- Hard waits (`waitForTimeout`)
- Conditional flow control (`if/else`)
- Try-catch for flow control
- Missing network-first patterns
**Fix:** Review determinism section, apply network-first patterns
### Low Performance Score
**Symptoms:**
- Tests take > 1.5 minutes each
- Test suite takes hours
- CI times out
**Common Causes:**
- Unnecessary waits (hard timeouts)
- Inefficient selectors (XPath, complex CSS)
- Not using parallelization
- Heavy setup in every test
**Fix:** Optimize waits, improve selectors, use fixtures
### Low Isolation Score
**Symptoms:**
- Tests fail when run in different order
- Tests fail in parallel
- Test data conflicts
**Common Causes:**
- Shared global state
- Tests don't clean up
- Hard-coded test data
- Database not reset between tests
**Fix:** Use fixtures, clean up in afterEach, use unique test data
### "Too Many Issues to Fix"
**Problem:** Report shows 50+ issues, overwhelming.
**Solution:** Prioritize:
1. Fix all critical issues first
2. Apply top 3 recommendations
3. Re-run review
4. Iterate
Don't try to fix everything at once.
### Reviews Take Too Long
**Problem:** Reviewing entire suite takes hours.
**Solution:** Review incrementally:
- Review new tests in PR review
- Schedule directory reviews weekly
- Full suite review quarterly
## Related Guides
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Generate tests to review
- [How to Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md) - Expand coverage to review
- [How to Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md) - Coverage complements quality
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - What makes tests good
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Avoiding flakiness
- [Fixture Architecture](/docs/tea/explanation/fixture-architecture.md) - Reusable patterns
## Reference
- [Command: *test-review](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md#test-review) - Full command reference
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Patterns TEA reviews against
---
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---
title: "How to Run Trace with TEA"
description: Map requirements to tests and make quality gate decisions using TEA's trace workflow
---
# How to Run Trace with TEA
Use TEA's `trace` workflow for requirements traceability and quality gate decisions. This is a two-phase workflow: Phase 1 analyzes coverage, Phase 2 makes the go/no-go decision.
## When to Use This
### Phase 1: Requirements Traceability
- Map acceptance criteria to implemented tests
- Identify coverage gaps
- Prioritize missing tests
- Refresh coverage after each story/epic
### Phase 2: Quality Gate Decision
- Make go/no-go decision for release
- Validate coverage meets thresholds
- Document gate decision with evidence
- Support business-approved waivers
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- Requirements defined (stories, acceptance criteria, test design)
- Tests implemented
- For brownfield: Existing codebase with tests
## Steps
### 1. Run the Trace Workflow
```
trace
```
### 2. Specify Phase
TEA will ask which phase you're running.
**Phase 1: Requirements Traceability**
- Analyze coverage
- Identify gaps
- Generate recommendations
**Phase 2: Quality Gate Decision**
- Make PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL/WAIVED decision
- Requires Phase 1 complete
**Typical flow:** Run Phase 1 first, review gaps, then run Phase 2 for gate decision.
---
## Phase 1: Requirements Traceability
### 3. Provide Requirements Source
TEA will ask where requirements are defined.
**Options:**
| Source | Example | Best For |
| --------------- | ----------------------------- | ---------------------- |
| **Story file** | `story-profile-management.md` | Single story coverage |
| **Test design** | `test-design-epic-1.md` | Epic coverage |
| **PRD** | `PRD.md` | System-level coverage |
| **Multiple** | All of the above | Comprehensive analysis |
**Example Response:**
```
Requirements:
- story-profile-management.md (acceptance criteria)
- test-design-epic-1.md (test priorities)
```
### 4. Specify Test Location
TEA will ask where tests are located.
**Example:**
```
Test location: tests/
Include:
- tests/api/
- tests/e2e/
```
### 5. Specify Focus Areas (Optional)
**Example:**
```
Focus on:
- Profile CRUD operations
- Validation scenarios
- Authorization checks
```
### 6. Review Coverage Matrix
TEA generates a comprehensive traceability matrix.
#### Traceability Matrix (`traceability-matrix.md`):
```markdown
# Requirements Traceability Matrix
**Date:** 2026-01-13
**Scope:** Epic 1 - User Profile Management
**Phase:** Phase 1 (Traceability Analysis)
## Coverage Summary
| Metric | Count | Percentage |
| ---------------------- | ----- | ---------- |
| **Total Requirements** | 15 | 100% |
| **Full Coverage** | 11 | 73% |
| **Partial Coverage** | 3 | 20% |
| **No Coverage** | 1 | 7% |
### By Priority
| Priority | Total | Covered | Percentage |
| -------- | ----- | ------- | ----------------- |
| **P0** | 5 | 5 | 100% ✅ |
| **P1** | 6 | 5 | 83% ⚠️ |
| **P2** | 3 | 1 | 33% ⚠️ |
| **P3** | 1 | 0 | 0% ✅ (acceptable) |
---
## Detailed Traceability
### ✅ Requirement 1: User can view their profile (P0)
**Acceptance Criteria:**
- User navigates to /profile
- Profile displays name, email, avatar
- Data is current (not cached)
**Test Coverage:** FULL ✅
**Tests:**
- `tests/e2e/profile-view.spec.ts:15` - "should display profile page with current data"
- ✅ Navigates to /profile
- ✅ Verifies name, email visible
- ✅ Verifies avatar displayed
- ✅ Validates data freshness via API assertion
- `tests/api/profile.spec.ts:8` - "should fetch user profile via API"
- ✅ Calls GET /api/profile
- ✅ Validates response schema
- ✅ Confirms all fields present
---
### ⚠️ Requirement 2: User can edit profile (P0)
**Acceptance Criteria:**
- User clicks "Edit Profile"
- Can modify name, email, bio
- Can upload avatar
- Changes are persisted
- Success message shown
**Test Coverage:** PARTIAL ⚠️
**Tests:**
- `tests/e2e/profile-edit.spec.ts:22` - "should edit and save profile"
- ✅ Clicks edit button
- ✅ Modifies name and email
- ⚠️ **Does NOT test bio field**
-**Does NOT test avatar upload**
- ✅ Verifies persistence
- ✅ Verifies success message
- `tests/api/profile.spec.ts:25` - "should update profile via PATCH"
- ✅ Calls PATCH /api/profile
- ✅ Validates update response
- ⚠️ **Only tests name/email, not bio/avatar**
**Missing Coverage:**
- Bio field not tested in E2E or API
- Avatar upload not tested
**Gap Severity:** HIGH (P0 requirement, critical path)
---
### ✅ Requirement 3: Invalid email shows validation error (P1)
**Acceptance Criteria:**
- Enter invalid email format
- See error message
- Cannot save changes
**Test Coverage:** FULL ✅
**Tests:**
- `tests/e2e/profile-edit.spec.ts:45` - "should show validation error for invalid email"
- `tests/api/profile.spec.ts:50` - "should return 400 for invalid email"
---
### ❌ Requirement 15: Profile export as PDF (P2)
**Acceptance Criteria:**
- User clicks "Export Profile"
- PDF downloads with profile data
**Test Coverage:** NONE ❌
**Gap Analysis:**
- **Priority:** P2 (medium)
- **Risk:** Low (non-critical feature)
- **Recommendation:** Add in next iteration (not blocking for release)
---
## Gap Prioritization
### Critical Gaps (Must Fix Before Release)
| Gap | Requirement | Priority | Risk | Recommendation |
| --- | ------------------------ | -------- | ---- | ------------------- |
| 1 | Bio field not tested | P0 | High | Add E2E + API tests |
| 2 | Avatar upload not tested | P0 | High | Add E2E + API tests |
**Estimated Effort:** 3 hours
**Owner:** QA team
**Deadline:** Before release
### Non-Critical Gaps (Can Defer)
| Gap | Requirement | Priority | Risk | Recommendation |
| --- | ------------------------- | -------- | ---- | ------------------- |
| 3 | Profile export not tested | P2 | Low | Add in v1.3 release |
**Estimated Effort:** 2 hours
**Owner:** QA team
**Deadline:** Next release (February)
---
## Recommendations
### 1. Add Bio Field Tests
**Tests Needed (Vanilla Playwright):**
```typescript
// tests/e2e/profile-edit.spec.ts
test('should edit bio field', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/profile');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Edit' }).click();
await page.getByLabel('Bio').fill('New bio text');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Save' }).click();
await expect(page.getByText('New bio text')).toBeVisible();
});
// tests/api/profile.spec.ts
test('should update bio via API', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.patch('/api/profile', {
data: { bio: 'Updated bio' }
});
expect(response.ok()).toBeTruthy();
const { bio } = await response.json();
expect(bio).toBe('Updated bio');
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
// tests/e2e/profile-edit.spec.ts
import { test } from '../support/fixtures'; // Composed with authToken
test('should edit bio field', async ({ page, authToken }) => {
await page.goto('/profile');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Edit' }).click();
await page.getByLabel('Bio').fill('New bio text');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Save' }).click();
await expect(page.getByText('New bio text')).toBeVisible();
});
// tests/api/profile.spec.ts
import { test as base, expect } from '@playwright/test';
import { test as apiRequestFixture } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { createAuthFixtures } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/auth-session';
import { mergeTests } from '@playwright/test';
// Merge API request + auth fixtures
const authFixtureTest = base.extend(createAuthFixtures());
const test = mergeTests(apiRequestFixture, authFixtureTest);
test('should update bio via API', async ({ apiRequest, authToken }) => {
const { status, body } = await apiRequest({
method: 'PATCH',
path: '/api/profile',
body: { bio: 'Updated bio' },
headers: { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` }
});
expect(status).toBe(200);
expect(body.bio).toBe('Updated bio');
});
```
**Note:** `authToken` requires auth-session fixture setup. See [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md#auth-session).
### 2. Add Avatar Upload Tests
**Tests Needed:**
```typescript
// tests/e2e/profile-edit.spec.ts
test('should upload avatar image', async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('/profile');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Edit' }).click();
// Upload file
await page.setInputFiles('[type="file"]', 'fixtures/avatar.png');
await page.getByRole('button', { name: 'Save' }).click();
// Verify uploaded image displays
await expect(page.locator('img[alt="Profile avatar"]')).toBeVisible();
});
// tests/api/profile.spec.ts
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
import fs from 'fs/promises';
test('should accept valid image upload', async ({ request }) => {
const response = await request.post('/api/profile/avatar', {
multipart: {
file: {
name: 'avatar.png',
mimeType: 'image/png',
buffer: await fs.readFile('fixtures/avatar.png')
}
}
});
expect(response.ok()).toBeTruthy();
});
```
---
## Next Steps
After reviewing traceability:
1. **Fix critical gaps** - Add tests for P0/P1 requirements
2. **Run `test-review`** - Ensure new tests meet quality standards
3. **Run Phase 2** - Make gate decision after gaps addressed
```
---
## Phase 2: Quality Gate Decision
After Phase 1 coverage analysis is complete, run Phase 2 for the gate decision.
**Prerequisites:**
- Phase 1 traceability matrix complete
- Test execution results available (must have test results)
**Note:** Phase 2 will skip if test execution results aren't provided. The workflow requires actual test run results to make gate decisions.
### 7. Run Phase 2
```
trace
```
Select "Phase 2: Quality Gate Decision"
### 8. Provide Additional Context
TEA will ask for:
**Gate Type:**
- Story gate (small release)
- Epic gate (larger release)
- Release gate (production deployment)
- Hotfix gate (emergency fix)
**Decision Mode:**
- **Deterministic** - Rule-based (coverage %, quality scores)
- **Manual** - Team decision with TEA guidance
**Example:**
```
Gate type: Epic gate
Decision mode: Deterministic
```
### 9. Provide Supporting Evidence
TEA will request:
**Phase 1 Results:**
```
traceability-matrix.md (from Phase 1)
```
**Test Quality (Optional):**
```
test-review.md (from test-review)
```
**NFR Assessment (Optional):**
```
nfr-assessment.md (from nfr-assess)
```
### 10. Review Gate Decision
TEA makes evidence-based gate decision and writes to separate file.
#### Gate Decision (`gate-decision-{gate_type}-{story_id}.md`):
```markdown
---
# Phase 2: Quality Gate Decision
**Gate Type:** Epic Gate
**Decision:** PASS ✅
**Date:** 2026-01-13
**Approvers:** Product Manager, Tech Lead, QA Lead
## Decision Summary
**Verdict:** Ready to release
**Evidence:**
- P0 coverage: 100% (5/5 requirements)
- P1 coverage: 100% (6/6 requirements)
- P2 coverage: 33% (1/3 requirements) - acceptable
- Test quality score: 84/100
- NFR assessment: PASS
## Coverage Analysis
| Priority | Required Coverage | Actual Coverage | Status |
| -------- | ----------------- | --------------- | --------------------- |
| **P0** | 100% | 100% | ✅ PASS |
| **P1** | 90% | 100% | ✅ PASS |
| **P2** | 50% | 33% | ⚠️ Below (acceptable) |
| **P3** | 20% | 0% | ✅ PASS (low priority) |
**Rationale:**
- All critical path (P0) requirements fully tested
- All high-value (P1) requirements fully tested
- P2 gap (profile export) is low risk and deferred to next release
## Quality Metrics
| Metric | Threshold | Actual | Status |
| ------------------ | --------- | ------ | ------ |
| P0/P1 Coverage | >95% | 100% | ✅ |
| Test Quality Score | >80 | 84 | ✅ |
| NFR Status | PASS | PASS | ✅ |
## Risks and Mitigations
### Accepted Risks
**Risk 1: Profile export not tested (P2)**
- **Impact:** Medium (users can't export profile)
- **Mitigation:** Feature flag disabled by default
- **Plan:** Add tests in v1.3 release (February)
- **Monitoring:** Track feature flag usage
## Approvals
- [x] **Product Manager** - Business requirements met (Approved: 2026-01-13)
- [x] **Tech Lead** - Technical quality acceptable (Approved: 2026-01-13)
- [x] **QA Lead** - Test coverage sufficient (Approved: 2026-01-13)
## Next Steps
### Deployment
1. Merge to main branch
2. Deploy to staging
3. Run smoke tests in staging
4. Deploy to production
5. Monitor for 24 hours
### Monitoring
- Set alerts for profile endpoint (P99 > 200ms)
- Track error rates (target: <0.1%)
- Monitor profile export feature flag usage
### Future Work
- Add profile export tests (v1.3)
- Expand P2 coverage to 50%
```
### Gate Decision Rules
TEA uses deterministic rules when decision_mode = "deterministic":
| P0 Coverage | P1 Coverage | Overall Coverage | Decision |
| ----------- | ----------- | ---------------- | ---------------------------- |
| 100% | ≥90% | ≥80% | **PASS** ✅ |
| 100% | 80-89% | ≥80% | **CONCERNS** ⚠️ |
| <100% | Any | Any | **FAIL** |
| Any | <80% | Any | **FAIL** |
| Any | Any | <80% | **FAIL** |
| Any | Any | Any | **WAIVED** (with approval) |
**Detailed Rules:**
- **PASS:** P0=100%, P190%, Overall80%
- **CONCERNS:** P0=100%, P1 80-89%, Overall80% (below threshold but not critical)
- **FAIL:** P0<100% OR P1<80% OR Overall<80% (critical gaps)
**PASS** : All criteria met, ready to release
**CONCERNS** : Some criteria not met, but:
- Mitigation plan exists
- Risk is acceptable
- Team approves proceeding
- Monitoring in place
**FAIL** : Critical criteria not met:
- P0 requirements not tested
- Critical security vulnerabilities
- System is broken
- Cannot deploy
**WAIVED** : Business approves proceeding despite concerns:
- Documented business justification
- Accepted risks quantified
- Approver signatures
- Future plans documented
### Example CONCERNS Decision
```markdown
## Decision Summary
**Verdict:** CONCERNS ⚠️ - Proceed with monitoring
**Evidence:**
- P0 coverage: 100%
- P1 coverage: 85% (below 90% target)
- Test quality: 78/100 (below 80 target)
**Gaps:**
- 1 P1 requirement not tested (avatar upload)
- Test quality score slightly below threshold
**Mitigation:**
- Avatar upload not critical for v1.2 launch
- Test quality issues are minor (no flakiness)
- Monitoring alerts configured
**Approvals:**
- Product Manager: APPROVED (business priority to launch)
- Tech Lead: APPROVED (technical risk acceptable)
```
### Example FAIL Decision
```markdown
## Decision Summary
**Verdict:** FAIL ❌ - Cannot release
**Evidence:**
- P0 coverage: 60% (below 95% threshold)
- Critical security vulnerability (CVE-2024-12345)
- Test quality: 55/100
**Blockers:**
1. **Login flow not tested** (P0 requirement)
- Critical path completely untested
- Must add E2E and API tests
2. **SQL injection vulnerability**
- Critical security issue
- Must fix before deployment
**Actions Required:**
1. Add login tests (QA team, 2 days)
2. Fix SQL injection (backend team, 1 day)
3. Re-run security scan (DevOps, 1 hour)
4. Re-run trace after fixes
**Cannot proceed until all blockers resolved.**
```
## What You Get
### Phase 1: Traceability Matrix
- Requirement-to-test mapping
- Coverage classification (FULL/PARTIAL/NONE)
- Gap identification with priorities
- Actionable recommendations
### Phase 2: Gate Decision
- Go/no-go verdict (PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL/WAIVED)
- Evidence summary
- Approval signatures
- Next steps and monitoring plan
## Usage Patterns
### Greenfield Projects
**Phase 3:**
```
After architecture complete:
1. Run test-design (system-level)
2. Run trace Phase 1 (baseline)
3. Use for implementation-readiness gate
```
**Phase 4:**
```
After each epic/story:
1. Run trace Phase 1 (refresh coverage)
2. Identify gaps
3. Add missing tests
```
**Release Gate:**
```
Before deployment:
1. Run trace Phase 1 (final coverage check)
2. Run trace Phase 2 (make gate decision)
3. Get approvals
4. Deploy (if PASS or WAIVED)
```
### Brownfield Projects
**Phase 2:**
```
Before planning new work:
1. Run trace Phase 1 (establish baseline)
2. Understand existing coverage
3. Plan testing strategy
```
**Phase 4:**
```
After each epic/story:
1. Run trace Phase 1 (refresh)
2. Compare to baseline
3. Track coverage improvement
```
**Release Gate:**
```
Before deployment:
1. Run trace Phase 1 (final check)
2. Run trace Phase 2 (gate decision)
3. Compare to baseline
4. Deploy if coverage maintained or improved
```
## Tips
### Run Phase 1 Frequently
Don't wait until release gate:
```
After Story 1: trace Phase 1 (identify gaps early)
After Story 2: trace Phase 1 (refresh)
After Story 3: trace Phase 1 (refresh)
Before Release: trace Phase 1 + Phase 2 (final gate)
```
**Benefit:** Catch gaps early when they're cheap to fix.
### Use Coverage Trends
Track improvement over time:
```markdown
## Coverage Trend
| Date | Epic | P0/P1 Coverage | Quality Score | Status |
| ---------- | -------- | -------------- | ------------- | -------------- |
| 2026-01-01 | Baseline | 45% | - | Starting point |
| 2026-01-08 | Epic 1 | 78% | 72 | Improving |
| 2026-01-15 | Epic 2 | 92% | 84 | Near target |
| 2026-01-20 | Epic 3 | 100% | 88 | Ready! |
```
### Set Coverage Targets by Priority
Don't aim for 100% across all priorities:
**Recommended Targets:**
- **P0:** 100% (critical path must be tested)
- **P1:** 90% (high-value scenarios)
- **P2:** 50% (nice-to-have features)
- **P3:** 20% (low-value edge cases)
### Use Classification Strategically
**FULL** : Requirement completely tested
- E2E test covers full user workflow
- API test validates backend behavior
- All acceptance criteria covered
**PARTIAL** : Some aspects tested
- E2E test exists but missing scenarios
- API test exists but incomplete
- Some acceptance criteria not covered
**NONE** : No tests exist
- Requirement identified but not tested
- May be intentional (low priority) or oversight
**Classification helps prioritize:**
- Fix NONE coverage for P0/P1 requirements first
- Enhance PARTIAL coverage for P0 requirements
- Accept PARTIAL or NONE for P2/P3 if time-constrained
### Automate Gate Decisions
Use traceability in CI:
```yaml
# .github/workflows/gate-check.yml
- name: Check coverage
run: |
# Run trace Phase 1
# Parse coverage percentages
if [ $P0_COVERAGE -lt 95 ]; then
echo "P0 coverage below 95%"
exit 1
fi
```
### Document Waivers Clearly
If proceeding with WAIVED:
**Required:**
```markdown
## Waiver Documentation
**Waived By:** VP Engineering, Product Lead
**Date:** 2026-01-15
**Gate Type:** Release Gate v1.2
**Justification:**
Business critical to launch by Q1 for investor demo.
Performance concerns acceptable for initial user base.
**Conditions:**
- Set monitoring alerts for P99 > 300ms
- Plan optimization for v1.3 (due February 28)
- Monitor user feedback closely
**Accepted Risks:**
- 1% of users may experience 350ms latency
- Avatar upload feature incomplete
- Profile export deferred to next release
**Quantified Impact:**
- Affects <100 users at current scale
- Workaround exists (manual export)
- Monitoring will catch issues early
**Approvals:**
- VP Engineering: [Signature] Date: 2026-01-15
- Product Lead: [Signature] Date: 2026-01-15
- QA Lead: [Signature] Date: 2026-01-15
```
## Common Issues
### Too Many Gaps to Fix
**Problem:** Phase 1 shows 50 uncovered requirements.
**Solution:** Prioritize ruthlessly:
1. Fix all P0 gaps (critical path)
2. Fix high-risk P1 gaps
3. Accept low-risk P1 gaps with mitigation
4. Defer all P2/P3 gaps
**Don't try to fix everything** - focus on what matters for release.
### Can't Find Test Coverage
**Problem:** Tests exist but TEA can't map them to requirements.
**Cause:** Tests don't reference requirements.
**Solution:** Add traceability comments:
```typescript
test('should display profile', async ({ page }) => {
// Covers: Requirement 1 - User can view profile
// Acceptance criteria: Navigate to /profile, see name/email
await page.goto('/profile');
await expect(page.getByText('Test User')).toBeVisible();
});
```
Or use test IDs:
```typescript
test('[REQ-1] should display profile', async ({ page }) => {
// Test code...
});
```
### Unclear What "FULL" vs "PARTIAL" Means
**FULL** : All acceptance criteria tested
```
Requirement: User can edit profile
Acceptance criteria:
- Can modify name ✅ Tested
- Can modify email ✅ Tested
- Can upload avatar ✅ Tested
- Changes persist ✅ Tested
Result: FULL coverage
```
**PARTIAL** : Some criteria tested, some not
```
Requirement: User can edit profile
Acceptance criteria:
- Can modify name ✅ Tested
- Can modify email ✅ Tested
- Can upload avatar ❌ Not tested
- Changes persist ✅ Tested
Result: PARTIAL coverage (3/4 criteria)
```
### Gate Decision Unclear
**Problem:** Not sure if PASS or CONCERNS is appropriate.
**Guideline:**
**Use PASS** if:
- All P0 requirements 100% covered
- P1 requirements >90% covered
- No critical issues
- NFRs met
**Use CONCERNS** ⚠️ if:
- P1 coverage 85-90% (close to threshold)
- Minor quality issues (score 70-79)
- NFRs have mitigation plans
- Team agrees risk is acceptable
**Use FAIL** ❌ if:
- P0 coverage <100% (critical path gaps)
- P1 coverage <85%
- Critical security/performance issues
- No mitigation possible
**When in doubt, use CONCERNS** and document the risk.
## Related Guides
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Provides requirements for traceability
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Quality scores feed gate
- [How to Run NFR Assessment](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-nfr-assess.md) - NFR status feeds gate
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - Why P0 vs P3 matters
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Gate decisions in context
## Reference
- [Command: *trace](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md#trace) - Full command reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config options
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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@@ -0,0 +1,712 @@
---
title: "How to Set Up CI Pipeline with TEA"
description: Configure automated test execution with selective testing and burn-in loops using TEA
---
# How to Set Up CI Pipeline with TEA
Use TEA's `ci` workflow to scaffold production-ready CI/CD configuration for automated test execution with selective testing, parallel sharding, and flakiness detection.
## When to Use This
- Need to automate test execution in CI/CD
- Want selective testing (only run affected tests)
- Need parallel execution for faster feedback
- Want burn-in loops for flakiness detection
- Setting up new CI/CD pipeline
- Optimizing existing CI/CD workflow
## Prerequisites
- BMad Method installed
- TEA agent available
- Test framework configured (run `framework` first)
- Tests written (have something to run in CI)
- CI/CD platform access (GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, etc.)
## Steps
### 1. Load TEA Agent
Start a fresh chat and load TEA:
```
tea
```
### 2. Run the CI Workflow
```
ci
```
### 3. Select CI/CD Platform
TEA will ask which platform you're using.
**Supported Platforms:**
- **GitHub Actions** (most common)
- **GitLab CI**
- **Circle CI**
- **Jenkins**
- **Other** (TEA provides generic template)
**Example:**
```
GitHub Actions
```
### 4. Configure Test Strategy
TEA will ask about your test execution strategy.
#### Repository Structure
**Question:** "What's your repository structure?"
**Options:**
- **Single app** - One application in root
- **Monorepo** - Multiple apps/packages
- **Monorepo with affected detection** - Only test changed packages
**Example:**
```
Monorepo with multiple apps
Need selective testing for changed packages only
```
#### Parallel Execution
**Question:** "Want to shard tests for parallel execution?"
**Options:**
- **No sharding** - Run tests sequentially
- **Shard by workers** - Split across N workers
- **Shard by file** - Each file runs in parallel
**Example:**
```
Yes, shard across 4 workers for faster execution
```
**Why Shard?**
- **4 workers:** 20-minute suite → 5 minutes
- **Better resource usage:** Utilize CI runners efficiently
- **Faster feedback:** Developers wait less
#### Burn-In Loops
**Question:** "Want burn-in loops for flakiness detection?"
**Options:**
- **No burn-in** - Run tests once
- **PR burn-in** - Run tests multiple times on PRs
- **Nightly burn-in** - Dedicated flakiness detection job
**Example:**
```
Yes, run tests 5 times on PRs to catch flaky tests early
```
**Why Burn-In?**
- Catches flaky tests before they merge
- Prevents intermittent CI failures
- Builds confidence in test suite
### 5. Review Generated CI Configuration
TEA generates platform-specific workflow files.
#### GitHub Actions (`.github/workflows/test.yml`):
```yaml
name: Test Suite
on:
pull_request:
push:
branches: [main, develop]
schedule:
- cron: '0 2 * * *' # Nightly at 2 AM
jobs:
# Main test job with sharding
test:
name: Test (Shard ${{ matrix.shard }})
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 15
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
shard: [1, 2, 3, 4]
steps:
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
cache: 'npm'
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Install Playwright browsers
run: npx playwright install --with-deps
- name: Run tests
run: npx playwright test --shard=${{ matrix.shard }}/4
- name: Upload test results
if: always()
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
name: test-results-${{ matrix.shard }}
path: test-results/
retention-days: 7
- name: Upload test report
if: always()
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
name: playwright-report-${{ matrix.shard }}
path: playwright-report/
retention-days: 7
# Burn-in job for flakiness detection (PRs only)
burn-in:
name: Burn-In (Flakiness Detection)
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
timeout-minutes: 30
steps:
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
cache: 'npm'
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Install Playwright browsers
run: npx playwright install --with-deps
- name: Run burn-in loop
run: |
for i in {1..5}; do
echo "=== Burn-in iteration $i/5 ==="
npx playwright test --grep-invert "@skip" || exit 1
done
- name: Upload burn-in results
if: failure()
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
name: burn-in-failures
path: test-results/
# Selective testing (changed files only)
selective:
name: Selective Tests
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
steps:
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0 # Full history for git diff
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
cache: 'npm'
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Install Playwright browsers
run: npx playwright install --with-deps
- name: Run selective tests
run: npm run test:changed
```
#### GitLab CI (`.gitlab-ci.yml`):
```yaml
variables:
NODE_VERSION: "18"
stages:
- test
- burn-in
# Test job with parallel execution
test:
stage: test
image: node:$NODE_VERSION
parallel: 4
script:
- npm ci
- npx playwright install --with-deps
- npx playwright test --shard=$CI_NODE_INDEX/$CI_NODE_TOTAL
artifacts:
when: always
paths:
- test-results/
- playwright-report/
expire_in: 7 days
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH
# Burn-in job for flakiness detection
burn-in:
stage: burn-in
image: node:$NODE_VERSION
script:
- npm ci
- npx playwright install --with-deps
- |
for i in {1..5}; do
echo "=== Burn-in iteration $i/5 ==="
npx playwright test || exit 1
done
artifacts:
when: on_failure
paths:
- test-results/
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
```
#### Burn-In Testing
**Option 1: Classic Burn-In (Playwright Built-In)**
```json
{
"scripts": {
"test": "playwright test",
"test:burn-in": "playwright test --repeat-each=5 --retries=0"
}
}
```
**How it works:**
- Runs every test 5 times
- Fails if any iteration fails
- Detects flakiness before merge
**Use when:** Small test suite, want to run everything multiple times
---
**Option 2: Smart Burn-In (Playwright Utils)**
If `tea_use_playwright_utils: true`:
**scripts/burn-in-changed.ts:**
```typescript
import { runBurnIn } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/burn-in';
await runBurnIn({
configPath: 'playwright.burn-in.config.ts',
baseBranch: 'main'
});
```
**playwright.burn-in.config.ts:**
```typescript
import type { BurnInConfig } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/burn-in';
const config: BurnInConfig = {
skipBurnInPatterns: ['**/config/**', '**/*.md', '**/*types*'],
burnInTestPercentage: 0.3,
burnIn: { repeatEach: 5, retries: 0 }
};
export default config;
```
**package.json:**
```json
{
"scripts": {
"test:burn-in": "tsx scripts/burn-in-changed.ts"
}
}
```
**How it works:**
- Git diff analysis (only affected tests)
- Smart filtering (skip configs, docs, types)
- Volume control (run 30% of affected tests)
- Each test runs 5 times
**Use when:** Large test suite, want intelligent selection
---
**Comparison:**
| Feature | Classic Burn-In | Smart Burn-In (PW-Utils) |
|---------|----------------|--------------------------|
| Changed 1 file | Runs all 500 tests × 5 = 2500 runs | Runs 3 affected tests × 5 = 15 runs |
| Config change | Runs all tests | Skips (no tests affected) |
| Type change | Runs all tests | Skips (no runtime impact) |
| Setup | Zero config | Requires config file |
**Recommendation:** Start with classic (simple), upgrade to smart (faster) when suite grows.
### 6. Configure Secrets
TEA provides a secrets checklist.
**Required Secrets** (add to CI/CD platform):
```markdown
## GitHub Actions Secrets
Repository Settings → Secrets and variables → Actions
### Required
- None (tests run without external auth)
### Optional
- `TEST_USER_EMAIL` - Test user credentials
- `TEST_USER_PASSWORD` - Test user password
- `API_BASE_URL` - API endpoint for tests
- `DATABASE_URL` - Test database (if needed)
```
**How to Add Secrets:**
**GitHub Actions:**
1. Go to repo Settings → Secrets → Actions
2. Click "New repository secret"
3. Add name and value
4. Use in workflow: `${{ secrets.TEST_USER_EMAIL }}`
**GitLab CI:**
1. Go to Project Settings → CI/CD → Variables
2. Add variable name and value
3. Use in workflow: `$TEST_USER_EMAIL`
### 7. Test the CI Pipeline
#### Push and Verify
**Commit the workflow file:**
```bash
git add .github/workflows/test.yml
git commit -m "ci: add automated test pipeline"
git push
```
**Watch the CI run:**
- GitHub Actions: Go to Actions tab
- GitLab CI: Go to CI/CD → Pipelines
- Circle CI: Go to Pipelines
**Expected Result:**
```
✓ test (shard 1/4) - 3m 24s
✓ test (shard 2/4) - 3m 18s
✓ test (shard 3/4) - 3m 31s
✓ test (shard 4/4) - 3m 15s
✓ burn-in - 15m 42s
```
#### Test on Pull Request
**Create test PR:**
```bash
git checkout -b test-ci-setup
echo "# Test" > test.md
git add test.md
git commit -m "test: verify CI setup"
git push -u origin test-ci-setup
```
**Open PR and verify:**
- Tests run automatically
- Burn-in runs (if configured for PRs)
- Selective tests run (if applicable)
- All checks pass ✓
## What You Get
### Automated Test Execution
- **On every PR** - Catch issues before merge
- **On every push to main** - Protect production
- **Nightly** - Comprehensive regression testing
### Parallel Execution
- **4x faster feedback** - Shard across multiple workers
- **Efficient resource usage** - Maximize CI runner utilization
### Selective Testing
- **Run only affected tests** - Git diff-based selection
- **Faster PR feedback** - Don't run entire suite every time
### Flakiness Detection
- **Burn-in loops** - Run tests multiple times
- **Early detection** - Catch flaky tests in PRs
- **Confidence building** - Know tests are reliable
### Artifact Collection
- **Test results** - Saved for 7 days
- **Screenshots** - On test failures
- **Videos** - Full test recordings
- **Traces** - Playwright trace files for debugging
## Tips
### Start Simple, Add Complexity
**Week 1:** Basic pipeline
```yaml
- Run tests on PR
- Single worker (no sharding)
```
**Week 2:** Add parallelization
```yaml
- Shard across 4 workers
- Faster feedback
```
**Week 3:** Add selective testing
```yaml
- Git diff-based selection
- Skip unaffected tests
```
**Week 4:** Add burn-in
```yaml
- Detect flaky tests
- Run on PR and nightly
```
### Optimize for Feedback Speed
**Goal:** PR feedback in < 5 minutes
**Strategies:**
- Shard tests across workers (4 workers = 4x faster)
- Use selective testing (run 20% of tests, not 100%)
- Cache dependencies (`actions/cache`, `cache: 'npm'`)
- Run smoke tests first, full suite after
**Example fast workflow:**
```yaml
jobs:
smoke:
# Run critical path tests (2 min)
run: npm run test:smoke
full:
needs: smoke
# Run full suite only if smoke passes (10 min)
run: npm test
```
### Use Test Tags
Tag tests for selective execution:
```typescript
// Critical path tests (always run)
test('@critical should login', async ({ page }) => { });
// Smoke tests (run first)
test('@smoke should load homepage', async ({ page }) => { });
// Slow tests (run nightly only)
test('@slow should process large file', async ({ page }) => { });
// Skip in CI
test('@local-only should use local service', async ({ page }) => { });
```
**In CI:**
```bash
# PR: Run critical and smoke only
npx playwright test --grep "@critical|@smoke"
# Nightly: Run everything except local-only
npx playwright test --grep-invert "@local-only"
```
### Monitor CI Performance
Track metrics:
```markdown
## CI Metrics
| Metric | Target | Current | Status |
|--------|--------|---------|--------|
| PR feedback time | < 5 min | 3m 24s | |
| Full suite time | < 15 min | 12m 18s | |
| Flakiness rate | < 1% | 0.3% | |
| CI cost/month | < $100 | $75 | |
```
### Handle Flaky Tests
When burn-in detects flakiness:
1. **Quarantine flaky test:**
```typescript
test.skip('flaky test - investigating', async ({ page }) => {
// TODO: Fix flakiness
});
```
2. **Investigate with trace viewer:**
```bash
npx playwright show-trace test-results/trace.zip
```
3. **Fix root cause:**
- Add network-first patterns
- Remove hard waits
- Fix race conditions
4. **Verify fix:**
```bash
npm run test:burn-in -- tests/flaky.spec.ts --repeat 20
```
### Secure Secrets
**Don't commit secrets to code:**
```yaml
# ❌ Bad
- run: API_KEY=sk-1234... npm test
# ✅ Good
- run: npm test
env:
API_KEY: ${{ secrets.API_KEY }}
```
**Use environment-specific secrets:**
- `STAGING_API_URL`
- `PROD_API_URL`
- `TEST_API_URL`
### Cache Aggressively
Speed up CI with caching:
```yaml
# Cache node_modules
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
cache: 'npm'
# Cache Playwright browsers
- name: Cache Playwright browsers
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: ~/.cache/ms-playwright
key: playwright-${{ hashFiles('package-lock.json') }}
```
## Common Issues
### Tests Pass Locally, Fail in CI
**Symptoms:**
- Green locally, red in CI
- "Works on my machine"
**Common Causes:**
- Different Node version
- Different browser version
- Missing environment variables
- Timezone differences
- Race conditions (CI slower)
**Solutions:**
```yaml
# Pin Node version
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
# Pin browser versions
- run: npx playwright install --with-deps chromium@1.40.0
# Set timezone
env:
TZ: 'America/New_York'
```
### CI Takes Too Long
**Problem:** CI takes 30+ minutes, developers wait too long.
**Solutions:**
1. **Shard tests:** 4 workers = 4x faster
2. **Selective testing:** Only run affected tests on PR
3. **Smoke tests first:** Run critical path (2 min), full suite after
4. **Cache dependencies:** `npm ci` with cache
5. **Optimize tests:** Remove slow tests, hard waits
### Burn-In Always Fails
**Problem:** Burn-in job fails every time.
**Cause:** Test suite is flaky.
**Solution:**
1. Identify flaky tests (check which iteration fails)
2. Fix flaky tests using `test-review`
3. Re-run burn-in on specific files:
```bash
npm run test:burn-in tests/flaky.spec.ts
```
### Out of CI Minutes
**Problem:** Using too many CI minutes, hitting plan limit.
**Solutions:**
1. Run full suite only on main branch
2. Use selective testing on PRs
3. Run expensive tests nightly only
4. Self-host runners (for GitHub Actions)
## Related Guides
- [How to Set Up Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md) - Run first
- [How to Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Audit CI tests
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) - Burn-in utility
## Understanding the Concepts
- [Test Quality Standards](/docs/tea/explanation/test-quality-standards.md) - Why determinism matters
- [Network-First Patterns](/docs/tea/explanation/network-first-patterns.md) - Avoid CI flakiness
## Reference
- [Command: *ci](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md#ci) - Full command reference
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - CI-related config options
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "How to Set Up a Test Framework with TEA"
description: How to set up a production-ready test framework using TEA
---
Use TEA's `framework` workflow to scaffold a production-ready test framework for your project.
## When to Use This
- No existing test framework in your project
- Current test setup isn't production-ready
- Starting a new project that needs testing infrastructure
- Phase 3 (Solutioning) after architecture is complete
:::note[Prerequisites]
- BMad Method installed
- Architecture completed (or at least tech stack decided)
- TEA agent available
:::
## Steps
### 1. Load the TEA Agent
Start a fresh chat and load the TEA (Test Architect) agent.
### 2. Run the Framework Workflow
```
framework
```
### 3. Answer TEA's Questions
TEA will ask about:
- Your tech stack (React, Node, etc.)
- Preferred test framework (Playwright, Cypress, Jest)
- Testing scope (E2E, integration, unit)
- CI/CD platform (GitHub Actions, etc.)
### 4. Review Generated Output
TEA generates:
- **Test scaffold** — Directory structure and config files
- **Sample specs** — Example tests following best practices
- **`.env.example`** — Environment variable template
- **`.nvmrc`** — Node version specification
- **README updates** — Testing documentation
## What You Get
```
tests/
├── e2e/
│ ├── example.spec.ts
│ └── fixtures/
├── integration/
├── unit/
├── playwright.config.ts # or cypress.config.ts
└── README.md
```
## Optional: Playwright Utils Integration
TEA can integrate with `@seontechnologies/playwright-utils` for advanced fixtures:
```bash
npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
```
Enable during BMad installation or set `tea_use_playwright_utils: true` in config.
**Utilities available:** api-request, network-recorder, auth-session, intercept-network-call, recurse, log, file-utils, burn-in, network-error-monitor
## Optional: MCP Enhancements
TEA can use Playwright MCP servers for enhanced capabilities:
- `playwright` — Browser automation
- `playwright-test` — Test runner with failure analysis
Configure in your IDE's MCP settings.
## Tips
- **Run only once per repository** — Framework setup is a one-time operation
- **Run after architecture is complete** — Framework aligns with tech stack
- **Follow up with CI setup** — Run `ci` to configure CI/CD pipeline
## Next Steps
After test framework setup:
1. **Test Design** — Create test plans for system or epics
2. **CI Configuration** — Set up automated test runs
3. **Story Implementation** — Tests are ready for development

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---
title: "TEA Command Reference"
description: Quick reference for all 8 TEA workflows - inputs, outputs, and links to detailed guides
---
# TEA Command Reference
Quick reference for all 8 TEA (Test Architect) workflows. For detailed step-by-step guides, see the how-to documentation.
## Quick Index
- [`framework`](#framework) - Scaffold test framework
- [`ci`](#ci) - Setup CI/CD pipeline
- [`test-design`](#test-design) - Risk-based test planning
- [`atdd`](#atdd) - Acceptance TDD
- [`automate`](#automate) - Test automation
- [`test-review`](#test-review) - Quality audit
- [`nfr-assess`](#nfr-assess) - NFR assessment
- [`trace`](#trace) - Coverage traceability
---
## framework
**Purpose:** Scaffold production-ready test framework (Playwright or Cypress)
**Phase:** Phase 3 (Solutioning)
**Frequency:** Once per project
**Key Inputs:**
- Tech stack, test framework choice, testing scope
**Key Outputs:**
- `tests/` directory with `support/fixtures/` and `support/helpers/`
- `playwright.config.ts` or `cypress.config.ts`
- `.env.example`, `.nvmrc`
- Sample tests with best practices
**How-To Guide:** [Setup Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md)
---
## ci
**Purpose:** Setup CI/CD pipeline with selective testing and burn-in
**Phase:** Phase 3 (Solutioning)
**Frequency:** Once per project
**Key Inputs:**
- CI platform (GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, etc.)
- Sharding strategy, burn-in preferences
**Key Outputs:**
- Platform-specific CI workflow (`.github/workflows/test.yml`, etc.)
- Parallel execution configuration
- Burn-in loops for flakiness detection
- Secrets checklist
**How-To Guide:** [Setup CI Pipeline](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-ci.md)
---
## test-design
**Purpose:** Risk-based test planning with coverage strategy
**Phase:** Phase 3 (system-level), Phase 4 (epic-level)
**Frequency:** Once (system), per epic (epic-level)
**Modes:**
- **System-level:** Architecture testability review (TWO documents)
- **Epic-level:** Per-epic risk assessment (ONE document)
**Key Inputs:**
- System-level: Architecture, PRD, ADRs
- Epic-level: Epic, stories, acceptance criteria
**Key Outputs:**
**System-Level (TWO Documents):**
- `test-design-architecture.md` - For Architecture/Dev teams
- Quick Guide (🚨 BLOCKERS / ⚠️ HIGH PRIORITY / 📋 INFO ONLY)
- Risk assessment with scoring
- Testability concerns and gaps
- Mitigation plans
- `test-design-qa.md` - For QA team
- Test execution recipe
- Coverage plan (P0/P1/P2/P3 with checkboxes)
- Sprint 0 setup requirements
- NFR readiness summary
**Epic-Level (ONE Document):**
- `test-design-epic-N.md`
- Risk assessment (probability × impact scores)
- Test priorities (P0-P3)
- Coverage strategy
- Mitigation plans
**Why Two Documents for System-Level?**
- Architecture teams scan blockers in <5 min
- QA teams have actionable test recipes
- No redundancy (cross-references instead)
- Clear separation (what to deliver vs how to test)
**MCP Enhancement:** Exploratory mode (live browser UI discovery)
**How-To Guide:** [Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md)
---
## atdd
**Purpose:** Generate failing acceptance tests BEFORE implementation (TDD red phase)
**Phase:** Phase 4 (Implementation)
**Frequency:** Per story (optional)
**Key Inputs:**
- Story with acceptance criteria, test design, test levels
**Key Outputs:**
- Failing tests (`tests/api/`, `tests/e2e/`)
- Implementation checklist
- All tests fail initially (red phase)
**MCP Enhancement:** Recording mode (for skeleton UI only - rare)
**How-To Guide:** [Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md)
---
## automate
**Purpose:** Expand test coverage after implementation
**Phase:** Phase 4 (Implementation)
**Frequency:** Per story/feature
**Key Inputs:**
- Feature description, test design, existing tests to avoid duplication
**Key Outputs:**
- Comprehensive test suite (`tests/e2e/`, `tests/api/`)
- Updated fixtures, README
- Definition of Done summary
**MCP Enhancement:** Healing + Recording modes (fix tests, verify selectors)
**How-To Guide:** [Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md)
---
## test-review
**Purpose:** Audit test quality with 0-100 scoring
**Phase:** Phase 4 (optional per story), Release Gate
**Frequency:** Per epic or before release
**Key Inputs:**
- Test scope (file, directory, or entire suite)
**Key Outputs:**
- `test-review.md` with quality score (0-100)
- Critical issues with fixes
- Recommendations
- Category scores (Determinism, Isolation, Assertions, Structure, Performance)
**Scoring Categories:**
- Determinism: 35 points
- Isolation: 25 points
- Assertions: 20 points
- Structure: 10 points
- Performance: 10 points
**How-To Guide:** [Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md)
---
## nfr-assess
**Purpose:** Validate non-functional requirements with evidence
**Phase:** Phase 2 (enterprise), Release Gate
**Frequency:** Per release (enterprise projects)
**Key Inputs:**
- NFR categories (Security, Performance, Reliability, Maintainability)
- Thresholds, evidence location
**Key Outputs:**
- `nfr-assessment.md`
- Category assessments (PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL)
- Mitigation plans
- Gate decision inputs
**How-To Guide:** [Run NFR Assessment](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-nfr-assess.md)
---
## trace
**Purpose:** Requirements traceability + quality gate decision
**Phase:** Phase 2/4 (traceability), Release Gate (decision)
**Frequency:** Baseline, per epic refresh, release gate
**Two-Phase Workflow:**
**Phase 1: Traceability**
- Requirements test mapping
- Coverage classification (FULL/PARTIAL/NONE)
- Gap prioritization
- Output: `traceability-matrix.md`
**Phase 2: Gate Decision**
- PASS/CONCERNS/FAIL/WAIVED decision
- Evidence-based (coverage %, quality scores, NFRs)
- Output: `gate-decision-{gate_type}-{story_id}.md`
**Gate Rules:**
- P0 coverage: 100% required
- P1 coverage: 90% for PASS, 80-89% for CONCERNS, <80% FAIL
- Overall coverage: 80% required
**How-To Guide:** [Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md)
---
## Summary Table
| Command | Phase | Frequency | Primary Output |
|---------|-------|-----------|----------------|
| `framework` | 3 | Once | Test infrastructure |
| `ci` | 3 | Once | CI/CD pipeline |
| `test-design` | 3, 4 | System + per epic | Test design doc |
| `atdd` | 4 | Per story (optional) | Failing tests |
| `automate` | 4 | Per story | Passing tests |
| `test-review` | 4, Gate | Per epic/release | Quality report |
| `nfr-assess` | 2, Gate | Per release | NFR assessment |
| `trace` | 2, 4, Gate | Baseline + refresh + gate | Coverage matrix + decision |
---
## See Also
**How-To Guides (Detailed Instructions):**
- [Setup Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md)
- [Setup CI Pipeline](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-ci.md)
- [Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md)
- [Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md)
- [Run Automate](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-automate.md)
- [Run Test Review](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md)
- [Run NFR Assessment](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-nfr-assess.md)
- [Run Trace](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-trace.md)
**Explanation:**
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Complete TEA lifecycle
- [Engagement Models](/docs/tea/explanation/engagement-models.md) - When to use which workflows
**Reference:**
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config options
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md) - Pattern fragments
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "TEA Configuration Reference"
description: Complete reference for TEA configuration options and file locations
---
# TEA Configuration Reference
Complete reference for all TEA (Test Architect) configuration options.
## Configuration File Locations
### User Configuration (Installer-Generated)
**Location:** `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml`
**Purpose:** Project-specific configuration values for your repository
**Created By:** BMad installer
**Status:** Typically gitignored (user-specific values)
**Usage:** Edit this file to change TEA behavior in your project
**Example:**
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
project_name: my-awesome-app
user_skill_level: intermediate
output_folder: _bmad-output
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: false
```
### Canonical Schema (Source of Truth)
**Location:** `src/bmm/module.yaml`
**Purpose:** Defines available configuration keys, defaults, and installer prompts
**Created By:** BMAD maintainers (part of BMAD repo)
**Status:** Versioned in BMAD repository
**Usage:** Reference only (do not edit unless contributing to BMAD)
**Note:** The installer reads `module.yaml` to prompt for config values, then writes user choices to `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml` in your project.
---
## TEA Configuration Options
### tea_use_playwright_utils
Enable Playwright Utils integration for production-ready fixtures and utilities.
**Schema Location:** `src/bmm/module.yaml:52-56`
**User Config:** `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml`
**Type:** `boolean`
**Default:** `false` (set via installer prompt during installation)
**Installer Prompt:**
```
Are you using playwright-utils (@seontechnologies/playwright-utils) in your project?
You must install packages yourself, or use test architect's `framework` command.
```
**Purpose:** Enables TEA to:
- Include playwright-utils in `framework` scaffold
- Generate tests using playwright-utils fixtures
- Review tests against playwright-utils patterns
- Configure CI with burn-in and selective testing utilities
**Affects Workflows:**
- `framework` - Includes playwright-utils imports and fixture examples
- `atdd` - Uses fixtures like `apiRequest`, `authSession` in generated tests
- `automate` - Leverages utilities for test patterns
- `test-review` - Reviews against playwright-utils best practices
- `ci` - Includes burn-in utility and selective testing
**Example (Enable):**
```yaml
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
```
**Example (Disable):**
```yaml
tea_use_playwright_utils: false
```
**Prerequisites:**
```bash
npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
```
**Related:**
- [Integrate Playwright Utils Guide](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md)
- [Playwright Utils on npm](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@seontechnologies/playwright-utils)
---
### tea_use_mcp_enhancements
Enable Playwright MCP servers for live browser verification during test generation.
**Schema Location:** `src/bmm/module.yaml:47-50`
**User Config:** `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml`
**Type:** `boolean`
**Default:** `false`
**Installer Prompt:**
```
Test Architect Playwright MCP capabilities (healing, exploratory, verification) are optionally available.
You will have to setup your MCPs yourself; refer to https://docs.bmad-method.org/explanation/features/tea-overview for configuration examples.
Would you like to enable MCP enhancements in Test Architect?
```
**Purpose:** Enables TEA to use Model Context Protocol servers for:
- Live browser automation during test design
- Selector verification with actual DOM
- Interactive UI discovery
- Visual debugging and healing
**Affects Workflows:**
- `test-design` - Enables exploratory mode (browser-based UI discovery)
- `atdd` - Enables recording mode (verify selectors with live browser)
- `automate` - Enables healing mode (fix tests with visual debugging)
**MCP Servers Required:**
**Two Playwright MCP servers** (actively maintained, continuously updated):
- `playwright` - Browser automation (`npx @playwright/mcp@latest`)
- `playwright-test` - Test runner with failure analysis (`npx playwright run-test-mcp-server`)
**Configuration example**:
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"playwright": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["@playwright/mcp@latest"]
},
"playwright-test": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["playwright", "run-test-mcp-server"]
}
}
}
```
**Configuration:** Refer to your AI agent's documentation for MCP server setup instructions.
**Example (Enable):**
```yaml
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true
```
**Example (Disable):**
```yaml
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: false
```
**Prerequisites:**
1. MCP servers installed in IDE configuration
2. `@playwright/mcp` package available globally or locally
3. Browser binaries installed (`npx playwright install`)
**Related:**
- [Enable MCP Enhancements Guide](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/enable-tea-mcp-enhancements.md)
- [TEA Overview - MCP Section](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md#playwright-mcp-enhancements)
- [Playwright MCP on npm](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@playwright/mcp)
---
## Core BMM Configuration (Inherited by TEA)
TEA also uses core BMM configuration options from `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml`:
### output_folder
**Type:** `string`
**Default:** `_bmad-output`
**Purpose:** Where TEA writes output files (test designs, reports, traceability matrices)
**Example:**
```yaml
output_folder: _bmad-output
```
**TEA Output Files:**
- `test-design-architecture.md` + `test-design-qa.md` (from `test-design` system-level - TWO documents)
- `test-design-epic-N.md` (from `test-design` epic-level)
- `test-review.md` (from `test-review`)
- `traceability-matrix.md` (from `trace` Phase 1)
- `gate-decision-{gate_type}-{story_id}.md` (from `trace` Phase 2)
- `nfr-assessment.md` (from `nfr-assess`)
- `automation-summary.md` (from `automate`)
- `atdd-checklist-{story_id}.md` (from `atdd`)
---
### user_skill_level
**Type:** `enum`
**Options:** `beginner` | `intermediate` | `expert`
**Default:** `intermediate`
**Purpose:** Affects how TEA explains concepts in chat responses
**Example:**
```yaml
user_skill_level: beginner
```
**Impact on TEA:**
- **Beginner:** More detailed explanations, links to concepts, verbose guidance
- **Intermediate:** Balanced explanations, assumes basic knowledge
- **Expert:** Concise, technical, minimal hand-holding
---
### project_name
**Type:** `string`
**Default:** Directory name
**Purpose:** Used in TEA-generated documentation and reports
**Example:**
```yaml
project_name: my-awesome-app
```
**Used in:**
- Report headers
- Documentation titles
- CI configuration comments
---
### communication_language
**Type:** `string`
**Default:** `english`
**Purpose:** Language for TEA chat responses
**Example:**
```yaml
communication_language: english
```
**Supported:** Any language (TEA responds in specified language)
---
### document_output_language
**Type:** `string`
**Default:** `english`
**Purpose:** Language for TEA-generated documents (test designs, reports)
**Example:**
```yaml
document_output_language: english
```
**Note:** Can differ from `communication_language` - chat in Spanish, generate docs in English.
---
## Environment Variables
TEA workflows may use environment variables for test configuration.
### Test Framework Variables
**Playwright:**
```bash
# .env
BASE_URL=https://todomvc.com/examples/react/dist/
API_BASE_URL=https://api.example.com
TEST_USER_EMAIL=test@example.com
TEST_USER_PASSWORD=password123
```
**Cypress:**
```bash
# cypress.env.json or .env
CYPRESS_BASE_URL=https://example.com
CYPRESS_API_URL=https://api.example.com
```
### CI/CD Variables
Set in CI platform (GitHub Actions secrets, GitLab CI variables):
```yaml
# .github/workflows/test.yml
env:
BASE_URL: ${{ secrets.STAGING_URL }}
API_KEY: ${{ secrets.API_KEY }}
TEST_USER_EMAIL: ${{ secrets.TEST_USER }}
```
---
## Configuration Patterns
### Development vs Production
**Separate configs for environments:**
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
output_folder: _bmad-output
# .env.development
BASE_URL=http://localhost:3000
API_BASE_URL=http://localhost:4000
# .env.staging
BASE_URL=https://staging.example.com
API_BASE_URL=https://api-staging.example.com
# .env.production (read-only tests only!)
BASE_URL=https://example.com
API_BASE_URL=https://api.example.com
```
### Team vs Individual
**Team config (committed):**
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml.example (committed to repo)
project_name: team-project
output_folder: _bmad-output
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: false
```
**Individual config (typically gitignored):**
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml (user adds to .gitignore)
user_name: John Doe
user_skill_level: expert
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true # Individual preference
```
### Monorepo Configuration
**Root config:**
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml (root)
project_name: monorepo-parent
output_folder: _bmad-output
```
**Package-specific:**
```yaml
# packages/web-app/_bmad/bmm/config.yaml
project_name: web-app
output_folder: ../../_bmad-output/web-app
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
# packages/mobile-app/_bmad/bmm/config.yaml
project_name: mobile-app
output_folder: ../../_bmad-output/mobile-app
tea_use_playwright_utils: false
```
---
## Configuration Best Practices
### 1. Use Version Control Wisely
**Commit:**
```
_bmad/bmm/config.yaml.example # Template for team
.nvmrc # Node version
package.json # Dependencies
```
**Recommended for .gitignore:**
```
_bmad/bmm/config.yaml # User-specific values
.env # Secrets
.env.local # Local overrides
```
### 2. Document Required Setup
**In your README:**
```markdown
## Setup
1. Install BMad
2. Copy config template:
cp _bmad/bmm/config.yaml.example _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
3. Edit config with your values:
- Set user_name
- Enable tea_use_playwright_utils if using playwright-utils
- Enable tea_use_mcp_enhancements if MCPs configured
```
### 3. Validate Configuration
**Check config is valid:**
```bash
# Check TEA config is set
cat _bmad/bmm/config.yaml | grep tea_use
# Verify playwright-utils installed (if enabled)
npm list @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
# Verify MCP servers configured (if enabled)
# Check your IDE's MCP settings
```
### 4. Keep Config Minimal
**Don't over-configure:**
```yaml
# ❌ Bad - overriding everything unnecessarily
project_name: my-project
user_name: John Doe
user_skill_level: expert
output_folder: custom/path
planning_artifacts: custom/planning
implementation_artifacts: custom/implementation
project_knowledge: custom/docs
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true
communication_language: english
document_output_language: english
# Overriding 11 config options when most can use defaults
# ✅ Good - only essential overrides
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
output_folder: docs/testing
# Only override what differs from defaults
```
**Use defaults when possible** - only override what you actually need to change.
---
## Troubleshooting
### Configuration Not Loaded
**Problem:** TEA doesn't use my config values.
**Causes:**
1. Config file in wrong location
2. YAML syntax error
3. Typo in config key
**Solution:**
```bash
# Check file exists
ls -la _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
# Validate YAML syntax
npm install -g js-yaml
js-yaml _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
# Check for typos (compare to module.yaml)
diff _bmad/bmm/config.yaml src/bmm/module.yaml
```
### Playwright Utils Not Working
**Problem:** `tea_use_playwright_utils: true` but TEA doesn't use utilities.
**Causes:**
1. Package not installed
2. Config file not saved
3. Workflow run before config update
**Solution:**
```bash
# Verify package installed
npm list @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
# Check config value
grep tea_use_playwright_utils _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
# Re-run workflow in fresh chat
# (TEA loads config at workflow start)
```
### MCP Enhancements Not Working
**Problem:** `tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true` but no browser opens.
**Causes:**
1. MCP servers not configured in IDE
2. MCP package not installed
3. Browser binaries missing
**Solution:**
```bash
# Check MCP package available
npx @playwright/mcp@latest --version
# Install browsers
npx playwright install
# Verify IDE MCP config
# Check ~/.cursor/config.json or VS Code settings
```
### Config Changes Not Applied
**Problem:** Updated config but TEA still uses old values.
**Cause:** TEA loads config at workflow start.
**Solution:**
1. Save `_bmad/bmm/config.yaml`
2. Start fresh chat
3. Run TEA workflow
4. Config will be reloaded
**TEA doesn't reload config mid-chat** - always start fresh chat after config changes.
---
## Configuration Examples
### Recommended Setup (Full Stack)
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
project_name: my-project
user_skill_level: beginner # or intermediate/expert
output_folder: _bmad-output
tea_use_playwright_utils: true # Recommended
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true # Recommended
```
**Why recommended:**
- Playwright Utils: Production-ready fixtures and utilities
- MCP enhancements: Live browser verification, visual debugging
- Together: The three-part stack (see [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md))
**Prerequisites:**
```bash
npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
# Configure MCP servers in IDE (see Enable MCP Enhancements guide)
```
**Best for:** Everyone (beginners learn good patterns from day one)
---
### Minimal Setup (Learning Only)
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
project_name: my-project
output_folder: _bmad-output
tea_use_playwright_utils: false
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: false
```
**Best for:**
- First-time TEA users (keep it simple initially)
- Quick experiments
- Learning basics before adding integrations
**Note:** Can enable integrations later as you learn
---
### Monorepo Setup
**Root config:**
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml (root)
project_name: monorepo
output_folder: _bmad-output
tea_use_playwright_utils: true
```
**Package configs:**
```yaml
# apps/web/_bmad/bmm/config.yaml
project_name: web-app
output_folder: ../../_bmad-output/web
# apps/api/_bmad/bmm/config.yaml
project_name: api-service
output_folder: ../../_bmad-output/api
tea_use_playwright_utils: false # Using vanilla Playwright only
```
---
### Team Template
**Commit this template:**
```yaml
# _bmad/bmm/config.yaml.example
# Copy to config.yaml and fill in your values
project_name: your-project-name
user_name: Your Name
user_skill_level: intermediate # beginner | intermediate | expert
output_folder: _bmad-output
planning_artifacts: _bmad-output/planning-artifacts
implementation_artifacts: _bmad-output/implementation-artifacts
project_knowledge: docs
# TEA Configuration (Recommended: Enable both for full stack)
tea_use_playwright_utils: true # Recommended - production-ready utilities
tea_use_mcp_enhancements: true # Recommended - live browser verification
# Languages
communication_language: english
document_output_language: english
```
**Team instructions:**
```markdown
## Setup for New Team Members
1. Clone repo
2. Copy config template:
cp _bmad/bmm/config.yaml.example _bmad/bmm/config.yaml
3. Edit with your name and preferences
4. Install dependencies:
npm install
5. (Optional) Enable playwright-utils:
npm install -D @seontechnologies/playwright-utils
Set tea_use_playwright_utils: true
```
---
## See Also
### How-To Guides
- [Set Up Test Framework](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-test-framework.md)
- [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md)
- [Enable MCP Enhancements](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/enable-tea-mcp-enhancements.md)
### Reference
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md)
- [Knowledge Base Index](/docs/tea/reference/knowledge-base.md)
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md)
### Explanation
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md)
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md)
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "TEA Knowledge Base Index"
description: Complete index of TEA's 33 knowledge fragments for context engineering
---
# TEA Knowledge Base Index
TEA uses 33 specialized knowledge fragments for context engineering. These fragments are loaded dynamically based on workflow needs via the `tea-index.csv` manifest.
## What is Context Engineering?
**Context engineering** is the practice of loading domain-specific standards into AI context automatically rather than relying on prompts alone.
Instead of asking AI to "write good tests" every time, TEA:
1. Reads `tea-index.csv` to identify relevant fragments for the workflow
2. Loads only the fragments needed (keeps context focused)
3. Operates with domain-specific standards, not generic knowledge
4. Produces consistent, production-ready tests across projects
**Example:**
```
User runs: `test-design`
TEA reads tea-index.csv:
- Loads: test-quality.md, test-priorities-matrix.md, risk-governance.md
- Skips: network-recorder.md, burn-in.md (not needed for test design)
Result: Focused context, consistent quality standards
```
## How Knowledge Loading Works
### 1. Workflow Trigger
User runs a TEA workflow (e.g., `test-design`)
### 2. Manifest Lookup
TEA reads `src/bmm/testarch/tea-index.csv`:
```csv
id,name,description,tags,fragment_file
test-quality,Test Quality,Execution limits and isolation rules,quality;standards,knowledge/test-quality.md
risk-governance,Risk Governance,Risk scoring and gate decisions,risk;governance,knowledge/risk-governance.md
```
### 3. Dynamic Loading
Only fragments needed for the workflow are loaded into context
### 4. Consistent Output
AI operates with established patterns, producing consistent results
## Fragment Categories
### Architecture & Fixtures
Core patterns for test infrastructure and fixture composition.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [fixture-architecture](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/fixture-architecture.md) | Pure function → Fixture → mergeTests composition with auto-cleanup | Testability, composition, reusability |
| [network-first](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/network-first.md) | Intercept-before-navigate workflow, HAR capture, deterministic waits | Flakiness prevention, network patterns |
| [playwright-config](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/playwright-config.md) | Environment switching, timeout standards, artifact outputs | Configuration, environments, CI |
| [fixtures-composition](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/fixtures-composition.md) | mergeTests composition patterns for combining utilities | Fixture merging, utility composition |
**Used in:** `framework`, `test-design`, `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`
---
### Data & Setup
Patterns for test data generation, authentication, and setup.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [data-factories](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/data-factories.md) | Factory patterns with faker, overrides, API seeding, cleanup | Test data, factories, cleanup |
| [email-auth](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/email-auth.md) | Magic link extraction, state preservation, negative flows | Authentication, email testing |
| [auth-session](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/auth-session.md) | Token persistence, multi-user, API/browser authentication | Auth patterns, session management |
**Used in:** `framework`, `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`
---
### Network & Reliability
Network interception, error handling, and reliability patterns.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [network-recorder](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/network-recorder.md) | HAR record/playback, CRUD detection for offline testing | Offline testing, network replay |
| [intercept-network-call](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/intercept-network-call.md) | Network spy/stub, JSON parsing for UI tests | Mocking, interception, stubbing |
| [error-handling](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/error-handling.md) | Scoped exception handling, retry validation, telemetry logging | Error patterns, resilience |
| [network-error-monitor](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/network-error-monitor.md) | HTTP 4xx/5xx detection for UI tests | Error detection, monitoring |
**Used in:** `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`
---
### Test Execution & CI
CI/CD patterns, burn-in testing, and selective test execution.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [ci-burn-in](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/ci-burn-in.md) | Staged jobs, shard orchestration, burn-in loops | CI/CD, flakiness detection |
| [burn-in](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/burn-in.md) | Smart test selection, git diff for CI optimization | Test selection, performance |
| [selective-testing](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/selective-testing.md) | Tag/grep usage, spec filters, diff-based runs | Test filtering, optimization |
**Used in:** `ci`, `test-review`
---
### Quality & Standards
Test quality standards, test level selection, and TDD patterns.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [test-quality](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/test-quality.md) | Execution limits, isolation rules, green criteria | DoD, best practices, anti-patterns |
| [test-levels-framework](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/test-levels-framework.md) | Guidelines for unit, integration, E2E selection | Test pyramid, level selection |
| [test-priorities-matrix](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/test-priorities-matrix.md) | P0-P3 criteria, coverage targets, execution ordering | Prioritization, risk-based testing |
| [test-healing-patterns](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/test-healing-patterns.md) | Common failure patterns and automated fixes | Debugging, healing, fixes |
| [component-tdd](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/component-tdd.md) | Red→green→refactor workflow, provider isolation | TDD, component testing |
**Used in:** `test-design`, `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`, `trace`
---
### Risk & Gates
Risk assessment, governance, and gate decision frameworks.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [risk-governance](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/risk-governance.md) | Scoring matrix, category ownership, gate decision rules | Risk assessment, governance |
| [probability-impact](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/probability-impact.md) | Probability × impact scale for scoring matrix | Risk scoring, impact analysis |
| [nfr-criteria](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/nfr-criteria.md) | Security, performance, reliability, maintainability status | NFRs, compliance, enterprise |
**Used in:** `test-design`, `nfr-assess`, `trace`
---
### Selectors & Timing
Selector resilience, race condition debugging, and visual debugging.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [selector-resilience](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/selector-resilience.md) | Robust selector strategies and debugging | Selectors, locators, resilience |
| [timing-debugging](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/timing-debugging.md) | Race condition identification and deterministic fixes | Race conditions, timing issues |
| [visual-debugging](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/visual-debugging.md) | Trace viewer usage, artifact expectations | Debugging, trace viewer, artifacts |
**Used in:** `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`
---
### Feature Flags & Testing Patterns
Feature flag testing, contract testing, and API testing patterns.
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [feature-flags](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/feature-flags.md) | Enum management, targeting helpers, cleanup, checklists | Feature flags, toggles |
| [contract-testing](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/contract-testing.md) | Pact publishing, provider verification, resilience | Contract testing, Pact |
| [api-testing-patterns](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/api-testing-patterns.md) | Pure API patterns without browser | API testing, backend testing |
**Used in:** `test-design`, `atdd`, `automate`
---
### Playwright-Utils Integration
Patterns for using `@seontechnologies/playwright-utils` package (9 utilities).
| Fragment | Description | Key Topics |
|----------|-------------|-----------|
| [api-request](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/api-request.md) | Typed HTTP client, schema validation, retry logic | API calls, HTTP, validation |
| [auth-session](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/auth-session.md) | Token persistence, multi-user, API/browser authentication | Auth patterns, session management |
| [network-recorder](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/network-recorder.md) | HAR record/playback, CRUD detection for offline testing | Offline testing, network replay |
| [intercept-network-call](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/intercept-network-call.md) | Network spy/stub, JSON parsing for UI tests | Mocking, interception, stubbing |
| [recurse](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/recurse.md) | Async polling for API responses, background jobs | Polling, eventual consistency |
| [log](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/log.md) | Structured logging for API and UI tests | Logging, debugging, reporting |
| [file-utils](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/file-utils.md) | CSV/XLSX/PDF/ZIP handling with download support | File validation, exports |
| [burn-in](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/burn-in.md) | Smart test selection with git diff analysis | CI optimization, selective testing |
| [network-error-monitor](../../../src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/network-error-monitor.md) | Auto-detect HTTP 4xx/5xx errors during tests | Error monitoring, silent failures |
**Note:** `fixtures-composition` is listed under Architecture & Fixtures (general Playwright `mergeTests` pattern, applies to all fixtures).
**Used in:** `framework` (if `tea_use_playwright_utils: true`), `atdd`, `automate`, `test-review`, `ci`
**Official Docs:** <https://seontechnologies.github.io/playwright-utils/>
---
## Fragment Manifest (tea-index.csv)
**Location:** `src/bmm/testarch/tea-index.csv`
**Purpose:** Tracks all knowledge fragments and their usage in workflows
**Structure:**
```csv
id,name,description,tags,fragment_file
test-quality,Test Quality,Execution limits and isolation rules,quality;standards,knowledge/test-quality.md
risk-governance,Risk Governance,Risk scoring and gate decisions,risk;governance,knowledge/risk-governance.md
```
**Columns:**
- `id` - Unique fragment identifier (kebab-case)
- `name` - Human-readable fragment name
- `description` - What the fragment covers
- `tags` - Searchable tags (semicolon-separated)
- `fragment_file` - Relative path to fragment markdown file
**Fragment Location:** `src/bmm/testarch/knowledge/` (all 33 fragments in single directory)
**Manifest:** `src/bmm/testarch/tea-index.csv`
---
## Workflow Fragment Loading
Each TEA workflow loads specific fragments:
### `framework`
**Key Fragments:**
- fixture-architecture.md
- playwright-config.md
- fixtures-composition.md
**Purpose:** Test infrastructure patterns and fixture composition
**Note:** Loads additional fragments based on framework choice (Playwright/Cypress) and config (`tea_use_playwright_utils`).
---
### `test-design`
**Key Fragments:**
- test-quality.md
- test-priorities-matrix.md
- test-levels-framework.md
- risk-governance.md
- probability-impact.md
**Purpose:** Risk assessment and test planning standards
**Note:** Loads additional fragments based on mode (system-level vs epic-level) and focus areas.
---
### `atdd`
**Key Fragments:**
- test-quality.md
- component-tdd.md
- fixture-architecture.md
- network-first.md
- data-factories.md
- selector-resilience.md
- timing-debugging.md
- test-healing-patterns.md
**Purpose:** TDD patterns and test generation standards
**Note:** Loads auth, network, and utility fragments based on feature requirements.
---
### `automate`
**Key Fragments:**
- test-quality.md
- test-levels-framework.md
- test-priorities-matrix.md
- fixture-architecture.md
- network-first.md
- selector-resilience.md
- test-healing-patterns.md
- timing-debugging.md
**Purpose:** Comprehensive test generation with quality standards
**Note:** Loads additional fragments for data factories, auth, network utilities based on test needs.
---
### `test-review`
**Key Fragments:**
- test-quality.md
- test-healing-patterns.md
- selector-resilience.md
- timing-debugging.md
- visual-debugging.md
- network-first.md
- test-levels-framework.md
- fixture-architecture.md
**Purpose:** Comprehensive quality review against all standards
**Note:** Loads all applicable playwright-utils fragments when `tea_use_playwright_utils: true`.
---
### `ci`
**Key Fragments:**
- ci-burn-in.md
- burn-in.md
- selective-testing.md
- playwright-config.md
**Purpose:** CI/CD best practices and optimization
---
### `nfr-assess`
**Key Fragments:**
- nfr-criteria.md
- risk-governance.md
- probability-impact.md
**Purpose:** NFR assessment frameworks and decision rules
---
### `trace`
**Key Fragments:**
- test-priorities-matrix.md
- risk-governance.md
- test-quality.md
**Purpose:** Traceability and gate decision standards
**Note:** Loads nfr-criteria.md if NFR assessment is part of gate decision.
---
## Related
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - How knowledge base fits in TEA
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - Context engineering philosophy
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - Workflows that use fragments
---
Generated with [BMad Method](https://bmad-method.org) - TEA (Test Architect)

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---
title: "Getting Started with Test Architect"
description: Learn Test Architect fundamentals by generating and running tests for an existing demo app in 30 minutes
---
Welcome! **Test Architect (TEA) Lite** is the simplest way to get started with TEA - just use the `automate` workflow (e.g., `/automate` in Claude Code) to generate tests for existing features. Perfect for beginners who want to learn TEA fundamentals quickly.
## What You'll Build
By the end of this 30-minute tutorial, you'll have:
- A working Playwright test framework
- Your first risk-based test plan
- Passing tests for an existing demo app feature
:::note[Prerequisites]
- Node.js installed (v20 or later)
- 30 minutes of focused time
- We'll use TodoMVC (<https://todomvc.com/examples/react/dist/>) as our demo app
:::
:::tip[Quick Path]
Load TEA (`tea`) → scaffold framework (`framework`) → create test plan (`test-design`) → generate tests (`automate`) → run with `npx playwright test`.
:::
## TEA Approaches Explained
Before we start, understand the three ways to use TEA:
- **TEA Lite** (this tutorial): Beginner using just the `automate` workflow to test existing features
- **TEA Solo**: Using TEA standalone without full BMad Method integration
- **TEA Integrated**: Full BMad Method with all TEA workflows across phases
This tutorial focuses on **TEA Lite** - the fastest way to see TEA in action.
## Step 0: Setup (2 minutes)
We'll test TodoMVC, a standard demo app used across testing documentation.
**Demo App:** <https://todomvc.com/examples/react/dist/>
No installation needed - TodoMVC runs in your browser. Open the link above and:
1. Add a few todos (type and press Enter)
2. Mark some as complete (click checkbox)
3. Try the "All", "Active", "Completed" filters
You've just explored the features we'll test!
## Step 1: Install BMad and Scaffold Framework (10 minutes)
### Install BMad Method
Install BMad (see installation guide for latest command).
When prompted:
- **Select modules:** Choose "BMM: BMad Method" (press Space, then Enter)
- **Project name:** Keep default or enter your project name
- **Experience level:** Choose "beginner" for this tutorial
- **Planning artifacts folder:** Keep default
- **Implementation artifacts folder:** Keep default
- **Project knowledge folder:** Keep default
- **Enable TEA Playwright Model Context Protocol (MCP) enhancements?** Choose "No" for now (we'll explore this later)
- **Using playwright-utils?** Choose "No" for now (we'll explore this later)
BMad is now installed! You'll see a `_bmad/` folder in your project.
### Load TEA Agent
Start a new chat with your AI assistant (Claude, etc.) and type:
```
tea
```
This loads the Test Architect agent. You'll see TEA's menu with available workflows.
### Scaffold Test Framework
In your chat, run:
```
framework
```
TEA will ask you questions:
**Q: What's your tech stack?**
A: "We're testing a React web application (TodoMVC)"
**Q: Which test framework?**
A: "Playwright"
**Q: Testing scope?**
A: "End-to-end (E2E) testing for a web application"
**Q: Continuous integration/continuous deployment (CI/CD) platform?**
A: "GitHub Actions" (or your preference)
TEA will generate:
- `tests/` directory with Playwright config
- `playwright.config.ts` with base configuration
- Sample test structure
- `.env.example` for environment variables
- `.nvmrc` for Node version
**Verify the setup:**
```bash
npm install
npx playwright install
```
You now have a production-ready test framework!
## Step 2: Your First Test Design (5 minutes)
Test design is where TEA shines - risk-based planning before writing tests.
### Run Test Design
In your chat with TEA, run:
```
test-design
```
**Q: System-level or epic-level?**
A: "Epic-level - I want to test TodoMVC's basic functionality"
**Q: What feature are you testing?**
A: "TodoMVC's core operations - creating, completing, and deleting todos"
**Q: Any specific risks or concerns?**
A: "We want to ensure the filter buttons (All, Active, Completed) work correctly"
TEA will analyze and create `test-design-epic-1.md` with:
1. **Risk Assessment**
- Probability × Impact scoring
- Risk categories (TECH, SEC, PERF, DATA, BUS, OPS)
- High-risk areas identified
2. **Test Priorities**
- P0: Critical path (creating and displaying todos)
- P1: High value (completing todos, filters)
- P2: Medium value (deleting todos)
- P3: Low value (edge cases)
3. **Coverage Strategy**
- E2E tests for user workflows
- Which scenarios need testing
- Suggested test structure
**Review the test design file** - notice how TEA provides a systematic approach to what needs testing and why.
## Step 3: Generate Tests for Existing Features (5 minutes)
Now the magic happens - TEA generates tests based on your test design.
### Run Automate
In your chat with TEA, run:
```
automate
```
**Q: What are you testing?**
A: "TodoMVC React app at <https://todomvc.com/examples/react/dist/> - focus on the test design we just created"
**Q: Reference existing docs?**
A: "Yes, use test-design-epic-1.md"
**Q: Any specific test scenarios?**
A: "Cover the P0 and P1 scenarios from the test design"
TEA will generate:
**`tests/e2e/todomvc.spec.ts`** with tests like:
```typescript
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test.describe('TodoMVC - Core Functionality', () => {
test.beforeEach(async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto('https://todomvc.com/examples/react/dist/');
});
test('should create a new todo', async ({ page }) => {
// TodoMVC uses a simple input without placeholder or test IDs
const todoInput = page.locator('.new-todo');
await todoInput.fill('Buy groceries');
await todoInput.press('Enter');
// Verify todo appears in list
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toContainText('Buy groceries');
});
test('should mark todo as complete', async ({ page }) => {
// Create a todo
const todoInput = page.locator('.new-todo');
await todoInput.fill('Complete tutorial');
await todoInput.press('Enter');
// Mark as complete using the toggle checkbox
await page.locator('.todo-list li .toggle').click();
// Verify completed state
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toHaveClass(/completed/);
});
test('should filter todos by status', async ({ page }) => {
// Create multiple todos
const todoInput = page.locator('.new-todo');
await todoInput.fill('Buy groceries');
await todoInput.press('Enter');
await todoInput.fill('Write tests');
await todoInput.press('Enter');
// Complete the first todo ("Buy groceries")
await page.locator('.todo-list li .toggle').first().click();
// Test Active filter (shows only incomplete todos)
await page.locator('.filters a[href="#/active"]').click();
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toHaveCount(1);
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toContainText('Write tests');
// Test Completed filter (shows only completed todos)
await page.locator('.filters a[href="#/completed"]').click();
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toHaveCount(1);
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toContainText('Buy groceries');
});
});
```
TEA also creates:
- **`tests/README.md`** - How to run tests, project conventions
- **Definition of Done summary** - What makes a test "good"
### With Playwright Utils (Optional Enhancement)
If you have `tea_use_playwright_utils: true` in your config, TEA generates tests using production-ready utilities:
**Vanilla Playwright:**
```typescript
test('should mark todo as complete', async ({ page, request }) => {
// Manual API call
const response = await request.post('/api/todos', {
data: { title: 'Complete tutorial' }
});
const todo = await response.json();
await page.goto('/');
await page.locator(`.todo-list li:has-text("${todo.title}") .toggle`).click();
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toHaveClass(/completed/);
});
```
**With Playwright Utils:**
```typescript
import { test } from '@seontechnologies/playwright-utils/api-request/fixtures';
import { expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should mark todo as complete', async ({ page, apiRequest }) => {
// Typed API call with cleaner syntax
const { status, body: todo } = await apiRequest({
method: 'POST',
path: '/api/todos',
body: { title: 'Complete tutorial' }
});
expect(status).toBe(201);
await page.goto('/');
await page.locator(`.todo-list li:has-text("${todo.title}") .toggle`).click();
await expect(page.locator('.todo-list li')).toHaveClass(/completed/);
});
```
**Benefits:**
- Type-safe API responses (`{ status, body }`)
- Automatic retry for 5xx errors
- Built-in schema validation
- Cleaner, more maintainable code
See [Integrate Playwright Utils](/docs/tea/how-to/customization/integrate-playwright-utils.md) to enable this.
## Step 4: Run and Validate (5 minutes)
Time to see your tests in action!
### Run the Tests
```bash
npx playwright test
```
You should see:
```
Running 3 tests using 1 worker
✓ tests/e2e/todomvc.spec.ts:7:3 should create a new todo (2s)
✓ tests/e2e/todomvc.spec.ts:15:3 should mark todo as complete (2s)
✓ tests/e2e/todomvc.spec.ts:30:3 should filter todos by status (3s)
3 passed (7s)
```
All green! Your tests are passing against the existing TodoMVC app.
### View Test Report
```bash
npx playwright show-report
```
Opens a beautiful HTML report showing:
- Test execution timeline
- Screenshots (if any failures)
- Trace viewer for debugging
### What Just Happened?
You used **TEA Lite** to:
1. Scaffold a production-ready test framework (`framework`)
2. Create a risk-based test plan (`test-design`)
3. Generate comprehensive tests (`automate`)
4. Run tests against an existing application
All in 30 minutes!
## What You Learned
Congratulations! You've completed the TEA Lite tutorial. You learned:
### Quick Reference
| Command | Purpose |
| -------------- | ------------------------------------ |
| `tea` | Load the TEA agent |
| `framework` | Scaffold test infrastructure |
| `test-design` | Risk-based test planning |
| `automate` | Generate tests for existing features |
### TEA Principles
- **Risk-based testing** - Depth scales with impact (P0 vs P3)
- **Test design first** - Plan before generating
- **Network-first patterns** - Tests wait for actual responses (no hard waits)
- **Production-ready from day one** - Not toy examples
:::tip[Key Takeaway]
TEA Lite (just `automate`) is perfect for beginners learning TEA fundamentals, testing existing applications, quick test coverage expansion, and teams wanting fast results.
:::
## Understanding ATDD vs Automate
This tutorial used the `automate` workflow to generate tests for **existing features** (tests pass immediately).
**When to use `automate`:**
- Feature already exists
- Want to add test coverage
- Tests should pass on first run
**When to use `atdd` (Acceptance Test-Driven Development):**
- Feature doesn't exist yet (Test-Driven Development workflow)
- Want failing tests BEFORE implementation
- Following red → green → refactor cycle
See [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) for the test-drive development (TDD) approach.
## Next Steps
### Level Up Your TEA Skills
**How-To Guides** (task-oriented):
- [How to Run Test Design](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-design.md) - Deep dive into risk assessment
- [How to Run ATDD](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-atdd.md) - Generate failing tests first (TDD)
- [How to Set Up CI Pipeline](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/setup-ci.md) - Automate test execution
- [How to Review Test Quality](/docs/tea/how-to/workflows/run-test-review.md) - Audit test quality
**Explanation** (understanding-oriented):
- [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) - Complete TEA capabilities
- [Testing as Engineering](/docs/tea/explanation/testing-as-engineering.md) - **Why TEA exists** (problem + solution)
- [Risk-Based Testing](/docs/tea/explanation/risk-based-testing.md) - How risk scoring works
**Reference** (quick lookup):
- [TEA Command Reference](/docs/tea/reference/commands.md) - All 8 TEA workflows
- [TEA Configuration](/docs/tea/reference/configuration.md) - Config options
- [Glossary](/docs/tea/glossary/index.md) - TEA terminology
### Try TEA Solo
Ready for standalone usage without full BMad Method? Use TEA Solo:
- Run any TEA workflow independently
- Bring your own requirements
- Use on non-BMad projects
See [TEA Overview](/docs/tea/explanation/tea-overview.md) for engagement models.
### Go Full TEA Integrated
Want the complete quality operating model? Try TEA Integrated with BMad Method:
- Phase 2: Planning with non-functional requirements (NFR) assessment
- Phase 3: Architecture testability review
- Phase 4: Per-epic test design → `atdd``automate`
- Release Gate: Coverage traceability and gate decisions
See [BMad Method Documentation](/) for the full workflow.
## Common Questions
- [Why can't my tests find elements?](#why-cant-my-tests-find-elements)
- [How do I fix network timeouts?](#how-do-i-fix-network-timeouts)
### Why can't my tests find elements?
TodoMVC doesn't use test IDs or accessible roles consistently. The selectors in this tutorial use CSS classes that match TodoMVC's actual structure:
```typescript
// TodoMVC uses these CSS classes:
page.locator('.new-todo') // Input field
page.locator('.todo-list li') // Todo items
page.locator('.toggle') // Checkbox
// If testing your own app, prefer accessible selectors:
page.getByRole('textbox')
page.getByRole('listitem')
page.getByRole('checkbox')
```
In production code, use accessible selectors (`getByRole`, `getByLabel`, `getByText`) for better resilience. TodoMVC is used here for learning, not as a selector best practice example.
### How do I fix network timeouts?
Increase timeout in `playwright.config.ts`:
```typescript
use: {
timeout: 30000, // 30 seconds
}
```
## Getting Help
- **Documentation:** <https://docs.bmad-method.org>
- **GitHub Issues:** <https://github.com/bmad-code-org/bmad-method/issues>
- **Discord:** Join the BMAD community

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@@ -0,0 +1,205 @@
---
title: "Getting Started"
description: Install BMad and build your first project
---
Build software faster using AI-powered workflows with specialized agents that guide you through planning, architecture, and implementation.
## What You'll Learn
- Install and initialize BMad Method for a new project
- Choose the right planning track for your project size
- Progress through phases from requirements to working code
- Use agents and workflows effectively
:::note[Prerequisites]
- **Node.js 20+** — Required for the installer
- **Git** — Recommended for version control
- **AI-powered IDE** — Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, or similar
- **A project idea** — Even a simple one works for learning
:::
:::tip[Quick Path]
**Install**`npx bmad-method install`
**Plan** → PM creates PRD, Architect creates architecture
**Build** → SM manages sprints, DEV implements stories
**Fresh chats** for each workflow to avoid context issues.
:::
## Understanding BMad
BMad helps you build software through guided workflows with specialized AI agents. The process follows four phases:
| Phase | Name | What Happens |
| ----- | -------------- | --------------------------------------------------- |
| 1 | Analysis | Brainstorming, research, product brief *(optional)* |
| 2 | Planning | Create requirements (PRD or tech-spec) |
| 3 | Solutioning | Design architecture *(BMad Method/Enterprise only)* |
| 4 | Implementation | Build epic by epic, story by story |
**[Open the Workflow Map](/docs/reference/workflow-map.md)** to explore phases, workflows, and context management.
Based on your project's complexity, BMad offers three planning tracks:
| Track | Best For | Documents Created |
| --------------- | ------------------------------------------------------ | -------------------------------------- |
| **Quick Flow** | Bug fixes, simple features, clear scope (1-15 stories) | Tech-spec only |
| **BMad Method** | Products, platforms, complex features (10-50+ stories) | PRD + Architecture + UX |
| **Enterprise** | Compliance, multi-tenant systems (30+ stories) | PRD + Architecture + Security + DevOps |
:::note
Story counts are guidance, not definitions. Choose your track based on planning needs, not story math.
:::
## Installation
Open a terminal in your project directory and run:
```bash
npx bmad-method install
```
When prompted to select modules, choose **BMad Method**.
The installer creates two folders:
- `_bmad/` — agents, workflows, tasks, and configuration
- `_bmad-output/` — empty for now, but this is where your artifacts will be saved
Open your AI IDE in the project folder. Run the `help` workflow (`/bmad-help` on most platforms) to see what to do next — it detects what you've completed and recommends the next step.
:::caution[Fresh Chats]
Always start a fresh chat for each workflow. This prevents context limitations from causing issues.
:::
## Step 1: Create Your Plan
Work through phases 1-3. **Use fresh chats for each workflow.**
### Phase 1: Analysis (Optional)
All workflows in this phase are optional:
- **brainstorming** — Guided ideation
- **research** — Market and technical research
- **create-product-brief** — Recommended foundation document
### Phase 2: Planning (Required)
**For BMad Method and Enterprise tracks:**
1. Load the **PM agent** in a new chat
2. Run the `prd` workflow
3. Output: `PRD.md`
**For Quick Flow track:**
- Use the `quick-spec` workflow instead of PRD, then skip to implementation
:::note[UX Design (Optional)]
If your project has a user interface, load the **UX-Designer agent** and run the UX design workflow after creating your PRD.
:::
### Phase 3: Solutioning (BMad Method/Enterprise)
**Create Architecture**
1. Load the **Architect agent** in a new chat
2. Run `create-architecture`
3. Output: Architecture document with technical decisions
**Create Epics and Stories**
:::tip[V6 Improvement]
Epics and stories are now created *after* architecture. This produces better quality stories because architecture decisions (database, API patterns, tech stack) directly affect how work should be broken down.
:::
1. Load the **PM agent** in a new chat
2. Run `create-epics-and-stories`
3. The workflow uses both PRD and Architecture to create technically-informed stories
**Implementation Readiness Check** *(Highly Recommended)*
1. Load the **Architect agent** in a new chat
2. Run `check-implementation-readiness`
3. Validates cohesion across all planning documents
## Step 2: Build Your Project
Once planning is complete, move to implementation. **Each workflow should run in a fresh chat.**
### Initialize Sprint Planning
Load the **SM agent** and run `sprint-planning`. This creates `sprint-status.yaml` to track all epics and stories.
### The Build Cycle
For each story, repeat this cycle with fresh chats:
| Step | Agent | Workflow | Purpose |
| ---- | ----- | -------------- | ---------------------------------- |
| 1 | SM | `create-story` | Create story file from epic |
| 2 | DEV | `dev-story` | Implement the story |
| 3 | DEV | `code-review` | Quality validation *(recommended)* |
After completing all stories in an epic, load the **SM agent** and run `retrospective`.
## What You've Accomplished
You've learned the foundation of building with BMad:
- Installed BMad and configured it for your IDE
- Initialized a project with your chosen planning track
- Created planning documents (PRD, Architecture, Epics & Stories)
- Understood the build cycle for implementation
Your project now has:
```
your-project/
├── _bmad/ # BMad configuration
├── _bmad-output/
│ ├── PRD.md # Your requirements document
│ ├── architecture.md # Technical decisions
│ ├── epics/ # Epic and story files
│ └── sprint-status.yaml # Sprint tracking
└── ...
```
## Quick Reference
| Workflow | Agent | Purpose |
| -------------------------------- | --------- | ------------------------------------ |
| `help` | Any | Get guidance on what to do next |
| `prd` | PM | Create Product Requirements Document |
| `create-architecture` | Architect | Create architecture document |
| `create-epics-and-stories` | PM | Break down PRD into epics |
| `check-implementation-readiness` | Architect | Validate planning cohesion |
| `sprint-planning` | SM | Initialize sprint tracking |
| `create-story` | SM | Create a story file |
| `dev-story` | DEV | Implement a story |
| `code-review` | DEV | Review implemented code |
## Common Questions
**Do I always need architecture?**
Only for BMad Method and Enterprise tracks. Quick Flow skips from tech-spec to implementation.
**Can I change my plan later?**
Yes. The SM agent has a `correct-course` workflow for handling scope changes.
**What if I want to brainstorm first?**
Load the Analyst agent and run `brainstorming` before starting your PRD.
**Do I need to follow a strict order?**
Not strictly. Once you learn the flow, you can run workflows directly using the Quick Reference above.
## Getting Help
- **During workflows** — Agents guide you with questions and explanations
- **Community** — [Discord](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj) (#bmad-method-help, #report-bugs-and-issues)
- **Stuck?** — Run `help` to see what to do next
## Key Takeaways
:::tip[Remember These]
- **Always use fresh chats** — Start a new chat for each workflow
- **Track matters** — Quick Flow uses quick-spec; Method/Enterprise need PRD and architecture
- **Use `help` when stuck** — It detects your progress and suggests next steps
:::
Ready to start? Install BMad and let the agents guide you through your first project.

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@@ -1,227 +0,0 @@
# BMad v4 to v6 Upgrade Guide
## Overview
BMad v6 represents a complete ground-up rewrite with significant architectural changes. This guide will help you migrate your v4 project to v6.
---
## Automatic V4 Detection
When you run `npm run install:bmad` on a project with v4 installed, the installer automatically detects:
- **Legacy folders**: Any folders starting with `.bmad`, `bmad` (lowercase), or `Bmad`
- **IDE command artifacts**: Legacy bmad folders in IDE configuration directories (`.claude/commands/`, `.cursor/commands/`, etc.)
### What Happens During Detection
1. **Automatic Backup of v4 Modules**: All `.bmad-*` folders are moved to `v4-backup/` in your project root
- If a backup already exists, a timestamp is added to avoid conflicts
- Example: `.bmad-core``v4-backup/.bmad-core`
- Your project files and data are NOT affected
2. **IDE Command Cleanup Recommended**: Legacy v4 IDE commands should be manually removed
- Located in IDE config folders: `.claude/commands/`, `.cursor/commands/`, etc.
- These old commands would still reference v4 folder structure if left in place
- The installer provides copy/paste terminal commands for your platform
- You can proceed without cleanup, but removing them prevents confusion with old v4 commands
---
## Module Migration
### Deprecated Modules
| v4 Module | v6 Status |
| ----------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------ |
| `.bmad-2d-phaser-game-dev` | Integrated into BMM |
| `.bmad-2d-unity-game-dev` | Integrated into BMM |
| `.bmad-godot-game-dev` | Integrated into BMM |
| `.bmad-*-game-dev` (any) | Integrated into BMM |
| `.bmad-infrastructure-devops` | Deprecated - New core devops agent coming in BMM |
| `.bmad-creative-writing` | Not adapted - New module releasing soon |
**Game Development**: All game development functionality has been consolidated and expanded within the BMM (BMad Method) module. Game-specific workflows now adapt to your game type and engine.
---
## Architecture Changes
### Folder Structure
**v4 "Expansion Packs" Structure:**
```
your-project/
├── .bmad-core/ # Was actually the BMad Method
├── .bmad-game-dev/ # Separate expansion packs
├── .bmad-creative-writing/
└── .bmad-infrastructure-devops/
```
**v6 Unified Structure:**
```
your-project/
└── {bmad_folder}/ # Single installation folder, default .bmad
├── core/ # Real core framework (applies to all modules)
├── bmm/ # BMad Method (software/game dev)
├── bmb/ # BMad Builder (create agents/workflows)
├── cis/ # Creative Intelligence Suite
└── _cfg/ # Your customizations
└── agents/ # Agent customization files
```
### Key Concept Changes
- **v4 `.bmad-core`**: Was actually the BMad Method
- **v6 `{bmad_folder}/core/`**: Is the real universal core framework
- **v6 `{bmad_folder}/bmm/`**: Is the BMad Method module
- **Module identification**: All modules now have a `config.yaml` file
---
## Project Progress Migration
### If You've Completed Planning Phase (PRD/Architecture) with the BMad Method:
After running the v6 installer:
1. **Run `workflow-init`** workflow to set up the guided workflow system
2. **Specify your project level** when prompted:
- If you followed v4's full workflow (PRD → Architecture → Stories), select **Level 3 or 4**
- This tells v6 you've already completed planning and solutioning phases
3. **Document paths**: Keep your existing paths during installation
- Default PRD/Architecture location: `docs/`
- Default stories location: `docs/sprint-artifacts/`
- **Accept these defaults** if you're already using them in v4
> **Important**: v6 workflows can handle both sharded and unsharded documents. You don't need to restructure your existing PRD or architecture files.
### If You're Mid-Development (Stories Created/Implemented)
1. Complete the v6 installation as above
2. Run `workflow-init` and specify Level 3 or 4
3. When ready to continue development, run the **`sprint-planning`** workflow (Phase 4)
---
## Agent Customization Migration
### v4 Agent Customization
In v4, you may have modified agent files directly in `.bmad-*` folders.
### v6 Agent Customization
**All customizations** now go in `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/` using customize files:
**Example: Renaming an agent and changing communication style**
File: `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/bmm-pm.customize.yaml`
```yaml
# Customize the PM agent
persona:
name: 'Captain Jack' # Override agent name
role: 'Swashbuckling Product Owner'
communication_style: |
- Talk like a pirate
- Use nautical metaphors for software concepts
- Always upbeat and adventurous
```
**How it works:**
- Base agent: `{bmad_folder}/bmm/agents/pm.md`
- Customization: `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/bmm-pm.customize.yaml`
- Result: Agent uses your custom name and style, but updates don't overwrite your changes
---
## Document Compatibility
### Sharded vs Unsharded Documents
**Good news**: Unlike v4, v6 workflows are **fully flexible** with document structure:
- ✅ Sharded documents (split into multiple files)
- ✅ Unsharded documents (single file per section)
- ✅ Custom sections for your project type
- ✅ Mixed approaches
All workflow files are scanned automatically. No manual configuration needed.
---
## Installation Steps
### 1. Clone Repository
```bash
git clone https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD
cd BMAD-METHOD
npm install
```
### 2. Run Installer on Your v4 Project
```bash
npx bmad-method install
```
**Enter the full path to your v4 project** when prompted.
### 3. Follow Interactive Prompts
The installer will:
1. Detect v4 installation and offer to backup `.bmad-*` folders
2. Prompt for recommended cleanup (you can skip)
3. Let you select modules (recommend: BMM for software and or game development)
4. Configure core settings (name, language, etc.)
5. Configure module-specific options
6. Configure IDE integrations
### 4. Accept Default Paths
If you're using:
- `docs/` for PRD and architecture
- `docs/sprint-artifacts/` for story files
**Accept these defaults** during installation.
### 5. Initialize Workflow
After installation:
1. **Load the Analyst agent** - See your IDE-specific instructions in [docs/ide-info](./ide-info/) for how to activate agents:
- [Claude Code](./ide-info/claude-code.md)
- [Cursor](./ide-info/cursor.md)
- [VS Code/Windsurf](./ide-info/) - Check your IDE folder
2. **Wait for the agent's menu** to appear
3. **Tell the agent**: `*workflow-init` - v6 supports excellent natural language fuzzy matching, so you could also say "workflow init" or "please init the workflow"
Since you are migrating an existing project from v4, it's most likely **Level 3 or 4** you will want to suggest when asked - if you've already completed PRD/architecture in v4.
---
## Post-Migration Checklist
- [ ] v4 folders backed up to `v4-backup/`
- [ ] v6 installed to `{bmad_folder}/` folder
- [ ] `workflow-init` run with correct project level selected
- [ ] Agent customizations migrated to `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/` if needed
- [ ] IDE integration working (test by listing agents)
- [ ] For active development: `sprint-planning` workflow executed
---
## Getting Help
- **Discord**: [Join the BMad Community](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)
- **Issues**: [GitHub Issue Tracker](https://github.com/bmad-code-org/BMAD-METHOD/issues)
- **Docs**: Check `{bmad_folder}/docs/` in your installation for IDE-specific instructions

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@@ -1,473 +0,0 @@
# Using BMad Web Bundles in Gemini Gems & Custom GPTs
Web bundles package BMad agents as self-contained XML files that work in Gemini Gems and Custom GPTs. Everything the agent needs - instructions, workflows, dependencies - is bundled into a single file.
## What Are Web Bundles?
Web bundles are standalone XML files containing:
- Complete agent persona and instructions
- All workflows and dependencies
- Interactive menu system
- Party mode for multi-agent collaboration
- No external files required
**Perfect for:** Uploading a single file to a Gemini GEM or Custom GPT to use BMad Method from the Web, generally at a huge cost savings, at the expense of some quality and convenience of using locally.
## Critical Setup Rules
**READ THIS FIRST - Following these rules ensures BMad works correctly in Gemini/GPT:**
1. **ONE file per Gem/GPT** - Upload exactly ONE XML file per Gemini Gem or Custom GPT instance. Do NOT combine multiple agent files.
2. **Use the setup instructions** - When creating your Gem/GPT, you MUST add the configuration prompt (shown in Quick Start below) so it knows how to read the XML file.
3. **Enable Canvas/Code Execution** - This is ESSENTIAL for document generation workflows (PRD, Architecture, etc.). Enable this in your Gem/GPT settings.
4. **Gemini Gems are strongly preferred** - They work significantly better than Custom GPTs for BMad workflows.
5. **Team bundles = Gemini 2.5 Pro+ only** - Team bundles (multiple agents) have terrible performance in Custom GPTs due to context limits. Only use them with Gemini 2.5 Pro or higher.
6. **Create separate Gems for each agent** - Make a PM Gem, an Architect Gem, a Developer Gem, etc. Don't try to combine them (except via official team bundles).
## Quick Start
### 1. Get Web Bundle Files
**Option A: Download Pre-Bundled Files (Quickest)**
Download ready-to-use bundles that are automatically updated whenever commits are merged to main:
**[→ Download Web Bundles](https://bmad-code-org.github.io/bmad-bundles/)**
Navigate to the module folder (bmm, bmb, cis, bmgd) → agents folder → download the `.xml` file you need. These bundles are automatically regenerated and deployed with every commit to the main branch, ensuring you always have the latest version.
**Option B: Generate from Local Installation**
From your BMad project directory:
```bash
# Generate all agent bundles
npm run bundle
# Or generate specific bundles
node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js module bmm
node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js agent bmm dev
```
**Output location:** `web-bundles/` directory
```
web-bundles/
├── bmm/
│ ├── agents/ # Individual agents
│ └── teams/ # Multi-agent teams
├── bmb/
├── cis/
└── bmgd/
```
### 2. Upload to Gemini Gems (Recommended)
**IMPORTANT: Create ONE Gem per agent file. Do NOT upload multiple agent files to a single Gem.**
**Create a Gem:**
1. Go to [Google AI Studio](https://aistudio.google.com/)
2. Click "New Gem" or "Create Gem"
3. Give your Gem a name (e.g., "BMad PM Agent")
4. **Enable "Code execution" for best results with document generation**
5. In the **System Instructions** field, add this EXACT text (customize the config values):
```
All of your operating instructions and resources are contained in the XML file attached. Read in the initial agent block and instructions to understand it. You will not deviate from the character and rules outlined in the attached!
CONFIG.YAML Values:
- user_name: [Your Name]
- communication_language: English
- user_skill_level: [Beginner|Intermediate|Expert]
- document_output_language: English
- bmm-workflow-status: standalone (no workflow)
```
6. **Upload ONE XML file** (e.g., `pm.xml`) - either attach as a file or paste contents
7. Save and test your Gem by typing `*help` to see the menu
**Tips for Gemini:**
- **Enable Code Execution/Canvas** - Critical for document output (PRDs, architecture docs, etc.)
- **Use Gemini 2.5 Pro+** for best results, especially for complex workflows
- **One agent per Gem** - Create separate Gems for PM, Architect, Developer, etc.
- Test the agent by triggering menu items with `*workflow-name`
### 3. Upload to Custom GPTs
**IMPORTANT: Create ONE Custom GPT per agent file. Do NOT upload multiple agent files to a single GPT.**
**Create a Custom GPT:**
1. Go to [ChatGPT](https://chat.openai.com/)
2. Click your profile → "My GPTs" → "Create a GPT"
3. Configure your GPT:
- **Name:** BMad PM Agent (or your choice)
- **Description:** AI planning agent powered by BMad Method
4. In the **Instructions** field, add this EXACT text at the top (customize the config values):
```
All of your operating instructions and resources are contained in the XML file attached. Read in the initial agent block and instructions to understand it. You will not deviate from the character and rules outlined in the attached!
CONFIG.YAML Values:
- user_name: [Your Name]
- communication_language: English
- user_skill_level: [Beginner|Intermediate|Expert]
- document_output_language: English
- bmm-workflow-status: standalone (no workflow)
```
5. **Below that text**, paste the entire contents of ONE XML file (e.g., `pm.xml`)
6. **Enable "Canvas" in ChatGPT settings** for better document output
7. Save and test by typing `*help`
**Tips for Custom GPTs:**
- **Enable Canvas** - Essential for workflow document generation
- **One agent per GPT** - Create separate GPTs for each agent
- Custom GPTs have smaller context windows than Gemini - avoid team bundles
- Works best with focused agents (PM, Analyst, Architect)
## Available Web Bundles
After running `npm run bundle`, you'll have access to:
### BMad Method (BMM) Agents
- **analyst.xml** - Business analysis and requirements gathering
- **architect.xml** - System architecture and technical design
- **dev.xml** - Full-stack development and implementation
- **pm.xml** - Product management and planning
- **sm.xml** - Scrum master and agile facilitation
- **tea.xml** - Test architecture and quality assurance
- **tech-writer.xml** - Technical documentation
- **ux-designer.xml** - User experience design
- **game-designer.xml** - Game design and mechanics
- **game-dev.xml** - Game development
- **game-architect.xml** - Game architecture
### BMad Builder (BMB) Agent
- **bmad-builder.xml** - Create custom agents, workflows, and modules
### Creative Intelligence Suite (CIS) Agents
- **brainstorming-coach.xml** - Creative brainstorming facilitation
- **design-thinking-coach.xml** - Human-centered problem solving
- **innovation-strategist.xml** - Innovation and strategy
- **creative-problem-solver.xml** - Breakthrough problem solving
- **storyteller.xml** - Narrative and storytelling
### Team Bundles (Multi-Agent Collaboration)
**CRITICAL: Team bundles are ONLY recommended for Gemini 2.5 Pro+ in the web. The experience is poor with Custom GPTs due to limited context windows.**
- **bmm/teams/team-fullstack.xml** - Full BMad Method development team
- **bmgd/teams/team-gamedev.xml** - Game development team
- **cis/teams/creative-squad.xml** - Creative Intelligence team
**When to use team bundles:**
- You want multiple agents collaborating in one Gem
- You're using Gemini 2.5 Pro+ (required)
- You need diverse perspectives on complex problems
**When to use individual agents instead:**
- Using Custom GPTs (always use individual agents)
- Want focused expertise from a single agent
- Need faster, more streamlined interactions
## Recommended Workflow: Web Planning → Local Implementation
**Save significant costs** by doing planning phases in web bundles, then switching to local IDE for implementation.
### Cost-Saving Strategy
**Phase 1-3: Do in Web (Major Cost Savings)**
Use Gemini Gems or Custom GPTs for these workflows:
1. **Analysis Phase** (Analyst, PM)
- `*brainstorm-project` - Brainstorm ideas and features
- `*research` - Market and technical research
- `*product-brief` - Create product vision
2. **Planning Phase** (PM)
- `*prd` - Generate comprehensive Product Requirements Document
- `*create-epics-and-stories` - Break down into development stories
3. **Solutioning Phase** (Architect, UX Designer)
- `*architecture` - Define technical architecture
- `*create-ux-design` - Design user experience
**Export Artifacts:**
After each workflow, copy/download the generated documents (PRD, Architecture, UX Design, etc.)
**Phase 4: Switch to Local IDE (Required for Implementation)**
1. Save exported artifacts to your project's `docs/` folder
2. Run local BMad installation with `*workflow-init`
3. BMad will detect the existing artifacts and update workflow status
4. Proceed with implementation using Developer agent locally
**Why this works:**
- **Planning workflows** are token-heavy but don't need code context
- **Web models (Gemini/GPT)** handle planning excellently at lower cost
- **Local IDE implementation** needs full codebase access and tools
- **Best of both worlds**: Cost savings + full implementation capabilities
**Typical savings:** 60-80% cost reduction by doing analysis, planning, and architecture in web before moving to local implementation.
## Using Web Bundles
### Basic Usage
**1. Load the Agent**
Upload or paste the XML file into Gemini/GPT. The agent will introduce itself and show its menu.
**2. Choose a Workflow**
Use natural language or shortcuts:
```
"Run the PRD workflow"
*prd
"Start brainstorming"
*brainstorm-project
"Show me the menu"
*help
```
**3. Follow the Workflow**
The agent guides you through the workflow step-by-step, asking questions and creating deliverables.
### Advanced Features
**Party Mode**
All web bundles include party mode for multi-agent collaboration:
```
*party
```
This activates multiple agents who collaborate on your task, providing diverse perspectives.
**Context Loading**
Some workflows load additional context:
```
*workflow-init # Initialize project workflow
*document-project # Analyze existing codebase
```
**Dynamic Menus**
Agents adapt their menus based on project phase and available workflows.
## Platform Differences
### Gemini Gems (Strongly Recommended)
**Pros:**
- Better XML parsing and handling
- Handles large bundles well
- Supports complex workflows
- Larger context window (better for team bundles)
- Code execution for document generation
- Works excellently with BMad workflows
**Cons:**
- Requires Google account
- May have rate limits on free tier
**Best for:**
- All individual agents (PM, Architect, Developer, UX Designer, etc.)
- Team bundles (requires Gemini 2.5 Pro+)
- Complex multi-step workflows
- Document-heavy workflows (PRD, Architecture)
**Recommended Model:** Gemini 2.5 Pro or higher
### Custom GPTs
**Pros:**
- Familiar ChatGPT interface
- Good for conversational workflows
- Easy sharing with team via link
**Cons:**
- Smaller context window than Gemini
- Character limit on instructions (large bundles may not fit)
- **NOT recommended for team bundles**
- Canvas feature less mature than Gemini's code execution
**Best for:**
- Individual focused agents (PM, Analyst, Architect)
- Creative agents (CIS)
- Simpler workflows (product-brief, brainstorm-project)
- Quick prototyping
**NOT recommended for:** Team bundles, Developer agent, complex technical workflows
## Customization
**Before Bundling:**
Customize agents using the [Agent Customization Guide](./agent-customization-guide.md):
1. Edit `{bmad_folder}/_cfg/agents/<agent>.customize.yaml`
2. Rebuild: `npx bmad-method build <agent-name>`
3. Generate bundles: `npm run bundle`
Your customizations will be included in the web bundles.
**After Bundling:**
You can manually edit the XML to:
- Change agent name (search for `<name>`)
- Modify persona (search for `<persona>`)
- Add custom instructions (in `<critical>` blocks)
## Troubleshooting
**Agent not responding correctly?**
- Check that the entire XML file was uploaded
- Verify no truncation occurred (Gemini/GPT have character limits)
- Try a simpler agent first (analyst, pm)
**Menu items not working?**
- Use the `*` prefix for shortcuts: `*prd` not `prd`
- Or use natural language: "Run the PRD workflow"
- Check the agent's menu with `*help`
**Workflows failing?**
- Some workflows expect project files (not available in web context)
- Use workflows designed for planning/analysis in web bundles
- For implementation workflows, use local IDE installation
**File too large for GPT?**
- Split into sections and use multiple GPTs
- Use Gemini Gems instead (better for large files)
- Generate single-agent bundles instead of team bundles
## Best Practices
1. **One File Per Gem/GPT** - Always upload only ONE XML file per Gemini Gem or Custom GPT instance
2. **Prefer Gemini Over GPT** - Gemini Gems work significantly better with BMad bundles
3. **Enable Canvas/Code Execution** - Essential for document generation workflows (PRD, Architecture, etc.)
4. **Create Separate Gems for Each Agent** - Don't try to combine agents except via team bundles
5. **Team Bundles = Gemini 2.5 Pro+ Only** - Never use team bundles with Custom GPTs
6. **Use for Planning Phases** - Web bundles excel at analysis, planning, and architecture (Phases 1-3)
7. **Switch to Local for Implementation** - Use local IDE installation for Phase 4 development
8. **Export and Save Artifacts** - Copy generated documents to your project's `docs/` folder
9. **Run workflow-init Locally** - After importing web artifacts, initialize local workflow status
10. **Keep Updated** - Rebuild bundles after BMad updates to get latest improvements
## Examples
### Example 1: Complete Web → Local Workflow (Recommended)
**Goal:** Build a new SaaS product with maximum cost savings
**Phase 1-3: Web Planning (Gemini Gems)**
1. **Download bundles:**
- `bmm/agents/analyst.xml`
- `bmm/agents/pm.xml`
- `bmm/agents/architect.xml`
- `bmm/agents/ux-designer.xml`
2. **Create 4 separate Gemini Gems** (one per agent, enable Code Execution)
3. **Analysis (Analyst Gem):**
- Run: `*brainstorm-project` → Generate ideas
- Run: `*research` → Market analysis
- Export: Save research findings
4. **Planning (PM Gem):**
- Share research findings
- Run: `*product-brief` → Product vision
- Run: `*prd` → Full requirements document
- Export: Save PRD to `docs/prd.md`
5. **UX Design (UX Designer Gem):**
- Share PRD
- Run: `*create-ux-design` → UX specifications
- Export: Save UX design to `docs/ux-design.md`
6. **Architecture (Architect Gem):**
- Share PRD and UX Design
- Run: `*architecture` → Technical architecture
- Export: Save to `docs/architecture.md`
**Phase 4: Local Implementation**
7. **Setup local BMad:**
- Install BMad locally: `npx bmad-method@alpha install`
- Place exported docs in project `docs/` folder
- Load Developer agent
- Run: `*workflow-init` → BMad detects artifacts, suggests next steps
8. **Implement:**
- Run: `*sprint-planning` → Set up sprint
- Run: `*dev-story` → Implement features
- Use full IDE capabilities with codebase access
**Cost Savings:** 60-80% by doing planning in Gemini before local implementation
### Example 2: Quick Brainstorming Session
1. Download `cis/agents/brainstorming-coach.xml`
2. Create Gemini Gem with Code Execution enabled
3. Run: `*brainstorming`
4. Choose technique (e.g., SCAMPER, Mind Mapping)
5. Generate and refine ideas
6. Export results for team review
### Example 3: Architecture Review
1. Download `bmm/agents/architect.xml`
2. Create Gemini Gem (enable Code Execution)
3. Paste existing PRD into conversation
4. Run: `*architecture`
5. Collaborate on technical decisions
6. Export architecture document to `docs/architecture.md`
## Next Steps
- **[Agent Customization Guide](./agent-customization-guide.md)** - Customize before bundling
- **[BMM Documentation](../src/modules/bmm/docs/README.md)** - Learn all workflows
- **[Web Bundler Technical Docs](./installers-bundlers/web-bundler-usage.md)** - Advanced bundling options
- **[Contributing Guide](../CONTRIBUTING.md)** - Help improve web bundles
## Resources
- **[Google AI Studio](https://aistudio.google.com/)** - Create Gemini Gems
- **[Custom GPTs](https://chat.openai.com/gpts)** - Build Custom GPTs
- **[BMad Discord](https://discord.gg/gk8jAdXWmj)** - Get help and share your Gems/GPTs

View File

@@ -16,8 +16,26 @@ export default [
'test/template-test-generator/**/*.md',
'test/fixtures/**',
'test/fixtures/**/*.yaml',
'.bmad/**',
'.bmad*/**',
'_bmad/**',
'_bmad*/**',
// Build output
'build/**',
// Website uses ESM/Astro - separate linting ecosystem
'website/**',
// Gitignored patterns
'z*/**', // z-samples, z1, z2, etc.
'.claude/**',
'.codex/**',
'.github/chatmodes/**',
'.agent/**',
'.agentvibes/**',
'.kiro/**',
'.roo/**',
'test-project-install/**',
'sample-project/**',
'tools/template-test-generator/test-scenarios/**',
'src/modules/*/sub-modules/**',
'.bundler-temp/**',
],
},
@@ -63,9 +81,9 @@ export default [
},
},
// CLI/CommonJS scripts under tools/** and test/**
// CLI scripts under tools/** and test/**
{
files: ['tools/**/*.js', 'test/**/*.js'],
files: ['tools/**/*.js', 'tools/**/*.mjs', 'test/**/*.js'],
rules: {
// Allow CommonJS patterns for Node CLI scripts
'unicorn/prefer-module': 'off',
@@ -92,6 +110,7 @@ export default [
'no-useless-catch': 'off',
'unicorn/prefer-number-properties': 'off',
'no-unreachable': 'off',
'unicorn/text-encoding-identifier-case': 'off',
},
},

9152
package-lock.json generated

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{
"$schema": "https://json.schemastore.org/package.json",
"name": "bmad-method",
"version": "6.0.0-alpha.10",
"version": "6.0.0-Beta.2",
"description": "Breakthrough Method of Agile AI-driven Development",
"keywords": [
"agile",
@@ -25,41 +25,50 @@
},
"scripts": {
"bmad:install": "node tools/cli/bmad-cli.js install",
"bmad:status": "node tools/cli/bmad-cli.js status",
"bundle": "node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js all",
"docs:build": "node tools/build-docs.js",
"docs:dev": "astro dev --root website",
"docs:fix-links": "node tools/fix-doc-links.js",
"docs:preview": "astro preview --root website",
"docs:validate-links": "node tools/validate-doc-links.js",
"flatten": "node tools/flattener/main.js",
"format:check": "prettier --check \"**/*.{js,cjs,mjs,json,md,yaml}\"",
"format:fix": "prettier --write \"**/*.{js,cjs,mjs,json,md,yaml}\"",
"format:check": "prettier --check \"**/*.{js,cjs,mjs,json,yaml}\"",
"format:fix": "prettier --write \"**/*.{js,cjs,mjs,json,yaml}\"",
"format:fix:staged": "prettier --write",
"install:bmad": "node tools/cli/bmad-cli.js install",
"lint": "eslint . --ext .js,.cjs,.mjs,.yaml --max-warnings=0",
"lint:fix": "eslint . --ext .js,.cjs,.mjs,.yaml --fix",
"lint:md": "markdownlint-cli2 \"**/*.md\"",
"prepare": "husky",
"rebundle": "node tools/cli/bundlers/bundle-web.js rebundle",
"release:major": "gh workflow run \"Manual Release\" -f version_bump=major",
"release:minor": "gh workflow run \"Manual Release\" -f version_bump=minor",
"release:patch": "gh workflow run \"Manual Release\" -f version_bump=patch",
"release:watch": "gh run watch",
"test": "npm run test:schemas && npm run test:install && npm run validate:bundles && npm run validate:schemas && npm run lint && npm run format:check",
"test": "npm run test:schemas && npm run test:install && npm run validate:schemas && npm run lint && npm run lint:md && npm run format:check",
"test:coverage": "c8 --reporter=text --reporter=html npm run test:schemas",
"test:install": "node test/test-installation-components.js",
"test:schemas": "node test/test-agent-schema.js",
"validate:bundles": "node tools/validate-bundles.js",
"validate:schemas": "node tools/validate-agent-schema.js"
},
"lint-staged": {
"*.{js,cjs,mjs}": [
"npm run lint:fix",
"npm run format:fix"
"npm run format:fix:staged"
],
"*.yaml": [
"eslint --fix",
"npm run format:fix"
"npm run format:fix:staged"
],
"*.{json,md}": [
"npm run format:fix"
"*.json": [
"npm run format:fix:staged"
],
"*.md": [
"markdownlint-cli2"
]
},
"dependencies": {
"@clack/prompts": "^0.11.0",
"@kayvan/markdown-tree-parser": "^1.6.1",
"boxen": "^5.1.2",
"chalk": "^4.1.2",
@@ -70,15 +79,19 @@
"fs-extra": "^11.3.0",
"glob": "^11.0.3",
"ignore": "^7.0.5",
"inquirer": "^8.2.6",
"js-yaml": "^4.1.0",
"ora": "^5.4.1",
"semver": "^7.6.3",
"wrap-ansi": "^7.0.0",
"xml2js": "^0.6.2"
"xml2js": "^0.6.2",
"yaml": "^2.7.0"
},
"devDependencies": {
"@astrojs/sitemap": "^3.6.0",
"@astrojs/starlight": "^0.37.0",
"@eslint/js": "^9.33.0",
"archiver": "^7.0.1",
"astro": "^5.16.0",
"c8": "^10.1.3",
"eslint": "^9.33.0",
"eslint-config-prettier": "^10.1.8",
@@ -88,11 +101,12 @@
"husky": "^9.1.7",
"jest": "^30.0.4",
"lint-staged": "^16.1.1",
"prettier": "^3.5.3",
"markdownlint-cli2": "^0.19.1",
"prettier": "^3.7.4",
"prettier-plugin-packagejson": "^2.5.19",
"sharp": "^0.33.5",
"yaml-eslint-parser": "^1.2.3",
"yaml-lint": "^1.7.0",
"zod": "^4.1.12"
"yaml-lint": "^1.7.0"
},
"engines": {
"node": ">=20.0.0"

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,48 @@
const fs = require('fs-extra');
const path = require('node:path');
const chalk = require('chalk');
// Directories to create from config
const DIRECTORIES = ['output_folder', 'planning_artifacts', 'implementation_artifacts'];
/**
* BMM Module Installer
* Creates output directories configured in module config
*
* @param {Object} options - Installation options
* @param {string} options.projectRoot - The root directory of the target project
* @param {Object} options.config - Module configuration from module.yaml
* @param {Array<string>} options.installedIDEs - Array of IDE codes that were installed
* @param {Object} options.logger - Logger instance for output
* @returns {Promise<boolean>} - Success status
*/
async function install(options) {
const { projectRoot, config, logger } = options;
try {
logger.log(chalk.blue('🚀 Installing BMM Module...'));
// Create configured directories
for (const configKey of DIRECTORIES) {
const configValue = config[configKey];
if (!configValue) continue;
const dirPath = configValue.replace('{project-root}/', '');
const fullPath = path.join(projectRoot, dirPath);
if (!(await fs.pathExists(fullPath))) {
const dirName = configKey.replace('_', ' ');
logger.log(chalk.yellow(`Creating ${dirName} directory: ${dirPath}`));
await fs.ensureDir(fullPath);
}
}
logger.log(chalk.green('✓ BMM Module installation complete'));
return true;
} catch (error) {
logger.error(chalk.red(`Error installing BMM module: ${error.message}`));
return false;
}
}
module.exports = { install };

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