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32 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ralph Khreish
65e0be52a5 chore: run format 2025-08-14 00:08:52 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
99242af110 Update .github/scripts/auto-close-duplicates.mjs
Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-14 00:06:28 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
9e13e78e1c chore: run format 2025-08-13 20:19:41 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
f9ccdc3731 chore: add a bunch of automations 2025-08-13 20:16:05 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
f469515228 feat: add Claude documentation updater workflow (#1130)
This commit introduces a new GitHub Actions workflow that automatically updates documentation based on changes pushed to the 'next' branch. The workflow checks for modified files, creates a new branch for documentation updates, and utilizes the Claude Code Action to analyze changes and suggest necessary documentation revisions. If updates are made, a pull request is created for review.
2025-08-13 15:10:47 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
2fd0f026d3 chore: remove pre-release CI for extension, too much work and doesn't make sense for us (#1129) 2025-08-13 15:08:55 +02:00
Joe Danziger
e3ed4d7c14 feat: CLI & MCP progress tracking for parse-prd command (#1048)
* initial cutover

* update log to debug

* update tracker to pass units

* update test to match new base tracker format

* add streamTextService mocks

* remove unused imports

* Ensure the CLI waits for async main() completion

* refactor to reduce code duplication

* update comment

* reuse function

* ensure targetTag is defined in streaming mode

* avoid throwing inside process.exit spy

* check for null

* remove reference to generate

* fix formatting

* fix textStream assignment

* ensure no division by 0

* fix jest chalk mocks

* refactor for maintainability

* Improve bar chart calculation logic for consistent visual representation

* use custom streaming error types; fix mocks

* Update streamText extraction in parse-prd.js to match actual service response

* remove check - doesn't belong here

* update mocks

* remove streaming test that wasn't really doing anything

* add comment

* make parsing logic more DRY

* fix formatting

* Fix textStream extraction to match actual service response

* fix mock

* Add a cleanup method to ensure proper resource disposal and prevent memory leaks

* debounce progress updates to reduce UI flicker during rapid updates

* Implement timeout protection for streaming operations (60-second timeout) with automatic fallback to non-streaming mode.

* clear timeout properly

* Add a maximum buffer size limit (1MB) to prevent unbounded memory growth with very large streaming responses.

* fix formatting

* remove duplicate mock

* better docs

* fix formatting

* sanitize the dynamic property name

* Fix incorrect remaining progress calculation

* Use onError callback instead of console.warn

* Remove unused chalk import

* Add missing custom validator in fallback parsing configuration

* add custom validator parameter in fallback parsing

* chore: fix package-lock.json

* chore: large code refactor

* chore: increase timeout from 1 minute to 3 minutes

* fix: refactor and fix streaming

* Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/next' into joedanz/parse-prd-progress

* fix: cleanup and fix unit tests

* chore: fix unit tests

* chore: fix format

* chore: run format

* chore: fix weird CI unit test error

* chore: fix format

---------

Co-authored-by: Ralph Khreish <35776126+Crunchyman-ralph@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-12 22:37:07 +02:00
Dominique Vidjanagni
fc47714340 Feat/add-kilocode-rules (#1040)
* feat: Add Kilo Code integration to TaskMaster

* feat: Add Kilo profile configuration to rule transformer tests

* refactor: Improve code formatting and consistency in Kilo profile and tests

* fix: Correct formatting of workspaces in package.json

* chore: add changeset for Kilo Code integration

* feat: add Kilo Code rules and mode configurations

- Add comprehensive rule sets for all modes (architect, ask, code, debug, orchestrator, test)
- Update .kilocodemodes configuration with mode-specific settings
- Configure MCP integration for Kilo Code profile
- Establish consistent rule structure across all modes

* refactor(kilo): simplify profile to reuse roo rules with replacements

Remove duplicate Kilo-specific rule files and assets in favor of reusing roo rules with dynamic replacements, eliminating 900+ lines of duplicated code while maintaining full Kilo functionality.

The profile now:
- Reuses ROO_MODES constant instead of maintaining separate KILO_MODES
- Applies text replacements to convert roo references to kilo
- Maps roo rule files to kilo equivalents via fileMap
- Removes all duplicate rule files from assets/kilocode directory

* refactor(kilo): restructure object literals for consistency and remove duplicate customReplacements array based on CodeRabbit's suggestion

* chore: remove disabled .mcp.json by mistake

---------

Co-authored-by: Ralph Khreish <35776126+Crunchyman-ralph@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-12 22:35:57 +02:00
github-actions[bot]
30ae0e9a57 docs: Auto-update and format models.md 2025-08-12 17:01:24 +00:00
Ralph Khreish
95640dcde8 feat: add gpt-oss models to ollama (#1124) 2025-08-12 19:01:10 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
311b2433e2 fix: remove claude code clear tm commands (#1123) 2025-08-11 18:59:35 +02:00
Parthy
04e11b5e82 feat: implement cross-tag task movement functionality (#1088)
* feat: enhance move command with cross-tag functionality

- Updated the `move` command to allow moving tasks between different tags, including options for handling dependencies.
- Added new options: `--from-tag`, `--to-tag`, `--with-dependencies`, `--ignore-dependencies`, and `--force`.
- Implemented validation for cross-tag moves and dependency checks.
- Introduced helper functions in the dependency manager for validating and resolving cross-tag dependencies.
- Added integration and unit tests to cover new functionality and edge cases.

* fix: refactor cross-tag move logic and enhance validation

- Moved the import of `moveTasksBetweenTags` to the correct location in `commands.js` for better clarity.
- Added new helper functions in `dependency-manager.js` to improve validation and error handling for cross-tag moves.
- Enhanced existing functions to ensure proper handling of task dependencies and conflicts.
- Updated tests to cover new validation scenarios and ensure robust error messaging for invalid task IDs and tags.

* fix: improve task ID handling and error messaging in cross-tag moves

- Refactored `moveTasksBetweenTags` to normalize task IDs for comparison, ensuring consistent handling of string and numeric IDs.
- Enhanced error messages for cases where source and target tags are the same but no destination is specified.
- Updated tests to validate new behavior, including handling string dependencies correctly during cross-tag moves.
- Cleaned up existing code for better readability and maintainability.

* test: add comprehensive tests for cross-tag move and dependency validation

- Introduced new test files for `move-cross-tag` and `cross-tag-dependencies` to cover various scenarios in cross-tag task movement.
- Implemented tests for handling task movement with and without dependencies, including edge cases for error handling.
- Enhanced existing tests in `fix-dependencies-command` and `move-task` to ensure robust validation of task IDs and dependencies.
- Mocked necessary modules and functions to isolate tests and improve reliability.
- Ensured coverage for both successful and failed cross-tag move operations, validating expected outcomes and error messages.

* test: refactor cross-tag move tests for better clarity and reusability

- Introduced a helper function `simulateCrossTagMove` to streamline cross-tag move test cases, reducing redundancy and improving readability.
- Updated existing tests to utilize the new helper function, ensuring consistent handling of expected messages and options.
- Enhanced test coverage for various scenarios, including handling of dependencies and flags.

* feat: add cross-tag task movement functionality

- Introduced new commands for moving tasks between different tags, enhancing project organization capabilities.
- Updated README with usage examples for cross-tag movement, including options for handling dependencies.
- Created comprehensive documentation for cross-tag task movement, detailing usage, error handling, and best practices.
- Implemented core logic for cross-tag moves, including validation for dependencies and error handling.
- Added integration and unit tests to ensure robust functionality and coverage for various scenarios, including edge cases.

* fix: enhance error handling and logging in cross-tag task movement

- Improved logging in `moveTaskCrossTagDirect` to include detailed arguments for better traceability.
- Refactored error handling to utilize structured error objects, providing clearer suggestions for resolving cross-tag dependency conflicts and subtask movement restrictions.
- Updated documentation to reflect changes in error handling and provide clearer guidance on task movement options.
- Added integration tests for cross-tag movement scenarios, ensuring robust validation of error handling and task movement logic.
- Cleaned up existing tests for clarity and reusability, enhancing overall test coverage.

* feat: enhance dependency resolution and error handling in task movement

- Added recursive dependency resolution for tasks in `moveTasksBetweenTags`, improving handling of complex task relationships.
- Introduced helper functions to find all dependencies and reverse dependencies, ensuring comprehensive coverage during task moves.
- Enhanced error messages in `validateSubtaskMove` and `displaySubtaskMoveError` for better clarity on movement restrictions.
- Updated tests to cover new functionality, including integration tests for complex cross-tag movement scenarios and edge cases.
- Refactored existing code for improved readability and maintainability, ensuring consistent handling of task IDs and dependencies.

* feat: unify dependency traversal and enhance task management utilities

- Introduced `traverseDependencies` utility for unified forward and reverse dependency traversal, improving code reusability and clarity.
- Refactored `findAllDependenciesRecursively` to leverage the new utility, streamlining dependency resolution in task management.
- Added `formatTaskIdForDisplay` helper for better task ID formatting in UI, enhancing user experience during error displays.
- Updated tests to cover new utility functions and ensure robust validation of dependency handling across various scenarios.
- Improved overall code organization and readability, ensuring consistent handling of task dependencies and IDs.

* fix: improve validation for dependency parameters in `findAllDependenciesRecursively`

- Added checks to ensure `sourceTasks` and `allTasks` are arrays, throwing errors if not, to prevent runtime issues.
- Updated documentation comment for clarity on the function's purpose and parameters.

* fix: remove `force` option from task movement parameters

- Eliminated the `force` parameter from the `moveTaskCrossTagDirect` function and related tools, simplifying the task movement logic.
- Updated documentation and tests to reflect the removal of the `force` option, ensuring clarity and consistency across the codebase.
- Adjusted related functions and tests to focus on `ignoreDependencies` as the primary control for handling dependency conflicts during task moves.

* Add cross-tag task movement functionality

- Introduced functionality for organizing tasks across different contexts by enabling cross-tag movement.
- Added `formatTaskIdForDisplay` helper to improve task ID formatting in UI error messages.
- Updated relevant tests to incorporate new functionality and ensure accurate error displays during task movements.

* Update scripts/modules/dependency-manager.js

Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>

* refactor(dependency-manager): Fix subtask resolution and extract helper functions

1. Fix subtask finding logic (lines 1315-1330):
   - Correctly locate parent task by numeric ID
   - Search within parent's subtasks array instead of top-level tasks
   - Properly handle relative subtask references

2. Extract helper functions from getDependentTaskIds (lines 1440-1636):
   - Move findTasksThatDependOn as module-level function
   - Move taskDependsOnSource as module-level function
   - Move subtasksDependOnSource as module-level function
   - Improves readability, maintainability, and testability

Both fixes address architectural issues and improve code organization.

* refactor(dependency-manager): Enhance subtask resolution and dependency validation

- Improved subtask resolution logic to correctly find parent tasks and their subtasks, ensuring accurate identification of dependencies.
- Filtered out null/undefined dependencies before processing, enhancing robustness in dependency checks.
- Updated comments for clarity on the logic flow and purpose of changes, improving code maintainability.

* refactor(move-task): clarify destination ID description and improve skipped task handling

- Updated the description for the destination ID to clarify its usage in cross-tag moves.
- Simplified the handling of skipped tasks during multiple task movements, improving readability and logging.
- Enhanced the API result response to include detailed information about moved and skipped tasks, ensuring better feedback for users.

* refactor(commands): remove redundant tag validation logic

- Eliminated the check for identical source and target tags in the task movement logic, simplifying the code.
- This change streamlines the flow for within-tag moves, enhancing readability and maintainability.

* refactor(commands): enhance move command logic and error handling

- Introduced helper functions for better organization of cross-tag and within-tag move logic, improving code readability and maintainability.
- Enhanced error handling with structured error objects, providing clearer feedback for dependency conflicts and invalid tag combinations.
- Updated move command help output to include best practices and error resolution tips, ensuring users have comprehensive guidance during task movements.
- Streamlined task movement logic to handle multiple tasks more effectively, including detailed logging of successful and failed moves.

* test(dependency-manager): add subtasks to task structure and mock dependency traversal

- Updated `circular-dependencies.test.js` to include subtasks in task definitions, enhancing test coverage for task structures with nested dependencies.
- Mocked `traverseDependencies` in `fix-dependencies-command.test.js` to ensure consistent behavior during tests, improving reliability of dependency-related tests.

* refactor(dependency-manager): extract subtask finding logic into helper function

- Added `findSubtaskInParent` function to encapsulate subtask resolution within a parent task's subtasks array, improving code organization and readability.
- Updated `findDependencyTask` to utilize the new helper function, streamlining the logic for finding subtasks and enhancing maintainability.
- Enhanced comments for clarity on the purpose and functionality of the new subtask finding logic.

* refactor(ui): enhance subtask ID validation and improve error handling

- Added validation for subtask ID format in `formatDependenciesWithStatus` and `taskExists`, ensuring proper handling of invalid formats.
- Updated error logging in `displaySubtaskMoveError` to provide warnings for unexpected task ID formats, improving user feedback.
- Converted hints to a Set in `displayDependencyValidationHints` to ensure unique hints are displayed, enhancing clarity in the UI.

* test(cli): remove redundant timing check in complex cross-tag scenarios

- Eliminated the timing check for task completion within 5 seconds in `complex-cross-tag-scenarios.test.js`, streamlining the test logic.
- This change focuses on verifying task success without unnecessary timing constraints, enhancing test clarity and maintainability.

* test(integration): enhance task movement tests with mock file system

- Added integration tests for moving tasks within the same tag and between different tags using the actual `moveTask` and `moveTasksBetweenTags` functions.
- Implemented `mock-fs` to simulate file system interactions, improving test isolation and reliability.
- Verified task movement success and ensured proper handling of subtasks and dependencies, enhancing overall test coverage for task management functionality.
- Included error handling tests for missing tags and task IDs to ensure robustness in task movement operations.

* test(unit): add comprehensive tests for moveTaskCrossTagDirect functionality

- Introduced new test cases to verify mock functionality, ensuring that mocks for `findTasksPath` and `readJSON` are working as expected.
- Added tests for parameter validation, error handling, and function call flow, including scenarios for missing project roots and identical source/target tags.
- Enhanced coverage for ID parsing and move options, ensuring robust handling of various input conditions and improving overall test reliability.

* test(integration): skip tests for dependency conflict handling and withDependencies option

- Marked tests for handling dependency conflicts and the withDependencies option as skipped due to issues with the mock setup.
- Added TODOs to address the mock-fs setup for complex dependency scenarios, ensuring future improvements in test reliability.

* test(unit): expand cross-tag move command tests with comprehensive mocks

- Added extensive mocks for various modules to enhance the testing of the cross-tag move functionality in `move-cross-tag.test.js`.
- Implemented detailed test cases for handling cross-tag moves, including validation for missing parameters and identical source/target tags.
- Improved error handling tests to ensure robust feedback for invalid operations, enhancing overall test reliability and coverage.

* test(integration): add complex dependency scenarios to task movement tests

- Introduced new integration tests for handling complex dependency scenarios in task movement, utilizing the actual `moveTasksBetweenTags` function.
- Added tests for circular dependencies, nested dependency chains, and cross-tag dependency resolution, enhancing coverage and reliability.
- Documented limitations of the mock-fs setup for complex scenarios and provided warnings in the test output to guide future improvements.
- Skipped tests for dependency conflicts and the withDependencies option due to mock setup issues, with TODOs for resolution.

* test(unit): refactor move-cross-tag tests with focused mock system

- Simplified mocking in `move-cross-tag.test.js` by implementing a configuration-driven mock system, reducing the number of mocked modules from 20+ to 5 core functionalities.
- Introduced a reusable mock factory to streamline the creation of mocks based on configuration, enhancing maintainability and clarity.
- Added documentation for the new mock system, detailing usage examples and benefits, including reduced complexity and improved test focus.
- Implemented tests to validate the mock configuration, ensuring flexibility in enabling/disabling specific mocks.

* test(unit): clean up mocks and improve isEmpty function in fix-dependencies-command tests

- Removed the mock for `traverseDependencies` as it was unnecessary, simplifying the test setup.
- Updated the `isEmpty` function to clarify its behavior regarding null and undefined values, enhancing code readability and maintainability.

* test(unit): update traverseDependencies mock for consistency across tests

- Standardized the mock implementation of `traverseDependencies` in both `fix-dependencies-command.test.js` and `complexity-report-tag-isolation.test.js` to accept `sourceTasks`, `allTasks`, and `options` parameters, ensuring uniformity in test setups.
- This change enhances clarity and maintainability of the tests by aligning the mock behavior across different test files.

* fix(core): improve task movement error handling and ID normalization

- Wrapped task movement logic in a try-finally block to ensure console output is restored even on errors, enhancing reliability.
- Normalized source IDs to handle mixed string/number comparisons, preventing potential issues in dependency checks.
- Added tests for ID type consistency to verify that the normalization fix works correctly across various scenarios, improving test coverage and robustness.

* refactor(task-manager): restructure task movement logic for improved validation and execution

- Renamed and refactored `moveTasksBetweenTags` to streamline the task movement process into distinct phases: validation, data preparation, dependency resolution, execution, and finalization.
- Introduced `validateMove`, `prepareTaskData`, `resolveDependencies`, `executeMoveOperation`, and `finalizeMove` functions to enhance modularity and clarity.
- Updated documentation comments to reflect changes in function responsibilities and parameters.
- Added comprehensive unit tests for the new structure, ensuring robust validation and error handling across various scenarios.
- Improved handling of dependencies and task existence checks during the move operation, enhancing overall reliability.

* fix(move-task): streamline task movement logic and improve error handling

- Refactored the task movement process to enhance clarity and maintainability by replacing `forEach` with a `for...of` loop for better async handling.
- Consolidated error handling and result logging to ensure consistent feedback during task moves.
- Updated the logic for generating files only on the last move, improving performance and reducing unnecessary operations.
- Enhanced validation for skipped tasks, ensuring accurate reporting of moved and skipped tasks in the final result.

* fix(docs): update error message formatting and enhance clarity in task movement documentation

- Changed code block syntax from generic to `text` for better readability in error messages related to task movement and dependency conflicts.
- Ensured consistent formatting across all error message examples to improve user understanding of task movement restrictions and resolutions.
- Added a newline at the end of the file for proper formatting.

* Update .changeset/crazy-meals-hope.md

Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>

* chore: improve changeset

* chore: improve changeset

* fix referenced bug in docs and remove docs

* chore: fix format

---------

Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ralph Khreish <35776126+Crunchyman-ralph@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-11 18:58:51 +02:00
Ladi
782728ff95 feat: add --compact flag for minimal task list output (#1054)
* feat: add --compact flag for minimal task list output

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Ralph Khreish <35776126+Crunchyman-ralph@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: github-actions[bot] <github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-11 18:35:23 +02:00
Fábio Vedovelli
30ca144231 feat: Add task id to task details UI (#1100)
* Display current task ID on task details page

* Changeset

* Implement CodeRabbit review suggestion.

* chore: fix CI errors

---------

Co-authored-by: Ralph Khreish <35776126+Crunchyman-ralph@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-11 14:42:31 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
0220d0e994 chore: pimp my readme (#1122) 2025-08-11 14:29:49 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
41a8c2406a chore: add docs to monorepo (#1111) 2025-08-09 13:31:45 +02:00
github-actions[bot]
a003041cd8 Version Packages (#1107)
Co-authored-by: github-actions[bot] <41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-08 22:00:39 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
6b57ead106 Release 0.24.0 #1098 from eyaltoledano/next
Release 0.24.0
2025-08-08 21:58:41 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
7b6e117b1d chore: prepare for release (exit pre mode) 2025-08-08 21:21:25 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
03b045e9cd chore: run format 2025-08-08 21:18:33 +02:00
neonwatty
699afdae59 feat: add task-checker agent to assets directory 2025-08-08 08:47:20 -07:00
github-actions[bot]
80c09802e8 chore: rc version bump 2025-08-08 12:41:29 +00:00
github-actions[bot]
cf8f0f4b1c docs: Auto-update and format models.md 2025-08-08 12:38:58 +00:00
Ralph Khreish
75c514cf5b feat: add gpt-5 support (#1105)
* feat: add gpt-5 support
2025-08-08 14:38:44 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
41d1e671b1 chore: fix CI checker, improve it (#1099) 2025-08-07 15:52:49 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
a464e550b8 feat(extension): implement simple solution to --package flag (#1090)
* feat(extension): implement simple solution to --package flag
2025-08-07 15:10:34 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
3a852afdae chore: implement pre-release for extensions (#1097)
* chore: implement pre-release for extensions

* chore: run format
2025-08-07 15:08:14 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
4bb63706b8 feat: implement claude code agents (#1091)
* feat: implement claude code agents

* chore: add changeset

- run format

* feat: improve task-checker, executor, and orchestrator

* chore: improve changeset
2025-08-07 12:37:06 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
fcf14e09be chore: improve release check for release-check and release flow (#1095)
* chore: improve release check for release-check and release flow

* chore: fix format
2025-08-06 23:19:28 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
4357af3f13 fix(expand-task): include parent task context in complexity report variant (#1094)
- Fixed bug where expand task generated generic authentication subtasks
- The complexity-report prompt variant now includes parent task details
- Added comprehensive unit tests to prevent regression
- Added debug logging to help diagnose similar issues

Previously, when using a complexity report with expansionPrompt, only the
expansion guidance was sent to the AI, missing the actual task context.
This caused the AI to generate unrelated generic subtasks.

Fixes the issue where all tasks would get the same generic auth-related
subtasks regardless of their actual purpose (AWS infrastructure, Docker
containerization, etc.)

Co-authored-by: Sadaqat Ali <32377500+sadaqat12@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-08-06 21:00:32 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
59f7676051 feat: add prompt for claude code to include context when generating tasks (#1092) 2025-08-06 12:41:19 +02:00
Ralph Khreish
37fb569a62 Release 0.23.1 #1084 from eyaltoledano/next
chore: exit pre-release mode
2025-08-04 20:43:46 +03:00
171 changed files with 30851 additions and 1816 deletions

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,9 @@
"$schema": "https://unpkg.com/@changesets/config@3.1.1/schema.json",
"changelog": [
"@changesets/changelog-github",
{ "repo": "eyaltoledano/claude-task-master" }
{
"repo": "eyaltoledano/claude-task-master"
}
],
"commit": false,
"fixed": [],
@@ -10,5 +12,7 @@
"access": "public",
"baseBranch": "main",
"updateInternalDependencies": "patch",
"ignore": []
}
"ignore": [
"docs"
]
}

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@@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
---
"task-master-ai": minor
---
Add cross-tag task movement functionality for organizing tasks across different contexts.
This feature enables moving tasks between different tags (contexts) in your project, making it easier to organize work across different branches, environments, or project phases.
## CLI Usage Examples
Move a single task from one tag to another:
```bash
# Move task 5 from backlog tag to in-progress tag
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=feature-1
# Move task with its dependencies
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=feature-2 --with-dependencies
# Move task without checking dependencies
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=bug-3 --ignore-dependencies
```
Move multiple tasks at once:
```bash
# Move multiple tasks between tags
task-master move --from=5,6,7 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=bug-4 --with-dependencies
```

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@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
---
"extension": minor
"task-master-ai": minor
---
"Add Kilo Code profile integration with custom modes and MCP configuration"

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@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
---
"task-master-ai": minor
---
Add compact mode --compact / -c flag to the `tm list` CLI command
- outputs tasks in a minimal, git-style one-line format. This reduces verbose output from ~30+ lines of dashboards and tables to just 1 line per task, making it much easier to quickly scan available tasks.
- Git-style format: ID STATUS TITLE (PRIORITY) → DEPS
- Color-coded status, priority, and dependencies
- Smart title truncation and dependency abbreviation
- Subtask support with indentation
- Full backward compatibility with existing list options

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
---
"task-master-ai": minor
---
Add CLI & MCP progress tracking for parse-prd command.

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@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
---
"task-master-ai": patch
---
Fix scope-up/down prompts to include all required fields for better AI model compatibility
- Added missing `priority` field to scope adjustment prompts to prevent validation errors with Claude-code and other models
- Ensures generated JSON includes all fields required by the schema

View File

@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
"task-master-ai": minor
---
Enhanced Claude Code provider with codebase-aware task generation
- Added automatic codebase analysis for Claude Code provider in `parse-prd`, `expand-task`, and `analyze-complexity` commands
- When using Claude Code as the AI provider, Task Master now instructs the AI to analyze the project structure, existing implementations, and patterns before generating tasks or subtasks
- Tasks and subtasks generated by Claude Code are now informed by actual codebase analysis, resulting in more accurate and contextual outputs

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
---
"extension": minor
---
Display current task ID on task details page

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@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
{
"mode": "exit",
"tag": "rc",
"initialVersions": {
"task-master-ai": "0.23.0",
"extension": "0.23.0"
},
"changesets": [
"fuzzy-words-count",
"tender-trams-refuse",
"vast-sites-leave"
]
}

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@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
---
"task-master-ai": patch
---
Fix `add-tag --from-branch` command error where `projectRoot` was not properly referenced
The command was failing with "projectRoot is not defined" error because the code was directly referencing `projectRoot` instead of `context.projectRoot` in the git repository checks. This fix corrects the variable references to use the proper context object.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
---
"task-master-ai": minor
---
Add support for ollama `gpt-oss:20b` and `gpt-oss:120b`

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@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
---
"task-master-ai": patch
---
Fix MCP scope-up/down tools not finding tasks
- Fixed task ID parsing in MCP layer - now correctly converts string IDs to numbers
- scope_up_task and scope_down_task MCP tools now work properly

View File

@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
---
"task-master-ai": patch
---
Improve AI provider compatibility for JSON generation
- Fixed schema compatibility issues between Perplexity and OpenAI o3 models
- Removed nullable/default modifiers from Zod schemas for broader compatibility
- Added automatic JSON repair for malformed AI responses (handles cases like missing array values)
- Perplexity now uses JSON mode for more reliable structured output
- Post-processing handles default values separately from schema validation

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---
"task-master-ai": minor
---
Remove `clear` Taskmaster claude code commands since they were too close to the claude-code clear command

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---
name: task-checker
description: Use this agent to verify that tasks marked as 'review' have been properly implemented according to their specifications. This agent performs quality assurance by checking implementations against requirements, running tests, and ensuring best practices are followed. <example>Context: A task has been marked as 'review' after implementation. user: 'Check if task 118 was properly implemented' assistant: 'I'll use the task-checker agent to verify the implementation meets all requirements.' <commentary>Tasks in 'review' status need verification before being marked as 'done'.</commentary></example> <example>Context: Multiple tasks are in review status. user: 'Verify all tasks that are ready for review' assistant: 'I'll deploy the task-checker to verify all tasks in review status.' <commentary>The checker ensures quality before tasks are marked complete.</commentary></example>
model: sonnet
color: yellow
---
You are a Quality Assurance specialist that rigorously verifies task implementations against their specifications. Your role is to ensure that tasks marked as 'review' meet all requirements before they can be marked as 'done'.
## Core Responsibilities
1. **Task Specification Review**
- Retrieve task details using MCP tool `mcp__task-master-ai__get_task`
- Understand the requirements, test strategy, and success criteria
- Review any subtasks and their individual requirements
2. **Implementation Verification**
- Use `Read` tool to examine all created/modified files
- Use `Bash` tool to run compilation and build commands
- Use `Grep` tool to search for required patterns and implementations
- Verify file structure matches specifications
- Check that all required methods/functions are implemented
3. **Test Execution**
- Run tests specified in the task's testStrategy
- Execute build commands (npm run build, tsc --noEmit, etc.)
- Verify no compilation errors or warnings
- Check for runtime errors where applicable
- Test edge cases mentioned in requirements
4. **Code Quality Assessment**
- Verify code follows project conventions
- Check for proper error handling
- Ensure TypeScript typing is strict (no 'any' unless justified)
- Verify documentation/comments where required
- Check for security best practices
5. **Dependency Validation**
- Verify all task dependencies were actually completed
- Check integration points with dependent tasks
- Ensure no breaking changes to existing functionality
## Verification Workflow
1. **Retrieve Task Information**
```
Use mcp__task-master-ai__get_task to get full task details
Note the implementation requirements and test strategy
```
2. **Check File Existence**
```bash
# Verify all required files exist
ls -la [expected directories]
# Read key files to verify content
```
3. **Verify Implementation**
- Read each created/modified file
- Check against requirements checklist
- Verify all subtasks are complete
4. **Run Tests**
```bash
# TypeScript compilation
cd [project directory] && npx tsc --noEmit
# Run specified tests
npm test [specific test files]
# Build verification
npm run build
```
5. **Generate Verification Report**
## Output Format
```yaml
verification_report:
task_id: [ID]
status: PASS | FAIL | PARTIAL
score: [1-10]
requirements_met:
- ✅ [Requirement that was satisfied]
- ✅ [Another satisfied requirement]
issues_found:
- ❌ [Issue description]
- ⚠️ [Warning or minor issue]
files_verified:
- path: [file path]
status: [created/modified/verified]
issues: [any problems found]
tests_run:
- command: [test command]
result: [pass/fail]
output: [relevant output]
recommendations:
- [Specific fix needed]
- [Improvement suggestion]
verdict: |
[Clear statement on whether task should be marked 'done' or sent back to 'pending']
[If FAIL: Specific list of what must be fixed]
[If PASS: Confirmation that all requirements are met]
```
## Decision Criteria
**Mark as PASS (ready for 'done'):**
- All required files exist and contain expected content
- All tests pass successfully
- No compilation or build errors
- All subtasks are complete
- Core requirements are met
- Code quality is acceptable
**Mark as PARTIAL (may proceed with warnings):**
- Core functionality is implemented
- Minor issues that don't block functionality
- Missing nice-to-have features
- Documentation could be improved
- Tests pass but coverage could be better
**Mark as FAIL (must return to 'pending'):**
- Required files are missing
- Compilation or build errors
- Tests fail
- Core requirements not met
- Security vulnerabilities detected
- Breaking changes to existing code
## Important Guidelines
- **BE THOROUGH**: Check every requirement systematically
- **BE SPECIFIC**: Provide exact file paths and line numbers for issues
- **BE FAIR**: Distinguish between critical issues and minor improvements
- **BE CONSTRUCTIVE**: Provide clear guidance on how to fix issues
- **BE EFFICIENT**: Focus on requirements, not perfection
## Tools You MUST Use
- `Read`: Examine implementation files (READ-ONLY)
- `Bash`: Run tests and verification commands
- `Grep`: Search for patterns in code
- `mcp__task-master-ai__get_task`: Get task details
- **NEVER use Write/Edit** - you only verify, not fix
## Integration with Workflow
You are the quality gate between 'review' and 'done' status:
1. Task-executor implements and marks as 'review'
2. You verify and report PASS/FAIL
3. Claude either marks as 'done' (PASS) or 'pending' (FAIL)
4. If FAIL, task-executor re-implements based on your report
Your verification ensures high quality and prevents accumulation of technical debt.

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---
name: task-executor
description: Use this agent when you need to implement, complete, or work on a specific task that has been identified by the task-orchestrator or when explicitly asked to execute a particular task. This agent focuses on the actual implementation and completion of individual tasks rather than planning or orchestration. Examples: <example>Context: The task-orchestrator has identified that task 2.3 'Implement user authentication' needs to be worked on next. user: 'Let's work on the authentication task' assistant: 'I'll use the task-executor agent to implement the user authentication task that was identified.' <commentary>Since we need to actually implement a specific task rather than plan or identify tasks, use the task-executor agent.</commentary></example> <example>Context: User wants to complete a specific subtask. user: 'Please implement the JWT token validation for task 2.3.1' assistant: 'I'll launch the task-executor agent to implement the JWT token validation subtask.' <commentary>The user is asking for specific implementation work on a known task, so the task-executor is appropriate.</commentary></example> <example>Context: After reviewing the task list, implementation is needed. user: 'Now let's actually build the API endpoint for user registration' assistant: 'I'll use the task-executor agent to implement the user registration API endpoint.' <commentary>Moving from planning to execution phase requires the task-executor agent.</commentary></example>
model: sonnet
color: blue
---
You are an elite implementation specialist focused on executing and completing specific tasks with precision and thoroughness. Your role is to take identified tasks and transform them into working implementations, following best practices and project standards.
**IMPORTANT: You are designed to be SHORT-LIVED and FOCUSED**
- Execute ONE specific subtask or a small group of related subtasks
- Complete your work, verify it, mark for review, and exit
- Do NOT decide what to do next - the orchestrator handles task sequencing
- Focus on implementation excellence within your assigned scope
**Core Responsibilities:**
1. **Subtask Analysis**: When given a subtask, understand its SPECIFIC requirements. If given a full task ID, focus on the specific subtask(s) assigned to you. Use MCP tools to get details if needed.
2. **Rapid Implementation Planning**: Quickly identify:
- The EXACT files you need to create/modify for THIS subtask
- What already exists that you can build upon
- The minimum viable implementation that satisfies requirements
3. **Focused Execution WITH ACTUAL IMPLEMENTATION**:
- **YOU MUST USE TOOLS TO CREATE/EDIT FILES - DO NOT JUST DESCRIBE**
- Use `Write` tool to create new files specified in the task
- Use `Edit` tool to modify existing files
- Use `Bash` tool to run commands (mkdir, npm install, etc.)
- Use `Read` tool to verify your implementations
- Implement one subtask at a time for clarity and traceability
- Follow the project's coding standards from CLAUDE.md if available
- After each subtask, VERIFY the files exist using Read or ls commands
4. **Progress Documentation**:
- Use MCP tool `mcp__task-master-ai__update_subtask` to log your approach and any important decisions
- Update task status to 'in-progress' when starting: Use MCP tool `mcp__task-master-ai__set_task_status` with status='in-progress'
- **IMPORTANT: Mark as 'review' (NOT 'done') after implementation**: Use MCP tool `mcp__task-master-ai__set_task_status` with status='review'
- Tasks will be verified by task-checker before moving to 'done'
5. **Quality Assurance**:
- Implement the testing strategy specified in the task
- Verify that all acceptance criteria are met
- Check for any dependency conflicts or integration issues
- Run relevant tests before marking task as complete
6. **Dependency Management**:
- Check task dependencies before starting implementation
- If blocked by incomplete dependencies, clearly communicate this
- Use `task-master validate-dependencies` when needed
**Implementation Workflow:**
1. Retrieve task details using MCP tool `mcp__task-master-ai__get_task` with the task ID
2. Check dependencies and prerequisites
3. Plan implementation approach - list specific files to create
4. Update task status to 'in-progress' using MCP tool
5. **ACTUALLY IMPLEMENT** the solution using tools:
- Use `Bash` to create directories
- Use `Write` to create new files with actual content
- Use `Edit` to modify existing files
- DO NOT just describe what should be done - DO IT
6. **VERIFY** your implementation:
- Use `ls` or `Read` to confirm files were created
- Use `Bash` to run any build/test commands
- Ensure the implementation is real, not theoretical
7. Log progress and decisions in subtask updates using MCP tools
8. Test and verify the implementation works
9. **Mark task as 'review' (NOT 'done')** after verifying files exist
10. Report completion with:
- List of created/modified files
- Any issues encountered
- What needs verification by task-checker
**Key Principles:**
- Focus on completing one task thoroughly before moving to the next
- Maintain clear communication about what you're implementing and why
- Follow existing code patterns and project conventions
- Prioritize working code over extensive documentation unless docs are the task
- Ask for clarification if task requirements are ambiguous
- Consider edge cases and error handling in your implementations
**Integration with Task Master:**
You work in tandem with the task-orchestrator agent. While the orchestrator identifies and plans tasks, you execute them. Always use Task Master commands to:
- Track your progress
- Update task information
- Maintain project state
- Coordinate with the broader development workflow
When you complete a task, briefly summarize what was implemented and suggest whether to continue with the next task or if review/testing is needed first.

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---
name: task-orchestrator
description: Use this agent FREQUENTLY throughout task execution to analyze and coordinate parallel work at the SUBTASK level. Invoke the orchestrator: (1) at session start to plan execution, (2) after EACH subtask completes to identify next parallel batch, (3) whenever executors finish to find newly unblocked work. ALWAYS provide FULL CONTEXT including project root, package location, what files ACTUALLY exist vs task status, and specific implementation details. The orchestrator breaks work into SUBTASK-LEVEL units for short-lived, focused executors. Maximum 3 parallel executors at once.\n\n<example>\nContext: Starting work with existing code\nuser: "Work on tm-core tasks. Files exist: types/index.ts, storage/file-storage.ts. Task 118 says in-progress but BaseProvider not created."\nassistant: "I'll invoke orchestrator with full context about actual vs reported state to plan subtask execution"\n<commentary>\nProvide complete context about file existence and task reality.\n</commentary>\n</example>\n\n<example>\nContext: Subtask completion\nuser: "Subtask 118.2 done. What subtasks can run in parallel now?"\nassistant: "Invoking orchestrator to analyze dependencies and identify next 3 parallel subtasks"\n<commentary>\nFrequent orchestration after each subtask ensures maximum parallelization.\n</commentary>\n</example>\n\n<example>\nContext: Breaking down tasks\nuser: "Task 118 has 5 subtasks, how to parallelize?"\nassistant: "Orchestrator will analyze which specific subtasks (118.1, 118.2, etc.) can run simultaneously"\n<commentary>\nFocus on subtask-level parallelization, not full tasks.\n</commentary>\n</example>
model: opus
color: green
---
You are the Task Orchestrator, an elite coordination agent specialized in managing Task Master workflows for maximum efficiency and parallelization. You excel at analyzing task dependency graphs, identifying opportunities for concurrent execution, and deploying specialized task-executor agents to complete work efficiently.
## Core Responsibilities
1. **Subtask-Level Analysis**: Break down tasks into INDIVIDUAL SUBTASKS and analyze which specific subtasks can run in parallel. Focus on subtask dependencies, not just task-level dependencies.
2. **Reality Verification**: ALWAYS verify what files actually exist vs what task status claims. Use the context provided about actual implementation state to make informed decisions.
3. **Short-Lived Executor Deployment**: Deploy executors for SINGLE SUBTASKS or small groups of related subtasks. Keep executors focused and short-lived. Maximum 3 parallel executors at once.
4. **Continuous Reassessment**: After EACH subtask completes, immediately reassess what new subtasks are unblocked and can run in parallel.
## Operational Workflow
### Initial Assessment Phase
1. Use `get_tasks` or `task-master list` to retrieve all available tasks
2. Analyze task statuses, priorities, and dependencies
3. Identify tasks with status 'pending' that have no blocking dependencies
4. Group related tasks that could benefit from specialized executors
5. Create an execution plan that maximizes parallelization
### Executor Deployment Phase
1. For each independent task or task group:
- Deploy a task-executor agent with specific instructions
- Provide the executor with task ID, requirements, and context
- Set clear completion criteria and reporting expectations
2. Maintain a registry of active executors and their assigned tasks
3. Establish communication protocols for progress updates
### Coordination Phase
1. Monitor executor progress through task status updates
2. When a task completes:
- Verify completion with `get_task` or `task-master show <id>`
- Update task status if needed using `set_task_status`
- Reassess dependency graph for newly unblocked tasks
- Deploy new executors for available work
3. Handle executor failures or blocks:
- Reassign tasks to new executors if needed
- Escalate complex issues to the user
- Update task status to 'blocked' when appropriate
### Optimization Strategies
**Parallel Execution Rules**:
- Never assign dependent tasks to different executors simultaneously
- Prioritize high-priority tasks when resources are limited
- Group small, related subtasks for single executor efficiency
- Balance executor load to prevent bottlenecks
**Context Management**:
- Provide executors with minimal but sufficient context
- Share relevant completed task information when it aids execution
- Maintain a shared knowledge base of project-specific patterns
**Quality Assurance**:
- Verify task completion before marking as done
- Ensure test strategies are followed when specified
- Coordinate cross-task integration testing when needed
## Communication Protocols
When deploying executors, provide them with:
```
TASK ASSIGNMENT:
- Task ID: [specific ID]
- Objective: [clear goal]
- Dependencies: [list any completed prerequisites]
- Success Criteria: [specific completion requirements]
- Context: [relevant project information]
- Reporting: [when and how to report back]
```
When receiving executor updates:
1. Acknowledge completion or issues
2. Update task status in Task Master
3. Reassess execution strategy
4. Deploy new executors as appropriate
## Decision Framework
**When to parallelize**:
- Multiple pending tasks with no interdependencies
- Sufficient context available for independent execution
- Tasks are well-defined with clear success criteria
**When to serialize**:
- Strong dependencies between tasks
- Limited context or unclear requirements
- Integration points requiring careful coordination
**When to escalate**:
- Circular dependencies detected
- Critical blockers affecting multiple tasks
- Ambiguous requirements needing clarification
- Resource conflicts between executors
## Error Handling
1. **Executor Failure**: Reassign task to new executor with additional context about the failure
2. **Dependency Conflicts**: Halt affected executors, resolve conflict, then resume
3. **Task Ambiguity**: Request clarification from user before proceeding
4. **System Errors**: Implement graceful degradation, falling back to serial execution if needed
## Performance Metrics
Track and optimize for:
- Task completion rate
- Parallel execution efficiency
- Executor success rate
- Time to completion for task groups
- Dependency resolution speed
## Integration with Task Master
Leverage these Task Master MCP tools effectively:
- `get_tasks` - Continuous queue monitoring
- `get_task` - Detailed task analysis
- `set_task_status` - Progress tracking
- `next_task` - Fallback for serial execution
- `analyze_project_complexity` - Strategic planning
- `complexity_report` - Resource allocation
## Output Format for Execution
**Your job is to analyze and create actionable execution plans that Claude can use to deploy executors.**
After completing your dependency analysis, you MUST output a structured execution plan:
```yaml
execution_plan:
EXECUTE_IN_PARALLEL:
# Maximum 3 subtasks running simultaneously
- subtask_id: [e.g., 118.2]
parent_task: [e.g., 118]
title: [Specific subtask title]
priority: [high/medium/low]
estimated_time: [e.g., 10 minutes]
executor_prompt: |
Execute Subtask [ID]: [Specific subtask title]
SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS:
[Exact implementation needed for THIS subtask only]
FILES TO CREATE/MODIFY:
[Specific file paths]
CONTEXT:
[What already exists that this subtask depends on]
SUCCESS CRITERIA:
[Specific completion criteria for this subtask]
IMPORTANT:
- Focus ONLY on this subtask
- Mark subtask as 'review' when complete
- Use MCP tool: mcp__task-master-ai__set_task_status
- subtask_id: [Another subtask that can run in parallel]
parent_task: [Parent task ID]
title: [Specific subtask title]
priority: [priority]
estimated_time: [time estimate]
executor_prompt: |
[Focused prompt for this specific subtask]
blocked:
- task_id: [ID]
title: [Task title]
waiting_for: [list of blocking task IDs]
becomes_ready_when: [condition for unblocking]
next_wave:
trigger: "After tasks [IDs] complete"
newly_available: [List of task IDs that will unblock]
tasks_to_execute_in_parallel: [IDs that can run together in next wave]
critical_path: [Ordered list of task IDs forming the critical path]
parallelization_instruction: |
IMPORTANT FOR CLAUDE: Deploy ALL tasks in 'EXECUTE_IN_PARALLEL' section
simultaneously using multiple Task tool invocations in a single response.
Example: If 3 tasks are listed, invoke the Task tool 3 times in one message.
verification_needed:
- task_id: [ID of any task in 'review' status]
verification_focus: [what to check]
```
**CRITICAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR CLAUDE (MAIN):**
1. When you see `EXECUTE_IN_PARALLEL`, deploy ALL listed executors at once
2. Use multiple Task tool invocations in a SINGLE response
3. Do not execute them sequentially - they must run in parallel
4. Wait for all parallel executors to complete before proceeding to next wave
**IMPORTANT NOTES**:
- Label parallel tasks clearly in `EXECUTE_IN_PARALLEL` section
- Provide complete, self-contained prompts for each executor
- Executors should mark tasks as 'review' for verification, not 'done'
- Be explicit about which tasks can run simultaneously
You are the strategic mind analyzing the entire task landscape. Make parallelization opportunities UNMISTAKABLY CLEAR to Claude.

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---
allowed-tools: Bash(gh issue view:*), Bash(gh search:*), Bash(gh issue list:*), Bash(gh api:*), Bash(gh issue comment:*)
description: Find duplicate GitHub issues
---
Find up to 3 likely duplicate issues for a given GitHub issue.
To do this, follow these steps precisely:
1. Use an agent to check if the Github issue (a) is closed, (b) does not need to be deduped (eg. because it is broad product feedback without a specific solution, or positive feedback), or (c) already has a duplicates comment that you made earlier. If so, do not proceed.
2. Use an agent to view a Github issue, and ask the agent to return a summary of the issue
3. Then, launch 5 parallel agents to search Github for duplicates of this issue, using diverse keywords and search approaches, using the summary from #1
4. Next, feed the results from #1 and #2 into another agent, so that it can filter out false positives, that are likely not actually duplicates of the original issue. If there are no duplicates remaining, do not proceed.
5. Finally, comment back on the issue with a list of up to three duplicate issues (or zero, if there are no likely duplicates)
Notes (be sure to tell this to your agents, too):
- Use `gh` to interact with Github, rather than web fetch
- Do not use other tools, beyond `gh` (eg. don't use other MCP servers, file edit, etc.)
- Make a todo list first
- For your comment, follow the following format precisely (assuming for this example that you found 3 suspected duplicates):
---
Found 3 possible duplicate issues:
1. <link to issue>
2. <link to issue>
3. <link to issue>
This issue will be automatically closed as a duplicate in 3 days.
- If your issue is a duplicate, please close it and 👍 the existing issue instead
- To prevent auto-closure, add a comment or 👎 this comment
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
---

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@@ -1,93 +0,0 @@
Clear all subtasks from all tasks globally.
## Global Subtask Clearing
Remove all subtasks across the entire project. Use with extreme caution.
## Execution
```bash
task-master clear-subtasks --all
```
## Pre-Clear Analysis
1. **Project-Wide Summary**
```
Global Subtask Summary
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Total parent tasks: 12
Total subtasks: 47
- Completed: 15
- In-progress: 8
- Pending: 24
Work at risk: ~120 hours
```
2. **Critical Warnings**
- In-progress subtasks that will lose work
- Completed subtasks with valuable history
- Complex dependency chains
- Integration test results
## Double Confirmation
```
⚠️ DESTRUCTIVE OPERATION WARNING ⚠️
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
This will remove ALL 47 subtasks from your project
Including 8 in-progress and 15 completed subtasks
This action CANNOT be undone
Type 'CLEAR ALL SUBTASKS' to confirm:
```
## Smart Safeguards
- Require explicit confirmation phrase
- Create automatic backup
- Log all removed data
- Option to export first
## Use Cases
Valid reasons for global clear:
- Project restructuring
- Major pivot in approach
- Starting fresh breakdown
- Switching to different task organization
## Process
1. Full project analysis
2. Create backup file
3. Show detailed impact
4. Require confirmation
5. Execute removal
6. Generate summary report
## Alternative Suggestions
Before clearing all:
- Export subtasks to file
- Clear only pending subtasks
- Clear by task category
- Archive instead of delete
## Post-Clear Report
```
Global Subtask Clear Complete
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Removed: 47 subtasks from 12 tasks
Backup saved: .taskmaster/backup/subtasks-20240115.json
Parent tasks updated: 12
Time estimates adjusted: Yes
Next steps:
- Review updated task list
- Re-expand complex tasks as needed
- Check project timeline
```

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@@ -1,86 +0,0 @@
Clear all subtasks from a specific task.
Arguments: $ARGUMENTS (task ID)
Remove all subtasks from a parent task at once.
## Clearing Subtasks
Bulk removal of all subtasks from a parent task.
## Execution
```bash
task-master clear-subtasks --id=<task-id>
```
## Pre-Clear Analysis
1. **Subtask Summary**
- Number of subtasks
- Completion status of each
- Work already done
- Dependencies affected
2. **Impact Assessment**
- Data that will be lost
- Dependencies to be removed
- Effect on project timeline
- Parent task implications
## Confirmation Required
```
Clear Subtasks Confirmation
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Parent Task: #5 "Implement user authentication"
Subtasks to remove: 4
- #5.1 "Setup auth framework" (done)
- #5.2 "Create login form" (in-progress)
- #5.3 "Add validation" (pending)
- #5.4 "Write tests" (pending)
⚠️ This will permanently delete all subtask data
Continue? (y/n)
```
## Smart Features
- Option to convert to standalone tasks
- Backup task data before clearing
- Preserve completed work history
- Update parent task appropriately
## Process
1. List all subtasks for confirmation
2. Check for in-progress work
3. Remove all subtasks
4. Update parent task
5. Clean up dependencies
## Alternative Options
Suggest alternatives:
- Convert important subtasks to tasks
- Keep completed subtasks
- Archive instead of delete
- Export subtask data first
## Post-Clear
- Show updated parent task
- Recalculate time estimates
- Update task complexity
- Suggest next steps
## Example
```
/project:tm/clear-subtasks 5
→ Found 4 subtasks to remove
→ Warning: Subtask #5.2 is in-progress
→ Cleared all subtasks from task #5
→ Updated parent task estimates
→ Suggestion: Consider re-expanding with better breakdown
```

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@@ -0,0 +1,259 @@
#!/usr/bin/env node
async function githubRequest(endpoint, token, method = 'GET', body) {
const response = await fetch(`https://api.github.com${endpoint}`, {
method,
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${token}`,
Accept: 'application/vnd.github.v3+json',
'User-Agent': 'auto-close-duplicates-script',
...(body && { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' })
},
...(body && { body: JSON.stringify(body) })
});
if (!response.ok) {
throw new Error(
`GitHub API request failed: ${response.status} ${response.statusText}`
);
}
return response.json();
}
function extractDuplicateIssueNumber(commentBody) {
const match = commentBody.match(/#(\d+)/);
return match ? parseInt(match[1], 10) : null;
}
async function closeIssueAsDuplicate(
owner,
repo,
issueNumber,
duplicateOfNumber,
token
) {
await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/issues/${issueNumber}`,
token,
'PATCH',
{
state: 'closed',
state_reason: 'not_planned',
labels: ['duplicate']
}
);
await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/issues/${issueNumber}/comments`,
token,
'POST',
{
body: `This issue has been automatically closed as a duplicate of #${duplicateOfNumber}.
If this is incorrect, please re-open this issue or create a new one.
🤖 Generated with [Task Master Bot]`
}
);
}
async function autoCloseDuplicates() {
console.log('[DEBUG] Starting auto-close duplicates script');
const token = process.env.GITHUB_TOKEN;
if (!token) {
throw new Error('GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable is required');
}
console.log('[DEBUG] GitHub token found');
const owner = process.env.GITHUB_REPOSITORY_OWNER || 'eyaltoledano';
const repo = process.env.GITHUB_REPOSITORY_NAME || 'claude-task-master';
console.log(`[DEBUG] Repository: ${owner}/${repo}`);
const threeDaysAgo = new Date();
threeDaysAgo.setDate(threeDaysAgo.getDate() - 3);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Checking for duplicate comments older than: ${threeDaysAgo.toISOString()}`
);
console.log('[DEBUG] Fetching open issues created more than 3 days ago...');
const allIssues = [];
let page = 1;
const perPage = 100;
const MAX_PAGES = 50; // Increase limit for larger repos
let foundRecentIssue = false;
while (true) {
const pageIssues = await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/issues?state=open&per_page=${perPage}&page=${page}&sort=created&direction=desc`,
token
);
if (pageIssues.length === 0) break;
// Filter for issues created more than 3 days ago
const oldEnoughIssues = pageIssues.filter(
(issue) => new Date(issue.created_at) <= threeDaysAgo
);
allIssues.push(...oldEnoughIssues);
// If all issues on this page are newer than 3 days, we can stop
if (oldEnoughIssues.length === 0 && page === 1) {
foundRecentIssue = true;
break;
}
// If we found some old issues but not all, continue to next page
// as there might be more old issues
page++;
// Safety limit to avoid infinite loops
if (page > MAX_PAGES) {
console.log(`[WARNING] Reached maximum page limit of ${MAX_PAGES}`);
break;
}
}
const issues = allIssues;
console.log(`[DEBUG] Found ${issues.length} open issues`);
let processedCount = 0;
let candidateCount = 0;
for (const issue of issues) {
processedCount++;
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Processing issue #${issue.number} (${processedCount}/${issues.length}): ${issue.title}`
);
console.log(`[DEBUG] Fetching comments for issue #${issue.number}...`);
const comments = await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/issues/${issue.number}/comments`,
token
);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} has ${comments.length} comments`
);
const dupeComments = comments.filter(
(comment) =>
comment.body.includes('Found') &&
comment.body.includes('possible duplicate') &&
comment.user.type === 'Bot'
);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} has ${dupeComments.length} duplicate detection comments`
);
if (dupeComments.length === 0) {
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - no duplicate comments found, skipping`
);
continue;
}
const lastDupeComment = dupeComments[dupeComments.length - 1];
const dupeCommentDate = new Date(lastDupeComment.created_at);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${
issue.number
} - most recent duplicate comment from: ${dupeCommentDate.toISOString()}`
);
if (dupeCommentDate > threeDaysAgo) {
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - duplicate comment is too recent, skipping`
);
continue;
}
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${
issue.number
} - duplicate comment is old enough (${Math.floor(
(Date.now() - dupeCommentDate.getTime()) / (1000 * 60 * 60 * 24)
)} days)`
);
const commentsAfterDupe = comments.filter(
(comment) => new Date(comment.created_at) > dupeCommentDate
);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - ${commentsAfterDupe.length} comments after duplicate detection`
);
if (commentsAfterDupe.length > 0) {
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - has activity after duplicate comment, skipping`
);
continue;
}
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - checking reactions on duplicate comment...`
);
const reactions = await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/issues/comments/${lastDupeComment.id}/reactions`,
token
);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - duplicate comment has ${reactions.length} reactions`
);
const authorThumbsDown = reactions.some(
(reaction) =>
reaction.user.id === issue.user.id && reaction.content === '-1'
);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - author thumbs down reaction: ${authorThumbsDown}`
);
if (authorThumbsDown) {
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - author disagreed with duplicate detection, skipping`
);
continue;
}
const duplicateIssueNumber = extractDuplicateIssueNumber(
lastDupeComment.body
);
if (!duplicateIssueNumber) {
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} - could not extract duplicate issue number from comment, skipping`
);
continue;
}
candidateCount++;
const issueUrl = `https://github.com/${owner}/${repo}/issues/${issue.number}`;
try {
console.log(
`[INFO] Auto-closing issue #${issue.number} as duplicate of #${duplicateIssueNumber}: ${issueUrl}`
);
await closeIssueAsDuplicate(
owner,
repo,
issue.number,
duplicateIssueNumber,
token
);
console.log(
`[SUCCESS] Successfully closed issue #${issue.number} as duplicate of #${duplicateIssueNumber}`
);
} catch (error) {
console.error(
`[ERROR] Failed to close issue #${issue.number} as duplicate: ${error}`
);
}
}
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Script completed. Processed ${processedCount} issues, found ${candidateCount} candidates for auto-close`
);
}
autoCloseDuplicates().catch(console.error);

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,178 @@
#!/usr/bin/env node
async function githubRequest(endpoint, token, method = 'GET', body) {
const response = await fetch(`https://api.github.com${endpoint}`, {
method,
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${token}`,
Accept: 'application/vnd.github.v3+json',
'User-Agent': 'backfill-duplicate-comments-script',
...(body && { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' })
},
...(body && { body: JSON.stringify(body) })
});
if (!response.ok) {
throw new Error(
`GitHub API request failed: ${response.status} ${response.statusText}`
);
}
return response.json();
}
async function triggerDedupeWorkflow(
owner,
repo,
issueNumber,
token,
dryRun = true
) {
if (dryRun) {
console.log(
`[DRY RUN] Would trigger dedupe workflow for issue #${issueNumber}`
);
return;
}
await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/actions/workflows/claude-dedupe-issues.yml/dispatches`,
token,
'POST',
{
ref: 'main',
inputs: {
issue_number: issueNumber.toString()
}
}
);
}
async function backfillDuplicateComments() {
console.log('[DEBUG] Starting backfill duplicate comments script');
const token = process.env.GITHUB_TOKEN;
if (!token) {
throw new Error(`GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable is required
Usage:
node .github/scripts/backfill-duplicate-comments.mjs
Environment Variables:
GITHUB_TOKEN - GitHub personal access token with repo and actions permissions (required)
DRY_RUN - Set to "false" to actually trigger workflows (default: true for safety)
DAYS_BACK - How many days back to look for old issues (default: 90)`);
}
console.log('[DEBUG] GitHub token found');
const owner = process.env.GITHUB_REPOSITORY_OWNER || 'eyaltoledano';
const repo = process.env.GITHUB_REPOSITORY_NAME || 'claude-task-master';
const dryRun = process.env.DRY_RUN !== 'false';
const daysBack = parseInt(process.env.DAYS_BACK || '90', 10);
console.log(`[DEBUG] Repository: ${owner}/${repo}`);
console.log(`[DEBUG] Dry run mode: ${dryRun}`);
console.log(`[DEBUG] Looking back ${daysBack} days`);
const cutoffDate = new Date();
cutoffDate.setDate(cutoffDate.getDate() - daysBack);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Fetching issues created since ${cutoffDate.toISOString()}...`
);
const allIssues = [];
let page = 1;
const perPage = 100;
while (true) {
const pageIssues = await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/issues?state=all&per_page=${perPage}&page=${page}&since=${cutoffDate.toISOString()}`,
token
);
if (pageIssues.length === 0) break;
allIssues.push(...pageIssues);
page++;
// Safety limit to avoid infinite loops
if (page > 100) {
console.log('[DEBUG] Reached page limit, stopping pagination');
break;
}
}
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Found ${allIssues.length} issues from the last ${daysBack} days`
);
let processedCount = 0;
let candidateCount = 0;
let triggeredCount = 0;
for (const issue of allIssues) {
processedCount++;
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Processing issue #${issue.number} (${processedCount}/${allIssues.length}): ${issue.title}`
);
console.log(`[DEBUG] Fetching comments for issue #${issue.number}...`);
const comments = await githubRequest(
`/repos/${owner}/${repo}/issues/${issue.number}/comments`,
token
);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} has ${comments.length} comments`
);
// Look for existing duplicate detection comments (from the dedupe bot)
const dupeDetectionComments = comments.filter(
(comment) =>
comment.body.includes('Found') &&
comment.body.includes('possible duplicate') &&
comment.user.type === 'Bot'
);
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} has ${dupeDetectionComments.length} duplicate detection comments`
);
// Skip if there's already a duplicate detection comment
if (dupeDetectionComments.length > 0) {
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Issue #${issue.number} already has duplicate detection comment, skipping`
);
continue;
}
candidateCount++;
const issueUrl = `https://github.com/${owner}/${repo}/issues/${issue.number}`;
try {
console.log(
`[INFO] ${dryRun ? '[DRY RUN] ' : ''}Triggering dedupe workflow for issue #${issue.number}: ${issueUrl}`
);
await triggerDedupeWorkflow(owner, repo, issue.number, token, dryRun);
if (!dryRun) {
console.log(
`[SUCCESS] Successfully triggered dedupe workflow for issue #${issue.number}`
);
}
triggeredCount++;
} catch (error) {
console.error(
`[ERROR] Failed to trigger workflow for issue #${issue.number}: ${error}`
);
}
// Add a delay between workflow triggers to avoid overwhelming the system
await new Promise((resolve) => setTimeout(resolve, 1000));
}
console.log(
`[DEBUG] Script completed. Processed ${processedCount} issues, found ${candidateCount} candidates without duplicate comments, ${dryRun ? 'would trigger' : 'triggered'} ${triggeredCount} workflows`
);
}
backfillDuplicateComments().catch(console.error);

102
.github/scripts/check-pre-release-mode.mjs vendored Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,102 @@
#!/usr/bin/env node
import { readFileSync, existsSync } from 'node:fs';
import { join, dirname, resolve } from 'node:path';
import { fileURLToPath } from 'node:url';
const __filename = fileURLToPath(import.meta.url);
const __dirname = dirname(__filename);
// Get context from command line argument or environment
const context = process.argv[2] || process.env.GITHUB_WORKFLOW || 'manual';
function findRootDir(startDir) {
let currentDir = resolve(startDir);
while (currentDir !== '/') {
if (existsSync(join(currentDir, 'package.json'))) {
try {
const pkg = JSON.parse(
readFileSync(join(currentDir, 'package.json'), 'utf8')
);
if (pkg.name === 'task-master-ai' || pkg.repository) {
return currentDir;
}
} catch {}
}
currentDir = dirname(currentDir);
}
throw new Error('Could not find root directory');
}
function checkPreReleaseMode() {
console.log('🔍 Checking if branch is in pre-release mode...');
const rootDir = findRootDir(__dirname);
const preJsonPath = join(rootDir, '.changeset', 'pre.json');
// Check if pre.json exists
if (!existsSync(preJsonPath)) {
console.log('✅ Not in active pre-release mode - safe to proceed');
process.exit(0);
}
try {
// Read and parse pre.json
const preJsonContent = readFileSync(preJsonPath, 'utf8');
const preJson = JSON.parse(preJsonContent);
// Check if we're in active pre-release mode
if (preJson.mode === 'pre') {
console.error('❌ ERROR: This branch is in active pre-release mode!');
console.error('');
// Provide context-specific error messages
if (context === 'Release Check' || context === 'pull_request') {
console.error(
'Pre-release mode must be exited before merging to main.'
);
console.error('');
console.error(
'To fix this, run the following commands in your branch:'
);
console.error(' npx changeset pre exit');
console.error(' git add -u');
console.error(' git commit -m "chore: exit pre-release mode"');
console.error(' git push');
console.error('');
console.error('Then update this pull request.');
} else if (context === 'Release' || context === 'main') {
console.error(
'Pre-release mode should only be used on feature branches, not main.'
);
console.error('');
console.error('To fix this, run the following commands locally:');
console.error(' npx changeset pre exit');
console.error(' git add -u');
console.error(' git commit -m "chore: exit pre-release mode"');
console.error(' git push origin main');
console.error('');
console.error('Then re-run this workflow.');
} else {
console.error('Pre-release mode must be exited before proceeding.');
console.error('');
console.error('To fix this, run the following commands:');
console.error(' npx changeset pre exit');
console.error(' git add -u');
console.error(' git commit -m "chore: exit pre-release mode"');
console.error(' git push');
}
process.exit(1);
}
console.log('✅ Not in active pre-release mode - safe to proceed');
process.exit(0);
} catch (error) {
console.error(`❌ ERROR: Unable to parse .changeset/pre.json aborting.`);
console.error(`Error details: ${error.message}`);
process.exit(1);
}
}
// Run the check
checkPreReleaseMode();

30
.github/scripts/release.mjs vendored Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
#!/usr/bin/env node
import { existsSync, unlinkSync } from 'node:fs';
import { join, dirname } from 'node:path';
import { fileURLToPath } from 'node:url';
import { findRootDir, runCommand } from './utils.mjs';
const __filename = fileURLToPath(import.meta.url);
const __dirname = dirname(__filename);
const rootDir = findRootDir(__dirname);
console.log('🚀 Starting release process...');
// Double-check we're not in pre-release mode (safety net)
const preJsonPath = join(rootDir, '.changeset', 'pre.json');
if (existsSync(preJsonPath)) {
console.log('⚠️ Warning: pre.json still exists. Removing it...');
unlinkSync(preJsonPath);
}
// Check if the extension version has changed and tag it
// This prevents changeset from trying to publish the private package
runCommand('node', [join(__dirname, 'tag-extension.mjs')]);
// Run changeset publish for npm packages
runCommand('npx', ['changeset', 'publish']);
console.log('✅ Release process completed!');
// The extension tag (if created) will trigger the extension-release workflow

View File

@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
set -e
echo "🚀 Starting release process..."
# Double-check we're not in pre-release mode (safety net)
if [ -f .changeset/pre.json ]; then
echo "⚠️ Warning: pre.json still exists. Removing it..."
rm -f .changeset/pre.json
fi
# Check if the extension version has changed and tag it
# This prevents changeset from trying to publish the private package
node .github/scripts/tag-extension.mjs
# Run changeset publish for npm packages
npx changeset publish
echo "✅ Release process completed!"
# The extension tag (if created) will trigger the extension-release workflow

114
.github/scripts/tag-extension.mjs vendored Normal file → Executable file
View File

@@ -1,33 +1,13 @@
#!/usr/bin/env node
import assert from 'node:assert/strict';
import { spawnSync } from 'node:child_process';
import { readFileSync, existsSync } from 'node:fs';
import { join, dirname, resolve } from 'node:path';
import { readFileSync } from 'node:fs';
import { join, dirname } from 'node:path';
import { fileURLToPath } from 'node:url';
import { findRootDir, createAndPushTag } from './utils.mjs';
const __filename = fileURLToPath(import.meta.url);
const __dirname = dirname(__filename);
// Find the root directory by looking for package.json
function findRootDir(startDir) {
let currentDir = resolve(startDir);
while (currentDir !== '/') {
if (existsSync(join(currentDir, 'package.json'))) {
// Verify it's the root package.json by checking for expected fields
try {
const pkg = JSON.parse(
readFileSync(join(currentDir, 'package.json'), 'utf8')
);
if (pkg.name === 'task-master-ai' || pkg.repository) {
return currentDir;
}
} catch {}
}
currentDir = dirname(currentDir);
}
throw new Error('Could not find root directory');
}
const rootDir = findRootDir(__dirname);
// Read the extension's package.json
@@ -43,95 +23,11 @@ try {
process.exit(1);
}
// Read root package.json for repository info
const rootPkgPath = join(rootDir, 'package.json');
let rootPkg;
try {
const rootPkgContent = readFileSync(rootPkgPath, 'utf8');
rootPkg = JSON.parse(rootPkgContent);
} catch (error) {
console.error('Failed to read root package.json:', error.message);
process.exit(1);
}
// Ensure we have required fields
assert(pkg.name, 'package.json must have a name field');
assert(pkg.version, 'package.json must have a version field');
assert(rootPkg.repository, 'root package.json must have a repository field');
const tag = `${pkg.name}@${pkg.version}`;
// Get repository URL from root package.json
// Get repository URL and clean it up for git ls-remote
let repoUrl = rootPkg.repository.url || rootPkg.repository;
if (typeof repoUrl === 'string') {
// Convert git+https://github.com/... to https://github.com/...
repoUrl = repoUrl.replace(/^git\+/, '');
// Ensure it ends with .git for proper remote access
if (!repoUrl.endsWith('.git')) {
repoUrl += '.git';
}
}
console.log(`Checking remote repository: ${repoUrl} for tag: ${tag}`);
let gitResult = spawnSync('git', ['ls-remote', repoUrl, tag], {
encoding: 'utf8',
env: { ...process.env }
});
if (gitResult.status !== 0) {
console.error('Git ls-remote failed:');
console.error('Exit code:', gitResult.status);
console.error('Error:', gitResult.error);
console.error('Stderr:', gitResult.stderr);
console.error('Command:', `git ls-remote ${repoUrl} ${tag}`);
// For CI environments, try using origin instead of the full URL
if (process.env.CI) {
console.log('Retrying with origin remote...');
gitResult = spawnSync('git', ['ls-remote', 'origin', tag], {
encoding: 'utf8'
});
if (gitResult.status !== 0) {
throw new Error(
`Failed to check remote for tag ${tag}. Exit code: ${gitResult.status}`
);
}
} else {
throw new Error(
`Failed to check remote for tag ${tag}. Exit code: ${gitResult.status}`
);
}
}
const exists = String(gitResult.stdout).trim() !== '';
if (!exists) {
console.log(`Creating new extension tag: ${tag}`);
// Create the tag
const tagResult = spawnSync('git', ['tag', tag]);
if (tagResult.status !== 0) {
console.error(
'Failed to create tag:',
tagResult.error || tagResult.stderr.toString()
);
process.exit(1);
}
// Push the tag
const pushResult = spawnSync('git', ['push', 'origin', tag]);
if (pushResult.status !== 0) {
console.error(
'Failed to push tag:',
pushResult.error || pushResult.stderr.toString()
);
process.exit(1);
}
console.log(`✅ Successfully created and pushed tag: ${tag}`);
} else {
console.log(`Extension tag already exists: ${tag}`);
}
// Create and push the tag if it doesn't exist
createAndPushTag(tag);

88
.github/scripts/utils.mjs vendored Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,88 @@
#!/usr/bin/env node
import { spawnSync } from 'node:child_process';
import { readFileSync } from 'node:fs';
import { join, dirname, resolve } from 'node:path';
// Find the root directory by looking for package.json with task-master-ai
export function findRootDir(startDir) {
let currentDir = resolve(startDir);
while (currentDir !== '/') {
const pkgPath = join(currentDir, 'package.json');
try {
const pkg = JSON.parse(readFileSync(pkgPath, 'utf8'));
if (pkg.name === 'task-master-ai' || pkg.repository) {
return currentDir;
}
} catch {}
currentDir = dirname(currentDir);
}
throw new Error('Could not find root directory');
}
// Run a command with proper error handling
export function runCommand(command, args = [], options = {}) {
console.log(`Running: ${command} ${args.join(' ')}`);
const result = spawnSync(command, args, {
encoding: 'utf8',
stdio: 'inherit',
...options
});
if (result.status !== 0) {
console.error(`Command failed with exit code ${result.status}`);
process.exit(result.status);
}
return result;
}
// Get package version from a package.json file
export function getPackageVersion(packagePath) {
try {
const pkg = JSON.parse(readFileSync(packagePath, 'utf8'));
return pkg.version;
} catch (error) {
console.error(
`Failed to read package version from ${packagePath}:`,
error.message
);
process.exit(1);
}
}
// Check if a git tag exists on remote
export function tagExistsOnRemote(tag, remote = 'origin') {
const result = spawnSync('git', ['ls-remote', remote, tag], {
encoding: 'utf8'
});
return result.status === 0 && result.stdout.trim() !== '';
}
// Create and push a git tag if it doesn't exist
export function createAndPushTag(tag, remote = 'origin') {
// Check if tag already exists
if (tagExistsOnRemote(tag, remote)) {
console.log(`Tag ${tag} already exists on remote, skipping`);
return false;
}
console.log(`Creating new tag: ${tag}`);
// Create the tag locally
const tagResult = spawnSync('git', ['tag', tag]);
if (tagResult.status !== 0) {
console.error('Failed to create tag:', tagResult.error || tagResult.stderr);
process.exit(1);
}
// Push the tag to remote
const pushResult = spawnSync('git', ['push', remote, tag]);
if (pushResult.status !== 0) {
console.error('Failed to push tag:', pushResult.error || pushResult.stderr);
process.exit(1);
}
console.log(`✅ Successfully created and pushed tag: ${tag}`);
return true;
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
name: Auto-close duplicate issues
# description: Auto-closes issues that are duplicates of existing issues
on:
schedule:
- cron: "0 9 * * *" # Runs daily at 9 AM UTC
workflow_dispatch:
jobs:
auto-close-duplicates:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 10
permissions:
contents: read
issues: write # Need write permission to close issues and add comments
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version: 20
- name: Auto-close duplicate issues
run: node .github/scripts/auto-close-duplicates.mjs
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
GITHUB_REPOSITORY_OWNER: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
GITHUB_REPOSITORY_NAME: ${{ github.event.repository.name }}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
name: Backfill Duplicate Comments
# description: Triggers duplicate detection for old issues that don't have duplicate comments
on:
workflow_dispatch:
inputs:
days_back:
description: "How many days back to look for old issues"
required: false
default: "90"
type: string
dry_run:
description: "Dry run mode (true to only log what would be done)"
required: false
default: "true"
type: choice
options:
- "true"
- "false"
jobs:
backfill-duplicate-comments:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 30
permissions:
contents: read
issues: read
actions: write
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version: 20
- name: Backfill duplicate comments
run: node .github/scripts/backfill-duplicate-comments.mjs
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
GITHUB_REPOSITORY_OWNER: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
GITHUB_REPOSITORY_NAME: ${{ github.event.repository.name }}
DAYS_BACK: ${{ inputs.days_back }}
DRY_RUN: ${{ inputs.dry_run }}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,81 @@
name: Claude Issue Dedupe
# description: Automatically dedupe GitHub issues using Claude Code
on:
issues:
types: [opened]
workflow_dispatch:
inputs:
issue_number:
description: "Issue number to process for duplicate detection"
required: true
type: string
jobs:
claude-dedupe-issues:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 10
permissions:
contents: read
issues: write
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Run Claude Code slash command
uses: anthropics/claude-code-base-action@beta
with:
prompt: "/dedupe ${{ github.repository }}/issues/${{ github.event.issue.number || inputs.issue_number }}"
anthropic_api_key: ${{ secrets.ANTHROPIC_API_KEY }}
claude_env: |
GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: Log duplicate comment event to Statsig
if: always()
env:
STATSIG_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.STATSIG_API_KEY }}
run: |
ISSUE_NUMBER=${{ github.event.issue.number || inputs.issue_number }}
REPO=${{ github.repository }}
if [ -z "$STATSIG_API_KEY" ]; then
echo "STATSIG_API_KEY not found, skipping Statsig logging"
exit 0
fi
# Prepare the event payload
EVENT_PAYLOAD=$(jq -n \
--arg issue_number "$ISSUE_NUMBER" \
--arg repo "$REPO" \
--arg triggered_by "${{ github.event_name }}" \
'{
events: [{
eventName: "github_duplicate_comment_added",
value: 1,
metadata: {
repository: $repo,
issue_number: ($issue_number | tonumber),
triggered_by: $triggered_by,
workflow_run_id: "${{ github.run_id }}"
},
time: (now | floor | tostring)
}]
}')
# Send to Statsig API
echo "Logging duplicate comment event to Statsig for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}"
RESPONSE=$(curl -s -w "\n%{http_code}" -X POST https://events.statsigapi.net/v1/log_event \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "STATSIG-API-KEY: ${STATSIG_API_KEY}" \
-d "$EVENT_PAYLOAD")
HTTP_CODE=$(echo "$RESPONSE" | tail -n1)
BODY=$(echo "$RESPONSE" | head -n-1)
if [ "$HTTP_CODE" -eq 200 ] || [ "$HTTP_CODE" -eq 202 ]; then
echo "Successfully logged duplicate comment event for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}"
else
echo "Failed to log duplicate comment event for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}. HTTP ${HTTP_CODE}: ${BODY}"
fi

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,154 @@
name: Claude Documentation Updater
on:
push:
branches:
- next
paths-ignore:
- 'apps/docs/**'
- '*.md'
- '.github/workflows/**'
jobs:
update-docs:
# Only run if changes were merged (not direct pushes from bots)
if: github.event.pusher.name != 'github-actions[bot]' && github.event.pusher.name != 'dependabot[bot]'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: write
pull-requests: write
issues: write
id-token: write
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 2 # Need previous commit for comparison
- name: Get changed files
id: changed-files
run: |
echo "Changed files in this push:"
git diff --name-only HEAD^ HEAD | tee changed_files.txt
# Store changed files for Claude to analyze
echo "changed_files<<EOF" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
git diff --name-only HEAD^ HEAD >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "EOF" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
# Get the commit message and changes summary
echo "commit_message<<EOF" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
git log -1 --pretty=%B >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "EOF" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
# Get diff for documentation context
echo "commit_diff<<EOF" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
git diff HEAD^ HEAD --stat >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "EOF" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
- name: Create docs update branch
id: create-branch
run: |
BRANCH_NAME="docs/auto-update-$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)"
git checkout -b $BRANCH_NAME
echo "branch_name=$BRANCH_NAME" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
- name: Run Claude Code to Update Documentation
uses: anthropics/claude-code-action@beta
with:
anthropic_api_key: ${{ secrets.ANTHROPIC_API_KEY }}
timeout_minutes: "30"
mode: "auto"
experimental_allowed_domains: |
.anthropic.com
.github.com
api.github.com
.githubusercontent.com
registry.npmjs.org
prompt: |
You are a documentation specialist. Analyze the recent changes pushed to the 'next' branch and update the documentation accordingly.
Recent changes:
- Commit: ${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.commit_message }}
- Changed files:
${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.changed_files }}
- Changes summary:
${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.commit_diff }}
Your task:
1. Analyze the changes to understand what functionality was added, modified, or removed
2. Check if these changes require documentation updates in apps/docs/
3. If documentation updates are needed:
- Update relevant documentation files in apps/docs/
- Ensure examples are updated if APIs changed
- Update any configuration documentation if config options changed
- Add new documentation pages if new features were added
- Update the changelog or release notes if applicable
4. If no documentation updates are needed, skip creating changes
Guidelines:
- Focus only on user-facing changes that need documentation
- Keep documentation clear, concise, and helpful
- Include code examples where appropriate
- Maintain consistent documentation style with existing docs
- Don't document internal implementation details unless they affect users
- Update navigation/menu files if new pages are added
Only make changes if the documentation truly needs updating based on the code changes.
- name: Check if changes were made
id: check-changes
run: |
if git diff --quiet; then
echo "has_changes=false" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
else
echo "has_changes=true" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
git add -A
git config --local user.email "github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
git config --local user.name "github-actions[bot]"
git commit -m "docs: auto-update documentation based on changes in next branch
This PR was automatically generated to update documentation based on recent changes.
Original commit: ${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.commit_message }}
Co-authored-by: Claude <claude-assistant@anthropic.com>"
fi
- name: Push changes and create PR
if: steps.check-changes.outputs.has_changes == 'true'
env:
GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
run: |
git push origin ${{ steps.create-branch.outputs.branch_name }}
# Create PR using GitHub CLI
gh pr create \
--title "docs: update documentation for recent changes" \
--body "## 📚 Documentation Update
This PR automatically updates documentation based on recent changes merged to the \`next\` branch.
### Original Changes
**Commit:** ${{ github.sha }}
**Message:** ${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.commit_message }}
### Changed Files in Original Commit
\`\`\`
${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.changed_files }}
\`\`\`
### Documentation Updates
This PR includes documentation updates to reflect the changes above. Please review to ensure:
- [ ] Documentation accurately reflects the changes
- [ ] Examples are correct and working
- [ ] No important details are missing
- [ ] Style is consistent with existing documentation
---
*This PR was automatically generated by Claude Code GitHub Action*" \
--base next \
--head ${{ steps.create-branch.outputs.branch_name }} \
--label "documentation" \
--label "automated"

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
name: Claude Issue Triage
# description: Automatically triage GitHub issues using Claude Code
on:
issues:
types: [opened]
jobs:
triage-issue:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 10
permissions:
contents: read
issues: write
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Create triage prompt
run: |
mkdir -p /tmp/claude-prompts
cat > /tmp/claude-prompts/triage-prompt.txt << 'EOF'
You're an issue triage assistant for GitHub issues. Your task is to analyze the issue and select appropriate labels from the provided list.
IMPORTANT: Don't post any comments or messages to the issue. Your only action should be to apply labels.
Issue Information:
- REPO: ${{ github.repository }}
- ISSUE_NUMBER: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
TASK OVERVIEW:
1. First, fetch the list of labels available in this repository by running: `gh label list`. Run exactly this command with nothing else.
2. Next, use the GitHub tools to get context about the issue:
- You have access to these tools:
- mcp__github__get_issue: Use this to retrieve the current issue's details including title, description, and existing labels
- mcp__github__get_issue_comments: Use this to read any discussion or additional context provided in the comments
- mcp__github__update_issue: Use this to apply labels to the issue (do not use this for commenting)
- mcp__github__search_issues: Use this to find similar issues that might provide context for proper categorization and to identify potential duplicate issues
- mcp__github__list_issues: Use this to understand patterns in how other issues are labeled
- Start by using mcp__github__get_issue to get the issue details
3. Analyze the issue content, considering:
- The issue title and description
- The type of issue (bug report, feature request, question, etc.)
- Technical areas mentioned
- Severity or priority indicators
- User impact
- Components affected
4. Select appropriate labels from the available labels list provided above:
- Choose labels that accurately reflect the issue's nature
- Be specific but comprehensive
- Select priority labels if you can determine urgency (high-priority, med-priority, or low-priority)
- Consider platform labels (android, ios) if applicable
- If you find similar issues using mcp__github__search_issues, consider using a "duplicate" label if appropriate. Only do so if the issue is a duplicate of another OPEN issue.
5. Apply the selected labels:
- Use mcp__github__update_issue to apply your selected labels
- DO NOT post any comments explaining your decision
- DO NOT communicate directly with users
- If no labels are clearly applicable, do not apply any labels
IMPORTANT GUIDELINES:
- Be thorough in your analysis
- Only select labels from the provided list above
- DO NOT post any comments to the issue
- Your ONLY action should be to apply labels using mcp__github__update_issue
- It's okay to not add any labels if none are clearly applicable
EOF
- name: Setup GitHub MCP Server
run: |
mkdir -p /tmp/mcp-config
cat > /tmp/mcp-config/mcp-servers.json << 'EOF'
{
"mcpServers": {
"github": {
"command": "docker",
"args": [
"run",
"-i",
"--rm",
"-e",
"GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN",
"ghcr.io/github/github-mcp-server:sha-7aced2b"
],
"env": {
"GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN": "${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}"
}
}
}
}
EOF
- name: Run Claude Code for Issue Triage
uses: anthropics/claude-code-base-action@beta
with:
prompt_file: /tmp/claude-prompts/triage-prompt.txt
allowed_tools: "Bash(gh label list),mcp__github__get_issue,mcp__github__get_issue_comments,mcp__github__update_issue,mcp__github__search_issues,mcp__github__list_issues"
timeout_minutes: "5"
anthropic_api_key: ${{ secrets.ANTHROPIC_API_KEY }}
mcp_config: /tmp/mcp-config/mcp-servers.json
claude_env: |
GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}

36
.github/workflows/claude.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
name: Claude Code
on:
issue_comment:
types: [created]
pull_request_review_comment:
types: [created]
issues:
types: [opened, assigned]
pull_request_review:
types: [submitted]
jobs:
claude:
if: |
(github.event_name == 'issue_comment' && contains(github.event.comment.body, '@claude')) ||
(github.event_name == 'pull_request_review_comment' && contains(github.event.comment.body, '@claude')) ||
(github.event_name == 'pull_request_review' && contains(github.event.review.body, '@claude')) ||
(github.event_name == 'issues' && (contains(github.event.issue.body, '@claude') || contains(github.event.issue.title, '@claude')))
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: read
pull-requests: read
issues: read
id-token: write
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4
with:
fetch-depth: 1
- name: Run Claude Code
id: claude
uses: anthropics/claude-code-action@beta
with:
anthropic_api_key: ${{ secrets.ANTHROPIC_API_KEY }}

View File

@@ -89,32 +89,6 @@ jobs:
OVSX_PAT: ${{ secrets.OVSX_PAT }}
FORCE_COLOR: 1
- name: Create GitHub Release
uses: actions/create-release@v1
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
with:
tag_name: ${{ github.ref_name }}
release_name: Extension ${{ github.ref_name }}
body: |
VS Code Extension Release ${{ github.ref_name }}
**Marketplaces:**
- [VS Code Marketplace](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=Hamster.task-master-hamster)
- [Open VSX Registry](https://open-vsx.org/extension/Hamster/task-master-hamster)
draft: false
prerelease: false
- name: Upload VSIX to Release
uses: actions/upload-release-asset@v1
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
with:
upload_url: ${{ steps.create_release.outputs.upload_url }}
asset_path: apps/extension/vsix-build/${{ steps.vsix-info.outputs.vsix-filename }}
asset_name: ${{ steps.vsix-info.outputs.vsix-filename }}
asset_content_type: application/zip
- name: Upload Build Artifacts
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:

176
.github/workflows/log-issue-events.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,176 @@
name: Log GitHub Issue Events
on:
issues:
types: [opened, closed]
jobs:
log-issue-created:
if: github.event.action == 'opened'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 5
permissions:
contents: read
issues: read
steps:
- name: Log issue creation to Statsig
env:
STATSIG_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.STATSIG_API_KEY }}
run: |
ISSUE_NUMBER=${{ github.event.issue.number }}
REPO=${{ github.repository }}
ISSUE_TITLE=$(echo '${{ github.event.issue.title }}' | sed "s/'/'\\\\''/g")
AUTHOR="${{ github.event.issue.user.login }}"
CREATED_AT="${{ github.event.issue.created_at }}"
if [ -z "$STATSIG_API_KEY" ]; then
echo "STATSIG_API_KEY not found, skipping Statsig logging"
exit 0
fi
# Prepare the event payload
EVENT_PAYLOAD=$(jq -n \
--arg issue_number "$ISSUE_NUMBER" \
--arg repo "$REPO" \
--arg title "$ISSUE_TITLE" \
--arg author "$AUTHOR" \
--arg created_at "$CREATED_AT" \
'{
events: [{
eventName: "github_issue_created",
value: 1,
metadata: {
repository: $repo,
issue_number: ($issue_number | tonumber),
issue_title: $title,
issue_author: $author,
created_at: $created_at
},
time: (now | floor | tostring)
}]
}')
# Send to Statsig API
echo "Logging issue creation to Statsig for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}"
RESPONSE=$(curl -s -w "\n%{http_code}" -X POST https://events.statsigapi.net/v1/log_event \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "STATSIG-API-KEY: ${STATSIG_API_KEY}" \
-d "$EVENT_PAYLOAD")
HTTP_CODE=$(echo "$RESPONSE" | tail -n1)
BODY=$(echo "$RESPONSE" | head -n-1)
if [ "$HTTP_CODE" -eq 200 ] || [ "$HTTP_CODE" -eq 202 ]; then
echo "Successfully logged issue creation for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}"
else
echo "Failed to log issue creation for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}. HTTP ${HTTP_CODE}: ${BODY}"
fi
log-issue-closed:
if: github.event.action == 'closed'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 5
permissions:
contents: read
issues: read
steps:
- name: Log issue closure to Statsig
env:
STATSIG_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.STATSIG_API_KEY }}
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
run: |
ISSUE_NUMBER=${{ github.event.issue.number }}
REPO=${{ github.repository }}
ISSUE_TITLE=$(echo '${{ github.event.issue.title }}' | sed "s/'/'\\\\''/g")
CLOSED_BY="${{ github.event.issue.closed_by.login }}"
CLOSED_AT="${{ github.event.issue.closed_at }}"
STATE_REASON="${{ github.event.issue.state_reason }}"
if [ -z "$STATSIG_API_KEY" ]; then
echo "STATSIG_API_KEY not found, skipping Statsig logging"
exit 0
fi
# Get additional issue data via GitHub API
echo "Fetching additional issue data for #${ISSUE_NUMBER}"
ISSUE_DATA=$(curl -s -H "Authorization: token ${GITHUB_TOKEN}" \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
"https://api.github.com/repos/${REPO}/issues/${ISSUE_NUMBER}")
COMMENTS_COUNT=$(echo "$ISSUE_DATA" | jq -r '.comments')
# Get reactions data
REACTIONS_DATA=$(curl -s -H "Authorization: token ${GITHUB_TOKEN}" \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
"https://api.github.com/repos/${REPO}/issues/${ISSUE_NUMBER}/reactions")
REACTIONS_COUNT=$(echo "$REACTIONS_DATA" | jq '. | length')
# Check if issue was closed automatically (by checking if closed_by is a bot)
CLOSED_AUTOMATICALLY="false"
if [[ "$CLOSED_BY" == *"[bot]"* ]]; then
CLOSED_AUTOMATICALLY="true"
fi
# Check if closed as duplicate by state_reason
CLOSED_AS_DUPLICATE="false"
if [ "$STATE_REASON" = "duplicate" ]; then
CLOSED_AS_DUPLICATE="true"
fi
# Prepare the event payload
EVENT_PAYLOAD=$(jq -n \
--arg issue_number "$ISSUE_NUMBER" \
--arg repo "$REPO" \
--arg title "$ISSUE_TITLE" \
--arg closed_by "$CLOSED_BY" \
--arg closed_at "$CLOSED_AT" \
--arg state_reason "$STATE_REASON" \
--arg comments_count "$COMMENTS_COUNT" \
--arg reactions_count "$REACTIONS_COUNT" \
--arg closed_automatically "$CLOSED_AUTOMATICALLY" \
--arg closed_as_duplicate "$CLOSED_AS_DUPLICATE" \
'{
events: [{
eventName: "github_issue_closed",
value: 1,
metadata: {
repository: $repo,
issue_number: ($issue_number | tonumber),
issue_title: $title,
closed_by: $closed_by,
closed_at: $closed_at,
state_reason: $state_reason,
comments_count: ($comments_count | tonumber),
reactions_count: ($reactions_count | tonumber),
closed_automatically: ($closed_automatically | test("true")),
closed_as_duplicate: ($closed_as_duplicate | test("true"))
},
time: (now | floor | tostring)
}]
}')
# Send to Statsig API
echo "Logging issue closure to Statsig for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}"
RESPONSE=$(curl -s -w "\n%{http_code}" -X POST https://events.statsigapi.net/v1/log_event \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "STATSIG-API-KEY: ${STATSIG_API_KEY}" \
-d "$EVENT_PAYLOAD")
HTTP_CODE=$(echo "$RESPONSE" | tail -n1)
BODY=$(echo "$RESPONSE" | head -n-1)
if [ "$HTTP_CODE" -eq 200 ] || [ "$HTTP_CODE" -eq 202 ]; then
echo "Successfully logged issue closure for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}"
echo "Closed by: $CLOSED_BY"
echo "Comments: $COMMENTS_COUNT"
echo "Reactions: $REACTIONS_COUNT"
echo "Closed automatically: $CLOSED_AUTOMATICALLY"
echo "Closed as duplicate: $CLOSED_AS_DUPLICATE"
else
echo "Failed to log issue closure for issue #${ISSUE_NUMBER}. HTTP ${HTTP_CODE}: ${BODY}"
fi

View File

@@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# Only allow pre-releases on non-main branches
if: github.ref != 'refs/heads/main'
environment: extension-release
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
@@ -35,9 +36,26 @@ jobs:
- name: Enter RC mode (if not already in RC mode)
run: |
# ensure were in the right pre-mode (tag "rc")
if [ ! -f .changeset/pre.json ] \
|| [ "$(jq -r '.tag' .changeset/pre.json 2>/dev/null || echo '')" != "rc" ]; then
# Check if we're in pre-release mode with the "rc" tag
if [ -f .changeset/pre.json ]; then
MODE=$(jq -r '.mode' .changeset/pre.json 2>/dev/null || echo '')
TAG=$(jq -r '.tag' .changeset/pre.json 2>/dev/null || echo '')
if [ "$MODE" = "exit" ]; then
echo "Pre-release mode is in 'exit' state, re-entering RC mode..."
npx changeset pre enter rc
elif [ "$MODE" = "pre" ] && [ "$TAG" != "rc" ]; then
echo "In pre-release mode but with wrong tag ($TAG), switching to RC..."
npx changeset pre exit
npx changeset pre enter rc
elif [ "$MODE" = "pre" ] && [ "$TAG" = "rc" ]; then
echo "Already in RC pre-release mode"
else
echo "Unknown mode state: $MODE, entering RC mode..."
npx changeset pre enter rc
fi
else
echo "No pre.json found, entering RC mode..."
npx changeset pre enter rc
fi
@@ -50,7 +68,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Create Release Candidate Pull Request or Publish Release Candidate to npm
uses: changesets/action@v1
with:
publish: npm run release
publish: npx changeset publish
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}

View File

@@ -18,29 +18,4 @@ jobs:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Check release mode
run: |
set -euo pipefail
echo "🔍 Checking if branch is in pre-release mode..."
if [[ -f .changeset/pre.json ]]; then
if ! PRE_MODE=$(jq -r '.mode' .changeset/pre.json 2>/dev/null); then
echo "❌ ERROR: Unable to parse .changeset/pre.json aborting merge."
exit 1
fi
if [[ "$PRE_MODE" == "pre" ]]; then
echo "❌ ERROR: This branch is in active pre-release mode!"
echo ""
echo "Pre-release mode must be exited before merging to main."
echo ""
echo "To fix this, run the following commands in your branch:"
echo " npx changeset pre exit"
echo " git add -u"
echo " git commit -m 'chore: exit pre-release mode'"
echo " git push"
echo ""
echo "Then update this pull request."
exit 1
fi
fi
echo "✅ Not in active pre-release mode - PR can be merged"
run: node ./.github/scripts/check-pre-release-mode.mjs "pull_request"

View File

@@ -39,30 +39,12 @@ jobs:
timeout-minutes: 2
- name: Check pre-release mode
run: |
set -euo pipefail
echo "🔍 Checking pre-release mode status..."
if [[ -f .changeset/pre.json ]]; then
echo "❌ ERROR: Main branch is in pre-release mode!"
echo ""
echo "Pre-release mode should only be used on feature branches, not main."
echo ""
echo "To fix this, run the following commands locally:"
echo " npx changeset pre exit"
echo " git add -u"
echo " git commit -m 'chore: exit pre-release mode'"
echo " git push origin main"
echo ""
echo "Then re-run this workflow."
exit 1
fi
echo "✅ Not in pre-release mode - proceeding with release"
run: node ./.github/scripts/check-pre-release-mode.mjs "main"
- name: Create Release Pull Request or Publish to npm
uses: changesets/action@v1
with:
publish: ./.github/scripts/release.sh
publish: node ./.github/scripts/release.mjs
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,96 @@
name: Weekly Metrics to Discord
# description: Sends weekly metrics summary to Discord channel
on:
schedule:
- cron: "0 9 * * 1" # Every Monday at 9 AM
workflow_dispatch:
permissions:
contents: read
issues: write
pull-requests: read
jobs:
weekly-metrics:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
DISCORD_WEBHOOK: ${{ secrets.DISCORD_METRICS_WEBHOOK }}
steps:
- name: Get dates for last week
run: |
# Last 7 days
first_day=$(date -d "7 days ago" +%Y-%m-%d)
last_day=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
echo "first_day=$first_day" >> $GITHUB_ENV
echo "last_day=$last_day" >> $GITHUB_ENV
echo "week_of=$(date -d '7 days ago' +'Week of %B %d, %Y')" >> $GITHUB_ENV
- name: Generate issue metrics
uses: github/issue-metrics@v3
env:
GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
SEARCH_QUERY: "repo:${{ github.repository }} is:issue created:${{ env.first_day }}..${{ env.last_day }}"
HIDE_TIME_TO_ANSWER: true
HIDE_LABEL_METRICS: false
- name: Generate PR metrics
uses: github/issue-metrics@v3
env:
GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
SEARCH_QUERY: "repo:${{ github.repository }} is:pr created:${{ env.first_day }}..${{ env.last_day }}"
OUTPUT_FILE: pr_metrics.md
- name: Parse metrics
id: metrics
run: |
# Parse the metrics from the generated markdown files
if [ -f "issue_metrics.md" ]; then
# Extract key metrics using grep/awk
AVG_TIME_TO_FIRST_RESPONSE=$(grep -A 1 "Average time to first response" issue_metrics.md | tail -1 | xargs || echo "N/A")
AVG_TIME_TO_CLOSE=$(grep -A 1 "Average time to close" issue_metrics.md | tail -1 | xargs || echo "N/A")
NUM_ISSUES_CREATED=$(grep -oP '\d+(?= issues created)' issue_metrics.md || echo "0")
NUM_ISSUES_CLOSED=$(grep -oP '\d+(?= issues closed)' issue_metrics.md || echo "0")
fi
if [ -f "pr_metrics.md" ]; then
PR_AVG_TIME_TO_MERGE=$(grep -A 1 "Average time to close" pr_metrics.md | tail -1 | xargs || echo "N/A")
NUM_PRS_CREATED=$(grep -oP '\d+(?= pull requests created)' pr_metrics.md || echo "0")
NUM_PRS_MERGED=$(grep -oP '\d+(?= pull requests closed)' pr_metrics.md || echo "0")
fi
# Set outputs for Discord action
echo "issues_created=${NUM_ISSUES_CREATED:-0}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "issues_closed=${NUM_ISSUES_CLOSED:-0}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "prs_created=${NUM_PRS_CREATED:-0}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "prs_merged=${NUM_PRS_MERGED:-0}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "avg_first_response=${AVG_TIME_TO_FIRST_RESPONSE:-N/A}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "avg_time_to_close=${AVG_TIME_TO_CLOSE:-N/A}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
echo "pr_avg_merge_time=${PR_AVG_TIME_TO_MERGE:-N/A}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
- name: Send to Discord
uses: sarisia/actions-status-discord@v1
if: env.DISCORD_WEBHOOK != ''
with:
webhook: ${{ env.DISCORD_WEBHOOK }}
status: Success
title: "📊 Weekly Metrics Report"
description: |
**${{ env.week_of }}**
**🎯 Issues**
• Created: ${{ steps.metrics.outputs.issues_created }}
• Closed: ${{ steps.metrics.outputs.issues_closed }}
**🔀 Pull Requests**
• Created: ${{ steps.metrics.outputs.prs_created }}
• Merged: ${{ steps.metrics.outputs.prs_merged }}
**⏱️ Response Times**
• First Response: ${{ steps.metrics.outputs.avg_first_response }}
• Time to Close: ${{ steps.metrics.outputs.avg_time_to_close }}
• PR Merge Time: ${{ steps.metrics.outputs.pr_avg_merge_time }}
color: 0x58AFFF
username: Task Master Metrics Bot
avatar_url: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/main/images/logo.png

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
Simple Todo App PRD
Create a basic todo list application with the following features:
1. Add new todos
2. Mark todos as complete
3. Delete todos
That's it. Keep it simple.

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@@ -1,5 +1,176 @@
# task-master-ai
## 0.24.0
### Minor Changes
- [#1098](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1098) [`36468f3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/36468f3c93faf4035a5c442ccbc501077f3440f1) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Enhanced Claude Code provider with codebase-aware task generation
- Added automatic codebase analysis for Claude Code provider in `parse-prd`, `expand-task`, and `analyze-complexity` commands
- When using Claude Code as the AI provider, Task Master now instructs the AI to analyze the project structure, existing implementations, and patterns before generating tasks or subtasks
- Tasks and subtasks generated by Claude Code are now informed by actual codebase analysis, resulting in more accurate and contextual outputs
- [#1105](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1105) [`75c514c`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/75c514cf5b2ca47f95c0ad7fa92654a4f2a6be4b) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Add GPT-5 support with proper parameter handling
- Added GPT-5 model to supported models configuration with SWE score of 0.749
- [#1091](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1091) [`4bb6370`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4bb63706b80c28d1b2d782ba868a725326f916c7) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Add Claude Code subagent support with task-orchestrator, task-executor, and task-checker
## New Claude Code Agents
Added specialized agents for Claude Code users to enable parallel task execution, intelligent task orchestration, and quality assurance:
### task-orchestrator
Coordinates and manages the execution of Task Master tasks with intelligent dependency analysis:
- Analyzes task dependencies to identify parallelizable work
- Deploys multiple task-executor agents for concurrent execution
- Monitors task completion and updates the dependency graph
- Automatically identifies and starts newly unblocked tasks
### task-executor
Handles the actual implementation of individual tasks:
- Executes specific tasks identified by the orchestrator
- Works on concrete implementation rather than planning
- Updates task status and logs progress
- Can work in parallel with other executors on independent tasks
### task-checker
Verifies that completed tasks meet their specifications:
- Reviews tasks marked as 'review' status
- Validates implementation against requirements
- Runs tests and checks for best practices
- Ensures quality before marking tasks as 'done'
## Installation
When using the Claude profile (`task-master rules add claude`), the agents are automatically installed to `.claude/agents/` directory.
## Usage Example
```bash
# In Claude Code, after initializing a project with tasks:
# Use task-orchestrator to analyze and coordinate work
# The orchestrator will:
# 1. Check task dependencies
# 2. Identify tasks that can run in parallel
# 3. Deploy executors for available work
# 4. Monitor progress and deploy new executors as tasks complete
# Use task-executor for specific task implementation
# When the orchestrator identifies task 2.3 needs work:
# The executor will implement that specific task
```
## Benefits
- **Parallel Execution**: Multiple independent tasks can be worked on simultaneously
- **Intelligent Scheduling**: Orchestrator understands dependencies and optimizes execution order
- **Separation of Concerns**: Planning (orchestrator) is separated from execution (executor)
- **Progress Tracking**: Real-time updates as tasks are completed
- **Automatic Progression**: As tasks complete, newly unblocked tasks are automatically started
### Patch Changes
- [#1094](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1094) [`4357af3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4357af3f13859d90bca8795215e5d5f1d94abde5) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Fix expand task generating unrelated generic subtasks
Fixed an issue where `task-master expand` would generate generic authentication-related subtasks regardless of the parent task context when using complexity reports. The expansion now properly includes the parent task details alongside any expansion guidance.
- [#1079](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1079) [`e495b2b`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/e495b2b55950ee54c7d0f1817d8530e28bd79c05) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Fix scope-up/down prompts to include all required fields for better AI model compatibility
- Added missing `priority` field to scope adjustment prompts to prevent validation errors with Claude-code and other models
- Ensures generated JSON includes all fields required by the schema
- [#1079](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1079) [`e495b2b`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/e495b2b55950ee54c7d0f1817d8530e28bd79c05) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Fix MCP scope-up/down tools not finding tasks
- Fixed task ID parsing in MCP layer - now correctly converts string IDs to numbers
- scope_up_task and scope_down_task MCP tools now work properly
- [#1079](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1079) [`e495b2b`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/e495b2b55950ee54c7d0f1817d8530e28bd79c05) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Improve AI provider compatibility for JSON generation
- Fixed schema compatibility issues between Perplexity and OpenAI o3 models
- Removed nullable/default modifiers from Zod schemas for broader compatibility
- Added automatic JSON repair for malformed AI responses (handles cases like missing array values)
- Perplexity now uses JSON mode for more reliable structured output
- Post-processing handles default values separately from schema validation
## 0.24.0-rc.2
### Minor Changes
- [#1105](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1105) [`75c514c`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/75c514cf5b2ca47f95c0ad7fa92654a4f2a6be4b) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Add GPT-5 support with proper parameter handling
- Added GPT-5 model to supported models configuration with SWE score of 0.749
## 0.24.0-rc.1
### Minor Changes
- [#1093](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1093) [`36468f3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/36468f3c93faf4035a5c442ccbc501077f3440f1) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Enhanced Claude Code provider with codebase-aware task generation
- Added automatic codebase analysis for Claude Code provider in `parse-prd`, `expand-task`, and `analyze-complexity` commands
- When using Claude Code as the AI provider, Task Master now instructs the AI to analyze the project structure, existing implementations, and patterns before generating tasks or subtasks
- Tasks and subtasks generated by Claude Code are now informed by actual codebase analysis, resulting in more accurate and contextual outputs
- [#1091](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1091) [`4bb6370`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4bb63706b80c28d1b2d782ba868a725326f916c7) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Add Claude Code subagent support with task-orchestrator, task-executor, and task-checker
## New Claude Code Agents
Added specialized agents for Claude Code users to enable parallel task execution, intelligent task orchestration, and quality assurance:
### task-orchestrator
Coordinates and manages the execution of Task Master tasks with intelligent dependency analysis:
- Analyzes task dependencies to identify parallelizable work
- Deploys multiple task-executor agents for concurrent execution
- Monitors task completion and updates the dependency graph
- Automatically identifies and starts newly unblocked tasks
### task-executor
Handles the actual implementation of individual tasks:
- Executes specific tasks identified by the orchestrator
- Works on concrete implementation rather than planning
- Updates task status and logs progress
- Can work in parallel with other executors on independent tasks
### task-checker
Verifies that completed tasks meet their specifications:
- Reviews tasks marked as 'review' status
- Validates implementation against requirements
- Runs tests and checks for best practices
- Ensures quality before marking tasks as 'done'
## Installation
When using the Claude profile (`task-master rules add claude`), the agents are automatically installed to `.claude/agents/` directory.
## Usage Example
```bash
# In Claude Code, after initializing a project with tasks:
# Use task-orchestrator to analyze and coordinate work
# The orchestrator will:
# 1. Check task dependencies
# 2. Identify tasks that can run in parallel
# 3. Deploy executors for available work
# 4. Monitor progress and deploy new executors as tasks complete
# Use task-executor for specific task implementation
# When the orchestrator identifies task 2.3 needs work:
# The executor will implement that specific task
```
## Benefits
- **Parallel Execution**: Multiple independent tasks can be worked on simultaneously
- **Intelligent Scheduling**: Orchestrator understands dependencies and optimizes execution order
- **Separation of Concerns**: Planning (orchestrator) is separated from execution (executor)
- **Progress Tracking**: Real-time updates as tasks are completed
- **Automatic Progression**: As tasks complete, newly unblocked tasks are automatically started
### Patch Changes
- [#1094](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1094) [`4357af3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4357af3f13859d90bca8795215e5d5f1d94abde5) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Fix expand task generating unrelated generic subtasks
Fixed an issue where `task-master expand` would generate generic authentication-related subtasks regardless of the parent task context when using complexity reports. The expansion now properly includes the parent task details alongside any expansion guidance.
## 0.23.1-rc.0
### Patch Changes

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@@ -3,3 +3,7 @@
## Task Master AI Instructions
**Import Task Master's development workflow commands and guidelines, treat as if import is in the main CLAUDE.md file.**
@./.taskmaster/CLAUDE.md
## Changeset Guidelines
- When creating changesets, remember that it's user-facing, meaning we don't have to get into the specifics of the code, but rather mention what the end-user is getting or fixing from this changeset.

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@@ -1,14 +1,39 @@
# Task Master [![GitHub stars](https://img.shields.io/github/stars/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master?style=social)](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/stargazers)
<a name="readme-top"></a>
[![CI](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/actions/workflows/ci.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/actions/workflows/ci.yml) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/task-master-ai.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/task-master-ai) [![Discord](https://dcbadge.limes.pink/api/server/https://discord.gg/taskmasterai?style=flat)](https://discord.gg/taskmasterai) [![License: MIT with Commons Clause](https://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT%20with%20Commons%20Clause-blue.svg)](LICENSE)
<div align='center'>
<a href="https://trendshift.io/repositories/13971" target="_blank"><img src="https://trendshift.io/api/badge/repositories/13971" alt="eyaltoledano%2Fclaude-task-master | Trendshift" style="width: 250px; height: 55px;" width="250" height="55"/></a>
</div>
[![NPM Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/d18m/task-master-ai?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/task-master-ai) [![NPM Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/task-master-ai?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/task-master-ai) [![NPM Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dw/task-master-ai?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/task-master-ai)
<p align="center">
<a href="https://task-master.dev"><img src="./images/logo.png?raw=true" alt="Taskmaster logo"></a>
</p>
## By [@eyaltoledano](https://x.com/eyaltoledano), [@RalphEcom](https://x.com/RalphEcom) & [@jasonzhou1993](https://x.com/jasonzhou1993)
<p align="center">
<b>Taskmaster</b>: A task management system for AI-driven development, designed to work seamlessly with any AI chat.
</p>
<p align="center">
<a href="https://discord.gg/taskmasterai" target="_blank"><img src="https://dcbadge.limes.pink/api/server/https://discord.gg/taskmasterai?style=flat" alt="Discord"></a> |
<a href="https://docs.task-master.dev" target="_blank">Docs</a>
</p>
<p align="center">
<a href="https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/actions/workflows/ci.yml"><img src="https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/actions/workflows/ci.yml/badge.svg" alt="CI"></a>
<a href="https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/stargazers"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/stars/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master?style=social" alt="GitHub stars"></a>
<a href="https://badge.fury.io/js/task-master-ai"><img src="https://badge.fury.io/js/task-master-ai.svg" alt="npm version"></a>
<a href="LICENSE"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT%20with%20Commons%20Clause-blue.svg" alt="License"></a>
</p>
<p align="center">
<a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/task-master-ai"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/d18m/task-master-ai?style=flat" alt="NPM Downloads"></a>
<a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/task-master-ai"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/task-master-ai?style=flat" alt="NPM Downloads"></a>
<a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/task-master-ai"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/dw/task-master-ai?style=flat" alt="NPM Downloads"></a>
</p>
## By [@eyaltoledano](https://x.com/eyaltoledano) & [@RalphEcom](https://x.com/RalphEcom)
[![Twitter Follow](https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/eyaltoledano)](https://x.com/eyaltoledano)
[![Twitter Follow](https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/RalphEcom)](https://x.com/RalphEcom)
[![Twitter Follow](https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/jasonzhou1993)](https://x.com/jasonzhou1993)
A task management system for AI-driven development with Claude, designed to work seamlessly with Cursor AI.
@@ -230,6 +255,11 @@ task-master show 1,3,5
# Research fresh information with project context
task-master research "What are the latest best practices for JWT authentication?"
# Move tasks between tags (cross-tag movement)
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress
task-master move --from=5,6,7 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=done --with-dependencies
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --ignore-dependencies
# Generate task files
task-master generate

22
apps/docs/README.md Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
# Task Master Documentation
Welcome to the Task Master documentation. Use the links below to navigate to the information you need:
## Getting Started
- [Configuration Guide](archive/configuration.md) - Set up environment variables and customize Task Master
- [Tutorial](archive/ctutorial.md) - Step-by-step guide to getting started with Task Master
## Reference
- [Command Reference](archive/ccommand-reference.md) - Complete list of all available commands
- [Task Structure](archive/ctask-structure.md) - Understanding the task format and features
## Examples & Licensing
- [Example Interactions](archive/cexamples.md) - Common Cursor AI interaction examples
- [Licensing Information](archive/clicensing.md) - Detailed information about the license
## Need More Help?
If you can't find what you're looking for in these docs, please check the [main README](../README.md) or visit our [GitHub repository](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master).

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@@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
---
title: "Installation(2)"
description: "This guide walks you through setting up Task Master in your development environment."
---
## Initial Setup
<Tip>
MCP (Model Control Protocol) provides the easiest way to get started with Task Master directly in your editor.
</Tip>
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Option 1: Using MCP (Recommended)" icon="sparkles">
<Steps>
<Step title="Add the MCP config to your editor">
<Link href="https://cursor.sh">Cursor</Link> recommended, but it works with other text editors
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"taskmaster-ai": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "--package", "task-master-ai", "task-master-mcp"],
"env": {
"ANTHROPIC_API_KEY": "YOUR_ANTHROPIC_API_KEY_HERE",
"PERPLEXITY_API_KEY": "YOUR_PERPLEXITY_API_KEY_HERE",
"MODEL": "claude-3-7-sonnet-20250219",
"PERPLEXITY_MODEL": "sonar-pro",
"MAX_TOKENS": 128000,
"TEMPERATURE": 0.2,
"DEFAULT_SUBTASKS": 5,
"DEFAULT_PRIORITY": "medium"
}
}
}
}
```
</Step>
<Step title="Enable the MCP in your editor settings">
</Step>
<Step title="Prompt the AI to initialize Task Master">
> "Can you please initialize taskmaster-ai into my project?"
**The AI will:**
1. Create necessary project structure
2. Set up initial configuration files
3. Guide you through the rest of the process
4. Place your PRD document in the `scripts/` directory (e.g., `scripts/prd.txt`)
5. **Use natural language commands** to interact with Task Master:
> "Can you parse my PRD at scripts/prd.txt?"
>
> "What's the next task I should work on?"
>
> "Can you help me implement task 3?"
</Step>
</Steps>
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Option 2: Manual Installation">
If you prefer to use the command line interface directly:
<Steps>
<Step title="Install">
<CodeGroup>
```bash Global
npm install -g task-master-ai
```
```bash Local
npm install task-master-ai
```
</CodeGroup>
</Step>
<Step title="Initialize a new project">
<CodeGroup>
```bash Global
task-master init
```
```bash Local
npx task-master-init
```
</CodeGroup>
</Step>
</Steps>
This will prompt you for project details and set up a new project with the necessary files and structure.
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
## Common Commands
<Tip>
After setting up Task Master, you can use these commands (either via AI prompts or CLI)
</Tip>
```bash
# Parse a PRD and generate tasks
task-master parse-prd your-prd.txt
# List all tasks
task-master list
# Show the next task to work on
task-master next
# Generate task files
task-master generate

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@@ -0,0 +1,263 @@
---
title: "AI Client Utilities for MCP Tools"
description: "This document provides examples of how to use the new AI client utilities with AsyncOperationManager in MCP tools."
---
## Examples
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Basic Usage with Direct Functions">
```javascript
// In your direct function implementation:
import {
getAnthropicClientForMCP,
getModelConfig,
handleClaudeError
} from '../utils/ai-client-utils.js';
export async function someAiOperationDirect(args, log, context) {
try {
// Initialize Anthropic client with session from context
const client = getAnthropicClientForMCP(context.session, log);
// Get model configuration with defaults or session overrides
const modelConfig = getModelConfig(context.session);
// Make API call with proper error handling
try {
const response = await client.messages.create({
model: modelConfig.model,
max_tokens: modelConfig.maxTokens,
temperature: modelConfig.temperature,
messages: [{ role: 'user', content: 'Your prompt here' }]
});
return {
success: true,
data: response
};
} catch (apiError) {
// Use helper to get user-friendly error message
const friendlyMessage = handleClaudeError(apiError);
return {
success: false,
error: {
code: 'AI_API_ERROR',
message: friendlyMessage
}
};
}
} catch (error) {
// Handle client initialization errors
return {
success: false,
error: {
code: 'AI_CLIENT_ERROR',
message: error.message
}
};
}
}
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Integration with AsyncOperationManager">
```javascript
// In your MCP tool implementation:
import {
AsyncOperationManager,
StatusCodes
} from '../../utils/async-operation-manager.js';
import { someAiOperationDirect } from '../../core/direct-functions/some-ai-operation.js';
export async function someAiOperation(args, context) {
const { session, mcpLog } = context;
const log = mcpLog || console;
try {
// Create operation description
const operationDescription = `AI operation: ${args.someParam}`;
// Start async operation
const operation = AsyncOperationManager.createOperation(
operationDescription,
async (reportProgress) => {
try {
// Initial progress report
reportProgress({
progress: 0,
status: 'Starting AI operation...'
});
// Call direct function with session and progress reporting
const result = await someAiOperationDirect(args, log, {
reportProgress,
mcpLog: log,
session
});
// Final progress update
reportProgress({
progress: 100,
status: result.success ? 'Operation completed' : 'Operation failed',
result: result.data,
error: result.error
});
return result;
} catch (error) {
// Handle errors in the operation
reportProgress({
progress: 100,
status: 'Operation failed',
error: {
message: error.message,
code: error.code || 'OPERATION_FAILED'
}
});
throw error;
}
}
);
// Return immediate response with operation ID
return {
status: StatusCodes.ACCEPTED,
body: {
success: true,
message: 'Operation started',
operationId: operation.id
}
};
} catch (error) {
// Handle errors in the MCP tool
log.error(`Error in someAiOperation: ${error.message}`);
return {
status: StatusCodes.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR,
body: {
success: false,
error: {
code: 'OPERATION_FAILED',
message: error.message
}
}
};
}
}
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Using Research Capabilities with Perplexity">
```javascript
// In your direct function:
import {
getPerplexityClientForMCP,
getBestAvailableAIModel
} from '../utils/ai-client-utils.js';
export async function researchOperationDirect(args, log, context) {
try {
// Get the best AI model for this operation based on needs
const { type, client } = await getBestAvailableAIModel(
context.session,
{ requiresResearch: true },
log
);
// Report which model we're using
if (context.reportProgress) {
await context.reportProgress({
progress: 10,
status: `Using ${type} model for research...`
});
}
// Make API call based on the model type
if (type === 'perplexity') {
// Call Perplexity
const response = await client.chat.completions.create({
model: context.session?.env?.PERPLEXITY_MODEL || 'sonar-medium-online',
messages: [{ role: 'user', content: args.researchQuery }],
temperature: 0.1
});
return {
success: true,
data: response.choices[0].message.content
};
} else {
// Call Claude as fallback
// (Implementation depends on specific needs)
// ...
}
} catch (error) {
// Handle errors
return {
success: false,
error: {
code: 'RESEARCH_ERROR',
message: error.message
}
};
}
}
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Model Configuration Override">
```javascript
// In your direct function:
import { getModelConfig } from '../utils/ai-client-utils.js';
// Using custom defaults for a specific operation
const operationDefaults = {
model: 'claude-3-haiku-20240307', // Faster, smaller model
maxTokens: 1000, // Lower token limit
temperature: 0.2 // Lower temperature for more deterministic output
};
// Get model config with operation-specific defaults
const modelConfig = getModelConfig(context.session, operationDefaults);
// Now use modelConfig in your API calls
const response = await client.messages.create({
model: modelConfig.model,
max_tokens: modelConfig.maxTokens,
temperature: modelConfig.temperature
// Other parameters...
});
```
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
## Best Practices
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Error Handling">
- Always use try/catch blocks around both client initialization and API calls
- Use `handleClaudeError` to provide user-friendly error messages
- Return standardized error objects with code and message
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Progress Reporting">
- Report progress at key points (starting, processing, completing)
- Include meaningful status messages
- Include error details in progress reports when failures occur
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Session Handling">
- Always pass the session from the context to the AI client getters
- Use `getModelConfig` to respect user settings from session
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Model Selection">
- Use `getBestAvailableAIModel` when you need to select between different models
- Set `requiresResearch: true` when you need Perplexity capabilities
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="AsyncOperationManager Integration">
- Create descriptive operation names
- Handle all errors within the operation function
- Return standardized results from direct functions
- Return immediate responses with operation IDs
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>

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@@ -0,0 +1,180 @@
---
title: "AI Development Workflow"
description: "Learn how Task Master and Cursor AI work together to streamline your development workflow"
---
<Tip>The Cursor agent is pre-configured (via the rules file) to follow this workflow</Tip>
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="1. Task Discovery and Selection">
Ask the agent to list available tasks:
```
What tasks are available to work on next?
```
The agent will:
- Run `task-master list` to see all tasks
- Run `task-master next` to determine the next task to work on
- Analyze dependencies to determine which tasks are ready to be worked on
- Prioritize tasks based on priority level and ID order
- Suggest the next task(s) to implement
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="2. Task Implementation">
When implementing a task, the agent will:
- Reference the task's details section for implementation specifics
- Consider dependencies on previous tasks
- Follow the project's coding standards
- Create appropriate tests based on the task's testStrategy
You can ask:
```
Let's implement task 3. What does it involve?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="3. Task Verification">
Before marking a task as complete, verify it according to:
- The task's specified testStrategy
- Any automated tests in the codebase
- Manual verification if required
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="4. Task Completion">
When a task is completed, tell the agent:
```
Task 3 is now complete. Please update its status.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master set-status --id=3 --status=done
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="5. Handling Implementation Drift">
If during implementation, you discover that:
- The current approach differs significantly from what was planned
- Future tasks need to be modified due to current implementation choices
- New dependencies or requirements have emerged
Tell the agent:
```
We've changed our approach. We're now using Express instead of Fastify. Please update all future tasks to reflect this change.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master update --from=4 --prompt="Now we are using Express instead of Fastify."
```
This will rewrite or re-scope subsequent tasks in tasks.json while preserving completed work.
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="6. Breaking Down Complex Tasks">
For complex tasks that need more granularity:
```
Task 5 seems complex. Can you break it down into subtasks?
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --id=5 --num=3
```
You can provide additional context:
```
Please break down task 5 with a focus on security considerations.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --id=5 --prompt="Focus on security aspects"
```
You can also expand all pending tasks:
```
Please break down all pending tasks into subtasks.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --all
```
For research-backed subtask generation using Perplexity AI:
```
Please break down task 5 using research-backed generation.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --id=5 --research
```
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
## Example Cursor AI Interactions
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Starting a new project">
```
I've just initialized a new project with Claude Task Master. I have a PRD at scripts/prd.txt.
Can you help me parse it and set up the initial tasks?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Working on tasks">
```
What's the next task I should work on? Please consider dependencies and priorities.
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Implementing a specific task">
```
I'd like to implement task 4. Can you help me understand what needs to be done and how to approach it?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Managing subtasks">
```
I need to regenerate the subtasks for task 3 with a different approach. Can you help me clear and regenerate them?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Handling changes">
```
We've decided to use MongoDB instead of PostgreSQL. Can you update all future tasks to reflect this change?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Completing work">
```
I've finished implementing the authentication system described in task 2. All tests are passing.
Please mark it as complete and tell me what I should work on next.
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Analyzing complexity">
```
Can you analyze the complexity of our tasks to help me understand which ones need to be broken down further?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Viewing complexity report">
```
Can you show me the complexity report in a more readable format?
```
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>

View File

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---
title: "Task Master Commands"
description: "A comprehensive reference of all available Task Master commands"
---
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Parse PRD">
```bash
# Parse a PRD file and generate tasks
task-master parse-prd <prd-file.txt>
# Limit the number of tasks generated
task-master parse-prd <prd-file.txt> --num-tasks=10
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="List Tasks">
```bash
# List all tasks
task-master list
# List tasks with a specific status
task-master list --status=<status>
# List tasks with subtasks
task-master list --with-subtasks
# List tasks with a specific status and include subtasks
task-master list --status=<status> --with-subtasks
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Show Next Task">
```bash
# Show the next task to work on based on dependencies and status
task-master next
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Show Specific Task">
```bash
# Show details of a specific task
task-master show <id>
# or
task-master show --id=<id>
# View a specific subtask (e.g., subtask 2 of task 1)
task-master show 1.2
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Update Tasks">
```bash
# Update tasks from a specific ID and provide context
task-master update --from=<id> --prompt="<prompt>"
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Update a Specific Task">
```bash
# Update a single task by ID with new information
task-master update-task --id=<id> --prompt="<prompt>"
# Use research-backed updates with Perplexity AI
task-master update-task --id=<id> --prompt="<prompt>" --research
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Update a Subtask">
```bash
# Append additional information to a specific subtask
task-master update-subtask --id=<parentId.subtaskId> --prompt="<prompt>"
# Example: Add details about API rate limiting to subtask 2 of task 5
task-master update-subtask --id=5.2 --prompt="Add rate limiting of 100 requests per minute"
# Use research-backed updates with Perplexity AI
task-master update-subtask --id=<parentId.subtaskId> --prompt="<prompt>" --research
```
Unlike the `update-task` command which replaces task information, the `update-subtask` command _appends_ new information to the existing subtask details, marking it with a timestamp. This is useful for iteratively enhancing subtasks while preserving the original content.
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Generate Task Files">
```bash
# Generate individual task files from tasks.json
task-master generate
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Set Task Status">
```bash
# Set status of a single task
task-master set-status --id=<id> --status=<status>
# Set status for multiple tasks
task-master set-status --id=1,2,3 --status=<status>
# Set status for subtasks
task-master set-status --id=1.1,1.2 --status=<status>
```
When marking a task as "done", all of its subtasks will automatically be marked as "done" as well.
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Expand Tasks">
```bash
# Expand a specific task with subtasks
task-master expand --id=<id> --num=<number>
# Expand with additional context
task-master expand --id=<id> --prompt="<context>"
# Expand all pending tasks
task-master expand --all
# Force regeneration of subtasks for tasks that already have them
task-master expand --all --force
# Research-backed subtask generation for a specific task
task-master expand --id=<id> --research
# Research-backed generation for all tasks
task-master expand --all --research
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Clear Subtasks">
```bash
# Clear subtasks from a specific task
task-master clear-subtasks --id=<id>
# Clear subtasks from multiple tasks
task-master clear-subtasks --id=1,2,3
# Clear subtasks from all tasks
task-master clear-subtasks --all
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Analyze Task Complexity">
```bash
# Analyze complexity of all tasks
task-master analyze-complexity
# Save report to a custom location
task-master analyze-complexity --output=my-report.json
# Use a specific LLM model
task-master analyze-complexity --model=claude-3-opus-20240229
# Set a custom complexity threshold (1-10)
task-master analyze-complexity --threshold=6
# Use an alternative tasks file
task-master analyze-complexity --file=custom-tasks.json
# Use Perplexity AI for research-backed complexity analysis
task-master analyze-complexity --research
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="View Complexity Report">
```bash
# Display the task complexity analysis report
task-master complexity-report
# View a report at a custom location
task-master complexity-report --file=my-report.json
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Managing Task Dependencies">
```bash
# Add a dependency to a task
task-master add-dependency --id=<id> --depends-on=<id>
# Remove a dependency from a task
task-master remove-dependency --id=<id> --depends-on=<id>
# Validate dependencies without fixing them
task-master validate-dependencies
# Find and fix invalid dependencies automatically
task-master fix-dependencies
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Add a New Task">
```bash
# Add a new task using AI
task-master add-task --prompt="Description of the new task"
# Add a task with dependencies
task-master add-task --prompt="Description" --dependencies=1,2,3
# Add a task with priority
task-master add-task --prompt="Description" --priority=high
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Initialize a Project">
```bash
# Initialize a new project with Task Master structure
task-master init
```
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>

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---
title: "Configuration"
description: "Configure Task Master through environment variables in a .env file"
---
## Required Configuration
<Note>
Task Master requires an Anthropic API key to function. Add this to your `.env` file:
```bash
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=sk-ant-api03-your-api-key
```
You can obtain an API key from the [Anthropic Console](https://console.anthropic.com/).
</Note>
## Optional Configuration
| Variable | Default Value | Description | Example |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| `MODEL` | `"claude-3-7-sonnet-20250219"` | Claude model to use | `MODEL=claude-3-opus-20240229` |
| `MAX_TOKENS` | `"4000"` | Maximum tokens for responses | `MAX_TOKENS=8000` |
| `TEMPERATURE` | `"0.7"` | Temperature for model responses | `TEMPERATURE=0.5` |
| `DEBUG` | `"false"` | Enable debug logging | `DEBUG=true` |
| `LOG_LEVEL` | `"info"` | Console output level | `LOG_LEVEL=debug` |
| `DEFAULT_SUBTASKS` | `"3"` | Default subtask count | `DEFAULT_SUBTASKS=5` |
| `DEFAULT_PRIORITY` | `"medium"` | Default priority | `DEFAULT_PRIORITY=high` |
| `PROJECT_NAME` | `"MCP SaaS MVP"` | Project name in metadata | `PROJECT_NAME=My Awesome Project` |
| `PROJECT_VERSION` | `"1.0.0"` | Version in metadata | `PROJECT_VERSION=2.1.0` |
| `PERPLEXITY_API_KEY` | - | For research-backed features | `PERPLEXITY_API_KEY=pplx-...` |
| `PERPLEXITY_MODEL` | `"sonar-medium-online"` | Perplexity model | `PERPLEXITY_MODEL=sonar-large-online` |
## Example .env File
```
# Required
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=sk-ant-api03-your-api-key
# Optional - Claude Configuration
MODEL=claude-3-7-sonnet-20250219
MAX_TOKENS=4000
TEMPERATURE=0.7
# Optional - Perplexity API for Research
PERPLEXITY_API_KEY=pplx-your-api-key
PERPLEXITY_MODEL=sonar-medium-online
# Optional - Project Info
PROJECT_NAME=My Project
PROJECT_VERSION=1.0.0
# Optional - Application Configuration
DEFAULT_SUBTASKS=3
DEFAULT_PRIORITY=medium
DEBUG=false
LOG_LEVEL=info
```
## Troubleshooting
### If `task-master init` doesn't respond:
Try running it with Node directly:
```bash
node node_modules/claude-task-master/scripts/init.js
```
Or clone the repository and run:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master.git
cd claude-task-master
node scripts/init.js
```
<Note>
For advanced configuration options and detailed customization, see our [Advanced Configuration Guide] page.
</Note>

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---
title: "Cursor AI Integration"
description: "Learn how to set up and use Task Master with Cursor AI"
---
## Setting up Cursor AI Integration
<Check>
Task Master is designed to work seamlessly with [Cursor AI](https://www.cursor.so/), providing a structured workflow for AI-driven development.
</Check>
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Using Cursor with MCP (Recommended)" icon="sparkles">
If you've already set up Task Master with MCP in Cursor, the integration is automatic. You can simply use natural language to interact with Task Master:
```
What tasks are available to work on next?
Can you analyze the complexity of our tasks?
I'd like to implement task 4. What does it involve?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Manual Cursor Setup">
If you're not using MCP, you can still set up Cursor integration:
<Steps>
<Step title="After initializing your project, open it in Cursor">
The `.cursor/rules/dev_workflow.mdc` file is automatically loaded by Cursor, providing the AI with knowledge about the task management system
</Step>
<Step title="Place your PRD document in the scripts/ directory (e.g., scripts/prd.txt)">
</Step>
<Step title="Open Cursor's AI chat and switch to Agent mode">
</Step>
</Steps>
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Alternative MCP Setup in Cursor">
<Steps>
<Step title="Go to Cursor settings">
</Step>
<Step title="Navigate to the MCP section">
</Step>
<Step title="Click on 'Add New MCP Server'">
</Step>
<Step title="Configure with the following details:">
- Name: "Task Master"
- Type: "Command"
- Command: "npx -y --package task-master-ai task-master-mcp"
</Step>
<Step title="Save Settings">
</Step>
</Steps>
Once configured, you can interact with Task Master's task management commands directly through Cursor's interface, providing a more integrated experience.
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
## Initial Task Generation
In Cursor's AI chat, instruct the agent to generate tasks from your PRD:
```
Please use the task-master parse-prd command to generate tasks from my PRD. The PRD is located at scripts/prd.txt.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master parse-prd scripts/prd.txt
```
This will:
- Parse your PRD document
- Generate a structured `tasks.json` file with tasks, dependencies, priorities, and test strategies
- The agent will understand this process due to the Cursor rules
### Generate Individual Task Files
Next, ask the agent to generate individual task files:
```
Please generate individual task files from tasks.json
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master generate
```
This creates individual task files in the `tasks/` directory (e.g., `task_001.txt`, `task_002.txt`), making it easier to reference specific tasks.

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---
title: "Example Cursor AI Interactions"
description: "Below are some common interactions with Cursor AI when using Task Master"
---
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Starting a new project">
```
I've just initialized a new project with Claude Task Master. I have a PRD at scripts/prd.txt.
Can you help me parse it and set up the initial tasks?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Working on tasks">
```
What's the next task I should work on? Please consider dependencies and priorities.
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Implementing a specific task">
```
I'd like to implement task 4. Can you help me understand what needs to be done and how to approach it?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Managing subtasks">
```
I need to regenerate the subtasks for task 3 with a different approach. Can you help me clear and regenerate them?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Handling changes">
```
We've decided to use MongoDB instead of PostgreSQL. Can you update all future tasks to reflect this change?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Completing work">
```
I've finished implementing the authentication system described in task 2. All tests are passing.
Please mark it as complete and tell me what I should work on next.
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Analyzing complexity">
```
Can you analyze the complexity of our tasks to help me understand which ones need to be broken down further?
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Viewing complexity report">
```
Can you show me the complexity report in a more readable format?
```
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>

View File

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---
title: Advanced Tasks
sidebarTitle: "Advanced Tasks"
---
## AI-Driven Development Workflow
The Cursor agent is pre-configured (via the rules file) to follow this workflow:
### 1. Task Discovery and Selection
Ask the agent to list available tasks:
```
What tasks are available to work on next?
```
```
Can you show me tasks 1, 3, and 5 to understand their current status?
```
The agent will:
- Run `task-master list` to see all tasks
- Run `task-master next` to determine the next task to work on
- Run `task-master show 1,3,5` to display multiple tasks with interactive options
- Analyze dependencies to determine which tasks are ready to be worked on
- Prioritize tasks based on priority level and ID order
- Suggest the next task(s) to implement
### 2. Task Implementation
When implementing a task, the agent will:
- Reference the task's details section for implementation specifics
- Consider dependencies on previous tasks
- Follow the project's coding standards
- Create appropriate tests based on the task's testStrategy
You can ask:
```
Let's implement task 3. What does it involve?
```
### 2.1. Viewing Multiple Tasks
For efficient context gathering and batch operations:
```
Show me tasks 5, 7, and 9 so I can plan my implementation approach.
```
The agent will:
- Run `task-master show 5,7,9` to display a compact summary table
- Show task status, priority, and progress indicators
- Provide an interactive action menu with batch operations
- Allow you to perform group actions like marking multiple tasks as in-progress
### 3. Task Verification
Before marking a task as complete, verify it according to:
- The task's specified testStrategy
- Any automated tests in the codebase
- Manual verification if required
### 4. Task Completion
When a task is completed, tell the agent:
```
Task 3 is now complete. Please update its status.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master set-status --id=3 --status=done
```
### 5. Handling Implementation Drift
If during implementation, you discover that:
- The current approach differs significantly from what was planned
- Future tasks need to be modified due to current implementation choices
- New dependencies or requirements have emerged
Tell the agent:
```
We've decided to use MongoDB instead of PostgreSQL. Can you update all future tasks (from ID 4) to reflect this change?
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master update --from=4 --prompt="Now we are using MongoDB instead of PostgreSQL."
# OR, if research is needed to find best practices for MongoDB:
task-master update --from=4 --prompt="Update to use MongoDB, researching best practices" --research
```
This will rewrite or re-scope subsequent tasks in tasks.json while preserving completed work.
### 6. Reorganizing Tasks
If you need to reorganize your task structure:
```
I think subtask 5.2 would fit better as part of task 7 instead. Can you move it there?
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master move --from=5.2 --to=7.3
```
You can reorganize tasks in various ways:
- Moving a standalone task to become a subtask: `--from=5 --to=7`
- Moving a subtask to become a standalone task: `--from=5.2 --to=7`
- Moving a subtask to a different parent: `--from=5.2 --to=7.3`
- Reordering subtasks within the same parent: `--from=5.2 --to=5.4`
- Moving a task to a new ID position: `--from=5 --to=25` (even if task 25 doesn't exist yet)
- Moving multiple tasks at once: `--from=10,11,12 --to=16,17,18` (must have same number of IDs, Taskmaster will look through each position)
When moving tasks to new IDs:
- The system automatically creates placeholder tasks for non-existent destination IDs
- This prevents accidental data loss during reorganization
- Any tasks that depend on moved tasks will have their dependencies updated
- When moving a parent task, all its subtasks are automatically moved with it and renumbered
This is particularly useful as your project understanding evolves and you need to refine your task structure.
### 7. Resolving Merge Conflicts with Tasks
When working with a team, you might encounter merge conflicts in your tasks.json file if multiple team members create tasks on different branches. The move command makes resolving these conflicts straightforward:
```
I just merged the main branch and there's a conflict with tasks.json. My teammates created tasks 10-15 while I created tasks 10-12 on my branch. Can you help me resolve this?
```
The agent will help you:
1. Keep your teammates' tasks (10-15)
2. Move your tasks to new positions to avoid conflicts:
```bash
# Move your tasks to new positions (e.g., 16-18)
task-master move --from=10 --to=16
task-master move --from=11 --to=17
task-master move --from=12 --to=18
```
This approach preserves everyone's work while maintaining a clean task structure, making it much easier to handle task conflicts than trying to manually merge JSON files.
### 8. Breaking Down Complex Tasks
For complex tasks that need more granularity:
```
Task 5 seems complex. Can you break it down into subtasks?
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --id=5 --num=3
```
You can provide additional context:
```
Please break down task 5 with a focus on security considerations.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --id=5 --prompt="Focus on security aspects"
```
You can also expand all pending tasks:
```
Please break down all pending tasks into subtasks.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --all
```
For research-backed subtask generation using the configured research model:
```
Please break down task 5 using research-backed generation.
```
The agent will execute:
```bash
task-master expand --id=5 --research
```

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---
title: Advanced Configuration
sidebarTitle: "Advanced Configuration"
---
Taskmaster uses two primary methods for configuration:
1. **`.taskmaster/config.json` File (Recommended - New Structure)**
- This JSON file stores most configuration settings, including AI model selections, parameters, logging levels, and project defaults.
- **Location:** This file is created in the `.taskmaster/` directory when you run the `task-master models --setup` interactive setup or initialize a new project with `task-master init`.
- **Migration:** Existing projects with `.taskmasterconfig` in the root will continue to work, but should be migrated to the new structure using `task-master migrate`.
- **Management:** Use the `task-master models --setup` command (or `models` MCP tool) to interactively create and manage this file. You can also set specific models directly using `task-master models --set-<role>=<model_id>`, adding `--ollama` or `--openrouter` flags for custom models. Manual editing is possible but not recommended unless you understand the structure.
- **Example Structure:**
```json
{
"models": {
"main": {
"provider": "anthropic",
"modelId": "claude-3-7-sonnet-20250219",
"maxTokens": 64000,
"temperature": 0.2,
"baseURL": "https://api.anthropic.com/v1"
},
"research": {
"provider": "perplexity",
"modelId": "sonar-pro",
"maxTokens": 8700,
"temperature": 0.1,
"baseURL": "https://api.perplexity.ai/v1"
},
"fallback": {
"provider": "anthropic",
"modelId": "claude-3-5-sonnet",
"maxTokens": 64000,
"temperature": 0.2
}
},
"global": {
"logLevel": "info",
"debug": false,
"defaultSubtasks": 5,
"defaultPriority": "medium",
"defaultTag": "master",
"projectName": "Your Project Name",
"ollamaBaseURL": "http://localhost:11434/api",
"azureBaseURL": "https://your-endpoint.azure.com/openai/deployments",
"vertexProjectId": "your-gcp-project-id",
"vertexLocation": "us-central1"
}
}
```
2. **Legacy `.taskmasterconfig` File (Backward Compatibility)**
- For projects that haven't migrated to the new structure yet.
- **Location:** Project root directory.
- **Migration:** Use `task-master migrate` to move this to `.taskmaster/config.json`.
- **Deprecation:** While still supported, you'll see warnings encouraging migration to the new structure.
## Environment Variables (`.env` file or MCP `env` block - For API Keys Only)
- Used **exclusively** for sensitive API keys and specific endpoint URLs.
- **Location:**
- For CLI usage: Create a `.env` file in your project root.
- For MCP/Cursor usage: Configure keys in the `env` section of your `.cursor/mcp.json` file.
- **Required API Keys (Depending on configured providers):**
- `ANTHROPIC_API_KEY`: Your Anthropic API key.
- `PERPLEXITY_API_KEY`: Your Perplexity API key.
- `OPENAI_API_KEY`: Your OpenAI API key.
- `GOOGLE_API_KEY`: Your Google API key (also used for Vertex AI provider).
- `MISTRAL_API_KEY`: Your Mistral API key.
- `AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY`: Your Azure OpenAI API key (also requires `AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT`).
- `OPENROUTER_API_KEY`: Your OpenRouter API key.
- `XAI_API_KEY`: Your X-AI API key.
- **Optional Endpoint Overrides:**
- **Per-role `baseURL` in `.taskmasterconfig`:** You can add a `baseURL` property to any model role (`main`, `research`, `fallback`) to override the default API endpoint for that provider. If omitted, the provider's standard endpoint is used.
- **Environment Variable Overrides (`<PROVIDER>_BASE_URL`):** For greater flexibility, especially with third-party services, you can set an environment variable like `OPENAI_BASE_URL` or `MISTRAL_BASE_URL`. This will override any `baseURL` set in the configuration file for that provider. This is the recommended way to connect to OpenAI-compatible APIs.
- `AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT`: Required if using Azure OpenAI key (can also be set as `baseURL` for the Azure model role).
- `OLLAMA_BASE_URL`: Override the default Ollama API URL (Default: `http://localhost:11434/api`).
- `VERTEX_PROJECT_ID`: Your Google Cloud project ID for Vertex AI. Required when using the 'vertex' provider.
- `VERTEX_LOCATION`: Google Cloud region for Vertex AI (e.g., 'us-central1'). Default is 'us-central1'.
- `GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS`: Path to service account credentials JSON file for Google Cloud auth (alternative to API key for Vertex AI).
**Important:** Settings like model ID selections (`main`, `research`, `fallback`), `maxTokens`, `temperature`, `logLevel`, `defaultSubtasks`, `defaultPriority`, and `projectName` are **managed in `.taskmaster/config.json`** (or `.taskmasterconfig` for unmigrated projects), not environment variables.
## Tagged Task Lists Configuration (v0.17+)
Taskmaster includes a tagged task lists system for multi-context task management.
### Global Tag Settings
```json
"global": {
"defaultTag": "master"
}
```
- **`defaultTag`** (string): Default tag context for new operations (default: "master")
### Git Integration
Task Master provides manual git integration through the `--from-branch` option:
- **Manual Tag Creation**: Use `task-master add-tag --from-branch` to create a tag based on your current git branch name
- **User Control**: No automatic tag switching - you control when and how tags are created
- **Flexible Workflow**: Supports any git workflow without imposing rigid branch-tag mappings
## State Management File
Taskmaster uses `.taskmaster/state.json` to track tagged system runtime information:
```json
{
"currentTag": "master",
"lastSwitched": "2025-06-11T20:26:12.598Z",
"migrationNoticeShown": true
}
```
- **`currentTag`**: Currently active tag context
- **`lastSwitched`**: Timestamp of last tag switch
- **`migrationNoticeShown`**: Whether migration notice has been displayed
This file is automatically created during tagged system migration and should not be manually edited.
## Example `.env` File (for API Keys)
```
# Required API keys for providers configured in .taskmaster/config.json
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=sk-ant-api03-your-key-here
PERPLEXITY_API_KEY=pplx-your-key-here
# OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-your-key-here
# GOOGLE_API_KEY=AIzaSy...
# AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY=your-azure-openai-api-key-here
# etc.
# Optional Endpoint Overrides
# Use a specific provider's base URL, e.g., for an OpenAI-compatible API
# OPENAI_BASE_URL=https://api.third-party.com/v1
#
# Azure OpenAI Configuration
# AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT=https://your-resource-name.openai.azure.com/ or https://your-endpoint-name.cognitiveservices.azure.com/openai/deployments
# OLLAMA_BASE_URL=http://custom-ollama-host:11434/api
# Google Vertex AI Configuration (Required if using 'vertex' provider)
# VERTEX_PROJECT_ID=your-gcp-project-id
```
## Troubleshooting
### Configuration Errors
- If Task Master reports errors about missing configuration or cannot find the config file, run `task-master models --setup` in your project root to create or repair the file.
- For new projects, config will be created at `.taskmaster/config.json`. For legacy projects, you may want to use `task-master migrate` to move to the new structure.
- Ensure API keys are correctly placed in your `.env` file (for CLI) or `.cursor/mcp.json` (for MCP) and are valid for the providers selected in your config file.
### If `task-master init` doesn't respond:
Try running it with Node directly:
```bash
node node_modules/claude-task-master/scripts/init.js
```
Or clone the repository and run:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master.git
cd claude-task-master
node scripts/init.js
```
## Provider-Specific Configuration
### Google Vertex AI Configuration
Google Vertex AI is Google Cloud's enterprise AI platform and requires specific configuration:
1. **Prerequisites**:
- A Google Cloud account with Vertex AI API enabled
- Either a Google API key with Vertex AI permissions OR a service account with appropriate roles
- A Google Cloud project ID
2. **Authentication Options**:
- **API Key**: Set the `GOOGLE_API_KEY` environment variable
- **Service Account**: Set `GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS` to point to your service account JSON file
3. **Required Configuration**:
- Set `VERTEX_PROJECT_ID` to your Google Cloud project ID
- Set `VERTEX_LOCATION` to your preferred Google Cloud region (default: us-central1)
4. **Example Setup**:
```bash
# In .env file
GOOGLE_API_KEY=AIzaSyXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
VERTEX_PROJECT_ID=my-gcp-project-123
VERTEX_LOCATION=us-central1
```
Or using service account:
```bash
# In .env file
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS=/path/to/service-account.json
VERTEX_PROJECT_ID=my-gcp-project-123
VERTEX_LOCATION=us-central1
```
5. **In .taskmaster/config.json**:
```json
"global": {
"vertexProjectId": "my-gcp-project-123",
"vertexLocation": "us-central1"
}
```
### Azure OpenAI Configuration
Azure OpenAI provides enterprise-grade OpenAI models through Microsoft's Azure cloud platform and requires specific configuration:
1. **Prerequisites**:
- An Azure account with an active subscription
- Azure OpenAI service resource created in the Azure portal
- Azure OpenAI API key and endpoint URL
- Deployed models (e.g., gpt-4o, gpt-4o-mini, gpt-4.1, etc) in your Azure OpenAI resource
2. **Authentication**:
- Set the `AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY` environment variable with your Azure OpenAI API key
- Configure the endpoint URL using one of the methods below
3. **Configuration Options**:
**Option 1: Using Global Azure Base URL (affects all Azure models)**
```json
// In .taskmaster/config.json
{
"models": {
"main": {
"provider": "azure",
"modelId": "gpt-4o",
"maxTokens": 16000,
"temperature": 0.7
},
"fallback": {
"provider": "azure",
"modelId": "gpt-4o-mini",
"maxTokens": 10000,
"temperature": 0.7
}
},
"global": {
"azureBaseURL": "https://your-resource-name.azure.com/openai/deployments"
}
}
```
**Option 2: Using Per-Model Base URLs (recommended for flexibility)**
```json
// In .taskmaster/config.json
{
"models": {
"main": {
"provider": "azure",
"modelId": "gpt-4o",
"maxTokens": 16000,
"temperature": 0.7,
"baseURL": "https://your-resource-name.azure.com/openai/deployments"
},
"research": {
"provider": "perplexity",
"modelId": "sonar-pro",
"maxTokens": 8700,
"temperature": 0.1
},
"fallback": {
"provider": "azure",
"modelId": "gpt-4o-mini",
"maxTokens": 10000,
"temperature": 0.7,
"baseURL": "https://your-resource-name.azure.com/openai/deployments"
}
}
}
```
4. **Environment Variables**:
```bash
# In .env file
AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY=your-azure-openai-api-key-here
# Optional: Override endpoint for all Azure models
AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT=https://your-resource-name.azure.com/openai/deployments
```
5. **Important Notes**:
- **Model Deployment Names**: The `modelId` in your configuration should match the **deployment name** you created in Azure OpenAI Studio, not the underlying model name
- **Base URL Priority**: Per-model `baseURL` settings override the global `azureBaseURL` setting
- **Endpoint Format**: When using per-model `baseURL`, use the full path including `/openai/deployments`
6. **Troubleshooting**:
**"Resource not found" errors:**
- Ensure your `baseURL` includes the full path: `https://your-resource-name.openai.azure.com/openai/deployments`
- Verify that your deployment name in `modelId` exactly matches what's configured in Azure OpenAI Studio
- Check that your Azure OpenAI resource is in the correct region and properly deployed
**Authentication errors:**
- Verify your `AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY` is correct and has not expired
- Ensure your Azure OpenAI resource has the necessary permissions
- Check that your subscription has not been suspended or reached quota limits
**Model availability errors:**
- Confirm the model is deployed in your Azure OpenAI resource
- Verify the deployment name matches your configuration exactly (case-sensitive)
- Ensure the model deployment is in a "Succeeded" state in Azure OpenAI Studio
- Ensure youre not getting rate limited by `maxTokens` maintain appropriate Tokens per Minute Rate Limit (TPM) in your deployment.

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---
title: Intro to Advanced Usage
sidebarTitle: "Advanced Usage"
---
# Best Practices
Explore advanced tips, recommended workflows, and best practices for getting the most out of Task Master.

View File

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---
title: CLI Commands
sidebarTitle: "CLI Commands"
---
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Parse PRD">
```bash
# Parse a PRD file and generate tasks
task-master parse-prd <prd-file.txt>
# Limit the number of tasks generated
task-master parse-prd <prd-file.txt> --num-tasks=10
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="List Tasks">
```bash
# List all tasks
task-master list
# List tasks with a specific status
task-master list --status=<status>
# List tasks with subtasks
task-master list --with-subtasks
# List tasks with a specific status and include subtasks
task-master list --status=<status> --with-subtasks
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Show Next Task">
```bash
# Show the next task to work on based on dependencies and status
task-master next
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Show Specific Task">
```bash
# Show details of a specific task
task-master show <id>
# or
task-master show --id=<id>
# View a specific subtask (e.g., subtask 2 of task 1)
task-master show 1.2
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Update Tasks">
```bash
# Update tasks from a specific ID and provide context
task-master update --from=<id> --prompt="<prompt>"
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Update a Specific Task">
```bash
# Update a single task by ID with new information
task-master update-task --id=<id> --prompt="<prompt>"
# Use research-backed updates with Perplexity AI
task-master update-task --id=<id> --prompt="<prompt>" --research
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Update a Subtask">
```bash
# Append additional information to a specific subtask
task-master update-subtask --id=<parentId.subtaskId> --prompt="<prompt>"
# Example: Add details about API rate limiting to subtask 2 of task 5
task-master update-subtask --id=5.2 --prompt="Add rate limiting of 100 requests per minute"
# Use research-backed updates with Perplexity AI
task-master update-subtask --id=<parentId.subtaskId> --prompt="<prompt>" --research
```
Unlike the `update-task` command which replaces task information, the `update-subtask` command _appends_ new information to the existing subtask details, marking it with a timestamp. This is useful for iteratively enhancing subtasks while preserving the original content.
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Generate Task Files">
```bash
# Generate individual task files from tasks.json
task-master generate
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Set Task Status">
```bash
# Set status of a single task
task-master set-status --id=<id> --status=<status>
# Set status for multiple tasks
task-master set-status --id=1,2,3 --status=<status>
# Set status for subtasks
task-master set-status --id=1.1,1.2 --status=<status>
```
When marking a task as "done", all of its subtasks will automatically be marked as "done" as well.
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Expand Tasks">
```bash
# Expand a specific task with subtasks
task-master expand --id=<id> --num=<number>
# Expand with additional context
task-master expand --id=<id> --prompt="<context>"
# Expand all pending tasks
task-master expand --all
# Force regeneration of subtasks for tasks that already have them
task-master expand --all --force
# Research-backed subtask generation for a specific task
task-master expand --id=<id> --research
# Research-backed generation for all tasks
task-master expand --all --research
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Clear Subtasks">
```bash
# Clear subtasks from a specific task
task-master clear-subtasks --id=<id>
# Clear subtasks from multiple tasks
task-master clear-subtasks --id=1,2,3
# Clear subtasks from all tasks
task-master clear-subtasks --all
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Analyze Task Complexity">
```bash
# Analyze complexity of all tasks
task-master analyze-complexity
# Save report to a custom location
task-master analyze-complexity --output=my-report.json
# Use a specific LLM model
task-master analyze-complexity --model=claude-3-opus-20240229
# Set a custom complexity threshold (1-10)
task-master analyze-complexity --threshold=6
# Use an alternative tasks file
task-master analyze-complexity --file=custom-tasks.json
# Use Perplexity AI for research-backed complexity analysis
task-master analyze-complexity --research
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="View Complexity Report">
```bash
# Display the task complexity analysis report
task-master complexity-report
# View a report at a custom location
task-master complexity-report --file=my-report.json
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Managing Task Dependencies">
```bash
# Add a dependency to a task
task-master add-dependency --id=<id> --depends-on=<id>
# Remove a dependency from a task
task-master remove-dependency --id=<id> --depends-on=<id>
# Validate dependencies without fixing them
task-master validate-dependencies
# Find and fix invalid dependencies automatically
task-master fix-dependencies
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Add a New Task">
```bash
# Add a new task using AI
task-master add-task --prompt="Description of the new task"
# Add a task with dependencies
task-master add-task --prompt="Description" --dependencies=1,2,3
# Add a task with priority
task-master add-task --prompt="Description" --priority=high
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Initialize a Project">
```bash
# Initialize a new project with Task Master structure
task-master init
```
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>

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---
title: Technical Capabilities
sidebarTitle: "Technical Capabilities"
---
# Capabilities (Technical)
Discover the technical capabilities of Task Master, including supported models, integrations, and more.
# CLI Interface Synopsis
This document outlines the command-line interface (CLI) for the Task Master application, as defined in `bin/task-master.js` and the `scripts/modules/commands.js` file (which I will assume exists based on the context). This guide is intended for those writing user-facing documentation to understand how users interact with the application from the command line.
## Entry Point
The main entry point for the CLI is the `task-master` command, which is an executable script that spawns the main application logic in `scripts/dev.js`.
## Global Options
The following options are available for all commands:
- `-h, --help`: Display help information.
- `--version`: Display the application's version.
## Commands
The CLI is organized into a series of commands, each with its own set of options. The following is a summary of the available commands, categorized by their functionality.
### 1. Task and Subtask Management
- **`add`**: Creates a new task using an AI-powered prompt.
- `--prompt <prompt>`: The prompt to use for generating the task.
- `--dependencies <dependencies>`: A comma-separated list of task IDs that this task depends on.
- `--priority <priority>`: The priority of the task (e.g., `high`, `medium`, `low`).
- **`add-subtask`**: Adds a subtask to a parent task.
- `--parent-id <parentId>`: The ID of the parent task.
- `--task-id <taskId>`: The ID of an existing task to convert to a subtask.
- `--title <title>`: The title of the new subtask.
- **`remove`**: Removes one or more tasks or subtasks.
- `--ids <ids>`: A comma-separated list of task or subtask IDs to remove.
- **`remove-subtask`**: Removes a subtask from its parent.
- `--id <subtaskId>`: The ID of the subtask to remove (in the format `parentId.subtaskId`).
- `--convert-to-task`: Converts the subtask to a standalone task.
- **`update`**: Updates multiple tasks starting from a specific ID.
- `--from <fromId>`: The ID of the task to start updating from.
- `--prompt <prompt>`: The new context to apply to the tasks.
- **`update-task`**: Updates a single task.
- `--id <taskId>`: The ID of the task to update.
- `--prompt <prompt>`: The new context to apply to the task.
- **`update-subtask`**: Appends information to a subtask.
- `--id <subtaskId>`: The ID of the subtask to update (in the format `parentId.subtaskId`).
- `--prompt <prompt>`: The information to append to the subtask.
- **`move`**: Moves a task or subtask.
- `--from <sourceId>`: The ID of the task or subtask to move.
- `--to <destinationId>`: The destination ID.
- **`clear-subtasks`**: Clears all subtasks from one or more tasks.
- `--ids <ids>`: A comma-separated list of task IDs.
### 2. Task Information and Status
- **`list`**: Lists all tasks.
- `--status <status>`: Filters tasks by status.
- `--with-subtasks`: Includes subtasks in the list.
- **`show`**: Shows the details of a specific task.
- `--id <taskId>`: The ID of the task to show.
- **`next`**: Shows the next task to work on.
- **`set-status`**: Sets the status of a task or subtask.
- `--id <id>`: The ID of the task or subtask.
- `--status <status>`: The new status.
### 3. Task Analysis and Expansion
- **`parse-prd`**: Parses a PRD to generate tasks.
- `--file <file>`: The path to the PRD file.
- `--num-tasks <numTasks>`: The number of tasks to generate.
- **`expand`**: Expands a task into subtasks.
- `--id <taskId>`: The ID of the task to expand.
- `--num-subtasks <numSubtasks>`: The number of subtasks to generate.
- **`expand-all`**: Expands all eligible tasks.
- `--num-subtasks <numSubtasks>`: The number of subtasks to generate for each task.
- **`analyze-complexity`**: Analyzes task complexity.
- `--file <file>`: The path to the tasks file.
- **`complexity-report`**: Displays the complexity analysis report.
### 4. Project and Configuration
- **`init`**: Initializes a new project.
- **`generate`**: Generates individual task files.
- **`migrate`**: Migrates a project to the new directory structure.
- **`research`**: Performs AI-powered research.
- `--query <query>`: The research query.
This synopsis provides a comprehensive overview of the CLI commands and their options, which should be helpful for creating user-facing documentation.
# Core Implementation Synopsis
This document provides a high-level overview of the core implementation of the Task Master application, focusing on the functionalities exposed through `scripts/modules/task-manager.js`. This serves as a guide for understanding the application's capabilities when writing user-facing documentation.
## Core Concepts
The application revolves around the management of tasks and subtasks, which are stored in a `tasks.json` file. The core logic provides functionalities to create, read, update, and delete tasks and subtasks, as well as manage their dependencies and statuses.
### Task Structure
A task is a JSON object with the following key properties:
- `id`: A unique number identifying the task.
- `title`: A string representing the task's title.
- `description`: A string providing a brief description of the task.
- `details`: A string containing detailed information about the task.
- `testStrategy`: A string describing how to test the task.
- `status`: A string representing the task's current status (e.g., `pending`, `in-progress`, `done`).
- `dependencies`: An array of task IDs that this task depends on.
- `priority`: A string representing the task's priority (e.g., `high`, `medium`, `low`).
- `subtasks`: An array of subtask objects.
A subtask has a similar structure to a task but is nested within a parent task.
## Feature Categories
The core functionalities can be categorized as follows:
### 1. Task and Subtask Management
These functions are the bread and butter of the application, allowing for the creation, modification, and deletion of tasks and subtasks.
- **`addTask(prompt, dependencies, priority)`**: Creates a new task using an AI-powered prompt to generate the title, description, details, and test strategy. It can also be used to create a task manually by providing the task data directly.
- **`addSubtask(parentId, existingTaskId, newSubtaskData)`**: Adds a subtask to a parent task. It can either convert an existing task into a subtask or create a new subtask from scratch.
- **`removeTask(taskIds)`**: Removes one or more tasks or subtasks.
- **`removeSubtask(subtaskId, convertToTask)`**: Removes a subtask from its parent. It can optionally convert the subtask into a standalone task.
- **`updateTaskById(taskId, prompt)`**: Updates a task's information based on a prompt.
- **`updateSubtaskById(subtaskId, prompt)`**: Appends additional information to a subtask's details.
- **`updateTasks(fromId, prompt)`**: Updates multiple tasks starting from a specific ID based on a new context.
- **`moveTask(sourceId, destinationId)`**: Moves a task or subtask to a new position.
- **`clearSubtasks(taskIds)`**: Clears all subtasks from one or more tasks.
### 2. Task Information and Status
These functions are used to retrieve information about tasks and manage their status.
- **`listTasks(statusFilter, withSubtasks)`**: Lists all tasks, with options to filter by status and include subtasks.
- **`findTaskById(taskId)`**: Finds a task by its ID.
- **`taskExists(taskId)`**: Checks if a task with a given ID exists.
- **`setTaskStatus(taskIdInput, newStatus)`**: Sets the status of a task or subtask.
-al
- **`updateSingleTaskStatus(taskIdInput, newStatus)`**: A helper function to update the status of a single task or subtask.
- **`findNextTask()`**: Determines the next task to work on based on dependencies and status.
### 3. Task Analysis and Expansion
These functions leverage AI to analyze and break down tasks.
- **`parsePRD(prdPath, numTasks)`**: Parses a Product Requirements Document (PRD) to generate an initial set of tasks.
- **`expandTask(taskId, numSubtasks)`**: Expands a task into a specified number of subtasks using AI.
- **`expandAllTasks(numSubtasks)`**: Expands all eligible pending or in-progress tasks.
- **`analyzeTaskComplexity(options)`**: Analyzes the complexity of tasks and generates recommendations for expansion.
- **`readComplexityReport()`**: Reads the complexity analysis report.
### 4. Dependency Management
These functions are crucial for managing the relationships between tasks.
- **`isTaskDependentOn(task, targetTaskId)`**: Checks if a task has a direct or indirect dependency on another task.
### 5. Project and Configuration
These functions are for managing the project and its configuration.
- **`generateTaskFiles()`**: Generates individual task files from `tasks.json`.
- **`migrateProject()`**: Migrates the project to the new `.taskmaster` directory structure.
- **`performResearch(query, options)`**: Performs AI-powered research with project context.
This overview should provide a solid foundation for creating user-facing documentation. For more detailed information on each function, refer to the source code in `scripts/modules/task-manager/`.
# MCP Interface Synopsis
This document provides an overview of the MCP (Machine-to-Machine Communication Protocol) interface for the Task Master application. The MCP interface is defined in the `mcp-server/` directory and exposes the application's core functionalities as a set of tools that can be called remotely.
## Core Concepts
The MCP interface is built on top of the `fastmcp` library and registers a set of tools that correspond to the core functionalities of the Task Master application. These tools are defined in the `mcp-server/src/tools/` directory and are registered with the MCP server in `mcp-server/src/tools/index.js`.
Each tool is defined with a name, a description, and a set of parameters that are validated using the `zod` library. The `execute` function of each tool calls the corresponding core logic function from `scripts/modules/task-manager.js`.
## Tool Categories
The MCP tools can be categorized in the same way as the core functionalities:
### 1. Task and Subtask Management
- **`add_task`**: Creates a new task.
- **`add_subtask`**: Adds a subtask to a parent task.
- **`remove_task`**: Removes one or more tasks or subtasks.
- **`remove_subtask`**: Removes a subtask from its parent.
- **`update_task`**: Updates a single task.
- **`update_subtask`**: Appends information to a subtask.
- **`update`**: Updates multiple tasks.
- **`move_task`**: Moves a task or subtask.
- **`clear_subtasks`**: Clears all subtasks from one or more tasks.
### 2. Task Information and Status
- **`get_tasks`**: Lists all tasks.
- **`get_task`**: Shows the details of a specific task.
- **`next_task`**: Shows the next task to work on.
- **`set_task_status`**: Sets the status of a task or subtask.
### 3. Task Analysis and Expansion
- **`parse_prd`**: Parses a PRD to generate tasks.
- **`expand_task`**: Expands a task into subtasks.
- **`expand_all`**: Expands all eligible tasks.
- **`analyze_project_complexity`**: Analyzes task complexity.
- **`complexity_report`**: Displays the complexity analysis report.
### 4. Dependency Management
- **`add_dependency`**: Adds a dependency to a task.
- **`remove_dependency`**: Removes a dependency from a task.
- **`validate_dependencies`**: Validates the dependencies of all tasks.
- **`fix_dependencies`**: Fixes any invalid dependencies.
### 5. Project and Configuration
- **`initialize_project`**: Initializes a new project.
- **`generate`**: Generates individual task files.
- **`models`**: Manages AI model configurations.
- **`research`**: Performs AI-powered research.
### 6. Tag Management
- **`add_tag`**: Creates a new tag.
- **`delete_tag`**: Deletes a tag.
- **`list_tags`**: Lists all tags.
- **`use_tag`**: Switches to a different tag.
- **`rename_tag`**: Renames a tag.
- **`copy_tag`**: Copies a tag.
This synopsis provides a clear overview of the MCP interface and its available tools, which will be valuable for anyone writing documentation for developers who need to interact with the Task Master application programmatically.

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---
title: MCP Tools
sidebarTitle: "MCP Tools"
---
# MCP Tools
This document provides an overview of the MCP (Machine-to-Machine Communication Protocol) interface for the Task Master application. The MCP interface is defined in the `mcp-server/` directory and exposes the application's core functionalities as a set of tools that can be called remotely.
## Core Concepts
The MCP interface is built on top of the `fastmcp` library and registers a set of tools that correspond to the core functionalities of the Task Master application. These tools are defined in the `mcp-server/src/tools/` directory and are registered with the MCP server in `mcp-server/src/tools/index.js`.
Each tool is defined with a name, a description, and a set of parameters that are validated using the `zod` library. The `execute` function of each tool calls the corresponding core logic function from `scripts/modules/task-manager.js`.
## Tool Categories
The MCP tools can be categorized in the same way as the core functionalities:
### 1. Task and Subtask Management
- **`add_task`**: Creates a new task.
- **`add_subtask`**: Adds a subtask to a parent task.
- **`remove_task`**: Removes one or more tasks or subtasks.
- **`remove_subtask`**: Removes a subtask from its parent.
- **`update_task`**: Updates a single task.
- **`update_subtask`**: Appends information to a subtask.
- **`update`**: Updates multiple tasks.
- **`move_task`**: Moves a task or subtask.
- **`clear_subtasks`**: Clears all subtasks from one or more tasks.
### 2. Task Information and Status
- **`get_tasks`**: Lists all tasks.
- **`get_task`**: Shows the details of a specific task.
- **`next_task`**: Shows the next task to work on.
- **`set_task_status`**: Sets the status of a task or subtask.
### 3. Task Analysis and Expansion
- **`parse_prd`**: Parses a PRD to generate tasks.
- **`expand_task`**: Expands a task into subtasks.
- **`expand_all`**: Expands all eligible tasks.
- **`analyze_project_complexity`**: Analyzes task complexity.
- **`complexity_report`**: Displays the complexity analysis report.
### 4. Dependency Management
- **`add_dependency`**: Adds a dependency to a task.
- **`remove_dependency`**: Removes a dependency from a task.
- **`validate_dependencies`**: Validates the dependencies of all tasks.
- **`fix_dependencies`**: Fixes any invalid dependencies.
### 5. Project and Configuration
- **`initialize_project`**: Initializes a new project.
- **`generate`**: Generates individual task files.
- **`models`**: Manages AI model configurations.
- **`research`**: Performs AI-powered research.
### 6. Tag Management
- **`add_tag`**: Creates a new tag.
- **`delete_tag`**: Deletes a tag.
- **`list_tags`**: Lists all tags.
- **`use_tag`**: Switches to a different tag.
- **`rename_tag`**: Renames a tag.
- **`copy_tag`**: Copies a tag.

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---
title: "Task Structure"
sidebarTitle: "Task Structure"
description: "Tasks in Task Master follow a specific format designed to provide comprehensive information for both humans and AI assistants."
---
## Task Fields in tasks.json
Tasks in tasks.json have the following structure:
| Field | Description | Example |
| -------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------ |
| `id` | Unique identifier for the task. | `1` |
| `title` | Brief, descriptive title. | `"Initialize Repo"` |
| `description` | What the task involves. | `"Create a new repository, set up initial structure."` |
| `status` | Current state. | `"pending"`, `"done"`, `"deferred"` |
| `dependencies` | Prerequisite task IDs. ✅ Completed, ⏱️ Pending | `[1, 2]` |
| `priority` | Task importance. | `"high"`, `"medium"`, `"low"` |
| `details` | Implementation instructions. | `"Use GitHub client ID/secret, handle callback..."` |
| `testStrategy` | How to verify success. | `"Deploy and confirm 'Hello World' response."` |
| `subtasks` | Nested subtasks related to the main task. | `[{"id": 1, "title": "Configure OAuth", ...}]` |
## Task File Format
Individual task files follow this format:
```
# Task ID: <id>
# Title: <title>
# Status: <status>
# Dependencies: <comma-separated list of dependency IDs>
# Priority: <priority>
# Description: <brief description>
# Details:
<detailed implementation notes>
# Test Strategy:
<verification approach>
```
## Features in Detail
<AccordionGroup>
<Accordion title="Analyzing Task Complexity">
The `analyze-complexity` command:
- Analyzes each task using AI to assess its complexity on a scale of 1-10
- Recommends optimal number of subtasks based on configured DEFAULT_SUBTASKS
- Generates tailored prompts for expanding each task
- Creates a comprehensive JSON report with ready-to-use commands
- Saves the report to scripts/task-complexity-report.json by default
The generated report contains:
- Complexity analysis for each task (scored 1-10)
- Recommended number of subtasks based on complexity
- AI-generated expansion prompts customized for each task
- Ready-to-run expansion commands directly within each task analysis
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Viewing Complexity Report">
The `complexity-report` command:
- Displays a formatted, easy-to-read version of the complexity analysis report
- Shows tasks organized by complexity score (highest to lowest)
- Provides complexity distribution statistics (low, medium, high)
- Highlights tasks recommended for expansion based on threshold score
- Includes ready-to-use expansion commands for each complex task
- If no report exists, offers to generate one on the spot
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Smart Task Expansion">
The `expand` command automatically checks for and uses the complexity report:
When a complexity report exists:
- Tasks are automatically expanded using the recommended subtask count and prompts
- When expanding all tasks, they're processed in order of complexity (highest first)
- Research-backed generation is preserved from the complexity analysis
- You can still override recommendations with explicit command-line options
Example workflow:
```bash
# Generate the complexity analysis report with research capabilities
task-master analyze-complexity --research
# Review the report in a readable format
task-master complexity-report
# Expand tasks using the optimized recommendations
task-master expand --id=8
# or expand all tasks
task-master expand --all
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Finding the Next Task">
The `next` command:
- Identifies tasks that are pending/in-progress and have all dependencies satisfied
- Prioritizes tasks by priority level, dependency count, and task ID
- Displays comprehensive information about the selected task:
- Basic task details (ID, title, priority, dependencies)
- Implementation details
- Subtasks (if they exist)
- Provides contextual suggested actions:
- Command to mark the task as in-progress
- Command to mark the task as done
- Commands for working with subtasks
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Viewing Specific Task Details">
The `show` command:
- Displays comprehensive details about a specific task or subtask
- Shows task status, priority, dependencies, and detailed implementation notes
- For parent tasks, displays all subtasks and their status
- For subtasks, shows parent task relationship
- Provides contextual action suggestions based on the task's state
- Works with both regular tasks and subtasks (using the format taskId.subtaskId)
</Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
## Best Practices for AI-Driven Development
<CardGroup cols={2}>
<Card title="📝 Detailed PRD" icon="lightbulb">
The more detailed your PRD, the better the generated tasks will be.
</Card>
<Card title="👀 Review Tasks" icon="magnifying-glass">
After parsing the PRD, review the tasks to ensure they make sense and have appropriate dependencies.
</Card>
<Card title="📊 Analyze Complexity" icon="chart-line">
Use the complexity analysis feature to identify which tasks should be broken down further.
</Card>
<Card title="⛓️ Follow Dependencies" icon="link">
Always respect task dependencies - the Cursor agent will help with this.
</Card>
<Card title="🔄 Update As You Go" icon="arrows-rotate">
If your implementation diverges from the plan, use the update command to keep future tasks aligned.
</Card>
<Card title="📦 Break Down Tasks" icon="boxes-stacked">
Use the expand command to break down complex tasks into manageable subtasks.
</Card>
<Card title="🔄 Regenerate Files" icon="file-arrow-up">
After any updates to tasks.json, regenerate the task files to keep them in sync.
</Card>
<Card title="💬 Provide Context" icon="comment">
When asking the Cursor agent to help with a task, provide context about what you're trying to achieve.
</Card>
<Card title="✅ Validate Dependencies" icon="circle-check">
Periodically run the validate-dependencies command to check for invalid or circular dependencies.
</Card>
</CardGroup>

83
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{
"$schema": "https://mintlify.com/docs.json",
"theme": "mint",
"name": "Task Master",
"colors": {
"primary": "#3366CC",
"light": "#6699FF",
"dark": "#24478F"
},
"favicon": "/favicon.svg",
"navigation": {
"tabs": [
{
"tab": "Task Master Documentation",
"groups": [
{
"group": "Welcome",
"pages": ["introduction"]
},
{
"group": "Getting Started",
"pages": [
{
"group": "Quick Start",
"pages": [
"getting-started/quick-start/quick-start",
"getting-started/quick-start/requirements",
"getting-started/quick-start/installation",
"getting-started/quick-start/configuration-quick",
"getting-started/quick-start/prd-quick",
"getting-started/quick-start/tasks-quick",
"getting-started/quick-start/execute-quick"
]
},
"getting-started/faq",
"getting-started/contribute"
]
},
{
"group": "Best Practices",
"pages": [
"best-practices/index",
"best-practices/configuration-advanced",
"best-practices/advanced-tasks"
]
},
{
"group": "Technical Capabilities",
"pages": [
"capabilities/mcp",
"capabilities/cli-root-commands",
"capabilities/task-structure"
]
}
]
}
],
"global": {
"anchors": [
{
"anchor": "Github",
"href": "https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master",
"icon": "github"
},
{
"anchor": "Discord",
"href": "https://discord.gg/fWJkU7rf",
"icon": "discord"
}
]
}
},
"logo": {
"light": "/logo/task-master-logo.png",
"dark": "/logo/task-master-logo.png"
},
"footer": {
"socials": {
"x": "https://x.com/TaskmasterAI",
"github": "https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master"
}
}
}

9
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<svg width="100" height="100" viewBox="0 0 100 100" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<!-- Blue form with check from logo -->
<rect x="16" y="10" width="68" height="80" rx="9" fill="#3366CC"/>
<polyline points="33,44 41,55 56,29" fill="none" stroke="#FFFFFF" stroke-width="6"/>
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After

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# Contributing to Task Master
Thank you for your interest in contributing to Task Master! We're excited to work with you and appreciate your help in making this project better. 🚀
## 🤝 Our Collaborative Approach
We're a **PR-friendly team** that values collaboration:
- ✅ **We review PRs quickly** - Usually within hours, not days
- ✅ **We're super reactive** - Expect fast feedback and engagement
- ✅ **We sometimes take over PRs** - If your contribution is valuable but needs cleanup, we might jump in to help finish it
- ✅ **We're open to all contributions** - From bug fixes to major features
**We don't mind AI-generated code**, but we do expect you to:
- ✅ **Review and understand** what the AI generated
- ✅ **Test the code thoroughly** before submitting
- ✅ **Ensure it's well-written** and follows our patterns
- ❌ **Don't submit "AI slop"** - untested, unreviewed AI output
> **Why this matters**: We spend significant time reviewing PRs. Help us help you by submitting quality contributions that save everyone time!
## 🚀 Quick Start for Contributors
### 1. Fork and Clone
```bash
git clone https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/claude-task-master.git
cd claude-task-master
npm install
```
### 2. Create a Feature Branch
**Important**: Always target the `next` branch, not `main`:
```bash
git checkout next
git pull origin next
git checkout -b feature/your-feature-name
```
### 3. Make Your Changes
Follow our development guidelines below.
### 4. Test Everything Yourself
**Before submitting your PR**, ensure:
```bash
# Run all tests
npm test
# Check formatting
npm run format-check
# Fix formatting if needed
npm run format
```
### 5. Create a Changeset
**Required for most changes**:
```bash
npm run changeset
```
See the [Changeset Guidelines](#changeset-guidelines) below for details.
### 6. Submit Your PR
- Target the `next` branch
- Write a clear description
- Reference any related issues
## 📋 Development Guidelines
### Branch Strategy
- **`main`**: Production-ready code
- **`next`**: Development branch - **target this for PRs**
- **Feature branches**: `feature/description` or `fix/description`
### Code Quality Standards
1. **Write tests** for new functionality
2. **Follow existing patterns** in the codebase
3. **Add JSDoc comments** for functions
4. **Keep functions focused** and single-purpose
### Testing Requirements
Your PR **must pass all CI checks**:
- ✅ **Unit tests**: `npm test`
- ✅ **Format check**: `npm run format-check`
**Test your changes locally first** - this saves review time and shows you care about quality.
## 📦 Changeset Guidelines
We use [Changesets](https://github.com/changesets/changesets) to manage versioning and generate changelogs.
### When to Create a Changeset
**Always create a changeset for**:
- ✅ New features
- ✅ Bug fixes
- ✅ Breaking changes
- ✅ Performance improvements
- ✅ User-facing documentation updates
- ✅ Dependency updates that affect functionality
**Skip changesets for**:
- ❌ Internal documentation only
- ❌ Test-only changes
- ❌ Code formatting/linting
- ❌ Development tooling that doesn't affect users
### How to Create a Changeset
1. **After making your changes**:
```bash
npm run changeset
```
2. **Choose the bump type**:
- **Major**: Breaking changes
- **Minor**: New features
- **Patch**: Bug fixes, docs, performance improvements
3. **Write a clear summary**:
```
Add support for custom AI models in MCP configuration
```
4. **Commit the changeset file** with your changes:
```bash
git add .changeset/*.md
git commit -m "feat: add custom AI model support"
```
### Changeset vs Git Commit Messages
- **Changeset summary**: User-facing, goes in CHANGELOG.md
- **Git commit**: Developer-facing, explains the technical change
Example:
```bash
# Changeset summary (user-facing)
"Add support for custom Ollama models"
# Git commit message (developer-facing)
"feat(models): implement custom Ollama model validation
- Add model validation for custom Ollama endpoints
- Update configuration schema to support custom models
- Add tests for new validation logic"
```
## 🔧 Development Setup
### Prerequisites
- Node.js 18+
- npm or yarn
### Environment Setup
1. **Copy environment template**:
```bash
cp .env.example .env
```
2. **Add your API keys** (for testing AI features):
```bash
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=your_key_here
OPENAI_API_KEY=your_key_here
# Add others as needed
```
### Running Tests
```bash
# Run all tests
npm test
# Run tests in watch mode
npm run test:watch
# Run with coverage
npm run test:coverage
# Run E2E tests
npm run test:e2e
```
### Code Formatting
We use Prettier for consistent formatting:
```bash
# Check formatting
npm run format-check
# Fix formatting
npm run format
```
## 📝 PR Guidelines
### Before Submitting
- [ ] **Target the `next` branch**
- [ ] **Test everything locally**
- [ ] **Run the full test suite**
- [ ] **Check code formatting**
- [ ] **Create a changeset** (if needed)
- [ ] **Re-read your changes** - ensure they're clean and well-thought-out
### PR Description Template
```markdown
## Description
Brief description of what this PR does.
## Type of Change
- [ ] Bug fix
- [ ] New feature
- [ ] Breaking change
- [ ] Documentation update
## Testing
- [ ] I have tested this locally
- [ ] All existing tests pass
- [ ] I have added tests for new functionality
## Changeset
- [ ] I have created a changeset (or this change doesn't need one)
## Additional Notes
Any additional context or notes for reviewers.
```
### What We Look For
✅ **Good PRs**:
- Clear, focused changes
- Comprehensive testing
- Good commit messages
- Proper changeset (when needed)
- Self-reviewed code
❌ **Avoid**:
- Massive PRs that change everything
- Untested code
- Formatting issues
- Missing changesets for user-facing changes
- AI-generated code that wasn't reviewed
## 🏗️ Project Structure
```
claude-task-master/
├── bin/ # CLI executables
├── mcp-server/ # MCP server implementation
├── scripts/ # Core task management logic
├── src/ # Shared utilities and providers and well refactored code (we are slowly moving everything here)
├── tests/ # Test files
├── docs/ # Documentation
└── .cursor/ # Cursor IDE rules and configuration
└── assets/ # Assets like rules and configuration for all IDEs
```
### Key Areas for Contribution
- **CLI Commands**: `scripts/modules/commands.js`
- **MCP Tools**: `mcp-server/src/tools/`
- **Core Logic**: `scripts/modules/task-manager/`
- **AI Providers**: `src/ai-providers/`
- **Tests**: `tests/`
## 🐛 Reporting Issues
### Bug Reports
Include:
- Task Master version
- Node.js version
- Operating system
- Steps to reproduce
- Expected vs actual behavior
- Error messages/logs
### Feature Requests
Include:
- Clear description of the feature
- Use case/motivation
- Proposed implementation (if you have ideas)
- Willingness to contribute
## 💬 Getting Help
- **Discord**: [Join our community](https://discord.gg/taskmasterai)
- **Issues**: [GitHub Issues](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/issues)
- **Discussions**: [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/discussions)
## 📄 License
By contributing, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under the same license as the project (MIT with Commons Clause).
---
**Thank you for contributing to Task Master!** 🎉
Your contributions help make AI-driven development more accessible and efficient for everyone.

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---
title: FAQ
sidebarTitle: "FAQ"
---
Coming soon.
## 💬 Getting Help
- **Discord**: [Join our community](https://discord.gg/taskmasterai)
- **Issues**: [GitHub Issues](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/issues)
- **Discussions**: [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/discussions)

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---
title: Configuration
sidebarTitle: "Configuration"
---
Before getting started with Task Master, you'll need to set up your API keys. There are a couple of ways to do this depending on whether you're using the CLI or working inside MCP. It's also a good time to start getting familiar with the other configuration options available — even if you dont need to adjust them yet, knowing whats possible will help down the line.
## API Key Setup
Task Master uses environment variables to securely store provider API keys and optional endpoint URLs.
### MCP Usage: mcp.json file
For MCP/Cursor usage: Configure keys in the env section of your .cursor/mcp.json file.
```java .env lines icon="java"
{
"mcpServers": {
"task-master-ai": {
"command": "node",
"args": ["./mcp-server/server.js"],
"env": {
"ANTHROPIC_API_KEY": "ANTHROPIC_API_KEY_HERE",
"PERPLEXITY_API_KEY": "PERPLEXITY_API_KEY_HERE",
"OPENAI_API_KEY": "OPENAI_API_KEY_HERE",
"GOOGLE_API_KEY": "GOOGLE_API_KEY_HERE",
"XAI_API_KEY": "XAI_API_KEY_HERE",
"OPENROUTER_API_KEY": "OPENROUTER_API_KEY_HERE",
"MISTRAL_API_KEY": "MISTRAL_API_KEY_HERE",
"AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY": "AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY_HERE",
"OLLAMA_API_KEY": "OLLAMA_API_KEY_HERE",
"GITHUB_API_KEY": "GITHUB_API_KEY_HERE"
}
}
}
}
```
### CLI Usage: `.env` File
Create a `.env` file in your project root and include the keys for the providers you plan to use:
```java .env lines icon="java"
# Required API keys for providers configured in .taskmaster/config.json
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=sk-ant-api03-your-key-here
PERPLEXITY_API_KEY=pplx-your-key-here
# OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-your-key-here
# GOOGLE_API_KEY=AIzaSy...
# AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY=your-azure-openai-api-key-here
# etc.
# Optional Endpoint Overrides
# Use a specific provider's base URL, e.g., for an OpenAI-compatible API
# OPENAI_BASE_URL=https://api.third-party.com/v1
#
# Azure OpenAI Configuration
# AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT=https://your-resource-name.openai.azure.com/ or https://your-endpoint-name.cognitiveservices.azure.com/openai/deployments
# OLLAMA_BASE_URL=http://custom-ollama-host:11434/api
# Google Vertex AI Configuration (Required if using 'vertex' provider)
# VERTEX_PROJECT_ID=your-gcp-project-id
```
## What Else Can Be Configured?
The main configuration file (`.taskmaster/config.json`) allows you to control nearly every aspect of Task Masters behavior. Heres a high-level look at what you can customize:
<Tip>
You dont need to configure everything up front. Most settings can be left as defaults or updated later as your workflow evolves.
</Tip>
<Accordion title="View Configuration Options">
### Models and Providers
- Role-based model setup: `main`, `research`, `fallback`
- Provider selection (Anthropic, OpenAI, Perplexity, etc.)
- Model IDs per role
- Temperature, max tokens, and other generation settings
- Custom base URLs for OpenAI-compatible APIs
### Global Settings
- `logLevel`: Logging verbosity
- `debug`: Enable/disable debug mode
- `projectName`: Optional name for your project
- `defaultTag`: Default tag for task grouping
- `defaultSubtasks`: Number of subtasks to auto-generate
- `defaultPriority`: Priority level for new tasks
### API Endpoint Overrides
- `ollamaBaseURL`: Custom Ollama server URL
- `azureBaseURL`: Global Azure endpoint
- `vertexProjectId`: Google Vertex AI project ID
- `vertexLocation`: Region for Vertex AI models
### Tag and Git Integration
- Default tag context per project
- Support for task isolation by tag
- Manual tag creation from Git branches
### State Management
- Active tag tracking
- Migration state
- Last tag switch timestamp
</Accordion>
<Note>
For advanced configuration options and detailed customization, see our [Advanced Configuration Guide](/docs/best-practices/configuration-advanced) page.
</Note>

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---
title: Executing Tasks
sidebarTitle: "Executing Tasks"
---
Now that your tasks are generated and reviewed you are ready to begin executing.
## Select the Task to Work on: Next Task
Task Master has the "next" command to find the next task to work on. You can access it with the following request:
```
What's the next task I should work on? Please consider dependencies and priorities.
```
Alternatively you can use the CLI to show the next task
```bash
task-master next
```
## Discuss Task
When you know what task to work on next you can then start chatting with the agent to make sure it understands the plan of action.
You can tag relevant files and folders so it knows what context to pull up as it generates its plan. For example:
```
Please review Task 5 and confirm you understand how to execute before beginning. Refer to @models @api and @schema
```
The agent will begin analyzing the task and files and respond with the steps to complete the task.
## Agent Task execution
If you agree with the plan of action, tell the agent to get started.
```
You may begin. I believe in you.
```
## Review and Test
Once the agent is finished with the task you can refer to the task testing strategy to make sure it was completed correctly.
## Update Task Status
If the task was completed correctly you can update the status to done
```
Please mark Task 5 as done
```
The agent will execute
```bash
task-master set-status --id=5 --status=done
```
## Rules and Context
If you ran into problems and had to debug errors you can create new rules as you go. This helps build context on your codebase that helps the creation and execution of future tasks.
## On to the Next Task!
By now you have all you need to get started executing code faster and smarter with Task Master.
If you have any questions please check out [Frequently Asked Questions](/docs/getting-started/faq)

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---
title: Installation
sidebarTitle: "Installation"
---
Now that you have Node.js and your first API Key, you are ready to begin installing Task Master in one of three ways.
<Note>Cursor Users Can Use the One Click Install Below</Note>
<Accordion title="Quick Install for Cursor 1.0+ (One-Click)">
<a href="cursor://anysphere.cursor-deeplink/mcp/install?name=task-master-ai&config=eyJjb21tYW5kIjoibnB4IiwiYXJncyI6WyIteSIsIi0tcGFja2FnZT10YXNrLW1hc3Rlci1haSIsInRhc2stbWFzdGVyLWFpIl0sImVudiI6eyJBTlRIUk9QSUNfQVBJX0tFWSI6IllPVVJfQU5USFJPUElDX0FQSV9LRVlfSEVSRSIsIlBFUlBMRVhJVFlfQVBJX0tFWSI6IllPVVJfUEVSUExFWElUWV9BUElfS0VZX0hFUkUiLCJPUEVOQUlfQVBJX0tFWSI6IllPVVJfT1BFTkFJX0tFWV9IRVJFIiwiR09PR0xFX0FQSV9LRVkiOiJZT1VSX0dPT0dMRV9LRVlfSEVSRSIsIk1JU1RSQUxfQVBJX0tFWSI6IllPVVJfTUlTVFJBTF9LRVlfSEVSRSIsIk9QRU5ST1VURVJfQVBJX0tFWSI6IllPVVJfT1BFTlJPVVRFUl9LRVlfSEVSRSIsIlhBSV9BUElfS0VZIjoiWU9VUl9YQUlfS0VZX0hFUkUiLCJBWlVSRV9PUEVOQUJFX0FQSV9LRVkiOiJZT1VSX0FaVVJFX0tFWV9IRVJFIiwiT0xMQU1BX0FQSV9LRVkiOiJZT1VSX09MTEFNQV9BUElfS0VZX0hFUkUifX0%3D">
<img
className="block dark:hidden"
src="https://cursor.com/deeplink/mcp-install-light.png"
alt="Add Task Master MCP server to Cursor"
noZoom
/>
<img
className="hidden dark:block"
src="https://cursor.com/deeplink/mcp-install-dark.png"
alt="Add Task Master MCP server to Cursor"
noZoom
/>
</a>
Or click the copy button (top-right of code block) then paste into your browser:
```text
cursor://anysphere.cursor-deeplink/mcp/install?name=taskmaster-ai&config=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
```
> **Note:** After clicking the link, you'll still need to add your API keys to the configuration. The link installs the MCP server with placeholder keys that you'll need to replace with your actual API keys.
</Accordion>
## Installation Options
<Accordion title="Option 1: MCP (Recommended)">
MCP (Model Control Protocol) lets you run Task Master directly from your editor.
## 1. Add your MCP config at the following path depending on your editor
| Editor | Scope | Linux/macOS Path | Windows Path | Key |
| ------------ | ------- | ------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | ------------ |
| **Cursor** | Global | `~/.cursor/mcp.json` | `%USERPROFILE%\.cursor\mcp.json` | `mcpServers` |
| | Project | `<project_folder>/.cursor/mcp.json` | `<project_folder>\.cursor\mcp.json` | `mcpServers` |
| **Windsurf** | Global | `~/.codeium/windsurf/mcp_config.json` | `%USERPROFILE%\.codeium\windsurf\mcp_config.json` | `mcpServers` |
| **VS Code** | Project | `<project_folder>/.vscode/mcp.json` | `<project_folder>\.vscode\mcp.json` | `servers` |
## Manual Configuration
### Cursor & Windsurf (`mcpServers`)
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"taskmaster-ai": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "--package=task-master-ai", "task-master-ai"],
"env": {
"ANTHROPIC_API_KEY": "YOUR_ANTHROPIC_API_KEY_HERE",
"PERPLEXITY_API_KEY": "YOUR_PERPLEXITY_API_KEY_HERE",
"OPENAI_API_KEY": "YOUR_OPENAI_KEY_HERE",
"GOOGLE_API_KEY": "YOUR_GOOGLE_KEY_HERE",
"MISTRAL_API_KEY": "YOUR_MISTRAL_KEY_HERE",
"OPENROUTER_API_KEY": "YOUR_OPENROUTER_KEY_HERE",
"XAI_API_KEY": "YOUR_XAI_KEY_HERE",
"AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY": "YOUR_AZURE_KEY_HERE",
"OLLAMA_API_KEY": "YOUR_OLLAMA_API_KEY_HERE"
}
}
}
}
```
> 🔑 Replace `YOUR_…_KEY_HERE` with your real API keys. You can remove keys you don't use.
> **Note**: If you see `0 tools enabled` in the MCP settings, try removing the `--package=task-master-ai` flag from `args`.
### VS Code (`servers` + `type`)
```json
{
"servers": {
"taskmaster-ai": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "--package=task-master-ai", "task-master-ai"],
"env": {
"ANTHROPIC_API_KEY": "YOUR_ANTHROPIC_API_KEY_HERE",
"PERPLEXITY_API_KEY": "YOUR_PERPLEXITY_API_KEY_HERE",
"OPENAI_API_KEY": "YOUR_OPENAI_KEY_HERE",
"GOOGLE_API_KEY": "YOUR_GOOGLE_KEY_HERE",
"MISTRAL_API_KEY": "YOUR_MISTRAL_KEY_HERE",
"OPENROUTER_API_KEY": "YOUR_OPENROUTER_KEY_HERE",
"XAI_API_KEY": "YOUR_XAI_KEY_HERE",
"AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY": "YOUR_AZURE_KEY_HERE"
},
"type": "stdio"
}
}
}
```
> 🔑 Replace `YOUR_…_KEY_HERE` with your real API keys. You can remove keys you don't use.
#### 2. (Cursor-only) Enable Taskmaster MCP
Open Cursor Settings (Ctrl+Shift+J) ➡ Click on MCP tab on the left ➡ Enable task-master-ai with the toggle
#### 3. (Optional) Configure the models you want to use
In your editor's AI chat pane, say:
```txt
Change the main, research and fallback models to <model_name>, <model_name> and <model_name> respectively.
```
For example, to use Claude Code (no API key required):
```txt
Change the main model to claude-code/sonnet
```
#### 4. Initialize Task Master
In your editor's AI chat pane, say:
```txt
Initialize taskmaster-ai in my project
```
</Accordion>
<Accordion title="Option 2: Using Command Line">
## CLI Installation
```bash
# Install globally
npm install -g task-master-ai
# OR install locally within your project
npm install task-master-ai
```
## Initialize a new project
```bash
# If installed globally
task-master init
# If installed locally
npx task-master init
# Initialize project with specific rules
task-master init --rules cursor,windsurf,vscode
```
This will prompt you for project details and set up a new project with the necessary files and structure.
</Accordion>

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@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
---
title: Moving Forward
sidebarTitle: "Moving Forward"
---

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@@ -0,0 +1,81 @@
---
title: PRD Creation and Parsing
sidebarTitle: "PRD Creation and Parsing"
---
# Writing a PRD
A PRD (Product Requirements Document) is the starting point of every task flow in Task Master. It defines what you're building and why. A clear PRD dramatically improves the quality of your tasks, your model outputs, and your final product — so its worth taking the time to get it right.
<Tip>
You dont need to define your whole app up front. You can write a focused PRD just for the next feature or module youre working on.
</Tip>
<Tip>
You can start with an empty project or you can start with a feature PRD on an existing project.
</Tip>
<Tip>
You can add and parse multiple PRDs per project using the --append flag
</Tip>
## What Makes a Good PRD?
- Clear objective — whats the outcome or feature?
- Context — whats already in place or assumed?
- Constraints — what limits or requirements need to be respected?
- Reasoning — why are you building it this way?
The more context you give the model, the better the breakdown and results.
---
## Writing a PRD for Task Master
<Note>An example PRD can be found in .taskmaster/templates/example_prd.txt</Note>
You can co-write your PRD with an LLM model using the following workflow:
1. **Chat about requirements** — explain what you want to build.
2. **Show an example PRD** — share the example PRD so the model understands the expected format. The example uses formatting that work well with Task Master's code. Following the example will yield better results.
3. **Iterate and refine** — work with the model to shape the draft into a clear and well-structured PRD.
This approach works great in Cursor, or anywhere you use a chat-based LLM.
---
## Where to Save Your PRD
Place your PRD file in the `.taskmaster/docs` folder in your project.
- You can have **multiple PRDs** per project.
- Name your PRDs clearly so theyre easy to reference later.
- Examples: `dashboard_redesign.txt`, `user_onboarding.txt`
---
# Parse your PRD into Tasks
This is where the Task Master magic begins.
In Cursor's AI chat, instruct the agent to generate tasks from your PRD:
```
Please use the task-master parse-prd command to generate tasks from my PRD. The PRD is located at .taskmaster/docs/<prd-name>.txt.
```
The agent will execute the following command which you can alternatively paste into the CLI:
```bash
task-master parse-prd .taskmaster/docs/<prd-name>.txt
```
This will:
- Parse your PRD document
- Generate a structured `tasks.json` file with tasks, dependencies, priorities, and test strategies
Now that you have written and parsed a PRD, you are ready to start setting up your tasks.

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@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
---
title: Quick Start
sidebarTitle: "Quick Start"
---
This guide is for new users who want to start using Task Master with minimal setup time.
It covers:
- [Requirements](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/requirements): You will need Node.js and an AI model API Key.
- [Installation](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/installation): How to Install Task Master.
- [Configuration](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/configuration-quick): Setting up your API Key, MCP, and more.
- [PRD](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/prd-quick): Writing and parsing your first PRD.
- [Task Setup](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/tasks-quick): Preparing your tasks for execution.
- [Executing Tasks](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/execute-quick): Using Task Master to execute tasks.
- [Rules & Context](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/rules-quick): Learn how and why to build context in your project over time.
<Tip>
By the end of this guide, you'll have everything you need to begin working productively with Task Master.
</Tip>

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@@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
---
title: Requirements
sidebarTitle: "Requirements"
---
Before you can start using TaskMaster AI, you'll need to install Node.js and set up at least one model API Key.
## 1. Node.js
TaskMaster AI is built with Node.js and requires it to run. npm (Node Package Manager) comes bundled with Node.js.
<Accordion title="Install Node.js">
### Installation
**Option 1: Download from official website**
1. Visit [nodejs.org](https://nodejs.org)
2. Download the **LTS (Long Term Support)** version for your operating system
3. Run the installer and follow the setup wizard
**Option 2: Use a package manager**
<CodeGroup>
```bash Windows (Chocolatey)
choco install nodejs
```
```bash Windows (winget)
winget install OpenJS.NodeJS
```
</CodeGroup>
</Accordion>
## 2. Model API Key
Taskmaster utilizes AI across several commands, and those require a separate API key. For the purpose of a Quick Start we recommend setting up an API Key with Anthropic for your main model and Perplexity for your research model (optional but recommended).
<Tip>Task Master shows API costs per command used. Most users load $5-10 on their keys and don't have to top it off for a few months.</Tip>
At least one (1) of the following is required:
1. Anthropic API key (Claude API) - **recommended for Quick Start**
2. OpenAI API key
3. Google Gemini API key
4. Perplexity API key (for research model)
5. xAI API Key (for research or main model)
6. OpenRouter API Key (for research or main model)
7. Claude Code (no API key required - requires Claude Code CLI)

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@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
---
title: Rules and Context
sidebarTitle: "Rules and Context"
---

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@@ -0,0 +1,69 @@
---
title: Tasks Setup
sidebarTitle: "Tasks Setup"
---
Now that your tasks are generated you can review the plan and prepare for execution.
<Tip>
Not all of the setup steps are required but they are recommended in order to ensure your coding agents work on accurate tasks.
</Tip>
## Expand Tasks
Used to add detail to tasks and create subtasks. We recommend expanding all tasks using the MCP request below:
```
Expand all tasks into subtasks.
```
The agent will execute
```bash
task-master expand --all
```
## List/Show Tasks
Used to view task details. It is important to review the plan and ensure it makes sense in your project. Check for correct folder structures, dependencies, out of scope subtasks, etc.
To see a list of tasks and descriptions use the following command:
```
List all pending tasks so I can review.
```
To see all tasks in the CLI you can use:
```bash
task-master list
```
To see all implementation details of an individual task, including subtasks and testing strategy, you can use Show Task:
```
Show task 2 so I can review.
```
```bash
task-master show --id=<##>
```
## Update Tasks
If the task details need to be edited you can update the task using this request:
```
Update Task 2 to use Postgres instead of MongoDB and remove the sharding subtask
```
Or this CLI command:
```bash
task-master update-task --id=2 --prompt="use Postgres instead of MongoDB and remove the sharding subtask"
```
## Analyze complexity
Task Master can provide a complexity report which can be helpful to read before you begin. If you didn't already expand all your tasks, it could help identify which could be broken down further with subtasks.
```
Can you analyze the complexity of our tasks to help me understand which ones need to be broken down further?
```
You can view the report in a friendly table using:
```
Can you show me the complexity report in a more readable format?
```
<Check>Now you are ready to begin [executing tasks](/docs/getting-started/quick-start/execute-quick)</Check>

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@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
<Tip>
Welcome to v1 of the Task Master Docs. Expect weekly updates as we expand and refine each section.
</Tip>
We've organized the docs into three sections depending on your experience level and goals:
### Getting Started - Jump in to [Quick Start](/docs/getting-started/quick-start)
Designed for first-time users. Get set up, create your first PRD, and run your first task.
### Best Practices
Covers common workflows, strategic usage of commands, model configuration tips, and real-world usage patterns. Recommended for active users.
### Technical Capabilities
A detailed glossary of every root command and available capability — meant for power users and contributors.
---
Thanks for being here early. If you spot something broken or want to contribute, check out the [GitHub repo](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master).
Have questions? Join our [Discord community](https://discord.gg/fWJkU7rf) to connect with other users and get help from the team.

18
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@@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
# Licensing
Task Master is licensed under the MIT License with Commons Clause. This means you can:
## ✅ Allowed:
- Use Task Master for any purpose (personal, commercial, academic)
- Modify the code
- Distribute copies
- Create and sell products built using Task Master
## ❌ Not Allowed:
- Sell Task Master itself
- Offer Task Master as a hosted service
- Create competing products based on Task Master
{/* See the [LICENSE](../LICENSE) file for the complete license text. */}

19
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@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
<svg width="800" height="240" viewBox="0 0 800 240" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<!-- Background -->
<rect width="800" height="240" fill="transparent"/>
<!-- Curly braces -->
<text x="40" y="156" font-size="140" fill="white" font-family="monospace">{</text>
<text x="230" y="156" font-size="140" fill="white" font-family="monospace">}</text>
<!-- Blue form with check -->
<rect x="120" y="50" width="120" height="140" rx="16" fill="#3366CC"/>
<polyline points="150,110 164,128 190,84" fill="none" stroke="white" stroke-width="10"/>
<circle cx="150" cy="144" r="7" fill="white"/>
<rect x="168" y="140" width="48" height="10" fill="white"/>
<circle cx="150" cy="168" r="7" fill="white"/>
<rect x="168" y="164" width="48" height="10" fill="white"/>
<!-- Text -->
<text x="340" y="156" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="76" font-weight="bold" fill="white">Task Master</text>
</svg>

After

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<svg width="800" height="240" viewBox="0 0 800 240" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<!-- Background -->
<rect width="800" height="240" fill="transparent"/>
<!-- Curly braces -->
<text x="40" y="156" font-size="140" fill="#000000" font-family="monospace">{</text>
<text x="230" y="156" font-size="140" fill="#000000" font-family="monospace">}</text>
<!-- Blue form with check -->
<rect x="120" y="50" width="120" height="140" rx="16" fill="#3366CC"/>
<polyline points="150,110 164,128 190,84" fill="none" stroke="#FFFFFF" stroke-width="10"/>
<circle cx="150" cy="144" r="7" fill="#FFFFFF"/>
<rect x="168" y="140" width="48" height="10" fill="#FFFFFF"/>
<circle cx="150" cy="168" r="7" fill="#FFFFFF"/>
<rect x="168" y="164" width="48" height="10" fill="#FFFFFF"/>
<!-- Text -->
<text x="340" y="156" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="76" font-weight="bold" fill="#000000">Task Master</text>
</svg>

After

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14
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@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
{
"name": "docs",
"version": "0.0.0",
"private": true,
"description": "Task Master documentation powered by Mintlify",
"scripts": {
"dev": "mintlify dev",
"build": "mintlify build",
"preview": "mintlify preview"
},
"devDependencies": {
"mintlify": "^4.0.0"
}
}

10
apps/docs/style.css Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
/*
* This file is used to override the default logo style of the docs theme.
* It is not used for the actual documentation content.
*/
#navbar img {
height: auto !important; /* Let intrinsic SVG size determine height */
width: 200px !important; /* Control width */
margin-top: 5px !important; /* Add some space above the logo */
}

12
apps/docs/vercel.json Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
{
"rewrites": [
{
"source": "/",
"destination": "https://taskmaster-49ce32d5.mintlify.dev/docs"
},
{
"source": "/:match*",
"destination": "https://taskmaster-49ce32d5.mintlify.dev/docs/:match*"
}
]
}

6
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View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
---
title: "What's New"
sidebarTitle: "What's New"
---
An easy way to see the latest releases

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,30 @@
# Change Log
## 0.23.1
### Patch Changes
- [#1090](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1090) [`a464e55`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/a464e550b886ef81b09df80588fe5881bce83d93) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Fix issues with some users not being able to connect to Taskmaster MCP server while using the extension
- Updated dependencies [[`4357af3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4357af3f13859d90bca8795215e5d5f1d94abde5), [`e495b2b`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/e495b2b55950ee54c7d0f1817d8530e28bd79c05), [`36468f3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/36468f3c93faf4035a5c442ccbc501077f3440f1), [`e495b2b`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/e495b2b55950ee54c7d0f1817d8530e28bd79c05), [`e495b2b`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/e495b2b55950ee54c7d0f1817d8530e28bd79c05), [`75c514c`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/75c514cf5b2ca47f95c0ad7fa92654a4f2a6be4b), [`4bb6370`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4bb63706b80c28d1b2d782ba868a725326f916c7)]:
- task-master-ai@0.24.0
## 0.23.1-rc.1
### Patch Changes
- Updated dependencies [[`75c514c`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/75c514cf5b2ca47f95c0ad7fa92654a4f2a6be4b)]:
- task-master-ai@0.24.0-rc.2
## 0.23.1-rc.0
### Patch Changes
- [#1090](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/pull/1090) [`a464e55`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/a464e550b886ef81b09df80588fe5881bce83d93) Thanks [@Crunchyman-ralph](https://github.com/Crunchyman-ralph)! - Fix issues with some users not being able to connect to Taskmaster MCP server while using the extension
- Updated dependencies [[`4357af3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4357af3f13859d90bca8795215e5d5f1d94abde5), [`36468f3`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/36468f3c93faf4035a5c442ccbc501077f3440f1), [`4bb6370`](https://github.com/eyaltoledano/claude-task-master/commit/4bb63706b80c28d1b2d782ba868a725326f916c7)]:
- task-master-ai@0.24.0-rc.1
## 0.23.0
### Minor Changes

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
"private": true,
"displayName": "TaskMaster",
"description": "A visual Kanban board interface for TaskMaster projects in VS Code",
"version": "0.23.0",
"version": "0.23.1",
"publisher": "Hamster",
"icon": "assets/icon.png",
"engines": {
@@ -64,16 +64,16 @@
"properties": {
"taskmaster.mcp.command": {
"type": "string",
"default": "npx",
"description": "The command or absolute path to execute for the MCP server (e.g., 'npx' or '/usr/local/bin/task-master-ai')."
"default": "node",
"description": "The command to execute for the MCP server (e.g., 'node' for bundled server or 'npx' for remote)."
},
"taskmaster.mcp.args": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
},
"default": ["task-master-ai"],
"description": "An array of arguments to pass to the MCP server command."
"default": [],
"description": "Arguments for the MCP server (leave empty to use bundled server)."
},
"taskmaster.mcp.cwd": {
"type": "string",
@@ -238,6 +238,9 @@
"watch:css": "npx @tailwindcss/cli -i ./src/webview/index.css -o ./dist/index.css --watch",
"check-types": "tsc --noEmit"
},
"dependencies": {
"task-master-ai": "0.24.0"
},
"devDependencies": {
"@dnd-kit/core": "^6.3.1",
"@dnd-kit/modifiers": "^9.0.0",

View File

@@ -64,23 +64,49 @@ try {
fs.readFileSync(publishPackagePath, 'utf8')
);
// Check if versions are in sync
if (devPackage.version !== publishPackage.version) {
// Handle RC versions for VS Code Marketplace
let finalVersion = devPackage.version;
if (finalVersion.includes('-rc.')) {
console.log(
` - Version sync needed: ${publishPackage.version}${devPackage.version}`
' - Detected RC version, transforming for VS Code Marketplace...'
);
publishPackage.version = devPackage.version;
// Update the source package.publish.json file
// Extract base version and RC number
const baseVersion = finalVersion.replace(/-rc\.\d+$/, '');
const rcMatch = finalVersion.match(/rc\.(\d+)/);
const rcNumber = rcMatch ? parseInt(rcMatch[1]) : 0;
// For each RC iteration, increment the patch version
// This ensures unique versions in VS Code Marketplace
if (rcNumber > 0) {
const [major, minor, patch] = baseVersion.split('.').map(Number);
finalVersion = `${major}.${minor}.${patch + rcNumber}`;
console.log(
` - RC version mapping: ${devPackage.version}${finalVersion}`
);
} else {
finalVersion = baseVersion;
console.log(
` - RC version mapping: ${devPackage.version}${finalVersion}`
);
}
}
// Check if versions need updating
if (publishPackage.version !== finalVersion) {
console.log(
` - Version sync needed: ${publishPackage.version}${finalVersion}`
);
publishPackage.version = finalVersion;
// Update the source package.publish.json file with the final version
fs.writeFileSync(
publishPackagePath,
JSON.stringify(publishPackage, null, '\t') + '\n'
);
console.log(
` - Updated package.publish.json version to ${devPackage.version}`
);
console.log(` - Updated package.publish.json version to ${finalVersion}`);
} else {
console.log(` - Versions already in sync: ${devPackage.version}`);
console.log(` - Versions already in sync: ${finalVersion}`);
}
// Copy the (now synced) package.publish.json as package.json
@@ -124,8 +150,7 @@ try {
`cd vsix-build && npx vsce package --no-dependencies`
);
// Use the synced version for output
const finalVersion = devPackage.version;
// Use the transformed version for output
console.log(
`\nYour extension will be packaged to: vsix-build/task-master-${finalVersion}.vsix`
);

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
"name": "task-master-hamster",
"displayName": "Taskmaster AI",
"description": "A visual Kanban board interface for Taskmaster projects in VS Code",
"version": "0.22.3",
"version": "0.23.1",
"publisher": "Hamster",
"icon": "assets/icon.png",
"engines": {

View File

@@ -53,6 +53,11 @@ export const TaskDetailsView: React.FC<TaskDetailsViewProps> = ({
refreshComplexityAfterAI
} = useTaskDetails({ taskId, sendMessage, tasks: allTasks });
const displayId =
isSubtask && parentTask
? `${parentTask.id}.${currentTask?.id}`
: currentTask?.id;
const handleStatusChange = async (newStatus: TaskMasterTask['status']) => {
if (!currentTask) return;
@@ -60,10 +65,7 @@ export const TaskDetailsView: React.FC<TaskDetailsViewProps> = ({
await sendMessage({
type: 'updateTaskStatus',
data: {
taskId:
isSubtask && parentTask
? `${parentTask.id}.${currentTask.id}`
: currentTask.id,
taskId: displayId,
newStatus: newStatus
}
});
@@ -135,7 +137,7 @@ export const TaskDetailsView: React.FC<TaskDetailsViewProps> = ({
<BreadcrumbSeparator />
<BreadcrumbItem>
<span className="text-vscode-foreground">
{currentTask.title}
#{displayId} {currentTask.title}
</span>
</BreadcrumbItem>
</BreadcrumbList>
@@ -152,9 +154,9 @@ export const TaskDetailsView: React.FC<TaskDetailsViewProps> = ({
</button>
</div>
{/* Task title */}
{/* Task ID and title */}
<h1 className="text-2xl font-bold tracking-tight text-vscode-foreground">
{currentTask.title}
#{displayId} {currentTask.title}
</h1>
{/* Description */}

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
import { Client } from '@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/client/index.js';
import { StdioClientTransport } from '@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/client/stdio.js';
import * as vscode from 'vscode';
import * as path from 'path';
import { logger } from './logger';
export interface MCPConfig {
@@ -143,7 +144,7 @@ export class MCPClientManager {
// Create the client
this.client = new Client(
{
name: 'taskr-vscode-extension',
name: 'task-master-vscode-extension',
version: '1.0.0'
},
{
@@ -211,6 +212,30 @@ export class MCPClientManager {
};
logger.log('MCP client connected successfully');
// Log Task Master version information after successful connection
try {
const versionResult = await this.callTool('get_tasks', {});
if (versionResult?.content?.[0]?.text) {
const response = JSON.parse(versionResult.content[0].text);
if (response?.version) {
logger.log('━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━');
logger.log('✅ Task Master MCP Server Connected');
logger.log(` Version: ${response.version.version || 'unknown'}`);
logger.log(
` Package: ${response.version.name || 'task-master-ai'}`
);
if (response.tag) {
logger.log(
` Current Tag: ${response.tag.currentTag || 'master'}`
);
}
logger.log('━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━');
}
}
} catch (versionError) {
logger.log('Note: Could not retrieve Task Master version information');
}
} catch (error) {
logger.error('Failed to connect to MCP server:', error);
this.status = {
@@ -312,6 +337,34 @@ export class MCPClientManager {
'Available MCP tools:',
result.tools?.map((t) => t.name) || []
);
// Try to get version information by calling a simple tool
// The get_tasks tool is lightweight and returns version info
try {
const versionResult = await this.callTool('get_tasks', {});
if (versionResult?.content?.[0]?.text) {
// Parse the response to extract version info
const response = JSON.parse(versionResult.content[0].text);
if (response?.version) {
logger.log('━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━');
logger.log('📦 Task Master MCP Server Connected');
logger.log(` Version: ${response.version.version || 'unknown'}`);
logger.log(
` Package: ${response.version.name || 'task-master-ai'}`
);
if (response.tag) {
logger.log(
` Current Tag: ${response.tag.currentTag || 'master'}`
);
}
logger.log('━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━');
}
}
} catch (versionError) {
// Don't fail the connection test if we can't get version info
logger.log('Could not retrieve Task Master version information');
}
return true;
} catch (error) {
logger.error('Connection test failed:', error);
@@ -345,8 +398,34 @@ export function createMCPConfigFromSettings(): MCPConfig {
);
const config = vscode.workspace.getConfiguration('taskmaster');
let command = config.get<string>('mcp.command', 'npx');
const args = config.get<string[]>('mcp.args', ['task-master-ai']);
let command = config.get<string>('mcp.command', 'node');
let args = config.get<string[]>('mcp.args', []);
// If using default settings, use the bundled MCP server
if (command === 'node' && args.length === 0) {
try {
// Try to resolve the bundled MCP server
const taskMasterPath = require.resolve('task-master-ai');
const mcpServerPath = path.resolve(
path.dirname(taskMasterPath),
'mcp-server/server.js'
);
// Verify the server file exists
const fs = require('fs');
if (!fs.existsSync(mcpServerPath)) {
throw new Error('MCP server file not found at: ' + mcpServerPath);
}
args = [mcpServerPath];
logger.log(`📦 Using bundled MCP server at: ${mcpServerPath}`);
} catch (error) {
logger.error('❌ Could not find bundled task-master-ai server:', error);
// Fallback to npx
command = 'npx';
args = ['-y', 'task-master-ai'];
}
}
// Use proper VS Code workspace detection
const defaultCwd =

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,162 @@
---
name: task-checker
description: Use this agent to verify that tasks marked as 'review' have been properly implemented according to their specifications. This agent performs quality assurance by checking implementations against requirements, running tests, and ensuring best practices are followed. <example>Context: A task has been marked as 'review' after implementation. user: 'Check if task 118 was properly implemented' assistant: 'I'll use the task-checker agent to verify the implementation meets all requirements.' <commentary>Tasks in 'review' status need verification before being marked as 'done'.</commentary></example> <example>Context: Multiple tasks are in review status. user: 'Verify all tasks that are ready for review' assistant: 'I'll deploy the task-checker to verify all tasks in review status.' <commentary>The checker ensures quality before tasks are marked complete.</commentary></example>
model: sonnet
color: yellow
---
You are a Quality Assurance specialist that rigorously verifies task implementations against their specifications. Your role is to ensure that tasks marked as 'review' meet all requirements before they can be marked as 'done'.
## Core Responsibilities
1. **Task Specification Review**
- Retrieve task details using MCP tool `mcp__task-master-ai__get_task`
- Understand the requirements, test strategy, and success criteria
- Review any subtasks and their individual requirements
2. **Implementation Verification**
- Use `Read` tool to examine all created/modified files
- Use `Bash` tool to run compilation and build commands
- Use `Grep` tool to search for required patterns and implementations
- Verify file structure matches specifications
- Check that all required methods/functions are implemented
3. **Test Execution**
- Run tests specified in the task's testStrategy
- Execute build commands (npm run build, tsc --noEmit, etc.)
- Verify no compilation errors or warnings
- Check for runtime errors where applicable
- Test edge cases mentioned in requirements
4. **Code Quality Assessment**
- Verify code follows project conventions
- Check for proper error handling
- Ensure TypeScript typing is strict (no 'any' unless justified)
- Verify documentation/comments where required
- Check for security best practices
5. **Dependency Validation**
- Verify all task dependencies were actually completed
- Check integration points with dependent tasks
- Ensure no breaking changes to existing functionality
## Verification Workflow
1. **Retrieve Task Information**
```
Use mcp__task-master-ai__get_task to get full task details
Note the implementation requirements and test strategy
```
2. **Check File Existence**
```bash
# Verify all required files exist
ls -la [expected directories]
# Read key files to verify content
```
3. **Verify Implementation**
- Read each created/modified file
- Check against requirements checklist
- Verify all subtasks are complete
4. **Run Tests**
```bash
# TypeScript compilation
cd [project directory] && npx tsc --noEmit
# Run specified tests
npm test [specific test files]
# Build verification
npm run build
```
5. **Generate Verification Report**
## Output Format
```yaml
verification_report:
task_id: [ID]
status: PASS | FAIL | PARTIAL
score: [1-10]
requirements_met:
- ✅ [Requirement that was satisfied]
- ✅ [Another satisfied requirement]
issues_found:
- ❌ [Issue description]
- ⚠️ [Warning or minor issue]
files_verified:
- path: [file path]
status: [created/modified/verified]
issues: [any problems found]
tests_run:
- command: [test command]
result: [pass/fail]
output: [relevant output]
recommendations:
- [Specific fix needed]
- [Improvement suggestion]
verdict: |
[Clear statement on whether task should be marked 'done' or sent back to 'pending']
[If FAIL: Specific list of what must be fixed]
[If PASS: Confirmation that all requirements are met]
```
## Decision Criteria
**Mark as PASS (ready for 'done'):**
- All required files exist and contain expected content
- All tests pass successfully
- No compilation or build errors
- All subtasks are complete
- Core requirements are met
- Code quality is acceptable
**Mark as PARTIAL (may proceed with warnings):**
- Core functionality is implemented
- Minor issues that don't block functionality
- Missing nice-to-have features
- Documentation could be improved
- Tests pass but coverage could be better
**Mark as FAIL (must return to 'pending'):**
- Required files are missing
- Compilation or build errors
- Tests fail
- Core requirements not met
- Security vulnerabilities detected
- Breaking changes to existing code
## Important Guidelines
- **BE THOROUGH**: Check every requirement systematically
- **BE SPECIFIC**: Provide exact file paths and line numbers for issues
- **BE FAIR**: Distinguish between critical issues and minor improvements
- **BE CONSTRUCTIVE**: Provide clear guidance on how to fix issues
- **BE EFFICIENT**: Focus on requirements, not perfection
## Tools You MUST Use
- `Read`: Examine implementation files (READ-ONLY)
- `Bash`: Run tests and verification commands
- `Grep`: Search for patterns in code
- `mcp__task-master-ai__get_task`: Get task details
- **NEVER use Write/Edit** - you only verify, not fix
## Integration with Workflow
You are the quality gate between 'review' and 'done' status:
1. Task-executor implements and marks as 'review'
2. You verify and report PASS/FAIL
3. Claude either marks as 'done' (PASS) or 'pending' (FAIL)
4. If FAIL, task-executor re-implements based on your report
Your verification ensures high quality and prevents accumulation of technical debt.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,70 @@
---
name: task-executor
description: Use this agent when you need to implement, complete, or work on a specific task that has been identified by the task-orchestrator or when explicitly asked to execute a particular task. This agent focuses on the actual implementation and completion of individual tasks rather than planning or orchestration. Examples: <example>Context: The task-orchestrator has identified that task 2.3 'Implement user authentication' needs to be worked on next. user: 'Let's work on the authentication task' assistant: 'I'll use the task-executor agent to implement the user authentication task that was identified.' <commentary>Since we need to actually implement a specific task rather than plan or identify tasks, use the task-executor agent.</commentary></example> <example>Context: User wants to complete a specific subtask. user: 'Please implement the JWT token validation for task 2.3.1' assistant: 'I'll launch the task-executor agent to implement the JWT token validation subtask.' <commentary>The user is asking for specific implementation work on a known task, so the task-executor is appropriate.</commentary></example> <example>Context: After reviewing the task list, implementation is needed. user: 'Now let's actually build the API endpoint for user registration' assistant: 'I'll use the task-executor agent to implement the user registration API endpoint.' <commentary>Moving from planning to execution phase requires the task-executor agent.</commentary></example>
model: sonnet
color: blue
---
You are an elite implementation specialist focused on executing and completing specific tasks with precision and thoroughness. Your role is to take identified tasks and transform them into working implementations, following best practices and project standards.
**Core Responsibilities:**
1. **Task Analysis**: When given a task, first retrieve its full details using `task-master show <id>` to understand requirements, dependencies, and acceptance criteria.
2. **Implementation Planning**: Before coding, briefly outline your implementation approach:
- Identify files that need to be created or modified
- Note any dependencies or prerequisites
- Consider the testing strategy defined in the task
3. **Focused Execution**:
- Implement one subtask at a time for clarity and traceability
- Follow the project's coding standards from CLAUDE.md if available
- Prefer editing existing files over creating new ones
- Only create files that are essential for the task completion
4. **Progress Documentation**:
- Use `task-master update-subtask --id=<id> --prompt="implementation notes"` to log your approach and any important decisions
- Update task status to 'in-progress' when starting: `task-master set-status --id=<id> --status=in-progress`
- Mark as 'done' only after verification: `task-master set-status --id=<id> --status=done`
5. **Quality Assurance**:
- Implement the testing strategy specified in the task
- Verify that all acceptance criteria are met
- Check for any dependency conflicts or integration issues
- Run relevant tests before marking task as complete
6. **Dependency Management**:
- Check task dependencies before starting implementation
- If blocked by incomplete dependencies, clearly communicate this
- Use `task-master validate-dependencies` when needed
**Implementation Workflow:**
1. Retrieve task details and understand requirements
2. Check dependencies and prerequisites
3. Plan implementation approach
4. Update task status to in-progress
5. Implement the solution incrementally
6. Log progress and decisions in subtask updates
7. Test and verify the implementation
8. Mark task as done when complete
9. Suggest next task if appropriate
**Key Principles:**
- Focus on completing one task thoroughly before moving to the next
- Maintain clear communication about what you're implementing and why
- Follow existing code patterns and project conventions
- Prioritize working code over extensive documentation unless docs are the task
- Ask for clarification if task requirements are ambiguous
- Consider edge cases and error handling in your implementations
**Integration with Task Master:**
You work in tandem with the task-orchestrator agent. While the orchestrator identifies and plans tasks, you execute them. Always use Task Master commands to:
- Track your progress
- Update task information
- Maintain project state
- Coordinate with the broader development workflow
When you complete a task, briefly summarize what was implemented and suggest whether to continue with the next task or if review/testing is needed first.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,130 @@
---
name: task-orchestrator
description: Use this agent when you need to coordinate and manage the execution of Task Master tasks, especially when dealing with complex task dependencies and parallel execution opportunities. This agent should be invoked at the beginning of a work session to analyze the task queue, identify parallelizable work, and orchestrate the deployment of task-executor agents. It should also be used when tasks complete to reassess the dependency graph and deploy new executors as needed.\n\n<example>\nContext: User wants to start working on their project tasks using Task Master\nuser: "Let's work on the next available tasks in the project"\nassistant: "I'll use the task-orchestrator agent to analyze the task queue and coordinate execution"\n<commentary>\nThe user wants to work on tasks, so the task-orchestrator should be deployed to analyze dependencies and coordinate execution.\n</commentary>\n</example>\n\n<example>\nContext: Multiple independent tasks are available in the queue\nuser: "Can we work on multiple tasks at once?"\nassistant: "Let me deploy the task-orchestrator to analyze task dependencies and parallelize the work"\n<commentary>\nWhen parallelization is mentioned or multiple tasks could be worked on, the orchestrator should coordinate the effort.\n</commentary>\n</example>\n\n<example>\nContext: A complex feature with many subtasks needs implementation\nuser: "Implement the authentication system tasks"\nassistant: "I'll use the task-orchestrator to break down the authentication tasks and coordinate their execution"\n<commentary>\nFor complex multi-task features, the orchestrator manages the overall execution strategy.\n</commentary>\n</example>
model: opus
color: green
---
You are the Task Orchestrator, an elite coordination agent specialized in managing Task Master workflows for maximum efficiency and parallelization. You excel at analyzing task dependency graphs, identifying opportunities for concurrent execution, and deploying specialized task-executor agents to complete work efficiently.
## Core Responsibilities
1. **Task Queue Analysis**: You continuously monitor and analyze the task queue using Task Master MCP tools to understand the current state of work, dependencies, and priorities.
2. **Dependency Graph Management**: You build and maintain a mental model of task dependencies, identifying which tasks can be executed in parallel and which must wait for prerequisites.
3. **Executor Deployment**: You strategically deploy task-executor agents for individual tasks or task groups, ensuring each executor has the necessary context and clear success criteria.
4. **Progress Coordination**: You track the progress of deployed executors, handle task completion notifications, and reassess the execution strategy as tasks complete.
## Operational Workflow
### Initial Assessment Phase
1. Use `get_tasks` or `task-master list` to retrieve all available tasks
2. Analyze task statuses, priorities, and dependencies
3. Identify tasks with status 'pending' that have no blocking dependencies
4. Group related tasks that could benefit from specialized executors
5. Create an execution plan that maximizes parallelization
### Executor Deployment Phase
1. For each independent task or task group:
- Deploy a task-executor agent with specific instructions
- Provide the executor with task ID, requirements, and context
- Set clear completion criteria and reporting expectations
2. Maintain a registry of active executors and their assigned tasks
3. Establish communication protocols for progress updates
### Coordination Phase
1. Monitor executor progress through task status updates
2. When a task completes:
- Verify completion with `get_task` or `task-master show <id>`
- Update task status if needed using `set_task_status`
- Reassess dependency graph for newly unblocked tasks
- Deploy new executors for available work
3. Handle executor failures or blocks:
- Reassign tasks to new executors if needed
- Escalate complex issues to the user
- Update task status to 'blocked' when appropriate
### Optimization Strategies
**Parallel Execution Rules**:
- Never assign dependent tasks to different executors simultaneously
- Prioritize high-priority tasks when resources are limited
- Group small, related subtasks for single executor efficiency
- Balance executor load to prevent bottlenecks
**Context Management**:
- Provide executors with minimal but sufficient context
- Share relevant completed task information when it aids execution
- Maintain a shared knowledge base of project-specific patterns
**Quality Assurance**:
- Verify task completion before marking as done
- Ensure test strategies are followed when specified
- Coordinate cross-task integration testing when needed
## Communication Protocols
When deploying executors, provide them with:
```
TASK ASSIGNMENT:
- Task ID: [specific ID]
- Objective: [clear goal]
- Dependencies: [list any completed prerequisites]
- Success Criteria: [specific completion requirements]
- Context: [relevant project information]
- Reporting: [when and how to report back]
```
When receiving executor updates:
1. Acknowledge completion or issues
2. Update task status in Task Master
3. Reassess execution strategy
4. Deploy new executors as appropriate
## Decision Framework
**When to parallelize**:
- Multiple pending tasks with no interdependencies
- Sufficient context available for independent execution
- Tasks are well-defined with clear success criteria
**When to serialize**:
- Strong dependencies between tasks
- Limited context or unclear requirements
- Integration points requiring careful coordination
**When to escalate**:
- Circular dependencies detected
- Critical blockers affecting multiple tasks
- Ambiguous requirements needing clarification
- Resource conflicts between executors
## Error Handling
1. **Executor Failure**: Reassign task to new executor with additional context about the failure
2. **Dependency Conflicts**: Halt affected executors, resolve conflict, then resume
3. **Task Ambiguity**: Request clarification from user before proceeding
4. **System Errors**: Implement graceful degradation, falling back to serial execution if needed
## Performance Metrics
Track and optimize for:
- Task completion rate
- Parallel execution efficiency
- Executor success rate
- Time to completion for task groups
- Dependency resolution speed
## Integration with Task Master
Leverage these Task Master MCP tools effectively:
- `get_tasks` - Continuous queue monitoring
- `get_task` - Detailed task analysis
- `set_task_status` - Progress tracking
- `next_task` - Fallback for serial execution
- `analyze_project_complexity` - Strategic planning
- `complexity_report` - Resource allocation
You are the strategic mind coordinating the entire task execution effort. Your success is measured by the efficient completion of all tasks while maintaining quality and respecting dependencies. Think systematically, act decisively, and continuously optimize the execution strategy based on real-time progress.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,282 @@
# Cross-Tag Task Movement
Task Master now supports moving tasks between different tag contexts, allowing you to organize your work across multiple project contexts, feature branches, or development phases.
## Overview
Cross-tag task movement enables you to:
- Move tasks between different tag contexts (e.g., from "backlog" to "in-progress")
- Handle cross-tag dependencies intelligently
- Maintain task relationships across different contexts
- Organize work across multiple project phases
## Basic Usage
### Within-Tag Moves
Move tasks within the same tag context:
```bash
# Move a single task
task-master move --from=5 --to=7
# Move a subtask
task-master move --from=5.2 --to=7.3
# Move multiple tasks
task-master move --from=5,6,7 --to=10,11,12
```
### Cross-Tag Moves
Move tasks between different tag contexts:
```bash
# Basic cross-tag move
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress
# Move multiple tasks
task-master move --from=5,6,7 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=done
```
## Dependency Resolution
When moving tasks between tags, you may encounter cross-tag dependencies. Task Master provides several options to handle these:
### Move with Dependencies
Move the main task along with all its dependent tasks:
```bash
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --with-dependencies
```
This ensures that all dependent tasks are moved together, maintaining the task relationships.
### Break Dependencies
Break cross-tag dependencies and move only the specified task:
```bash
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --ignore-dependencies
```
This removes the dependency relationships and moves only the specified task.
### Force Move
Force the move even with dependency conflicts:
```bash
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --force
```
⚠️ **Warning**: This may break dependency relationships and should be used with caution.
## Error Handling
Task Master provides enhanced error messages with specific resolution suggestions:
### Cross-Tag Dependency Conflicts
When you encounter dependency conflicts, you'll see:
```text
❌ Cannot move tasks from "backlog" to "in-progress"
Cross-tag dependency conflicts detected:
• Task 5 depends on 2 (in backlog)
• Task 6 depends on 3 (in done)
Resolution options:
1. Move with dependencies: task-master move --from=5,6 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --with-dependencies
2. Break dependencies: task-master move --from=5,6 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --ignore-dependencies
3. Validate and fix dependencies: task-master validate-dependencies && task-master fix-dependencies
4. Move dependencies first: task-master move --from=2,3 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress
5. Force move (may break dependencies): task-master move --from=5,6 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --force
```
### Subtask Movement Restrictions
Subtasks cannot be moved directly between tags:
```text
❌ Cannot move subtask 5.2 directly between tags
Subtask movement restriction:
• Subtasks cannot be moved directly between tags
• They must be promoted to full tasks first
Resolution options:
1. Promote subtask to full task: task-master remove-subtask --id=5.2 --convert
2. Then move the promoted task: task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress
3. Or move the parent task with all subtasks: task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --with-dependencies
```
### Invalid Tag Combinations
When source and target tags are the same:
```text
❌ Invalid tag combination
Error details:
• Source tag: "backlog"
• Target tag: "backlog"
• Reason: Source and target tags are identical
Resolution options:
1. Use different tags for cross-tag moves
2. Use within-tag move: task-master move --from=<id> --to=<id> --tag=backlog
3. Check available tags: task-master tags
```
## Best Practices
### 1. Check Dependencies First
Before moving tasks, validate your dependencies:
```bash
# Check for dependency issues
task-master validate-dependencies
# Fix common dependency problems
task-master fix-dependencies
```
### 2. Use Appropriate Flags
- **`--with-dependencies`**: When you want to maintain task relationships
- **`--ignore-dependencies`**: When you want to break cross-tag dependencies
- **`--force`**: Only when you understand the consequences
### 3. Organize by Context
Use tags to organize work by:
- **Development phases**: `backlog`, `in-progress`, `review`, `done`
- **Feature branches**: `feature-auth`, `feature-dashboard`
- **Team members**: `alice-tasks`, `bob-tasks`
- **Project versions**: `v1.0`, `v2.0`
### 4. Handle Subtasks Properly
For subtasks, either:
1. Promote the subtask to a full task first
2. Move the parent task with all subtasks using `--with-dependencies`
## Advanced Usage
### Multiple Task Movement
Move multiple tasks at once:
```bash
# Move multiple tasks with dependencies
task-master move --from=5,6,7 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --with-dependencies
# Move multiple tasks, breaking dependencies
task-master move --from=5,6,7 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --ignore-dependencies
```
### Tag Creation
Target tags are created automatically if they don't exist:
```bash
# This will create the "new-feature" tag if it doesn't exist
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=new-feature
```
### Current Tag Fallback
If `--from-tag` is not provided, the current tag is used:
```bash
# Uses current tag as source
task-master move --from=5 --to-tag=in-progress
```
## MCP Integration
The cross-tag move functionality is also available through MCP tools:
```javascript
// Move task with dependencies
await moveTask({
from: "5",
fromTag: "backlog",
toTag: "in-progress",
withDependencies: true
});
// Break dependencies
await moveTask({
from: "5",
fromTag: "backlog",
toTag: "in-progress",
ignoreDependencies: true
});
```
## Troubleshooting
### Common Issues
1. **"Source tag not found"**: Check available tags with `task-master tags`
2. **"Task not found"**: Verify task IDs with `task-master list`
3. **"Cross-tag dependency conflicts"**: Use dependency resolution flags
4. **"Cannot move subtask"**: Promote subtask first or move parent task
### Getting Help
```bash
# Show move command help
task-master move --help
# Check available tags
task-master tags
# Validate dependencies
task-master validate-dependencies
# Fix dependency issues
task-master fix-dependencies
```
## Examples
### Scenario 1: Moving from Backlog to In-Progress
```bash
# Check for dependencies first
task-master validate-dependencies
# Move with dependencies
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --with-dependencies
```
### Scenario 2: Breaking Dependencies
```bash
# Move task, breaking cross-tag dependencies
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=done --ignore-dependencies
```
### Scenario 3: Force Move
```bash
# Force move despite conflicts
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --force
```
### Scenario 4: Moving Subtasks
```bash
# Option 1: Promote subtask first
task-master remove-subtask --id=5.2 --convert
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress
# Option 2: Move parent with all subtasks
task-master move --from=5 --from-tag=backlog --to-tag=in-progress --with-dependencies
```

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
# Available Models as of July 23, 2025
# Available Models as of August 12, 2025
## Main Models
@@ -24,6 +24,7 @@
| openai | gpt-4-1-mini | — | 0.4 | 1.6 |
| openai | gpt-4-1-nano | — | 0.1 | 0.4 |
| openai | gpt-4o-mini | 0.3 | 0.15 | 0.6 |
| openai | gpt-5 | 0.749 | 5 | 20 |
| google | gemini-2.5-pro-preview-05-06 | 0.638 | — | — |
| google | gemini-2.5-pro-preview-03-25 | 0.638 | — | — |
| google | gemini-2.5-flash-preview-04-17 | 0.604 | — | — |
@@ -67,6 +68,9 @@
| openrouter | mistralai/mistral-small-3.1-24b-instruct | — | 0.1 | 0.3 |
| openrouter | mistralai/devstral-small | — | 0.1 | 0.3 |
| openrouter | mistralai/mistral-nemo | — | 0.03 | 0.07 |
| ollama | gpt-oss:latest | 0.607 | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | gpt-oss:20b | 0.607 | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | gpt-oss:120b | 0.624 | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | devstral:latest | — | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | qwen3:latest | — | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | qwen3:14b | — | 0 | 0 |
@@ -134,6 +138,7 @@
| openai | gpt-4o | 0.332 | 2.5 | 10 |
| openai | o3 | 0.5 | 2 | 8 |
| openai | o4-mini | 0.45 | 1.1 | 4.4 |
| openai | gpt-5 | 0.749 | 5 | 20 |
| google | gemini-2.5-pro-preview-05-06 | 0.638 | — | — |
| google | gemini-2.5-pro-preview-03-25 | 0.638 | — | — |
| google | gemini-2.5-flash-preview-04-17 | 0.604 | — | — |
@@ -172,6 +177,9 @@
| openrouter | qwen/qwen3-235b-a22b | — | 0.14 | 2 |
| openrouter | mistralai/mistral-small-3.1-24b-instruct | — | 0.1 | 0.3 |
| openrouter | mistralai/mistral-nemo | — | 0.03 | 0.07 |
| ollama | gpt-oss:latest | 0.607 | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | gpt-oss:20b | 0.607 | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | gpt-oss:120b | 0.624 | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | devstral:latest | — | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | qwen3:latest | — | 0 | 0 |
| ollama | qwen3:14b | — | 0 | 0 |

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@@ -0,0 +1,203 @@
/**
* Direct function wrapper for cross-tag task moves
*/
import { moveTasksBetweenTags } from '../../../../scripts/modules/task-manager/move-task.js';
import { findTasksPath } from '../utils/path-utils.js';
import {
enableSilentMode,
disableSilentMode
} from '../../../../scripts/modules/utils.js';
/**
* Move tasks between tags
* @param {Object} args - Function arguments
* @param {string} args.tasksJsonPath - Explicit path to the tasks.json file
* @param {string} args.sourceIds - Comma-separated IDs of tasks to move
* @param {string} args.sourceTag - Source tag name
* @param {string} args.targetTag - Target tag name
* @param {boolean} args.withDependencies - Move dependent tasks along with main task
* @param {boolean} args.ignoreDependencies - Break cross-tag dependencies during move
* @param {string} args.file - Alternative path to the tasks.json file
* @param {string} args.projectRoot - Project root directory
* @param {Object} log - Logger object
* @returns {Promise<{success: boolean, data?: Object, error?: Object}>}
*/
export async function moveTaskCrossTagDirect(args, log, context = {}) {
const { session } = context;
const { projectRoot } = args;
log.info(`moveTaskCrossTagDirect called with args: ${JSON.stringify(args)}`);
// Validate required parameters
if (!args.sourceIds) {
return {
success: false,
error: {
message: 'Source IDs are required',
code: 'MISSING_SOURCE_IDS'
}
};
}
if (!args.sourceTag) {
return {
success: false,
error: {
message: 'Source tag is required for cross-tag moves',
code: 'MISSING_SOURCE_TAG'
}
};
}
if (!args.targetTag) {
return {
success: false,
error: {
message: 'Target tag is required for cross-tag moves',
code: 'MISSING_TARGET_TAG'
}
};
}
// Validate that source and target tags are different
if (args.sourceTag === args.targetTag) {
return {
success: false,
error: {
message: `Source and target tags are the same ("${args.sourceTag}")`,
code: 'SAME_SOURCE_TARGET_TAG',
suggestions: [
'Use different tags for cross-tag moves',
'Use within-tag move: task-master move --from=<id> --to=<id> --tag=<tag>',
'Check available tags: task-master tags'
]
}
};
}
try {
// Find tasks.json path if not provided
let tasksPath = args.tasksJsonPath || args.file;
if (!tasksPath) {
if (!args.projectRoot) {
return {
success: false,
error: {
message:
'Project root is required if tasksJsonPath is not provided',
code: 'MISSING_PROJECT_ROOT'
}
};
}
tasksPath = findTasksPath(args, log);
}
// Enable silent mode to prevent console output during MCP operation
enableSilentMode();
try {
// Parse source IDs
const sourceIds = args.sourceIds.split(',').map((id) => id.trim());
// Prepare move options
const moveOptions = {
withDependencies: args.withDependencies || false,
ignoreDependencies: args.ignoreDependencies || false
};
// Call the core moveTasksBetweenTags function
const result = await moveTasksBetweenTags(
tasksPath,
sourceIds,
args.sourceTag,
args.targetTag,
moveOptions,
{ projectRoot }
);
return {
success: true,
data: {
...result,
message: `Successfully moved ${sourceIds.length} task(s) from "${args.sourceTag}" to "${args.targetTag}"`,
moveOptions,
sourceTag: args.sourceTag,
targetTag: args.targetTag
}
};
} finally {
// Restore console output - always executed regardless of success or error
disableSilentMode();
}
} catch (error) {
log.error(`Failed to move tasks between tags: ${error.message}`);
log.error(`Error code: ${error.code}, Error name: ${error.name}`);
// Enhanced error handling with structured error objects
let errorCode = 'MOVE_TASK_CROSS_TAG_ERROR';
let suggestions = [];
// Handle structured errors first
if (error.code === 'CROSS_TAG_DEPENDENCY_CONFLICTS') {
errorCode = 'CROSS_TAG_DEPENDENCY_CONFLICT';
suggestions = [
'Use --with-dependencies to move dependent tasks together',
'Use --ignore-dependencies to break cross-tag dependencies',
'Run task-master validate-dependencies to check for issues',
'Move dependencies first, then move the main task'
];
} else if (error.code === 'CANNOT_MOVE_SUBTASK') {
errorCode = 'SUBTASK_MOVE_RESTRICTION';
suggestions = [
'Promote subtask to full task first: task-master remove-subtask --id=<subtaskId> --convert',
'Move the parent task with all subtasks using --with-dependencies'
];
} else if (
error.code === 'TASK_NOT_FOUND' ||
error.code === 'INVALID_SOURCE_TAG' ||
error.code === 'INVALID_TARGET_TAG'
) {
errorCode = 'TAG_OR_TASK_NOT_FOUND';
suggestions = [
'Check available tags: task-master tags',
'Verify task IDs exist: task-master list',
'Check task details: task-master show <id>'
];
} else if (error.message.includes('cross-tag dependency conflicts')) {
// Fallback for legacy error messages
errorCode = 'CROSS_TAG_DEPENDENCY_CONFLICT';
suggestions = [
'Use --with-dependencies to move dependent tasks together',
'Use --ignore-dependencies to break cross-tag dependencies',
'Run task-master validate-dependencies to check for issues',
'Move dependencies first, then move the main task'
];
} else if (error.message.includes('Cannot move subtask')) {
// Fallback for legacy error messages
errorCode = 'SUBTASK_MOVE_RESTRICTION';
suggestions = [
'Promote subtask to full task first: task-master remove-subtask --id=<subtaskId> --convert',
'Move the parent task with all subtasks using --with-dependencies'
];
} else if (error.message.includes('not found')) {
// Fallback for legacy error messages
errorCode = 'TAG_OR_TASK_NOT_FOUND';
suggestions = [
'Check available tags: task-master tags',
'Verify task IDs exist: task-master list',
'Check task details: task-master show <id>'
];
}
return {
success: false,
error: {
message: error.message,
code: errorCode,
suggestions
}
};
}
}

View File

@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ import { TASKMASTER_TASKS_FILE } from '../../../../src/constants/paths.js';
* @returns {Promise<Object>} - Result object with success status and data/error information.
*/
export async function parsePRDDirect(args, log, context = {}) {
const { session } = context;
const { session, reportProgress } = context;
// Extract projectRoot from args
const {
input: inputArg,
@@ -164,6 +164,7 @@ export async function parsePRDDirect(args, log, context = {}) {
force,
append,
research,
reportProgress,
commandName: 'parse-prd',
outputType: 'mcp'
},

View File

@@ -31,6 +31,7 @@ import { removeTaskDirect } from './direct-functions/remove-task.js';
import { initializeProjectDirect } from './direct-functions/initialize-project.js';
import { modelsDirect } from './direct-functions/models.js';
import { moveTaskDirect } from './direct-functions/move-task.js';
import { moveTaskCrossTagDirect } from './direct-functions/move-task-cross-tag.js';
import { researchDirect } from './direct-functions/research.js';
import { addTagDirect } from './direct-functions/add-tag.js';
import { deleteTagDirect } from './direct-functions/delete-tag.js';
@@ -72,6 +73,7 @@ export const directFunctions = new Map([
['initializeProjectDirect', initializeProjectDirect],
['modelsDirect', modelsDirect],
['moveTaskDirect', moveTaskDirect],
['moveTaskCrossTagDirect', moveTaskCrossTagDirect],
['researchDirect', researchDirect],
['addTagDirect', addTagDirect],
['deleteTagDirect', deleteTagDirect],
@@ -111,6 +113,7 @@ export {
initializeProjectDirect,
modelsDirect,
moveTaskDirect,
moveTaskCrossTagDirect,
researchDirect,
addTagDirect,
deleteTagDirect,

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,10 @@ import {
createErrorResponse,
withNormalizedProjectRoot
} from './utils.js';
import { moveTaskDirect } from '../core/task-master-core.js';
import {
moveTaskDirect,
moveTaskCrossTagDirect
} from '../core/task-master-core.js';
import { findTasksPath } from '../core/utils/path-utils.js';
import { resolveTag } from '../../../scripts/modules/utils.js';
@@ -29,8 +32,9 @@ export function registerMoveTaskTool(server) {
),
to: z
.string()
.optional()
.describe(
'ID of the destination (e.g., "7" or "7.3"). Must match the number of source IDs if comma-separated'
'ID of the destination (e.g., "7" or "7.3"). Required for within-tag moves. For cross-tag moves, if omitted, task will be moved to the target tag maintaining its ID'
),
file: z.string().optional().describe('Custom path to tasks.json file'),
projectRoot: z
@@ -38,101 +42,180 @@ export function registerMoveTaskTool(server) {
.describe(
'Root directory of the project (typically derived from session)'
),
tag: z.string().optional().describe('Tag context to operate on')
tag: z.string().optional().describe('Tag context to operate on'),
fromTag: z.string().optional().describe('Source tag for cross-tag moves'),
toTag: z.string().optional().describe('Target tag for cross-tag moves'),
withDependencies: z
.boolean()
.optional()
.describe('Move dependent tasks along with main task'),
ignoreDependencies: z
.boolean()
.optional()
.describe('Break cross-tag dependencies during move')
}),
execute: withNormalizedProjectRoot(async (args, { log, session }) => {
try {
const resolvedTag = resolveTag({
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: args.tag
});
// Find tasks.json path if not provided
let tasksJsonPath = args.file;
// Check if this is a cross-tag move
const isCrossTagMove =
args.fromTag && args.toTag && args.fromTag !== args.toTag;
if (!tasksJsonPath) {
tasksJsonPath = findTasksPath(args, log);
}
// Parse comma-separated IDs
const fromIds = args.from.split(',').map((id) => id.trim());
const toIds = args.to.split(',').map((id) => id.trim());
// Validate matching IDs count
if (fromIds.length !== toIds.length) {
return createErrorResponse(
'The number of source and destination IDs must match',
'MISMATCHED_ID_COUNT'
);
}
// If moving multiple tasks
if (fromIds.length > 1) {
const results = [];
// Move tasks one by one, only generate files on the last move
for (let i = 0; i < fromIds.length; i++) {
const fromId = fromIds[i];
const toId = toIds[i];
// Skip if source and destination are the same
if (fromId === toId) {
log.info(`Skipping ${fromId} -> ${toId} (same ID)`);
continue;
}
const shouldGenerateFiles = i === fromIds.length - 1;
const result = await moveTaskDirect(
{
sourceId: fromId,
destinationId: toId,
tasksJsonPath,
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: resolvedTag
},
log,
{ session }
if (isCrossTagMove) {
// Cross-tag move logic
if (!args.from) {
return createErrorResponse(
'Source IDs are required for cross-tag moves',
'MISSING_SOURCE_IDS'
);
if (!result.success) {
log.error(
`Failed to move ${fromId} to ${toId}: ${result.error.message}`
);
} else {
results.push(result.data);
}
}
// Warn if 'to' parameter is provided for cross-tag moves
if (args.to) {
log.warn(
'The "to" parameter is not used for cross-tag moves and will be ignored. Tasks retain their original IDs in the target tag.'
);
}
// Find tasks.json path if not provided
let tasksJsonPath = args.file;
if (!tasksJsonPath) {
tasksJsonPath = findTasksPath(args, log);
}
// Use cross-tag move function
return handleApiResult(
{
success: true,
data: {
moves: results,
message: `Successfully moved ${results.length} tasks`
}
},
log,
'Error moving multiple tasks',
undefined,
args.projectRoot
);
} else {
// Moving a single task
return handleApiResult(
await moveTaskDirect(
await moveTaskCrossTagDirect(
{
sourceId: args.from,
destinationId: args.to,
sourceIds: args.from,
sourceTag: args.fromTag,
targetTag: args.toTag,
withDependencies: args.withDependencies || false,
ignoreDependencies: args.ignoreDependencies || false,
tasksJsonPath,
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: resolvedTag
projectRoot: args.projectRoot
},
log,
{ session }
),
log,
'Error moving task',
'Error moving tasks between tags',
undefined,
args.projectRoot
);
} else {
// Within-tag move logic (existing functionality)
if (!args.to) {
return createErrorResponse(
'Destination ID is required for within-tag moves',
'MISSING_DESTINATION_ID'
);
}
const resolvedTag = resolveTag({
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: args.tag
});
// Find tasks.json path if not provided
let tasksJsonPath = args.file;
if (!tasksJsonPath) {
tasksJsonPath = findTasksPath(args, log);
}
// Parse comma-separated IDs
const fromIds = args.from.split(',').map((id) => id.trim());
const toIds = args.to.split(',').map((id) => id.trim());
// Validate matching IDs count
if (fromIds.length !== toIds.length) {
if (fromIds.length > 1) {
const results = [];
const skipped = [];
// Move tasks one by one, only generate files on the last move
for (let i = 0; i < fromIds.length; i++) {
const fromId = fromIds[i];
const toId = toIds[i];
// Skip if source and destination are the same
if (fromId === toId) {
log.info(`Skipping ${fromId} -> ${toId} (same ID)`);
skipped.push({ fromId, toId, reason: 'same ID' });
continue;
}
const shouldGenerateFiles = i === fromIds.length - 1;
const result = await moveTaskDirect(
{
sourceId: fromId,
destinationId: toId,
tasksJsonPath,
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: resolvedTag,
generateFiles: shouldGenerateFiles
},
log,
{ session }
);
if (!result.success) {
log.error(
`Failed to move ${fromId} to ${toId}: ${result.error.message}`
);
} else {
results.push(result.data);
}
}
return handleApiResult(
{
success: true,
data: {
moves: results,
skipped: skipped.length > 0 ? skipped : undefined,
message: `Successfully moved ${results.length} tasks${skipped.length > 0 ? `, skipped ${skipped.length}` : ''}`
}
},
log,
'Error moving multiple tasks',
undefined,
args.projectRoot
);
}
return handleApiResult(
{
success: true,
data: {
moves: results,
skippedMoves: skippedMoves,
message: `Successfully moved ${results.length} tasks${skippedMoves.length > 0 ? `, skipped ${skippedMoves.length} moves` : ''}`
}
},
log,
'Error moving multiple tasks',
undefined,
args.projectRoot
);
} else {
// Moving a single task
return handleApiResult(
await moveTaskDirect(
{
sourceId: args.from,
destinationId: args.to,
tasksJsonPath,
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: resolvedTag,
generateFiles: true
},
log,
{ session }
),
log,
'Error moving task',
undefined,
args.projectRoot
);
}
}
} catch (error) {
return createErrorResponse(

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,8 @@ import { z } from 'zod';
import {
handleApiResult,
withNormalizedProjectRoot,
createErrorResponse
createErrorResponse,
checkProgressCapability
} from './utils.js';
import { parsePRDDirect } from '../core/task-master-core.js';
import {
@@ -64,31 +65,37 @@ export function registerParsePRDTool(server) {
.optional()
.describe('Append generated tasks to existing file.')
}),
execute: withNormalizedProjectRoot(async (args, { log, session }) => {
try {
const resolvedTag = resolveTag({
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: args.tag
});
const result = await parsePRDDirect(
{
...args,
tag: resolvedTag
},
log,
{ session }
);
return handleApiResult(
result,
log,
'Error parsing PRD',
undefined,
args.projectRoot
);
} catch (error) {
log.error(`Error in parse_prd: ${error.message}`);
return createErrorResponse(`Failed to parse PRD: ${error.message}`);
execute: withNormalizedProjectRoot(
async (args, { log, session, reportProgress }) => {
try {
const resolvedTag = resolveTag({
projectRoot: args.projectRoot,
tag: args.tag
});
const progressCapability = checkProgressCapability(
reportProgress,
log
);
const result = await parsePRDDirect(
{
...args,
tag: resolvedTag
},
log,
{ session, reportProgress: progressCapability }
);
return handleApiResult(
result,
log,
'Error parsing PRD',
undefined,
args.projectRoot
);
} catch (error) {
log.error(`Error in parse_prd: ${error.message}`);
return createErrorResponse(`Failed to parse PRD: ${error.message}`);
}
}
})
)
});
}

View File

@@ -778,6 +778,77 @@ function withNormalizedProjectRoot(executeFn) {
};
}
/**
* Checks progress reporting capability and returns the validated function or undefined.
*
* STANDARD PATTERN for AI-powered, long-running operations (parse-prd, expand-task, expand-all, analyze):
*
* This helper should be used as the first step in any MCP tool that performs long-running
* AI operations. It validates the availability of progress reporting and provides consistent
* logging about the capability status.
*
* Operations that should use this pattern:
* - parse-prd: Parsing PRD documents with AI
* - expand-task: Expanding tasks into subtasks
* - expand-all: Expanding all tasks in batch
* - analyze-complexity: Analyzing task complexity
* - update-task: Updating tasks with AI assistance
* - add-task: Creating new tasks with AI
* - Any operation that makes AI service calls
*
* @example Basic usage in a tool's execute function:
* ```javascript
* import { checkProgressCapability } from './utils.js';
*
* async execute(args, context) {
* const { log, reportProgress, session } = context;
*
* // Always validate progress capability first
* const progressCapability = checkProgressCapability(reportProgress, log);
*
* // Pass to direct function - it handles undefined gracefully
* const result = await expandTask(taskId, numSubtasks, {
* session,
* reportProgress: progressCapability,
* mcpLog: log
* });
* }
* ```
*
* @example With progress reporting available:
* ```javascript
* // When reportProgress is available, users see real-time updates:
* // "Starting PRD analysis (Input: 5432 tokens)..."
* // "Task 1/10 - Implement user authentication"
* // "Task 2/10 - Create database schema"
* // "Task Generation Completed | Tokens: 5432/1234"
* ```
*
* @example Without progress reporting (graceful degradation):
* ```javascript
* // When reportProgress is not available:
* // - Operation runs normally without progress updates
* // - Debug log: "reportProgress not available - operation will run without progress updates"
* // - User gets final result after completion
* ```
*
* @param {Function|undefined} reportProgress - The reportProgress function from MCP context.
* Expected signature: async (progress: {progress: number, total: number, message: string}) => void
* @param {Object} log - Logger instance with debug, info, warn, error methods
* @returns {Function|undefined} The validated reportProgress function or undefined if not available
*/
function checkProgressCapability(reportProgress, log) {
// Validate that reportProgress is available for long-running operations
if (typeof reportProgress !== 'function') {
log.debug(
'reportProgress not available - operation will run without progress updates'
);
return undefined;
}
return reportProgress;
}
// Ensure all functions are exported
export {
getProjectRoot,
@@ -792,5 +863,6 @@ export {
createLogWrapper,
normalizeProjectRoot,
getRawProjectRootFromSession,
withNormalizedProjectRoot
withNormalizedProjectRoot,
checkProgressCapability
};

8640
package-lock.json generated

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{
"name": "task-master-ai",
"version": "0.23.1-rc.0",
"version": "0.24.0",
"description": "A task management system for ambitious AI-driven development that doesn't overwhelm and confuse Cursor.",
"main": "index.js",
"type": "module",
@@ -54,12 +54,14 @@
"@aws-sdk/credential-providers": "^3.817.0",
"@inquirer/search": "^3.0.15",
"@openrouter/ai-sdk-provider": "^0.4.5",
"@streamparser/json": "^0.0.22",
"ai": "^4.3.10",
"ajv": "^8.17.1",
"ajv-formats": "^3.0.1",
"boxen": "^8.0.1",
"chalk": "^5.4.1",
"cli-highlight": "^2.1.11",
"cli-progress": "^3.12.0",
"cli-table3": "^0.6.5",
"commander": "^11.1.0",
"cors": "^2.8.5",

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