* feat(extensions): support .extensionignore to exclude files during install Add .extensionignore support so extension authors can exclude files and folders from being copied when users run 'specify extension add'. The file uses glob-style patterns (one per line), supports comments (#), blank lines, trailing-slash directory patterns, and relative path matching. The .extensionignore file itself is always excluded from the copy. - Add _load_extensionignore() to ExtensionManager - Integrate ignore function into shutil.copytree in install_from_directory - Document .extensionignore in EXTENSION-DEVELOPMENT-GUIDE.md - Add 6 tests covering all pattern matching scenarios - Bump version to 0.1.14 * fix(extensions): use pathspec for gitignore-compatible .extensionignore matching Replace fnmatch with pathspec.GitIgnoreSpec to get proper .gitignore semantics where * does not cross directory boundaries. This addresses review feedback on #1781. Changes: - Switch from fnmatch to pathspec>=0.12.0 (GitIgnoreSpec.from_lines) - Normalize backslashes in patterns for cross-platform compatibility - Distinguish directories from files for trailing-slash patterns - Update docs to accurately describe supported pattern semantics - Add edge-case tests: .., absolute paths, empty file, backslashes, * vs ** boundary behavior, and ! negation - Move changelog entry to [Unreleased] section
Spec Kit Extensions
Extension system for Spec Kit - add new functionality without bloating the core framework.
Extension Catalogs
Spec Kit provides two catalog files with different purposes:
Your Catalog (catalog.json)
- Purpose: Default upstream catalog of extensions used by the Spec Kit CLI
- Default State: Empty by design in the upstream project - you or your organization populate a fork/copy with extensions you trust
- Location (upstream):
extensions/catalog.jsonin the GitHub-hosted spec-kit repo - CLI Default: The
specify extensioncommands use the upstream catalog URL by default, unless overridden - Org Catalog: Point
SPECKIT_CATALOG_URLat your organization's fork or hosted catalog JSON to use it instead of the upstream default - Customization: Copy entries from the community catalog into your org catalog, or add your own extensions directly
Example override:
# Override the default upstream catalog with your organization's catalog
export SPECKIT_CATALOG_URL="https://your-org.com/spec-kit/catalog.json"
specify extension search # Now uses your organization's catalog instead of the upstream default
Community Reference Catalog (catalog.community.json)
- Purpose: Browse available community-contributed extensions
- Status: Active - contains extensions submitted by the community
- Location:
extensions/catalog.community.json - Usage: Reference catalog for discovering available extensions
- Submission: Open to community contributions via Pull Request
How It Works:
Making Extensions Available
You control which extensions your team can discover and install:
Option 1: Curated Catalog (Recommended for Organizations)
Populate your catalog.json with approved extensions:
- Discover extensions from various sources:
- Browse
catalog.community.jsonfor community extensions - Find private/internal extensions in your organization's repos
- Discover extensions from trusted third parties
- Browse
- Review extensions and choose which ones you want to make available
- Add those extension entries to your own
catalog.json - Team members can now discover and install them:
specify extension searchshows your curated catalogspecify extension add <name>installs from your catalog
Benefits: Full control over available extensions, team consistency, organizational approval workflow
Example: Copy an entry from catalog.community.json to your catalog.json, then your team can discover and install it by name.
Option 2: Direct URLs (For Ad-hoc Use)
Skip catalog curation - team members install directly using URLs:
specify extension add --from https://github.com/org/spec-kit-ext/archive/refs/tags/v1.0.0.zip
Benefits: Quick for one-off testing or private extensions
Tradeoff: Extensions installed this way won't appear in specify extension search for other team members unless you also add them to your catalog.json.
Available Community Extensions
The following community-contributed extensions are available in catalog.community.json:
| Extension | Purpose | URL |
|---|---|---|
| Azure DevOps Integration | Sync user stories and tasks to Azure DevOps work items using OAuth authentication | spec-kit-azure-devops |
| Cleanup Extension | Post-implementation quality gate that reviews changes, fixes small issues (scout rule), creates tasks for medium issues, and generates analysis for large issues | spec-kit-cleanup |
| Fleet Orchestrator | Orchestrate a full feature lifecycle with human-in-the-loop gates across all SpecKit phases | spec-kit-fleet |
| Jira Integration | Create Jira Epics, Stories, and Issues from spec-kit specifications and task breakdowns with configurable hierarchy and custom field support | spec-kit-jira |
| Ralph Loop | Autonomous implementation loop using AI agent CLI | spec-kit-ralph |
| Retrospective Extension | Post-implementation retrospective with spec adherence scoring, drift analysis, and human-gated spec updates | spec-kit-retrospective |
| Review Extension | Post-implementation comprehensive code review with specialized agents for code quality, comments, tests, error handling, type design, and simplification | spec-kit-review |
| Spec Sync | Detect and resolve drift between specs and implementation. AI-assisted resolution with human approval | spec-kit-sync |
| Understanding | Automated requirements quality analysis — 31 deterministic metrics against IEEE/ISO standards with experimental energy-based ambiguity detection | understanding |
| V-Model Extension Pack | Enforces V-Model paired generation of development specs and test specs with full traceability | spec-kit-v-model |
| Verify Extension | Post-implementation quality gate that validates implemented code against specification artifacts | spec-kit-verify |
Adding Your Extension
Submission Process
To add your extension to the community catalog:
- Prepare your extension following the Extension Development Guide
- Create a GitHub release for your extension
- Submit a Pull Request that:
- Adds your extension to
extensions/catalog.community.json - Updates this README with your extension in the Available Extensions table
- Adds your extension to
- Wait for review - maintainers will review and merge if criteria are met
See the Extension Publishing Guide for detailed step-by-step instructions.
Submission Checklist
Before submitting, ensure:
- ✅ Valid
extension.ymlmanifest - ✅ Complete README with installation and usage instructions
- ✅ LICENSE file included
- ✅ GitHub release created with semantic version (e.g., v1.0.0)
- ✅ Extension tested on a real project
- ✅ All commands working as documented
Installing Extensions
Once extensions are available (either in your catalog or via direct URL), install them:
# From your curated catalog (by name)
specify extension search # See what's in your catalog
specify extension add <extension-name> # Install by name
# Direct from URL (bypasses catalog)
specify extension add --from https://github.com/<org>/<repo>/archive/refs/tags/<version>.zip
# List installed extensions
specify extension list
For more information, see the Extension User Guide.