Files
spec-kit/presets/PUBLISHING.md
Manfred Riem abf4aebdb3 feat(presets): pluggable preset system with template/command overrides, catalog, and resolver
- Rename 'template packs' to 'presets' to avoid naming collision with core templates
- PresetManifest, PresetRegistry, PresetManager, PresetCatalog, PresetResolver in presets.py
- Extract CommandRegistrar to agents.py as shared infrastructure
- CLI: specify preset list/add/remove/search/resolve/info
- CLI: specify preset catalog list/add/remove
- --preset option on specify init
- Priority-based preset stacking (--priority, lower = higher precedence)
- Command overrides registered into all detected agent directories (17+ agents)
- Extension command safety: skip registration if target extension not installed
- Multi-catalog support: env var, project config, user config, built-in defaults
- resolve_template() / Resolve-Template in bash/PowerShell scripts
- Self-test preset: overrides all 6 core templates + 1 command
- Scaffold with 4 examples: core/extension template and command overrides
- Preset catalog (catalog.json, catalog.community.json)
- Documentation: README.md, ARCHITECTURE.md, PUBLISHING.md
- 110 preset tests, 253 total tests passing
2026-03-10 14:17:44 -05:00

8.2 KiB

Preset Publishing Guide

This guide explains how to publish your preset to the Spec Kit preset catalog, making it discoverable by specify preset search.

Table of Contents

  1. Prerequisites
  2. Prepare Your Preset
  3. Submit to Catalog
  4. Verification Process
  5. Release Workflow
  6. Best Practices

Prerequisites

Before publishing a preset, ensure you have:

  1. Valid Preset: A working preset with a valid preset.yml manifest
  2. Git Repository: Preset hosted on GitHub (or other public git hosting)
  3. Documentation: README.md with description and usage instructions
  4. License: Open source license file (MIT, Apache 2.0, etc.)
  5. Versioning: Semantic versioning (e.g., 1.0.0)
  6. Testing: Preset tested on real projects with specify preset add --dev

Prepare Your Preset

1. Preset Structure

Ensure your preset follows the standard structure:

your-preset/
├── preset.yml                 # Required: Preset manifest
├── README.md                  # Required: Documentation
├── LICENSE                    # Required: License file
├── CHANGELOG.md               # Recommended: Version history
│
├── templates/                 # Template overrides
│   ├── spec-template.md
│   ├── plan-template.md
│   └── ...
│
└── commands/                  # Command overrides (optional)
    └── speckit.specify.md

Start from the scaffold if you're creating a new preset.

2. preset.yml Validation

Verify your manifest is valid:

schema_version: "1.0"

preset:
  id: "your-preset"               # Unique lowercase-hyphenated ID
  name: "Your Preset Name"        # Human-readable name
  version: "1.0.0"                # Semantic version
  description: "Brief description (one sentence)"
  author: "Your Name or Organization"
  repository: "https://github.com/your-org/spec-kit-preset-your-preset"
  license: "MIT"

requires:
  speckit_version: ">=0.1.0"      # Required spec-kit version

provides:
  templates:
    - type: "template"
      name: "spec-template"
      file: "templates/spec-template.md"
      description: "Custom spec template"
      replaces: "spec-template"

tags:                              # 2-5 relevant tags
  - "category"
  - "workflow"

Validation Checklist:

  • id is lowercase with hyphens only (no underscores, spaces, or special characters)
  • version follows semantic versioning (X.Y.Z)
  • description is concise (under 200 characters)
  • repository URL is valid and public
  • All template and command files exist in the preset directory
  • Template names are lowercase with hyphens only
  • Command names use dot notation (e.g. speckit.specify)
  • Tags are lowercase and descriptive

3. Test Locally

# Install from local directory
specify preset add --dev /path/to/your-preset

# Verify templates resolve from your preset
specify preset resolve spec-template

# Verify preset info
specify preset info your-preset

# List installed presets
specify preset list

# Remove when done testing
specify preset remove your-preset

If your preset includes command overrides, verify they appear in the agent directories:

# Check Claude commands (if using Claude)
ls .claude/commands/speckit.*.md

# Check Copilot commands (if using Copilot)
ls .github/agents/speckit.*.agent.md

# Check Gemini commands (if using Gemini)
ls .gemini/commands/speckit.*.toml

4. Create GitHub Release

Create a GitHub release for your preset version:

# Tag the release
git tag v1.0.0
git push origin v1.0.0

The release archive URL will be:

https://github.com/your-org/spec-kit-preset-your-preset/archive/refs/tags/v1.0.0.zip

5. Test Installation from Archive

specify preset add --from https://github.com/your-org/spec-kit-preset-your-preset/archive/refs/tags/v1.0.0.zip

Submit to Catalog

Understanding the Catalogs

Spec Kit uses a dual-catalog system:

  • catalog.json — Official, verified presets (install allowed by default)
  • catalog.community.json — Community-contributed presets (discovery only by default)

All community presets should be submitted to catalog.community.json.

1. Fork the spec-kit Repository

git clone https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/spec-kit.git
cd spec-kit

2. Add Preset to Community Catalog

Edit presets/catalog.community.json and add your preset.

⚠️ Entries must be sorted alphabetically by preset ID. Insert your preset in the correct position within the "presets" object.

{
  "schema_version": "1.0",
  "updated_at": "2026-03-10T00:00:00Z",
  "catalog_url": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/spec-kit/main/presets/catalog.community.json",
  "presets": {
    "your-preset": {
      "name": "Your Preset Name",
      "description": "Brief description of what your preset provides",
      "author": "Your Name",
      "version": "1.0.0",
      "download_url": "https://github.com/your-org/spec-kit-preset-your-preset/archive/refs/tags/v1.0.0.zip",
      "repository": "https://github.com/your-org/spec-kit-preset-your-preset",
      "license": "MIT",
      "requires": {
        "speckit_version": ">=0.1.0"
      },
      "provides": {
        "templates": 3,
        "commands": 1
      },
      "tags": [
        "category",
        "workflow"
      ],
      "created_at": "2026-03-10T00:00:00Z",
      "updated_at": "2026-03-10T00:00:00Z"
    }
  }
}

3. Submit Pull Request

git checkout -b add-your-preset
git add presets/catalog.community.json
git commit -m "Add your-preset to community catalog

- Preset ID: your-preset
- Version: 1.0.0
- Author: Your Name
- Description: Brief description
"
git push origin add-your-preset

Pull Request Checklist:

## Preset Submission

**Preset Name**: Your Preset Name
**Preset ID**: your-preset
**Version**: 1.0.0
**Repository**: https://github.com/your-org/spec-kit-preset-your-preset

### Checklist
- [ ] Valid preset.yml manifest
- [ ] README.md with description and usage
- [ ] LICENSE file included
- [ ] GitHub release created
- [ ] Preset tested with `specify preset add --dev`
- [ ] Templates resolve correctly (`specify preset resolve`)
- [ ] Commands register to agent directories (if applicable)
- [ ] Commands match template sections (command + template are coherent)
- [ ] Added to presets/catalog.community.json

Verification Process

After submission, maintainers will review:

  1. Manifest validation — valid preset.yml, all files exist
  2. Template quality — templates are useful and well-structured
  3. Command coherence — commands reference sections that exist in templates
  4. Security — no malicious content, safe file operations
  5. Documentation — clear README explaining what the preset does

Once verified, verified: true is set and the preset appears in specify preset search.


Release Workflow

When releasing a new version:

  1. Update version in preset.yml
  2. Update CHANGELOG.md
  3. Tag and push: git tag v1.1.0 && git push origin v1.1.0
  4. Submit PR to update version and download_url in presets/catalog.community.json

Best Practices

Template Design

  • Keep sections clear — use headings and placeholder text the LLM can replace
  • Match commands to templates — if your preset overrides a command, make sure it references the sections in your template
  • Document customization points — use HTML comments to guide users on what to change

Naming

  • Preset IDs should be descriptive: healthcare-compliance, enterprise-safe, startup-lean
  • Avoid generic names: my-preset, custom, test

Stacking

  • Design presets to work well when stacked with others
  • Only override templates you need to change
  • Document which templates and commands your preset modifies

Command Overrides

  • Only override commands when the workflow needs to change, not just the output format
  • If you only need different template sections, a template override is sufficient
  • Test command overrides with multiple agents (Claude, Gemini, Copilot)