--- name: research-codebase description: Conduct comprehensive codebase research using parallel sub-agents to answer questions and document findings --- # Research Codebase You are tasked with conducting comprehensive research across the codebase to answer user questions by spawning parallel sub-agents and synthesizing their findings. ## Initial Setup When this command is invoked, respond with: ``` I'm ready to research the codebase. Please provide your research question or area of interest, and I'll analyze it thoroughly by exploring relevant components and connections. ``` Then wait for the user's research query. ## Process 1. **Evaluate if any available skill is relevant and a fit for the task**: - If so, respond with: ```I believe the [skill name] skill is well-suited to assist with this research. It provides expertise in [skill description]. I will leverage this skill throughout process to ensure we follow best practices and produce a high-quality research. ``` 2. **Read any directly mentioned files first:** - If the user mentions specific files (tickets, docs, JSON), read them FULLY first - **IMPORTANT**: Use the Read tool WITHOUT limit/offset parameters to read entire files - **CRITICAL**: Read these files yourself in the main context before spawning any sub-tasks - This ensures you have full context before decomposing the research 3. **Analyze and decompose the research question:** - Break down the user's query into composable research areas - Take time to ultrathink about the underlying patterns, connections, and architectural implications the user might be seeking - Identify specific components, patterns, or concepts to investigate - Create a research plan using TodoWrite to track all subtasks - Consider which directories, files, or architectural patterns are relevant 4. **Spawn parallel sub-agent tasks for comprehensive research:** - Create multiple Task agents to research different aspects concurrently The key is to use these agents intelligently: - Start with locator agents to find what exists - Then use analyzer agents on the most promising findings - Run multiple agents in parallel when they're searching for different things - Each agent knows its job - just tell it what you're looking for - Don't write detailed prompts about HOW to search - the agents already know 5. **Wait for all sub-agents to complete and synthesize findings:** - IMPORTANT: Wait for ALL sub-agent tasks to complete before proceeding - Compile all sub-agent results (both codebase and thoughts findings) - Prioritize live codebase findings as primary source of truth - Use thoughts/ findings as supplementary historical context - Connect findings across different components - Include specific file paths and line numbers for reference - Verify all thoughts/ paths are correct (e.g., thoughts/allison/ not thoughts/shared/ for personal files) - Highlight patterns, connections, and architectural decisions - Answer the user's specific questions with concrete evidence 6. **Gather metadata for the research document:** - generate all relevant metadata - Filename: `thoughts/shared/research/YYYY-MM-DD-ENG-XXXX-description.md` - Format: `YYYY-MM-DD-ENG-XXXX-description.md` where: - YYYY-MM-DD is today's date - ENG-XXXX is the ticket number (omit if no ticket) - description is a brief kebab-case description of the research topic - Examples: - With ticket: `2025-01-08-ENG-1478-parent-child-tracking.md` - Without ticket: `2025-01-08-authentication-flow.md` 7. **Generate research document:** - Use the metadata gathered in step 4 - Structure the document with YAML frontmatter followed by content: ```markdown --- date: [Current date and time with timezone in ISO format] researcher: [Researcher name] git_commit: [Current commit hash] branch: [Current branch name] repository: [Repository name] topic: "[User's Question/Topic]" tags: [research, codebase, relevant-component-names] status: complete last_updated: [Current date in YYYY-MM-DD format] last_updated_by: [Researcher name] --- # Research: [User's Question/Topic] **Date**: [Current date and time with timezone from step 4] **Researcher**: [Researcher name] **Git Commit**: [Current commit hash from step 4] **Branch**: [Current branch name from step 4] **Repository**: [Repository name] ## Research Question [Original user query] ## Summary [High-level findings answering the user's question] ## Detailed Findings ### [Component/Area 1] - Finding with reference ([file.ext:line](link)) - Connection to other components - Implementation details ### [Component/Area 2] ... ## Code References - `path/to/file.py:123` - Description of what's there - `another/file.ts:45-67` - Description of the code block ## Architecture Insights [Patterns, conventions, and design decisions discovered] ## Historical Context (from thoughts/) [Relevant insights from thoughts/ directory with references] - `thoughts/shared/something.md` - Historical decision about X - `thoughts/local/notes.md` - Past exploration of Y Note: Paths exclude "searchable/" even if found there ## Related Research [Links to other research documents in thoughts/shared/research/] ## Open Questions [Any areas that need further investigation] ``` 8. **Add GitHub permalinks (if applicable):** - Check if on main branch or if commit is pushed: `git branch --show-current` and `git status` - If on main/master or pushed, generate GitHub permalinks: - Get repo info: `gh repo view --json owner,name` - Create permalinks: `https://github.com/{owner}/{repo}/blob/{commit}/{file}#L{line}` - Replace local file references with permalinks in the document 9. **Sync and present findings:** - Present a concise summary of findings to the user - Include key file references for easy navigation - Ask if they have follow-up questions or need clarification 10. **Handle follow-up questions:** - If the user has follow-up questions, append to the same research document - Update the frontmatter fields `last_updated` and `last_updated_by` to reflect the update - Add `last_updated_note: "Added follow-up research for [brief description]"` to frontmatter - Add a new section: `## Follow-up Research [timestamp]` - Spawn new sub-agents as needed for additional investigation - Continue updating the document and syncing ## Important notes: - Always use parallel Task agents to maximize efficiency and minimize context usage - Always run fresh codebase research - never rely solely on existing research documents - The thoughts/ directory provides historical context to supplement live findings - Focus on finding concrete file paths and line numbers for developer reference - Research documents should be self-contained with all necessary context - Each sub-agent prompt should be specific and focused on read-only operations - Consider cross-component connections and architectural patterns - Include temporal context (when the research was conducted) - Link to GitHub when possible for permanent references - Keep the main agent focused on synthesis, not deep file reading - Encourage sub-agents to find examples and usage patterns, not just definitions - Explore all of thoughts/ directory, not just research subdirectory - **File reading**: Always read mentioned files FULLY (no limit/offset) before spawning sub-tasks - **Critical ordering**: Follow the numbered steps exactly - ALWAYS read mentioned files first before spawning sub-tasks (step 1) - ALWAYS wait for all sub-agents to complete before synthesizing (step 4) - ALWAYS gather metadata before writing the document (step 5 before step 6) - NEVER write the research document with placeholder values - **Path handling**: The thoughts/searchable/ directory contains hard links for searching - Always document paths by removing ONLY "searchable/" - preserve all other subdirectories - Examples of correct transformations: - `thoughts/searchable/allison/old_stuff/notes.md` → `thoughts/allison/old_stuff/notes.md` - `thoughts/searchable/shared/prs/123.md` → `thoughts/shared/prs/123.md` - `thoughts/searchable/global/shared/templates.md` → `thoughts/global/shared/templates.md` - NEVER change allison/ to shared/ or vice versa - preserve the exact directory structure - This ensures paths are correct for editing and navigation - **Frontmatter consistency**: - Always include frontmatter at the beginning of research documents - Keep frontmatter fields consistent across all research documents - Update frontmatter when adding follow-up research - Use snake_case for multi-word field names (e.g., `last_updated`, `git_commit`) - Tags should be relevant to the research topic and components studied - Format the research document for 80-character line width for readability