Spec-driven development on OpenSpec, with mechanical spec-as-source enforcement: a custom 'spec-as-source' OpenSpec schema adds file-ownership (targets) and test-verification ([@test]) metadata to every capability spec, three scripts (link check, ownership check, manifest build) keep code and specs from drifting apart, plus requirement-gathering, spec-writer, work-review, and a session-handoff skill with a proactive context-warning hook.
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Does it follow best practices?
Impact
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No eval scenarios have been run
Advisory
Suggest reviewing before use
Sync delta specs from a change to main specs.
This is an agent-driven operation - you will read delta specs and directly edit main specs to apply the changes. This allows intelligent merging (e.g., adding a scenario without copying the entire requirement).
Store selection: If the user names a store (a store is a standalone OpenSpec repo registered on this machine) or the work lives in one, run openspec store list --json to discover registered store ids, then pass --store <id> on the commands that read or write specs and changes (new change, status, instructions, list, show, validate, archive, doctor, context). Other commands do not take the flag. Hints printed by commands already carry the flag; keep it on follow-ups. Without a store, commands act on the nearest local openspec/ root.
Input: Optionally specify a change name. If omitted, check if it can be inferred from conversation context. If vague or ambiguous you MUST prompt for available changes.
Steps
If no change name provided, prompt for selection
Run openspec list --json to get available changes and ask the user to select one.
Show changes that have delta specs (under specs/ directory).
IMPORTANT: Do NOT guess or auto-select a change. Always let the user choose.
Resolve change context
Run:
openspec status --change "<name>" --jsonFind delta specs
Use artifactPaths.specs.existingOutputPaths from the status JSON as the list of delta spec files.
Each delta spec file contains sections like:
## ADDED Requirements - New requirements to add## MODIFIED Requirements - Changes to existing requirements## REMOVED Requirements - Requirements to remove## RENAMED Requirements - Requirements to rename (FROM:/TO: format)If no delta specs found, inform user and stop.
For each delta spec, apply changes to main specs
For each repo-local capability delta spec path returned by the CLI:
a. Read the delta spec to understand the intended changes
b. Read the main spec at openspec/specs/<capability>/spec.md (may not exist yet)
c. Apply changes intelligently:
ADDED Requirements:
MODIFIED Requirements:
REMOVED Requirements:
RENAMED Requirements:
d. Create new main spec if capability doesn't exist yet:
openspec/specs/<capability>/spec.mdShow summary
After applying all changes, summarize:
Delta Spec Format Reference
## ADDED Requirements
### Requirement: New Feature
The system SHALL do something new.
#### Scenario: Basic case
- **WHEN** user does X
- **THEN** system does Y
## MODIFIED Requirements
### Requirement: Existing Feature
#### Scenario: New scenario to add
- **WHEN** user does A
- **THEN** system does B
## REMOVED Requirements
### Requirement: Deprecated Feature
## RENAMED Requirements
- FROM: `### Requirement: Old Name`
- TO: `### Requirement: New Name`Key Principle: Intelligent Merging
Unlike programmatic merging, you can apply partial updates:
Output On Success
## Specs Synced: <change-name>
Updated main specs:
**<capability-1>**:
- Added requirement: "New Feature"
- Modified requirement: "Existing Feature" (added 1 scenario)
**<capability-2>**:
- Created new spec file
- Added requirement: "Another Feature"
Main specs are now updated. The change remains active - archive when implementation is complete.Guardrails
.tessl-plugin
skills
handoff
openspec-apply-change
openspec-archive-change
openspec-explore
openspec-propose
openspec-sync-specs
requirement-gathering
spec-as-source-setup
templates
openspec-schema
spec-as-source
templates
spec-ci-sync
spec-rebuild
spec-verify
spec-writer
work-review