debug-cli

This skill provides a systematic workflow for debugging and verifying changes to the forge CLI application.

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Install skill "debug-cli" with this command: npx skills add antinomyhq/forge/antinomyhq-forge-debug-cli

CLI Debug Skill

This skill provides a systematic workflow for debugging and verifying changes to the forge CLI application.

Core Principles

  • Always get latest docs first: Run --help to see current commands and options

  • Use -p for testing: Test forge by giving it tasks with the -p flag

  • Never commit: This is for debugging only - don't commit changes

  • Clone conversations: When debugging conversation bugs, clone the source conversation before reproducing

Workflow

  1. Build the Application

Always build in debug mode after making changes:

cargo build

Never use cargo build --release for debugging - it's significantly slower and unnecessary for verification.

  1. Get Latest Documentation

Always start by checking the latest help to understand current commands and options:

Main help - do this first

./target/debug/forge --help

Command-specific help

./target/debug/forge [COMMAND] --help

Subcommand help

./target/debug/forge [COMMAND] [SUBCOMMAND] --help

  1. Test with -p Flag

Use the -p flag to give forge a task to complete without interactive mode:

Test with a simple prompt

./target/debug/forge -p "create a hello world rust program"

Test with specific functionality

./target/debug/forge -p "read the README.md file and summarize it"

Test with complex tasks

./target/debug/forge -p "analyze the code structure and suggest improvements"

  1. Debug with Conversation Dumps

When debugging prompts or conversation issues, use conversation dump to export conversations. The command automatically creates a timestamped file:

Dump conversation as JSON (creates: YYYY-MM-DD_HH-MM-SS-dump.json)

./target/debug/forge conversation dump <conversation-id>

Export as HTML for human-readable format (creates: YYYY-MM-DD_HH-MM-SS-dump.html)

./target/debug/forge conversation dump --html <conversation-id>

Use dumped JSON to reproduce issues

./target/debug/forge --conversation 2025-11-23_12-28-52-dump.json

  1. Clone Before Reproducing Bugs

Critical: When a user provides a conversation with a bug, always clone it first:

Clone the conversation

./target/debug/forge conversation clone <source-conversation-id>

This creates a new conversation ID - use that for testing

./target/debug/forge --conversation-id <new-cloned-id>

Keep cloning the source until the fix is verified

Never modify the original conversation

Why clone?

  • Preserves original bug evidence

  • Allows multiple reproduction attempts

  • Enables A/B testing of fixes

  • Keeps source conversation clean

Common Testing Patterns

Test New Features

Build and test new command

cargo build ./target/debug/forge --help # Verify new command appears ./target/debug/forge new-command --help # Check command docs ./target/debug/forge -p "test the new feature"

Reproduce Reported Bugs

1. Dump the conversation (creates timestamped JSON file)

./target/debug/forge conversation dump <bug-conversation-id>

2. Clone it for testing (preserves original)

./target/debug/forge conversation clone <bug-conversation-id>

3. Reproduce with the cloned conversation

./target/debug/forge --conversation-id <cloned-id> -p "reproduce the issue"

4. After fix, verify with new clone

./target/debug/forge conversation clone <bug-conversation-id> ./target/debug/forge --conversation-id <new-clone-id> -p "verify fix"

Test Edge Cases

Test with missing arguments

./target/debug/forge command

Test with invalid input

./target/debug/forge -p "invalid task with special chars: <>|&"

Test with boundary values

./target/debug/forge -p "create a file with a very long name..."

Debug Prompt Optimization

1. Dump conversation to analyze prompts (creates timestamped JSON)

./target/debug/forge conversation dump <id>

2. Review the conversation structure

cat 2025-11-23_12-28-52-dump.json | jq '.messages[] | {role, content}'

3. Export as HTML for easier reading

./target/debug/forge conversation dump --html <id>

4. Test modified prompts

./target/debug/forge -p "your optimized prompt here"

Integration with Development Workflow

After Code Changes

  • Build: cargo build

  • Docs: ./target/debug/forge --help (verify documentation)

  • Test: ./target/debug/forge -p "relevant task"

  • Verify: Check output matches expectations

Debugging a Bug Report

  • Clone: ./target/debug/forge conversation clone <source-id>

  • Build: cargo build (with potential fixes)

  • Test: ./target/debug/forge --conversation-id <cloned-id> -p "reproduce"

  • Iterate: Repeat until verified

  • Never commit during debugging - only after full verification

Quick Reference

Standard debug workflow

cargo build ./target/debug/forge --help # Always check docs first ./target/debug/forge -p "your test task"

Dump conversation (creates timestamped file)

./target/debug/forge conversation dump <id>

Output: 2025-11-23_12-28-52-dump.json

Export as HTML for review

./target/debug/forge conversation dump --html <id>

Output: 2025-11-23_12-28-52-dump.html

Use dumped conversation

./target/debug/forge --conversation 2025-11-23_12-28-52-dump.json

Clone and test bug

./target/debug/forge conversation clone <source-id> ./target/debug/forge --conversation-id <cloned-id> -p "reproduce bug"

Debug prompts with jq (use actual filename)

cat 2025-11-23_12-28-52-dump.json | jq '.messages[] | {role, content}'

Test with verbose output

./target/debug/forge --verbose -p "test task"

Tips

  • Always --help first: Get latest docs before testing

  • Use -p for testing: Don't test interactively, use prompts

  • Clone conversations: Never modify original bug conversations

  • Never commit: This is for debugging only

  • Dump creates files: dump automatically creates timestamped files (no > needed)

  • HTML exports: Use --html flag for human-readable conversation views

  • Use relative paths: Binary is at ./target/debug/forge from project root

  • Check exit codes: Use echo $? to verify exit codes

  • Watch for warnings: Build warnings often indicate issues

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