Viewer (assets/topology-viewer.html): - inline a minified d3 subset (hierarchy/pack, zoom, selection, interpolateZoom, ease; ISC license) instead of loading from a CDN — the page is now fully self-contained and works on air-gapped networks - handle duplicate node ids (unique-suffix; edges bind to the first occurrence) and store parent references directly, fixing level-of-detail and selection corruption with messy generated data - share one reveal rule between drawing, edge culling, and hit-testing so edges no longer draw into collapsed containers - pre-bucket edges by kind and keep a per-node adjacency map; the hover/selection pass no longer scans every edge each frame - cancel in-flight fly-to animations when a new one starts; clamp fly-to zoom to the zoom extent; derive max zoom from the smallest leaf so deep estates stay reachable - render dead-end candidates (new deadEnds field) with a dashed outline and a sidebar badge - clicking a node during a flow walkthrough exits the walkthrough; search results clear on selection and Escape; surrogate-safe label truncation; clearer stats line; explicit empty-topology message Commands: - new /modernize-status: read-only progress report — artifact inventory with timestamps, staleness flags, secrets-hygiene checks, next step - map: deadEnds in the topology schema; datastore names must be logical identifiers with credentials stripped from URLs/DSNs - brief: read topology.json + .mmd files (not the interactive HTML); staleness check against inputs; effort unit aligned to person-months - transform: secret-safe characterization-test prompt; diff -y fallback when delta is missing; credential-safe diff selection - reimagine: target vision is everything after the first argument (was silently truncated to one word); masking rules in spec/scaffold/ handoff prompts - brief/transform/reimagine: human-approval gates phrased as explicit stop-and-wait instead of 'enter plan mode' - preflight: delta in the tool table; brief added to the verdict list - README: preflight/status in the workflow; legacy/ deny list also covers Write; plugin + marketplace descriptions updated
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| description | argument-hint |
|---|---|
| Multi-agent greenfield rebuild — extract specs from legacy, design AI-native, scaffold & validate with HITL | <system-dir> <target-vision> |
The first token of $ARGUMENTS is the system dir ($1); everything
after it is the target vision — it is usually multiple words, so do not
truncate it to one token. Below, <vision> means that full remainder.
Reimagine legacy/$1 as:
This is not a port — it's a rebuild from extracted intent. The legacy system becomes the specification source, not the structural template. This command orchestrates a multi-agent team with explicit human checkpoints.
Phase A — Specification mining (parallel agents)
Spawn concurrently and show the user that all three are running:
-
business-rules-extractor — "Extract every business rule from legacy/$1 into Given/When/Then form. Output to a structured list I can parse."
-
legacy-analyst — "Catalog every external interface of legacy/$1: inbound (screens, APIs, batch triggers, queues) and outbound (reports, files, downstream calls, DB writes). For each: name, direction, payload shape, frequency/SLA if discernible. Mask any credential embedded in endpoints or payload examples per your secret-handling rules."
-
legacy-analyst — "Identify the core domain entities in legacy/$1 and their relationships. Return as an entity list + Mermaid erDiagram."
Collect results. Write analysis/$1/AI_NATIVE_SPEC.md containing:
- Capabilities (what the system must do — derived from rules + interfaces)
- Domain Model (entities + erDiagram)
- Interface Contracts (each external interface as an OpenAPI fragment or AsyncAPI fragment)
- Non-functional requirements inferred from legacy (batch windows, volumes)
- Behavior Contract (the Given/When/Then rules — these are the acceptance tests)
Credential values are masked everywhere in the spec; connection details
appear as env-var placeholders (${DATABASE_URL}), never literals.
Phase B — HITL checkpoint #1
Present the spec summary. Ask the user one focused question: "Which of these capabilities are P0 for the reimagined system, and are there any we should deliberately drop?" Wait for the answer. Record it in the spec.
Phase C — Architecture (single agent, then critique)
Design the target architecture for "":
- Mermaid C4 Container diagram
- Service boundaries with rationale (which rules/entities live where)
- Technology choices with one-line justification each
- Data migration approach from legacy stores
Then spawn architecture-critic: "Review this proposed architecture for
against the spec in analysis/$1/AI_NATIVE_SPEC.md. Identify over-engineering,
missed requirements, scaling risks, and simpler alternatives." Incorporate
the critique. Write the result to analysis/$1/REIMAGINED_ARCHITECTURE.md.
Phase D — HITL checkpoint #2
Present the architecture and stop — scaffold nothing until the user explicitly approves (use plan mode if the session supports it).
Phase E — Parallel scaffolding
For each service in the approved architecture (cap at 3 to keep the run tractable; tell the user which you deferred), spawn a general-purpose agent in parallel:
"Scaffold the service per analysis/$1/REIMAGINED_ARCHITECTURE.md and AI_NATIVE_SPEC.md. Create: project skeleton, domain model, API stubs matching the interface contracts, and executable acceptance tests for every behavior-contract rule assigned to this service (mark unimplemented ones as expected-failure/skip with the rule ID). No credential literal from legacy code becomes a test fixture or config default — use fake same-shape values and env-var placeholders. Write to modernized/$1-reimagined//."
Show the agents' progress. When all complete, run the acceptance test suites and report: total tests, passing (scaffolded behavior), pending (rule IDs awaiting implementation).
Phase F — Knowledge graph handoff
Write modernized/$1-reimagined/CLAUDE.md — the persistent context file for
the new system, containing: architecture summary, service responsibilities,
where the spec lives, how to run tests, and the legacy→modern traceability
map. This file IS the knowledge graph that future agents and engineers will
load — and it gets committed: connection details and credentials appear
only as env-var names with a pointer to where they're provisioned, never
as values.
Report: services scaffolded, acceptance tests defined, % behaviors with a home, location of all artifacts.