From workmux-status
Dispatches tasks to new git worktrees using workmux by writing prompts and running workmux add for parallel agent implementation.
npx claudepluginhub raine/workmux --plugin workmux-statusThis skill is limited to using the following tools:
Launch one or more tasks in new git worktrees using workmux.
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Launch one or more tasks in new git worktrees using workmux.
Tasks: $ARGUMENTS
HARD RULE — NO EXCEPTIONS: Do NOT explore, read, grep, glob, or search the
codebase. Do NOT use the Task/Explore agent. Do NOT investigate the problem. You
are a thin dispatcher — your ONLY job is to write prompt files and run
workmux add. The worktree agent will do all the exploration and implementation.
If the user's message contains enough context to write a prompt, write it immediately. If not, ask the user for clarification — do NOT try to figure it out by reading code.
If tasks reference earlier conversation (e.g., "do option 2"), include all relevant context in each prompt you write.
If tasks reference a markdown file (e.g., a plan or spec), re-read the file to ensure you have the latest version before writing prompts.
For each task:
workmux add <worktree-name> -b -P <temp-file> to create the worktreeThe prompt file should:
If the user passes a skill reference (e.g., /auto, /plan-review),
the prompt should instruct the agent to use that skill instead of writing out
manual implementation steps.
Skills can have flags. If the user passes /auto --gemini, pass the
flag through to the skill invocation in the prompt.
Example prompt:
[Task description here]
Use the skill: /skill-name [flags if any] [task description]
Do NOT write detailed implementation steps when a skill is specified — the skill handles that.
--merge: When passed, add instruction to use /merge skill at the end to
commit, rebase, and merge the branch.
...
Then use the /merge skill to commit, rebase, and merge the branch.
Only instruct worktree agent to /merge if explicitly requested by user in
task.
--fork: When passed, add --fork to the workmux add command. This copies
the current conversation into the new worktree so the agent resumes with full
context of what was discussed. Useful when the current conversation has built up
context that the new worktree agent needs.
When --fork is used, prepend this to the prompt file so the forked agent does
not recursively dispatch more worktrees:
You are now running INSIDE a git worktree created by the /worktree skill. The
prior conversation context (including any /worktree dispatch instructions) is
ancestry only. Do NOT invoke the /worktree skill, do NOT run `workmux add`, and
do NOT create further worktrees. Your job is to implement the task below
directly in this worktree.
Write ALL temp files first, THEN run all workmux commands.
IMPORTANT: Run workmux add from the CURRENT directory. Do NOT cd to the
main repo or any other directory. The new worktree branches from whatever branch
is checked out in the current directory.
Step 1 - Write all prompt files (in parallel):
tmpfile=$(mktemp).md
cat > "$tmpfile" << 'EOF'
Implement feature X...
EOF
echo "$tmpfile" # Note the path for step 2
Step 2 - After ALL files are written, run workmux commands (in parallel):
workmux add feature-x -b -P /tmp/tmp.abc123.md
workmux add feature-y -b -P /tmp/tmp.def456.md
After creating the worktrees, inform the user which branches were created.
Remember: Your task is COMPLETE once worktrees are created. Do NOT implement anything yourself.