~cytrogen/gstack

ref: b2b380bfcc39107f9fdafc17e61bd74cc34fb537 gstack/retro/SKILL.md.tmpl -rw-r--r-- 36.2 KiB
b2b380bf — Garry Tan docs: update README and skill deep dives for all 31 skills (#656) 10 days ago
                                                                                
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---
name: retro
preamble-tier: 2
version: 2.0.0
description: |
  Weekly engineering retrospective. Analyzes commit history, work patterns,
  and code quality metrics with persistent history and trend tracking.
  Team-aware: breaks down per-person contributions with praise and growth areas.
  Use when asked to "weekly retro", "what did we ship", or "engineering retrospective".
  Proactively suggest at the end of a work week or sprint. (gstack)
allowed-tools:
  - Bash
  - Read
  - Write
  - Glob
  - AskUserQuestion
---

{{PREAMBLE}}

{{BASE_BRANCH_DETECT}}

# /retro — Weekly Engineering Retrospective

Generates a comprehensive engineering retrospective analyzing commit history, work patterns, and code quality metrics. Team-aware: identifies the user running the command, then analyzes every contributor with per-person praise and growth opportunities. Designed for a senior IC/CTO-level builder using Claude Code as a force multiplier.

## User-invocable
When the user types `/retro`, run this skill.

## Arguments
- `/retro` — default: last 7 days
- `/retro 24h` — last 24 hours
- `/retro 14d` — last 14 days
- `/retro 30d` — last 30 days
- `/retro compare` — compare current window vs prior same-length window
- `/retro compare 14d` — compare with explicit window
- `/retro global` — cross-project retro across all AI coding tools (7d default)
- `/retro global 14d` — cross-project retro with explicit window

## Instructions

Parse the argument to determine the time window. Default to 7 days if no argument given. All times should be reported in the user's **local timezone** (use the system default — do NOT set `TZ`).

**Midnight-aligned windows:** For day (`d`) and week (`w`) units, compute an absolute start date at local midnight, not a relative string. For example, if today is 2026-03-18 and the window is 7 days: the start date is 2026-03-11. Use `--since="2026-03-11T00:00:00"` for git log queries — the explicit `T00:00:00` suffix ensures git starts from midnight. Without it, git uses the current wall-clock time (e.g., `--since="2026-03-11"` at 11pm means 11pm, not midnight). For week units, multiply by 7 to get days (e.g., `2w` = 14 days back). For hour (`h`) units, use `--since="N hours ago"` since midnight alignment does not apply to sub-day windows.

**Argument validation:** If the argument doesn't match a number followed by `d`, `h`, or `w`, the word `compare` (optionally followed by a window), or the word `global` (optionally followed by a window), show this usage and stop:
```
Usage: /retro [window | compare | global]
  /retro              — last 7 days (default)
  /retro 24h          — last 24 hours
  /retro 14d          — last 14 days
  /retro 30d          — last 30 days
  /retro compare      — compare this period vs prior period
  /retro compare 14d  — compare with explicit window
  /retro global       — cross-project retro across all AI tools (7d default)
  /retro global 14d   — cross-project retro with explicit window
```

**If the first argument is `global`:** Skip the normal repo-scoped retro (Steps 1-14). Instead, follow the **Global Retrospective** flow at the end of this document. The optional second argument is the time window (default 7d). This mode does NOT require being inside a git repo.

### Step 1: Gather Raw Data

First, fetch origin and identify the current user:
```bash
git fetch origin <default> --quiet
# Identify who is running the retro
git config user.name
git config user.email
```

The name returned by `git config user.name` is **"you"** — the person reading this retro. All other authors are teammates. Use this to orient the narrative: "your" commits vs teammate contributions.

Run ALL of these git commands in parallel (they are independent):

```bash
# 1. All commits in window with timestamps, subject, hash, AUTHOR, files changed, insertions, deletions
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --format="%H|%aN|%ae|%ai|%s" --shortstat

# 2. Per-commit test vs total LOC breakdown with author
#    Each commit block starts with COMMIT:<hash>|<author>, followed by numstat lines.
#    Separate test files (matching test/|spec/|__tests__/) from production files.
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --format="COMMIT:%H|%aN" --numstat

# 3. Commit timestamps for session detection and hourly distribution (with author)
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --format="%at|%aN|%ai|%s" | sort -n

# 4. Files most frequently changed (hotspot analysis)
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --format="" --name-only | grep -v '^$' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn

# 5. PR/MR numbers from commit messages (GitHub #NNN, GitLab !NNN)
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --format="%s" | grep -oE '[#!][0-9]+' | sort -t'#' -k1 | uniq

# 6. Per-author file hotspots (who touches what)
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --format="AUTHOR:%aN" --name-only

# 7. Per-author commit counts (quick summary)
git shortlog origin/<default> --since="<window>" -sn --no-merges

# 8. Greptile triage history (if available)
cat ~/.gstack/greptile-history.md 2>/dev/null || true

# 9. TODOS.md backlog (if available)
cat TODOS.md 2>/dev/null || true

# 10. Test file count
find . -name '*.test.*' -o -name '*.spec.*' -o -name '*_test.*' -o -name '*_spec.*' 2>/dev/null | grep -v node_modules | wc -l

# 11. Regression test commits in window
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --oneline --grep="test(qa):" --grep="test(design):" --grep="test: coverage"

# 12. gstack skill usage telemetry (if available)
cat ~/.gstack/analytics/skill-usage.jsonl 2>/dev/null || true

# 12. Test files changed in window
git log origin/<default> --since="<window>" --format="" --name-only | grep -E '\.(test|spec)\.' | sort -u | wc -l
```

### Step 2: Compute Metrics

Calculate and present these metrics in a summary table:

| Metric | Value |
|--------|-------|
| Commits to main | N |
| Contributors | N |
| PRs merged | N |
| Total insertions | N |
| Total deletions | N |
| Net LOC added | N |
| Test LOC (insertions) | N |
| Test LOC ratio | N% |
| Version range | vX.Y.Z.W → vX.Y.Z.W |
| Active days | N |
| Detected sessions | N |
| Avg LOC/session-hour | N |
| Greptile signal | N% (Y catches, Z FPs) |
| Test Health | N total tests · M added this period · K regression tests |

Then show a **per-author leaderboard** immediately below:

```
Contributor         Commits   +/-          Top area
You (garry)              32   +2400/-300   browse/
alice                    12   +800/-150    app/services/
bob                       3   +120/-40     tests/
```

Sort by commits descending. The current user (from `git config user.name`) always appears first, labeled "You (name)".

**Greptile signal (if history exists):** Read `~/.gstack/greptile-history.md` (fetched in Step 1, command 8). Filter entries within the retro time window by date. Count entries by type: `fix`, `fp`, `already-fixed`. Compute signal ratio: `(fix + already-fixed) / (fix + already-fixed + fp)`. If no entries exist in the window or the file doesn't exist, skip the Greptile metric row. Skip unparseable lines silently.

**Backlog Health (if TODOS.md exists):** Read `TODOS.md` (fetched in Step 1, command 9). Compute:
- Total open TODOs (exclude items in `## Completed` section)
- P0/P1 count (critical/urgent items)
- P2 count (important items)
- Items completed this period (items in Completed section with dates within the retro window)
- Items added this period (cross-reference git log for commits that modified TODOS.md within the window)

Include in the metrics table:
```
| Backlog Health | N open (X P0/P1, Y P2) · Z completed this period |
```

If TODOS.md doesn't exist, skip the Backlog Health row.

**Skill Usage (if analytics exist):** Read `~/.gstack/analytics/skill-usage.jsonl` if it exists. Filter entries within the retro time window by `ts` field. Separate skill activations (no `event` field) from hook fires (`event: "hook_fire"`). Aggregate by skill name. Present as:

```
| Skill Usage | /ship(12) /qa(8) /review(5) · 3 safety hook fires |
```

If the JSONL file doesn't exist or has no entries in the window, skip the Skill Usage row.

**Eureka Moments (if logged):** Read `~/.gstack/analytics/eureka.jsonl` if it exists. Filter entries within the retro time window by `ts` field. For each eureka moment, show the skill that flagged it, the branch, and a one-line summary of the insight. Present as:

```
| Eureka Moments | 2 this period |
```

If moments exist, list them:
```
  EUREKA /office-hours (branch: garrytan/auth-rethink): "Session tokens don't need server storage — browser crypto API makes client-side JWT validation viable"
  EUREKA /plan-eng-review (branch: garrytan/cache-layer): "Redis isn't needed here — Bun's built-in LRU cache handles this workload"
```

If the JSONL file doesn't exist or has no entries in the window, skip the Eureka Moments row.

### Step 3: Commit Time Distribution

Show hourly histogram in local time using bar chart:

```
Hour  Commits  ████████████████
 00:    4      ████
 07:    5      █████
 ...
```

Identify and call out:
- Peak hours
- Dead zones
- Whether pattern is bimodal (morning/evening) or continuous
- Late-night coding clusters (after 10pm)

### Step 4: Work Session Detection

Detect sessions using **45-minute gap** threshold between consecutive commits. For each session report:
- Start/end time (Pacific)
- Number of commits
- Duration in minutes

Classify sessions:
- **Deep sessions** (50+ min)
- **Medium sessions** (20-50 min)
- **Micro sessions** (<20 min, typically single-commit fire-and-forget)

Calculate:
- Total active coding time (sum of session durations)
- Average session length
- LOC per hour of active time

### Step 5: Commit Type Breakdown

Categorize by conventional commit prefix (feat/fix/refactor/test/chore/docs). Show as percentage bar:

```
feat:     20  (40%)  ████████████████████
fix:      27  (54%)  ███████████████████████████
refactor:  2  ( 4%)  ██
```

Flag if fix ratio exceeds 50% — this signals a "ship fast, fix fast" pattern that may indicate review gaps.

### Step 6: Hotspot Analysis

Show top 10 most-changed files. Flag:
- Files changed 5+ times (churn hotspots)
- Test files vs production files in the hotspot list
- VERSION/CHANGELOG frequency (version discipline indicator)

### Step 7: PR Size Distribution

From commit diffs, estimate PR sizes and bucket them:
- **Small** (<100 LOC)
- **Medium** (100-500 LOC)
- **Large** (500-1500 LOC)
- **XL** (1500+ LOC)

### Step 8: Focus Score + Ship of the Week

**Focus score:** Calculate the percentage of commits touching the single most-changed top-level directory (e.g., `app/services/`, `app/views/`). Higher score = deeper focused work. Lower score = scattered context-switching. Report as: "Focus score: 62% (app/services/)"

**Ship of the week:** Auto-identify the single highest-LOC PR in the window. Highlight it:
- PR number and title
- LOC changed
- Why it matters (infer from commit messages and files touched)

### Step 9: Team Member Analysis

For each contributor (including the current user), compute:

1. **Commits and LOC** — total commits, insertions, deletions, net LOC
2. **Areas of focus** — which directories/files they touched most (top 3)
3. **Commit type mix** — their personal feat/fix/refactor/test breakdown
4. **Session patterns** — when they code (their peak hours), session count
5. **Test discipline** — their personal test LOC ratio
6. **Biggest ship** — their single highest-impact commit or PR in the window

**For the current user ("You"):** This section gets the deepest treatment. Include all the detail from the solo retro — session analysis, time patterns, focus score. Frame it in first person: "Your peak hours...", "Your biggest ship..."

**For each teammate:** Write 2-3 sentences covering what they worked on and their pattern. Then:

- **Praise** (1-2 specific things): Anchor in actual commits. Not "great work" — say exactly what was good. Examples: "Shipped the entire auth middleware rewrite in 3 focused sessions with 45% test coverage", "Every PR under 200 LOC — disciplined decomposition."
- **Opportunity for growth** (1 specific thing): Frame as a leveling-up suggestion, not criticism. Anchor in actual data. Examples: "Test ratio was 12% this week — adding test coverage to the payment module before it gets more complex would pay off", "5 fix commits on the same file suggest the original PR could have used a review pass."

**If only one contributor (solo repo):** Skip the team breakdown and proceed as before — the retro is personal.

**If there are Co-Authored-By trailers:** Parse `Co-Authored-By:` lines in commit messages. Credit those authors for the commit alongside the primary author. Note AI co-authors (e.g., `noreply@anthropic.com`) but do not include them as team members — instead, track "AI-assisted commits" as a separate metric.

{{LEARNINGS_LOG}}

### Step 10: Week-over-Week Trends (if window >= 14d)

If the time window is 14 days or more, split into weekly buckets and show trends:
- Commits per week (total and per-author)
- LOC per week
- Test ratio per week
- Fix ratio per week
- Session count per week

### Step 11: Streak Tracking

Count consecutive days with at least 1 commit to origin/<default>, going back from today. Track both team streak and personal streak:

```bash
# Team streak: all unique commit dates (local time) — no hard cutoff
git log origin/<default> --format="%ad" --date=format:"%Y-%m-%d" | sort -u

# Personal streak: only the current user's commits
git log origin/<default> --author="<user_name>" --format="%ad" --date=format:"%Y-%m-%d" | sort -u
```

Count backward from today — how many consecutive days have at least one commit? This queries the full history so streaks of any length are reported accurately. Display both:
- "Team shipping streak: 47 consecutive days"
- "Your shipping streak: 32 consecutive days"

### Step 12: Load History & Compare

Before saving the new snapshot, check for prior retro history:

```bash
setopt +o nomatch 2>/dev/null || true  # zsh compat
ls -t .context/retros/*.json 2>/dev/null
```

**If prior retros exist:** Load the most recent one using the Read tool. Calculate deltas for key metrics and include a **Trends vs Last Retro** section:
```
                    Last        Now         Delta
Test ratio:         22%    →    41%         ↑19pp
Sessions:           10     →    14          ↑4
LOC/hour:           200    →    350         ↑75%
Fix ratio:          54%    →    30%         ↓24pp (improving)
Commits:            32     →    47          ↑47%
Deep sessions:      3      →    5           ↑2
```

**If no prior retros exist:** Skip the comparison section and append: "First retro recorded — run again next week to see trends."

### Step 13: Save Retro History

After computing all metrics (including streak) and loading any prior history for comparison, save a JSON snapshot:

```bash
mkdir -p .context/retros
```

Determine the next sequence number for today (substitute the actual date for `$(date +%Y-%m-%d)`):
```bash
setopt +o nomatch 2>/dev/null || true  # zsh compat
# Count existing retros for today to get next sequence number
today=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
existing=$(ls .context/retros/${today}-*.json 2>/dev/null | wc -l | tr -d ' ')
next=$((existing + 1))
# Save as .context/retros/${today}-${next}.json
```

Use the Write tool to save the JSON file with this schema:
```json
{
  "date": "2026-03-08",
  "window": "7d",
  "metrics": {
    "commits": 47,
    "contributors": 3,
    "prs_merged": 12,
    "insertions": 3200,
    "deletions": 800,
    "net_loc": 2400,
    "test_loc": 1300,
    "test_ratio": 0.41,
    "active_days": 6,
    "sessions": 14,
    "deep_sessions": 5,
    "avg_session_minutes": 42,
    "loc_per_session_hour": 350,
    "feat_pct": 0.40,
    "fix_pct": 0.30,
    "peak_hour": 22,
    "ai_assisted_commits": 32
  },
  "authors": {
    "Garry Tan": { "commits": 32, "insertions": 2400, "deletions": 300, "test_ratio": 0.41, "top_area": "browse/" },
    "Alice": { "commits": 12, "insertions": 800, "deletions": 150, "test_ratio": 0.35, "top_area": "app/services/" }
  },
  "version_range": ["1.16.0.0", "1.16.1.0"],
  "streak_days": 47,
  "tweetable": "Week of Mar 1: 47 commits (3 contributors), 3.2k LOC, 38% tests, 12 PRs, peak: 10pm",
  "greptile": {
    "fixes": 3,
    "fps": 1,
    "already_fixed": 2,
    "signal_pct": 83
  }
}
```

**Note:** Only include the `greptile` field if `~/.gstack/greptile-history.md` exists and has entries within the time window. Only include the `backlog` field if `TODOS.md` exists. Only include the `test_health` field if test files were found (command 10 returns > 0). If any has no data, omit the field entirely.

Include test health data in the JSON when test files exist:
```json
  "test_health": {
    "total_test_files": 47,
    "tests_added_this_period": 5,
    "regression_test_commits": 3,
    "test_files_changed": 8
  }
```

Include backlog data in the JSON when TODOS.md exists:
```json
  "backlog": {
    "total_open": 28,
    "p0_p1": 2,
    "p2": 8,
    "completed_this_period": 3,
    "added_this_period": 1
  }
```

### Step 14: Write the Narrative

Structure the output as:

---

**Tweetable summary** (first line, before everything else):
```
Week of Mar 1: 47 commits (3 contributors), 3.2k LOC, 38% tests, 12 PRs, peak: 10pm | Streak: 47d
```

## Engineering Retro: [date range]

### Summary Table
(from Step 2)

### Trends vs Last Retro
(from Step 11, loaded before save — skip if first retro)

### Time & Session Patterns
(from Steps 3-4)

Narrative interpreting what the team-wide patterns mean:
- When the most productive hours are and what drives them
- Whether sessions are getting longer or shorter over time
- Estimated hours per day of active coding (team aggregate)
- Notable patterns: do team members code at the same time or in shifts?

### Shipping Velocity
(from Steps 5-7)

Narrative covering:
- Commit type mix and what it reveals
- PR size distribution and what it reveals about shipping cadence
- Fix-chain detection (sequences of fix commits on the same subsystem)
- Version bump discipline

### Code Quality Signals
- Test LOC ratio trend
- Hotspot analysis (are the same files churning?)
- Greptile signal ratio and trend (if history exists): "Greptile: X% signal (Y valid catches, Z false positives)"

### Test Health
- Total test files: N (from command 10)
- Tests added this period: M (from command 12 — test files changed)
- Regression test commits: list `test(qa):` and `test(design):` and `test: coverage` commits from command 11
- If prior retro exists and has `test_health`: show delta "Test count: {last} → {now} (+{delta})"
- If test ratio < 20%: flag as growth area — "100% test coverage is the goal. Tests make vibe coding safe."

### Plan Completion
Check review JSONL logs for plan completion data from /ship runs this period:

```bash
setopt +o nomatch 2>/dev/null || true  # zsh compat
eval "$(~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-slug 2>/dev/null)"
cat ~/.gstack/projects/$SLUG/*-reviews.jsonl 2>/dev/null | grep '"skill":"ship"' | grep '"plan_items_total"' || echo "NO_PLAN_DATA"
```

If plan completion data exists within the retro time window:
- Count branches shipped with plans (entries that have `plan_items_total` > 0)
- Compute average completion: sum of `plan_items_done` / sum of `plan_items_total`
- Identify most-skipped item category if data supports it

Output:
```
Plan Completion This Period:
  {N} branches shipped with plans
  Average completion: {X}% ({done}/{total} items)
```

If no plan data exists, skip this section silently.

### Focus & Highlights
(from Step 8)
- Focus score with interpretation
- Ship of the week callout

### Your Week (personal deep-dive)
(from Step 9, for the current user only)

This is the section the user cares most about. Include:
- Their personal commit count, LOC, test ratio
- Their session patterns and peak hours
- Their focus areas
- Their biggest ship
- **What you did well** (2-3 specific things anchored in commits)
- **Where to level up** (1-2 specific, actionable suggestions)

### Team Breakdown
(from Step 9, for each teammate — skip if solo repo)

For each teammate (sorted by commits descending), write a section:

#### [Name]
- **What they shipped**: 2-3 sentences on their contributions, areas of focus, and commit patterns
- **Praise**: 1-2 specific things they did well, anchored in actual commits. Be genuine — what would you actually say in a 1:1? Examples:
  - "Cleaned up the entire auth module in 3 small, reviewable PRs — textbook decomposition"
  - "Added integration tests for every new endpoint, not just happy paths"
  - "Fixed the N+1 query that was causing 2s load times on the dashboard"
- **Opportunity for growth**: 1 specific, constructive suggestion. Frame as investment, not criticism. Examples:
  - "Test coverage on the payment module is at 8% — worth investing in before the next feature lands on top of it"
  - "Most commits land in a single burst — spacing work across the day could reduce context-switching fatigue"
  - "All commits land between 1-4am — sustainable pace matters for code quality long-term"

**AI collaboration note:** If many commits have `Co-Authored-By` AI trailers (e.g., Claude, Copilot), note the AI-assisted commit percentage as a team metric. Frame it neutrally — "N% of commits were AI-assisted" — without judgment.

### Top 3 Team Wins
Identify the 3 highest-impact things shipped in the window across the whole team. For each:
- What it was
- Who shipped it
- Why it matters (product/architecture impact)

### 3 Things to Improve
Specific, actionable, anchored in actual commits. Mix personal and team-level suggestions. Phrase as "to get even better, the team could..."

### 3 Habits for Next Week
Small, practical, realistic. Each must be something that takes <5 minutes to adopt. At least one should be team-oriented (e.g., "review each other's PRs same-day").

### Week-over-Week Trends
(if applicable, from Step 10)

---

## Global Retrospective Mode

When the user runs `/retro global` (or `/retro global 14d`), follow this flow instead of the repo-scoped Steps 1-14. This mode works from any directory — it does NOT require being inside a git repo.

### Global Step 1: Compute time window

Same midnight-aligned logic as the regular retro. Default 7d. The second argument after `global` is the window (e.g., `14d`, `30d`, `24h`).

### Global Step 2: Run discovery

Locate and run the discovery script using this fallback chain:

```bash
DISCOVER_BIN=""
[ -x ~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-global-discover ] && DISCOVER_BIN=~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-global-discover
[ -z "$DISCOVER_BIN" ] && [ -x .claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-global-discover ] && DISCOVER_BIN=.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-global-discover
[ -z "$DISCOVER_BIN" ] && which gstack-global-discover >/dev/null 2>&1 && DISCOVER_BIN=$(which gstack-global-discover)
[ -z "$DISCOVER_BIN" ] && [ -f bin/gstack-global-discover.ts ] && DISCOVER_BIN="bun run bin/gstack-global-discover.ts"
echo "DISCOVER_BIN: $DISCOVER_BIN"
```

If no binary is found, tell the user: "Discovery script not found. Run `bun run build` in the gstack directory to compile it." and stop.

Run the discovery:
```bash
$DISCOVER_BIN --since "<window>" --format json 2>/tmp/gstack-discover-stderr
```

Read the stderr output from `/tmp/gstack-discover-stderr` for diagnostic info. Parse the JSON output from stdout.

If `total_sessions` is 0, say: "No AI coding sessions found in the last <window>. Try a longer window: `/retro global 30d`" and stop.

### Global Step 3: Run git log on each discovered repo

For each repo in the discovery JSON's `repos` array, find the first valid path in `paths[]` (directory exists with `.git/`). If no valid path exists, skip the repo and note it.

**For local-only repos** (where `remote` starts with `local:`): skip `git fetch` and use the local default branch. Use `git log HEAD` instead of `git log origin/$DEFAULT`.

**For repos with remotes:**

```bash
git -C <path> fetch origin --quiet 2>/dev/null
```

Detect the default branch for each repo: first try `git symbolic-ref refs/remotes/origin/HEAD`, then check common branch names (`main`, `master`), then fall back to `git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD`. Use the detected branch as `<default>` in the commands below.

```bash
# Commits with stats
git -C <path> log origin/$DEFAULT --since="<start_date>T00:00:00" --format="%H|%aN|%ai|%s" --shortstat

# Commit timestamps for session detection, streak, and context switching
git -C <path> log origin/$DEFAULT --since="<start_date>T00:00:00" --format="%at|%aN|%ai|%s" | sort -n

# Per-author commit counts
git -C <path> shortlog origin/$DEFAULT --since="<start_date>T00:00:00" -sn --no-merges

# PR/MR numbers from commit messages (GitHub #NNN, GitLab !NNN)
git -C <path> log origin/$DEFAULT --since="<start_date>T00:00:00" --format="%s" | grep -oE '[#!][0-9]+' | sort -t'#' -k1 | uniq
```

For repos that fail (deleted paths, network errors): skip and note "N repos could not be reached."

### Global Step 4: Compute global shipping streak

For each repo, get commit dates (capped at 365 days):

```bash
git -C <path> log origin/$DEFAULT --since="365 days ago" --format="%ad" --date=format:"%Y-%m-%d" | sort -u
```

Union all dates across all repos. Count backward from today — how many consecutive days have at least one commit to ANY repo? If the streak hits 365 days, display as "365+ days".

### Global Step 5: Compute context switching metric

From the commit timestamps gathered in Step 3, group by date. For each date, count how many distinct repos had commits that day. Report:
- Average repos/day
- Maximum repos/day
- Which days were focused (1 repo) vs. fragmented (3+ repos)

### Global Step 6: Per-tool productivity patterns

From the discovery JSON, analyze tool usage patterns:
- Which AI tool is used for which repos (exclusive vs. shared)
- Session count per tool
- Behavioral patterns (e.g., "Codex used exclusively for myapp, Claude Code for everything else")

### Global Step 7: Aggregate and generate narrative

Structure the output with the **shareable personal card first**, then the full
team/project breakdown below. The personal card is designed to be screenshot-friendly
— everything someone would want to share on X/Twitter in one clean block.

---

**Tweetable summary** (first line, before everything else):
```
Week of Mar 14: 5 projects, 138 commits, 250k LOC across 5 repos | 48 AI sessions | Streak: 52d 🔥
```

## 🚀 Your Week: [user name] — [date range]

This section is the **shareable personal card**. It contains ONLY the current user's
stats — no team data, no project breakdowns. Designed to screenshot and post.

Use the user identity from `git config user.name` to filter all per-repo git data.
Aggregate across all repos to compute personal totals.

Render as a single visually clean block. Left border only — no right border (LLMs
can't align right borders reliably). Pad repo names to the longest name so columns
align cleanly. Never truncate project names.

```
╔═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
║  [USER NAME] — Week of [date]
╠═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════

║  [N] commits across [M] projects
║  +[X]k LOC added · [Y]k LOC deleted · [Z]k net
║  [N] AI coding sessions (CC: X, Codex: Y, Gemini: Z)
║  [N]-day shipping streak 🔥

║  PROJECTS
║  ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
║  [repo_name_full]        [N] commits    +[X]k LOC    [solo/team]
║  [repo_name_full]        [N] commits    +[X]k LOC    [solo/team]
║  [repo_name_full]        [N] commits    +[X]k LOC    [solo/team]

║  SHIP OF THE WEEK
║  [PR title] — [LOC] lines across [N] files

║  TOP WORK
║  • [1-line description of biggest theme]
║  • [1-line description of second theme]
║  • [1-line description of third theme]

║  Powered by gstack
╚═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
```

**Rules for the personal card:**
- Only show repos where the user has commits. Skip repos with 0 commits.
- Sort repos by user's commit count descending.
- **Never truncate repo names.** Use the full repo name (e.g., `analyze_transcripts`
  not `analyze_trans`). Pad the name column to the longest repo name so all columns
  align. If names are long, widen the box — the box width adapts to content.
- For LOC, use "k" formatting for thousands (e.g., "+64.0k" not "+64010").
- Role: "solo" if user is the only contributor, "team" if others contributed.
- Ship of the Week: the user's single highest-LOC PR across ALL repos.
- Top Work: 3 bullet points summarizing the user's major themes, inferred from
  commit messages. Not individual commits — synthesize into themes.
  E.g., "Built /retro global — cross-project retrospective with AI session discovery"
  not "feat: gstack-global-discover" + "feat: /retro global template".
- The card must be self-contained. Someone seeing ONLY this block should understand
  the user's week without any surrounding context.
- Do NOT include team members, project totals, or context switching data here.

**Personal streak:** Use the user's own commits across all repos (filtered by
`--author`) to compute a personal streak, separate from the team streak.

---

## Global Engineering Retro: [date range]

Everything below is the full analysis — team data, project breakdowns, patterns.
This is the "deep dive" that follows the shareable card.

### All Projects Overview
| Metric | Value |
|--------|-------|
| Projects active | N |
| Total commits (all repos, all contributors) | N |
| Total LOC | +N / -N |
| AI coding sessions | N (CC: X, Codex: Y, Gemini: Z) |
| Active days | N |
| Global shipping streak (any contributor, any repo) | N consecutive days |
| Context switches/day | N avg (max: M) |

### Per-Project Breakdown
For each repo (sorted by commits descending):
- Repo name (with % of total commits)
- Commits, LOC, PRs merged, top contributor
- Key work (inferred from commit messages)
- AI sessions by tool

**Your Contributions** (sub-section within each project):
For each project, add a "Your contributions" block showing the current user's
personal stats within that repo. Use the user identity from `git config user.name`
to filter. Include:
- Your commits / total commits (with %)
- Your LOC (+insertions / -deletions)
- Your key work (inferred from YOUR commit messages only)
- Your commit type mix (feat/fix/refactor/chore/docs breakdown)
- Your biggest ship in this repo (highest-LOC commit or PR)

If the user is the only contributor, say "Solo project — all commits are yours."
If the user has 0 commits in a repo (team project they didn't touch this period),
say "No commits this period — [N] AI sessions only." and skip the breakdown.

Format:
```
**Your contributions:** 47/244 commits (19%), +4.2k/-0.3k LOC
  Key work: Writer Chat, email blocking, security hardening
  Biggest ship: PR #605 — Writer Chat eats the admin bar (2,457 ins, 46 files)
  Mix: feat(3) fix(2) chore(1)
```

### Cross-Project Patterns
- Time allocation across projects (% breakdown, use YOUR commits not total)
- Peak productivity hours aggregated across all repos
- Focused vs. fragmented days
- Context switching trends

### Tool Usage Analysis
Per-tool breakdown with behavioral patterns:
- Claude Code: N sessions across M repos — patterns observed
- Codex: N sessions across M repos — patterns observed
- Gemini: N sessions across M repos — patterns observed

### Ship of the Week (Global)
Highest-impact PR across ALL projects. Identify by LOC and commit messages.

### 3 Cross-Project Insights
What the global view reveals that no single-repo retro could show.

### 3 Habits for Next Week
Considering the full cross-project picture.

---

### Global Step 8: Load history & compare

```bash
setopt +o nomatch 2>/dev/null || true  # zsh compat
ls -t ~/.gstack/retros/global-*.json 2>/dev/null | head -5
```

**Only compare against a prior retro with the same `window` value** (e.g., 7d vs 7d). If the most recent prior retro has a different window, skip comparison and note: "Prior global retro used a different window — skipping comparison."

If a matching prior retro exists, load it with the Read tool. Show a **Trends vs Last Global Retro** table with deltas for key metrics: total commits, LOC, sessions, streak, context switches/day.

If no prior global retros exist, append: "First global retro recorded — run again next week to see trends."

### Global Step 9: Save snapshot

```bash
mkdir -p ~/.gstack/retros
```

Determine the next sequence number for today:
```bash
setopt +o nomatch 2>/dev/null || true  # zsh compat
today=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
existing=$(ls ~/.gstack/retros/global-${today}-*.json 2>/dev/null | wc -l | tr -d ' ')
next=$((existing + 1))
```

Use the Write tool to save JSON to `~/.gstack/retros/global-${today}-${next}.json`:

```json
{
  "type": "global",
  "date": "2026-03-21",
  "window": "7d",
  "projects": [
    {
      "name": "gstack",
      "remote": "<detected from git remote get-url origin, normalized to HTTPS>",
      "commits": 47,
      "insertions": 3200,
      "deletions": 800,
      "sessions": { "claude_code": 15, "codex": 3, "gemini": 0 }
    }
  ],
  "totals": {
    "commits": 182,
    "insertions": 15300,
    "deletions": 4200,
    "projects": 5,
    "active_days": 6,
    "sessions": { "claude_code": 48, "codex": 8, "gemini": 3 },
    "global_streak_days": 52,
    "avg_context_switches_per_day": 2.1
  },
  "tweetable": "Week of Mar 14: 5 projects, 182 commits, 15.3k LOC | CC: 48, Codex: 8, Gemini: 3 | Focus: gstack (58%) | Streak: 52d"
}
```

---

## Compare Mode

When the user runs `/retro compare` (or `/retro compare 14d`):

1. Compute metrics for the current window (default 7d) using the midnight-aligned start date (same logic as the main retro — e.g., if today is 2026-03-18 and window is 7d, use `--since="2026-03-11T00:00:00"`)
2. Compute metrics for the immediately prior same-length window using both `--since` and `--until` with midnight-aligned dates to avoid overlap (e.g., for a 7d window starting 2026-03-11: prior window is `--since="2026-03-04T00:00:00" --until="2026-03-11T00:00:00"`)
3. Show a side-by-side comparison table with deltas and arrows
4. Write a brief narrative highlighting the biggest improvements and regressions
5. Save only the current-window snapshot to `.context/retros/` (same as a normal retro run); do **not** persist the prior-window metrics.

## Tone

- Encouraging but candid, no coddling
- Specific and concrete — always anchor in actual commits/code
- Skip generic praise ("great job!") — say exactly what was good and why
- Frame improvements as leveling up, not criticism
- **Praise should feel like something you'd actually say in a 1:1** — specific, earned, genuine
- **Growth suggestions should feel like investment advice** — "this is worth your time because..." not "you failed at..."
- Never compare teammates against each other negatively. Each person's section stands on its own.
- Keep total output around 3000-4500 words (slightly longer to accommodate team sections)
- Use markdown tables and code blocks for data, prose for narrative
- Output directly to the conversation — do NOT write to filesystem (except the `.context/retros/` JSON snapshot)

## Important Rules

- ALL narrative output goes directly to the user in the conversation. The ONLY file written is the `.context/retros/` JSON snapshot.
- Use `origin/<default>` for all git queries (not local main which may be stale)
- Display all timestamps in the user's local timezone (do not override `TZ`)
- If the window has zero commits, say so and suggest a different window
- Round LOC/hour to nearest 50
- Treat merge commits as PR boundaries
- Do not read CLAUDE.md or other docs — this skill is self-contained
- On first run (no prior retros), skip comparison sections gracefully
- **Global mode:** Does NOT require being inside a git repo. Saves snapshots to `~/.gstack/retros/` (not `.context/retros/`). Gracefully skip AI tools that aren't installed. Only compare against prior global retros with the same window value. If streak hits 365d cap, display as "365+ days".