SkillHub

lattice

v1.2.1

Initialize and manage Lattice organizations — a file-based operating system for AI agent teams that enables stable, long-running iterative development through an 8-phase pipeline. Core strengths: (1) File-driven state keeps agents on track across sessions — no context loss, no drift, tasks complete...

Sourced from ClawHub, Authored by CNF6682

Installation

Please help me install the skill `lattice` from SkillHub official store. npx skills add CNF6682/lattice

Lattice

Lattice is a file-based operating system for AI agent teams. It replaces volatile chat windows with persistent files, enabling agents to work stably through long, iterative development cycles via an 8-phase execution pipeline.

Why Lattice?

  • Stable long-running execution — File-driven state machine ensures agents stay on track across sessions. No context window overflow, no drift. Tasks complete reliably over hours or days through structured iteration.
  • Three-tier failure handling — When an agent gets stuck: (1) Model Escalation retries with stronger models, (2) Peer Consult gathers parallel opinions from multiple models, (3) Auto-Triage makes a judgment call (relax constraints / defer / block for human). Most blockers resolve automatically.
  • Per-phase model configuration — Thinking-heavy phases (planning, review, architecture) need strong reasoning models; token-heavy phases (implementation, testing) can use cost-efficient coding models. This dramatically reduces overall token cost without sacrificing quality where it matters.

Example model assignment (from a production setup):

Phase Model tier Example
Constitute (architecture) Strong reasoning Claude Opus
Research Strong reasoning Gemini Pro
Specify (design) Strong reasoning Claude Opus
Plan + Tasks Strong reasoning Claude Opus
Implement Cost-efficient coding GPT Codex
Test Cost-efficient coding GPT Codex
Review Strong reasoning Claude Opus
Gap Analysis Strong reasoning Gemini Pro

The key insight: implementation and testing consume the most tokens (writing/running code), but don't require the most expensive models. Planning and review consume fewer tokens but need deeper reasoning. Match model strength to cognitive demand, not token volume. - Multi-project parallel execution — Run multiple projects simultaneously, each with its own cron-scheduled orchestrator. Combined with OpenClaw's cron system, projects advance autonomously on independent cadences.

Templates are bundled at templates/ORG/ relative to this skill directory.

Quick Reference

  • Full design doc: templates/ORG/PROJECTS/pipeline-framework/DESIGN.md
  • Pipeline guide (all agents): templates/ORG/PIPELINE_GUIDE.md
  • Sub-agent guide: templates/ORG/PROJECTS/pipeline-framework/templates/PIPELINE_GUIDE_FOR_SUBAGENTS.md
  • Orchestrator prompt template: templates/ORG/PROJECTS/pipeline-framework/templates/ORCHESTRATOR_PROMPT.template.md
  • Phase prompt templates: templates/ORG/PROJECTS/pipeline-framework/templates/PHASE_PROMPTS/
  • State machine template: templates/ORG/PROJECTS/pipeline-framework/templates/PIPELINE_STATE.template.json

Task: Initialize a New Organization (lattice init)

1. Gather Information

Ask the user for: - Organization name (e.g. "Acme Labs") - Target directory — where to create the ORG/ folder (default: current workspace root) - Departments — list of department names (e.g. Research, Engineering, Reliability) - First project (optional) — name + one-line description

Keep it conversational. Don't dump all questions at once.

2. Scaffold the ORG Directory

Copy the entire templates/ORG/ directory to <target>/ORG/.

Then customize:

  1. ORG_README.md — Replace the example org structure in §5 with the user's actual departments
  2. TASKBOARD.md — Leave the template structure intact (user fills in priorities later)
  3. Departments — For each department the user listed:
  4. Copy DEPARTMENTS/example-dept/DEPARTMENTS/<dept-name>/
  5. In each copied department, replace <Department Name> placeholders in CHARTER.md, RUNBOOK.md, HANDOFF.md with the actual department name
  6. Reset STATE.json to {"lastRun": null, "cursor": null, "notes": "Initial state"}
  7. Remove DEPARTMENTS/example-dept/ after creating real departments (unless user wants to keep it as reference)

3. Create the First Project (if requested)

  • Copy PROJECTS/example-project/PROJECTS/<project-name>/
  • Update STATUS.md with the project name
  • Update DECISIONS.md header
  • Configure PIPELINE_STATE.json (see "Configure Pipeline State" below)
  • Remove PROJECTS/example-project/ after creating the real project

4. Configure Pipeline State

Read templates/ORG/PROJECTS/pipeline-framework/templates/PIPELINE_STATE.template.json as the reference.

Ask the user: - Which agents will run each phase? (agentId per role — or a single agent for all) - Which models for each phase? (or a default model) - Escalation chain — list of models from cheapest to strongest (e.g. ["gflash", "gpro", "sonnet"]) - Peer consult models — which models to consult in parallel when stuck - Synthesizer/triage model — typically the strongest available model - Notification channel (optional) — where to send pipeline status updates

Fill in the project's PIPELINE_STATE.json with these values, replacing all <placeholder> tokens.

5. Set Up the Orchestrator Cron Job

Read templates/ORG/PROJECTS/pipeline-framework/templates/ORCHESTRATOR_PROMPT.template.md.

Create a cron job using the cron tool: - Schedule: every 30 minutes (adjustable) - Session target: isolated - Payload kind: agentTurn - Model: the user's chosen orchestrator model - Message: the orchestrator prompt template, with all <placeholder> tokens filled in: - <project> → project name - <org-root> → absolute path to the ORG directory - <project-root> → absolute path to the project directory - <repo-root> → absolute path to the code repository (ask user) - Phase prompt paths → absolute paths to the skill's bundled phase prompt templates

Tell the user the cron job ID so they can manage it later.

6. Summary

Print a brief summary: - ORG directory location - Departments created - Project(s) created - Cron job ID and schedule - Remind them to fill in TASKBOARD.md with initial priorities


Task: Add a New Project (lattice new-project)

  1. Ask for: project name, one-line description, code repo path
  2. Copy templates/ORG/PROJECTS/example-project/ORG/PROJECTS/<name>/
  3. Customize STATUS.md, DECISIONS.md, PIPELINE_STATE.json (same as step 3-4 above)
  4. Optionally create a new orchestrator cron job for this project

Task: Add a New Department (lattice new-dept)

  1. Ask for: department name, mission (one sentence)
  2. Copy templates/ORG/DEPARTMENTS/example-dept/ORG/DEPARTMENTS/<name>/
  3. Fill in CHARTER.md with the department name and mission
  4. Update ORG_README.md §5 to include the new department

Task: Check Organization Status (lattice status)

  1. Read ORG/TASKBOARD.md — summarize active priorities
  2. For each project in ORG/PROJECTS/:
  3. Read STATUS.md — current phase and progress
  4. Read PIPELINE_STATE.json — phase statuses, blockers, run number
  5. For each department in ORG/DEPARTMENTS/:
  6. Read HANDOFF.md — current state and blockers
  7. Present a concise status report

Pipeline Architecture (for reference)

8 Phases

Constitute → Research → Specify → Plan+Tasks → Implement → Test → Review → Gap Analysis

3-Layer Assistance (when a phase gets stuck)

  1. Model Escalation — retry with progressively stronger models
  2. Peer Consult — parallel multi-model consultation + synthesis
  3. Auto-Triage — automated judge decides: RELAX (loosen constraints) / DEFER (next iteration) / BLOCK (wait for human)

Key Files per Project

ORG/PROJECTS/<project>/
├── STATUS.md              # Human-readable status
├── DECISIONS.md           # Key decisions + rationale
├── PIPELINE_STATE.json    # Phase state machine
├── PIPELINE_LOG.jsonl     # Append-only history
├── pipeline/              # Current run artifacts
└── pipeline_archive/      # Historical runs