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repair-damage

pjt222
Actualizado 2 days ago
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Esta habilidad proporciona una recuperación estructurada para sistemas dañados mediante triaje, estabilización y reconstrucción progresiva. Está diseñada para incidentes, migraciones fallidas, deuda técnica o degradación progresiva. Sus capacidades clave incluyen evaluación de daños, estabilización de emergencia y fortalecimiento de la resiliencia.

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

Recomendado
Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Comando PluginAlternativo
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternativo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/repair-damage

Copia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad

Documentación

Repair Damage

Impl regenerative recovery for systems sustained structural damage — incidents, failed migrations, accumulated neglect, external disruption. Uses bio wound-healing as framework: triage, stabilization, scaffolding, progressive rebuild, scar tissue mgmt.

Use When

  • System suffered incident, needs structured recovery beyond "fix it"
  • Failed transformation (see adapt-architecture) left damaged intermediate
  • Accumulated tech debt caused partial fail
  • Org damage (team departures, knowledge loss, morale collapse) needs structured repair
  • Post-defense recovery (see defend-colony) when colony sustained damage
  • System functional but degraded, degradation worsening

In

  • Required: Damage description (what broke, when, severity)
  • Required: Current system state (working vs not)
  • Optional: Root cause (if known — may not be clear yet)
  • Optional: Pre-damage state (compare)
  • Optional: Resources (time, people, budget)
  • Optional: Urgency (actively degrading or stable-but-damaged?)

Do

Step 1: Triage

Rapidly assess all damage + classify by severity + urgency.

  1. Catalog every known damage point:
    • What component, fn, capability affected?
    • Damage complete (non-functional) or partial (degraded)?
    • Spreading (affecting adjacent) or contained?
  2. Classify each wound:
Wound Classification:
┌──────────┬──────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Class    │ Severity             │ Response                           │
├──────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Critical │ Core function lost,  │ Immediate: stop bleeding, activate │
│          │ data at risk,        │ backup, redirect traffic, page     │
│          │ actively spreading   │ on-call team                       │
├──────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Serious  │ Important function   │ Urgent: fix within hours/days,     │
│          │ degraded, no spread  │ workarounds acceptable short-term  │
├──────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Moderate │ Non-critical function│ Scheduled: fix within sprint,      │
│          │ affected, contained  │ prioritize against other work      │
├──────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Minor    │ Cosmetic or edge     │ Backlog: fix when convenient,      │
│          │ case, no user impact │ may self-resolve                   │
└──────────┴──────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────┘
  1. Prioritize repair order:
    • Critical first (stop bleeding)
    • Then serious (restore important fn)
    • Moderate + minor wait scheduled
  2. Check wound interaction:
    • Wounds amplify each other? (A worse because B also broken)
    • Fixing one auto fix others? (shared root cause)
    • Fixing one make another worse? (competing strategies)

→ Complete wound inventory classified by severity, prioritized order accounting for interactions.

If err: triage too long (system actively degrading) → skip detailed classification + focus: "What single most critical thing to stabilize?" Fix that first, then return full triage.

Step 2: Emergency Stabilization

Stop damage spreading before repair.

  1. Contain wound:
    • Isolate damaged components (circuit breakers, network segmentation, traffic rerouting)
    • Prevent cascade: disable non-essential features depending on damaged
    • Preserve evidence: snapshots, save logs, capture current state before changes
  2. Apply emergency patches:
    • Not permanent fixes — tourniquets
    • Acceptable:
      • Redirect traffic to healthy replica
      • Disable damaged feature entirely
      • Apply known-working config from backup
      • Scale up healthy components to absorb redirected load
    • Unacceptable:
      • Modifying code w/o testing (creates new wounds)
      • Deleting data to "reset" (destroys recovery options)
      • Hiding damage (disabling alerts, suppressing errors)
  3. Verify stabilization:
    • Damage still spreading? Yes → containment failed → broader isolation
    • System functional (possibly degraded)? Yes → proceed repair
    • Emergency patches holding? Yes → time for deliberate repair

→ System stable (not actively degrading) even if degraded. Damage contained + not spreading. Evidence preserved for root cause.

If err: stabilization fails (damage continues spreading despite containment) → escalate to full system fallback: activate disaster recovery, switch backup, or gracefully degrade to minimal viable. Stabilization too long becomes the disaster.

Step 3: Build Repair Scaffolding

Construct temp structures supporting repair.

  1. Set up repair env:
    • Branch or copy damaged system for repair work
    • Repair changes testable before applying to prod
    • Rollback plan for each repair step
  2. Build diagnostic infra:
    • Enhanced monitoring on damaged areas (detect regression immediately)
    • Logging captures repair process (what changed, when, why)
    • Comparison tools: pre-damage vs current vs post-repair
  3. Design repair sequence:
    • For each wound (priority order from triage): a. Root cause ID (why broke?) b. Repair approach (fix cause not just symptom) c. Verification method (confirm worked) d. Regression check (break anything else?)
  4. ID scar tissue risk:
    • Repairs under pressure often introduce scar tissue (workarounds, special cases, tech debt)
    • Plan scar mgmt (Step 5) from start

→ Repair env w/ diagnostic capability, sequenced plan, scar awareness.

If err: setting proper repair env too slow (urgency demands immediate prod changes) → apply directly w/ extreme discipline: one change at a time, tested by available means, rolled back if no help.

Step 4: Execute Progressive Rebuild

Repair systematically, verify each fix before next.

  1. For each wound (triage priority order): a. ID root cause:
    • Code bug? Config err? Data corruption? Dep fail?
    • Symptom of deeper structural problem?
    • Fixing cause also addresses other wounds? b. Implement repair:
    • Fix root cause not just symptom
    • Can't fix cause immediately → deliberate workaround + document
    • Keep minimal — fix what's broken, no refactor neighborhood c. Verify:
    • Specific damaged fn works correctly now?
    • Pass auto tests?
    • Overall health improved or unchanged? d. Regression check:
    • Break anything else?
    • Emergency patches Step 2 still needed, or remove?
  2. After all critical + serious repaired:
    • Remove emergency patches no longer needed
    • Restore disabled features
    • Return traffic normal routing
  3. Schedule moderate + minor repairs:
    • Enter normal dev workflow
    • Track to completion (no "accepted" damage)

→ Critical + serious wounds repaired w/ verified fixes. Emergency patches removed. System restored to functional.

If err: repair attempt fails or causes regression → rollback prev state + reassess. Multi attempts fail same wound → damage too deep for local repair → consider component needs full replacement not repair (see dissolve-form).

Step 5: Manage Scar + Strengthen

Address workarounds + shortcuts from emergency repair, strengthen vs recurrence.

  1. Inventory scar:
    • Emergency patches became permanent
    • Workarounds never replaced w/ proper fixes
    • Special cases for damage-related edges
    • Disabled features never re-enabled
  2. For each scar piece, decide:
    • Remove: workaround no longer needed (damage fully repaired)
    • Replace: workaround real need, impl proper
    • Accept: most practical long-term (rare, document why)
  3. Strengthen vs recurrence:
    • Root cause analysis: why did damage occur?
    • Prevention: what would have prevented? (monitoring, testing, arch change)
    • Detection: how detect faster next time? (alerts, health checks)
    • Recovery: how recover faster? (runbooks, backup procs, automation)
  4. Update immune memory:
    • Add incident pattern to monitoring + alerting (see defend-colony immune memory)
    • Update runbooks w/ working repair proc
    • Share learnings across team/org

→ Scar managed (removed/replaced/accepted documented). System repaired + more resilient than pre-damage. Learnings captured for future.

If err: scar mgmt deprioritized ("works, don't touch") → schedule explicit. Unmanaged scar accumulates + eventually contributes next incident. Root cause unidentifiable → strengthen detection + recovery speed as compensating controls.

Check

  • All damage inventoried + classified by severity
  • Emergency stabilization stopped spread
  • Evidence preserved for root cause
  • Critical + serious wounds repaired w/ verified fixes
  • Emergency patches removed after proper repair
  • Scar inventoried + managed (removed/replaced/documented)
  • Root cause analysis IDs prevention + detection improvements
  • System resilience improved vs pre-damage

Traps

  • Repair w/o stabilize: Fix root cause while system actively bleeding. Stabilize first, then repair. Tourniquets before surgery.
  • Permanent emergency patches: Emergency measures becoming permanent → compounding tech debt. Always follow w/ proper repair.
  • Root cause assumption: Assume root cause known w/o investigation. Many "obvious" causes are symptoms of deeper issues. Investigate before committing strategy.
  • Repair-induced damage: Rush repairs w/o testing → new wounds. One verified fix per iter — never batch untested.
  • Ignore scar: "Works now" ≠ "healthy". Scar from hasty repairs = seed of next incident.

  • assess-form — damage assess shares methodology w/ form assess
  • adapt-architecture — arch adaptation needed if damage reveals structural weakness
  • dissolve-form — components too damaged to repair → dissolve + rebuild
  • defend-colony — defense triggers repair; post-incident recovery feeds defense
  • shift-camouflage — surface adaptation masks damage while repair proceeds (caution)
  • conduct-post-mortem — structured post-incident analysis complements root cause
  • write-incident-runbook — repair procs captured as runbooks for future

Repositorio GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Ruta: i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/repair-damage
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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