| name | Loop Launcher |
| description | Reference for configuring, launching, and monitoring infinity loops and polish loops |
| phase | architect |
Loop Launcher
Reference skill for launching and monitoring autonomous loop pipelines. This skill is NOT auto-loaded — it is read on-demand when launching loops.
Authorization Gate
Before launching any loop, you MUST have authorization:
- The user explicitly asked to launch a loop, OR
- You are inside an architect workflow where the user approved Phase 5 (launch), OR
- The user started this session by invoking
/compound:architect with loop/launch intent
If none of these apply, use AskUserQuestion to confirm: "This will launch an autonomous loop with full permissions. Proceed?"
If the user declines: Do NOT generate scripts or launch anything. Report the parameters you would have used and stop. The user can invoke /compound:launch-loop later.
Do NOT autonomously decide to launch loops.
Script Generation
Infinity Loop
ca loop --epics "id1,id2,id3" \
--model "claude-opus-4-7[1m]" \
--reviewers "claude-sonnet,claude-opus,gemini,codex" \
--review-every 1 \
--max-review-cycles 3 \
--max-retries 1 \
--force
Polish Loop
ca polish --spec-file "docs/specs/your-spec.md" \
--meta-epic "meta-epic-id" \
--reviewers "claude-sonnet,claude-opus,gemini,codex" \
--cycles 2 \
--model "claude-opus-4-7[1m]" \
--force
Flags Reference — Infinity Loop (ca loop)
| Flag | Default | Description |
|---|
--epics | (auto-discover) | Comma-separated epic IDs |
--model | claude-opus-4-7[1m] | Model for implementation sessions |
--reviewers | (none) | Comma-separated: claude-sonnet,claude-opus,gemini,codex |
--review-every | 0 (end-only) | Review after every N epics |
--max-review-cycles | 3 | Max review/fix iterations |
--max-retries | 1 | Retries per epic on failure |
--review-blocking | false | Fail loop if review not approved after max cycles |
--review-model | claude-opus-4-7[1m] | Model for implementer fix sessions |
-o, --output | .compound-agent/infinity-loop.sh | Output script path |
--force | (off) | Overwrite existing script |
Flags Reference — Polish Loop (ca polish)
| Flag | Default | Description |
|---|
--meta-epic | (required) | Parent meta-epic ID for traceability |
--spec-file | (required) | Path to the spec for reviewer context |
--cycles | 3 | Number of polish cycles |
--model | claude-opus-4-7[1m] | Model for polish architect sessions |
--reviewers | claude-sonnet,claude-opus,gemini,codex | Comma-separated audit fleet |
-o, --output | .compound-agent/polish-loop.sh | Output script path |
--force | (off) | Overwrite existing script |
Launching
Always launch in a screen session. Never run loops in the foreground.
Single loop
LOOP_SESSION="compound-loop-$(basename "$(pwd)")"
screen -dmS "$LOOP_SESSION" bash .compound-agent/infinity-loop.sh
mkdir -p .beads && echo "$LOOP_SESSION" > .beads/loop-session-name
Chained pipeline (infinity + polish)
cat > pipeline.sh << 'SCRIPT'
set -e
trap 'echo "[pipeline] FAILED at line $LINENO" >&2' ERR
cd "$(dirname "$0")"
bash .compound-agent/infinity-loop.sh
bash .compound-agent/polish-loop.sh
SCRIPT
LOOP_SESSION="compound-loop-$(basename "$(pwd)")"
screen -dmS "$LOOP_SESSION" bash pipeline.sh
mkdir -p .beads && echo "$LOOP_SESSION" > .beads/loop-session-name
Screen session naming
Use readable names: compound-loop-projectname, polish-loop-projectname-cycle2. Never use hashes.
Pre-Flight
Before launching:
- Verify
ca is the Go binary (not the old TypeScript CLI): run ca loop --help and confirm it shows Cobra-style output (Usage: ca loop [flags]). If you see Usage: ca [options] [command] (Commander.js format), the binary is stale — reinstall with npm install compound-agent@latest or use the local Go build at go/dist/ca.
- Verify
ca polish --help succeeds (command exists). If it fails, same stale binary issue.
- Verify all epics are status=open:
bd show <id> for each
- Verify
claude CLI is available and authenticated
- Verify
bd CLI is available
- Sync beads:
bd dolt push
- Dry-run infinity loop:
LOOP_DRY_RUN=1 bash .compound-agent/infinity-loop.sh
- Dry-run polish loop:
POLISH_DRY_RUN=1 bash .compound-agent/polish-loop.sh
- Verify screen is available:
command -v screen
Full pre-flight checklist with monitoring protocol: architect/references/infinity-loop/pre-flight.md.
Monitoring
Quick Reference
| Command | What it shows |
|---|
screen -r "$(cat .beads/loop-session-name)" | Attach to live session (Ctrl-A D to detach) |
ca watch | Live trace tail from active session |
cat .compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json | Current epic and status |
cat .compound-agent/agent_logs/loop-execution.jsonl | Completed epics with durations |
ls .compound-agent/agent_logs/polish-cycle-*/ | Polish cycle reports and audit findings |
screen -S "$(cat .beads/loop-session-name)" -X quit | Kill the loop |
Post-Launch Verification
After launching a loop in screen, verify it started by running a background Bash command (run_in_background: true):
sleep 60 && cat .compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json 2>/dev/null || echo "No status file yet"
screen -ls 2>/dev/null | grep "$(cat .beads/loop-session-name 2>/dev/null || echo compound-loop)" || echo "No screen session found"
When the result comes back: if .loop-status.json shows "status":"running" and screen lists the session, report success to the user. If not, check for crash details or missing screen session and report the issue.
Health Check Protocol
When the user asks about loop progress, follow this protocol to build a structured overview.
Step 1 — Gather data (use parallel subagents for speed):
- Read
.compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json — current epic, attempt number, status
- Read
.compound-agent/agent_logs/loop-execution.jsonl — all completed epics with result, duration
- Run
bd show <epic-id> for each epic to get titles and statuses
- Run
git log --oneline -5 to see recent commit activity
- For polish loops: also read
.compound-agent/agent_logs/.polish-status.json and list .compound-agent/agent_logs/polish-cycle-*/
Step 2 — Detect stalls:
- If
.loop-status.json shows "status":"running", check when it was last modified:
- macOS:
stat -f '%m' .compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json
- Linux:
stat -c '%Y' .compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json
- Calculate the delta:
DELTA=$(( $(date +%s) - $(stat -f '%m' .compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json) )) (macOS) or DELTA=$(( $(date +%s) - $(stat -c '%Y' .compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json) )) (Linux). If $DELTA > 300, proceed with stall check below.
- If last modified > 5 minutes ago: read the last 20 lines of the active trace (
tail -20 ".compound-agent/agent_logs/$(readlink .compound-agent/agent_logs/.latest)"), wait 15 seconds, read again. If output is identical, flag as potentially stalled.
- If status is
"crashed": report crash details (exit code, line number, timestamp) immediately.
- Verify screen session is alive:
screen -ls | grep "$(cat .beads/loop-session-name)"
Step 3 — Build the overview:
Present a structured report like this:
[one-line summary: "X of Y epics done, currently working on Z"]
| # | Epic | Status | Duration |
|---|------|--------|----------|
| 1 | Epic title from beads | Closed | ~8 min |
| 2 | Another epic | Running | started HH:MM UTC |
| 3 | Upcoming epic | Open | -- |
[total runtime, average per completed epic, ETA for remaining epics]
[any anomalies: failures, retries, human_required, stalls]
Note on ETA: The loop does not persist a target epic count. To calculate "X of Y", query bd list --type=epic --status=open for remaining epics and count completed entries in loop-execution.jsonl. ETAs are rough estimates — epic duration varies with complexity, retries, and memory pressure.
- Closed epics: duration from
loop-execution.jsonl (convert seconds to human-readable)
- Running epic: "started HH:MM UTC" from
.loop-status.json timestamp
- Open epics: "--"
- Pace: total elapsed, average per epic, rough ETA for remaining
- Anomalies: flag failures, retries (attempt > 1), human_required markers, or stalled sessions
Log File Map
| Path | Content | When to read |
|---|
.compound-agent/agent_logs/.loop-status.json | Current epic, attempt, status | Always -- primary status |
.compound-agent/agent_logs/loop-execution.jsonl | Completed epics with result, duration | Always -- progress history |
.compound-agent/agent_logs/.latest | Symlink to active trace file | Stall detection |
.compound-agent/agent_logs/trace_<id>-<ts>.jsonl | Raw stream-json per session | Deep debugging only |
.compound-agent/agent_logs/loop_<id>-<ts>.log | Extracted assistant text per session | Investigating a specific epic |
.compound-agent/agent_logs/memory_<id>-<ts>.log | Memory watchdog readings | Suspecting OOM |
.compound-agent/agent_logs/.polish-status.json | Polish loop cycle/status | During polish loops |
.compound-agent/agent_logs/polish-cycle-<N>/ | Per-cycle audit findings and reports | Polish loop review |
Gotchas
Critical
-
Always include --dangerously-skip-permissions --permission-mode auto --verbose in non-interactive claude invocations. Without --dangerously-skip-permissions, claude hangs on permission prompts. Without --verbose, --output-format stream-json silently exits 1. The ca loop generator includes all three — if a generated script is missing them, the binary is stale.
-
Always use a quoted heredoc (<<'DELIM') for prompt templates containing markdown. Triple backticks in markdown code blocks are interpreted as bash command substitution in unquoted heredocs (<<DELIM). This causes bash to spawn and hang silently. Use <<'DELIM' and inject variables with sed instead.
-
Prefer the local ca binary over npx ca. The polish loop generates inner loop scripts via ca loop. If npx resolves a stale npm-installed version, the generated script may lack critical flags (--dangerously-skip-permissions, --verbose) and use unquoted heredocs. The current Go CLI already handles all these correctly — ensure the local build is on PATH.
-
Use comma-separated values for --epics and --reviewers. Space-separated arguments are interpreted as subcommands and cause parse errors.
CLI Flags for Advisory/Review Fleet
| CLI | Non-interactive mode | Model flag |
|---|
claude | -p "prompt" | --model <id> |
gemini | -p "prompt" | -m <model> |
codex | codex exec "prompt" | (default model) |
Stdin piping works for all three: cat file.md | claude -p "Review this".
Other Gotchas
- Run
ca loop and ca polish from the directory containing go.mod (usually go/)
- Use
--force when regenerating scripts to overwrite existing ones
- The polish loop is a separate script — chain via pipeline script, not
&& in the terminal
- Do not use
gemini --print, codex --print, or claude --print — wrong flags
- Do not use
claude -m sonnet — use claude --model claude-sonnet-4-6
Windows Users
All sections above assume Unix/macOS. Windows users should read the references/windows/ directory:
windows-wsl2.md — Recommended path. Run loops unmodified inside WSL2 with tmux for session management. Covers both infinity and polish loops.
infinity-loop.ps1 — Native PowerShell reference template. Static translation of the bash infinity loop for users who cannot use WSL2. Runs in foreground only (no screen/tmux equivalent). See the Known Limitations header in the file for gaps.
The references/windows/ directory is ONLY relevant for Windows users. Unix/macOS users can ignore it entirely.