| name | driving-claude-code-sessions |
| description | Use when acting as a project manager that delegates tasks to other coding-agent sessions (Claude Code, Codex, or Pi) - launch workers, assign them work, monitor progress, review their tool calls, and collect results |
Driving Coding-Agent Sessions
Overview
You can launch coding-agent sessions — Claude Code, Codex, or Pi — as "workers" in tmux, send them prompts, wait for them to finish, read their output, and hand them off to a human. Workers run with permissions bypassed, so they execute tool calls without prompting. Each worker emits lifecycle events to a JSONL file so the controller can observe what it's doing — Claude and Codex through their hook systems, Pi through a native extension csd loads into it.
All operations go through a single CLI: csd. After launching a worker, the controller receives a shim path at /tmp/csd-workers/bin/<tmux-name> that bakes in the worker handle. Every per-worker operation goes through that path — no positional state to thread between calls, no absolute skill path to prepend. A small set of environment variables tune behavior; see Environment variables at the bottom.
(The worker dir moved from /tmp/claude-workers to /tmp/csd-workers; when the default path is in use, csd creates a back-compat symlink /tmp/claude-workers → /tmp/csd-workers, so old paths and muscle memory still resolve.)
The shim path is deterministic: if you pick a memorable tmux name at launch, you can reconstruct /tmp/csd-workers/bin/<tmux-name> whenever you need it. For agents driving via tool calls, that's the right model — shell state doesn't persist between calls, so a SHIM=...; $SHIM cmd pattern just adds noise. The examples below use the bare path.
Harnesses
Pick a harness with --harness at launch (default claude):
$SKILL/csd launch --harness codex my-task /path/to/project
$SKILL/csd launch --harness pi my-task /path/to/project
The controller-facing command surface is identical across all three harnesses — launch, send, converse, wait-for-turn, read-turn, read-events, status, stop, and handoff behave the same regardless of harness. A few things differ:
- Auth. Each harness authenticates from its own home — Claude
~/.claude, Codex ~/.codex, Pi ~/.pi/agent. csd stages that login into the worker at launch, so to rotate credentials, relaunch.
adopt is Claude-only. Claude takes a caller-assigned session id, so a session can be resumed by id (claude --resume). Codex and Pi mint their own ids on the first prompt and offer no resume-by-id — relaunch them instead.
- Codex isn't queryable until its first prompt. Codex mints its session id only when you send the first prompt, so between
launch and the first send/converse a codex worker's status, session-id, and wait-for-turn return no worker known — it is running, it just hasn't registered yet. converse handles this internally, so the typical launch→converse path is fine; only the lower-level commands see the gap. (Claude takes its id at launch and Pi registers at launch, so both are queryable immediately.)
Prerequisites
- tmux
- a harness CLI — at least the one you launch: claude (default), codex, or pi
(No jq and no bash hooks: csd is a TypeScript/node tool and its hooks are node programs. node is required, but it's already present wherever Claude Code runs.)
Setup
The CLI lives at <skill>/scripts/csd. Top-level subcommands need the skill path:
csd launch [--harness <claude|codex|pi>] <tmux-name> <cwd> [-- harness-args...] — bootstrap a worker (harness defaults to claude)
csd adopt <tmux-name> <cwd> <session-id> [-- claude-args...] — re-adopt an existing Claude session as a worker (claude-only; see Recovering workers)
csd list [--all] — enumerate workers
csd grant-consent — one-time consent for running workers with permissions bypassed
Once a worker is launched, run subsequent commands against /tmp/csd-workers/bin/<tmux-name>:
SKILL=/abs/path/to/skill/scripts
$SKILL/csd grant-consent
$SKILL/csd launch my-task /path/to/project
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task status
Pick a memorable tmux name at launch; the shim path is then deterministic. (You can capture it into a shell variable in an interactive shell, but for agent-driven workflows the bare path is simpler — there's no shell state to lose between calls.)
Workflow
In examples below, $SKILL is the absolute path to skills/driving-claude-code-sessions/scripts. WORKER is the bare shim path (e.g. /tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task) — substitute the deterministic path for your worker.
1. Launch
$SKILL/csd launch my-task /path/to/project
csd launch:
- Writes a 3-line shim at
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task
- Starts tmux and the harness in it
- Blocks until the worker is ready — Claude (which takes a caller-assigned session id) waits for its
session_start event; Codex and Pi mint their own ids on the first prompt, so launch settles their TUI and the worker's meta self-registers when it fires its first event
- Prints the shim path on stdout (one line)
- Prints a "Worker launched" panel on stderr — the
reproduce: line is the exact command to relaunch with the same args
Pass harness CLI args after a -- separator, or pick a non-default harness with --harness:
$SKILL/csd launch my-task /path/to/project -- --model sonnet
$SKILL/csd launch --harness codex my-task /path/to/project
2. Converse (the typical case)
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task converse "Refactor the auth module" 300
converse sends the prompt, waits for the worker to finish, and prints the final assistant text on stdout. For tool-heavy turns where the bare text strips the interesting part, use --with-turn to get the full markdown:
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task converse --with-turn "Run the failing tests" 600
Multi-turn just works — the wait tracks turn boundaries automatically:
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task converse "Write tests for the auth module" 300
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task converse "Add edge cases for expired tokens" 300
3. Lower-level control
If you need to drive the worker more directly:
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task send "Refactor the auth module"
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task wait-for-turn 300
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task status
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task read-turn
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task read-turn --full
4. Watching what the worker does
Every tool call emits a pre_tool_use event with the tool name and input. Tail the event stream to watch in real time:
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task read-events --follow &
MONITOR_PID=$!
kill $MONITOR_PID
Or pull events after the fact:
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task read-events
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task read-events --last 5
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task read-events --type pre_tool_use
--type accepts one of: session_start, user_prompt_submit, pre_tool_use, post_tool_use, stop, session_end. Unknown event names fail fast. (Claude workers emit pre_tool_use but not post_tool_use; Codex and Pi emit both.)
If you see something you don't want, stop the worker:
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task stop
5. Stop and clean up
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task stop
Sends /exit, waits up to 10s for session_end, kills the tmux session if still running, and removes the meta, events, and shim files.
stop is destructive: the worker is gone and the shim path stops working. If you wanted the worker around for follow-up turns or a parallel workflow, don't call stop until you're done with it. To resume work under the same name, relaunch — csd launch my-task /path/to/project again — and you'll get a fresh worker at the same shim path.
After stop, the shim no longer exists, so invoking it again surfaces a shell error along the lines of no such file or directory: /tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task (the exact wording depends on your shell). That's expected; the worker is gone.
6. Hand off to a human
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task handoff
Prints attach instructions for a human to take over the tmux session.
Finding workers
$SKILL/csd list
$SKILL/csd list --all
$SKILL/csd list api
$SKILL/csd prune
Reference
csd launch [--harness <claude|codex|pi>] <tmux-name> <cwd> [-- harness-args...]
csd adopt <tmux-name> <cwd> <session-id> [-- claude-args...] # claude-only
csd list [--all] [<pattern>]
csd prune # remove dead/orphaned worker state
csd grant-consent
<shim> converse [--with-turn] <prompt> [timeout=120]
<shim> send <prompt>
<shim> wait-for-turn [timeout=60] [--after-line N]
<shim> status
<shim> read-events [--last N] [--type T] [--follow] # --last caps the --follow backlog
<shim> read-turn [--full]
<shim> stop
<shim> handoff
<shim> session-id
<shim> events-file
<shim> is /tmp/csd-workers/bin/<tmux-name>. Run csd help for the same surface.
Common Patterns
Fan-Out: Multiple Workers in Parallel
$SKILL/csd launch worker-api ~/proj
$SKILL/csd launch worker-ui ~/proj
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/worker-api send "Add pagination to /users"
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/worker-ui send "Add a loading spinner to the user list"
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/worker-api wait-for-turn 600
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/worker-ui wait-for-turn 600
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/worker-api stop
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/worker-ui stop
Pipeline: Worker A produces, Worker B consumes
$SKILL/csd launch spec ~/proj
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/spec converse "Write an OpenAPI spec for /users to /tmp/api.yaml" 300
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/spec stop
$SKILL/csd launch impl ~/proj
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/impl converse "Implement the endpoint defined in /tmp/api.yaml" 600
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/impl stop
Don't trust worker B's summary of what it did — check the produced file. A worker can report success while having written the wrong thing (see Important Notes).
Edge Cases
Worker crashes mid-turn
wait-for-turn matches stop OR session_end, so it returns when the worker dies. Call status afterward: if it's gone, the worker crashed.
After a converse timeout, check status before wait-for-turn
A bare wait-for-turn baselines at the current end of the events file and waits for the next turn-end. If a converse timed out, the worker often finishes during the gap — the stop has already landed, so a follow-up wait-for-turn blocks the entire timeout waiting for a turn that will never start. After a timeout, call status first: idle means the turn already ended (read-turn to read it); working means it's still going.
Recovering workers after a reboot
Worker runtime state (the meta/events/shim files under /tmp/csd-workers) lives in /tmp, which macOS clears on reboot — and the tmux panes die with it. But the conversations survive: Claude Code persists each session transcript at ~/.claude/projects/<encoded-cwd>/<session-id>.jsonl. csd adopt brings one back as a live, driveable worker (this is claude-only — Codex and Pi mint their own session ids and offer no resume-by-id, so relaunch those instead):
$SKILL/csd adopt my-task /path/to/project <session-id>
This is claude-only — codex/pi conversations do NOT survive stop. Codex and Pi run under a staged per-worker home at /tmp/csd-workers/homes/<name>/ (config, auth, and the rollout/session transcript), not your real ~/.codex / ~/.pi. stop removes that home, so the transcript is gone and there is no recovery path — relaunch starts a fresh session. Only claude persists its transcript outside the worker dir (in ~/.claude/projects), which is why only claude is adoptable.
adopt pre-writes the meta keyed by <session-id>, starts claude --resume <session-id> (which preserves the id, so the worker emits events normally), and writes the shim — so the resumed conversation is fully driveable (converse/status/read-turn/…), with all prior context intact. If a tmux session of that name already exists (e.g. restored by tmux-resurrect / tmux-continuum), adopt respawns its pane in place, preserving the restored layout; otherwise it opens a new one.
Find a worker's <session-id> from its working directory: the newest *.jsonl in ~/.claude/projects/<cwd with every / . _ replaced by ->. For bulk recovery (e.g. pairing with tmux-continuum's @continuum-boot), examples/recover-workers.sh reads a tmux-resurrect snapshot, derives each id, and calls adopt per worker — run it with --dry-run first. Note: workers are restored as resumed sessions, not their original tool/MCP state; re-pass any launch args (e.g. -- --model …) you depended on.
Lost the shim path
If you know the tmux name, the path is /tmp/csd-workers/bin/<tmux-name>. If you don't, csd list enumerates everything; csd list <pattern> filters by tmux-name substring.
Long prompts
send uses bracketed-paste, which handles multi-line and special characters. For prompts in the tens-of-KB range, write to a file and tell the worker to read it:
echo "Long instructions..." > /tmp/instructions.txt
/tmp/csd-workers/bin/my-task send "Read /tmp/instructions.txt and follow it"
Important Notes
- One controller per worker. Two controllers driving the same tmux session will collide.
- Workers don't share state with the controller except via files on disk and the event stream.
- Shim paths bake in absolute skill paths. A plugin reinstall at a new location breaks live workers; relaunch them.
- csd is a transparent relay, not a validator.
converse/read-turn return whatever the worker says — verbatim, including when the worker is confidently wrong. For correctness-critical handoffs, verify the produced artifact on disk, not the worker's prose self-report.
Environment variables
The csd CLI honors a small set of env vars. All are optional.
| Variable | Purpose |
|---|
CSD_CLAUDE_BIN / CSD_CODEX_BIN / CSD_PI_BIN | Path to each harness binary. Default to claude / codex / pi (resolved via PATH). Set when a binary is not on PATH or you want to pin a specific version. |
CSD_CODEX_MODEL / CSD_PI_MODEL | Optional model override for codex / pi workers. Unset = the harness default (codex: gpt-5.5; pi: its configured default). |
CSD_CONVERSE_DIAG_FILE | When set, csd converse writes a post-mortem diagnostic on timeout — ps tree, tmux capture-pane, last 30 lines of the worker's session JSONL, last 20 lines of the csd events JSONL — to this path, then emits a csd-diagnostic: <path> pointer to stderr. The file is overwritten on each timeout. Unset = no diagnostic file. Useful when wrapping csd in a harness that can ship the file off-box before the worker is reaped. |
CSD_WORKER_DIR | Override the worker dir (default /tmp/csd-workers). The back-compat /tmp/claude-workers symlink is only created when the default is in use. |
CSD_SUBMIT_TIMEOUT / CSD_SUBMIT_RETRY_INTERVAL | send: seconds to wait for the worker to confirm a pasted prompt (default 10) and seconds between retry-Enter resends (default 2). Raise the timeout if a slow tmux session drops the paste. |
CSD_REGISTER_TIMEOUT | Seconds the FIRST send/converse to a derive worker (codex/pi) waits for it to self-register its session id (default 15). |
HOME | Used to locate ~/.claude/projects/<encoded-cwd>/<sid>.jsonl (claude) and the one-time consent file (~/.claude/.claude-session-driver-consent). |
csd help shows the same surface.