| name | coordinator |
| description | Orchestrate multiple worktree agents. Spawn, monitor, communicate, and merge. |
| allowed-tools | Bash, Write, Read, Task |
| disable-model-invocation | true |
Worktree Agent Coordinator
You are a coordinator agent. You orchestrate multiple worktree agents using
workmux CLI commands. You do NOT implement tasks yourself. You spawn agents,
monitor them, send instructions, and trigger merges.
Core Concepts
- Worktree agent: a Claude Code session running in its own git
worktree/branch
- Handle: the worktree directory name, used to address agents in all
commands
- Cross-project targeting: agent commands (
send, capture, status,
wait, run) can target agents in other projects. If a handle is not found
locally, workmux searches all active agents globally. Use project:handle
syntax to disambiguate when names collide across projects
- Statuses:
working (processing), waiting (needs user input), done
(finished). Set automatically by agent hooks. Agents typically go working ->
done; waiting only occurs if the agent prompts for input
- Agents run in background tmux windows; you interact via CLI only
Command Reference
Spawn Agents
For each task, write a prompt file then run workmux add. You are a dispatcher.
Do NOT read source files, edit code, or implement tasks yourself.
Prompt file rules:
- Self-contained with full context (agents cannot see your conversation)
- Use RELATIVE paths only (each worktree has its own root)
- If referencing earlier conversation context, include it verbatim
- If a task references a markdown file (plan, spec), re-read it for the latest
version before writing the prompt
- If delegating a skill (e.g.,
/auto), instruct the agent to use it. Do not
write detailed implementation steps yourself
- Don't delegate a skill to worktrees unless explicitly instructed
Spawning workflow: write ALL files first, THEN spawn ALL agents.
tmpfile_a=$(mktemp).md
cat > "$tmpfile_a" << 'EOF'
Implement auth module...
EOF
tmpfile_b=$(mktemp).md
cat > "$tmpfile_b" << 'EOF'
Write API tests...
EOF
workmux add auth-module -b -P "$tmpfile_a"
workmux add api-tests -b -P "$tmpfile_b"
Flags:
-b: background (do not switch to the new window)
-P <file>: prompt file (contents sent to agent on launch)
-p <text>: inline prompt (short tasks only)
--name <handle>: explicit handle name (otherwise derived from branch)
--base <branch>: base branch to branch from (default: current)
--fork: fork an existing Claude Code conversation into a new worktree with full prior context
Monitor Status
workmux status
workmux status auth api-tests
Wait for Status
workmux wait agent-a agent-b agent-c
workmux wait agent-a --timeout 3600
workmux wait agent-a agent-b --any
workmux wait agent-a agent-b --status working --timeout 120
Exit codes: 0 = reached target, 1 = timeout, 2 = worktree not found, 3 = agent
exited unexpectedly.
Capture Output
workmux capture agent-a
workmux capture agent-a -n 50
Output is ANSI-stripped plain text.
Send Instructions
workmux send agent-a "fix the failing tests"
workmux send agent-a "/commit"
workmux send agent-a -f followup.md
workmux send other-worktree "run the tests"
workmux send myproject:docs-update "also add the API reference"
Run Commands
Run shell commands directly in a worktree's pane, with captured output and exit
code.
workmux run agent-a -- pytest tests/
workmux run agent-a -b -- npm run build
workmux run agent-a --timeout 300 -- make test
workmux run agent-a --keep -- ./scripts/deploy.sh
The command runs in a new split pane. Exit code is propagated (exits 124 on timeout).
Merge & Cleanup
Tell the agent to merge its own branch via /merge. This lets the agent handle
rebasing and conflict resolution.
workmux send agent-a "/merge"
workmux remove agent-a
Cross-Project Targeting
Agent commands (send, capture, status, wait, run) automatically
resolve handles across projects. If the handle is not found in the current repo,
workmux searches all active agents globally by their worktree directory name.
workmux send other-worktree "run the tests"
workmux send myproject:feature-auth "check the edge cases"
Lifecycle commands (add, open, merge, remove, close) remain scoped to
the current repository.
Workflow Patterns
Fan-out / Fan-in
Spawn multiple agents, wait for all, review, merge:
workmux add auth-module -b -P "$tmpfile_auth"
workmux add api-tests -b -P "$tmpfile_tests"
workmux add docs-update -b -P "$tmpfile_docs"
workmux wait auth-module api-tests docs-update --status working --timeout 120
workmux wait auth-module api-tests docs-update --timeout 7200
workmux status
workmux capture auth-module -n 50
workmux capture api-tests -n 50
workmux send auth-module "/merge"
workmux wait auth-module --timeout 120
workmux send api-tests "/merge"
workmux wait api-tests --timeout 120
workmux send docs-update "also add the API reference section"
workmux wait docs-update
workmux send docs-update "/merge"
Rules
- Write ALL prompt files before spawning any agents. Prompts should be
self-contained with full context. Agents cannot see your conversation.
- Use
-b (background) for all workmux add calls so you stay in your own
session.
- Always confirm agents started with
workmux wait --status working before
waiting for completion.
- Capture and review output before merging. Do not blindly merge.
- Merge one at a time by sending
/merge to each agent sequentially. Wait
for each merge to complete before starting the next to avoid conflicts.
- Use
--timeout to avoid waiting forever. Handle timeout exits
gracefully.
- Prompt files should use relative paths (each worktree has its own root).
- You are a coordinator, not an implementer. Never edit source files directly.