| name | plan |
| description | Bomb-proof plan mode: write an actionable markdown plan, no execution. Bite-sized tasks, exact paths, complete code. |
| version | 2.1.0 |
| license | MIT |
| platforms | ["linux","macos","windows"] |
| metadata | {"hermes":{"tags":["planning","plan-mode","bomb-proof","workflow","design"],"related_skills":["writing-plans","subagent-driven-development","test-driven-development","requesting-code-review"]}} |
| argument-hint | What needs a bomb-proof plan? |
Plan Mode
Leading word: bomb-proof — consistent with writing-plans. A plan so thorough no implementer has to guess. But here: plan only, no execution.
Completion criterion: A .md file saved at .hermes/plans/ with goal, approach, step-by-step tasks, file paths, and verification steps — nothing implemented yet.
Core behavior
For this turn, you are planning only.
- Do not implement code.
- Do not edit project files except the plan markdown file.
- Do not run mutating terminal commands, commit, push, or perform external actions.
- You may inspect the repo or other context with read-only commands/tools when needed.
- Your deliverable is a markdown plan saved inside the active workspace under
.hermes/plans/.
Output requirements
Write a markdown plan that is concrete and actionable.
Include, when relevant:
- Goal
- Current context / assumptions
- Proposed approach
- Step-by-step plan
- Files likely to change
- Tests / validation
- Risks, tradeoffs, and open questions
If the task is code-related, include exact file paths, likely test targets, and verification steps.
Save location
Save the plan with write_file under:
.hermes/plans/YYYY-MM-DD_HHMMSS-<slug>.md
Treat that as relative to the active working directory / backend workspace. Hermes file tools are backend-aware, so using this relative path keeps the plan with the workspace on local, docker, ssh, modal, and daytona backends.
If the runtime provides a specific target path, use that exact path.
If not, create a sensible timestamped filename yourself under .hermes/plans/.
Interaction style
- If the request is clear enough, write the plan directly.
- If no explicit instruction accompanies
/plan, infer the task from the current conversation context.
- If it is genuinely underspecified, ask a brief clarifying question instead of guessing.
- After saving the plan, reply briefly with what you planned and the saved path.
Crafting the Plan Content
The craft of writing a bomb-proof plan — bite-sized tasks, complete code, exact paths — lives in the writing-plans skill. Load it for the full reference: leading word "bomb-proof", completion criteria per step, TDD-oriented task structure, and verification checklist.
Key points from writing-plans to apply here:
- Each task = 2-5 minutes of focused work
- Include exact file paths (not "the config file" but
src/config/settings.py)
- Include complete code examples (copy-pasteable)
- Include exact commands with expected output
- Write tasks in order: setup → core → edge cases → integration → cleanup
Remember
Bite-sized tasks (2-5 min each)
Exact file paths
Complete code (copy-pasteable)
Exact commands with expected output
Verification steps
DRY, YAGNI, TDD
Frequent commits
A good plan makes implementation obvious.