| name | output-dev-create-skeleton |
| description | Generate workflow skeleton files using the Output SDK CLI. Use when starting a new workflow, scaffolding project structure, or understanding the generated file layout. |
| allowed-tools | ["Bash","Read"] |
Generate Workflow Skeleton with Output SDK CLI
Overview
This skill documents how to use the Output SDK CLI to generate a workflow skeleton. The skeleton provides a starting point with all required files and proper structure.
When to Use This Skill
- Starting a new workflow from scratch
- Understanding what files are needed for a workflow
- Scaffolding the basic structure before implementation
- Learning the Output SDK workflow patterns
CLI Command
npx output workflow generate --skeleton
This command creates the basic file structure for a new workflow.
Generated File Structure
After running the skeleton generator, you will have:
src/workflows/{workflow-name}/
├── workflow.ts # Main workflow definition
├── steps.ts # Step function definitions
├── types.ts # Zod schemas and types
├── prompts/ # Empty folder for prompt files
└── scenarios/ # Empty folder for test scenarios
Project Structure Overview
The skeleton is created within the standard Output SDK project structure:
src/
├── shared/ # Shared code (create if needed)
│ ├── clients/ # API clients
│ ├── utils/ # Utility functions
│ ├── services/ # Business logic services
│ ├── steps/ # Shared steps (optional)
│ └── evaluators/ # Shared evaluators (optional)
└── workflows/
└── {workflow-name}/ # Your new workflow
├── workflow.ts
├── steps.ts
├── types.ts
├── prompts/
└── scenarios/
Post-Generation Steps
Step 1: Review Generated Files
After generation, review each file to understand the template structure:
workflow.ts - Contains a basic workflow template:
import { workflow, z } from '@outputai/core';
import { exampleStep } from './steps.js';
import { WorkflowInputSchema } from './types.js';
export default workflow( {
name: 'workflowName',
description: 'Workflow description',
inputSchema: WorkflowInputSchema,
outputSchema: z.object( { result: z.string() } ),
fn: async input => {
const result = await exampleStep( input );
return { result };
}
} );
steps.ts - Contains example step template:
import { step, z } from '@outputai/core';
import { ExampleStepInputSchema } from './types.js';
export const exampleStep = step( {
name: 'exampleStep',
description: 'Example step description',
inputSchema: ExampleStepInputSchema,
outputSchema: z.object( { result: z.string() } ),
fn: async input => {
return { result: 'example' };
}
} );
types.ts - Contains schema definitions:
import { z } from '@outputai/core';
export const WorkflowInputSchema = z.object( {
} );
export type WorkflowInput = z.infer<typeof WorkflowInputSchema>;
Step 2: Customize the Workflow Name
- Update the folder name to match your workflow
- Update the
name property in workflow.ts
- Follow naming conventions:
- Folder:
snake_case (e.g., image_processor)
- Workflow name:
camelCase (e.g., imageProcessor)
Step 3: Define Your Schemas
In types.ts, define your actual input/output schemas:
import { z } from '@outputai/core';
export const WorkflowInputSchema = z.object( {
content: z.string().describe( 'Content to process' ),
options: z.object( {
format: z.enum( [ 'json', 'text' ] ).default( 'json' )
} ).optional()
} );
export type WorkflowInput = z.infer<typeof WorkflowInputSchema>;
export type WorkflowOutput = { processed: string };
Related Skill: output-dev-types-file
Step 4: Implement Your Steps
Replace the example step with your actual step implementations:
import { step, z, FatalError, ValidationError } from '@outputai/core';
import { httpClient } from '@outputai/http';
import { ProcessContentInputSchema } from './types.js';
export const processContent = step( {
name: 'processContent',
description: 'Process the input content',
inputSchema: ProcessContentInputSchema,
outputSchema: z.object( { processed: z.string() } ),
fn: async ( { content } ) => {
return { processed: content.toUpperCase() };
}
} );
Related Skill: output-dev-step-function
Step 5: Update the Workflow
Wire up your steps in the workflow:
import { workflow, z } from '@outputai/core';
import { processContent } from './steps.js';
import { WorkflowInputSchema } from './types.js';
export default workflow( {
name: 'contentProcessor',
description: 'Process content with custom logic',
inputSchema: WorkflowInputSchema,
outputSchema: z.object( { processed: z.string() } ),
fn: async input => {
const result = await processContent( { content: input.content } );
return result;
}
} );
Related Skill: output-dev-workflow-function
Step 6: Add Prompts (If Needed)
If your workflow uses LLM operations, create prompt files:
prompts/
└── analyzeContent@v1.prompt
Related Skill: output-dev-prompt-file
Step 7: Create Test Scenarios
Add test input files to the scenarios folder:
scenarios/
├── basic_input.json
└── complex_input.json
Related Skill: output-dev-scenario-file
Step 8: Set Up Shared Resources (If Needed)
If your workflow needs shared clients, utilities, or services:
mkdir -p src/shared/clients
mkdir -p src/shared/utils
mkdir -p src/shared/services
Import shared resources in your steps:
import { GeminiService } from '../../shared/clients/gemini_client.js';
import { formatDate } from '../../shared/utils/date_helpers.js';
Related Skill: output-dev-http-client-create
Verification
After customization, verify your workflow:
1. List Available Workflows
npx output workflow list
Your workflow should appear in the list.
2. Run with Test Input
npx output workflow run {workflowName} --input path/to/scenarios/basic_input.json
3. Check for Errors
Common issues after skeleton generation:
- Import paths missing
.js extension
- Schema imported from
zod instead of @outputai/core
- Missing step exports
Customization Tips
Adding Multiple Steps
export const stepOne = step( { ... } );
export const stepTwo = step( { ... } );
export const stepThree = step( { ... } );
const resultOne = await stepOne( input );
const resultTwo = await stepTwo( resultOne );
const resultThree = await stepThree( resultTwo );
Parallel Step Execution
const [ resultA, resultB ] = await Promise.all( [
stepA( input ),
stepB( input )
] );
Conditional Steps
if ( input.processImages ) {
await processImages( input );
}
Large Workflows - Folder-Based Organization
For workflows with many steps, use folder-based organization:
src/workflows/{workflow-name}/
├── workflow.ts
├── steps/ # Folder instead of single file
│ ├── fetch_data.ts
│ ├── process.ts
│ └── validate.ts
├── types.ts
└── ...
Verification Checklist
After generating and customizing the skeleton:
Related Skills
output-dev-folder-structure - Understanding the complete folder layout
output-dev-workflow-function - Detailed workflow.ts documentation
output-dev-step-function - Detailed steps.ts documentation
output-dev-types-file - Creating Zod schemas
output-dev-prompt-file - Adding LLM prompts
output-dev-scenario-file - Creating test scenarios
output-workflow-run - Running workflows
output-dev-code-style - Code style conventions
output-workflow-list - Listing available workflows