| name | cc-verify-between-waves |
| description | Checkpoint-between-waves cadence for multi-file refactors. After each logical batch (wave) of edits, run typecheck + tests; commit only on green; roll back the wave (not the whole branch) on red. Use for any refactor touching more than three files or three distinct concerns. |
| allowed-tools | ["Read","Bash","Edit","Write"] |
| triggers | ["verify between waves","wave-by-wave","checkpoint refactor","tsc after each","multi-file refactor"] |
Verify Between Waves
A named cadence for multi-file refactors. This codifies what happens in practice on successful
large refactors — and what's missing on the ones that go sideways.
Why this exists
Refactors fail when edits compound before any get verified. Classic failure mode: wave 1 edits
look fine; wave 2 breaks something subtle in wave 1; by wave 4 the tsc errors are so tangled the
repro takes longer than redoing the work.
Session evidence
Applied to the scrapin-aint-easy Tier-A refactor pass (one real session, n=1):
- 7 waves, 24 upgrades, 9 commits
- tsc + tests after every wave before committing
- Regressions caught inside the wave they were introduced:
this._initialized rename broke two write sites (caught by tsc immediately after rename wave)
now unused after the dead-comparator removal wave (caught on the same tsc pass)
- 9 of 9 commits landed green — no mid-branch rollback ever needed
- Every wave's gate:
npx tsc --noEmit && pnpm test — no exceptions
When to use this
Any edit set that:
- Touches >3 files, or
- Touches >3 distinct concerns (security, perf, DX, cleanup, …), or
- Runs longer than 20 minutes of human time, or
- Mixes mechanical cleanup with new-code additions
Skip for single-file fixes, one-line edits, and documentation-only commits.
The cadence
Wave = a logically coherent group of edits that can be reasoned about as one change.
Per wave:
1. Read the target files (batched, parallel Reads).
2. Make the edits (batched, parallel Edits). Keep edits narrow and related.
3. Gate: run typecheck (`tsc --noEmit`) and tests (`pnpm test` or equivalent).
4. If RED:
a. Do NOT add more edits.
b. Fix the regression inside the current wave.
c. Re-run the gate until GREEN.
d. If the fix grows the wave beyond "one coherent change", split into two waves
with a commit boundary between them.
5. If GREEN:
a. Commit with a scoped message naming the wave.
b. Move to the next wave.
After N waves: push.
Wave-sizing heuristics
| Signal | Wave size |
|---|
Mechanical replace_all (e.g., errMsg helper replacing 11 ternaries) | One wave by itself |
| Related fixes in one file | One wave |
| Same pattern applied across 2-3 files | One wave |
| Cross-cutting change (interface extraction, rename of a widely-used symbol) | One wave, then verify, then cleanup wave |
| New feature + tests | One wave for feature, one for tests |
Anti-pattern: stuffing "security fixes + cleanup + new tests + doc update" into one wave.
The gate: what counts as "green"
Minimum:
- Typecheck: no errors
- Tests: all pre-existing tests pass; new tests added in the wave also pass
Better (if available):
- Lint: clean
- Coverage: above the configured threshold
- Smoke: a handful of explicit manual checks where unit tests can't reach (e.g., MCP stdio transport round-trip)
Example: commit messages
wave 1 — security hardening
wave 2 — tools.ts cleanup + schema visibility
wave 3 — pino redact + telemetry race + HNSW init
wave 4 — Puppeteer page pool
wave 5 — safePaginate helper, vector dirty flag
Each message states the wave's coherent theme; body documents what changed and what was left out.
Interaction with other patterns
- Refactor Pipeline (
cc-orchestrate.md Template 5): verify-between-waves is the "Verifier"
role formalized as a repeating cadence instead of a single final step.
- Checkpointing (
skills/checkpointing/SKILL.md): checkpointing saves orchestrator state
periodically; verify-between-waves saves code state (commits) periodically. Complementary.
- Context Budget (
skills/cc-context-budgeting/SKILL.md): waves are natural /compact
boundaries — after each green commit, the surrounding context is a good candidate to summarize.
Rollback recipe (if a wave went bad)
git reset --mixed HEAD~1 # undo the wave commit but keep files
git checkout -- <files> # drop the bad edits
# or: git stash # keep them for inspection
Then either redo the wave in smaller steps, or abandon that particular change and move on.
Red flags that you're NOT running this cadence
- You haven't run tsc in 10+ edits.
- You're hoping the tests pass "at the end".
- You have >5 uncommitted files changed.
- You're about to commit 200+ line diff without having run typecheck since the first edit.
Any of these → stop editing, run the gate, commit what's green, re-plan the rest as new waves.