| name | grinding-until-pass |
| description | Keep iterating on code changes until the tests pass, the build succeeds, or linting is clean. Runs in a tight loop of fix → run → check → repeat. Use when you want the agent to autonomously grind through test failures or build errors. |
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Grind Until Pass
Use this skill when you want the agent to keep working autonomously until a specific goal is met — all tests pass, the build succeeds, or linting is clean. Instead of stopping after one attempt, the agent loops until done.
Steps
- Define the goal command — the command whose exit code determines success:
- Tests:
npm test or npx vitest run
- Build:
npm run build
- Lint:
npm run lint
- Type-check:
npx tsc --noEmit
- All of the above:
npm run lint && npx tsc --noEmit && npm test && npm run build
-
Run the command — execute it and capture the output.
-
If it fails — analyze and fix:
- Read the error output carefully.
- Identify the root cause: failing test assertion, type error, lint violation, import error, etc.
- Make the minimal fix. Don't refactor — just fix the error.
- Go back to step 2.
- If it passes — stop and report:
- Report what was fixed and how many iterations it took.
- Summarize the changes made.
Rules for the Loop
- Maximum 10 iterations — if after 10 attempts the command still fails, stop and report what's blocking progress. Something fundamental is wrong and needs human input.
- Fix one thing at a time — don't try to fix all errors at once. Fix the first error, re-run, and see if the fix resolves downstream errors too.
- Don't delete tests — if a test is failing, fix the code to make it pass. Don't modify the test unless the test itself is clearly wrong (testing old behavior that was intentionally changed).
- Don't suppress errors — don't add
@ts-ignore, eslint-disable, or any types to silence errors. Fix the actual problem.
- Track progress — if the number of errors is increasing instead of decreasing, stop and reassess the approach.
When to use
- After a large refactor that broke multiple tests
- After upgrading a dependency that introduced type errors
- After merging a branch with conflicts that need resolution
- When you want to "just make it green" and trust the agent to grind through it
Advanced: Cursor Hooks Integration
You can automate this with a Cursor hook in .cursor/hooks.json that triggers after the agent's turn ends, checks if tests pass, and sends a follow-up message if they don't:
{
"hooks": [
{
"event": "stop",
"command": "bash .cursor/scripts/check-tests.sh",
"description": "Re-run tests after agent stops and send follow-up if failing"
}
]
}
The script checks the exit code and returns a followup_message if tests are still failing.
Notes
- This works best with fast test suites. If your tests take 5+ minutes, the loop will be slow.
- Use
--bail or --fail-fast flags to stop at the first failure for faster iteration.
- The agent will be thorough but not creative — if the fix requires a design change, it'll need human guidance.
Related skills
loop-on-ci: same iterate-until-green pattern but driven by PR checks (gh pr checks); prefer it when the goal is a green PR rather than a local command
gh-fix-ci: diagnose failing GitHub Actions checks and plan the fix with user approval; prefer it when the failure only shows up in CI