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ccw-cli-tools CLI tools execution specification (gemini/claude/codex/qwen/opencode) with unified prompt template, mode options, and auto-invoke triggers for code analysis and implementation tasks. Supports configurable CLI endpoints for analysis, write, and review modes. 1.0.0

CLI Tools - Unified Execution Framework

Purpose: Structured CLI tool usage with configuration-driven tool selection, unified prompt templates, and quality-gated execution.

Configuration: ~/.claude/cli-tools.json (Global, always read at initialization)

Initialization (Required First Step)

Before any tool selection or recommendation:

  1. Check if configuration exists in memory:

    • If configuration is already in conversation memory → Use it directly
    • If NOT in memory → Read the configuration file:
      Read(file_path="~/.claude/cli-tools.json")
      
  2. Parse the JSON to understand:

    • Available tools and their enabled status
    • Each tool's primaryModel and secondaryModel
    • Tags defined for tag-based routing
    • Tool types (builtin, cli-wrapper, api-endpoint)
  3. Use configuration throughout the selection process

Why: Tools, models, and tags may change. Configuration file is the single source of truth. Optimization: Reuse in-memory configuration to avoid redundant file reads.

Process Flow

┌─ USER REQUEST
│
├─ STEP 1: Load Configuration
│  ├─ Check if configuration exists in conversation memory
│  └─ If NOT in memory → Read(file_path="~/.claude/cli-tools.json")
│
├─ STEP 2: Understand User Intent
│  ├─ Parse task type (analysis, implementation, security, etc.)
│  ├─ Extract required capabilities (tags)
│  └─ Identify scope (files, modules)
│
├─ STEP 3: Select Tool (based on config)
│  ├─ Explicit --tool specified?
│  │  YES → Validate in config → Use it
│  │  NO  → Match tags with enabled tools → Select best match
│  │       → No match → Use first enabled tool (default)
│  └─ Get primaryModel from config
│
├─ STEP 4: Build Prompt
│  └─ Use 6-field template: PURPOSE, TASK, MODE, CONTEXT, EXPECTED, CONSTRAINTS
│
├─ STEP 5: Select Rule Template
│  ├─ Determine rule from task type
│  └─ Pass via --rule parameter
│
├─ STEP 6: Execute CLI Command
│  └─ ccw cli -p "<PROMPT>" --tool <tool> --mode <mode> --rule <rule>
│
└─ STEP 7: Handle Results
   ├─ On success → Deliver output to user
   └─ On failure → Check secondaryModel or fallback tool

Configuration Reference

Configuration File Location

Path: ~/.claude/cli-tools.json (Global configuration)

IMPORTANT: Check conversation memory first. Only read file if configuration is not in memory.

Reading Configuration

Priority: Check conversation memory first

Loading Options:

  • Option 1 (Preferred): Use in-memory configuration if already loaded in conversation
  • Option 2 (Fallback): Read from file when not in memory
# Read configuration file
cat ~/.claude/cli-tools.json

The configuration defines all available tools with their enabled status, models, and tags.

Configuration Structure

The JSON file contains a tools object where each tool has these fields:

Field Type Description Example
enabled boolean Tool availability status true or false
primaryModel string Default model for execution "gemini-2.5-pro"
secondaryModel string Fallback model on primary failure "gemini-2.5-flash"
tags array Capability tags for routing ["分析", "Debug"]
type string Tool type "builtin", "cli-wrapper", "api-endpoint"

Expected Tools (Reference Only)

Typical tools found in configuration (actual availability determined by reading the file):

Tool Typical Type Common Use
gemini builtin Analysis, Debug (分析, Debug tags)
qwen builtin General coding
codex builtin Code review, implementation
claude builtin General tasks
opencode builtin Open-source model fallback

Note: Tool availability, models, and tags may differ. Use in-memory configuration or read ~/.claude/cli-tools.json if not cached.

Configuration Fields

  • enabled: Tool availability (boolean)
  • primaryModel: Default model for execution
  • secondaryModel: Fallback model on primary failure
  • tags: Capability tags for routing (分析, Debug, implementation, etc.)
  • type: Tool type (builtin, cli-wrapper, api-endpoint)

Universal Prompt Template

Structure: Every CLI command follows this 6-field template

ccw cli -p "PURPOSE: [goal] + [why] + [success criteria] + [scope]
TASK: • [step 1: specific action] • [step 2: specific action] • [step 3: specific action]
MODE: [analysis|write|review]
CONTEXT: @[file patterns] | Memory: [session/tech/module context]
EXPECTED: [deliverable format] + [quality criteria] + [structure requirements]
CONSTRAINTS: [domain constraints]" --tool <tool-id> --mode <mode> --rule <template>

Field Specifications

PURPOSE (Goal Definition)

What: Clear objective + motivation + success criteria + scope boundary

Components:

  • What: Specific task goal
  • Why: Business/technical motivation
  • Success: Measurable success criteria
  • Scope: Bounded context/files

Example - Good:

PURPOSE: Identify OWASP Top 10 vulnerabilities in auth module to pass security audit;
success = all critical/high issues documented with remediation;
scope = src/auth/** only

Example - Bad:

PURPOSE: Analyze code

TASK (Action Steps)

What: Specific, actionable steps with clear verbs and targets

Format: Bullet list with concrete actions

Example - Good:

TASK:
• Scan for SQL injection in query builders
• Check XSS in template rendering
• Verify CSRF token validation

Example - Bad:

TASK: Review code and find issues

MODE (Permission Level)

Options:

  • analysis - Read-only, safe for auto-execution
  • write - Create/Modify/Delete files, full operations
  • review - Git-aware code review (codex only)

Rules:

  • Always specify explicitly
  • Default to analysis for read-only tasks
  • Require explicit --mode write for file modifications
  • Use --mode review with --tool codex for git-aware review

CONTEXT (File Scope + Memory)

Format: CONTEXT: @[file patterns] | Memory: [memory context]

File Patterns:

  • @**/* - All files (default)
  • @src/**/*.ts - Specific pattern
  • @../shared/**/* - Parent/sibling (requires --includeDirs)

Memory Context (when building on previous work):

Memory: Building on auth refactoring (commit abc123), using JWT for sessions
Memory: Integration with auth module, shared error patterns from @shared/utils/errors.ts

EXPECTED (Output Specification)

What: Output format + quality criteria + structure requirements

Example - Good:

EXPECTED: Markdown report with:
severity levels (Critical/High/Medium/Low),
file:line references,
remediation code snippets,
priority ranking

Example - Bad:

EXPECTED: Report

CONSTRAINTS (Domain Boundaries)

What: Scope limits, special requirements, focus areas

Example - Good:

CONSTRAINTS: Focus on authentication | Ignore test files | No breaking changes

Example - Bad:

CONSTRAINTS: (missing or too vague)

CLI Execution Modes

MODE: analysis

  • Permission: Read-only
  • Use For: Code review, architecture analysis, pattern discovery, exploration
  • Safe: Yes - can auto-execute
  • Default: When not specified

MODE: write

  • Permission: Create/Modify/Delete files
  • Use For: Feature implementation, bug fixes, documentation, code creation
  • Safe: No - requires explicit --mode write
  • Requirements: Must be explicitly requested by user

MODE: review

  • Permission: Read-only (git-aware review output)
  • Use For: Code review of uncommitted changes, branch diffs, specific commits
  • Tool Support: codex only (others treat as analysis)
  • Constraint: Target flags (--uncommitted, --base, --commit) and prompt are mutually exclusive

Command Structure

Basic Command

ccw cli -p "<PROMPT>" --tool <tool-id> --mode <analysis|write|review>

Command Options

Option Description Example
--tool <tool> Tool from config --tool gemini
--mode <mode> REQUIRED: analysis/write/review --mode analysis
--model <model> Model override --model gemini-2.5-flash
--cd <path> Working directory --cd src/auth
--includeDirs <dirs> Additional directories --includeDirs ../shared,../types
--rule <template> Auto-load template --rule analysis-review-architecture
--resume [id] Resume session --resume or --resume <id>

Advanced Directory Configuration

Working Directory (--cd)

When using --cd:

  • @**/* = Files within working directory tree only
  • Cannot reference parent/sibling without --includeDirs
  • Reduces token usage by scoping context

Include Directories (--includeDirs)

Two-step requirement for external files:

  1. Add --includeDirs parameter
  2. Reference in CONTEXT with @ patterns
# Single directory
ccw cli -p "CONTEXT: @**/* @../shared/**/*" \
  --tool gemini --mode analysis \
  --cd src/auth --includeDirs ../shared

# Multiple directories
ccw cli -p "..." \
  --tool gemini --mode analysis \
  --cd src/auth --includeDirs ../shared,../types,../utils

Session Resume

When to Use:

  • Multi-round planning (analysis → planning → implementation)
  • Multi-model collaboration (tool A → tool B on same topic)
  • Topic continuity (building on previous findings)

Usage:

ccw cli -p "Continue analyzing" --tool <tool-id> --mode analysis --resume              # Resume last
ccw cli -p "Fix issues found" --tool <tool-id> --mode write --resume <id>              # Resume specific
ccw cli -p "Merge findings" --tool <tool-id> --mode analysis --resume <id1>,<id2>      # Merge sessions

Available Rule Templates

Template System

Use --rule <template-name> to auto-load protocol + template appended to prompt

Universal Templates

  • universal-rigorous-style - Precise tasks (default)
  • universal-creative-style - Exploratory tasks

Analysis Templates

  • analysis-trace-code-execution - Execution tracing
  • analysis-diagnose-bug-root-cause - Bug diagnosis
  • analysis-analyze-code-patterns - Code patterns
  • analysis-analyze-technical-document - Document analysis
  • analysis-review-architecture - Architecture review
  • analysis-review-code-quality - Code review
  • analysis-analyze-performance - Performance analysis
  • analysis-assess-security-risks - Security assessment

Planning Templates

  • planning-plan-architecture-design - Architecture design
  • planning-breakdown-task-steps - Task breakdown
  • planning-design-component-spec - Component design
  • planning-plan-migration-strategy - Migration strategy

Development Templates

  • development-implement-feature - Feature implementation
  • development-refactor-codebase - Code refactoring
  • development-generate-tests - Test generation
  • development-implement-component-ui - UI component
  • development-debug-runtime-issues - Runtime debugging

Task-Type Specific Examples

Example 1: Security Analysis (Read-Only)

ccw cli -p "PURPOSE: Identify OWASP Top 10 vulnerabilities in authentication module to pass security audit; success = all critical/high issues documented with remediation
TASK: • Scan for injection flaws (SQL, command, LDAP) • Check authentication bypass vectors • Evaluate session management • Assess sensitive data exposure
MODE: analysis
CONTEXT: @src/auth/**/* @src/middleware/auth.ts | Memory: Using bcrypt for passwords, JWT for sessions
EXPECTED: Security report with: severity matrix, file:line references, CVE mappings where applicable, remediation code snippets prioritized by risk
CONSTRAINTS: Focus on authentication | Ignore test files
" --tool gemini --mode analysis --rule analysis-assess-security-risks --cd src/auth

Example 2: Feature Implementation (Write Mode)

ccw cli -p "PURPOSE: Implement rate limiting for API endpoints to prevent abuse; must be configurable per-endpoint; backward compatible with existing clients
TASK: • Create rate limiter middleware with sliding window • Implement per-route configuration • Add Redis backend for distributed state • Include bypass for internal services
MODE: write
CONTEXT: @src/middleware/**/* @src/config/**/* | Memory: Using Express.js, Redis already configured, existing middleware pattern in auth.ts
EXPECTED: Production-ready code with: TypeScript types, unit tests, integration test, configuration example, migration guide
CONSTRAINTS: Follow existing middleware patterns | No breaking changes
" --tool gemini --mode write --rule development-implement-feature

Example 3: Bug Root Cause Analysis

ccw cli -p "PURPOSE: Fix memory leak in WebSocket connection handler causing server OOM after 24h; root cause must be identified before any fix
TASK: • Trace connection lifecycle from open to close • Identify event listener accumulation • Check cleanup on disconnect • Verify garbage collection eligibility
MODE: analysis
CONTEXT: @src/websocket/**/* @src/services/connection-manager.ts | Memory: Using ws library, ~5000 concurrent connections in production
EXPECTED: Root cause analysis with: memory profile, leak source (file:line), fix recommendation with code, verification steps
CONSTRAINTS: Focus on resource cleanup
" --tool gemini --mode analysis --rule analysis-diagnose-bug-root-cause --cd src

Example 4: Code Review (Codex Review Mode)

# Option 1: Custom focus (reviews uncommitted by default)
ccw cli -p "Focus on security vulnerabilities and error handling" --tool codex --mode review

# Option 2: Target flag only (no prompt with target flags)
ccw cli --tool codex --mode review --uncommitted
ccw cli --tool codex --mode review --base main
ccw cli --tool codex --mode review --commit abc123

Tool Selection Strategy

Selection Algorithm

STEP 0 (REQUIRED): Load configuration (memory-first strategy)

# Check if configuration exists in conversation memory
# If YES → Use in-memory configuration
# If NO → Read(file_path="~/.claude/cli-tools.json")

Then proceed with selection:

  1. Parse task intent → Extract required capabilities
  2. Load configuration → Parse enabled tools with tags from JSON
  3. Match tags → Filter tools supporting required capabilities
  4. Select tool → Choose by priority (explicit > tag-match > default)
  5. Select model → Use primaryModel, fallback to secondaryModel

Selection Decision Tree

0. LOAD CONFIGURATION (memory-first)
   ├─ In memory? → Use it
   └─ Not in memory? → Read ~/.claude/cli-tools.json
   ↓
1. Explicit --tool specified?
   YES → Validate tool is enabled in config → Use it
   NO  → Proceed to tag-based selection
         ├─ Extract task tags (security, analysis, implementation, etc.)
         │  ├─ Find tools with matching tags
         │  │  ├─ Multiple matches? Use first enabled
         │  │  └─ Single match? Use it
         │  └─ No tag match? Use default tool
         │
         └─ Default: Use first enabled tool in config

Common Tag Routing

Note: Match task type to tags defined in ~/.claude/cli-tools.json

Task Type Common Tags to Match
Security audit 分析, analysis, security
Bug diagnosis Debug, 分析, analysis
Implementation implementation, (any enabled tool)
Testing testing, (any enabled tool)
Refactoring refactoring, (any enabled tool)
Documentation documentation, (any enabled tool)

Selection Logic: Find tools where tags array contains matching keywords, otherwise use first enabled tool.

Fallback Chain

When primary tool fails (based on ~/.claude/cli-tools.json configuration):

  1. Check secondaryModel for same tool (use secondaryModel from config)
  2. Try next enabled tool with matching tags (scan config for enabled tools)
  3. Fall back to default enabled tool (first enabled tool in config)

Example Fallback:

Tool1: primaryModel fails
  ↓
Try Tool1: secondaryModel
  ↓ (if fails)
Try Tool2: primaryModel (next enabled with matching tags)
  ↓ (if fails)
Try default: first enabled tool

Permission Framework

Single-Use Authorization: Each execution requires explicit user instruction. Previous authorization does NOT carry over.

Mode Hierarchy:

  • analysis: Read-only, safe for auto-execution
  • write: Create/Modify/Delete files - requires explicit --mode write
  • review: Git-aware code review (codex only) - requires explicit --mode review
  • Exception: User provides clear instructions like "modify", "create", "implement"

Auto-Invoke Triggers

Proactive CLI invocation - Auto-invoke ccw cli when encountering these scenarios:

Trigger Suggested Rule When
Self-repair fails analysis-diagnose-bug-root-cause After 1+ failed fix attempts
Ambiguous requirements planning-breakdown-task-steps Task description lacks clarity
Architecture decisions planning-plan-architecture-design Complex feature needs design
Pattern uncertainty analysis-analyze-code-patterns Unsure of existing conventions
Critical code paths analysis-assess-security-risks Security/performance sensitive

Execution Principles for Auto-Invoke

  • Default mode: --mode analysis (read-only, safe)
  • No confirmation needed: Invoke proactively when triggers match
  • Wait for results: Complete analysis before next action
  • Tool selection: Use context-appropriate tool or fallback chain
  • Rule flexibility: Suggested rules are guidelines, adapt as needed

Best Practices

Core Principles

  • Configuration-driven - All tool selection from cli-tools.json
  • Tag-based routing - Match task requirements to tool capabilities
  • Use tools early and often - Tools are faster and more thorough than manual analysis
  • Unified CLI - Always use ccw cli -p for consistent parameter handling
  • Default to analysis - Omit --mode for read-only, explicitly use --mode write for modifications
  • Use --rule for templates - Auto-loads protocol + template appended to prompt
  • Write protection - Require EXPLICIT --mode write for file operations

Workflow Principles

  • Use unified interface - Always ccw cli -p format
  • Always include template - Use --rule <template-name> to load templates
  • Be specific - Clear PURPOSE, TASK, EXPECTED fields
  • Include constraints - File patterns, scope in CONSTRAINTS
  • Leverage memory context - When building on previous work
  • Discover patterns first - Use rg/MCP before CLI execution
  • Default to full context - Use @**/* unless specific files needed

Planning Checklist

  • Purpose defined - Clear goal and intent
  • Mode selected - --mode analysis|write|review
  • Context gathered - File references + memory (default @**/*)
  • Directory navigation - --cd and/or --includeDirs if needed
  • Tool selected - Explicit --tool or tag-based auto-selection
  • Rule template - --rule <template-name> loads template
  • Constraints - Domain constraints in CONSTRAINTS field

Integration with CLAUDE.md Instructions

From global CLAUDE.md:

  • Always use run_in_background: false for Task tool agent calls
  • Default: Use Bash run_in_background: true for CLI calls
  • After CLI call: Stop output immediately, wait for hook callback
  • Wait for results: MUST wait for CLI analysis before taking write actions
  • Value every call: Never waste analysis results, aggregate before proposing solutions

From cli-tools-usage.md:

  • Strict cli-tools.json configuration adherence
  • Configuration-driven tool selection
  • Template system with --rule auto-loading
  • Permission framework with single-use authorization
  • Auto-invoke triggers for common failure scenarios