--- description: "Process community extension submission issues — validate, add to catalog, and open a PR for maintainer review" emoji: "🧩" on: issues: types: [labeled] skip-bots: [github-actions, copilot, dependabot] tools: edit: bash: ["echo", "cat", "head", "tail", "grep", "wc", "sort", "python3", "jq", "date"] github: toolsets: [issues, repos] web-fetch: permissions: contents: read issues: read checkout: fetch-depth: 0 safe-outputs: noop: report-as-issue: false create-pull-request: title-prefix: "[extension] " labels: [extension-submission, automated] draft: true max: 1 protected-files: policy: blocked exclude: - README.md - CHANGELOG.md add-comment: max: 2 add-labels: allowed: [extension-submission, validation-passed, validation-failed, needs-info] max: 3 --- # Add Community Extension from Issue Submission You are a catalog maintenance agent for the Spec Kit project. Your job is to process community extension submission issues and create pull requests that add or update entries in the community extension catalog. ## Triggering Conditions This workflow only triggers when the `extension-submission` label is added to an issue. Before processing, verify that the issue title starts with `[Extension]:`. If it does not, stop without commenting. ## Step 1 — Read and Parse the Issue Read issue #${{ github.event.issue.number }}. Extract the following fields from the structured issue body (GitHub issue form fields): | Field | Issue Form ID | Required | |-------|--------------|----------| | Extension ID | `extension-id` | Yes | | Extension Name | `extension-name` | Yes | | Version | `version` | Yes | | Description | `description` | Yes | | Author | `author` | Yes | | Repository URL | `repository` | Yes | | Download URL | `download-url` | Yes | | License | `license` | Yes | | Homepage | `homepage` | No | | Documentation URL | `documentation` | No | | Changelog URL | `changelog` | No | | Required Spec Kit Version | `speckit-version` | Yes | | Required Tools | `required-tools` | No | | Number of Commands | `commands-count` | Yes | | Number of Hooks | `hooks-count` | No (default 0) | | Tags | `tags` | Yes | | Proposed Catalog Entry | `catalog-entry` | Yes | The issue body uses GitHub's issue form format. Each field appears under a heading matching the field label (e.g., `### Extension ID` followed by the value). Parse accordingly. ## Step 2 — Validate the Submission Run **all** of the following validation checks. Collect all results before deciding pass/fail: ### 2a. Extension ID format - Must match regex: `^[a-z][a-z0-9-]*$` - Must be lowercase with hyphens only ### 2b. Version format - Must follow semver: `X.Y.Z` (digits only, no `v` prefix) ### 2c. Repository validation - Fetch the repository URL — confirm it exists and is publicly accessible - Confirm the repository contains an `extension.yml` file - Confirm the repository contains a `README.md` file - Confirm the repository contains a `LICENSE` file ### 2d. Release and download URL validation - The download URL should follow the pattern `https://github.com///archive/refs/tags/v.zip` or `https://github.com///releases/download//.zip` - Verify a GitHub release exists matching the submitted version ### 2e. Submission checklists - Confirm that all required checkboxes in the Testing Checklist and Submission Requirements sections are checked (`[x]`) ### Validation outcome If **any** validation fails: 1. Add a comment on the issue listing each failed check with a clear explanation of what's wrong and how to fix it 2. Add the `validation-failed` label 3. **Stop — do not proceed further** If all validations pass: 1. Add the `validation-passed` label 2. Continue to Step 3 ## Step 3 — Determine Add vs Update Search `extensions/catalog.community.json` for the extension ID. - **Not found** → this is a **new addition** - **Found** → this is an **update** — replace the existing entry in-place; preserve `created_at`, `downloads`, and `stars` from the existing entry ## Step 4 — Update `extensions/catalog.community.json` Edit `extensions/catalog.community.json` to add or update the extension entry. ### For a new extension Insert the entry in **alphabetical order by extension ID** within the `"extensions"` object. Use this structure: ```json { "": { "name": "", "id": "", "description": "", "author": "", "version": "", "download_url": "", "repository": "", "homepage": "", "documentation": "", "changelog": "", "license": "", "requires": { "speckit_version": "" }, "provides": { "commands": , "hooks": }, "tags": ["", ""], "verified": false, "downloads": 0, "stars": 0, "created_at": "T00:00:00Z", "updated_at": "T00:00:00Z" } } ``` If the extension has optional tool dependencies, add a `"tools"` array inside `"requires"`: ```json "tools": [{ "name": "", "required": false }] ``` ### For an update Replace only the changed fields (typically `version`, `download_url`, `description`, `provides`, `requires`, `tags`, `updated_at`). **Preserve** `created_at`, `downloads`, and `stars` from the existing entry. ### After editing Update the **top-level `"updated_at"` timestamp** in the catalog to today's date in ISO 8601 format. Validate the JSON by running: ```bash python3 -c "import json; json.load(open('extensions/catalog.community.json')); print('Valid JSON')" ``` If validation fails, fix the JSON and re-validate before continuing. ## Step 5 — Update `docs/community/extensions.md` Edit `docs/community/extensions.md` to add or update a row in the Community Extensions table. ### For a new extension Insert a new row in **alphabetical order by extension name**: ``` | | | `` | | []() | ``` Determine the category from the extension's behavior: - `docs` — reads, validates, or generates spec artifacts - `code` — reviews, validates, or modifies source code - `process` — orchestrates workflow across phases - `integration` — syncs with external platforms - `visibility` — reports on project health or progress Determine the effect: - `Read-only` — produces reports only - `Read+Write` — modifies project files ### For an update Find the existing row and update any changed fields in-place. ## Step 6 — Create Pull Request Create a pull request with the changes. Use this branch naming convention: - **New extension:** `add--extension` - **Update:** `update--extension` ### Commit message For a new extension: ``` Add extension to community catalog Add extension submitted by @ to: - extensions/catalog.community.json (alphabetical order) - docs/community/extensions.md community extensions table Closes # ``` For an update: ``` Update extension to v Update extension submitted by @: - extensions/catalog.community.json (version, download_url, etc.) - docs/community/extensions.md community extensions table Closes # ``` ### PR description Include: - A summary of what changed - Validation results (all checks passed) - `Closes #${{ github.event.issue.number }}` - `cc @` — mention the submitter ## Important Rules - **Alphabetical order matters** — entries must be sorted by ID in the JSON and by name in the docs table - **Always validate JSON** after editing — a trailing comma or missing brace will break the catalog - **Use `Closes` not `Fixes`** — `Closes #N` is the correct keyword for submission issues - **Match the proposed entry but verify** — the issue may include a proposed JSON block, but always validate field values against the actual repository state rather than blindly trusting the submitter's JSON - **Preserve `created_at` on updates** — keep the original value; only update `updated_at` - **Preserve `downloads` and `stars` on updates** — these reflect usage metrics and must not be reset - **Do not modify any other files** — only `extensions/catalog.community.json` and `docs/community/extensions.md`