name: ultrawork
description: "[OMX] Parallel execution engine for high-throughput task completion"
Ultrawork is a parallel execution engine for high-throughput task completion. It is a component, not a standalone persistence mode: it provides parallelism, context discipline, and smart delegation guidance, but not Ralph's persistence loop, architect sign-off, or long-running completion guarantees.
- Multiple independent tasks can run simultaneously
- User says "ulw", "ultrawork", or explicitly wants parallel execution
- Task benefits from concurrent execution plus lightweight evidence before wrap-up
- You need a direct-tool lane plus optional background evidence lanes without entering Ralph
- Task requires guaranteed completion with persistence, architect verification, or deslop/reverification -- use
ralphinstead (Ralph includes ultrawork) - Task requires a full autonomous pipeline -- use
autopilotinstead (autopilot defaults to Ultragoal, with Team/parallel execution used only when needed) - There is only one sequential task with no parallelism opportunity -- execute directly or delegate to a single
executor - The request is still in plan-consensus mode -- keep planning artifacts in
ralplanuntil execution is explicitly authorized - User needs session persistence for resume -- use
ralph, which adds persistence on top of ultrawork
Sequential task execution wastes time when tasks are independent. Ultrawork keeps the execution branch fast while tightening the protocol: gather enough context first, define pass/fail acceptance criteria before editing, decide deliberately between local execution and delegation, and finish with evidence rather than vibes.
- Gather enough context before implementation. Start with the task intent, desired outcome, constraints, likely touchpoints, and any uncertainty that would change the execution path.
- If uncertainty is still material after a quick repo read, do a focused evidence pass first instead of immediately editing.
- Define pass/fail acceptance criteria before launching execution lanes. Include the command, artifact, or manual check that will prove success.
- Prefer direct tool work when the task is small, coupled, or blocked on immediate local context. Delegate only when the work is independent enough to benefit from parallel execution.
- When useful, run a direct-tool lane and one or more background evidence lanes at the same time. Evidence lanes can cover docs, tests, regression mapping, or bounded repo analysis.
- Fire independent agent calls simultaneously -- never serialize independent work.
- Always pass the
modelparameter explicitly when delegating. - Read
docs/shared/agent-tiers.mdbefore first delegation for agent selection guidance. - Auto-delegate
researcherwhen official docs, version-aware framework guidance, best practices, or external dependency behavior materially affect task correctness; treat it as an evidence lane, not a replacement primary workflow. - Use
run_in_background: truefor operations over ~30 seconds (installs, builds, tests). - Run quick commands (git status, file reads, simple checks) in the foreground.
- Apply the shared workflow guidance pattern: outcome-first framing, concise visible updates for speculative/blocked lanes, local overrides for the active workflow branch, evidence-backed validation, explicit stop rules, and continuation of clear safe execution branches instead of restarting or re-asking.
- If the user says
continue, continue the active workflow branch rather than restarting discovery or re-asking settled questions.
-
Read agent reference: Load
docs/shared/agent-tiers.mdfor tier selection. -
Context + certainty check:
- State the task intent in one sentence.
- List the constraints and unknowns that could invalidate a quick fix.
- If confidence is low, explore first and narrow the task before editing.
-
Define acceptance criteria before execution:
- What must be true at the end?
- Which command or artifact proves it?
- Which manual QA check is required, if any?
-
Classify the work by dependency shape:
- Independent tasks -> parallel lanes.
- Shared-file or prerequisite-heavy tasks -> local execution or staged lanes.
-
Choose self vs delegate deliberately:
- Work locally when the next step depends on immediate repo context, shared files, or tight iteration.
- Delegate when the task slice is bounded, independent, and materially improves throughput.
-
Run execution lanes:
- Direct-tool lane for immediate implementation or verification work.
- Background evidence lanes for tests, docs, repo analysis, or regression checks.
- Run dependent tasks sequentially: Wait for prerequisites before launching dependent work.
-
Close with lightweight evidence:
- Build/typecheck passes when relevant.
- Affected tests pass.
- Manual QA notes are recorded when the task needs a human-visible or behavior-level check.
- No new errors introduced.
- Use LOW-tier delegation for simple lookups and bounded evidence gathering.
- Use STANDARD-tier delegation for standard implementation and regression work.
- Use THOROUGH-tier delegation for complex analysis, architectural review, or risky multi-file changes.
- Prefer a direct-tool lane when the immediate next step is blocked on local context.
- Prefer background evidence lanes when you can learn something useful in parallel with implementation.
- Use
run_in_background: truefor package installs, builds, and test suites. - Use foreground execution for quick status checks and file operations.
State Management
Use the CLI-first state surface (omx state ... --json) for ultrawork lifecycle state. If explicit MCP compatibility tools are already available, equivalent omx_state calls are optional compatibility, not the default.
-
On start:
omx state write --input '{"mode":"ultrawork","active":true,"reinforcement_count":1,"started_at":"<now>"}' --json -
On each reinforcement/loop step:
omx state write --input '{"mode":"ultrawork","reinforcement_count":<current>}' --json -
On completion:
omx state write --input '{"mode":"ultrawork","active":false}' --json -
On cancellation/cleanup:
run
$cancel(which should callomx state clear --input '{"mode":"ultrawork"}' --json)
Two-track execution with acceptance criteria up front:
Acceptance criteria:
- `npm run build` passes
- `node --test dist/scripts/__tests__/codex-native-hook.test.js` passes
- Manual QA: verify `$ultrawork` activation message still points to the session state file
Direct-tool lane:
- update `skills/ultrawork/SKILL.md`
Background evidence lane:
- use /prompts:test-engineer for this scoped task
Why good: Context is grounded first, acceptance criteria are explicit, and the direct-tool lane runs alongside a bounded evidence lane.
Correct use of self-vs-delegate judgment:
Shared-file edit in progress across `src/scripts/codex-native-hook.ts` and its test -> keep implementation local.
Independent regression mapping for keyword-detector coverage -> delegate to a test-engineer lane.
Why good: Shared-file work stays local; independent evidence work fans out.
Parallelizing before the task is grounded:
use /prompts:executor for this scoped task
use /prompts:test-engineer for this scoped task
Why bad: No context snapshot, no pass/fail target, and delegation starts before the work is shaped.
Claiming success without evidence or manual QA:
Made the changes. Ultrawork should be updated now.
Why bad: No verification output, no acceptance evidence, and no manual QA note when the behavior is user-visible.
- When ultrawork is invoked directly (not via Ralph), apply lightweight verification only -- build/typecheck passes when relevant, affected tests pass, and manual QA notes are captured when needed.
- Ralph owns persistence, architect verification, deslop, and the full verified-completion promise. Do not claim those guarantees from direct ultrawork alone.
- If a task fails repeatedly across retries, report the issue rather than retrying indefinitely.
- Escalate to the user when tasks have unclear dependencies, conflicting requirements, or a materially branching acceptance target.
- Task intent and constraints were grounded before editing
- Pass/fail acceptance criteria were stated before execution
- Parallel lanes were used only for independent work
- Build/typecheck passes when relevant
- Affected tests pass
- Manual QA notes recorded when behavior is user-visible
- No new errors introduced
- Completion claim stays inside ultrawork's lightweight-verification boundary
Relationship to Other Modes
ralph (persistence + verified completion wrapper)
\-- includes: ultrawork (this skill)
\-- provides: high-throughput execution + lightweight evidence
autopilot (autonomous execution)
\-- includes: ralph
\-- includes: ultrawork (this skill)
ecomode (token efficiency)
\-- modifies: ultrawork's model selection
Ultrawork is the parallelism and execution-discipline layer. Ralph adds persistence, architect verification, deslop, and retry-until-done behavior. Autopilot adds the broader autonomous lifecycle pipeline. Ecomode adjusts ultrawork's model routing to favor cheaper models.