From easy-cheese
Runs a six-phase debug loop: feedback loop, reproduce, hypothesise, instrument, fix + regression test, cleanup. Hard-bug diagnosis and fix for flaky tests, perf regressions, and unexplained misbehaviour.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/easy-cheese:pasteurizeThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
A discipline for hard bugs. Skip phases only when explicitly justified.
A discipline for hard bugs. Skip phases only when explicitly justified.
When exploring the codebase, use /cheez-search to orient and check .cheese/specs/ for any spec or design notes that touch the failing seam.
This is the skill. Everything else is mechanical. If you have a fast, deterministic, agent-runnable pass/fail signal for the bug, you will find the cause — bisection, hypothesis-testing, and instrumentation all just consume that signal. If you don't have one, no amount of staring at code will save you.
Spend disproportionate effort here. Be aggressive. Be creative. Refuse to give up.
git bisect run it.Build the right feedback loop, and the bug is 90% fixed.
Treat the loop as a product. Once you have a loop, ask:
A 30-second flaky loop is barely better than no loop. A 2-second deterministic loop is a debugging superpower.
The goal is not a clean repro but a higher reproduction rate. Loop the trigger 100×, parallelise, add stress, narrow timing windows, inject sleeps. A 50%-flake bug is debuggable; 1% is not — keep raising the rate until it's debuggable.
Stop and say so explicitly. List what you tried. Ask the user for: (a) access to whatever environment reproduces it, (b) a captured artifact (HAR file, log dump, core dump, screen recording with timestamps), or (c) permission to add temporary production instrumentation. Do not proceed to hypothesise without a loop. Write a status: halt handoff slug (see below) and stop.
Do not proceed to Phase 2 until you have a loop you believe in.
Run the loop. Watch the bug appear.
Confirm:
Do not proceed until you reproduce the bug.
Generate 3–5 ranked hypotheses before testing any of them. Single-hypothesis generation anchors on the first plausible idea.
Each hypothesis must be falsifiable: state the prediction it makes.
Format: "If
<X>is the cause, then<changing Y>will make the bug disappear /<changing Z>will make it worse."
If you cannot state the prediction, the hypothesis is a vibe — discard or sharpen it.
Show the ranked list to the user through the host routing guide in ../../shared/handoff-gate.md before testing. They often have domain knowledge that re-ranks instantly ("we just deployed a change to #3"), or know hypotheses they've already ruled out. Cheap checkpoint, big time saver. Don't block on it — proceed with your ranking if the user is AFK or running --auto.
Each probe must map to a specific prediction from Phase 3. Change one variable at a time.
Tool preference:
Tag every debug log with a unique prefix, e.g. [DEBUG-a4f2]. Cleanup at the end becomes a single /cheez-search content query. Untagged logs survive; tagged logs die.
Perf branch. For performance regressions, logs are usually wrong. Instead: establish a baseline measurement (timing harness, performance.now(), profiler, query plan), then bisect. Measure first, fix second.
Use /cheez-write for any instrumentation edits — never the host Edit / Write tools.
Write the regression test before the fix — but only if there is a correct seam for it.
A correct seam is one where the test exercises the real bug pattern as it occurs at the call site. If the only available seam is too shallow (single-caller test when the bug needs multiple callers, unit test that can't replicate the chain that triggered the bug), a regression test there gives false confidence.
If no correct seam exists, that itself is the finding. Note it in the handoff slug as an architectural follow-up. The codebase is preventing the bug from being locked down. Skip the test write; do not paper over it. Phase 6's "what would have prevented this bug?" retrospective still applies.
If a correct seam exists:
/cheez-write./cheez-write. No scope creep, no "while I'm here" cleanup.All edits go through /cheez-write — never the host Edit / Write tools.
Broader implementation (related cleanup, follow-on changes, anything beyond the minimal fix) is not pasteurize's job. Note it in the slug and let /cook --auto pick it up in Phase 6's handoff.
Before writing the handoff slug, confirm:
[DEBUG-...] instrumentation removed — run a /cheez-search content query for the prefix and verify zero hits.Then ask: what would have prevented this bug? If the answer involves architectural change (no good test seam, tangled callers, hidden coupling), note it in the slug under an architectural-follow-up line. The chain still runs; the user can pick up the architectural work via /mold after the fix lands. Make the recommendation after the fix is in, not before — you have more information now than when you started.
Once the checklist is green and the slug is on disk, hand off to /cook <slug> --auto (default). Cook --auto picks up the post-fix state, runs its taste-test against the applied diff for spec drift / readability / scope creep, produces its package-ready report, and triggers the autonomous /press → /age → /cure chain. Pasteurize itself does not commit, open PRs, or drive the chain — cook owns that.
| Need | Prefer | Fallback |
|---|---|---|
| Code search / blast radius | /cheez-search (tilth MCP) | flag the gap; do not fall back to host grep |
| Reading code | /cheez-read (tilth MCP) | flag the gap; do not fall back to host cat/Read |
| Editing instrumentation | /cheez-write (tilth MCP) | flag the gap; do not fall back to host Edit/Write |
| Diff visualization | delta | plain git diff |
| GitHub context | gh | local git history or user-provided links |
| External sanity check | /briesearch | clearly mark as an assumption |
Missing optional tools should not interrupt diagnosis. Keep tool use proportional to the bug.
Return a short report covering:
<certain> / <speculating> / <don't know> calibration).[DEBUG-...] removed, harnesses deleted or relocated)./cook <slug> --auto for the autonomous chain forward.Write a minimum-shape handoff slug to .cheese/pasteurize/<slug>.md so /cook (and any orchestrator) can resume without re-reading the full report. Schema:
status: ok | halt: <one-line reason>
next: cook | mold | done
artifact: <path-to-richer-report-if-any>
cause: <one-sentence named cause>
loop: <command or repro path>
seam: <regression-test path:line, or "none — architectural follow-up">
fix: <production diff footprint, e.g. "src/foo.ts:42">
follow_up: <architectural follow-up note, or "none">
<one-line orientation: what pasteurize converged on>
status: ok when the regression test is green, the original repro no longer reproduces, and cleanup is done. status: halt: <reason> when Phase 1 failed (cannot build a loop, missing environment access, missing artifact), or Phase 3 exhausted both hypothesis rounds without a confirmed cause. next: is cook for the standard chain, mold if the diagnosis itself recommends an architectural spec instead of a per-bug fix, or done if the bug was caused outside the repo and no follow-up is needed.
Pipeline: cheese (debug) → [pasteurize] → cook --auto → press → age → cure → ship
After the report is printed and the handoff slug is on disk, ask through the host routing guide in ../../shared/handoff-gate.md which downstream to run. Lead each option with the verb (what the user wants to do next):
status: ok) — /cook <slug> --auto./cook <slug> (cook runs taste-test, then the user picks each subsequent step)./mold <slug> (when seam: none — architectural follow-up).Pre-select Validate and chain forward when status: ok. The chain default is --auto because pasteurize already wrote and verified the fix; the work left for cook → press → age → cure is mechanical validation, not new authoring. Never auto-invoke; the user must still select.
When invoked with --auto, skip this host-routed question entirely and invoke /cook <slug> --auto directly.
--auto is the autonomous-pipeline switch. Propagated from upstream skills (/cheese propagates --auto by default; under --safe, --auto becomes an explicit selection in the dispatch gate rather than the silent default) or invoked directly with --auto.
What auto mode does:
/cook <slug> --auto directly.Auto mode stops early when:
status: halt written, no loop achievable).status: halt: no correct regression-test seam and route to /mold instead of /cook.In every early-stop case, write the halt slug and surface the report. Do not silently downgrade to "best guess".
/cook, not pasteurize.[DEBUG-...] tags in the tree — clean them before the handoff slug is written.npx claudepluginhub paulnsorensen/easy-cheeseImplements disciplined diagnosis loop for hard bugs and performance regressions: reproduce → minimise → hypothesise → instrument → fix → regression-test. Use for bug reports, failures, or 'diagnose this'.
Provides a disciplined diagnosis loop for hard bugs and performance regressions: reproduce, minimise, hypothesise, instrument, fix, regression-test.
Structured diagnosis protocol for hard bugs and performance regressions: build a deterministic feedback loop, then bisect/hypothesise/fix. Activate when debugging, triaging failures, or investigating regressions.