← Back to Skills Marketplace
imbeasting

test-driven-development

by ImBeasting · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0
cross-platform ⚠ suspicious
813
Downloads
1
Stars
4
Active Installs
1
Versions
Install in OpenClaw
/install imbeasting-test-driven-development
Description
Unified TDD skill with three input modes — from spec, from task, or from description. Enforces test-first development using repository patterns, with proptes...
README (SKILL.md)

Test-Driven Development

Overview

One skill for all TDD workflows. Enforces test-first development using existing repository patterns. Three input modes handle different entry points — specs, task files, or ad-hoc descriptions — but the core cycle is always RED → GREEN → REFACTOR.

Input Modes

Detect the input type and follow the corresponding mode:

Mode A: From Spec (.spec.md)

Use when the input references a .spec.md file with Given/When/Then acceptance criteria.

  1. Locate and parse the spec file — extract all Given/When/Then triples
  2. Generate one test stub per criterion with todo!() bodies:
    /// Spec: \x3Cspec-file> — Criterion #\x3CN>
    /// Given \x3Cgiven text>
    /// When \x3Cwhen text>
    /// Then \x3Cthen text>
    #[test]
    fn \x3Cspec_name>_criterion_\x3CN>_\x3Cslug>() {
        todo!("Implement: \x3Cthen text>");
    }
    
  3. Verify stubs compile but fail: cargo test --no-run -p \x3Ccrate>
  4. Proceed to the TDD Cycle to make stubs pass

Programmatic support: ralph_core::preflight::{extract_acceptance_criteria, extract_criteria_from_file, extract_all_criteria} can parse criteria from spec files.

Mode B: From Task (.code-task.md)

Use when the input references a .code-task.md file or a specific implementation task.

  1. Read the task and identify acceptance criteria or requirements
  2. Discover patterns (see Pattern Discovery)
  3. Design test scenarios covering normal operation, edge cases, and error conditions
  4. Write failing tests for all requirements before any implementation
  5. Proceed to the TDD Cycle

Mode C: From Description

Use for ad-hoc tasks without a spec or task file.

  1. Clarify requirements from the description
  2. Discover patterns (see Pattern Discovery)
  3. Write failing tests targeting the described behavior
  4. Proceed to the TDD Cycle

Pattern Discovery

Before writing tests, discover existing conventions:

rg --files -g "crates/*/tests/*.rs"
rg -n "#\[cfg\(test\)\]" crates/

Read 2-3 relevant test files near the target code. Mirror:

  • Test module layout, naming, and assertion style
  • Fixture helpers and test utilities
  • Use of tempfile, scenarios, or harnesses

TDD Cycle

1) RED — Failing Tests

  • Write tests for the exact behavior required
  • Run tests to confirm failure for the right reason
  • If tests pass without implementation, the test is wrong

2) GREEN — Minimal Implementation

  • Write the minimum code to make tests pass
  • No extra features or refactoring during this step

3) REFACTOR — Clean Up

  • Improve implementation and tests while keeping tests green
  • Align with surrounding codebase conventions
  • Re-run tests after every change

Proptest Guidance

Use proptest only when ALL of:

  • Function is pure (no I/O, no time, no globals)
  • Deterministic output for given input
  • Non-trivial input space or edge cases
proptest! {
    #[test]
    fn round_trip(input in "[a-z0-9]{0,32}") {
        let encoded = encode(input.as_str());
        let decoded = decode(&encoded).expect("should decode");
        prop_assert_eq!(decoded, input);
    }
}

Don't introduce proptest as a new dependency without strong justification.

Backpressure Integration

Include coverage evidence in completion events:

ralph emit "build.done" "tests: pass, lint: pass, typecheck: pass, audit: pass, coverage: pass (82%)"

Run cargo tarpaulin --out Html --output-dir coverage --skip-clean when feasible. If coverage cannot be run, state why and include targeted test evidence instead.

Test Location Rules

  • Spec maps to a single module → inline #[cfg(test)] tests
  • Spec spans multiple modules → integration test in crates/\x3Ccrate>/tests/
  • CLI behavior → crates/ralph-cli/tests/
  • Follow existing patterns in the target crate

Anti-Patterns

  • Writing implementation before tests
  • Generating tests that pass without implementation
  • Copying tests from other crates without adapting to local patterns
  • Adding proptest when a simple example test suffices
  • Emitting completion events without coverage evidence
Usage Guidance
This skill appears to be a useful Rust TDD helper, but it assumes tools and an external event emitter without declaring them. Before installing or running: (1) verify you have a safe, isolated environment (sandbox or CI worker) because 'cargo test' and coverage can execute repository code; (2) confirm the presence and versions of required tools (cargo, ripgrep, cargo-tarpaulin, and the 'ralph' CLI/library) and ask the author to list them in metadata; (3) ask what 'ralph emit' does and where completion events are sent — treat it as a potential data exfiltration vector until proven otherwise; (4) run on trusted repositories first or review tests for malicious setup/teardown logic; and (5) prefer installing the skill only after the author updates requirements and documents external integrations.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: imbeasting-test-driven-development Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle defines a standard Test-Driven Development (TDD) workflow for Rust projects, utilizing common development tools like `cargo` and `ripgrep` (`rg`). It provides structured instructions for the agent to follow Red-Green-Refactor cycles based on specification files or task descriptions, and it lacks any indicators of malicious intent, data exfiltration, or unauthorized command execution.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The name/description describe a Rust-oriented TDD workflow (RED/GREEN/REFACTOR) which matches the instructions, but the SKILL.md assumes cargo, ripgrep (rg), cargo-tarpaulin, and a 'ralph' tool/library; none of those are declared in the skill metadata. The omission of these required tools is disproportionate to the stated lightweight metadata.
Instruction Scope
Instructions direct the agent to read repository files, run 'cargo test --no-run', run coverage (cargo tarpaulin), run ripgrep, and call 'ralph emit'. Running tests and coverage can execute repository code; 'ralph emit' likely posts completion events externally. The instructions do not document where/events are sent or require explicit authorization, so they may transmit repository-derived data without explicit disclosure.
Install Mechanism
This is an instruction-only skill with no install spec and no code files, so there is no installer download or archive execution risk.
Credentials
No environment variables, binaries, or config paths are declared, yet the guidance relies on multiple external tools and an integration (ralph) that may need credentials or config. The skill should declare required binaries and any credentials/config needed for 'ralph' or CI integration.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill is not always-enabled and does not request persistent or cross-skill configuration changes; it does not require elevated platform privileges per the provided metadata.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install imbeasting-test-driven-development
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /imbeasting-test-driven-development
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial publish under account-scoped slug due reserved original slug
Metadata
Slug imbeasting-test-driven-development
Version 1.0.0
License
All-time Installs 4
Active Installs 4
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is test-driven-development?

Unified TDD skill with three input modes — from spec, from task, or from description. Enforces test-first development using repository patterns, with proptes... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 813 downloads so far.

How do I install test-driven-development?

Run "/install imbeasting-test-driven-development" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is test-driven-development free?

Yes, test-driven-development is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does test-driven-development support?

test-driven-development is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created test-driven-development?

It is built and maintained by ImBeasting (@imbeasting); the current version is v1.0.0.

💬 Comments