pbl/skills/dispatching-parallel-agents/SKILL.md
Use when facing 2+ independent tasks that can be worked on without shared state or sequential dependencies
npx skillsauth add tim-hub/powerball dispatching-parallel-agentsInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
You delegate tasks to specialized agents with isolated context. By precisely crafting their instructions and context, you ensure they stay focused and succeed at their task. They should never inherit your session's context or history — you construct exactly what they need. This also preserves your own context for coordination work.
When you have multiple unrelated failures (different test files, different subsystems, different bugs), investigating them sequentially wastes time. Each investigation is independent and can happen in parallel.
Core principle: Dispatch one agent per independent problem domain. Let them work concurrently.
flowchart TD
A{Multiple failures?} -->|yes| B{Are they independent?}
B -->|no - related| C[Single agent investigates all]
B -->|yes| D{Can they work in parallel?}
D -->|yes| E[Parallel dispatch]
D -->|no - shared state| F[Sequential agents]
Use when:
Don't use when:
Group failures by what's broken:
Each domain is independent - fixing tool approval doesn't affect abort tests.
Each agent gets:
// In Claude Code / AI environment
Task("Fix agent-tool-abort.test.ts failures")
Task("Fix batch-completion-behavior.test.ts failures")
Task("Fix tool-approval-race-conditions.test.ts failures")
// All three run concurrently
When agents return:
Good agent prompts are:
Fix the 3 failing tests in src/agents/agent-tool-abort.test.ts:
1. "should abort tool with partial output capture" - expects 'interrupted at' in message
2. "should handle mixed completed and aborted tools" - fast tool aborted instead of completed
3. "should properly track pendingToolCount" - expects 3 results but gets 0
These are timing/race condition issues. Your task:
1. Read the test file and understand what each test verifies
2. Identify root cause - timing issues or actual bugs?
3. Fix by:
- Replacing arbitrary timeouts with event-based waiting
- Fixing bugs in abort implementation if found
- Adjusting test expectations if testing changed behavior
Do NOT just increase timeouts - find the real issue.
Return: Summary of what you found and what you fixed.
Bad: Too broad: "Fix all the tests" - agent gets lost Good: Specific: "Fix agent-tool-abort.test.ts" - focused scope
Bad: No context: "Fix the race condition" - agent doesn't know where Good: Context: Paste the error messages and test names
Bad: No constraints: Agent might refactor everything Good: Constraints: "Do NOT change production code" or "Fix tests only"
Bad: Vague output: "Fix it" - you don't know what changed Good: Specific: "Return summary of root cause and changes"
Related failures: Fixing one might fix others - investigate together first Need full context: Understanding requires seeing entire system Exploratory debugging: You don't know what's broken yet Shared state: Agents would interfere (editing same files, using same resources)
Scenario: 6 test failures across 3 files after major refactoring
Failures:
Decision: Independent domains - abort logic separate from batch completion separate from race conditions
Dispatch:
Agent 1 → Fix agent-tool-abort.test.ts
Agent 2 → Fix batch-completion-behavior.test.ts
Agent 3 → Fix tool-approval-race-conditions.test.ts
Results:
Integration: All fixes independent, no conflicts, full suite green
Time saved: 3 problems solved in parallel vs sequentially
After agents return:
From debugging session (YYYY-MM-DD):
testing
Picks the right Kubernetes Deployment update strategy (RollingUpdate / Recreate / Blue-Green / Canary) for the situation. Use when configuring a new Deployment, changing rollout config, or deciding how to ship a risky change.
tools
Translates a markdown file to a target language, preserving structure. Use when the user needs a markdown file translated.
development
Translates text between any two languages while preserving source format. Use when the user needs to translate plain text, code, or markdown content.
testing
Generates written content — blog posts, social posts, emails, and marketing copy — matched to the project's existing voice. Use when the user needs written material.