Implement Windsurf reliability patterns including circuit breakers, idempotency, and graceful degradation.Use when building fault-tolerant Windsurf integrations, implementing retry strategies,or adding resilience to production Windsurf services.Trigger with phrases like "windsurf reliability", "windsurf circuit breaker","windsurf idempotent", "windsurf resilience", "windsurf fallback", "windsurf bulkhead".
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Updated Apr 3, 2026, 03:47 AM
Why Use This
This skill provides specialized capabilities for jeremylongshore's codebase.
Use Cases
Developing new features in the jeremylongshore repository
Refactoring existing code to follow jeremylongshore standards
Understanding and working with jeremylongshore's codebase structure
---
name: windsurf-reliability-patterns
description: |
Implement reliable Cascade workflows with checkpoints, rollback, and incremental editing.
Use when building fault-tolerant AI coding workflows, preventing Cascade from breaking builds,
or establishing safe practices for multi-file AI edits.
Trigger with phrases like "windsurf reliability", "cascade safety",
"windsurf rollback", "cascade checkpoint", "safe cascade workflow".
allowed-tools: Read, Write, Edit, Bash(git:*)
version: 1.0.0
license: MIT
author: Jeremy Longshore <[email protected]>
compatible-with: claude-code, codex, openclaw
tags: [saas, windsurf, reliability, safety, git-workflow]
---
# Windsurf Reliability Patterns
## Overview
Reliability patterns for safe Cascade usage: Git checkpointing, incremental task scoping, validation gates, and rollback strategies. Cascade's multi-file editing is powerful but requires discipline to avoid breaking your codebase.
## Prerequisites
- Windsurf with Cascade enabled
- Git repository initialized
- Test suite available
- Understanding of Cascade Write mode
## Instructions
### Step 1: Always Commit Before Cascade
The most important reliability pattern: create a clean Git checkpoint before every Cascade session.
```bash
# Before starting a Cascade task
git add -A && git commit -m "checkpoint: before cascade session"
# After Cascade completes:
git diff # Review all changes
npm test && npm run typecheck # Validate
# If good:
git add -A && git commit -m "[cascade] add notification service"
# If bad:
git checkout -- . # Revert everything
# Or selectively:
git checkout -- src/problem-file.ts # Revert one file
```
### Step 2: Use Feature Branches for Cascade Work
```bash
# Create dedicated branch for each Cascade task
git checkout -b cascade/add-notification-service
# Do Cascade work on this branch
# ...
# If results are good:
git checkout main && git merge cascade/add-notification-service
# If results are bad:
git checkout main && git branch -D cascade/add-notification-service
# Clean slate, main branch untouched
```
### Step 3: Scope Tasks Incrementally
Large tasks cause Cascade to make sweeping changes that are hard to review. Break into steps.
```
BAD (too broad):
"Refactor the authentication system to use JWT instead of sessions"
→ Cascade may modify 30+ files, hard to review, likely has bugs
GOOD (incremental):
Step 1: "Create src/services/jwt.ts with functions: generateToken,
validateToken, refreshToken. Use the jose library."
Step 2: "Create tests/services/jwt.test.ts with tests for all three functions"
Step 3: "Run the tests and fix any failures"
Step 4: "Update src/middleware/auth.ts to use jwt.ts instead of
express-session. Keep the old code commented out."
Step 5: "Run the full test suite and fix any failures"
Step 6: "Remove commented-out session code from auth.ts"
Each step: review diff → test → commit → next step
```
### Step 4: Validate After Every Cascade Edit
```bash
#!/bin/bash
# scripts/cascade-validate.sh — run after every Cascade edit
set -euo pipefail
echo "=== Post-Cascade Validation ==="
# Type check
echo "1/4 TypeScript..."
npm run typecheck || { echo "FAIL: Type errors. Ask Cascade to fix."; exit 1; }
# Lint
echo "2/4 Lint..."
npm run lint || { echo "FAIL: Lint errors. Ask Cascade to fix."; exit 1; }
# Tests
echo "3/4 Tests..."
npm test || { echo "FAIL: Test failures. Ask Cascade to fix."; exit 1; }
# Build
echo "4/4 Build..."
npm run build || { echo "FAIL: Build errors. Ask Cascade to fix."; exit 1; }
echo "ALL PASSED. Safe to commit."
```
### Step 5: Use Cascade Checkpoints
Cascade supports named checkpoints within a conversation:
```
1. Start Cascade task
2. After each significant step, Cascade shows a revert button
3. Hover over any previous step → click revert arrow → rolls back to that point
4. WARNING: Reverts are irreversible (can't undo a revert)
5. For complex tasks, commit to Git between Cascade steps for a safer safety net
```
### Step 6: Cascade Constraint Patterns
Add constraints to prompts to prevent Cascade from going too wide:
```
Scope constraints:
"Only modify files in src/services/"
"Don't change any existing tests"
"Don't modify any files except src/services/auth.ts"
"Don't install new dependencies"
Quality constraints:
"Follow the Result<T,E> pattern used in other services"
"Match the coding style in @src/services/payment.ts"
"Include error handling for all edge cases"
"Add JSDoc comments on all public functions"
Safety constraints:
"Don't modify the database schema"
"Don't change any API response formats"
"Don't remove any existing functionality"
"Keep backward compatibility with existing callers"
```
### Step 7: Team Safety Policy
```markdown
# Team Cascade Usage Policy
1. **Git checkpoint before Cascade** — non-negotiable
2. **One task per Cascade session** — don't mix refactor + feature
3. **Review every file diff** — never "accept all" without reading
4. **Run tests after accepting** — `npm test` before committing
5. **Tag AI commits** — use `[cascade]` prefix for traceability
6. **Feature branches only** — never use Cascade on main/develop
7. **Start fresh for new tasks** — close old Cascade sessions
8. **Narrow scope** — specific files > vague descriptions
```
## Error Handling
| Issue | Cause | Solution |
|-------|-------|----------|
| Cascade broke the build | Accepted without testing | Git revert, add post-Cascade validation |
| Modified wrong files | Ambiguous instruction | Specify exact file paths in prompt |
| Lost good changes in revert | Reverted too broadly | Use feature branches, commit incrementally |
| Cascade contradicts earlier edit | Long conversation | Start fresh session for new tasks |
| Tests pass but logic wrong | AI-specific bug pattern | Manual code review of all Cascade changes |
## Examples
### Safe Cascade Workflow (Complete)
```bash
set -euo pipefail
# 1. Branch
git checkout -b cascade/feature-name
# 2. Checkpoint
git add -A && git commit -m "checkpoint: pre-cascade" --allow-empty
# 3. Cascade task (in Windsurf)
# ... Cascade edits files ...
# 4. Validate
npm run typecheck && npm test && npm run lint
# 5. Commit
git add -A && git commit -m "[cascade] implement feature-name"
# 6. Merge (after review)
git checkout main && git merge cascade/feature-name
git branch -d cascade/feature-name
```
### Recover from Bad Cascade Edit
```bash
# Option 1: Revert all changes since checkpoint
git checkout -- .
# Option 2: Revert specific file
git checkout -- src/broken-file.ts
# Option 3: Reset to last commit
git reset --hard HEAD
# Option 4: Cherry-pick good commits from bad branch
git log cascade/feature-name --oneline # Find good commits
git cherry-pick <good-commit-hash>
```
## Resources
- [Windsurf Cascade](https://docs.windsurf.com/windsurf/cascade/cascade)
- [Git Workflows](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Branching-Workflows)
## Next Steps
For policy guardrails, see `windsurf-policy-guardrails`.