Domain Docs
How the engineering skills should consume this repo's domain documentation when exploring the codebase.
Before exploring, read these
CONTEXT.mdat the repo root, orCONTEXT-MAP.mdat the repo root if it exists — it points at oneCONTEXT.mdper context. Read each one relevant to the topic.openspec/baseline/architecture/— read ADRs that touch the area you're about to work in. In multi-context repos, also checksrc/<context>/docs/adr/for context-scoped decisions.
If any of these files don't exist, proceed silently. Don't flag their absence; don't suggest creating them upfront. The producer skill (/grill-with-docs) creates them lazily when terms or decisions actually get resolved.
File structure
Single-context repo:
/
├── CONTEXT.md ← domain glossary (to be created)
├── openspec/
│ └── baseline/
│ └── architecture/ ← ADRs live here
│ ├── 0001-core-architecture.md
│ ├── 0002-toolchain-policy.md
│ ├── 0003-benchmark-system.md
│ ├── 0004-memory-pool.md
│ ├── 0005-advanced-tooling.md
│ └── 0006-benchmark-maintenance-policy.md
└── src/Use the glossary's vocabulary
When your output names a domain concept (in an issue title, a refactor proposal, a hypothesis, a test name), use the term as defined in CONTEXT.md. Don't drift to synonyms the glossary explicitly avoids.
If the concept you need isn't in the glossary yet, that's a signal — either you're inventing language the project doesn't use (reconsider) or there's a real gap (note it for /grill-with-docs).
Flag ADR conflicts
If your output contradicts an existing ADR, surface it explicitly rather than silently overriding:
Contradicts ADR-0007 (event-sourced orders) — but worth reopening because…