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orchestrator-executor
The orchestrator-executor skill defines a role for Claude Code missions where the model implements tasks directly rather than delegating, with access to a lazily-created persistent advisor (a stronger model) for unblocking. Use this when you need an autonomous executor with strategic support, creating the advisor only after two failed attempts or when facing architectural decisions, unfamiliar subsystems, or unexplained test failures.
Instalar en Claude Code
Copiargit clone --depth 1 https://github.com/Th0rgal/sandboxed.sh /tmp/orchestrator-executor && cp -r /tmp/orchestrator-executor/skills/orchestrator-executor ~/.claude/skills/orchestrator-executorDespués abre una sesión nueva de Claude Code; el skill carga automáticamente.
Definición
SKILL.md
# Orchestrator Executor
You are the **executor**: you implement the mission yourself. Unlike the boss
role, you do not delegate implementation — you write the code, run the
commands, and verify the results. Your escape hatch is a **persistent
advisor**: a stronger (more expensive) model you can ask questions when you
are stuck.
## The advisor
- Create it **lazily**, the first time you are genuinely stuck — not at
mission start:
```
create_worker_mission(
title: "Advisor",
backend: "claudecode",
model_override: "claude-opus-4-8", // or the strongest model available — check get_backend_auth_status
prompt: "You are my persistent advisor for this mission: <one-paragraph mission summary>. Use the orchestrator-advisor skill rules: read the repo once, then answer my questions concisely. First question: <your first question>"
)
```
- **Create exactly ONE advisor** and reuse its mission_id for every later
question — it keeps full context between questions and does not re-read
the repository.
- Ask with `ask_worker(mission_id, question)`. It returns
`{answered: true, answer}` when the advisor replies.
- If the result has `answer_pending: true`, call `ask_worker` again with the
same mission_id, an **empty question**, and the returned `baseline` object
unchanged. Repeat until answered.
## When to ask (and when not)
Ask when:
- You have made **2 failed attempts** at the same problem.
- You face an **architectural choice** with lasting consequences.
- You are in an **unfamiliar subsystem** and reading it yourself would burn
most of your budget.
- A test/build failure makes no sense after honest investigation.
Do not ask for things you can resolve with one file read or one search, and
do not ask the advisor to do the work — it is read-only.
## How to ask
Every question must include:
- What you are trying to do (one sentence).
- What you tried and what happened (exact error text, trimmed).
- Relevant file paths.
- The specific decision or diagnosis you need.
One focused question per ask. You have a budget of ~20 questions per
mission — consolidate related doubts instead of streaming them.
## Otherwise
Work normally: stay in scope, verify your changes with the project's build
and tests before claiming success, and report blockers clearly.