Brooks-Lint — Architecture Audit
When to Use
Use this skill when you need architecture audit that maps module dependencies, checks layering integrity, and flags structural decay across a codebase, drawing on twelve classic engineering books. Triggers when: user asks to audit architecture, review folder/module structure, check for circular imports, understand...
Setup
- Read
../_shared/common.mdfor the Iron Law, Project Config, Report Template, and Health Score rules - Read
../_shared/source-coverage.mdfor book-level coverage, exceptions, and tradeoffs - Read
../_shared/decay-risks.mdfor symptom definitions and source attributions - Read
architecture-guide.mdin this directory for the audit framework
Process
Onboarding mode: If the user asks for an onboarding report, codebase tour, or
"explain this codebase to a new developer", read onboarding-guide.md from this
directory and follow it instead of architecture-guide.md. This mode explains rather
than diagnoses — no Health Score, no Iron Law findings.
If the user has not specified files or a directory to audit: apply Auto Scope
Detection from ../_shared/common.md to determine the audit scope before proceeding.
- Gather codebase context and draw the module dependency graph as Mermaid (Steps 0–1 of the guide)
- Scan for each decay risk in the order specified (Steps 2–4 of the guide)
- Assign node colors in the Mermaid diagram based on findings (red/yellow/green) — after Step 4
- Run the Testability Seam Assessment (Step 5 of the guide)
- Run the Conway's Law check (Step 6 of the guide)
- Output using the Report Template from common.md — Mermaid graph FIRST, then Findings
Mode line in report: Architecture Audit
Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches its upstream source and local project context.
- Verify commands, generated code, dependencies, credentials, and external service behavior before applying changes.
- Do not treat examples as a substitute for environment-specific tests, security review, or user approval for destructive or costly actions.