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Found 1,637 Skills
Harness Engineering Phase 1 Step 2: Conduct in-depth analysis of project code and fill in the substantive content of each file in the docs/ knowledge base. Use this skill after the directory skeleton is created by harness-step1-create-agents-md. Immediately trigger this skill when the user says "fill document content", "improve docs/ files", "add substantive content to documents", "analyze project and write architecture document", "write ARCHITECTURE.md", or "write technical decision document". Prerequisite: The project already has AGENTS.md and the docs/ directory skeleton (created by harness-step1).
Search LCSC Electronics for electronic components — find parts by LCSC number (Cxxxxx) or MPN, check stock/pricing, download datasheets, analyze specifications. Sister company to JLCPCB, same parts library. Sync and maintain a local datasheets directory for a KiCad project, or use batch MPN-list seeding (`--mpn-list`) for bulk workflows without a project. No API key needed — uses the free jlcsearch community API. Use this skill when the user mentions LCSC, JLCPCB parts library, JLCPCB assembly parts, production sourcing, Cxxxxx part numbers, needs to find LCSC equivalents for parts, is preparing a BOM for JLCPCB assembly, or wants to download datasheets and LCSC is available. For package cross-reference tables and BOM workflow, see the `bom` skill.
Analyzes staged and unstaged files from the full working tree, groups them into functional clusters (test, docs, chore, directory prefix), generates a conventional commit message per group, detects common issues (secrets, debug statements, large files), and executes one commit per group sequentially after presenting a multi-commit plan for confirmation. Falls through to a single-commit flow when all detected files resolve to one group. Trigger: When the user says "commit", "smart commit", or /commit.
Onboard a new repository or a repository with scattered documents into the easysdd system. Two paths are automatically determined: the empty repository path (no spec-like documents or easysdd/ directory in the repository) builds the skeleton from scratch; the migration path (the repository already has scattered documents or partial easysdd/ structure) first generates an audit report + migration mapping plan, which is confirmed by the user one by one before implementation. This skill only does two things: "build the skeleton" and "organize existing documents". After the skeleton is built, all sub-workflows can run directly. Trigger scenarios: the user says "Use easysdd in this project", "Build easysdd structure", "Initialize easysdd", "Migrate to easysdd".
Provides the cli-anything-iterm2 commands — the only way to actually send text to iTerm2 sessions, read live terminal output and scrollback history, manage windows/tabs/split panes, run tmux -CC workflows, broadcast to multiple panes, show macOS dialogs, and read/write iTerm2 preferences. Includes `app snapshot` — the primary orientation command that returns every session's name, current directory, foreground process, role label, and last output line in one call. Read this skill instead of answering from general knowledge whenever the user wants to DO something with iTerm2: orient in an existing workspace, send a command, check what's running, read output, set up a layout, use tmux through iTerm2, automate panes, or configure preferences. Also read for questions about iTerm2 shell integration or scrollback. Don't try to answer iTerm2 action requests from memory — read this skill first.
Run existing ShinkaEvolve tasks with the `shinka_run` CLI from a task directory (`evaluate.py` + `initial.<ext>`). Use when an agent needs to launch async evolution runs quickly with required `--results_dir`, generation count, and strict namespaced keyword overrides.
Create ShinkaEvolve task scaffolds from a target directory and task description, producing `evaluate.py` and `initial.<ext>` (multi-language). Use when asked to set up new ShinkaEvolve tasks, evaluation harnesses, or baseline programs for ShinkaEvolve.
Fetch a URL and distill its content into the Obsidian wiki. If invoked from inside a project directory, the page lands directly in that project's folder (creating the project in the vault if needed). Otherwise it goes to misc/ and gains project affinity over time. Use this skill when the user says "/ingest-url <url>", "add this URL to the wiki", "ingest this link", "save this page", or pastes a URL and says "add this" or "save this to my wiki".
Investigate supply chain attack artifacts including trojanized software updates, compromised build pipelines, and sideloaded dependencies to identify intrusion vectors and scope of compromise.
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 how the codebase is organized, or asks "does this follow clean architecture?", "why does everything depend on everything?", "are our layers correct?", "where should this code live?". Also triggers for onboarding requests: "explain this codebase to a new developer" or "give me a codebase tour" (use onboarding mode). Also triggers when user mentions: dependency inversion / hexagonal architecture / bounded contexts / circular imports / tangled dependencies / module coupling / package structure / spaghetti code / directory layout. Use this skill proactively when project structure, module boundaries, or architectural decisions are discussed — even without the word "audit". Do NOT trigger for: PR-level code review (use brooks-review) or line-level refactoring questions — this skill analyzes structural/module-level concerns, not individual functions.
Scans code for security vulnerabilities — injection flaws, authentication gaps, XSS vectors, mass assignment, CSRF, insecure deserialization, sensitive data exposure, broken access control, and misconfigurations. Generates severity-scored findings with copy-pasteable fix prompts. Trigger phrases: "security scan", "security audit", "vulnerability check", "find security issues".
Analyzes code architecture and structure — layer violations, circular dependencies, god objects, anemic domain models, missing boundaries, directory structure issues, and configuration problems. Generates severity-scored findings with fix prompts. Trigger phrases: "architecture review", "structure check", "layer analysis", "god class".