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Found 3,023 Skills
Cisco IOS and IOS-XE review patterns for show commands, config hierarchy, wildcard masks, ACL placement, interface hygiene, and safe change-window verification.
Segmenting home networks into VLANs for IoT, guest, trusted, and server traffic using UniFi, pfSense/OPNsense, and MikroTik — including switch trunk config, firewall rules, and wireless SSID mapping.
Configure AI agents via the imperative SDK / REST API — for no-code dashboard setups, webhook-based tools, and knowledge bases.
Meta-skill: helps create an AGENTS.md for a new project by guiding the user through selecting the right profile from the agentic library and running the compose command. Also helps create a custom AGENTS.md from scratch when no profile fits. Invoked when the user asks to set up agent instructions, create AGENTS.md, or configure agents for a project.
Enable the GitHub CLI (`gh`) in Claude Code cloud sessions and GitHub Copilot coding agent environments. Use this skill when: (1) setting up a project so cloud AI agents can use `gh` for PRs, issues, and releases, (2) configuring setup scripts or SessionStart hooks for `gh` installation, (3) adding `copilot-setup-steps.yml` for GitHub Copilot agents, (4) troubleshooting `gh` auth failures in cloud sessions, or (5) configuring `GH_TOKEN` for headless environments. Triggers on: "enable gh", "github integration", "Claude Code cloud setup", "copilot setup steps", "gh auth in cloud", "gh not working in cloud", "setup script", or any request involving GitHub CLI access from cloud-based AI coding agents.
Autonomously set up an OpenClaw bot on a fresh Yandex Cloud VM in Kazakhstan (kz1-a, Karaganda). Asks the user for exactly two things — a Telegram bot token and one of three LLM access options (Anthropic API key, OpenRouter API key, or OpenAI Codex OAuth via ChatGPT Plus/Pro subscription) — then handles VM creation, hardening, OpenClaw install, CEO AI OS workspace seeding, Telegram pairing, chat_id auto-detection, and bot-reply verification on its own. The only other actions the user performs are pressing /start in Telegram once and (if Codex) confirming a device code on auth.openai.com. Use when the user says install OpenClaw to Yandex Cloud, deploy OpenClaw to YC Kazakhstan, set up my CEO bot in YC KZ, I am at OpenClaw workshop and need my own bot, create a Yandex Cloud VM for OpenClaw, or any close paraphrase. Targets a ~15-minute end-to-end run for non-DevOps users (founders, CEOs, marketing leads). Supports two modes of accessing Yandex Cloud — Plan A (the user's own YC Kazakhstan account via OAuth) and Plan B (a workshop-key bundle provided by the workshop organizer, for participants without their own YC account). The mode is auto-detected from the inputs. For local-machine OpenClaw install, use openclaw/install.sh in this repo instead. Companion skill openclaw-guide is required; prepare-yc-workshop is the matching organizer-side skill that produces the bundles consumed in Plan B; openclaw-user-onboarding is auto-invoked after Step 5 to collect the five basic facts about the user (identity, focus, style, tools, anti-patterns) and write them into USER.md so the bot is useful from message one.
Connects NemoClaw to a local inference server. Use when setting up Ollama, vLLM, TensorRT-LLM, NIM, or any OpenAI-compatible local model server with NemoClaw. Trigger keywords - nemoclaw local inference, ollama nemoclaw, vllm nemoclaw, local model server, openai compatible endpoint, switch nemoclaw inference model, change inference runtime, nemoclaw additional model, nemoclaw sub-agent model, openclaw sub-agent, agents.list, sessions_spawn, vlm-demo, nemoclaw tool calling, ollama tool calls, vllm tool-call-parser, raw json in tui, nemoclaw inference options, nemoclaw onboarding providers, nemoclaw inference routing.
Configure Harness AI-powered operations (AIDA) via MCP. Set up predictive failure analysis with ML models for memory leaks, disk exhaustion, connection pool saturation, and latency degradation. Configure intelligent alert correlation and noise reduction to reduce alert volume. Use when asked to set up predictive failure analysis, configure AI-powered alerting, reduce alert noise, or enable ML-based anomaly detection. Do NOT use for pipeline debugging (use debug-pipeline instead) or SLO management (use manage-slos instead). Trigger phrases: AIDA, predictive failure, alert correlation, noise reduction, anomaly detection, AI ops, predictive analysis, alert fatigue, ML alerting, intelligent alerting.
Proactively use this skill when the user mentions installing, setting up, wiring, or configuring Tribal (a memory store for tacit engineering knowledge, the why, ways of working, breakthroughs). Also activates when `tribal check` reports failures the user wants to resolve, when switching transports, when re-wiring after a harness change, or when the user asks how to get started with Tribal. Walks through binary install, `tribal bootstrap`, `tribal check`, and MCP config wire-up.
Use this skill when integrating, configuring, or extending Modern Admin (`@modern-admin/*`) in a host project — i.e. wiring `ModernAdminModule.forRoot`, adding admin resources, configuring Better Auth/Prisma/Redis, declaring properties or `@Action`/`@Before`/`@After` hooks, setting up role permissions (`MaRole.permissions`), or troubleshooting auth/SPA 404s. Triggers on tasks that mention `@AdminResource`, `AdminController`, `adminSource`, `BetterAuthProvider`, `ModernAdminStaticUiModule`, `setupPrismaSystem`, `MaRole`, `rolesResourceId`, the `ma_*` schema fragment, or scaffolding `bun create @modern-admin`.
Redis client and connection guidance covering connection pooling, multiplexing, pipelining, client-side caching with RESP3, avoiding slow commands (KEYS, SMEMBERS, HGETALL), and tuning socket timeouts. Use when configuring a Redis client (redis-py, Jedis, Lettuce, NRedisStack), batching commands for throughput, eliminating per-request connection creation, iterating large keyspaces with SCAN, enabling client-side caching for read-heavy workloads, or setting connect and read timeouts.
Redis security guidance covering authentication (requirepass and ACL users), TLS, ACL-based least-privilege access control, restricting network exposure via bind and protected-mode, firewall rules, and disabling dangerous commands. Use when deploying Redis to production, defining ACL users for an application, configuring TLS connections, locking down a Redis instance behind a firewall, or auditing a Redis deployment for security hardening.