
agent-context-generator
by tjmaynes
A curated collection of agent skills
SKILL.md
name: agent-context-generator description: Generate project-level AGENTS.md guides that capture conventions, workflows, and required follow-up tasks. Use when a repository needs clear agent onboarding covering structure, tooling, testing, task flow, README expectations, and conventional commit summaries. license: MIT allowed-tools: Read Write Edit Bash(ls:) Bash(git:) Bash(just:) Bash(make:) metadata: generated-at: "2026-01-10T00:00:00Z" group: "enablement" category: "documentation" difficulty: "intermediate" step-count: "4"
Agent Context Generator
What You'll Do
- 🔍 Inventory the repository's structure, capture a
.gitignore-awaretreeoutput, and record automation entry points (preferringjust/maketasks when available) - 🧭 Capture coding conventions, directory ownership, testing expectations, and review workflows so future agents can navigate confidently
- 🧩 Produce an
AGENTS.mdfile following the opinionated section order below, honoring scope rules for nested directories - ✅ Embed universal wrap-up tasks: ensure the README is updated after significant code changes and summarize changes per conventional commits while resolving any open questions with the developer
Phase 1 · Understand the Repository
- Check for existing AGENTS.md
- Use
findalternative (globor repo tree) to discover current files. Determine scope inheritance so you can update or extend instead of duplicating.
- Use
- Read Core Docs
- Skim
README.md,CONTRIBUTING.md, and other onboarding docs for project philosophy, setup, and workflows. - If
docs/ordocumentation/exists, scan for architectural or process references worth surfacing.
- Skim
- Survey Project Layout
- Note primary directories, languages, build targets, and ownership (e.g., "
src/uimaintained by Frontend team"). - Check for
plans/,docs/, or other knowledge directories. Flag must-read files (ADR indexes, architecture overviews, runbooks) to reference later in AGENTS.md.
- Note primary directories, languages, build targets, and ownership (e.g., "
- Build a Git-aware Tree
- Use the
treecommand with the--gitignoreflag (tree ≥ 2.0) so ignored paths stay hidden:tree --gitignore -a -L 3 > tmp/tree.txt. - If your
treebuild lacks--gitignore, runtree -a -L 3 --pruneand manually prune any ignored directories noted in.gitignore, or install an updated version via your package manager. - Capture or trim the output before placing it in AGENTS.md (focus on the top 2–3 levels, and note when you omitted details for brevity).
- Use the
- Identify Automation Runners
- If
Justfileexists, runjust --list(orjust --list --unsortedfor extra notes). - If
Makefileexists (andjustdoes not), runmake helpor inspect phony targets for canonical tasks. - Record which commands are recommended for linting, testing, building, syncing data, etc. Link the definitive task names you surface in your notes for inclusion later.
- If
- Catalog Tooling & Environment
- List required runtimes, package managers, env vars, secrets handling, and local services.
- Note down any
.env.example,config/, or secrets documentation that agents must review.
- Clarify Testing & Quality Gates
- Identify test suites, coverage expectations, linting, formatting, and CI workflows.
- Resolve Ambiguities Early
- Whenever conventions, ownership, or workflows seem unclear, prompt the developer with focused questions before drafting the guide.
- Ask explicitly whether existing
plans/or documentation directories are authoritative or stale, and clarify what canon to reference.
Outcome: A structured notes list describing layout, tooling, commands, testing, release process, documentation references, pending questions, and update expectations.
Phase 2 · Plan the AGENTS.md Structure
Follow this opinionated order to keep files consistent and scannable:
- Header — Title + short purpose statement.
- Quick Facts — Table or bullet summary (languages, package manager, key scripts, CI).
- Repository Tour — High-level directory map with responsibilities and ownership hints.
- Tooling & Setup — Required runtimes, package managers, environment variables, secrets.
- Common Tasks — Lint/test/build/deploy commands. Prefer listing
justrecipes first, thenmaketargets, then raw commands. - Testing & Quality — When and how to run tests, linting, formatting, coverage, and CI expectations.
- Workflow Expectations — Branching model, review norms, feature flagging, deployment cadence.
- Documentation Duties — When to update
README.md, architecture diagrams, or other docs. - Finish the Task — Mandatory wrap-up checklist for every agent task.
For deeper directories (e.g., services/api/), include a "Scope" note at the top clarifying inheritance from parent AGENTS instructions. Always confirm with the developer before drafting new per-directory AGENTS files so you do not duplicate existing guidance or create unnecessary overhead.
Phase 3 · Compose AGENTS.md
Use the template below and adapt each section to the project:
# Project Agent Guide
> Scope: Root project (applies to all subdirectories unless overridden)
## Quick Facts
- **Primary language:**
- **Package manager:**
- **Entrypoints:**
- **CI/CD:**
## Repository Tour
- `path/` — description & owner
## Tooling & Setup
- Install instructions (per OS)
- Required environment variables (with purpose)
- Secrets management notes
## Common Tasks
- `just <task>` — what it does (preferred)
- `make <target>` — what it does
- Raw command fallback when automation missing
## Testing & Quality Gates
- Unit/integration test commands
- Lint/format commands
- Coverage expectations & thresholds
- CI status command or dashboard link
## Workflow Expectations
- Branch naming and review rules
- Feature toggles or release cadence
- Any approval or ticket linkage requirements
## Documentation Duties
- Update `README.md` when features, setup steps, or developer ergonomics change materially
- List other docs to refresh (architecture, ADRs, etc.)
## Finish the Task Checklist
- [ ] Update relevant docs (& `README.md` if significant changes landed)
- [ ] Summarize changes in conventional commit format (e.g., `feat: ...`, `fix: ...`)
Subdirectory Template (Use Only with Developer Approval)
# <Directory Name> Agent Guide
> Scope: ./path/to/directory (inherits root AGENTS.md unless noted)
## Purpose
- What lives here
- Who owns it (team/contact)
## Key Files
- `file_or_folder/` — why it matters
## Common Tasks
- `just <task>` / `make <target>` / command snippets scoped to this directory
## Testing & Quality
- Specific tests, linters, or data fixtures for this directory
## Hand-off Notes
- Docs or runbooks to reference
- Open questions captured during discovery
Only create these per-directory guides after confirming with the developer which areas need dedicated context and what information should be emphasized.
Writing Notes:
- Keep language direct and actionable. Agents should follow commands verbatim.
- Mention the preferred order of operations (e.g., "Always run
just formatbefore opening a PR"). - When referencing scripts, include relative paths so agents can jump quickly (e.g.,
scripts/bootstrap.sh). - Incorporate a trimmed
tree --gitignoresnapshot (or link to the saved artifact) so readers grasp layout quickly. - In the Repository Tour, highlight where
plans/,docs/, design docs, or ADRs live if present. - Call out any unanswered questions as action items, and confirm with the developer before creating any per-directory AGENTS overlays.
- If the project mixes languages/platforms, add subsections per component but keep global guidance first.
Phase 4 · Validate & Wrap Up
- Self-review
- Does the file respect AGENTS scope rules? (Mention inheritance or overrides.)
- Are all critical commands documented, especially automation entry points?
- Is the README update expectation explicit?
- Did you obtain developer approval before adding any per-directory AGENTS files, and is that approval reflected in the write-up?
- Does the "Finish the Task" checklist include the conventional commit summary reminder?
- Formatting
- Ensure headings use Title Case, commands are wrapped in backticks, and lists are concise.
- Keep sections under ~8 bullets unless a table is clearer.
- Handoff Summary
- When delivering the AGENTS.md to the user, include:
- A short summary of major sections added/updated.
- Confirmation that README and conventional commit reminders are present.
- Any follow-up suggestions (e.g., missing tests or outdated scripts).
- When delivering the AGENTS.md to the user, include:
Use this skill whenever a repo lacks AGENTS context or when existing instructions are incomplete or outdated. The goal is to leave future agents with a single, trustworthy map of the project, its tooling, and the expectations for finishing tasks responsibly.
Score
Total Score
Based on repository quality metrics
SKILL.mdファイルが含まれている
ライセンスが設定されている
100文字以上の説明がある
GitHub Stars 100以上
1ヶ月以内に更新
10回以上フォークされている
オープンIssueが50未満
プログラミング言語が設定されている
1つ以上のタグが設定されている
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