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tjmaynes

agent-context-generator

by tjmaynes

A curated collection of agent skills

2🍴 0📅 Jan 13, 2026

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-aware tree output, and record automation entry points (preferring just/make tasks when available)
  • 🧭 Capture coding conventions, directory ownership, testing expectations, and review workflows so future agents can navigate confidently
  • 🧩 Produce an AGENTS.md file 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

  1. Check for existing AGENTS.md
    • Use find alternative (glob or repo tree) to discover current files. Determine scope inheritance so you can update or extend instead of duplicating.
  2. Read Core Docs
    • Skim README.md, CONTRIBUTING.md, and other onboarding docs for project philosophy, setup, and workflows.
    • If docs/ or documentation/ exists, scan for architectural or process references worth surfacing.
  3. Survey Project Layout
    • Note primary directories, languages, build targets, and ownership (e.g., "src/ui maintained 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.
  4. Build a Git-aware Tree
    • Use the tree command with the --gitignore flag (tree ≥ 2.0) so ignored paths stay hidden: tree --gitignore -a -L 3 > tmp/tree.txt.
    • If your tree build lacks --gitignore, run tree -a -L 3 --prune and 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).
  5. Identify Automation Runners
    • If Justfile exists, run just --list (or just --list --unsorted for extra notes).
    • If Makefile exists (and just does not), run make help or 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.
  6. 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.
  7. Clarify Testing & Quality Gates
    • Identify test suites, coverage expectations, linting, formatting, and CI workflows.
  8. 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:

  1. Header — Title + short purpose statement.
  2. Quick Facts — Table or bullet summary (languages, package manager, key scripts, CI).
  3. Repository Tour — High-level directory map with responsibilities and ownership hints.
  4. Tooling & Setup — Required runtimes, package managers, environment variables, secrets.
  5. Common Tasks — Lint/test/build/deploy commands. Prefer listing just recipes first, then make targets, then raw commands.
  6. Testing & Quality — When and how to run tests, linting, formatting, coverage, and CI expectations.
  7. Workflow Expectations — Branching model, review norms, feature flagging, deployment cadence.
  8. Documentation Duties — When to update README.md, architecture diagrams, or other docs.
  9. 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 format before opening a PR").
  • When referencing scripts, include relative paths so agents can jump quickly (e.g., scripts/bootstrap.sh).
  • Incorporate a trimmed tree --gitignore snapshot (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

  1. 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?
  2. 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.
  3. 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).

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

65/100

Based on repository quality metrics

SKILL.md

SKILL.mdファイルが含まれている

+20
LICENSE

ライセンスが設定されている

+10
説明文

100文字以上の説明がある

0/10
人気

GitHub Stars 100以上

0/15
最近の活動

1ヶ月以内に更新

+10
フォーク

10回以上フォークされている

0/5
Issue管理

オープンIssueが50未満

+5
言語

プログラミング言語が設定されている

+5
タグ

1つ以上のタグが設定されている

+5

Reviews

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Reviews coming soon