Add hermes-agent-skill-authoring skill

Class-level skill for writing SKILL.md files inside this repo: required
frontmatter per tools/skill_manager_tool.py validator, size limits,
peer-matched structure, directory placement, write_file vs skill_manage,
caching pitfalls, cross-reference caveats.
This commit is contained in:
Brooklyn Nicholson
2026-04-26 17:12:25 -05:00
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---
name: hermes-agent-skill-authoring
description: Use when authoring or updating a SKILL.md inside the hermes-agent repo itself (skills/ tree, committed to a branch). Covers required frontmatter, validator limits, peer-matching structure, and the write_file-vs-skill_manage distinction for in-repo skills.
version: 1.0.0
author: Hermes Agent
license: MIT
metadata:
hermes:
tags: [skills, authoring, hermes-agent, conventions, skill-md]
related_skills: [writing-plans, requesting-code-review]
---
# Authoring Hermes-Agent Skills (in-repo)
## Overview
There are two places a SKILL.md can live:
1. **User-local:** `~/.hermes/skills/<maybe-category>/<name>/SKILL.md` — personal, not shared. Created via `skill_manage(action='create')`.
2. **In-repo (this skill is about this case):** `/home/bb/hermes-agent/skills/<category>/<name>/SKILL.md` — committed, shipped with the package. Use `write_file` + `git add`. `skill_manage(action='create')` does NOT target this tree.
## When to Use
- User asks you to add a skill "in this branch / repo / commit"
- You're committing a reusable workflow that should ship with hermes-agent
- You're editing an existing skill under `/home/bb/hermes-agent/skills/` (use `patch` for small edits, `write_file` for rewrites; `skill_manage` still works for patch on in-repo skills, but not for `create`)
## Required Frontmatter
Source of truth: `tools/skill_manager_tool.py::_validate_frontmatter`. Hard requirements:
- Starts with `---` as the first bytes (no leading blank line).
- Closes with `\n---\n` before the body.
- Parses as a YAML mapping.
- `name` field present.
- `description` field present, ≤ **1024 chars** (`MAX_DESCRIPTION_LENGTH`).
- Non-empty body after the closing `---`.
Peer-matched shape used by every skill under `skills/software-development/`:
```yaml
---
name: my-skill-name # lowercase, hyphens, ≤64 chars (MAX_NAME_LENGTH)
description: Use when <trigger>. <one-line behavior>.
version: 1.0.0
author: Hermes Agent
license: MIT
metadata:
hermes:
tags: [short, descriptive, tags]
related_skills: [other-skill, another-skill]
---
```
`version` / `author` / `license` / `metadata` are NOT enforced by the validator, but every peer has them — omit and your skill sticks out.
## Size Limits
- Description: ≤ 1024 chars (enforced).
- Full SKILL.md: ≤ 100,000 chars (enforced as `MAX_SKILL_CONTENT_CHARS`, ~36k tokens).
- Peer skills in `software-development/` sit at **8-14k chars**. Aim for that range. If you're pushing past 20k, split into `references/*.md` and reference them from SKILL.md.
## Peer-Matched Structure
Every in-repo skill follows roughly:
```
# <Title>
## Overview
One or two paragraphs: what and why.
## When to Use
- Bulleted triggers
- "Don't use for:" counter-triggers
## <Topic sections specific to the skill>
- Quick-reference tables are common
- Code blocks with exact commands
- Hermes-specific recipes (tests via scripts/run_tests.sh, ui-tui paths, etc.)
## Common Pitfalls
Numbered list of mistakes and their fixes.
## Verification Checklist
- [ ] Checkbox list of post-action verifications
## One-Shot Recipes (optional)
Named scenarios → concrete command sequences.
```
Not every section is mandatory, but `Overview` + `When to Use` + actionable body + pitfalls are the minimum for the skill to feel like a peer.
## Directory Placement
```
skills/<category>/<skill-name>/SKILL.md
```
Categories currently in repo (confirm with `ls skills/`): `autonomous-ai-agents`, `creative`, `data-science`, `devops`, `dogfood`, `email`, `gaming`, `github`, `leisure`, `mcp`, `media`, `mlops/*`, `note-taking`, `productivity`, `red-teaming`, `research`, `smart-home`, `social-media`, `software-development`.
Pick the closest existing category. Don't invent new top-level categories casually.
## Workflow
1. **Survey peers** in the target category:
```
ls skills/<category>/
```
Read 2-3 peer SKILL.md files to match tone and structure.
2. **Check validator constraints** in `tools/skill_manager_tool.py` if unsure.
3. **Draft** with `write_file` to `skills/<category>/<name>/SKILL.md`.
4. **Validate locally**:
```python
import yaml, re, pathlib
content = pathlib.Path("skills/<category>/<name>/SKILL.md").read_text()
assert content.startswith("---")
m = re.search(r'\n---\s*\n', content[3:])
fm = yaml.safe_load(content[3:m.start()+3])
assert "name" in fm and "description" in fm
assert len(fm["description"]) <= 1024
assert len(content) <= 100_000
```
5. **Git add + commit** on the active branch.
6. **Note:** the CURRENT session's skill loader is cached — `skill_view` / `skills_list` will not see the new skill until a new session. This is expected, not a bug.
## Cross-Referencing Other Skills
`metadata.hermes.related_skills` unions both trees (`skills/` in-repo and `~/.hermes/skills/`) at load time. You CAN reference a user-local skill from an in-repo skill, but it won't resolve for other users who clone the repo fresh. Prefer referencing only in-repo skills from in-repo skills. If a frequently-referenced skill lives only in `~/.hermes/skills/`, consider promoting it to the repo.
## Editing Existing In-Repo Skills
- **Small fix (typo, added pitfall, tightened trigger):** `skill_manage(action='patch', name=..., old_string=..., new_string=...)` works fine on in-repo skills.
- **Major rewrite:** `write_file` the whole SKILL.md. `skill_manage(action='edit')` also works but requires supplying the full new content.
- **Adding supporting files:** `write_file` to `skills/<category>/<name>/references/<file>.md`, `templates/<file>`, or `scripts/<file>`. `skill_manage(action='write_file')` also works and enforces the references/templates/scripts/assets subdir allowlist.
- **Always commit** the edit — in-repo skills are source, not runtime state.
## Common Pitfalls
1. **Using `skill_manage(action='create')` for an in-repo skill.** It writes to `~/.hermes/skills/`, not the repo tree. Use `write_file` for in-repo creation.
2. **Leading whitespace before `---`.** The validator checks `content.startswith("---")`; any leading blank line or BOM fails validation.
3. **Description too generic.** Peer descriptions start with "Use when ..." and describe the *trigger class*, not the one task. "Use when debugging X" > "Debug X".
4. **Forgetting the author/license/metadata block.** Not validator-enforced, but every peer has it; omitting makes the skill look half-finished.
5. **Writing a skill that duplicates a peer.** Before creating, `ls skills/<category>/` and open 2-3 peers. Prefer extending an existing skill to creating a narrow sibling.
6. **Expecting the current session to see the new skill.** It won't. The skill loader is initialized at session start. Verify in a fresh session or via `skill_view` using the exact path.
7. **Linking to skills that don't exist in-repo.** `related_skills: [some-user-local-skill]` works for you but breaks for other clones. Prefer only in-repo links.
## Verification Checklist
- [ ] File is at `skills/<category>/<name>/SKILL.md` (not in `~/.hermes/skills/`)
- [ ] Frontmatter starts at byte 0 with `---`, closes with `\n---\n`
- [ ] `name`, `description`, `version`, `author`, `license`, `metadata.hermes.{tags, related_skills}` all present
- [ ] Name ≤ 64 chars, lowercase + hyphens
- [ ] Description ≤ 1024 chars and starts with "Use when ..."
- [ ] Total file ≤ 100,000 chars (aim for 8-15k)
- [ ] Structure: `# Title` → `## Overview` → `## When to Use` → body → `## Common Pitfalls` → `## Verification Checklist`
- [ ] `related_skills` references resolve in-repo (or are explicitly OK to be user-local)
- [ ] `git add skills/<category>/<name>/ && git commit` completed on the intended branch