| name | update-docs |
| description | Scan recent git commits for changes that affect user-facing behavior, then draft or update the corresponding documentation pages. Use when docs have fallen behind code changes, after a batch of features lands, or when preparing a release. Trigger keywords - update docs, draft docs, docs from commits, sync docs, catch up docs, doc debt, docs behind, docs drift. |
Update Docs from Commits
Scan recent git history for commits that affect user-facing behavior and draft documentation updates for each.
Prerequisites
- You must be in the MemantoClaw git repository (
MemantoClaw).
- The
docs/ directory must exist with the current doc set.
When to Use
- After a batch of features or fixes has landed and docs may be stale.
- Before a release, to catch any doc gaps.
- When a contributor asks "what docs need updating?"
Step 1: Identify Relevant Commits
Determine the commit range. The user may provide one explicitly (e.g., "since v0.1.0" or "last 30 commits"). If not, default to commits since the head of the main branch.
git log v0.1.0..HEAD --oneline --no-merges
git log -50 --oneline --no-merges
Filter to commits that are likely to affect docs. Look for these signals:
- Commit type:
feat, fix, refactor, perf commits often change behavior. docs commits are already doc changes. chore, ci, test commits rarely need doc updates.
- Files changed: Changes to
memantoclaw/src/, memantoclaw-blueprint/, bin/, scripts/, or policy-related code are high-signal.
- Ignore: Changes limited to
test/, .github/, or internal-only modules.
git log v0.1.0..HEAD --oneline --no-merges --name-only
Step 2: Map Commits to Doc Pages
For each relevant commit, determine which doc page(s) it affects. Use this mapping as a starting point:
| Code area | Likely doc page(s) |
|---|
memantoclaw/src/commands/ (launch, connect, status, logs) | docs/reference/commands.md |
memantoclaw/src/commands/ (new command) | May need a new page or entry in docs/reference/commands.md |
memantoclaw/src/blueprint/ | docs/about/architecture.md |
memantoclaw/src/cli.ts or memantoclaw/src/index.ts | docs/reference/commands.md, docs/get-started/quickstart.md |
memantoclaw-blueprint/orchestrator/ | docs/about/architecture.md |
memantoclaw-blueprint/policies/ | docs/reference/network-policies.md |
memantoclaw-blueprint/blueprint.yaml | docs/about/architecture.md, docs/reference/inference-profiles.md |
scripts/ (setup, start) | docs/get-started/quickstart.md |
Dockerfile | docs/about/architecture.md |
| Inference-related changes | docs/reference/inference-profiles.md |
If a commit does not map to any existing page but introduces a user-visible concept, flag it as needing a new page.
Step 3: Read the Commit Details
For each commit that needs a doc update, read the full diff to understand the change:
git show <commit-hash> --stat
git show <commit-hash>
Extract:
- What changed (new flag, renamed command, changed default, new feature).
- Why it changed (from the commit message body, linked issue, or PR description).
- Any breaking changes or migration steps.
Step 4: Read the Current Doc Page
Before editing, read the full target doc page to understand its current content and structure.
Identify where the new content should go. Follow the page's existing structure.
Step 5: Draft the Update
Write the doc update following these conventions:
- Active voice, present tense, second person.
- No unnecessary bold. Reserve bold for UI labels and parameter names.
- No em dashes unless used sparingly. Prefer commas or separate sentences.
- Start sections with an introductory sentence that orients the reader.
- No superlatives. Say what the feature does, not how great it is.
- Code examples use
console language with $ prompt prefix.
- Include the SPDX header if creating a new page.
- Match existing frontmatter format if creating a new page.
- Always write NVIDIA in all caps. Wrong: Nvidia, nvidia.
- Always capitalize MemantoClaw correctly. Wrong: memantoclaw (in prose), Memantoclaw.
- Always capitalize OpenShell correctly. Wrong: openshell (in prose), Openshell, openShell.
- Do not number section titles. Wrong: "Section 1: Configure Inference" or "Step 3: Verify." Use plain descriptive titles.
- No colons in titles. Wrong: "Inference: Cloud and Local." Write "Cloud and Local Inference" instead.
- Use colons only to introduce a list. Do not use colons as general-purpose punctuation between clauses.
When updating an existing page:
- Add content in the logical place within the existing structure.
- Do not reorganize sections unless the change requires it.
- Update any cross-references or "Next Steps" links if relevant.
When creating a new page:
- Follow the frontmatter template from existing pages in
docs/.
- Add the page to the appropriate
toctree in docs/index.md.
Step 6: Present the Results
After drafting all updates, present a summary to the user:
## Doc Updates from Commits
### Updated pages
- `docs/reference/commands.md`: Added `eject` command documentation (from commit abc1234).
- `docs/reference/network-policies.md`: Updated policy schema for new egress rule (from commit def5678).
### New pages needed
- None (or list any new pages created).
### Commits with no doc impact
- `chore(deps): bump typescript` (abc1234) — internal dependency, no user-facing change.
- `test: add launch command test` (def5678) — test-only change.
Step 7: Build and Verify
After making changes, build the docs locally:
make docs
Check for:
- Build warnings or errors.
- Broken cross-references.
- Correct rendering of new content.
Tips
- When in doubt about whether a commit needs a doc update, check if the commit message references a CLI flag, config option, or user-visible behavior.
- Group related commits that touch the same doc page into a single update rather than making multiple small edits.
- If a commit is a breaking change, add a note at the top of the relevant section using a
:::{warning} admonition.
- PRs that are purely internal refactors with no behavior change do not need doc updates, even if they touch high-signal directories.
Example Usage
User says: "Catch up the docs for everything merged since v0.1.0."
- Run
git log v0.1.0..HEAD --oneline --no-merges --name-only.
- Filter to
feat, fix, refactor, perf commits touching user-facing code.
- Map each to a doc page.
- Read the commit diffs and current doc pages.
- Draft updates following the style guide.
- Present the summary.
- Build with
make docs to verify.