| name | agent-config |
| description | Show a Culture agent's full configuration in one read-only view: its system-prompt file (CLAUDE.md / AGENTS.md / GEMINI.md), the parallel culture.yaml, and the agent's local .claude/skills index. Use when an operator says "show agent <name>", "what does <agent> look like", or before teaching/onboarding an agent and you need to see its current kit + config. Backs the `guild show` verb. Vendored from steward (cite-don't-import); inventory only — it reports, it does not judge alignment or drift.
|
| type | command |
agent-config — surface a Culture agent's config in one view
guildmaster is the mesh's skills supplier and owns the inventory surfaces:
"what kit + config does this agent have?" This skill answers exactly that for a
single agent, showing the three artifacts that together define it:
- System-prompt file (
CLAUDE.md / AGENTS.md / GEMINI.md) — the
prompt-side guidance for the agent's backend. The script detects which file
is present from a backend-fingerprint registry.
culture.yaml — the runtime-side config (agents: list with suffix,
backend, model, system_prompt, channels, tags, acp_command,
extras). Lives parallel to the prompt file at the project root.
.claude/skills/*/SKILL.md — the per-project skills the agent can
invoke, one line each (name + truncated description).
This is the inventory half of the steward → guildmaster split
(issue #12): it reports
the config, it does not interpret drift or judge alignment. The relationship
graph and the "is this agent aligned?" judgment stay with steward overview /
steward doctor.
When to use
- Before
guild teach / guild onboard — see an agent's current kit + config.
- When an operator asks "show me agent
<name>" or "what does <agent> run".
- Read it, don't guess — before answering a question about what an agent does.
How to run
One script, two ways to call it (or just run guild show, which wraps it):
.claude/skills/agent-config/scripts/show.sh ../culture
.claude/skills/agent-config/scripts/show.sh daria
Output is three sections: the detected system-prompt file, culture.yaml (or
(missing)), and a one-line summary per local skill (name + description,
truncated to 120 chars).
What to look at in culture.yaml
| Field | Why it matters |
|---|
suffix | Identifies the agent on the mesh. |
backend | One of claude / codex / copilot / acp. The all-backends rule means a feature in one must land in all four. |
model | Drift here changes behavior silently. |
system_prompt | Should not contradict the prompt file. |
channels | Where the agent listens. |
tags, extras, acp_command | Backend-specific. |
Notes
- Read-only. The script never edits agent files. It reports; it does not
flag or fix drift — that judgment is steward's lane.
- Backend-aware. Prompt-file detection comes from
data/backend-fingerprints.yaml (the prompt: mapping), falling back to the
built-in (CLAUDE.md AGENTS.md GEMINI.md) list if the registry is absent.
- Per-machine config. Suffix mode reads
culture_server_yaml from
.claude/skills.local.yaml (git-ignored), falling back to
.claude/skills.local.yaml.example.
- Vendored from steward (
agent-config). guildmaster owns this copy and may
diverge; re-sync from steward's canonical copy when it changes. Divergences:
the SKILL.md is reframed for guildmaster's inventory role and adds
type: command for the culture backend's skill loader.