| name | app-it |
| description | Turn a local project or a hosted web app (including a published Claude Artifact URL) into a macOS Dock-launchable .app. Use when the user wants a clickable Dock app, local app package, icon, App It install, hosted-URL or Artifact wrapper, or repeatable desktop launcher. Defaults to native Swift WebKit, shipped templates, and verification of build, launch, ports, quit, warm relaunch, and cleanup. |
app-it - Make a local project or hosted web app launchable from the Dock
App It installs local projects under ~/Applications/App It/ as clickable
macOS apps: click opens, window close stays warm, Cmd+Q cleans up.
Non-Negotiables
- Run
templates/inspect.sh first and read the output before editing.
- Trust disk over docs. Verify project type from
package.json, config files,
and actual scripts when docs disagree.
- Decide for the user when the default is defensible. Ask only before a
destructive or genuinely ambiguous choice.
- Copy the shipped templates into the target project and customize through
scripts/app-it.config.json. Do not re-derive launcher patterns.
- Keep App It local and reversible. No Electron/Tauri migration unless the
project already has one or Strategy A cannot satisfy the requirement.
- Verify the installed app path, runtime port truth, warm relaunch, Cmd+Q
cleanup, and report honestly when GUI-only checks need a human.
- When wrapping a hosted app, keep auth with the host. Never copy sessions,
cookies, API keys, or another user's auth into a local bundle. For a Claude
Artifact that uses hosted runtime APIs (
window.claude, window.storage,
MCP prompts, or Claude-provided auth), package the published/shared
claude.ai URL rather than copied source.
Reference Map
Open these only when the inspection or chosen path needs them:
references/project-inspection.md - inspect output, app naming, bundle IDs,
multi-app signals, and framework recipes.
references/strategies.md - A1 native, Chrome fallback, A2 static, A3
multi-server, A4 CLI, existing Electron/Tauri/NW.js, and Strategy D.
references/ports-and-worktrees.md - worktrees, runtime port truth,
hardcoded/env ports, and framework port cheat sheet.
references/generated-files.md - allowed files, templates, config JSON,
placeholders, scripts, and generated docs.
references/assets-and-icons.md - icon discovery, rejection, preview,
placeholders, and replacement.
references/fsa-and-chromium.md - File System Access, polyfill, and
Chromium-only routing.
references/verification.md - build/install/runtime checks, smoke checks,
human/deferred buckets, and cleanup semantics.
references/troubleshooting.md - Gatekeeper/iCloud rescue, stale wrappers,
desktop:doctor, and anti-patterns.
references/report-template.md - exact final report format. Use it for the
chat reply and docs/desktop-launcher.app-it-report.md.
Templates
Copy templates from templates/; do not rewrite them. They encode the Mach-O
entrypoint, NFC/NFD-safe matching, daemon servers, two-stage cleanup, runtime
port fallback, descendant reattach, Finder/Dock PATH, menu shortcuts, and
doctor checks. See references/generated-files.md for the roster.
Workflow
1. Inspect
Run the bundled inspector from the target project root:
/path/to/plugins/app-it/skills/app-it/templates/inspect.sh
Use its output for worktree status, project type, scripts, hardcoded ports,
multi-app/cohabiting-server signals, FSA, port collisions, toolchains, runtime
paths, and assets.
Read references/project-inspection.md before resolving app count, names,
bundle IDs, existing desktop configs, or project type. Read
references/ports-and-worktrees.md for worktrees, hardcoded ports, proxy
targets, or cohabiting frontend/backend servers.
2. Decide
For each user-facing app, choose one strategy:
Existing Electron/Tauri/NW.js config?
yes -> Strategy B
no -> native desktop requirements beyond web shell?
yes -> Strategy D
no -> FSA real-I/O or Chromium-only API?
yes -> A1 Chrome fallback
no -> static built bundle, no server?
yes -> A2
no -> cohabiting frontend + backend?
yes -> A3
no -> A1 native WebKit (default)
Default to A1 native WebKit. Use Chrome fallback for real File System Access or
other Chromium-only APIs. Use Electron/Tauri/NW.js only when the project already
owns that path. Read references/strategies.md before anything beyond simple
A1.
3. Build
Touch as few target-project files as possible. Read generated-files for the
allowed surface/config, assets-and-icons before icon work, and
fsa-and-chromium before FSA polyfill or Chrome fallback.
4. Verify
Verification is mandatory. Read references/verification.md and run applicable
programmatic checks:
Check executable shape, plist/icon validity, installed-path open, runtime port,
HTTP response, process and LaunchServices identity, Cmd+Q cleanup via Apple
Event, red-X warm state, and warm relaunch. Use desktop:verify for the
headless loop and desktop:doctor for ownership/template drift. Prefer their
--json modes for automation. desktop:verify uses APP_IT_SMOKE=1 and marks
GUI-only checks manual unless a visible app window is actually driven.
Never claim GUI-only checks passed unless you can actually see them. Put window
content, Dock icon identity, autoplay, and FSA reconnect into the human bucket
when the environment cannot verify them.
5. Report
End with the references/report-template.md report inline and in
docs/desktop-launcher.app-it-report.md: strategy, changed files, icon source,
build/install/quit commands, installed paths, verification, Dock Stack note,
limitations, and decisions.
Stage new files with git add only when that is the repository's local
convention or the user asked for staging. Do not commit unless asked.
Quick Defaults
- Install destination:
~/Applications/App It/.
- Bundle ID prefix:
com.user.<slug>, unless the project has a real domain.
- Preferred single-server ports: Next/CRA
3000, Vite/SvelteKit 5173, Astro
4321, Flask/FastAPI project default.
- Port mode: keep
port_mode: "fallback" unless browser storage, OAuth
callbacks, or project config must stay on exactly one localhost origin. Use
port_mode: "fixed" for that case; a busy preferred port is then a clear
launch failure, not an upward scan.
- Framework recipes live in
project-inspection and ports-and-worktrees.
Translate examples to the package manager present.
- Next: use the direct binary when a script hardcodes flags, wraps
next dev,
or needs host/port flags:
pnpm exec next dev --hostname 127.0.0.1 --port "$PORT" (translate pnpm
to npm/yarn/bun as needed). Plain scripts that only run next dev are OK
when they already honor PORT.
- Vite/SvelteKit command:
npm run dev -- --host 127.0.0.1 --port "$PORT" --strictPort.
- Astro command:
npm run dev -- --host 127.0.0.1 --port "$PORT".
- Chrome fallback shutdown: document
desktop:quit as primary cleanup because
Chrome close/Cmd+Q do not map to the Swift wrapper lifecycle.
- Command surface:
scripts/app-it routes inspect | apply | verify | upgrade
over the vendored scripts (a router, not a binary or runtime dep). upgrade
(desktop-upgrade.sh) re-vendors newer templates when the manifest's
template_version is behind, touches only app-it's own artifacts, and rolls
back if the post-upgrade verify fails. See references/generated-files.md.
Stop Signs
Stop and explain clearly if the project needs blocking setup/auth, the start
command cannot honor the launcher port, a smoke test proves the project is
broken before the launcher, or the environment is hostile to verification.
What Not To Do
- Do not make App It explicit-only.
- Do not default to Chrome for vanilla web apps.
- Do not attach to an arbitrary externally running server.
- Do not use
kill -TERM on the wrapper to test Cmd+Q.
- Do not hardcode
com.$(id -un).* bundle IDs.
- Do not derive
PROJECT_ROOT from the installed app path.
- Do not remove PATH augmentation, runtime port fallback, daemon-mode warm
relaunch, two-stage cleanup, native menu shortcuts, or doctor diagnostics.