| name | distribute-skill-to-all-agents |
| description | Distribute a skill across configured agent skill folders while respecting local symlink layouts. |
| category | development |
| risk | critical |
| source | community |
| source_repo | davidondrej/skills |
| source_type | community |
| date_added | 2026-07-07 |
| author | davidondrej |
| tags | ["skills","distribution","agents"] |
| tools | ["claude","codex"] |
| license | MIT |
| license_source | https://github.com/davidondrej/skills/blob/main/LICENSE |
Distribute a Skill Across All Agents
When to Use
- Use when a skill should be made available across multiple local agent skill folders.
- Use when the user asks to sync or distribute skill updates to other agents.
The user has 4 agent skill locations on his MacBook. A skill must exist in each (or via symlink) to be discoverable by every agent.
The 4 Canonical Locations
| Agent | Skills Folder | Notes |
|---|
| Codex / OpenAI Agents | ~/.agents/skills/ | Canonical — author skills here first |
| Claude Code | ~/.claude/skills/ | Symlink → ~/.agents/skills/ — writing to .agents/skills automatically covers Claude |
| Pi Agent | ~/.pi/agent/skills/ | Symlink → ~/.agents/skills/ — auto-covered. (Path is /agent/ nested — NOT ~/.pi/skills/) |
| Hermes Agent | ~/.hermes/skills/ | Independent copy — the only one needing a manual copy |
Workflow
- Author the skill in
~/.agents/skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md (canonical). Follow effective-agent-skills SKILL.md guidance.
- Verify the
.claude symlink is intact (one-time check):
ls -la ~/.claude/skills
If it's a real directory instead of a symlink, the user has diverged copies — ask before touching.
- Copy to
.hermes only (.claude and .pi are symlinks — already covered):
SKILL=<skill-name>
cp -r ~/.agents/skills/$SKILL ~/.hermes/skills/
- Verify all 4 locations show identical byte counts:
for p in ~/.agents/skills/$SKILL ~/.claude/skills/$SKILL ~/.pi/agent/skills/$SKILL ~/.hermes/skills/$SKILL; do
echo "$p: $(wc -c < $p/SKILL.md) bytes"
done
All four numbers must match. If .claude or .pi shows a different byte count, that symlink is broken — investigate before proceeding.
Updating an Existing Distributed Skill
Same flow — re-copy from ~/.agents/skills/ to .hermes/skills/. The .claude and .pi symlinks update automatically. cp -r overwrites by default; use rsync -a --delete if the skill folder has nested files that may have been removed:
rsync -a --delete ~/.agents/skills/$SKILL/ ~/.hermes/skills/$SKILL/
Pitfalls
~/.pi/skills/ is the wrong location. Pi Agent loads from ~/.pi/agent/skills/ only. A skill placed in ~/.pi/skills/ is invisible. If you find skills already there, they're orphans — confirm with the user before deleting.
~/.claude/skills is a symlink, not a folder. cp -r ~/.agents/skills/foo ~/.claude/skills/ will error with "are identical". Skip the explicit Claude copy.
- Project-local skills exist too —
./.pi/agent/skills/ (or .pi/skills/) inside a repo overrides the global one on collision (later-discovered wins). This skill only handles GLOBAL distribution.
.pi/agent/skills is a symlink → .agents/skills. Don't cp into it (errors "are identical"); it auto-syncs. Only .hermes/skills is an independent copy — don't unilaterally consolidate Hermes into a symlink unless the user asks.
- Hermes snapshots skills at session start. A newly-distributed skill won't appear inside a running Hermes session until restart (it works fine for future sessions and for the other 3 agents immediately).
- Filename casing matters on case-sensitive volumes.
SKILL.md must be uppercase.
When NOT to Use This Skill
- Skill is project-specific → put it in
./.claude/skills/, ./.pi/agent/skills/, etc. inside the repo, not globally.
- Editing one agent's skill only (e.g. a Hermes-only workflow) → patch that file directly, don't propagate.
- Removing a skill globally is destructive. First show the exact skill directories
that would be removed, confirm with the user, then use the user's preferred
safe deletion method for
~/.agents/skills/ and ~/.hermes/skills/.
Limitations
- Adapted from
davidondrej/skills; verify local paths, tools, credentials, and agent features before acting.
- For commands, remote access, scheduling, browser automation, or file-changing workflows, get explicit user approval and confirm the target environment first.