| name | glance |
| description | Use when about to run commands with potentially long output (>40 lines) — builds, tests, logs, kubectl, docker, grep, find. Pipes output through glance for token-efficient summaries instead of reading all tokens. |
| version | 0.1.0 |
| allowed-tools | Bash(glance *) |
Bootstrap
Check if glance is available:
which glance
If missing, use uvx --from glancecli glance as the prefix for all glance commands (e.g. cmd 2>&1 | uvx --from glancecli glance).
First time: run glance help to learn the full interface.
When to use
Pipe through glance when output is unknown or likely >40 lines:
- Build output (
go build, npm run build, cargo build, make)
- Test output (
go test, pytest, jest, cargo test)
- Logs (
kubectl logs, docker logs, journalctl)
- Container/cluster commands (
kubectl get, docker ps)
- Large searches (
grep -r, find, rg) — pipe through glance first, then drill into the captured results instead of re-running with different flags
When to skip
Commands with reliably short output — git status, pwd, which, echo, ls (small dirs), git log -5.
Workflow
Skim
cmd 2>&1 | glance
cmd 2>&1 | glance -p errors
Read the footer — it gives you the capture ID and line count.
Drill
Don't jump to full output. Use targeted queries first:
glance show <id> -a LINE 5
glance show <id> -l 50-80
glance show <id> -f 'regex'
Save-and-query
Pipe once, then query the stored capture multiple times with different filters/ranges — including with different tools. Avoids re-running expensive commands. Especially useful for broad exploratory searches — run one wide rg or find, capture it, then use glance show <id> -f to explore different aspects of the results.
If you lose track of the capture ID, use glance list to find it.
Key gotcha
Always use 2>&1 — without it, stderr (where most errors go) isn't captured by the pipe.