| name | setup-project |
| description | Configure this repo for the engineering skills — issue tracker, domain doc layout, ai-docs gitignore. Run once per repo before first use of the other engineering skills. |
| disable-model-invocation | true |
Setup Project
Scaffold the per-repo configuration that the engineering skills assume:
- Issue tracker — where issues live (GitHub by default; local markdown is also supported out of the box)
- Domain docs — where
CONTEXT.md and ADRs live, and the consumer rules for reading them
Process
1. Explore
Look at the current repo to understand its starting state. Read what's actually there:
git remote -v and .git/config — is this a GitHub repo? Which one?
AGENTS.md and CLAUDE.md at the repo root — does either exist? Is there already an ## Agent skills section in either?
CONTEXT.md and CONTEXT-MAP.md at the repo root
ai-docs/adr/ and any src/*/ai-docs/adr/ directories
ai-docs/agents/ — does this skill's prior output already exist?
.gitignore — is ai-docs/ already ignored?
ai-docs/plans/ — sign that a local-markdown issue tracker convention is already in use
2. Present findings and ask
Summarise what's present and what's missing. Then walk the user through the two decisions one at a time — present a section, get the user's answer (AskUserQuestion fits the choice lists well), then move to the next.
Assume the user does not know what these terms mean. Each section starts with a short explainer (what it is, why these skills need it, what changes if they pick differently). Then show the choices and the default.
Section A — Issue tracker.
Explainer: The "issue tracker" is where issues live for this repo. Skills like to-tickets and to-spec read from and write to it — they need to know whether to call gh issue create, write a markdown file under ai-docs/plans/, or follow some other workflow you describe. Pick the place you actually track work for this repo.
Propose the tracker the git remote points at — GitHub, or GitLab (gitlab.com or self-hosted). With no remote, or if the user prefers something else, offer:
- GitHub — issues live in the repo's GitHub Issues (uses the
gh CLI)
- GitLab — issues live in the repo's GitLab Issues (uses the
glab CLI)
- Local markdown — issues live as files under
ai-docs/plans/<feature>/ in this repo (good for solo projects or repos without a remote)
- Other (Jira, Linear, etc.) — ask the user to describe the workflow in one paragraph; the skill will record it as freeform prose
Section B — Domain docs.
Explainer: Some skills (improve-codebase-architecture, diagnosing-bugs, tdd) read a CONTEXT.md file to learn the project's domain language, and ai-docs/adr/ for past architectural decisions. They need to know whether the repo has one global context or multiple (e.g. a monorepo with separate frontend/backend contexts) so they look in the right place.
Confirm the layout:
- Single-context — one
CONTEXT.md + ai-docs/adr/ at the repo root. Most repos are this.
- Multi-context —
CONTEXT-MAP.md at the root pointing to per-context CONTEXT.md files (typically a monorepo).
3. Confirm and edit
Show the user a draft of:
- The
## Agent skills block to add to whichever of CLAUDE.md / AGENTS.md is being edited (see step 4 for selection rules)
- The contents of
ai-docs/agents/issue-tracker.md and ai-docs/agents/domain.md
Let them edit before writing.
4. Write
Pick the file to edit:
- If
CLAUDE.md exists, edit it.
- Else if
AGENTS.md exists, edit it.
- If neither exists, ask the user which one to create — don't pick for them.
If an ## Agent skills block already exists in the chosen file, update its contents in-place, leaving the surrounding sections exactly as the user wrote them.
The block:
## Agent skills
### Issue tracker
[one-line summary of where issues are tracked]. See `ai-docs/agents/issue-tracker.md`.
### Domain docs
[one-line summary of layout — "single-context" or "multi-context"]. See `ai-docs/agents/domain.md`.
Then write the two docs files using the seed templates in this skill folder as a starting point:
For "other" issue trackers, write ai-docs/agents/issue-tracker.md from scratch using the user's description.
Add ai-docs/ to .gitignore (create the file if needed; skip if already covered) — ai-docs/ is local agent working space: plans, briefs, brainstorm sessions, and these config docs stay out of the repo's history.
5. Done
Tell the user the setup is complete and which engineering skills will now read from these files. Mention they can edit ai-docs/agents/*.md directly later — re-running this skill is only necessary if they want to switch issue trackers or restart from scratch.