| name | triage |
| description | Triage open GitHub issues and discussions on the Jarvis repo. Sweep for untriaged reports, reply to awaiting-user threads when new info lands, apply the right labels, close duplicates, and edit past owner comments rather than stacking follow-ups. Use after a release or any time the user says "triage issues", "triage discussions", or similar.
|
Triage Skill
You are triaging open issues and discussions on isair/jarvis. Work from data,
not memory. Stay friendly, specific, and short.
Step 1. Pull the state
Run these as parallel Bash tool calls (one message, two tool uses), not as chained shell commands:
gh issue list --state open --limit 50 --json number,title,author,createdAt,updatedAt,labels,comments \
--jq '[.[] | {number, title, author: .author.login, labels: [.labels[].name], commentCount: (.comments|length), updatedAt}]'
gh api graphql -f query='{repository(owner:"isair",name:"jarvis"){discussions(first:30,states:OPEN,orderBy:{field:UPDATED_AT,direction:DESC}){nodes{id number title author{login} category{name} updatedAt comments(last:5){totalCount nodes{id author{login} createdAt body replies(last:10){nodes{id author{login} createdAt body}}}}}}}}' \
--jq '.data.repository.discussions.nodes'
Important: GitHub Discussions are threaded. The top-level comments list does
not include sub-replies, so a fresh reporter question that lives under an owner
comment will look like an unanswered top-level thread if you forget to fetch
replies. The query above pulls both. When deciding "untriaged" vs "awaiting
reporter", scan the last reply across the whole tree, not just the last
top-level comment. A common shape: owner answers at the top level, reporter
replies underneath, owner replies underneath that. The newest message is two
levels deep, and you'll miss it if you only look at the top-level list.
Classify each thread into one of:
- Untriaged: no owner (
isair) reply yet. Act now.
- Awaiting reporter: labelled
question or the last comment is from the owner asking for details. Leave it unless the reporter has replied with new info. Per repo policy, do not close for silence before 2 weeks of reporter inactivity.
- Owner tracking: filed by
isair as an internal task. Skip unless a non-owner has commented with a question or new information, in which case treat it like a normal untriaged thread.
- Resolved-pending-release: fix is on
develop. Never close manually. Release (git merge --ff-only develop → main) auto-closes via Closes #NNN. Detect this by scanning recent develop commits (gh pr list --base develop --state merged --limit 20) for references to the issue number before you reply, so you can tell the reporter "this is fixed in the next release" rather than asking for more info.
Step 2. Fetch details for the untriaged
For issues:
gh issue view <N> --json title,body,author,labels,comments \
--jq '{title, author: .author.login, labels: [.labels[].name], body, comments: [.comments[] | {author: .author.login, createdAt, body}]}'
Read the logs and traceback carefully before replying. The vast majority of
reports contain the answer in the log; the reporter just didn't know what to
look for.
Step 3. Diagnose from the log
Common Jarvis patterns and what they mean:
| Symptom in log | Likely cause | Ask for |
|---|
Repeated 📝 Heard: "Thank you.", "you...", "Thanks for watching!" with no real commands | Whisper hallucinations on near-silent audio. Wrong default mic or broken mic/driver. | Ask them to check the input level bar (Windows Sound settings, or macOS System Settings → Sound → Input) actually moves when they speak, and confirm which mic they intend to use. |
🧠 Intent judge: unavailable (timeout or error) | Known; improved in v1.25.1 (bump this version as newer fixes ship). | Version they're on, and retry on latest. |
huggingface_hub.snapshot_download crash (thread pool / ssl.create_default_context) | Download-time crash, platform-specific. Not the same as 429 throttling. | Keep open as its own bug. Workaround: manual ollama pull ... and relaunch. |
LLM connection error: ... RemoteDisconnected | Ollama dropped. Upstream, not Jarvis. | ollama run <model> health check; Ollama version. |
setup_wizard.py ... _install_next_model fatal | Real bug on our side. | Which model had just finished, which was about to start; ollama list after crash; ~/Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports/Jarvis-*.ips on macOS. |
Low confidence lines only, no Heard: ever | Mic is captured but utterances are under the confidence floor. Usually mic placement or wrong device. | Same as first row. |
📍 Location features are not available | Not an error. Location is optional and only affects weather / local-time context. | Reassure, don't diagnose. Point at the MaxMind GeoLite2 signup if they actually want it. |
Do not ask obviously-answered questions. If the log shows the wizard was
pulling models, Ollama is by definition installed and running. If the log shows
Whisper loaded, Whisper is installed. Read before asking.
Other recurring user-environment answers:
- Windows "Error 4551: Application Control policy has blocked this file": WDAC / AppLocker / corporate MDM, not Jarvis. Point at IT allow-listing,
secpol.msc, or install-from-source.
- "missing AI models":
ollama pull gemma4:e2b + ollama pull nomic-embed-text, or tray → 🔧 Setup Wizard.
- Setup wizard was closed early, nothing works: tray → 🔧 Setup Wizard reopens it. Fallback:
rm -rf ~/.config/jarvis ~/.local/share/jarvis/config.
gemma4:e2b quality complaints: it is a very small model. Suggest 7B+ if hardware allows, note that capability scales with model size.
- "Can Jarvis speak ?": yes if the chat model supports it; for voice, Whisper handles most languages. Point at README.
Step 4. Label, retitle, reply
Available labels: bug, question, duplicate, enhancement, documentation, good first issue, help wanted, invalid, wontfix, voice, spike.
Conventions:
- Empty-body or needs-info bug reports: label
bug,question, retitle to "<one-line symptom> (awaiting details)" or similar so the backlog is scannable.
- Duplicates: label
duplicate, leave one short comment pointing at the canonical issue, close with --reason "not planned".
- Real confirmed crashes: label
bug (and voice if audio-related), retitle to pin the failure site from the traceback (e.g. "Crash on first-run setup wizard during model install (macOS, v1.26.0)").
Reply tone:
- Open with
Hi @user, thanks for filing this! 👋
- State the diagnosis (what the log shows) before the asks.
- Use bullet lists with bold labels for asks. Keep to 3 to 5 asks max.
- Friendly emojis: 👋 🙏 🚀 🧠 🎤 🔊 📝.
- No em dashes (—) anywhere in user-facing writing. Use commas, full stops, colons, or parentheses.
- British English (colour, behaviour, initialise).
- Do not promise fixes or ETAs.
Step 5. Post the reply
Issue comment:
gh issue comment <N> --body "..."
gh issue edit <N> --add-label "bug,question" --title "..."
gh issue close <N> --reason "not planned"
Discussion comment (GraphQL, and use -f body= not -F body= if the body
starts with @, because gh treats -F values starting with @ as file
paths):
gh api graphql -f query='mutation($id:ID!,$body:String!){addDiscussionComment(input:{discussionId:$id,body:$body}){comment{url}}}' \
-F id=<discussion node id> -f body="@user, ..."
Get the discussion id field from the Step 1 GraphQL output. It's the outer id on the discussion node, not the inner id inside comments.nodes (that one is the comment's node id, used in Step 6 for edits).
Verify the node id before posting. Discussion node ids look like D_kwDOPgt_k84Albb5 and a single-character typo will silently route the comment to a completely unrelated repo's discussion (the prefix encodes the repo, but neighbouring ids belong to other repos). Two safeguards:
- Copy the id straight from the Step 1 output, never retype it.
- The mutation response returns the comment URL:
addDiscussionComment.comment.url. Inspect it. If the host path is anything other than github.com/isair/jarvis/discussions/<N>, you posted to the wrong repo. Delete the comment immediately:
gh api graphql -f query='mutation($id:ID!){deleteDiscussionComment(input:{id:$id}){comment{id}}}' -F id=<comment node id>
Then repost with the correct discussion id.
To reply to a specific comment (threaded sub-reply) rather than at the top level, pass replyToId in the mutation input. Otherwise the reply goes to the root.
If a body you want to post starts with @, use -f body="...", not -F body="...". gh interprets -F values starting with @ as file paths.
Step 6. Clean up your own past comments
If a previous owner comment was premature, wrong, or asked an
obviously-answered question, edit it in place. A clean thread beats a trail
of self-corrections.
Issue comment edit:
gh api -X PATCH repos/isair/jarvis/issues/comments/<commentId> -f body="..."
Discussion comment edit. First grab the comment node id (the last:5 window usually covers recent owner replies):
gh api graphql -f query='{repository(owner:"isair",name:"jarvis"){discussion(number:N){comments(last:5){nodes{id author{login} createdAt body}}}}}'
Then update it:
gh api graphql -f query='mutation($id:ID!,$body:String!){updateDiscussionComment(input:{commentId:$id,body:$body}){comment{url}}}' \
-F id=<comment node id> -f body="..."
Step 7. Summarise to the user
At the end, list what you touched per thread: labels changed, titles changed,
comments posted, closures. Use markdown links like [#241](https://github.com/isair/jarvis/issues/241). Keep it short.
Hard rules
- Never close an issue because its fix landed on
develop. Let the release auto-close.
- Never close for reporter silence under 2 weeks after a clarifying question.
- Never ask a question the log already answers.
- Never use em dashes in user-facing text.
- Never invent facts about a reporter's environment. Ask, or infer only from the log.
- When in doubt, label
question and ask rather than guess.