| name | sort-agent-setup |
| description | Use when a project needs a trimmed Claude install instead of the full global setup, sorting skills/rules/hooks into DAILY vs LIBRARY with repo evidence. Triggers on "agent sort", "trim skills for repo", "daily vs library", "project install plan". |
Sort Agent Setup
Use this skill when a repo needs a project-specific surface instead of the default full global install.
The goal is not to guess what "feels useful." The goal is to classify components with evidence from the actual codebase.
When to Use
- A project only needs a subset of the global setup and the full install is too noisy
- The repo stack is clear, but nobody wants to hand-curate skills one by one
- You need to separate always-loaded daily workflow surfaces from searchable library/reference surfaces
- A repo has drifted into the wrong language, rule, or hook set and needs cleanup
Non-Negotiable Rules
- Use the current repository as the source of truth, not generic preferences
- Every DAILY decision must cite concrete repo evidence
- LIBRARY does not mean "delete"; it means "keep accessible without loading by default"
- Do not install hooks, rules, or scripts that the current repo cannot use
- Prefer the existing global install surface; do not introduce a second install system
Outputs
Produce these artifacts in order:
- DAILY inventory
- LIBRARY inventory
- install plan
- verification report
- optional
skill-library router if the project wants one
Classification Model
Use two buckets only:
DAILY
- should load every session for this repo
- strongly matched to the repo's language, framework, workflow, or operator surface
LIBRARY
- useful to retain, but not worth loading by default
- should remain reachable through search, router skill, or selective manual use
Evidence Sources
Use repo-local evidence before making any classification:
- file extensions
- package managers and lockfiles
- framework configs
- CI and hook configs
- build/test scripts
- imports and dependency manifests
- repo docs that explicitly describe the stack
Useful commands include:
rg --files
rg -n "typescript|react|next|supabase|django|spring|flutter|swift"
cat package.json
cat pyproject.toml
cat Cargo.toml
cat pubspec.yaml
cat go.mod
Parallel Review Passes
Dispatch parallel subagents (Agent tool with subagent_type=Explore) to split the review into these passes:
- Skills — classify entries under
~/.claude/skills/ and any plugin-provided skills
- Commands — classify entries under
~/.claude/commands/
- Rules — classify entries under
~/.claude/rules/
- Hooks and scripts — classify hook surfaces in
settings.json, MCP health checks, helper scripts in ~/.claude/hooks/
- Extras — classify MCP configs, templates, and reference docs in
~/.claude/dev/local/
If subagents are not available, run the same passes sequentially.
Core Workflow
1. Read the repo
Establish the real stack before classifying anything:
- languages in use
- frameworks in use
- primary package manager
- test stack
- lint/format stack
- deployment/runtime surface
- operator integrations already present
2. Build the evidence table
For every candidate surface, record:
- component path
- component type
- proposed bucket
- repo evidence
- short justification
Use this format:
skills/frontend-patterns | skill | DAILY | 84 .svelte files, svelte.config.js | core frontend stack
skills/python-patterns | skill | LIBRARY | no .py files, no pyproject.toml | not active in this repo
rules/web/* | rules | DAILY | package.json + svelte.config.js | active web repo
rules/rust/* | rules | LIBRARY | zero Rust source files | keep accessible only
3. Decide DAILY vs LIBRARY
Promote to DAILY when:
- the repo clearly uses the matching stack
- the component is general enough to help every session
- the repo already depends on the corresponding runtime or workflow
Demote to LIBRARY when:
- the component is off-stack
- the repo might need it later, but not every day
- it adds context overhead without immediate relevance
4. Build the install plan
Translate the classification into action:
- DAILY skills → keep enabled in
~/.claude/skills/, or symlink/copy into the project's .claude/skills/
- DAILY rules → reference only matching language/framework rule sets in CLAUDE.md
- DAILY hooks/scripts → keep only compatible ones in
settings.json
- LIBRARY surfaces → keep accessible through search, on-demand invocation, or a
skill-library router
If the project already has a .claude/ directory with selective installs, update that plan instead of creating another system.
5. Create the optional library router
If the project wants a searchable library surface, create:
.claude/skills/skill-library/SKILL.md
That router should contain:
- a short explanation of DAILY vs LIBRARY
- grouped trigger keywords
- where the library references live
Do not duplicate every skill body inside the router.
6. Verify the result
After the plan is applied, verify:
- every DAILY file exists where expected
- stale language rules were not left active
- incompatible hooks were not installed
- the resulting install actually matches the repo stack
Return a compact report with:
- DAILY count
- LIBRARY count
- removed stale surfaces
- open questions
Handoffs
If the next step is interactive settings/hook installation, hand off to:
If the next step is overlap cleanup or catalog review, hand off to:
claude-checkup:audit-authoring
If the next step is broader context trimming, hand off to:
Output Format
Return the result in this order:
STACK
- language/framework/runtime summary
DAILY
- always-loaded items with evidence
LIBRARY
- searchable/reference items with evidence
INSTALL PLAN
- what should be installed, removed, or routed
VERIFICATION
- checks run and remaining gaps