| name | netcatty-tool-cli |
| description | Use this skill when an external agent needs to operate on Netcatty sessions through Skills + CLI instead of the netcatty-remote-hosts MCP server. |
Netcatty Tool CLI
Use this skill for external ACP agents when Netcatty is configured for Skills + CLI mode.
For routine tasks, the host prompt is usually enough. Read only the reference that matches the task type.
Router
- Use the exact Netcatty CLI prefix provided by the host prompt.
- Keep
--chat-session <chat-session-id> on every Netcatty CLI call. Do not omit it.
- Treat
--chat-session <chat-session-id> as required for env, session, real exec, and every sftp operation. Treat --session <session-id> as required for session, exec, and every sftp operation.
- Classify the task before choosing a command path:
- Remote command execution tasks go through the exec reference.
- Remote file or directory tasks go through the sftp reference.
- If the user explicitly says to avoid shell or
exec, do not use exec.
- Treat
exec as the short-command path only. If the command may exceed about 60 seconds, or streams output for an extended period, use the long-running job commands instead of plain exec.
- If the host prompt already names a connected default target session, use that session directly for routine requests that do not mention another session or host, but still start with
session --session <id> --json --chat-session <chat-session-id> instead of jumping straight to exec or sftp.
- Only fall back to
env lookup when the task is ambiguous, the user points to another session, or that direct session lookup fails.
Core Rules
- Treat the host-provided CLI prefix as the only supported entrypoint for this session.
- If a command launcher is needed, prefer the operating system's built-in launcher for the current environment; do not require optional shells that may not be installed.
- Run Netcatty CLI commands strictly serially.
- Treat Netcatty CLI errors as authoritative.
- Never ask the user for SSH credentials, key paths, proxy settings, or jump-host details when Netcatty session access already exists.
- Do not pause to explain the plan, re-read this skill, or design scripts before trying that shortest path.
- When presenting structured results, prefer a concise table if it fits clearly.
Examples:
- On Windows, if a literal shell command line is required, use the host-provided prefix with the system launcher available in the environment, such as
cmd.exe or Windows PowerShell; do not assume PowerShell 7 pwsh.exe exists.
- On macOS or Linux, use the host-provided prefix directly, or the system shell already available in that environment when a shell command line is unavoidable.
- When the execution surface accepts argv-style calls, use the Netcatty launcher path as the executable and pass subcommands and flags as separate arguments instead of wrapping it in another shell.
References
- Exec and session workflow:
references/exec.md
- SFTP file workflow:
references/sftp.md
- Session and device-type handling:
references/session-types.md
- Cancel, resume, and runtime diagnostics:
references/control-commands.md
- Error handling and authoritative failures:
references/errors.md