Total Skills
16
Skills published by Ceratops-Code with real stars/downloads and source-aware metadata.
Total Skills
16
Total Stars
0
Total Downloads
0
Comparison chart based on real stars and downloads signals from source data.
ceratops-automation-run
0
ceratops-code-consistency-audit
0
ceratops-codex-skill-stage-release
0
ceratops-contract-review
0
ceratops-gh-codex-skill-ship
0
ceratops-gh-merge-pr
0
ceratops-gh-repo-create-and-publish
0
ceratops-gh-repo-dependencies-maintenance
0
Run recurring Codex automations with Ceratops defaults. Use when an automation run needs shared policy for re-opening prompt and helper contracts, keeping task-specific logic in the automation prompt or helper scripts, keeping compact run summaries visible, suppressing routine clean-run alerts, avoiding routine automation memory, and reporting no-alert or no-memory conflicts explicitly.
Audit a repository after large refactors, branch merges, or parallel agent threads for contradictions between implementation, docs, configs, tests, examples, comments, README guidance, and control files. Use when the goal is post-merge validation, release-readiness consistency checking, documentation-drift detection, comment-sufficiency review, or merged-only edge-case hunting rather than style review.
Stage committed Ceratops skill changes into the skills repo checkout's local `release/*` branch for coherent local preview. Use when Codex should merge ready task-worktree branches into a release branch created from `main`, switch the skills repo checkout to that branch, update the local skill install, and run the local validation batch before GitHub shipping.
Review the Ceratops org, repo, code, PR readiness, and artifact health contracts against current GitHub, repo-content, and registry standards, then report proposed contract or checker updates for explicit approval.
Ship the active staged Ceratops skills repo branch through GitHub, merge the PR after CI and PR readiness pass, then restore the skills repo checkout to main and rebuild installed skills from main.
Merge a GitHub pull request safely with Ceratops defaults, starting with a live scripted readiness check and ending with verified cleanup.
Create, fork, or production-harden a local software project as a public GitHub repository and publish the correct public artifact registry output with Ceratops defaults, using GitHub, code, and artifact contract checks before closing.
Process Dependabot, Renovate, security, and manual dependency maintenance work through GitHub with Ceratops defaults, using scripted live repo and PR checks before merge decisions.
Audit and repair GitHub repository health with Ceratops defaults, using scripted live checks first for machine-checkable GitHub settings.
Ship local repository changes through GitHub and any relevant artifact registry with Ceratops defaults, using PR readiness checks before merge decisions.
Create a brand-new Ceratops skill in the skills repo, integrate it into the shared section system and repo metadata, validate the result with the needed checks, and make it available locally through the skills repo `release/*` branch by default. Use when the user asks for a new Ceratops skill rather than an update to an existing one.
Update existing Ceratops skills and the shared skill-maintenance layer in the skills repo while keeping ownership clear between per-skill deltas, shared sections, the section manifest, runtime generation, validation scripts, helper runtime claims, contracts, and repo docs.
Drive substantial tasks through staged contingent execution with Ceratops defaults. Use when Codex should diagnose first, prefer the simplest standard fix, advance only to the next justified stage, ask before complex or high-maintenance solutions, and finish with a risk-based closure pass.
Create a copy-paste prompt for moving a whole task into a new thread. Use when Codex should compress the goal, current confirmed state, critical refs, and next step without re-auditing the whole task.
Resume an interrupted task in the current thread from current local state after a manual stop, restart, or crash. Use when Codex should inspect current local state, assume no external changes unless stated otherwise, continue from the next justified stage, and avoid rebuilding the whole task from scratch.
Create a minimal copy-paste prompt for spinning a newly discovered side task into another thread. Use when Codex should ignore most of the original task and capture only the side task's origin, conclusion, current objective, minimal refs, and next step.