skill-father

Authoritative skill-creation standards (Boss). Use when creating or updating OpenClaw skills so they are portable, reproducible, include prerequisites checks, and have a guided installation/onboarding flow that persists machine-specific config in skill-local config files.

Safety Notice

This listing is from the official public ClawHub registry. Review SKILL.md and referenced scripts before running.

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Install skill "skill-father" with this command: npx skills add moodykong/skill-father

Skill Father

This skill is Boss’s opinionated, authoritative standard for creating/updating skills.

It is based on the upstream skill-creator guidance, with extra requirements:

  • Always include Prerequisites checks (fail fast).
  • Keep skills portable/shareable: do not bake machine-specific settings into SKILL.md.
  • Always include Initialization / Installation / Onboarding that prompts the user when needed.
  • Make skills reproducible for other people/machines.

Core principles (from skill-creator)

  • Concise is key: minimize context bloat.
  • Progressive disclosure: keep SKILL.md short; put big docs in references/, deterministic code in scripts/.
  • Avoid extra docs (README/CHANGELOG/etc.).

Required sections in every skill

1) Prerequisites

Include a short section with concrete checks/commands.

Examples:

  • 1Password-backed workflows:
    • op whoami must succeed (or, if service accounts are used, required env vars like OP_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_TOKEN must be set).
  • External CLIs:
    • command -v <tool> must exist; include install guidance if missing.

2) Configuration (portable)

Rules:

  • Never hardcode machine/user-specific paths, usernames, tenant IDs, tokens, etc. inside SKILL.md.
  • Prefer skill-local config files stored next to SKILL.md, e.g.:
    • config.env (dotenv-style KEY="VALUE")
    • config.json (structured)
  • Config must be split into two files:
    • config.env.example (or config.json.example) — checked-in/shareable example; never mutated by onboarding
    • config.env (or config.json) — real machine-specific values written/updated during onboarding
  • SKILL.md documents:
    • where config lives
    • required keys + defaults
    • which file is the example vs real
    • how to run onboarding to generate/update the real config

3) Initialization / Installation / Onboarding

Provide a guided first-run flow.

  • If setup is trivial and safe: can be silent.
  • Otherwise: ask the user for choices + confirmation.
  • Persist outcomes into the real skill-local config file (not into SKILL.md; do not modify the example file).
  • Prefer discovery + confirmation over assumptions.

Prefer an onboarding helper script when setup touches real machine state.

Chat-first onboarding (Telegram-friendly)

When the primary interface is chat (e.g. Telegram), do not rely on TTY-style interactive prompts.

Requirement: Every child skill should explicitly document a “Preferred (chat-first)” onboarding path.

Preferred pattern:

  1. Agent asks the user the required onboarding questions in chat.
  2. Agent writes/updates the real skill-local config file.
  3. Agent runs a smoke test and reports results.

If you do ship an interactive script, treat it as an optional convenience for users running it in a real terminal (document as “Optional (terminal)”).

Recommended onboarding script behaviors:

  • Generate/update the real config file from prompts and/or auto-discovery.
  • If editing an existing system config file (e.g. ~/.config/openclaw/env, ~/.ssh/config):
    • detect whether the target file exists; create if missing
    • for each key/entry that would change, show current vs new
    • prompt the user per item: keep / override / skip
    • for secrets/tokens, mask values in prompts
  • If a restart/reload is required:
    • first detect whether the service manager is available (e.g. systemctl --user status <svc>)
    • ask the user for confirmation before restarting
    • if not detectable/available, print clear manual instructions

Examples of onboarding steps:

  • Detect candidate paths/resources.
  • Present options.
  • Ask for confirmation.
  • Write config.
  • Validate config by running a quick self-test.

4) Reproducibility

  • The skill should work for other people with minimal edits.
  • Prefer parameterization/config + prompts.
  • Avoid environment-specific assumptions unless explicitly documented.

5) Executables / bin placement

  • Any executable scripts/binaries required by the skill should live inside the skill folder (or inside the relevant plugin’s folder).
  • For convenience, you may create a symlink into a common PATH location (e.g. ~/.local/bin/<name>), but the canonical copy should remain in the skill/plugin directory.

Resource layout

Use the standard skill layout:

skill-name/
├── SKILL.md
├── config.env.example    # example (shareable)
├── config.env            # real machine-specific config (generated/updated by onboarding)
├── scripts/              # deterministic code
└── references/           # optional docs, loaded on demand

Process checklist (for the agent)

  1. Understand the task and collect concrete usage examples.
  2. Plan resources (scripts/, references/, assets/) only if they reduce repetition or increase reliability.
  3. Create/confirm required sections: Prerequisites, Config, Installation/Onboarding.
  4. Implement the smallest working version.
  5. Validate with a smoke test.
  6. Iterate.

Example expectations: ssh-op skill

  • Prereqs: confirm op whoami works (or service account env is set) and ssh/ssh-add/ssh-agent exist.
  • Onboarding: proactively discover/confirm:
    • vault name
    • SSH key item
    • host + host aliases stored in the 1Password item
  • Integration: check whether aliases exist in ~/.ssh/config; if missing, offer to add/update entries.
  • Config: store vault/item/host/aliases in a skill-local config file.

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

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