fusion-issue-authoring

📁 equinor/fusion-skills 📅 9 days ago
12
总安装量
12
周安装量
#25654
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/equinor/fusion-skills --skill fusion-issue-authoring

Agent 安装分布

github-copilot 12
amp 6
codex 6
kimi-cli 6
gemini-cli 6
opencode 6

Skill 文档

Issue Authoring Orchestrator

Subordinates

This skill routes to the following subordinate skills:

  • fusion-issue-author-bug (skills/fusion-issue-author-bug/SKILL.md): bug-focused issue drafting and triage structure
  • fusion-issue-author-feature (skills/fusion-issue-author-feature/SKILL.md): feature-focused scope and acceptance structure
  • fusion-issue-author-user-story (skills/fusion-issue-author-user-story/SKILL.md): role/workflow/scenario-driven story structure
  • fusion-issue-author-task (skills/fusion-issue-author-task/SKILL.md): checklist-first task decomposition and dependency planning

All subordinates require this orchestrator for shared gates (labels, assignee confirmation, draft review, publish confirmation, and mutation sequencing).

When to use

Use this skill when you need to turn ideas, bugs, feature requests, or user needs into clear, actionable GitHub issues. Use it as the top-level router for both creating and updating issues.

Typical triggers:

  • “create an issue”
  • “draft a ticket”
  • “turn this into a GitHub issue”
  • “help me structure this work item”
  • “update this issue”
  • “maintain/clean up this issue”

When not to use

Do not use this skill for:

  • Implementing code changes
  • Pull request authoring or review
  • General research tasks not resulting in an issue draft
  • Mutating GitHub state without explicit user confirmation

Required inputs

Collect before publishing:

  • Target repository for issue creation/update
  • Issue intent/context
  • Issue type (Bug, Feature, User Story, Task)
  • Existing issue number/url when updating
  • Repository label set (or confirmation that labels are intentionally skipped)
  • Parent/related issue links and dependency direction (sub-issue vs blocking)
  • Assignee preference (assign to user, specific person, or leave unassigned)

If required details are missing, ask concise clarifying questions from references/questions.md. If issue destination is unclear, ask explicitly where the issue should be created/updated before drafting mutation commands.

Instructions

Step 1 — Classify and route

Classify request as Bug, Feature, User Story, or Task, then route to:

  • Bug -> skills/fusion-issue-author-bug/SKILL.md
  • Feature -> skills/fusion-issue-author-feature/SKILL.md
  • User Story -> skills/fusion-issue-author-user-story/SKILL.md
  • Task -> skills/fusion-issue-author-task/SKILL.md

If ambiguous, ask only essential clarifying questions.

Step 2 — Resolve repository and template

  • Resolve the destination repository before any mutation.
  • Template precedence:
    1. repository template (.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/)
    2. specialist fallback template

Step 3 — Check duplicates

Search for likely duplicates with search_issues and surface matches before drafting/publishing.

Step 4 — Draft first

Draft in .tmp/{TYPE}-{CONTEXT}.md using GitHub Flavored Markdown.

Step 5 — Review and confirm

  • Ask for content edits first.
  • Ask explicit publish confirmation before mutation.
  • Never publish/update in the same pass as first draft unless user explicitly confirms.

Step 6 — Apply shared gates

Before mutation, confirm:

  • labels (only labels that exist in the target repo)
  • assignee intent (@me, specific login, or unassigned)

Step 7 — Mutate via MCP (ordered)

After explicit confirmation, execute MCP mutations in this order:

  1. issue_write create/update (include type only when supported)
  2. issue_write labels / assignees
  3. sub_issue_write relationships and execution ordering
  4. add_issue_comment for blocker/status notes when requested

If mutation fails due to missing MCP server/auth/config:

  • explain the failure clearly
  • guide user to setup steps in references/mcp-server.md
  • retry after user confirms setup is complete

type rule:

  • Only use type if the repository has issue types configured.
  • Use cached issue types per organization when available.
  • Call list_issue_types only on cache miss or invalid cache.
  • If issue types are not supported, omit type.

Step 8 — Validate relationships

Before linking:

  • use sub-issues for decomposition
  • use sub-issue ordering to represent prerequisites
  • ensure no contradictory dependency graph

Use detailed behavior and payload examples in references/instructions.md and references/mcp-server.md.

Core behavior to preserve

  • Classification-first workflow
  • Route-to-specialized-skill workflow
  • Draft-first workflow
  • Clarifying questions for missing critical context
  • Explicit confirmation before any GitHub mutation

Use detailed authoring guidance in references/instructions.md. Specialist fallback template locations:

  • Bug: skills/fusion-issue-author-bug/assets/issue-templates/bug.md
  • Feature: skills/fusion-issue-author-feature/assets/issue-templates/feature.md
  • User Story: skills/fusion-issue-author-user-story/assets/issue-templates/user-story.md
  • Task: skills/fusion-issue-author-task/assets/issue-templates/task*.md

Expected output

Return:

  • Selected specialized skill path
  • Draft issue file path under .tmp/
  • Template source used (repository template path or fallback asset path)
  • Proposed title, body summary, and labels
  • Issue type plan
  • Dependency plan (order + proposed sub-issue/blocking links)
  • Assignee plan (who will be assigned, or explicit unassigned decision)
  • Explicit status: Awaiting user content approval before any publish/update command
  • Any related/duplicate issue links found
  • Exact create/update command(s) to be run after confirmation
  • Created/updated issue URL/number only after confirmed mutation
  • Suggested template maintenance follow-up when repository templates are missing or weak

Safety & constraints

Never:

  • Run issue_write create/update without explicit user confirmation
  • Publish/update an issue before the user confirms the draft content is correct
  • Assume the user wants to publish to GitHub
  • Request or expose secrets/credentials
  • Perform destructive commands without explicit confirmation

Always:

  • Keep drafts concise and editable
  • Prefer WHAT/WHY over implementation HOW in issue text
  • Use full repository issue references (for example owner/repo#123)
  • Use issue-closing keywords when closure is intended (for example fixes owner/repo#123, resolves owner/repo#123, or closes owner/repo#123)