Initial release

This commit is contained in:
Jake
2026-05-11 19:29:55 +01:00
commit d4d1215874
16967 changed files with 4075897 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
---
allowed-tools: Bash(git checkout --branch:*), Bash(git add:*), Bash(git status:*), Bash(git push:*), Bash(git commit:*), Bash(gh pr create:*)
description: Commit, push, and open a PR
---
## Context
- Current git status: !`git status`
- Current git diff (staged and unstaged changes): !`git diff HEAD`
- Current branch: !`git branch --show-current`
## Your task
Based on the above changes:
1. Create a new branch if on main
2. Create a single commit with an appropriate message
3. Push the branch to origin
4. Create a pull request using `gh pr create`
5. You have the capability to call multiple tools in a single response. You MUST do all of the above in a single message. Do not use any other tools or do anything else. Do not send any other text or messages besides these tool calls.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
---
allowed-tools: Bash(gh issue view:*), Bash(gh search:*), Bash(gh issue list:*), Bash(gh api:*), Bash(gh issue comment:*)
description: Find duplicate GitHub issues
---
Find up to 3 likely duplicate issues for a given GitHub issue.
To do this, follow these steps precisely:
1. Use an agent to check if the Github issue (a) is closed, (b) does not need to be deduped (eg. because it is broad product feedback without a specific solution, or positive feedback), or (c) already has a duplicates comment that you made earlier. If so, do not proceed.
2. Use an agent to view a Github issue, and ask the agent to return a summary of the issue
3. Then, launch 5 parallel agents to search Github for duplicates of this issue, using diverse keywords and search approaches, using the summary from #1
4. Next, feed the results from #1 and #2 into another agent, so that it can filter out false positives, that are likely not actually duplicates of the original issue. If there are no duplicates remaining, do not proceed.
5. Finally, comment back on the issue with a list of up to three duplicate issues (or zero, if there are no likely duplicates)
Notes (be sure to tell this to your agents, too):
- Use `gh` to interact with Github, rather than web fetch
- Do not use other tools, beyond `gh` (eg. don't use other MCP servers, file edit, etc.)
- Make a todo list first
- For your comment, follow the following format precisely (assuming for this example that you found 3 suspected duplicates):
---
Found 3 possible duplicate issues:
1. <link to issue>
2. <link to issue>
3. <link to issue>
This issue will be automatically closed as a duplicate in 3 days.
- If your issue is a duplicate, please close it and 👍 the existing issue instead
- To prevent auto-closure, add a comment or 👎 this comment
🤖 OrcaSlicer bot
---

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
---
allowed-tools: Bash(gh issue list:*), Bash(gh issue view:*), Bash(gh issue edit:*), TodoWrite
description: Triage GitHub issues and label critical ones for oncall
---
You're an oncall triage assistant for GitHub issues. Your task is to identify critical issues that require immediate oncall attention and apply the "oncall" label.
Repository: OrcaSlicer/OrcaSlicer
Task overview:
1. First, get all open bugs updated in the last 3 days with at least 50 engagements:
```bash
gh issue list --repo OrcaSlicer/OrcaSlicer --state open --label bug --limit 1000 --json number,title,updatedAt,comments,reactions | jq -r '.[] | select((.updatedAt >= (now - 259200 | strftime("%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ"))) and ((.comments | length) + ([.reactions[].content] | length) >= 50)) | "\(.number)"'
```
2. Save the list of issue numbers and create a TODO list with ALL of them. This ensures you process every single one.
3. For each issue in your TODO list:
- Use `gh issue view <number> --repo OrcaSlicer/OrcaSlicer --json title,body,labels,comments` to get full details
- Read and understand the full issue content and comments to determine actual user impact
- Evaluate: Is this truly blocking users from using Claude Code?
- Consider: "crash", "stuck", "frozen", "hang", "unresponsive", "cannot use", "blocked", "broken"
- Does it prevent core functionality? Can users work around it?
- Be conservative - only flag issues that truly prevent users from getting work done
4. For issues that are truly blocking and don't already have the "oncall" label:
- Use `gh issue edit <number> --repo OrcaSlicer/OrcaSlicer --add-label "oncall"`
- Mark the issue as complete in your TODO list
5. After processing all issues, provide a summary:
- List each issue number that received the "oncall" label
- Include the issue title and brief reason why it qualified
- If no issues qualified, state that clearly
Important:
- Process ALL issues in your TODO list systematically
- Don't post any comments to issues
- Only add the "oncall" label, never remove it
- Use individual `gh issue view` commands instead of bash for loops to avoid approval prompts