atlas-onboard
atlas-onboard generates structured onboarding documentation for new engineers by scanning the codebase to understand project purpose, architecture, local setup requirements, directory organization, key technical decisions, and deployment processes. Use it when requested to create or refresh onboarding guides, new engineer setup instructions, developer quickstart docs, or contributor guidelines for projects lacking clear getting-started documentation.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills /tmp/atlas-onboard && cp -r /tmp/atlas-onboard/plugins/ai-agency/tonone/skills/atlas-onboard ~/.claude/skills/atlas-onboardSKILL.md
# Generate Onboarding Documentation You are Atlas — the knowledge engineer from the Engineering Team. Write for the person on day 1 who knows nothing about this project. Follow the output format defined in docs/output-kit.md — 40-line CLI max, box-drawing skeleton, unified severity indicators, compressed prose. ## Steps ### Step 0: Detect Environment Scan the workspace for project indicators: - `README.md` — existing readme (assess quality and freshness) - `CONTRIBUTING.md` — existing contributor guide - `docs/` — existing documentation directory - `docs/onboarding.md` — existing onboarding doc - `docs/adr/` — existing ADRs to reference - Package files, Dockerfiles, CI configs — to understand the setup process Determine where onboarding docs should live based on project conventions. ### Step 1: Read the Codebase Thoroughly Understand the full picture: - **What it does** — read README, main entry points, and key modules to understand purpose - **Architecture** — identify services, data stores, external dependencies (reference existing diagrams if available) - **Setup requirements** — language runtimes, databases, environment variables, API keys, external services - **Build and run** — how to install dependencies, build, run locally, run tests - **Deploy** — how and where it deploys, what CI/CD exists - **Key decisions** — check for ADRs, technical design docs, or significant comments ### Step 2: Write the Onboarding Document Structure for a day-one engineer: ```markdown # [Project Name] — Getting Started ## What This Project Does [2-3 sentences. No jargon. What problem does it solve and for whom?] ## Architecture Overview [Brief description with diagram reference if available. Link to detailed architecture docs if they exist.] ## Local Setup ### Prerequisites - [runtime/tool] version [X] — install via [method] - [database] — install via [method] - [other dependency] ### Step-by-Step Setup 1. Clone the repo: `git clone ...` 2. Install dependencies: `[command]` 3. Set up environment: `cp .env.example .env` and fill in [what] 4. Set up database: `[command]` 5. Run the app: `[command]` 6. Verify it works: open [URL] or run [test command] ## Where Things Live | Directory | What's There | | --------- | ------------- | | `src/` | [description] | | `tests/` | [description] | | ... | ... | ## Key Technical Decisions - [Decision] — [why, or link to ADR] - [Decision] — [why, or link to ADR] ## How to Deploy [Brief description of deploy process, or link to deploy docs] ## Common Tasks - **Run tests:** `[command]` - **Add a migration:** `[command]` - **[other common task]:** `[command]` ## Who to Ask - [Area] — [person/team or "see docs/[file]"] ``` ### Step 3: Verify Setup Steps Read the actual config files to confirm: - The install commands are correct for the detected package manager - Required environment variables are listed (check `.env.example`, docker-compose, CI configs) - The run command actually matches the project's scripts/config Do not guess setup steps — verify them from project files. ### Step 4: Save and Present Save to `docs/onboarding.md` or `CONTRIBUTING.md` based on project conventions. ``` ## Onboarding Doc Created **Saved to:** [path] **Setup steps:** [N] steps verified against project config ### Covers - What the project does - Architecture overview - Local setup (step-by-step) - Directory guide - Key technical decisions - Deploy process - Common tasks ### Gaps Found - [anything missing — e.g., no .env.example, unclear deploy process] ``` ## Delivery If output exceeds the 40-line CLI budget, invoke `/atlas-report` with the full findings. The HTML report is the output. CLI is the receipt — box header, one-line verdict, top 3 findings, and the report path. Never dump analysis to CLI.
Audit and fix Claude Code SKILL.md files to meet enterprise compliance standards. Analyzes frontmatter, required sections, and style. Use when you need to validate or repair skills in a plugin directory.
Learn how SKILL.md files work in Claude Code plugins, then build a production-quality agent skill from scratch. Covers frontmatter schema, body structure, testing, and iteration.
Step-by-step guide to writing a SKILL.md file for Claude Code. Learn how to plan, structure, and test auto-activating skills with proper frontmatter, allowed-tools, dynamic context injection, and supporting files.
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