agent-squad

AI Community
Fluxly profile Facts only: domain, agents, trust score, runtime, permissions and network
Domain
AI
Compatible agents
  • Claude Code
  • Cursor
  • Cline
  • Codex
  • Windsurf
  • Gemini CLI
  • +20
Trust score
88 / 100 · community maintained
Author / version / license
@tomevault-io · no license declared
Token usage
Lean
Setup complexity
Guided setup
External API key
Not required
Operating systems
Unspecified (assume cross-platform)
Runtime requirements
No special requirements
Permissions
  • Read-only
  • Write / modify
  • Shell exec
Network behavior
Local-only
Install commands
26 variants

Profile is derived at build time from SKILL.md and install vectors. Subject to drift from author intent.

Heads up: 未限定 allowed-tools,默认拥有全部工具权限。

Output preview agent-squad.preview
---
name: agent-squad
description: Manage persistent AI coding squads that run in tmux sessions with task queues, progress reports…
category: ai
runtime: no special runtime
---

# agent-squad output preview

## PART A: Task fit
- Use case: Manage persistent AI coding squads that run in tmux sessions with task queues, progress reports, and automatic health monitoring. Use when the user wants to: (1) start/launch/create/restart a squad or team of AI agents, (2) assign/give tasks to a squad, (3) check squad status or ask what a squad is doing, (4) ping/nudge a squad to report progress, (5) stop a squad, (6) list all active squads, (7) configure squad settings like default project directory, (8) delete/archive a squad. Supports Claude Code, Codex, Gemini CLI, OpenCode, Kimi, Trae, Aider, and Goose as AI engines. Use when this capability is needed..
- Inputs: target material, constraints, expected output, and acceptance criteria.
- Evidence boundary: follow “Slash Command Usage / Getting Started / What Users Can Do” and do not present inference as author intent.

## PART B: Execution result
- **01** The card summarizes the use case; runtime output centers on “Manage persistent AI coding squads that run in tmux sessions with task queues, progress reports, and automatic health monitoring. Use when the user wants to: (1) start/launch/create/restart a squad or team of AI agents, (2) assign/give tasks to a squad, (3) check squad status or ask what a squad is doing, (4) ping/nudge a squad to report progress, (5) stop a squad, (6) list all active squads, (7) configure squad settings like default project directory, (8) delete/archive a squad. Supports Claude Code, Codex, Gemini CLI, OpenCode, Kimi, Trae, Aider, and Goose as AI engines. Use when this capability is needed.”.
- **02** When the source has headings, the agent prioritizes “Slash Command Usage / Getting Started / What Users Can Do” so the result follows the author’s structure.
- **03** Typical output includes task judgment, concrete steps, required commands or file edits, validation, and follow-up options.
- **04** Risk context follows the fingerprint: read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.

## Running Rules
- read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.
- Validate with a small sample before expanding scope.
- Return the result, validation criteria, and next iteration options.
Interpretation is structured for decision-making; original keeps the upstream SKILL.md unchanged.

Decide Fit First

  • Core job: Manage persistent AI coding squads that run in tmux sessions with task queues, progress reports, and automatic health monitoring…
  • Best fit: Use it when the task has reusable inputs, steps, and validation criteria rather than a one-off answer.
  • Avoid forcing it: If the source lacks commands, platform support, or external-service evidence, keep those fields unknown instead of guessing.

Design Intent

  • Structure: The skill is organized around “Slash Command Usage”, “Getting Started”, “What Users Can Do”, “Start a squad”, showing how the author expects the agent to judge fit, collect context, and produce verifiable output.
  • Trigger evidence: Prioritize the author’s wording around when to use it, what context to collect, and what output shape to produce.
  • Evidence boundary: Author text states facts, repository files prove commands and paths, and Fluxly only adds fit, limits, and usage judgment.

How To Use It

  • Inputs: Provide target material, scope, expected result, forbidden changes, and validation method.
  • Invocation: Name agent-squad directly; if the source includes slash commands, start with the command and then add task context.
  • Validation: Start small and check whether the result follows “Slash Command Usage / Getting Started / What Users Can Do” before expanding.

Boundaries And Review

  • Dependencies: It usually needs no extra API key, so start with a small validation task.
  • Permissions: Declared permissions include read / write / shell-exec; ask the agent to state file, command, and rollback boundaries before acting.
  • Quality bar: A useful result names the deliverable, evidence, and next action. Generic prose means the task needs tighter context.

Discussion

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