.agents/skills/commit/SKILL.md
Make a commit in Git with an appropriate commit message for the currently staged changes.
npx skillsauth add fedify-dev/fedify commitInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Please make a commit with an appropriate commit message for the currently staged changes.
Don't touch the staged changes, just create the commit.
The first line of the commit message should be a concise summary of the changes (50 characters or less). You shouldn't follow the conventional commits, in other words, just write a normal commit message without any special prefixes.
The second line of the commit message should be blank.
The rest of the commit message should provide more detailed explanations about the changes, wrapped at 72 characters.
If you have some references like issues or pull requests, you can add them in the body of the commit message, usually after a blank line. Issues and pull requests should be referenced as full URLs instead of #numbers, and you can put some verbs like “Fixes” or “Closes” before the URLs. For just references without any verbs, you can just put the URLs in the body.
When running git commit, pass the commit message via a HEREDOC to
preserve newlines correctly. Never use literal \n escape sequences
inside a quoted string, as they will appear as literal characters in
the commit message. For example:
git commit -m "$(cat <<'EOF'
Summary line here
Detailed explanation here.
EOF
)"
Don't put Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code), or
Co-authored-by trailers at the end of the commit message. Instead,
use the Assisted-by trailer to indicate that the commit was generated by
an AI assistant, if necessary. The format of the Assisted-by trailer should
be:
Assisted-by: AGENT_NAME:MODEL_VERSION
For example:
Assisted-by: OpenCode:qwen3.6-plus
Assisted-by: Claude Code:claude-sonnet-4-6
Assisted-by: Gemini CLI:gemini-3.1-pro-preview
Assisted-by: Codex:gpt-5.4
development
Help the user migrate Fedify code between versions. Use when the user needs to upgrade their Fedify version, fix breaking-change errors, or update deprecated API usage.
tools
Help the user set up Fedify inbox listeners for handling incoming ActivityPub activities. Use when the user needs to handle Follow, Like, Announce, Create, Undo, or other activity types delivered to their inbox.
testing
Look up a Fediverse Enhancement Proposal (FEP) and explain how to implement it with Fedify. Use when the user asks about a specific FEP by ID (e.g., FEP-8fcf, FEP-1b12) or wants to implement a fediverse standard in their Fedify application.
tools
Use this skill whenever writing JavaScript or TypeScript code that uses Fedify to build an ActivityPub server, handle federation activities, implement fediverse features, or integrate Fedify with a web framework such as Hono, Express, Next.js, Nuxt, Fastify, Koa, NestJS, Astro, SvelteKit, Fresh, h3, Elysia, or Cloudflare Workers. Covers the `Federation` builder pattern, actor/inbox/outbox/collection dispatchers, inbox listeners, vocabulary objects from `@fedify/vocab`, key pair management, HTTP Signatures, Object Integrity Proofs, the `KvStore` and `MessageQueue` interfaces, database adapter packages, structured logging with LogTape, OpenTelemetry tracing, the `fedify` CLI toolchain, and common mistakes. Also apply when the user mentions ActivityPub, federation, fediverse, WebFinger, NodeInfo, FEPs, or Mastodon interoperability, even if they do not name Fedify explicitly.