terminal-ops

Evidence-first repo execution workflow for ECC. Use when the user wants a command run, a repo checked, a CI failure debugged, or a narrow fix pushed with exact proof of what was executed and verified.

Skill file

Preview skill file
---
name: terminal-ops
description: Evidence-first repo execution workflow for ECC. Use when the user wants a command run, a repo checked, a CI failure debugged, or a narrow fix pushed with exact proof of what was executed and verified.
origin: ECC
---

# Terminal Ops

Use this when the user wants real repo execution: run commands, inspect git state, debug CI or builds, make a narrow fix, and report exactly what changed and what was verified.

This skill is intentionally narrower than general coding guidance. It is an operator workflow for evidence-first terminal execution.

## Skill Stack

Pull these ECC-native skills into the workflow when relevant:

- `verification-loop` for exact proving steps after changes
- `tdd-workflow` when the right fix needs regression coverage
- `security-review` when secrets, auth, or external inputs are involved
- `github-ops` when the task depends on CI runs, PR state, or release status
- `knowledge-ops` when the verified outcome needs to be captured into durable project context

## When to Use

- user says "fix", "debug", "run this", "check the repo", or "push it"
- the task depends on command output, git state, test results, or a verified local fix
- the answer must distinguish changed locally, verified locally, committed, and pushed

## Guardrails

- inspect before editing
- stay read-only if the user asked for audit/review only
- prefer repo-local scripts and helpers over improvised ad hoc wrappers
- do not claim fixed until the proving command was rerun
- do not claim pushed unless the branch actually moved upstream

## Workflow

### 1. Resolve the working surface

Settle:

- exact repo path
- branch
- local diff state
- requested mode:
  - inspect
  - fix
  - verify
  - push

### 2. Read the failing surface first

Before changing anything:

- inspect the error
- inspect the file or test
- inspect git state
- use any already-supplied logs or context before re-reading blindly

### 3. Keep the fix narrow

Solve one dominant failure at a time:

- use the smallest useful proving command first
- only escalate to a bigger build/test pass after the local failure is addressed
- if a command keeps failing with the same signature, stop broad retries and narrow scope

### 4. Report exact execution state

Use exact status words:

- inspected
- changed locally
- verified locally
- committed
- pushed
- blocked

## Output Format

```text
SURFACE
- repo
- branch
- requested mode

EVIDENCE
- failing command / diff / test

ACTION
- what changed

STATUS
- inspected / changed locally / verified locally / committed / pushed / blocked
```

## Pitfalls

- do not work from stale memory when the live repo state can be read
- do not widen a narrow fix into repo-wide churn
- do not use destructive git commands
- do not ignore unrelated local work

## Verification

- the response names the proving command or test
- git-related work names the repo path and branch
- any push claim includes the target branch and exact result

Source

Creator's repository · affaan-m/everything-claude-code

View on GitHub

Security

Security checks in progress
Results will appear here once audits complete
What this skill can do
Reads your filesConnects to the internetRuns code on your machine
Checked by 3 independent security firms
Does it try to trick the AI?Not yet checkedPending · Gen Agent Trust Hub
Does it sneak in hidden code?Not yet checkedPending · Socket
Does it have known bugs?Not yet checkedPending · Snyk