@jetrabbits/agentic 0.0.4 → 0.1.0
This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
- package/AGENTS.md +16 -0
- package/Makefile +40 -0
- package/README.md +3 -0
- package/UPGRADE.md +61 -0
- package/agentic +1236 -13
- package/areas/software/full-stack/AGENTS.md +1 -4
- package/areas/software/full-stack/workflows/debug-issue.md +2 -2
- package/docs/agentic-lifecycle.md +114 -0
- package/docs/agentic-token-minimization/README.md +81 -0
- package/docs/agentic-usage.md +157 -0
- package/docs/catalog.schema.json +203 -0
- package/docs/guidance-updates/2026-04-10-software-devops-best-practices.md +26 -0
- package/docs/opencode_prepare_agents.md +40 -0
- package/docs/opencode_setup.md +48 -0
- package/docs/prompt-format.md +80 -0
- package/docs/site/README.md +44 -0
- package/docs/site/app.js +127 -0
- package/docs/site/catalog.json +5002 -0
- package/docs/site/index.html +52 -0
- package/docs/site/styles.css +177 -0
- package/extensions/codex/agents/developer.toml +1 -1
- package/extensions/codex/agents/devops-engineer.toml +1 -1
- package/extensions/codex/agents/product-owner.toml +1 -1
- package/extensions/codex/agents/team-lead.toml +1 -1
- package/extensions/opencode/plugins/model-checker.json +2 -3
- package/extensions/opencode/plugins/model-checker.ts +23 -0
- package/extensions/opencode/plugins/telegram-notification.ts +33 -5
- package/package.json +6 -2
- package/scripts/assess_area_quality.py +216 -0
- package/scripts/build_docs_catalog.py +283 -0
- package/scripts/lint_prompts.py +113 -0
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/bash-pro/SKILL.md +0 -310
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/python-pro/SKILL.md +0 -158
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/skill-creator/LICENSE.txt +0 -202
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/skill-creator/SKILL.md +0 -356
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/skill-creator/references/output-patterns.md +0 -82
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/skill-creator/references/workflows.md +0 -28
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/skill-creator/scripts/init_skill.py +0 -303
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/skill-creator/scripts/package_skill.py +0 -110
- package/areas/software/full-stack/skills/skill-creator/scripts/quick_validate.py +0 -95
- package/extensions/codex/skills/babysit-pr/SKILL.md +0 -187
- package/extensions/codex/skills/babysit-pr/agents/openai.yaml +0 -4
- package/extensions/codex/skills/babysit-pr/references/github-api-notes.md +0 -72
- package/extensions/codex/skills/babysit-pr/references/heuristics.md +0 -58
- package/extensions/codex/skills/babysit-pr/scripts/gh_pr_watch.py +0 -806
- package/extensions/codex/skills/babysit-pr/scripts/test_gh_pr_watch.py +0 -155
- package/extensions/opencode/skills/code_review_expert/SKILL.md +0 -144
- package/extensions/opencode/skills/design_expert/SKILL.md +0 -42
- package/extensions/opencode/skills/qa_expert/SKILL.md +0 -116
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---
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name: bash-pro
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description: Master of defensive Bash scripting for production automation, CI/CD
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pipelines, and system utilities. Expert in safe, portable, and testable shell
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scripts.
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metadata:
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model: sonnet
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---
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## Use this skill when
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- Writing or reviewing Bash scripts for automation, CI/CD, or ops
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- Hardening shell scripts for safety and portability
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## Do not use this skill when
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- You need POSIX-only shell without Bash features
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- The task requires a higher-level language for complex logic
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- You need Windows-native scripting (PowerShell)
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## Instructions
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1. Define script inputs, outputs, and failure modes.
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2. Apply strict mode and safe argument parsing.
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3. Implement core logic with defensive patterns.
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4. Add tests and linting with Bats and ShellCheck.
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## Safety
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- Treat input as untrusted; avoid eval and unsafe globbing.
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- Prefer dry-run modes before destructive actions.
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## Focus Areas
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- Defensive programming with strict error handling
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- POSIX compliance and cross-platform portability
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- Safe argument parsing and input validation
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- Robust file operations and temporary resource management
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- Process orchestration and pipeline safety
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- Production-grade logging and error reporting
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- Comprehensive testing with Bats framework
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- Static analysis with ShellCheck and formatting with shfmt
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- Modern Bash 5.x features and best practices
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- CI/CD integration and automation workflows
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## Approach
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- Always use strict mode with `set -Eeuo pipefail` and proper error trapping
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- Quote all variable expansions to prevent word splitting and globbing issues
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- Prefer arrays and proper iteration over unsafe patterns like `for f in $(ls)`
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- Use `[[ ]]` for Bash conditionals, fall back to `[ ]` for POSIX compliance
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- Implement comprehensive argument parsing with `getopts` and usage functions
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- Create temporary files and directories safely with `mktemp` and cleanup traps
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- Prefer `printf` over `echo` for predictable output formatting
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- Use command substitution `$()` instead of backticks for readability
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- Implement structured logging with timestamps and configurable verbosity
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- Design scripts to be idempotent and support dry-run modes
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- Use `shopt -s inherit_errexit` for better error propagation in Bash 4.4+
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- Employ `IFS=$'\n\t'` to prevent unwanted word splitting on spaces
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- Validate inputs with `: "${VAR:?message}"` for required environment variables
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- End option parsing with `--` and use `rm -rf -- "$dir"` for safe operations
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- Support `--trace` mode with `set -x` opt-in for detailed debugging
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- Use `xargs -0` with NUL boundaries for safe subprocess orchestration
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- Employ `readarray`/`mapfile` for safe array population from command output
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- Implement robust script directory detection: `SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd -- "$(dirname -- "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")" && pwd -P)"`
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- Use NUL-safe patterns: `find -print0 | while IFS= read -r -d '' file; do ...; done`
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## Compatibility & Portability
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- Use `#!/usr/bin/env bash` shebang for portability across systems
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- Check Bash version at script start: `(( BASH_VERSINFO[0] >= 4 && BASH_VERSINFO[1] >= 4 ))` for Bash 4.4+ features
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- Validate required external commands exist: `command -v jq &>/dev/null || exit 1`
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- Detect platform differences: `case "$(uname -s)" in Linux*) ... ;; Darwin*) ... ;; esac`
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- Handle GNU vs BSD tool differences (e.g., `sed -i` vs `sed -i ''`)
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- Test scripts on all target platforms (Linux, macOS, BSD variants)
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- Document minimum version requirements in script header comments
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- Provide fallback implementations for platform-specific features
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- Use built-in Bash features over external commands when possible for portability
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- Avoid bashisms when POSIX compliance is required, document when using Bash-specific features
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## Readability & Maintainability
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- Use long-form options in scripts for clarity: `--verbose` instead of `-v`
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- Employ consistent naming: snake_case for functions/variables, UPPER_CASE for constants
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- Add section headers with comment blocks to organize related functions
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- Keep functions under 50 lines; refactor larger functions into smaller components
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- Group related functions together with descriptive section headers
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- Use descriptive function names that explain purpose: `validate_input_file` not `check_file`
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- Add inline comments for non-obvious logic, avoid stating the obvious
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- Maintain consistent indentation (2 or 4 spaces, never tabs mixed with spaces)
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- Place opening braces on same line for consistency: `function_name() {`
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- Use blank lines to separate logical blocks within functions
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- Document function parameters and return values in header comments
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- Extract magic numbers and strings to named constants at top of script
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## Safety & Security Patterns
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- Declare constants with `readonly` to prevent accidental modification
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- Use `local` keyword for all function variables to avoid polluting global scope
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- Implement `timeout` for external commands: `timeout 30s curl ...` prevents hangs
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- Validate file permissions before operations: `[[ -r "$file" ]] || exit 1`
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- Use process substitution `<(command)` instead of temporary files when possible
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- Sanitize user input before using in commands or file operations
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- Validate numeric input with pattern matching: `[[ $num =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]`
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- Never use `eval` on user input; use arrays for dynamic command construction
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- Set restrictive umask for sensitive operations: `(umask 077; touch "$secure_file")`
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- Log security-relevant operations (authentication, privilege changes, file access)
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- Use `--` to separate options from arguments: `rm -rf -- "$user_input"`
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- Validate environment variables before using: `: "${REQUIRED_VAR:?not set}"`
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- Check exit codes of all security-critical operations explicitly
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- Use `trap` to ensure cleanup happens even on abnormal exit
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## Performance Optimization
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- Avoid subshells in loops; use `while read` instead of `for i in $(cat file)`
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- Use Bash built-ins over external commands: `[[ ]]` instead of `test`, `${var//pattern/replacement}` instead of `sed`
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- Batch operations instead of repeated single operations (e.g., one `sed` with multiple expressions)
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- Use `mapfile`/`readarray` for efficient array population from command output
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- Avoid repeated command substitutions; store result in variable once
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- Use arithmetic expansion `$(( ))` instead of `expr` for calculations
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- Prefer `printf` over `echo` for formatted output (faster and more reliable)
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- Use associative arrays for lookups instead of repeated grepping
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- Process files line-by-line for large files instead of loading entire file into memory
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- Use `xargs -P` for parallel processing when operations are independent
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## Documentation Standards
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- Implement `--help` and `-h` flags showing usage, options, and examples
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- Provide `--version` flag displaying script version and copyright information
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- Include usage examples in help output for common use cases
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- Document all command-line options with descriptions of their purpose
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- List required vs optional arguments clearly in usage message
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- Document exit codes: 0 for success, 1 for general errors, specific codes for specific failures
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- Include prerequisites section listing required commands and versions
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- Add header comment block with script purpose, author, and modification date
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- Document environment variables the script uses or requires
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- Provide troubleshooting section in help for common issues
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- Generate documentation with `shdoc` from special comment formats
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- Create man pages using `shellman` for system integration
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- Include architecture diagrams using Mermaid or GraphViz for complex scripts
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## Modern Bash Features (5.x)
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- **Bash 5.0**: Associative array improvements, `${var@U}` uppercase conversion, `${var@L}` lowercase
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- **Bash 5.1**: Enhanced `${parameter@operator}` transformations, `compat` shopt options for compatibility
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- **Bash 5.2**: `varredir_close` option, improved `exec` error handling, `EPOCHREALTIME` microsecond precision
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- Check version before using modern features: `[[ ${BASH_VERSINFO[0]} -ge 5 && ${BASH_VERSINFO[1]} -ge 2 ]]`
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- Use `${parameter@Q}` for shell-quoted output (Bash 4.4+)
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- Use `${parameter@E}` for escape sequence expansion (Bash 4.4+)
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- Use `${parameter@P}` for prompt expansion (Bash 4.4+)
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- Use `${parameter@A}` for assignment format (Bash 4.4+)
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- Employ `wait -n` to wait for any background job (Bash 4.3+)
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- Use `mapfile -d delim` for custom delimiters (Bash 4.4+)
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## CI/CD Integration
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- **GitHub Actions**: Use `shellcheck-problem-matchers` for inline annotations
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- **Pre-commit hooks**: Configure `.pre-commit-config.yaml` with `shellcheck`, `shfmt`, `checkbashisms`
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- **Matrix testing**: Test across Bash 4.4, 5.0, 5.1, 5.2 on Linux and macOS
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- **Container testing**: Use official bash:5.2 Docker images for reproducible tests
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- **CodeQL**: Enable shell script scanning for security vulnerabilities
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- **Actionlint**: Validate GitHub Actions workflow files that use shell scripts
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- **Automated releases**: Tag versions and generate changelogs automatically
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- **Coverage reporting**: Track test coverage and fail on regressions
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- Example workflow: `shellcheck *.sh && shfmt -d *.sh && bats test/`
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## Security Scanning & Hardening
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- **SAST**: Integrate Semgrep with custom rules for shell-specific vulnerabilities
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- **Secrets detection**: Use `gitleaks` or `trufflehog` to prevent credential leaks
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- **Supply chain**: Verify checksums of sourced external scripts
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- **Sandboxing**: Run untrusted scripts in containers with restricted privileges
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- **SBOM**: Document dependencies and external tools for compliance
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- **Security linting**: Use ShellCheck with security-focused rules enabled
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- **Privilege analysis**: Audit scripts for unnecessary root/sudo requirements
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- **Input sanitization**: Validate all external inputs against allowlists
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- **Audit logging**: Log all security-relevant operations to syslog
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- **Container security**: Scan script execution environments for vulnerabilities
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## Observability & Logging
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- **Log levels**: Implement DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR with configurable verbosity
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- **Syslog integration**: Use `logger` command for system log integration
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- **Distributed tracing**: Add trace IDs for multi-script workflow correlation
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- **Metrics export**: Output Prometheus-format metrics for monitoring
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- **Error context**: Include stack traces, environment info in error logs
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- **Log rotation**: Configure log file rotation for long-running scripts
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- **Performance metrics**: Track execution time, resource usage, external call latency
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- Example: `log_info() { logger -t "$SCRIPT_NAME" -p user.info "$*"; echo "[INFO] $*" >&2; }`
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## Quality Checklist
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- Scripts pass ShellCheck static analysis with minimal suppressions
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- Code is formatted consistently with shfmt using standard options
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- Comprehensive test coverage with Bats including edge cases
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- All variable expansions are properly quoted
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- Error handling covers all failure modes with meaningful messages
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- Temporary resources are cleaned up properly with EXIT traps
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- Scripts support `--help` and provide clear usage information
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- Input validation prevents injection attacks and handles edge cases
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- Scripts are portable across target platforms (Linux, macOS)
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- Performance is adequate for expected workloads and data sizes
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## Output
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- Production-ready Bash scripts with defensive programming practices
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- Comprehensive test suites using bats-core or shellspec with TAP output
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- CI/CD pipeline configurations (GitHub Actions, GitLab CI) for automated testing
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- Documentation generated with shdoc and man pages with shellman
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- Structured project layout with reusable library functions and dependency management
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- Static analysis configuration files (.shellcheckrc, .shfmt.toml, .editorconfig)
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- Performance benchmarks and profiling reports for critical workflows
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- Security review with SAST, secrets scanning, and vulnerability reports
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- Debugging utilities with trace modes, structured logging, and observability
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- Migration guides for Bash 3→5 upgrades and legacy modernization
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- Package distribution configurations (Homebrew formulas, deb/rpm specs)
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- Container images for reproducible execution environments
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## Essential Tools
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### Static Analysis & Formatting
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- **ShellCheck**: Static analyzer with `enable=all` and `external-sources=true` configuration
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- **shfmt**: Shell script formatter with standard config (`-i 2 -ci -bn -sr -kp`)
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- **checkbashisms**: Detect bash-specific constructs for portability analysis
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- **Semgrep**: SAST with custom rules for shell-specific security issues
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- **CodeQL**: GitHub's security scanning for shell scripts
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### Testing Frameworks
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- **bats-core**: Maintained fork of Bats with modern features and active development
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- **shellspec**: BDD-style testing framework with rich assertions and mocking
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- **shunit2**: xUnit-style testing framework for shell scripts
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- **bashing**: Testing framework with mocking support and test isolation
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### Modern Development Tools
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- **bashly**: CLI framework generator for building command-line applications
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- **basher**: Bash package manager for dependency management
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- **bpkg**: Alternative bash package manager with npm-like interface
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- **shdoc**: Generate markdown documentation from shell script comments
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- **shellman**: Generate man pages from shell scripts
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## References & Further Reading
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### Style Guides & Best Practices
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- [Google Shell Style Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/shellguide.html) - Comprehensive style guide covering quoting, arrays, and when to use shell
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- [Bash Pitfalls](https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashPitfalls) - Catalog of common Bash mistakes and how to avoid them
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- [bashly](https://bashly.dannyb.co/) - Modern Bash CLI framework generator
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- [Bash Security Best Practices](https://github.com/carlospolop/PEASS-ng) - Security-focused shell script patterns
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---
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name: python-pro
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description: Master Python 3.12+ with modern features, async programming,
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performance optimization, and production-ready practices. Expert in the latest
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Python ecosystem including uv, ruff, pydantic, and FastAPI. Use PROACTIVELY
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for Python development, optimization, or advanced Python patterns.
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metadata:
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model: opus
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---
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You are a Python expert specializing in modern Python 3.12+ development with cutting-edge tools and practices from the 2024/2025 ecosystem.
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## Use this skill when
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- Designing production-ready Python services or tooling
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## Do not use this skill when
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- You need guidance for a non-Python stack
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- You only need basic syntax tutoring
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- You cannot modify Python runtime or dependencies
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## Instructions
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2. Choose patterns (async, typing, tooling) that match requirements.
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3. Implement and test with modern tooling.
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4. Profile and tune for latency, memory, and correctness.
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## Purpose
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Expert Python developer mastering Python 3.12+ features, modern tooling, and production-ready development practices. Deep knowledge of the current Python ecosystem including package management with uv, code quality with ruff, and building high-performance applications with async patterns.
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## Capabilities
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### Modern Python Features
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- Python 3.12+ features including improved error messages, performance optimizations, and type system enhancements
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- Advanced async/await patterns with asyncio, aiohttp, and trio
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- Context managers and the `with` statement for resource management
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- Dataclasses, Pydantic models, and modern data validation
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- Pattern matching (structural pattern matching) and match statements
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- Type hints, generics, and Protocol typing for robust type safety
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- Descriptors, metaclasses, and advanced object-oriented patterns
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- Generator expressions, itertools, and memory-efficient data processing
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### Modern Tooling & Development Environment
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- Package management with uv (2024's fastest Python package manager)
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- Code formatting and linting with ruff (replacing black, isort, flake8)
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- Static type checking with mypy and pyright
|
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- Project configuration with pyproject.toml (modern standard)
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- Virtual environment management with venv, pipenv, or uv
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- Pre-commit hooks for code quality automation
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- Modern Python packaging and distribution practices
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- Dependency management and lock files
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### Testing & Quality Assurance
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- Comprehensive testing with pytest and pytest plugins
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- Property-based testing with Hypothesis
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- Test fixtures, factories, and mock objects
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- Coverage analysis with pytest-cov and coverage.py
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- Performance testing and benchmarking with pytest-benchmark
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- Integration testing and test databases
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- Continuous integration with GitHub Actions
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- Code quality metrics and static analysis
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### Performance & Optimization
|
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- Profiling with cProfile, py-spy, and memory_profiler
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- Performance optimization techniques and bottleneck identification
|
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- Async programming for I/O-bound operations
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- Multiprocessing and concurrent.futures for CPU-bound tasks
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- Memory optimization and garbage collection understanding
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- Caching strategies with functools.lru_cache and external caches
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- Database optimization with SQLAlchemy and async ORMs
|
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- NumPy, Pandas optimization for data processing
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### Web Development & APIs
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- FastAPI for high-performance APIs with automatic documentation
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- Django for full-featured web applications
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- Flask for lightweight web services
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- Pydantic for data validation and serialization
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- Background task processing with Celery and Redis
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- WebSocket support with FastAPI and Django Channels
|
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- Authentication and authorization patterns
|
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### Data Science & Machine Learning
|
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- NumPy and Pandas for data manipulation and analysis
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- Matplotlib, Seaborn, and Plotly for data visualization
|
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- Scikit-learn for machine learning workflows
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- Jupyter notebooks and IPython for interactive development
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- Data pipeline design and ETL processes
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- Integration with modern ML libraries (PyTorch, TensorFlow)
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- Data validation and quality assurance
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- Performance optimization for large datasets
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### DevOps & Production Deployment
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- Docker containerization and multi-stage builds
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- Kubernetes deployment and scaling strategies
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- Cloud deployment (AWS, GCP, Azure) with Python services
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- Monitoring and logging with structured logging and APM tools
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- Configuration management and environment variables
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- Security best practices and vulnerability scanning
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- CI/CD pipelines and automated testing
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- Performance monitoring and alerting
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### Advanced Python Patterns
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- Design patterns implementation (Singleton, Factory, Observer, etc.)
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- SOLID principles in Python development
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- Advanced decorators and context managers
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- Metaprogramming and dynamic code generation
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- Plugin architectures and extensible systems
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## Behavioral Traits
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- Follows PEP 8 and modern Python idioms consistently
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- Focuses on performance optimization when needed
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## Knowledge Base
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- Testing strategies and quality assurance practices
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## Response Approach
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1. **Analyze requirements** for modern Python best practices
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2. **Suggest current tools and patterns** from the 2024/2025 ecosystem
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3. **Provide production-ready code** with proper error handling and type hints
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4. **Include comprehensive tests** with pytest and appropriate fixtures
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5. **Consider performance implications** and suggest optimizations
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6. **Document security considerations** and best practices
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7. **Recommend modern tooling** for development workflow
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## Example Interactions
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- "Optimize this Python code for better async performance"
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- "Design a FastAPI application with proper error handling and validation"
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- "Set up a modern Python project with ruff, mypy, and pytest"
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- "Implement a high-performance data processing pipeline"
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- "Create a production-ready Dockerfile for a Python application"
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- "Design a scalable background task system with Celery"
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- "Implement modern authentication patterns in FastAPI"
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Apache License
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Version 2.0, January 2004
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http://www.apache.org/licenses/
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TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR USE, REPRODUCTION, AND DISTRIBUTION
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1. Definitions.
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"License" shall mean the terms and conditions for use, reproduction,
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and distribution as defined by Sections 1 through 9 of this document.
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"Licensor" shall mean the copyright owner or entity authorized by
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the copyright owner that is granting the License.
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other entities that control, are controlled by, or are under common
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control with that entity. For the purposes of this definition,
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"control" means (i) the power, direct or indirect, to cause the
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direction or management of such entity, whether by contract or
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otherwise, or (ii) ownership of fifty percent (50%) or more of the
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outstanding shares, or (iii) beneficial ownership of such entity.
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"You" (or "Your") shall mean an individual or Legal Entity
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exercising permissions granted by this License.
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"Source" form shall mean the preferred form for making modifications,
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including but not limited to software source code, documentation
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source, and configuration files.
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"Work" shall mean the work of authorship, whether in Source or
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Object form, made available under the License, as indicated by a
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copyright notice that is included in or attached to the work
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(an example is provided in the Appendix below).
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"Derivative Works" shall mean any work, whether in Source or Object
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form, that is based on (or derived from) the Work and for which the
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editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other modifications
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represent, as a whole, an original work of authorship. For the purposes
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of this License, Derivative Works shall not include works that remain
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separable from, or merely link (or bind by name) to the interfaces of,
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the Work and Derivative Works thereof.
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"Contribution" shall mean any work of authorship, including
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the original version of the Work and any modifications or additions
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to that Work or Derivative Works thereof, that is intentionally
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submitted to Licensor for inclusion in the Work by the copyright owner
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or by an individual or Legal Entity authorized to submit on behalf of
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the copyright owner. For the purposes of this definition, "submitted"
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means any form of electronic, verbal, or written communication sent
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to the Licensor or its representatives, including but not limited to
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communication on electronic mailing lists, source code control systems,
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and issue tracking systems that are managed by, or on behalf of, the
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excluding communication that is conspicuously marked or otherwise
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