@picahq/cli 1.10.0 → 1.11.1

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Files changed (3) hide show
  1. package/README.md +86 -86
  2. package/dist/index.js +181 -181
  3. package/package.json +3 -3
package/README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
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- # Pica CLI
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+ # One CLI
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  One CLI to connect AI agents to every API on the internet.
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- Pica gives your AI agent authenticated access to 200+ platforms — Gmail, Slack, Shopify, HubSpot, Stripe, Notion, and everything else — through a single interface. No API keys to juggle, no OAuth flows to build, no request formats to memorize. Connect a platform once, and your agent can search for actions, read the docs, and execute API calls in seconds.
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+ One gives your AI agent authenticated access to 200+ platforms — Gmail, Slack, Shopify, HubSpot, Stripe, Notion, and everything else — through a single interface. No API keys to juggle, no OAuth flows to build, no request formats to memorize. Connect a platform once, and your agent can search for actions, read the docs, and execute API calls in seconds.
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  ## Install
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@@ -14,10 +14,10 @@ Or install globally:
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  ```bash
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  npm install -g @picahq/cli
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- pica init
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+ one init
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  ```
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- `pica init` walks you through setup: enter your [API key](https://app.picaos.com/settings/api-keys), pick your AI agents, and you're done. The MCP server gets installed automatically.
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+ `one init` walks you through setup: enter your [API key](https://app.withone.ai/settings/api-keys), pick your AI agents, and you're done. The MCP server gets installed automatically.
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  Requires Node.js 18+.
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@@ -25,19 +25,19 @@ Requires Node.js 18+.
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  ```bash
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  # Connect a platform
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- pica add gmail
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+ one add gmail
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  # See what you're connected to
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- pica list
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+ one list
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  # Search for actions you can take
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- pica actions search gmail "send email" -t execute
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+ one actions search gmail "send email" -t execute
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  # Read the docs for an action
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- pica actions knowledge gmail <actionId>
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+ one actions knowledge gmail <actionId>
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  # Execute it
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- pica actions execute gmail <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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+ one actions execute gmail <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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  -d '{"to": "jane@example.com", "subject": "Hello", "body": "Sent from my AI agent"}'
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  ```
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@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ Chain actions across platforms into reusable workflows:
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  ```bash
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  # Create a flow that looks up a Stripe customer and sends a Gmail welcome email
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- pica flow create welcome-customer --definition '{
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+ one flow create welcome-customer --definition '{
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  "key": "welcome-customer",
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  "name": "Welcome New Customer",
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  "version": "1",
@@ -70,41 +70,41 @@ pica flow create welcome-customer --definition '{
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  }'
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  # Validate it
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- pica flow validate welcome-customer
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+ one flow validate welcome-customer
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  # Run it — connection keys auto-resolve if you have one connection per platform
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- pica flow execute welcome-customer -i email=jane@example.com
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+ one flow execute welcome-customer -i email=jane@example.com
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  ```
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- Flows are stored as JSON at `.one/flows/<key>.flow.json` and support conditions, loops, parallel steps, transforms, and more. Run `pica guide flows` for the full reference.
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+ Flows are stored as JSON at `.one/flows/<key>.flow.json` and support conditions, loops, parallel steps, transforms, and more. Run `one guide flows` for the full reference.
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  ## How it works
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  ```
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  Your AI Agent
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- Pica CLI
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+ One CLI
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- Pica API (api.picaos.com/v1/passthrough)
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+ One API (api.withone.ai/v1/passthrough)
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  Gmail / Slack / Shopify / HubSpot / Stripe / ...
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  ```
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- Every API call routes through Pica's passthrough proxy. Pica injects the right credentials, handles rate limiting, and normalizes responses. You never see or manage raw OAuth tokens — your connection key is all you need.
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+ Every API call routes through One's passthrough proxy. One injects the right credentials, handles rate limiting, and normalizes responses. You never see or manage raw OAuth tokens — your connection key is all you need.
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  ## Commands
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- ### `pica init`
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+ ### `one init`
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  Set up your API key and install the MCP server into your AI agents.
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  ```bash
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- pica init
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+ one init
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  ```
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  Supports Claude Code, Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, Codex, and Kiro. Installs globally by default, or per-project with `-p` so your team can share configs (each person uses their own API key).
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- If you've already set up, `pica init` shows your current status and lets you update your key, install to more agents, or reconfigure.
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+ If you've already set up, `one init` shows your current status and lets you update your key, install to more agents, or reconfigure.
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  | Flag | What it does |
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  |------|-------------|
@@ -112,24 +112,24 @@ If you've already set up, `pica init` shows your current status and lets you upd
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  | `-g` | Install globally (default) |
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  | `-p` | Install for current project only |
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- ### `pica add <platform>`
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+ ### `one add <platform>`
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  Connect a new platform via OAuth.
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  ```bash
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- pica add shopify
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- pica add hub-spot
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- pica add gmail
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+ one add shopify
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+ one add hub-spot
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+ one add gmail
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  ```
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- Opens your browser, you authorize, done. The CLI polls until the connection is live. Platform names are kebab-case — run `pica platforms` to see them all.
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+ Opens your browser, you authorize, done. The CLI polls until the connection is live. Platform names are kebab-case — run `one platforms` to see them all.
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- ### `pica list`
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+ ### `one list`
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  List your active connections with their status and connection keys.
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  ```bash
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- pica list
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+ one list
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  ```
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  ```
@@ -140,56 +140,56 @@ pica list
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  You need the connection key (rightmost column) when executing actions.
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- ### `pica platforms`
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+ ### `one platforms`
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  Browse all 200+ available platforms.
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  ```bash
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- pica platforms # all platforms
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- pica platforms -c "CRM" # filter by category
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- pica platforms --json # machine-readable output
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+ one platforms # all platforms
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+ one platforms -c "CRM" # filter by category
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+ one platforms --json # machine-readable output
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  ```
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- ### `pica actions search <platform> <query>`
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+ ### `one actions search <platform> <query>`
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  Search for API actions on a connected platform using natural language.
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  ```bash
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- pica actions search shopify "list products"
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- pica actions search hub-spot "create contact" -t execute
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- pica actions search gmail "send email"
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+ one actions search shopify "list products"
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+ one actions search hub-spot "create contact" -t execute
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+ one actions search gmail "send email"
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  ```
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  Returns the top 5 matching actions with their action IDs, HTTP methods, and paths. Use `-t execute` when you intend to run the action, or `-t knowledge` (default) when you want to learn about it or write code against it.
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- ### `pica actions knowledge <platform> <actionId>`
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+ ### `one actions knowledge <platform> <actionId>`
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  Get the full documentation for an action — parameters, validation rules, request/response structure, examples, and the exact API request format.
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  ```bash
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- pica actions knowledge shopify 67890abcdef
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+ one actions knowledge shopify 67890abcdef
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  ```
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  Always read the knowledge before executing. It tells you exactly what parameters are required, what format they need, and any platform-specific quirks.
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- ### `pica actions execute <platform> <actionId> <connectionKey>`
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+ ### `one actions execute <platform> <actionId> <connectionKey>`
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  Execute an API action on a connected platform.
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  ```bash
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  # Simple GET
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- pica actions execute shopify <actionId> <connectionKey>
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+ one actions execute shopify <actionId> <connectionKey>
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  # POST with data
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- pica actions execute hub-spot <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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+ one actions execute hub-spot <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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  -d '{"properties": {"email": "jane@example.com", "firstname": "Jane"}}'
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  # With path variables
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- pica actions execute shopify <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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+ one actions execute shopify <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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  --path-vars '{"order_id": "12345"}'
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  # With query params
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- pica actions execute stripe <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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+ one actions execute stripe <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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  --query-params '{"limit": "10"}'
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  ```
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@@ -202,37 +202,37 @@ pica actions execute stripe <actionId> <connectionKey> \
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  | `--form-data` | Send as multipart/form-data |
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  | `--form-url-encoded` | Send as application/x-www-form-urlencoded |
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- ### `pica guide [topic]`
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+ ### `one guide [topic]`
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  Get the full CLI usage guide, designed for AI agents that only have the binary (no MCP, no IDE skills).
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  ```bash
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- pica guide # full guide (all topics)
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- pica guide overview # setup, --agent flag, discovery workflow
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- pica guide actions # search, knowledge, execute workflow
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- pica guide flows # multi-step API workflows
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+ one guide # full guide (all topics)
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+ one guide overview # setup, --agent flag, discovery workflow
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+ one guide actions # search, knowledge, execute workflow
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+ one guide flows # multi-step API workflows
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- pica --agent guide # full guide as structured JSON
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- pica --agent guide flows # single topic as JSON
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+ one --agent guide # full guide as structured JSON
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+ one --agent guide flows # single topic as JSON
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  ```
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  Topics: `overview`, `actions`, `flows`, `all` (default).
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  In agent mode (`--agent`), the JSON response includes the guide content and an `availableTopics` array so agents can discover what sections exist.
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- ### `pica flow create [key]`
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+ ### `one flow create [key]`
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  Create a flow from a JSON definition. Flows are saved to `.one/flows/<key>.flow.json`.
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  ```bash
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  # From a --definition flag
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- pica flow create welcome-customer --definition '{"key":"welcome-customer","name":"Welcome","version":"1","inputs":{},"steps":[]}'
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+ one flow create welcome-customer --definition '{"key":"welcome-customer","name":"Welcome","version":"1","inputs":{},"steps":[]}'
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  # From stdin
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- cat flow.json | pica flow create
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+ cat flow.json | one flow create
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  # Custom output path
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- pica flow create my-flow --definition '...' -o ./custom/path.json
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+ one flow create my-flow --definition '...' -o ./custom/path.json
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  ```
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  | Option | What it does |
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  | `--definition <json>` | Flow definition as a JSON string |
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  | `-o, --output <path>` | Custom output path (default: `.one/flows/<key>.flow.json`) |
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- ### `pica flow execute <key>`
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+ ### `one flow execute <key>`
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  Execute a flow by key or file path. Pass inputs with repeatable `-i` flags.
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  ```bash
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  # Execute with inputs
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- pica flow execute welcome-customer \
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+ one flow execute welcome-customer \
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  -i customerEmail=jane@example.com
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  # Dry run — validate and show plan without executing
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- pica flow execute welcome-customer --dry-run -i customerEmail=jane@example.com
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+ one flow execute welcome-customer --dry-run -i customerEmail=jane@example.com
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  # Verbose — show each step as it runs
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- pica flow execute welcome-customer -v -i customerEmail=jane@example.com
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+ one flow execute welcome-customer -v -i customerEmail=jane@example.com
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  ```
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  Connection inputs with a `connection` field in the flow definition are auto-resolved when the user has exactly one connection for that platform.
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- Press Ctrl+C during execution to pause — the run can be resumed later with `pica flow resume <runId>`.
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+ Press Ctrl+C during execution to pause — the run can be resumed later with `one flow resume <runId>`.
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  | Option | What it does |
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  |--------|-------------|
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  | `--dry-run` | Validate and show execution plan without running |
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  | `-v, --verbose` | Show full request/response for each step |
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- ### `pica flow list`
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+ ### `one flow list`
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  List all flows saved in `.one/flows/`.
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  ```bash
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- pica flow list
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+ one flow list
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  ```
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- ### `pica flow validate <key>`
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+ ### `one flow validate <key>`
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  Validate a flow JSON file against the schema.
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  ```bash
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- pica flow validate welcome-customer
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+ one flow validate welcome-customer
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  ```
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- ### `pica flow resume <runId>`
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+ ### `one flow resume <runId>`
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  Resume a paused or failed flow run from where it left off.
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  ```bash
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- pica flow resume abc123
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+ one flow resume abc123
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  ```
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- ### `pica flow runs [flowKey]`
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+ ### `one flow runs [flowKey]`
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  List flow runs, optionally filtered by flow key.
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  ```bash
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- pica flow runs # all runs
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- pica flow runs welcome-customer # runs for a specific flow
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+ one flow runs # all runs
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+ one flow runs welcome-customer # runs for a specific flow
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  ```
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- ### `pica config`
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+ ### `one config`
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  Configure access control for the MCP server. Optional — full access is the default.
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  ```bash
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- pica config
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+ one config
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  ```
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  | Setting | Options | Default |
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  ## The workflow
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- The power of Pica is in the workflow. Every interaction follows the same pattern:
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+ The power of One is in the workflow. Every interaction follows the same pattern:
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  ```
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- pica list → What am I connected to?
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- pica actions search → What can I do?
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- pica actions knowledge → How do I do it?
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- pica actions execute → Do it.
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+ one list → What am I connected to?
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+ one actions search → What can I do?
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+ one actions knowledge → How do I do it?
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+ one actions execute → Do it.
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  ```
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  This is the same workflow whether you're sending emails, creating CRM contacts, processing payments, managing inventory, or posting to Slack. One pattern, any platform.
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  For multi-step workflows that chain actions across platforms, use **flows**:
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  ```
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- pica actions knowledge → Learn each action's schema
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- pica flow create → Define the workflow as JSON
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- pica flow validate → Check it
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- pica flow execute → Run it
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+ one actions knowledge → Learn each action's schema
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+ one flow create → Define the workflow as JSON
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+ one flow validate → Check it
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+ one flow execute → Run it
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  ```
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- Flows support conditions, loops, parallel execution, transforms, code steps, and file I/O. Run `pica guide flows` for the full schema reference and examples.
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+ Flows support conditions, loops, parallel execution, transforms, code steps, and file I/O. Run `one guide flows` for the full schema reference and examples.
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  ## For AI agents
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- If you're an AI agent with only the `pica` binary (no MCP server or IDE skills), start with `pica --agent guide` to get the full usage guide as structured JSON. This teaches you the complete workflow, JSON schemas, selector syntax, and more — everything you need to bootstrap yourself.
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+ If you're an AI agent with only the `one` binary (no MCP server or IDE skills), start with `one --agent guide` to get the full usage guide as structured JSON. This teaches you the complete workflow, JSON schemas, selector syntax, and more — everything you need to bootstrap yourself.
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- If you're an AI agent using the Pica MCP server, the tools map directly:
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+ If you're an AI agent using the One MCP server, the tools map directly:
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  | MCP Tool | CLI Command |
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  |----------|------------|
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- | `list_pica_integrations` | `pica list` + `pica platforms` |
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- | `search_pica_platform_actions` | `pica actions search` |
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- | `get_pica_action_knowledge` | `pica actions knowledge` |
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- | `execute_pica_action` | `pica actions execute` |
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+ | `list_one_integrations` | `one list` + `one platforms` |
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+ | `search_one_platform_actions` | `one actions search` |
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+ | `get_one_action_knowledge` | `one actions knowledge` |
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+ | `execute_one_action` | `one actions execute` |
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  The workflow is the same: list → search → knowledge → execute. Never skip the knowledge step — it contains required parameter info and platform-specific details that are critical for building correct requests.
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  ## MCP server installation
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359
 
360
- `pica init` handles this automatically. Here's where configs go:
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+ `one init` handles this automatically. Here's where configs go:
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  | Agent | Global | Project |
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  |-------|--------|---------|
@@ -368,7 +368,7 @@ The workflow is the same: list → search → knowledge → execute. Never skip
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  | Codex | `~/.codex/config.toml` | `.codex/config.toml` |
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  | Kiro | `~/.kiro/settings/mcp.json` | `.kiro/settings/mcp.json` |
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- Project configs can be committed to your repo. Each team member runs `pica init` with their own API key.
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+ Project configs can be committed to your repo. Each team member runs `one init` with their own API key.
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373
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  ## Development
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