design-patterns
Common design patterns with Java examples (Factory, Builder, Strategy, Observer, Decorator, etc.). Use when user asks "implement pattern", "use factory", "strategy pattern", or when designing extensible components.
Find the perfect capability for your agent.
Common design patterns with Java examples (Factory, Builder, Strategy, Observer, Decorator, etc.). Use when user asks "implement pattern", "use factory", "strategy pattern", or when designing extensible components.
Spring Boot 3.x development - REST APIs, JPA, Security, Testing, and Cloud-native patterns. Use for building enterprise Java applications with Spring Boot.
Interact with the kotlinx-rpc TeamCity CI/CD project using the `teamcity` CLI. Use this skill whenever the user wants to trigger builds, check build status, view build logs, monitor failures, manage the build queue, inspect agents, or do anything related to TeamCity CI. Also use it when the user mentions "TC", "TeamCity", "CI build", "run build", "build status", "build log", "trigger build", "check CI", or references a build configuration name or ID. Trigger even if the user doesn't say "TeamCity" explicitly -- if they ask about CI status, build failures, or want to run something on CI rather than locally, this is the right skill. Do NOT use this skill for local Gradle builds -- use `running_gradle_builds` or `running_gradle_tests` instead.
Executes and orchestrates Gradle builds with background management, surgical task output capturing, and structured failure diagnostics; ALWAYS use instead of `./gradlew` for core lifecycle tasks (build, assemble), dev servers, and troubleshooting. Do NOT use for running tests (use `running_gradle_tests`) or dependency graph auditing.
Validate PR code changes against task requirements to identify missing, forgotten, or overlooked business logic implementations
Verify that the kotlinx-rpc compiler plugin compiles successfully against multiple Kotlin compiler versions, and fix any incompatibilities found. Use this skill whenever the user wants to check compiler plugin compatibility across Kotlin versions, test a new Kotlin version, fix compiler plugin build failures after a Kotlin upgrade, ensure the CSM templates produce valid code for all supported versions, or test against Kotlin Master. Trigger on phrases like "verify compiler plugin", "check compatibility", "test Kotlin versions", "compiler plugin broken", "fix for Kotlin X.Y", "support new Kotlin version", or "Kotlin master".
Comprehensive code review for Java - clean code principles, API contracts, null safety, exception handling, and performance. Use when user says "review code", "refactor", "check API", or before merging changes.
Executes and diagnoses Gradle tests with high-precision `--tests` filtering, surgical per-test failure isolation, and full stack traces; ALWAYS use instead of `./gradlew test` for test execution, failure investigation, and post-mortem analysis. Do NOT use for general build lifecycle tasks (use `running_gradle_builds`) or dependency auditing.
Proofreads Markdown files against Google guidelines.
Establish build performance baselines and apply systematic optimization techniques. Only activate in MSBuild/.NET build context. USE FOR: diagnosing slow builds, establishing before/after measurements (cold, warm, no-op scenarios), applying optimization strategies like MSBuild Server, static graph builds, artifacts output, and dependency graph trimming. Start here before diving into build-perf-diagnostics, incremental-build, or build-parallelism. DO NOT USE FOR: non-MSBuild build systems, detailed bottleneck analysis (use build-perf-diagnostics after baselining).
Create MCP servers using the C# SDK and .NET project templates. Covers scaffolding, tool/prompt/resource implementation, and transport configuration for stdio and HTTP. USE FOR: creating new MCP server projects, scaffolding with dotnet new mcpserver, adding MCP tools/prompts/resources, choosing stdio vs HTTP transport, configuring MCP hosting in Program.cs, setting up ASP.NET Core MCP endpoints with MapMcp. DO NOT USE FOR: debugging or running existing servers (use mcp-csharp-debug), writing tests (use mcp-csharp-test), publishing or deploying (use mcp-csharp-publish), building MCP clients, non-.NET MCP servers.
Guides technology selection and implementation of AI and ML features in .NET 8+ applications using ML.NET, Microsoft.Extensions.AI (MEAI), Microsoft Agent Framework (MAF), GitHub Copilot SDK, ONNX Runtime, and OllamaSharp. Covers the full spectrum from classic ML through modern LLM orchestration to local inference. Use when adding classification, regression, clustering, anomaly detection, recommendation, LLM integration (text generation, summarization, reasoning), RAG pipelines with vector search, agentic workflows with tool calling, Copilot extensions, or custom model inference via ONNX Runtime to a .NET project. DO NOT USE FOR projects targeting .NET Framework (requires .NET 8+), the task is pure data engineering or ETL with no ML/AI component, or the project needs a custom deep learning training loop (use Python with PyTorch/TensorFlow, then export to ONNX for .NET inference).
Migrate a .NET 9 project or solution to .NET 10 and resolve all breaking changes. USE FOR: upgrading TargetFramework from net9.0 to net10.0, fixing build errors after updating the .NET 10 SDK, resolving source and behavioral changes in .NET 10 / C# 14 / ASP.NET Core 10 / EF Core 10, updating Dockerfiles for Debian-to-Ubuntu base images, resolving obsoletion warnings (SYSLIB0058-SYSLIB0062), adapting to SDK/NuGet changes (NU1510, PrunePackageReference), migrating System.Linq.Async to built-in AsyncEnumerable, fixing OpenApi v2 API changes, cryptography renames, and C# 14 compiler changes (field keyword, extension keyword, span overloads). DO NOT USE FOR: .NET Framework migrations, upgrading from .NET 8 or earlier (use migrate-dotnet8-to-dotnet9 first), greenfield .NET 10 projects, or cosmetic modernization. LOADS REFERENCES: csharp-compiler, core-libraries, sdk-msbuild (always); aspnet-core, efcore, cryptography, extensions-hosting, serialization-networking, winforms-wpf, containers-interop (selective).
Publish and deploy C# MCP servers. Covers NuGet packaging for stdio servers, Docker containerization for HTTP servers, Azure Container Apps and App Service deployment, and publishing to the official MCP Registry. USE FOR: packaging stdio MCP servers as NuGet tools, creating Dockerfiles for HTTP MCP servers, deploying to Azure Container Apps or App Service, publishing to the MCP Registry at registry.modelcontextprotocol.io, configuring server.json for MCP package metadata, setting up CI/CD for MCP server publishing. DO NOT USE FOR: publishing general NuGet libraries (not MCP-specific), general Docker guidance unrelated to MCP, creating new servers (use mcp-csharp-create), debugging (use mcp-csharp-debug), writing tests (use mcp-csharp-test).
Guide for organizing MSBuild infrastructure with Directory.Build.props, Directory.Build.targets, Directory.Packages.props, and Directory.Build.rsp. Only activate in MSBuild/.NET build context. USE FOR: structuring multi-project repos, centralizing build settings, implementing NuGet Central Package Management (CPM) with ManagePackageVersionsCentrally, consolidating duplicated properties across .csproj files, setting up multi-level Directory.Build hierarchy with GetPathOfFileAbove, understanding evaluation order (Directory.Build.props → SDK .props → .csproj → SDK .targets → Directory.Build.targets). Critical pitfall: $(TargetFramework) conditions in .props silently fail for single-targeting projects — must use .targets. DO NOT USE FOR: non-MSBuild build systems, migrating legacy projects to SDK-style (use msbuild-modernization), single-project solutions with no shared settings. INVOKES: no tools — pure knowledge skill.
Validates custom dotnet new templates for correctness before publishing. Catches missing fields, parameter bugs, shortName conflicts, constraint issues, and common authoring mistakes that cause templates to fail silently. USE FOR: checking template.json files for errors before publishing or testing, diagnosing why a template doesn't appear after installation, reviewing template parameter definitions for type mismatches and missing defaults, finding shortName conflicts with dotnet CLI commands, validating post-action and constraint configuration. DO NOT USE FOR: finding or using existing templates (use template-discovery), creating projects from templates (use template-instantiation), creating templates from existing projects (use template-authoring).
Test C# MCP servers at multiple levels: unit tests for individual tools and integration tests using the MCP client SDK. USE FOR: unit testing MCP tool methods, integration testing with in-memory MCP client/server, end-to-end testing via MCP protocol, testing HTTP MCP servers with WebApplicationFactory, mocking dependencies in tool tests, creating evaluations for MCP servers, writing eval questions, measuring tool quality. DO NOT USE FOR: testing MCP clients (this is server testing only), load or performance testing, testing non-.NET MCP servers, debugging server issues (use mcp-csharp-debug).
Detects duplicate boilerplate, copy-paste tests, and structural maintainability issues across .NET test suites. Use when the user asks to reduce repetition, consolidate similar test methods, convert copy-paste tests to data-driven parameterized tests, suggest a better test structure, or identify refactoring opportunities. Identifies repeated construction, assertion patterns, copy-paste methods convertible to DataRow/Theory/TestCase, redundant setup/teardown, and shared infrastructure. Produces an analysis report with concrete before/after suggestions. Works with MSTest, xUnit, NUnit, and TUnit. DO NOT USE FOR: writing new tests (use writing-mstest-tests), reviewing test quality or anti-patterns (use test-anti-patterns), or deep mock auditing (use exp-mock-usage-analysis).
Migrates .NET test projects from VSTest to Microsoft.Testing.Platform (MTP). Use when user asks to "migrate to MTP", "switch from VSTest", "enable Microsoft.Testing.Platform", "use MTP runner", or mentions EnableMSTestRunner, EnableNUnitRunner, UseMicrosoftTestingPlatformRunner, or dotnet test exit code 8. Supports MSTest, NUnit, xUnit.net v2 (via YTest.MTP.XUnit2), and xUnit.net v3 (native MTP). Also covers translating xUnit.net v3 MTP filter syntax (--filter-class, --filter-trait, --filter-query). Covers runner enablement, CLI argument translation, Directory.Build.props and global.json configuration, CI/CD pipeline updates, and MTP extension packages. DO NOT USE FOR: migrating between test frameworks (MSTest/xUnit/NUnit), xUnit.net v2 to v3 API migration, MSTest version upgrades (use migrate-mstest-* skills), TFM upgrades, or UWP/WinUI test projects.
Suggests using Microsoft Testing Platform (MTP) hot reload to iterate fixes on failing tests without rebuilding. Use when user says "hot reload tests", "iterate on test fix", "run tests without rebuilding", "speed up test loop", "fix test faster", or needs to set up MTP hot reload to rapidly iterate on test failures. Covers setup (NuGet package, environment variable, launchSettings.json) and the iterative workflow for fixing tests. DO NOT USE FOR: writing test code, diagnosing test failures, CI/CD pipeline configuration, or Visual Studio Test Explorer hot reload (which is a different feature).