How to install plantuml-skill
npx skills add https://github.com/agents365-ai/365-skills --skill plantuml-skillFull instructions (SKILL.md)
Source of truth, from agents365-ai/365-skills.
name: plantuml-skill description: Use when user requests diagrams, flowcharts, sequence diagrams, class diagrams, component diagrams, ER diagrams, architecture charts, or visualizations — including generating a diagram from existing source code, or rendering/extracting PlantUML embedded in a Markdown file to images (e.g. preparing docs for Confluence/Notion). Also use proactively when explaining systems with 3+ components, APIs, data flows, or class hierarchies. Generates .puml files and exports to PNG/SVG via Kroki API (no local install required). license: MIT homepage: https://github.com/Agents365-ai/plantuml-skill compatibility: Requires curl on PATH (pre-installed on macOS/Linux/Windows Git Bash). Default renderer is the public Kroki API at https://kroki.io; can also point to a local Kroki Docker instance, or fall back to a local PlantUML jar + Java + Graphviz. platforms: [macos, linux, windows] metadata: {"openclaw":{"requires":{"bins":["curl"]},"emoji":"🧩","os":["darwin","linux","win32"]},"hermes":{"tags":["plantuml","diagram","flowchart","sequence","class","uml","architecture","kroki"],"category":"design","requires_tools":["curl"],"related_skills":["drawio","mermaid","excalidraw","tldraw"]},"author":"Agents365-ai","version":"1.5.0"}
PlantUML Diagram Skill
Overview
Generate .puml PlantUML diagram files and export to PNG/SVG using Kroki — a cloud rendering API that requires no local installation beyond curl.
Format: .puml (PlantUML text)
Renderer: Kroki API (https://kroki.io) — just curl, no Java needed
Output: PNG, SVG
Diagram types: sequence, component, class, ER, activity, use case, state, C4, and more
When to Use
Explicit triggers:
- "plantuml diagram", "sequence diagram", "class diagram", "component diagram"
- "UML", "activity diagram", "use case diagram", "state machine"
- "visualize", "draw", "diagram", "flowchart", "architecture chart"
Proactive triggers:
- Explaining a system with 3+ interacting components
- Describing API flows, authentication sequences, message passing
- Showing class hierarchies, database schemas, or ER models
- Illustrating state machines or lifecycle flows
When NOT to use it — route elsewhere:
- General, non-UML quick diagrams embedded in Markdown → mermaid.
- Freeform, heavily-styled, or branded diagrams needing pixel control → drawio.
- A hand-drawn / sketchy look → excalidraw or tldraw.
Modes
Once triggered, route by what the user actually wants — then run the shared render loop (Steps 4–8):
| Mode | The user wants… | Entry point |
|---|---|---|
| Generate (default) | a diagram from a text description | Steps 1–8 below |
| From code | a diagram of existing source code | references/from-source-code.md → Steps 4–8 |
| Embed | the PlantUML inside a Markdown doc rendered to images | references/markdown-embed.md |
| Refine | to change an existing diagram | load its .puml, apply the minimal edit (Step 7), re-render (Steps 4–6) |
| Review | to know whether an existing diagram is readable / correct | run the Step 6 vision self-check on the image |
Prerequisites
Option A: Kroki API (recommended — no install)
# Just needs curl (pre-installed on macOS/Linux/Windows Git Bash)
curl --version
Option B: Local Kroki via Docker (for offline use)
docker run -d -p 8000:8000 yuzutech/kroki
# Then replace https://kroki.io with http://localhost:8000 in commands
Option C: Local PlantUML jar (traditional)
# Requires Java + Graphviz
brew install graphviz # macOS
sudo apt install graphviz # Ubuntu
# Download plantuml.jar from https://plantuml.com/download
java -jar plantuml.jar diagram.puml
Workflow
Step 1: Check Dependencies
curl --version
curl is available on all modern systems. If missing, install via package manager.
Step 2: Pick Diagram Type
Choose the most appropriate PlantUML diagram type (see reference below).
Step 3: Generate .puml File
Write the PlantUML source file with @startuml / @enduml markers.
Step 4: Export via Kroki (capture the HTTP status)
Pick the backend first. The default below (public Kroki) uploads the .puml source to kroki.io — for sensitive diagrams use a local backend instead, and never silently fall back. See references/rendering-backends.md. For local Kroki, swap https://kroki.io → http://localhost:8000.
# PNG (recommended) — keep the status code so Step 5 can verify it
http=$(curl -s -w "%{http_code}" -o diagram.png \
-X POST https://kroki.io/plantuml/png \
-H "Content-Type: text/plain" \
--data-binary "@diagram.puml")
echo "HTTP $http"
# SVG
http=$(curl -s -w "%{http_code}" -o diagram.svg \
-X POST https://kroki.io/plantuml/svg \
-H "Content-Type: text/plain" \
--data-binary "@diagram.puml")
echo "HTTP $http"
Step 5: Validate & self-correct (loop — do NOT skip)
Never report success on a blind curl. Verify the output first; treat the export as failed if any of these hold:
$httpis not200. Kroki returns400on a syntax error and writes the error text into the output file, so a.pngcan exist yet be broken.- The file is empty:
[ -s diagram.png ]fails. - The bytes aren't a real image:
file diagram.pngshould reportPNG image data; for SVG the file should start with<svgor<?xml.
if [ "$http" != "200" ] || [ ! -s diagram.png ]; then
echo "Render failed — Kroki said:"
cat diagram.png # the 400 body holds the offending line + reason
fi
On failure: cat the output file to read Kroki's error, fix the flagged .puml line (see Common Mistakes), then re-run Step 4. Repeat up to 3 times. If a targeted line fix doesn't clear it, degrade in this order, re-rendering after each step — stop as soon as it renders:
- remove exotic shapes → plain
rectangle/component/node - strip
skinparam/!theme(render plain first) - remove
notelines - simplify labels, wrap in
"…" - reduce edges
- switch to a simpler diagram type rather than forcing the current one
For a per-diagram-type error catalog and the Kroki safe subset, read references/kroki-troubleshooting.md. If it still fails after 3 tries, stop and show the user the raw Kroki error — do not claim the diagram was produced.
Step 6: Self-check (vision)
The Step 5 loop only proves Kroki returned a valid image — not that the diagram is readable. After it renders, use the agent's vision capability to read the PNG and catch what auto-layout (Graphviz) can't prevent. PlantUML positions everything itself, so the failures here are about readability, not your coordinates:
| Check | What to look for | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Label truncation / overrun | Text clipped or spilling past a box | Shorten the label, wrap in "…", or break with \n |
| Component overlap / cramped | Boxes touching or crowded; unreadable | Add together { }, layout hints, or split the diagram |
| Wrong orientation / aspect | Diagram far too wide or too tall to read | Switch left to right direction ↔ top to bottom direction |
| Edge spaghetti | Many relations crossing, hard to follow | Reorder declarations, group with package/together, or add hidden edges for layout |
| Wrong diagram type | Type doesn't suit the content | Switch type (sequence, state, C4, …) |
| Low contrast | Text blends into the fill / theme | Adjust skinparam / !theme so text contrasts the fill |
- Max 2 self-check rounds — if issues remain after 2 fixes, show the user anyway.
- Re-render (Step 4) and re-validate (Step 5) after every fix.
- If vision is unavailable, skip self-check and show the PNG directly.
Step 7: Review loop
After self-check, show the exported image and collect feedback. Apply the minimal .puml edit for each request, then re-render and re-validate:
| User request | Edit action |
|---|---|
| Change a label | Edit the element / message text in the .puml |
| Add / remove an element or relation | Add or delete the matching line |
| Change a color | skinparam, !theme, or an inline #color on the element |
| Change layout direction | Swap left to right direction ↔ top to bottom direction |
| Restructure / group | Wrap related elements in a package / together { }, or regenerate |
- Overwrite the same
diagram.puml/ output file each round — don't createv1,v2, … - Safety valve: after 5 rounds, suggest the user fine-tune the
.pumldirectly or at plantuml.com.
Step 8: Report to User
Only after Steps 5–7 pass. Tell the user:
- Path to the
.pumlsource file - Path to the exported PNG/SVG
- Brief description of what was generated
- Which backend rendered it, and whether the source left the machine — e.g. "via public Kroki (uploaded to kroki.io)" vs "via local Kroki (stayed local)"
Import Workflows
Two non-default modes — load the linked playbook when triggered, then run the same Step 4–8 loop:
- Generate a diagram from existing source code — class diagram of a module, sequence from a request handler, component map of a repo, ER from ORM models. Read the code, extract the real entities/relationships, draw only what's there. →
references/from-source-code.md - Render PlantUML embedded in Markdown — extract
```plantuml/```pumlblocks (and linked.puml), render each to an image, and rewrite the Markdown with image links (e.g. to publish to Confluence / Notion, which don't render fenced PlantUML). →references/markdown-embed.md
Diagram Types
| Type | Keyword | Use for |
|---|---|---|
| Sequence | @startuml + sequence syntax | API calls, protocol flows, message passing |
| Component | @startuml + components | service architecture, module dependencies |
| Class | @startuml + class syntax | OOP models, data structures |
| ER / Entity | @startuml + entity syntax | database schemas |
| Activity | @startuml + activity syntax | workflows, business processes |
| Use Case | @startuml + actor/usecase | system requirements, user stories |
| State | @startuml + state syntax | state machines, lifecycle |
| C4 Context | @startuml + C4 includes | high-level system context maps |
| Mind Map | @startmindmap | topic breakdowns, concept maps |
| Gantt | @startgantt | project timelines, schedules |
Syntax Reference
Component / Architecture Diagram
@startuml
!theme plain
title Microservices Architecture
actor "Client" as client
rectangle "API Gateway" as gateway #LightBlue
rectangle "Services" {
component "User Service" as user
component "Order Service" as order
}
database "User DB" as userdb
database "Order DB" as orderdb
queue "Kafka" as kafka
client --> gateway
gateway --> user
gateway --> order
user --> userdb
order --> orderdb
order --> kafka : events
@enduml
Shape types:
actor "Name" as id— stick figure (user, external actor)component "Name" as id— component box with [brackets]rectangle "Name" as id— plain rectangle (for groups/layers)database "Name" as id— cylinder (database)queue "Name" as id— queue symbolcloud "Name" as id— cloud shape (external services)node "Name" as id— server/node boxframe "Name" as id— frame groupingpackage "Name" { }— package grouping
Arrows:
A --> B— solid arrowA -> B— thin arrowA ..> B— dashed arrowA --> B : label— labeled arrowA <--> B— bidirectional
Colors:
#LightBlue,#LightGreen,#LightYellow,#Pink,#Violet#AED6F1(blue),#A9DFBF(green),#FAD7A0(orange),#F1948A(red)#D7BDE2(purple),#F9E79F(yellow),#D3D3D3(grey)
Sequence Diagram
@startuml
!theme plain
title Login Flow
participant "Client" as C
participant "API Gateway" as G
participant "Auth Service" as A
database "User DB" as D
C -> G : POST /login
G -> A : validateCredentials(user, pass)
A -> D : SELECT * FROM users WHERE email = ?
D --> A : user record
A --> G : 200 OK + JWT token
G --> C : { token: "..." }
@enduml
Arrow types:
A -> B— synchronous callA --> B— return / dashedA ->> B— async messageA -[#red]-> B— colored arrowactivate A/deactivate A— show activation box
Class Diagram
@startuml
!theme plain
class User {
+int id
+String name
+String email
+login() : bool
+logout()
}
class Order {
+int id
+Date createdAt
+float total
+place()
+cancel()
}
class Product {
+int id
+String name
+float price
}
User "1" --> "*" Order : places
Order "*" --> "*" Product : contains
@enduml
Relationships:
A --> B— associationA --|> B— inheritanceA ..|> B— implements interfaceA *-- B— compositionA o-- B— aggregationA "1" --> "*" B : label— with multiplicities
ER Diagram
@startuml
!theme plain
entity "USER" as user {
* id : int <<PK>>
--
name : varchar
email : varchar
created_at : datetime
}
entity "ORDER" as ord {
* id : int <<PK>>
--
* user_id : int <<FK>>
total : decimal
status : varchar
}
entity "PRODUCT" as prod {
* id : int <<PK>>
--
name : varchar
price : decimal
}
user ||--o{ ord : places
ord }o--|{ prod : contains
@enduml
Activity / Flowchart
@startuml
!theme plain
start
:Receive Order;
if (Payment valid?) then (yes)
:Process Payment;
:Send Confirmation Email;
:Update Inventory;
:Ship Order;
:Mark as Delivered;
else (no)
:Send Payment Failed Email;
:Cancel Order;
endif
stop
@enduml
State Diagram
@startuml
!theme plain
[*] --> Pending
Pending --> Processing : payment_received
Processing --> Shipped : packed
Shipped --> Delivered : confirmed
Processing --> Cancelled : cancel
Pending --> Cancelled : cancel
Delivered --> [*]
Cancelled --> [*]
@enduml
C4 Context Diagram
C4 uses the bundled C4-PlantUML standard library via !include <C4/...>, which Kroki and recent local jars resolve with no network fetch. Export with the standard plantuml endpoint (the c4plantuml Kroki type also works).
@startuml
!include <C4/C4_Context>
title System Context — Internet Banking
Person(customer, "Banking Customer", "A customer of the bank")
System(banking, "Internet Banking System", "Lets customers view their accounts")
System_Ext(mail, "E-mail System", "The internal Microsoft Exchange system")
Rel(customer, banking, "Uses", "HTTPS")
Rel(banking, mail, "Sends e-mail via", "SMTP")
@enduml
Other levels: <C4/C4_Container> (Container, ContainerDb), <C4/C4_Component> (Component). Common macros: Person, System, System_Ext, Container, Rel, Boundary. Do not use a remote !includeurl https://… — Kroki cannot fetch external URLs; always use the bundled <C4/…> form.
Export Commands
Quick reference for the renderer variants. The Kroki ones drop the status capture for brevity — when actually exporting, use the Step 4 form and run the Step 5 validation loop.
# PNG via Kroki API (recommended)
curl -s -X POST https://kroki.io/plantuml/png \
-H "Content-Type: text/plain" \
--data-binary "@diagram.puml" \
-o diagram.png
# SVG via Kroki API
curl -s -X POST https://kroki.io/plantuml/svg \
-H "Content-Type: text/plain" \
--data-binary "@diagram.puml" \
-o diagram.svg
# Via local Kroki Docker (offline)
curl -s -X POST http://localhost:8000/plantuml/png \
-H "Content-Type: text/plain" \
--data-binary "@diagram.puml" \
-o diagram.png
# Via local PlantUML jar (if installed)
java -jar plantuml.jar diagram.puml
# Output: diagram.png in same directory
Themes
!theme plain ← clean, minimal (recommended)
!theme cerulean ← blue-tinted
!theme blueprint ← dark blue background
!theme aws-orange ← AWS style
!theme vibrant ← vivid colors
Or use skinparam for custom styling:
skinparam backgroundColor #FAFAFA
skinparam componentBorderColor #555555
skinparam ArrowColor #333333
skinparam FontName Arial
Common Mistakes
Quick table below; for a per-diagram-type error catalog, the Kroki safe subset, and the failure-degradation ladder, see references/kroki-troubleshooting.md.
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
curl POST returns HTML error page | Check network; try curl -v to see error details |
| Kroki returns 400 Bad Request | cat the output file — Kroki wrote the offending line + reason there; fix it and re-render via the Step 5 loop. Validate syntax at https://www.plantuml.com/plantuml/uml/ |
| Arrow direction unexpected | Use --> for downward/right; explicitly use -up->, -down->, -left->, -right-> |
| Diagram too large/crowded | Split into multiple diagrams or use package/rectangle grouping |
Missing @startuml / @enduml | Always wrap diagram in these markers |
| Special chars in labels | Wrap in quotes: "Label: value" |
| C4 includes not found | Use the bundled !include <C4/C4_Context> (resolved on the standard plantuml endpoint and c4plantuml); never a remote !includeurl https://… — Kroki cannot fetch external URLs |
| Component overlap | Use together { } or explicit layout hints (top to bottom direction) |
| Sequence participants out of order | Declare participant explicitly at top in desired left-to-right order |
Related skills
More from agents365-ai/365-skills and the wider catalog.
drawio-skill
Use when the user requests diagrams, flowcharts, architecture diagrams, ER diagrams, UML / sequence / class diagrams, network topology, ML/DL model figures (Transformer/CNN/LSTM), mind maps, or any visualization. Also use proactively when explaining systems with 3+ components, complex data flows, or relationships that benefit from visual representation. Best suited when the diagram needs custom styling, rich shape vocabulary, swimlanes, or exportable images (PNG/SVG/PDF/JPG). Generates .drawio XML and exports locally via the native draw.io desktop CLI.
creating-mermaid-diagrams
Generate Mermaid diagrams (.mmd) and export to PNG/SVG/PDF using mmdc CLI or Kroki API. USE THIS SKILL when user mentions diagram, flowchart, sequence diagram, class diagram, ER diagram, state machine, architecture, visualize, git graph, 画图, 架构图, 流程图, 时序图. PROACTIVELY USE when explaining ANY system with 3+ components, API flows, authentication sequences, class hierarchies, database schemas, or state machines. Supports 11+ diagram types with fully automatic layout.
excalidraw
Use when user requests diagrams, flowcharts, architecture charts, or visualizations. Also use proactively when explaining systems with 3+ components, complex data flows, or relationships that benefit from visual representation. Generates .excalidraw files and exports to PNG/SVG via Kroki API or locally using excalidraw-brute-export-cli.
tldraw-skill
Use when user requests diagrams, flowcharts, architecture charts, or visualizations. Also use proactively when explaining systems with 3+ components, complex data flows, or relationships that benefit from visual representation. Generates .tldr JSON files and exports to PNG/SVG locally using @kitschpatrol/tldraw-cli.
semanticscholar-skill
Use when searching academic papers, looking up citations, finding authors, or getting paper recommendations using the Semantic Scholar API. Triggers on queries about research papers, academic search, citation analysis, or literature discovery.
paper-fetch
Use whenever the user wants to obtain, download, or fetch a paper's PDF — given a DOI, an arXiv id, a paper title, a citation, or a list of DOIs. Trigger on phrases like "download this paper", "find the PDF for [DOI]", "grab me the [Nature/bioRxiv/arXiv] paper on X", "get the open-access version", "I need this article", or any bulk/batch paper download request, even when the user doesn't explicitly say "PDF" or "DOI". Resolves via Unpaywall → Semantic Scholar → arXiv → PubMed Central → bioRxiv/medRxiv → publisher direct (institutional opt-in) → Sci-Hub mirrors as last-resort fallback.