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create-agentsmd

github/awesome-copilot

Generate an AGENTS.md file to help AI coding agents understand and work with your repository.

What is create-agentsmd?

This skill creates a comprehensive AGENTS.md file—a standardized Markdown document that provides AI coding agents with the technical context, setup instructions, and workflows they need to contribute effectively. Use it when you want to make your repository agent-friendly and compatible with 20+ AI coding tools like Cursor, Aider, and Claude.

  • Analyzes your project structure to identify languages, frameworks, and build tools
  • Extracts key workflows from package.json, CI/CD configs, and build files
  • Generates sections covering setup, development, testing, code style, and deployment
  • Includes specific, executable commands agents can run directly
  • Supports monorepo structures with nested AGENTS.md files
  • Follows the open agents.md format for ecosystem compatibility

How to install create-agentsmd

npx skills add https://github.com/github/awesome-copilot --skill create-agentsmd
Claude Code
Cursor
Windsurf
Cline

How to use create-agentsmd

  1. 1.Run the skill to analyze your repository structure and existing configuration files
  2. 2.Review the generated AGENTS.md for accuracy and completeness
  3. 3.Customize sections to match your project's specific workflows and conventions
  4. 4.Add any project-specific context, gotchas, or troubleshooting tips
  5. 5.Commit the AGENTS.md file to your repository root (or subproject roots for monorepos)
  6. 6.Update AGENTS.md as your project evolves and workflows change

Use cases

Good for
  • Onboard a new AI coding agent to your project with clear technical instructions
  • Document setup and testing procedures in a format agents can reliably parse
  • Provide monorepo-specific guidance for agents working across multiple packages
  • Standardize agent-focused documentation across your organization's repositories
  • Enable agents to run builds, tests, and linting without human intervention
Who it's for
  • Repository maintainers setting up agent-friendly projects
  • Teams using AI coding assistants like Cursor or Claude Code
  • Monorepo maintainers coordinating work across multiple packages
  • Open-source projects wanting to support automated contributions
  • Organizations standardizing developer experience for AI tools

create-agentsmd FAQ

What's the difference between AGENTS.md and README.md?

README.md is for humans and covers project overview, features, and usage. AGENTS.md is specifically for AI coding agents and contains detailed technical instructions, exact commands, setup steps, and development workflows that agents need to work effectively.

Do I need to include all the sections mentioned?

No. AGENTS.md has a flexible structure. Include sections relevant to your project—at minimum cover setup, development workflow, testing, and code style. Omit sections that don't apply.

Can I use AGENTS.md in a monorepo?

Yes. Place a main AGENTS.md at the repository root, and create additional AGENTS.md files in subproject directories. The closest AGENTS.md file takes precedence for any given location.

Which AI tools support AGENTS.md?

AGENTS.md works with 20+ AI coding tools including Cursor, Aider, Gemini CLI, Claude Code, and many others. It's an open format designed for ecosystem compatibility.

How do I keep AGENTS.md up to date?

Treat it as living documentation. Update it whenever you change build commands, add new testing frameworks, modify setup procedures, or evolve your development workflow.

Full instructions (SKILL.md)

Source of truth, from github/awesome-copilot.


name: create-agentsmd description: 'Prompt for generating an AGENTS.md file for a repository'

Create high‑quality AGENTS.md file

You are a code agent. Your task is to create a complete, accurate AGENTS.md at the root of this repository that follows the public guidance at https://agents.md/.

AGENTS.md is an open format designed to provide coding agents with the context and instructions they need to work effectively on a project.

What is AGENTS.md?

AGENTS.md is a Markdown file that serves as a "README for agents" - a dedicated, predictable place to provide context and instructions to help AI coding agents work on your project. It complements README.md by containing detailed technical context that coding agents need but might clutter a human-focused README.

Key Principles

  • Agent-focused: Contains detailed technical instructions for automated tools
  • Complements README.md: Doesn't replace human documentation but adds agent-specific context
  • Standardized location: Placed at repository root (or subproject roots for monorepos)
  • Open format: Uses standard Markdown with flexible structure
  • Ecosystem compatibility: Works across 20+ different AI coding tools and agents

File Structure and Content Guidelines

1. Required Setup

  • Create the file as AGENTS.md in the repository root
  • Use standard Markdown formatting
  • No required fields - flexible structure based on project needs

2. Essential Sections to Include

Project Overview

  • Brief description of what the project does
  • Architecture overview if complex
  • Key technologies and frameworks used

Setup Commands

  • Installation instructions
  • Environment setup steps
  • Dependency management commands
  • Database setup if applicable

Development Workflow

  • How to start development server
  • Build commands
  • Watch/hot-reload setup
  • Package manager specifics (npm, pnpm, yarn, etc.)

Testing Instructions

  • How to run tests (unit, integration, e2e)
  • Test file locations and naming conventions
  • Coverage requirements
  • Specific test patterns or frameworks used
  • How to run subset of tests or focus on specific areas

Code Style Guidelines

  • Language-specific conventions
  • Linting and formatting rules
  • File organization patterns
  • Naming conventions
  • Import/export patterns

Build and Deployment

  • Build commands and outputs
  • Environment configurations
  • Deployment steps and requirements
  • CI/CD pipeline information

3. Optional but Recommended Sections

Security Considerations

  • Security testing requirements
  • Secrets management
  • Authentication patterns
  • Permission models

Monorepo Instructions (if applicable)

  • How to work with multiple packages
  • Cross-package dependencies
  • Selective building/testing
  • Package-specific commands

Pull Request Guidelines

  • Title format requirements
  • Required checks before submission
  • Review process
  • Commit message conventions

Debugging and Troubleshooting

  • Common issues and solutions
  • Logging patterns
  • Debug configuration
  • Performance considerations

Example Template

Use this as a starting template and customize based on the specific project:

# AGENTS.md

## Project Overview

[Brief description of the project, its purpose, and key technologies]

## Setup Commands

- Install dependencies: `[package manager] install`
- Start development server: `[command]`
- Build for production: `[command]`

## Development Workflow

- [Development server startup instructions]
- [Hot reload/watch mode information]
- [Environment variable setup]

## Testing Instructions

- Run all tests: `[command]`
- Run unit tests: `[command]`
- Run integration tests: `[command]`
- Test coverage: `[command]`
- [Specific testing patterns or requirements]

## Code Style

- [Language and framework conventions]
- [Linting rules and commands]
- [Formatting requirements]
- [File organization patterns]

## Build and Deployment

- [Build process details]
- [Output directories]
- [Environment-specific builds]
- [Deployment commands]

## Pull Request Guidelines

- Title format: [component] Brief description
- Required checks: `[lint command]`, `[test command]`
- [Review requirements]

## Additional Notes

- [Any project-specific context]
- [Common gotchas or troubleshooting tips]
- [Performance considerations]

Working Example from agents.md

Here's a real example from the agents.md website:

# Sample AGENTS.md file

## Dev environment tips

- Use `pnpm dlx turbo run where <project_name>` to jump to a package instead of scanning with `ls`.
- Run `pnpm install --filter <project_name>` to add the package to your workspace so Vite, ESLint, and TypeScript can see it.
- Use `pnpm create vite@latest <project_name> -- --template react-ts` to spin up a new React + Vite package with TypeScript checks ready.
- Check the name field inside each package's package.json to confirm the right name—skip the top-level one.

## Testing instructions

- Find the CI plan in the .github/workflows folder.
- Run `pnpm turbo run test --filter <project_name>` to run every check defined for that package.
- From the package root you can just call `pnpm test`. The commit should pass all tests before you merge.
- To focus on one step, add the Vitest pattern: `pnpm vitest run -t "<test name>"`.
- Fix any test or type errors until the whole suite is green.
- After moving files or changing imports, run `pnpm lint --filter <project_name>` to be sure ESLint and TypeScript rules still pass.
- Add or update tests for the code you change, even if nobody asked.

## PR instructions

- Title format: [<project_name>] <Title>
- Always run `pnpm lint` and `pnpm test` before committing.

Implementation Steps

  1. Analyze the project structure to understand:

    • Programming languages and frameworks used
    • Package managers and build tools
    • Testing frameworks
    • Project architecture (monorepo, single package, etc.)
  2. Identify key workflows by examining:

    • package.json scripts
    • Makefile or other build files
    • CI/CD configuration files
    • Documentation files
  3. Create comprehensive sections covering:

    • All essential setup and development commands
    • Testing strategies and commands
    • Code style and conventions
    • Build and deployment processes
  4. Include specific, actionable commands that agents can execute directly

  5. Test the instructions by ensuring all commands work as documented

  6. Keep it focused on what agents need to know, not general project information

Best Practices

  • Be specific: Include exact commands, not vague descriptions
  • Use code blocks: Wrap commands in backticks for clarity
  • Include context: Explain why certain steps are needed
  • Stay current: Update as the project evolves
  • Test commands: Ensure all listed commands actually work
  • Consider nested files: For monorepos, create AGENTS.md files in subprojects as needed

Monorepo Considerations

For large monorepos:

  • Place a main AGENTS.md at the repository root
  • Create additional AGENTS.md files in subproject directories
  • The closest AGENTS.md file takes precedence for any given location
  • Include navigation tips between packages/projects

Final Notes

  • AGENTS.md works with 20+ AI coding tools including Cursor, Aider, Gemini CLI, and many others
  • The format is intentionally flexible - adapt it to your project's needs
  • Focus on actionable instructions that help agents understand and work with your codebase
  • This is living documentation - update it as your project evolves

When creating the AGENTS.md file, prioritize clarity, completeness, and actionability. The goal is to give any coding agent enough context to effectively contribute to the project without requiring additional human guidance.