Dedalus-ERP-PAS

GitHub Issues

0
0
# Install this skill:
npx skills add Dedalus-ERP-PAS/foundation-skills --skill "GitHub Issues"

Install specific skill from multi-skill repository

# Description

Creates, retrieves, updates, and manages GitHub issues with comprehensive context gathering. Use when the user wants to create a new issue, view issue details, update existing issues, list project issues, add comments, or manage issue workflows in GitHub.

# SKILL.md


name: GitHub Issues
description: Creates, retrieves, updates, and manages GitHub issues with comprehensive context gathering. Use when the user wants to create a new issue, view issue details, update existing issues, list project issues, add comments, or manage issue workflows in GitHub.
allowed-tools: github-mcp(create_issue), github-mcp(get_issue), github-mcp(list_issues), github-mcp(update_issue), github-mcp(search_issues), github-mcp(add_issue_comment)
license: MIT
metadata:
author: Foundation Skills
version: 1.0.0
mcp-server: github-mcp


GitHub Issues Management

Create, retrieve, update, and manage GitHub issues with comprehensive context integration and structured workflows.

When to Use This Skill

Activate this skill when:
- The user wants to create a new GitHub issue
- The user asks to view or retrieve issue details
- The user needs to update an existing issue
- The user wants to list issues in a repository
- The user mentions managing issues, bug reports, or feature requests in GitHub
- The user wants to close, reopen, or modify issue properties
- The user needs to add comments or labels to issues
- The user wants to search for issues

Critical Rules

IMPORTANT: Always confirm owner/repo before creating or modifying issues

Always use descriptive issue titles and provide structured descriptions

Never create duplicate issues - search existing issues first when appropriate

Available MCP Tools

Tool Purpose
github-mcp(create_issue) Create new issues
github-mcp(update_issue) Update existing issues
github-mcp(get_issue) Fetch issue details
github-mcp(search_issues) Search issues
github-mcp(add_issue_comment) Add comments
github-mcp(list_issues) List repository issues

Workflow

1. Gather Context

First, collect information about the current repository and context:

  • Identify the repository (owner and repo name)
  • Understand the type of issue (bug, feature, task, etc.)
  • Gather relevant labels, milestones, and assignees if applicable

2. Repository Verification

Before any operation, verify you have the correct repository identifier:

  • Confirm repository exists
  • Understand repository structure
  • Check available labels and milestones

3. Issue Operations

Creating a New Issue

When creating issues, gather complete context:

Required Information:
- owner: Repository owner (organization or user)
- repo: Repository name
- title: Clear, descriptive issue title

Optional but Recommended:
- body: Detailed description in Markdown format
- labels: Array of label names (e.g., ["bug", "enhancement"])
- assignees: Array of usernames to assign
- milestone: Milestone number (integer)

Human-in-the-Loop - Ask for Context

Always ask to clarify issue details:

Question: "What type of issue is this?"
Options:
- "Bug report - something is not working correctly"
- "Feature request - new functionality needed"
- "Task - work item to complete"
- "Documentation - documentation needs update"
- "Other - let me describe it"

Title Guidelines:
- Start with type prefix when useful: [Bug], [Feature], [Docs]
- Be specific and actionable
- Keep under 72 characters
- Examples:
- [Bug] Login fails with SSO enabled
- [Feature] Add dark mode support
- Add unit tests for auth module

Issue Description Template:

Structure descriptions for clarity:

## Summary
[Brief description of the issue]

## Current Behavior
[What is happening now - for bugs]

## Expected Behavior
[What should happen - for bugs]

## Steps to Reproduce
[For bugs - numbered steps]

## Acceptance Criteria
[For features/tasks - what defines "done"]

## Additional Context
[Screenshots, logs, related issues, etc.]

Retrieving Issue Details

Use github-mcp(get_issue) with:
- owner: Repository owner
- repo: Repository name
- issue_number: Issue number (e.g., 42)

This returns complete issue information including:
- Title and body
- State (open/closed)
- Labels and milestone
- Assignees and author
- Created/updated timestamps

Listing Issues

Use github-mcp(list_issues) with filters:
- owner: Repository owner
- repo: Repository name
- state: "open", "closed", or "all"
- labels: Filter by labels (comma-separated)
- assignee: Filter by assignee username
- sort: Sort by "created", "updated", "comments"
- direction: "asc" or "desc"
- per_page: Results per page (max 100)

Searching Issues

Use github-mcp(search_issues) for advanced queries:
- Search across repositories
- Use GitHub search qualifiers (is:open, label:bug, etc.)
- Full-text search in titles and bodies

Updating an Issue

When updating issues, only provide changed fields:

Use github-mcp(update_issue) with:
- owner: Repository owner
- repo: Repository name
- issue_number: Issue number
- Plus any fields to update (title, body, labels, state, etc.)

State Changes:
- state: "open" - Open/reopen the issue
- state: "closed" - Close the issue

Adding Comments

Use github-mcp(add_issue_comment) with:
- owner: Repository owner
- repo: Repository name
- issue_number: Issue number
- body: Comment content in Markdown

4. Execute Operations (Requires Confirmation)

CRITICAL: Confirm with user before creating or modifying issues

After gathering all information, present a summary for user approval:

Creating issue in repository: owner/repo
Title: [title]
Description: [summary]
Labels: [labels]
Assignee: [assignee]

Proceed with issue creation?

Issue Type Templates

Bug Report

## Description
The [component] is experiencing [issue] when [condition].

## Steps to Reproduce
1. [First step]
2. [Second step]
3. [See error]

## Expected Behavior
[What should happen]

## Actual Behavior
[What actually happens]

## Environment
- Application Version: [version]

## Screenshots/Logs
[Attach relevant files]

## Possible Solution
[Optional: if you have ideas]

Feature Request

## Summary
[One-line description of the feature]

## Motivation
[Why is this feature needed? What problem does it solve?]

## Proposed Solution
[How should this work?]

## Acceptance Criteria
- [ ] [Criterion 1]
- [ ] [Criterion 2]
- [ ] [Criterion 3]

## Alternatives Considered
[Other approaches considered]

## Additional Context
[Mockups, examples, references]

Task

## Task Description
[What needs to be done]

## Background
[Why is this needed?]

## Requirements
- [ ] [Requirement 1]
- [ ] [Requirement 2]

## Definition of Done
- [ ] [Criterion 1]
- [ ] [Criterion 2]

## Dependencies
[Related issues, blockers]

Examples

Example 1: Creating a Bug Report

User: "Create a bug issue - the login page crashes when using SSO"

AI Workflow:
1. Ask for repository (owner/repo) if not known
2. Ask clarifying questions about the bug
3. Generate structured description
4. Present summary for confirmation
5. Create issue with github-mcp(create_issue)

Result:

{
  "owner": "myorg",
  "repo": "webapp",
  "title": "[Bug] Login page crashes when using SSO",
  "body": "## Description\nThe login page crashes when users attempt to authenticate using SSO.\n\n## Steps to Reproduce\n1. Navigate to login page\n2. Click 'Sign in with SSO'\n3. Page crashes\n\n## Expected Behavior\nSSO authentication should complete and redirect to dashboard.\n\n## Actual Behavior\nPage becomes unresponsive and displays error.\n\n## Environment\n- Browser: [To be filled]\n- OS: [To be filled]",
  "labels": ["bug"]
}

Example 2: Feature Request with Priority

User: "Create a feature request for dark mode with high priority"

AI Workflow:
1. Gather feature details
2. Structure the request
3. Add appropriate labels
4. Confirm and create

Result:

{
  "owner": "myorg",
  "repo": "webapp",
  "title": "[Feature] Add dark mode support",
  "body": "## Summary\nAdd dark mode theme option for improved user experience and accessibility.\n\n## Motivation\n- Reduces eye strain in low-light environments\n- Increasingly expected by users\n- Improves accessibility\n\n## Proposed Solution\nImplement theme toggle with system preference detection.\n\n## Acceptance Criteria\n- [ ] Toggle switch in settings\n- [ ] Persists user preference\n- [ ] Respects system preference by default\n- [ ] All UI components support both themes",
  "labels": ["enhancement", "high-priority"]
}

Example 3: Listing and Filtering Issues

User: "Show me all open bugs assigned to me"

AI Workflow:
1. Use github-mcp(list_issues) with filters:
- state: "open"
- labels: "bug"
- assignee: [current user]

Result:

Found 3 open bug issues assigned to you:

#142 - [Bug] API timeout on large file uploads
      Labels: bug, priority-medium
      Created: 2024-01-15

#138 - [Bug] Dashboard graphs not rendering on Safari
      Labels: bug, frontend
      Created: 2024-01-12

#125 - [Bug] Email notifications delayed by 30+ minutes
      Labels: bug, priority-high
      Created: 2024-01-08

Example 4: Closing an Issue with Comment

User: "Close issue #142 and add a comment that it's fixed in v2.4.0"

AI Workflow:
1. First, add a comment to the issue
2. Then update issue state to closed

Using github-mcp(add_issue_comment):

{
  "owner": "myorg",
  "repo": "webapp",
  "issue_number": 142,
  "body": "Fixed in v2.4.0. Closing this issue."
}

Using github-mcp(update_issue):

{
  "owner": "myorg",
  "repo": "webapp",
  "issue_number": 142,
  "state": "closed"
}

Common Labels

Use these standard labels when applicable:

Label Use For
bug Something isn't working
enhancement New feature or improvement
documentation Documentation updates
good first issue Good for newcomers
help wanted Extra attention needed
question Further information requested
wontfix Will not be addressed
duplicate Already exists
invalid Not a valid issue

Important Notes

  • Always verify repository access - Ensure you have permission to create/modify issues
  • Use labels consistently - Follow repository labeling conventions
  • Be specific in titles - Prefix with [Bug], [Feature], [Task] for clarity
  • Include reproduction steps - Essential for bug reports
  • Define acceptance criteria - Clear "definition of done" for features/tasks
  • Link related issues - Use "Related to #XX" or "Blocks #XX" in descriptions
  • Mention users with @username - For visibility and notifications
  • Use milestones - Associate issues with releases when applicable

GitHub Issue Best Practices

Writing Effective Titles

  • Be concise but descriptive
  • Include issue type prefix: [Bug], [Feature], [Task], [Docs]
  • Mention affected component if applicable
  • Avoid vague titles like "Fix bug" or "Update code"

Structuring Descriptions

  • Use Markdown formatting for readability
  • Include all relevant context upfront
  • Add screenshots or logs when helpful
  • Link to related issues, PRs, or documentation
  • Use task lists for trackable sub-items

Label Strategy

  • Combine type labels (bug, enhancement) with area labels (frontend, api)
  • Use priority labels when needed (priority-high, priority-low)
  • Keep label taxonomy consistent across repositories

Assignment and Workflow

  • Assign issues to specific team members
  • Use milestones for release planning
  • Update issue status as work progresses
  • Close issues with reference to fixing PR: "Fixes #XX"

# Supported AI Coding Agents

This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:

Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.