Hi All,
Recently I've been using Claude Code a lot for debugging cluster issues and I realized I was performing similar tasks repeatedly so I decided to package them up into skills so I could call them up more easily (e.g. `/investigate`, `/audit-security`, `/audit-outdated`). I'm calling the skill pack "kstack" and the goal is to be able to monitor and troubleshoot K8s from within Claude Code.
If you have time, I'd love to get some feedback on the project!
Andres
Source: https://github.com/kubetail-org/kstack
Docs: https://kstack.sh/
I’m particularly interested in the disable-model-invocation: true safety on /exec and /cleanup. It addresses the biggest hurdle for AI in infra: the fear of an agent hallucinating a delete or exec command in the wrong context.
In addition the skills teach the agent about which kubectl commands are mutating so it doesn’t treat them and normal Bash() commands and asks you for permission first.
I wonder whether the future of software is like this project, where computer capabilities come in the form of skills that you can (purchase?/rent? to) download and use.
I'm reminded of Factorio.
At first, it's really fun to make your own bases. Eventually, it seems you either lose interest, or you get impatient and copy in others' blueprints. A blueprint is just a plain-ish text representation of a part of a factory, and late game (or creative mode), the robots just build it. All you do is copy and paste it, not much creativity required.
Where in Computer Science or business process engineering is the creativity going to go?
What should we call it? Software as a Service?
Shareware suggests itself.
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