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tea/skills/use/SKILL.md
T
naudachu b3db734cd8 Restructure tea skill into a plugin with a mandatory-login guard
Convert the standalone `tea` skill into a skills-dir plugin so commands are
namespaced and an enforcement hook can ship with it:

- /tea:login  — pin the project Gitea login into .claude/settings.local.json
- /tea:use    — tea CLI reference (was the old root SKILL.md), with the
                login rule slimmed since the hook now enforces it
- hooks/tea-guard.sh — PreToolUse(Bash) guard: blocks any `tea` command that
  touches Gitea unless it carries --login and $GITEA_LOGIN is set. Exempts
  `tea logins list` and `tea --version/--help` so /tea:login can bootstrap.

References moved under skills/use/references/. `claude plugin validate` passes;
guard unit-tested across allow/block cases.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-30 15:54:48 +05:00

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4.7 KiB
Markdown

---
name: use
description: Reference docs for the `tea` CLI — Gitea's command-line client. Load when the user asks about Gitea repos, issues, pulls, releases, actions, or other Gitea entities, to look up the right `tea` command and flags. Every tea call must carry --login "$GITEA_LOGIN" (enforced by the tea-guard hook; set it with /tea:login).
---
# /tea:use — tea CLI reference
Reference material for the `tea` CLI (Gitea's official command-line client).
Use these docs to look up commands, flags, filters, and output fields before
running `tea` via Bash.
## Login is mandatory (enforced)
Every `tea` invocation that touches Gitea MUST include `--login "$GITEA_LOGIN"`
(or `-l "$GITEA_LOGIN"`). This is enforced by the **`tea-guard`** PreToolUse
hook — a `tea` command without `--login` is blocked before it runs. If
`$GITEA_LOGIN` is unset, run **`/tea:login`** to pin one.
Why: without `--login`, `tea` silently falls back to the machine's default
login (possibly the user's personal account) and writes under the wrong
identity. The login value is pinned per-project in `.claude/settings.local.json`
under `env.GITEA_LOGIN`. Only `tea logins list` and `tea --version/--help` are
exempt from the guard.
## How to use
1. Identify the entity in the request: issues, pulls, labels, milestones,
releases, times, repos, branches, actions, webhooks, comments,
notifications, etc.
2. Find the matching command in the index below.
3. Run it via Bash with the login, e.g.
`tea issues list --login "$GITEA_LOGIN" --repo owner/repo --state open`.
`tea` auto-detects owner/repo from `$PWD` inside a git repo; otherwise pass
`--repo owner/repo` (or `-r`). Login is **not** auto-detected — it is pinned
per-project (see `/tea:login`). Config lives in `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/tea`.
## Index
- [tea CLI overview](references/tea/index.md) — global flags, common options, output formats
- [ENTITIES](references/tea/entities.md) — issues, pulls, labels, milestones, releases, times, repos, branches, actions, webhooks, comment
- [HELPERS](references/tea/helpers.md) — open, notifications, clone, api
- [MISC](references/tea/misc.md) — whoami, admin
- [SETUP](references/tea/setup.md) — logins, logout, ssh-keys
## Rich payloads — write to `$PWD/tmp/` first, then `tea api`
Entity subcommands (`tea comment`, `tea issues create`, `tea pulls create`, …)
are built for humans at a TTY. With a large or formatted body they can hang
silently — an empty-looking positional arg triggers `$EDITOR` fallback, or a
scope/confirm prompt waits on a TTY that doesn't exist. The harness eventually
kills the process (e.g. exit 144 = 128 + SIGURG on macOS).
**Rule:** for any non-trivial body (multi-line, or containing markdown / code
fences / backticks / pipes / tables), bypass entity commands. Save the full
request payload to `$PWD/tmp/` first, then POST via `tea api`.
### Procedure
1. Ensure the target dir exists: `mkdir -p tmp/{kind}` where `{kind}` is
`comment`, `issue`, `pull`, `release`, etc.
2. Write the **complete request body as JSON** to `$PWD/tmp/{kind}/<slug>.json`.
One file = one request. Use a quoted heredoc to avoid shell expansion:
```bash
mkdir -p tmp/comment
cat > tmp/comment/issue-60.json <<'EOF'
{"body": "## Heading\n\nMulti-line markdown with `code`, | tables |, and ```fences```."}
EOF
```
Newlines inside the body must be encoded as `\n` in the JSON string. If
composing programmatically, pipe through
`jq -Rs '{body: .}' < body.md > tmp/comment/issue-60.json`.
3. POST with `tea api`, passing the file with `-d @<path>`:
```bash
tea api --login "$GITEA_LOGIN" \
-X POST -d @tmp/comment/issue-60.json \
repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues/60/comments
```
4. Keep the file. `tmp/` should be gitignored; the saved payload is useful for
retries, edits (`PATCH`), and debugging failed posts.
### Common endpoints
| Action | Method + endpoint |
|---|---|
| Comment on issue/PR | `POST repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues/{n}/comments` |
| Edit comment | `PATCH repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues/comments/{id}` |
| Create issue | `POST repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues` |
| Edit issue/PR body or title | `PATCH repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues/{n}` |
| Create PR | `POST repos/{owner}/{repo}/pulls` |
| Create release | `POST repos/{owner}/{repo}/releases` |
Short single-line bodies (e.g. `tea comment 42 "lgtm" --login "$GITEA_LOGIN"`)
are still fine via entity commands.
## Tips
- Pass `-o json` for structured output when parsing programmatically.
- Use `--fields, -f` to narrow columns.
- Pagination: `--page, -p <n>` and `--limit, --lm <n>` (defaults 1 / 30).
- If a `tea` command is blocked by `tea-guard`, you forgot `--login` or
`$GITEA_LOGIN` is unset — add the flag or run `/tea:login`.