/install rtk-token-saver
RTK Token Saver
Use this skill when a task involves shell commands that may produce large output, especially repository inspection, git history, diffs, search, file reading, tests, linting, builds, logs, containers, or package manager output.
RTK is a CLI proxy that filters and compresses command output before it enters the agent context. Prefer RTK when compact output is enough to make the next decision. Use raw commands when exact bytes, full JSON, full logs, cryptographic material, or complete unmodified output is required.
Activation Rules
Use RTK by default for:
- Directory listings and tree-like exploration.
- Git status, diffs, logs, pull, push, and GitHub CLI summaries.
- Search commands across large repositories.
- Reading large files when a concise view is sufficient.
- Test, lint, typecheck, and build commands where failures are the main signal.
- Docker, Kubernetes, AWS, package manager, and log output that may be noisy.
Do not use RTK when:
- The user explicitly asks for raw or complete output.
- The next step requires exact formatting, exact bytes, or complete structured data.
- A command output will be parsed programmatically by another command.
- Security-sensitive values may be exposed; avoid reading secrets at all.
- RTK is not installed or the relevant RTK wrapper fails. Fall back to the native command and keep output scoped.
Install and Verify
Before relying on RTK, check whether it is available:
which rtk
rtk --version
rtk gain
If RTK is missing, do not install it silently. Report that RTK is unavailable and run the native command with the narrowest safe scope.
Command Mapping
Repository and File Exploration
Prefer:
rtk ls .
rtk find "*.ts" .
rtk read path/to/file.ts
rtk read path/to/file.ts -l aggressive
rtk smart path/to/file.ts
Instead of broad raw commands such as:
ls -laR .
find . -type f
cat path/to/large-file.ts
Search
Prefer:
rtk grep "pattern" .
rtk grep "functionName" src
Use native grep, ripgrep, or repository search tools when exact match behavior, line ranges, or complete output is required.
Git
Prefer:
rtk git status
rtk git diff
rtk git diff --stat
rtk git log -n 10
rtk gh pr list
rtk gh pr view 42
Use raw git commands when applying patches, generating exact diffs for review, or feeding output into another tool.
Tests, Lint, Typecheck, and Build
Prefer RTK wrappers for high-noise checks:
rtk test npm test
rtk jest
rtk vitest
rtk pytest
rtk cargo test
rtk go test
rtk lint
rtk tsc
rtk next build
rtk cargo clippy
rtk ruff check
If a compact failure summary is not enough to fix the issue, rerun the smallest failing command natively with flags that show the exact failure.
Logs and Services
Prefer:
rtk docker ps
rtk docker logs \x3Ccontainer>
rtk docker compose ps
rtk kubectl pods
rtk kubectl logs \x3Cpod>
rtk aws logs get-log-events
rtk log path/to/app.log
Use raw output only when full logs are required for auditing, exact reproduction, or external attachment.
Workflow
- Check whether RTK is installed when the task would benefit from compact command output.
- Use the RTK command that corresponds to the native command.
- Inspect the compact output and decide the next smallest action.
- If RTK hides information needed for correctness, rerun the native command with the narrowest scope that exposes the missing detail.
- Record validation commands exactly, including whether RTK or native output was used.
Guardrails
- Never use RTK as an excuse to skip validation.
- Never claim a test, lint, typecheck, or build passed unless the command exit status succeeded.
- Do not use RTK for commands whose output must be consumed exactly by a script or parser.
- Do not run broad commands just because RTK compresses output; keep command scope targeted.
- Respect project-specific tool preferences. If a project provides a preferred test or lint command, wrap that command with RTK only when compact output is appropriate.
Completion Output
When RTK was used for important work, summarize:
- The RTK commands run.
- Whether any native command was rerun for exact output.
- Final validation status.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install rtk-token-saver - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/rtk-token-saver - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Rtk Token Saver?
Use rtk to reduce token usage from common shell, git, search, file-reading, test, build, and lint commands while preserving raw-output fallbacks when exact o... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 12 downloads so far.
How do I install Rtk Token Saver?
Run "/install rtk-token-saver" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Rtk Token Saver free?
Yes, Rtk Token Saver is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Rtk Token Saver support?
Rtk Token Saver is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Rtk Token Saver?
It is built and maintained by clarezoe (@clarezoe); the current version is v1.0.2.