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leonardo-lb

doc-system-generator

by LeoNardo-LB · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install doc-system-generator
Description
Analyze any software project and generate a complete, well-structured documentation system with three-track philosophy (Intent/Contract/Constraint), intellig...
README (SKILL.md)

Doc System Generator

Analyze any project → derive optimal grouping → generate complete Markdown documentation system → self-check completeness.

Workflow

Phase 0: Environment Probe

  1. Detect existing docs: Check for docs/, doc/, documentation/, or any .md files at project root
  2. Detect entry file: Check for AGENTS.md, CLAUDE.md, GEMINI.md, README.md
  3. Decision point:
    • Existing docs found → present two equal options to user (no default):
      • Option A: Respect existing structure + suggest improvements
      • Option B: Full redesign from scratch
    • No existing docs → proceed directly to Phase 1
  4. Deploy tool: Copy scripts/md-sections.sh to project's scripts/ directory (create if needed)
    • Fallback: If md-sections.sh fails (corrupted Markdown, exotic separators), use AI Agent's native Read/Grep tools directly. No additional parser needed.
    • Scope boundary: Online documentation platforms (Notion, Confluence, GitBook) are out of scope — they require API tokens and have their own navigation

Phase 1: Project Analysis

  1. Detect explicit boundaries (🤖 automatic):
    • Scan build files → extract modules/packages/subprojects list
    • Scan directory structure → identify hierarchy pattern
    • Detect entry files → determine application boundaries
  2. Identify architecture pattern (🤖👤 semi-automatic):
    • Analyze code organization → match pattern (layered/ECS/microservice/pipeline/plugin/SPA/embedded)
    • Analyze dependency direction → determine coupling style
    • Analyze test structure → identify concern separation
  3. Identify cross-cutting concerns (🤖👤 semi-automatic):
    • Scan config files → extract concerns (CI, security, i18n, testing, deployment)
    • Analyze code patterns → identify concerns (error handling, logging, caching)
    • Analyze dependencies → list framework capabilities
  4. Optional field research: If unfamiliar project type or user requests, search for industry documentation practices for this tech stack/domain. Use results as hints only, not mandates.

Output: Project Profile (JSON) containing: techStack, modules, architecture, concerns. Show Phase 1 reasoning to user before proceeding.

For detailed signal tables and detection methods, see grouping-detection.md.

Phase 2: Grouping Derivation

  1. Derive grouping dimensions from Phase 1 results:
    • Module boundaries → basis for "module" document grouping
    • Architecture pattern → basis for "architecture" document grouping
    • Cross-cutting concerns → basis for "standards/conventions" document grouping
  2. Quality check (以职责为核心):
    • Cohesion: Do documents in each group answer the same class of questions?
    • Independence: Does each group carry a distinct documentation responsibility?
    • Discoverability: Can readers locate documents by intent?
  3. Present derivation to user: Show reasoning process + result. User confirms or adjusts.

Phase 3: Template Derivation

Key principle: Three-track system is the foundation. Read three-track-philosophy.md for full philosophy.

  1. Classify each document group into tracks:

    • 🔴 Intent: Records design intent (frozen after creation)
    • 🟢 Contract: Follows code (code → doc alignment)
    • 🔵 Constraint: Drives code (doc → code alignment)
  2. Determine template flexibility for each group:

    Documents answer same class of questions?
    ├── No  → Flexibility 1: Fully Independent
    └── Yes → Reader expectations identical?
             ├── Yes → Flexibility 3: Fully Unified
             └── No  → Shared core but unique needs?
                      ├── Yes → Flexibility 4: Mixed (unified shell + free core)
                      └── No  → Flexibility 2: Shell Unified
    
  3. Generate fixed shell (three tiers):

    • Required: Title + one-sentence purpose + 📋 TOC + track label (🔴/🟢/🔵)
    • Recommended: Overview/background + related docs
    • Optional: Change history (Contract track) / Checklist (Constraint track) / Mermaid diagram
  4. Derive core chapters:

    • Primary path: Reader questions → chapter names (per track's typical reader questions)
    • Secondary path: Code patterns → supplementary technical chapters
    • Optional: Field research for domain-specific chapter conventions
  5. Present templates to user: Show derived templates per group. User confirms or adjusts.

For detailed template derivation methods, see template-derivation.md.

Phase 4: Document Generation

  1. Generate entry file (AGENTS.md or equivalent):

    • Documentation system overview (tech stack summary, module structure)
    • Core coding rules extracted from Constraint track
    • Document index with reference strength (⛔ MUST / ⚠️ SHOULD / 💡 MAY)
    • Layered disclosure rule as highest priority constraint
  2. Generate meta-system doc (docs/README.md):

    • Three-track system definition
    • Seven writing principles (see Constraints below)
    • Template descriptions
    • Navigation index
    • Maintenance governance (🤖/🤖👤/👤 classification)
    • Anti-pattern warnings
  3. Generate group README for each group directory:

    • Template description + writing guide
    • Document list with one-sentence purpose each
  4. Generate all documents per derived templates:

    • Apply fixed shell + core chapters
    • Fill with analyzed project content
    • Add cross-references between related documents
    • Add track labels and reference strength annotations
  5. Write layered disclosure rule into entry file:

    ## ⛔ Documentation Loading Rules (Highest Priority)
    For documents exceeding 200 lines:
    Step 1: Run `scripts/md-sections.sh \x3Cfile>` for JSON structure
    Step 2: Run `scripts/md-sections.sh \x3Cfile> "Section Name"` to extract specific content
    PROHIBITED: Reading full document content in one operation
    

Phase 5: Completeness Self-Check

  1. Run structural checks (S1-S7, 🤖 automatic):
    • S1: Template compliance — all fixed sections present
    • S2: TOC accuracy — 📋 matches actual sections
    • S3: Cross-references — all links point to existing targets
    • S4: Entry index coverage — entry file references all documents
    • S5: Track labels — all documents labeled
    • S6: Reference strength — all index entries annotated
    • S7: Change history — all Contract-track docs have it
  2. Run content checks (C1-C6, 🤖👤 semi-automatic):
    • C1: Code references exist — mentioned entities found in codebase
    • C2: API signatures match — documented APIs match code
    • C3: Data models match — documented models match code
    • C4: Config items match — documented configs match code
    • C5: Version numbers match — documented versions match build files
    • C6: Semantic consistency — documented behavior matches code (deep mode only)
    • Record detection methods derived for C2-C5 in project metadata (for contract-doc-sync reuse)
  3. Run system health checks (H1-H5, 👤 human judgment):
    • H1: Module coverage — every code module has a document
    • H2: Concern coverage — every concern has a standards document
    • H3: Responsibility uniqueness — no two documents answer the same question
    • H4: No information islands — every document is referenced by at least one other
    • H5: Industry benchmark — field research coverage comparison
  4. Output self-check report using fixed template (see completeness-checklist.md for full template).

Phase 6: User Confirmation

  1. Present full results: generated file list + self-check report
  2. Iterate on user feedback: adjust grouping, templates, or content as needed

Constraints

Writing Principles (for all generated documents)

  1. Single Responsibility: Every document has exactly one purpose, expressible in one sentence. If two documents answer the same question → merge or re-split.
  2. Layered Disclosure: Documents exceeding 200 lines require structure-first access. Always include 📋 TOC section. Within a single session, parse the same file's structure only once — reuse the parsed tree for subsequent extractions.
  3. Hierarchy Limit: Section depth must not exceed L3 (###). L3 for fine-grained subdivisions only.
  4. Link Over Copy: When content from another document is needed, use Markdown links — never copy content.
  5. Positive Constraints: Write rules as "do X" with specifics, not "don't do Y". Pair safety-critical negatives with positive alternatives.
  6. Track Labeling: Every document carries a track label (🔴/🟢/🔵) in its header.
  7. Reference Strength: Every document entry in index files carries a strength annotation (⛔/⚠️/💡).

Maintenance Classification (for generated governance sections)

Level Marker Trigger Example
🤖 Deterministic Direct fix 1:1 mappable from code API signature change → update API reference
🤖👤 Semi-deterministic [pending confirmation] Requires intent understanding Business logic change → update description
👤 Creative Skip, report Requires original thinking New module → create new document

Format Rules

  • All generated documents use Markdown format exclusively
  • Use Mermaid diagrams for architecture and flow documentation
  • Use numbered tables for API/configuration references
  • Entry file (AGENTS.md): concise, constraint summary + document index only
  • Meta-system doc (docs/README.md): self-describing, includes all governance rules

Examples

Example 1: Java Spring Boot multi-module project

→ 1. Phase 0: No existing docs → proceed directly → 2. Phase 1: Detect Maven modules (common, client-cache, client-oss, app), identify layered architecture, find concerns (auth, caching, storage, testing) → 3. Phase 2: Derive 3 groups: architecture/ (by question), conventions/ (by concern), modules/ (by module) → 4. Phase 3: architecture=Flexibility 1, conventions=Flexibility 2, modules=Flexibility 3. Intent track in openspec/specs/, Contract in docs/modules/+docs/architecture/, Constraint in docs/conventions/+AGENTS.md → 5. Phase 4: Generate 22 documents + AGENTS.md + docs/README.md + group READMEs → 6. Phase 5: S1-S7 all pass. C2-C5 use Java-specific detection (annotations, pom.xml). H5: compare against Spring Boot doc conventions → 7. Phase 6: User confirms

Example 2: React component library, existing messy docs/

→ 1. Phase 0: Existing docs/ with disorganized files → present two options → user chooses "Full redesign" → 2. Phase 1: Detect npm workspaces, identify component structure, find concerns (styling, accessibility, testing, i18n) → 3. Phase 2: Derive groups: components/ (by component), guides/ (by concern), architecture/ (by question) → 4. Phase 3: components=Flexibility 3 (all need Overview/Props/Events/Examples), guides=Flexibility 2, architecture=Flexibility 4 → 5. Phase 4: Generate documents. Field research reveals Storybook conventions → incorporate Props/Events/Accessibility chapters → 6. Phase 5: S4 finds entry file missing 3 new docs → fix. H5: accessibility docs missing → flag → 7. Phase 6: User adds accessibility concern → regenerate

Example 3: Game engine (Unreal)

→ 1. Phase 0: No existing docs → 2. Phase 1: Detect CMake/workspace modules, identify ECS + Game Loop pattern, find concerns (performance, memory, scripting, asset pipeline) → 3. Phase 2: Derive 4 groups: systems/ (AI, rendering, physics, audio), pipelines/ (asset, build, CI), guides/ (scripting, performance, debugging), architecture/ (overview, patterns, memory model) → 4. Phase 3: systems=Flexibility 4 (unified shell: Overview/Integration/Performance, but unique chapters: AI has Behavior Tree, Rendering has Shader Pipeline) → 5. Phase 4: Generate. Field research: Unreal docs commonly cover Blueprints, C++ API, Performance budgets → incorporate → 6. Phase 5: H1 finds 2 subsystems without docs → flag for user → 7. Phase 6: User confirms


Verification

After completing the workflow:

  1. File existence: All planned documents were created (check with ls -la docs/ recursively)
  2. Structure valid: Run scripts/md-sections.sh \x3Ceach-file> → verify TOC sections exist
  3. Entry index complete: Entry file references all generated documents
  4. Cross-references valid: No broken Markdown links between documents
  5. Self-check report clean: S1-S7 all pass; C1-C6 reviewed; H1-H5 acknowledged by user
  6. Track consistency: Each document's track label matches its actual time/direction behavior

If any check fails → diagnose, fix, re-verify. If user disagrees with grouping/templates → iterate from corresponding Phase.


Resources

File When to Read
three-track-philosophy.md Phase 3 — Need to explain track classification or writing philosophy to user
grouping-detection.md Phase 1-2 — Need detailed signal tables, architecture patterns, or quality criteria
template-derivation.md Phase 3 — Need detailed flexibility judgment, fixed shell definition, or chapter derivation methods
completeness-checklist.md Phase 5-6 — Need 18-dimension checklist details, dependency order, or report template

Scripts

Script Purpose
scripts/md-sections.sh Markdown chapter parser with three operations: (1) md-sections.sh \x3Cfile> → JSON structure tree, (2) md-sections.sh \x3Cfile> "Section" → extract section content, (3) md-sections.sh \x3Cfile> --line \x3CN> → locate section by line number. Deploy to project's scripts/ in Phase 0

Complementary Skills

Skill Relationship
contract-doc-sync Maintenance partner: This skill = architect (one-time generation), contract-doc-sync = property manager (ongoing drift detection + sync). This skill's generated detection configs can be reused by contract-doc-sync
Usage Guidance
This skill appears coherent for generating a documentation system. Before installing/running it: (1) Review scripts/md-sections.sh (it is small and benign parsing code) and the SKILL.md to confirm you are comfortable with the agent reading project files. (2) Be aware the skill will scan your repository (source, build files, configs and Markdown) — do not run it on repos that contain secrets or sensitive data unless you trust the environment. (3) The skill will copy a script into the project's scripts/ directory (it will write files to the repo); back up or run in a branch/sandbox if you want to avoid modifying main history. (4) If you want to avoid any network lookups, decline the optional field-research step or restrict network access. (5) Because the agent can be invoked autonomously by default, limit permissions or require human confirmation in workflows where automatic modifications would be undesirable.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: doc-system-generator Version: 1.0.0 The 'doc-system-generator' bundle is a sophisticated tool designed to analyze software projects and generate structured Markdown documentation. It includes a utility script, 'scripts/md-sections.sh', used for parsing large Markdown files to optimize AI context usage, and several reference files outlining a 'three-track' documentation philosophy. While the skill performs file system operations (reading code and writing documentation/scripts), these actions are consistent with its stated purpose. No evidence of data exfiltration, malicious command execution, or harmful prompt injection was found.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description match the requested actions: scanning the repo, deriving groupings/templates, and generating Markdown docs. The provided helper script (md-sections.sh) and the reference docs are directly relevant to parsing and checking Markdown; no unrelated binaries or credentials are requested.
Instruction Scope
Instructions explicitly ask the agent to scan build files, config files, directory structure, and all Markdown in the project (which is appropriate for generating docs). It also directs copying scripts/md-sections.sh into the project's scripts/ directory (i.e., making a write to the repo). The SKILL.md allows optional online field research (network access) when needed. These behaviors are consistent with the purpose but do mean the agent will read/write repository contents and may perform network lookups if invoked.
Install Mechanism
No install spec; this is instruction-only plus a small bash helper included in the bundle. The helper is a local script (no downloads or external installers), so install risk is low.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, no primary credential, and no config path requirements. The runtime instructions read repository files and may use the included script, which is proportionate to its stated doc-generation purpose.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill is not marked always:true, does not request persistent system privileges, and does not modify other skills or global agent settings. It does write a helper script into the project's scripts/ directory (normal for a repo-targeted utility).
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install doc-system-generator
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /doc-system-generator
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
doc-system-generator 1.0.0 – Initial Release - Introduces a five-phase workflow to analyze software projects and generate a complete documentation system. - Uses a three-track philosophy (Intent, Contract, Constraint) for classifying and templating documentation. - Provides intelligent grouping based on project analysis, architecture, and cross-cutting concerns. - Generates Markdown templates and entry files, including self-check procedures for structural and content completeness. - Includes an 18-dimension self-check for documentation quality and coverage. - Designed for both new projects and redesigning existing documentation systems.
Metadata
Slug doc-system-generator
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is doc-system-generator?

Analyze any software project and generate a complete, well-structured documentation system with three-track philosophy (Intent/Contract/Constraint), intellig... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 85 downloads so far.

How do I install doc-system-generator?

Run "/install doc-system-generator" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is doc-system-generator free?

Yes, doc-system-generator is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does doc-system-generator support?

doc-system-generator is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created doc-system-generator?

It is built and maintained by LeoNardo-LB (@leonardo-lb); the current version is v1.0.0.

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