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oracle

🎯Skill

from steipete/clawdis

VibeIndex|
What it does

Bundles prompts and selected files into a single request for contextual code analysis using browser or API engines with GPT models.

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Part of

steipete/clawdis(48 items)

oracle

Installation

npxRun with npx
npx -y @steipete/oracle --help
📖 Extracted from docs: steipete/clawdis
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AddedFeb 4, 2026

Skill Details

SKILL.md

Best practices for using the oracle CLI (prompt + file bundling, engines, sessions, and file attachment patterns).

Overview

# oracle — best use

Oracle bundles your prompt + selected files into one “one-shot” request so another model can answer with real repo context (API or browser automation). Treat output as advisory: verify against code + tests.

Main use case (browser, GPT‑5.2 Pro)

Default workflow here: --engine browser with GPT‑5.2 Pro in ChatGPT. This is the common “long think” path: ~10 minutes to ~1 hour is normal; expect a stored session you can reattach to.

Recommended defaults:

  • Engine: browser (--engine browser)
  • Model: GPT‑5.2 Pro (--model gpt-5.2-pro or --model "5.2 Pro")

Golden path

  1. Pick a tight file set (fewest files that still contain the truth).
  2. Preview payload + token spend (--dry-run + --files-report).
  3. Use browser mode for the usual GPT‑5.2 Pro workflow; use API only when you explicitly want it.
  4. If the run detaches/timeouts: reattach to the stored session (don’t re-run).

Commands (preferred)

  • Help:

- oracle --help

- If the binary isn’t installed: npx -y @steipete/oracle --help (avoid pnpx here; sqlite bindings).

  • Preview (no tokens):

- oracle --dry-run summary -p "" --file "src/" --file "!/.test."

- oracle --dry-run full -p "" --file "src/**"

  • Token sanity:

- oracle --dry-run summary --files-report -p "" --file "src/**"

  • Browser run (main path; long-running is normal):

- oracle --engine browser --model gpt-5.2-pro -p "" --file "src/**"

  • Manual paste fallback:

- oracle --render --copy -p "" --file "src/**"

- Note: --copy is a hidden alias for --copy-markdown.

Attaching files (`--file`)

--file accepts files, directories, and globs. You can pass it multiple times; entries can be comma-separated.

  • Include:

- --file "src/**"

- --file src/index.ts

- --file docs --file README.md

  • Exclude:

- --file "src/" --file "!src//.test.ts" --file "!/.snap"

  • Defaults (implementation behavior):

- Default-ignored dirs: node_modules, dist, coverage, .git, .turbo, .next, build, tmp (skipped unless explicitly passed as literal dirs/files).

- Honors .gitignore when expanding globs.

- Does not follow symlinks.

- Dotfiles filtered unless opted in via pattern (e.g. --file ".github/**").

- Files > 1 MB rejected.

Engines (API vs browser)

  • Auto-pick: api when OPENAI_API_KEY is set; otherwise browser.
  • Browser supports GPT + Gemini only; use --engine api for Claude/Grok/Codex or multi-model runs.
  • Browser attachments:

- --browser-attachments auto|never|always (auto pastes inline up to ~60k chars then uploads).

  • Remote browser host:

- Host: oracle serve --host 0.0.0.0 --port 9473 --token

- Client: oracle --engine browser --remote-host --remote-token -p "" --file "src/**"

Sessions + slugs

  • Stored under ~/.oracle/sessions (override with ORACLE_HOME_DIR).
  • Runs may detach or take a long time (browser + GPT‑5.2 Pro often does). If the CLI times out: don’t re-run; reattach.

- List: oracle status --hours 72

- Attach: oracle session --render

  • Use --slug "<3-5 words>" to keep session IDs readable.
  • Duplicate prompt guard exists; use --force only when you truly want a fresh run.

Prompt template (high signal)

Oracle starts with zero project knowledge. Assume the model cannot infer your stack, build tooling, conventions, or “obvious” paths. Include:

  • Project briefing (stack + build/test commands + platform constraints).
  • “Where things live” (key directories, entrypoints, config files, boundaries).
  • Exact question + what you tried + the error text (verbatim).
  • Constraints (“don’t change X”, “must keep public API”, etc).
  • Desired output (“return patch plan + tests”, “give 3 options with tradeoffs”).

Safety

  • Don’t attach secrets by default (.env, key files, auth tokens). Redact aggressively; share only what’s required.

“Exhaustive prompt” restoration pattern

For long investigations, write a standalone prompt + file set so you can rerun days later:

  • 6–30 sentence project briefing + the goal.
  • Repro steps + exact errors + what you tried.
  • Attach all context files needed (entrypoints, configs, key modules, docs).

Oracle runs are one-shot; the model doesn’t remember prior runs. “Restoring context” means re-running with the same prompt + --file … set (or reattaching a still-running stored session).