config-gc
Garbage collection for your Claude Code configuration. Periodically scans ~/.claude (skills, memory, hooks, permissions, MCP servers, caches) for redundant, stale, orphaned, or low-value items, then walks the user through a confirm-each-deletion cleanup. Use when the user says "clean up my config", "config GC", "too many skills", "audit my setup", "my .claude is bloated", or asks for a periodic config review.
How do I install this agent skill?
npx skills add https://github.com/affaan-m/everything-claude-code --skill config-gcIs this agent skill safe to install?
- Gen Agent Trust Hubpass
This skill provides a structured approach for auditing and cleaning up the Claude Code configuration directory (~/.claude). It uses standard shell utilities to identify and remove redundant skills, memory files, and permission entries. The design incorporates security best practices including mandatory human confirmation for deletions, soft-delete mechanisms, and detailed audit logging.
- Socketpass
No alerts
- Snykpass
Risk: LOW · No issues
What does this agent skill do?
Config GC — Garbage Collection for Claude Code Setups
Borrowed from runtime garbage collection: periodically scan for objects that are no longer referenced, redundant, expired, or low-value, and reclaim the space. The critical difference: here, collection requires a human in the loop. Never delete autonomously.
When to Activate
- The user asks to clean up, audit, or slim down their Claude Code configuration
- The user complains about too many skills, noisy hooks, or slow session startup
- A monthly/periodic config review is due
- After installing a large skill pack (e.g. this repo), to reconcile overlaps with existing setup
Do NOT activate for: cleaning project source code (that's refactoring), clearing chat history, or uninstalling Claude Code itself.
Design Philosophy
- Append-only configs leak. Skills, memory files, hooks, and permission entries only ever get added. Without periodic review they rot silently.
- Regular audits beat one-time purges. Scan every ~30 days, propose a small batch of candidates each time.
- Per-channel strategies. Each accumulation type (skills, hooks, permissions, ...) has its own staleness signals — don't apply one rule everywhere.
- Soft-delete first. Rename to
.disabled> move to~/.claude/_gc_trash/> real deletion. Always keep an undo path. - Forced human-in-the-loop. Every candidate gets its own
[y/n/skip]confirmation. No "yes to all" shortcut. - Keep a log. Every GC run appends to
~/.claude/gc_log.md: what was touched, why, and how to undo it.
Scan Channels
| # | Channel | Path | Staleness / redundancy signals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Skills | ~/.claude/skills/*/ | Heavily overlapping names; never triggered in recent transcripts; domain mismatch with the user's actual work; broken or empty SKILL.md |
| 2 | Memory | ~/.claude/**/memory/*.md + its index | Multiple index entries for one topic; contents contradicting newer entries; dates that have passed; orphan files missing from the index; sub-100-word fragments that should merge |
| 3 | Hooks | ~/.claude/hooks/ + settings | Scripts present on disk but referenced by no hook config; old versions superseded by rewrites |
| 4 | Permissions | permissions.allow in settings.json / settings.local.json | Duplicate entries; specific entries already covered by a wildcard (e.g. Bash(git push) when Bash(*) is allowed); one-off grants from past experiments |
| 5 | MCP servers | ~/.claude.json or project .mcp.json | Servers that fail to connect; functional duplicates; long-unused |
| 6 | Scheduled reminders / jobs | wherever the user keeps them | Fired one-shots older than 30 days; jobs whose target scripts no longer exist |
| 7 | Project history | ~/.claude/projects/*/ | Stale handoff snapshots; session records superseded by newer state |
| 8 | Runtime caches | cache/, file-history/, logs/, shell-snapshots/ | Sort by size and mtime; propose items >30 days old and large |
Workflow
- Scan all channels (or the subset the user names). Collect candidates with: path, channel, signal that flagged it, size, last-modified.
- Rank by confidence (broken/orphaned = high; merely old = low) and present as a numbered table. Cap each run at ~20 candidates — GC is periodic, not exhaustive.
- Confirm one by one. For each candidate show the evidence, then ask
[y/n/skip]. The user can stop at any point. - Soft-delete confirmed items: prefer
.disabledrename for skills/hooks and_gc_trash/<date>/move for files. Permission entries live in JSON (no comments possible): back up the settings file, record each removed entry verbatim ingc_log.md, then remove it from theallowarray withjq. Only hard-delete when the user explicitly asks. - Log the run to
~/.claude/gc_log.md: timestamp, items actioned, undo instructions. - Report: reclaimed size, channels still healthy, suggested next review date.
Example Scan Commands
Orphaned hook scripts (channel 3) — scripts on disk that no hook config references:
for f in ~/.claude/hooks/*; do
name=$(basename "$f")
grep -rq "$name" ~/.claude/settings.json ~/.claude/settings.local.json 2>/dev/null \
|| echo "ORPHAN: $f"
done
Redundant permission entries (channel 4) — duplicates, and specific grants shadowed by a wildcard:
jq -r '.permissions.allow[]' ~/.claude/settings.local.json | sort | uniq -d
if jq -e '.permissions.allow | index("Bash(*)")' ~/.claude/settings.local.json >/dev/null; then
jq -r '.permissions.allow[]' ~/.claude/settings.local.json \
| grep '^Bash(' | grep -vF 'Bash(*)'
fi
Largest stale caches (channel 8) — du -k instead of GNU-only find -printf, so it works on macOS/BSD too:
find ~/.claude/file-history ~/.claude/shell-snapshots -type f -mtime +30 \
-exec du -k {} + 2>/dev/null | sort -rn | head -20
Soft-delete with undo path (capture the date once so the log can't disagree with the directory):
gc_date=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
mkdir -p ~/.claude/_gc_trash/$gc_date
mv ~/.claude/skills/dead-skill ~/.claude/_gc_trash/$gc_date/
echo "$(date -Iseconds) moved skills/dead-skill -> _gc_trash/$gc_date/ (undo: mv back)" >> ~/.claude/gc_log.md
Removing a confirmed-redundant permission entry (JSON has no comments — back up, log, then edit):
cp ~/.claude/settings.local.json ~/.claude/settings.local.json.bak
echo "$(date -Iseconds) removed permission entry: Bash(git push) (undo: restore from .bak or re-add)" >> ~/.claude/gc_log.md
jq '.permissions.allow -= ["Bash(git push)"]' ~/.claude/settings.local.json.bak \
> ~/.claude/settings.local.json
Anti-Patterns
- Bulk approval. Asking "delete all 15? [y/n]" defeats the design. One item, one decision.
- Hard-deleting on first pass. If there's no
_gc_trash/copy or.disabledrename, you did it wrong. - Treating "old" as "dead". A skill untouched for 60 days may be seasonal (tax season, quarterly reviews). Age is a signal, not a verdict — that's why a human confirms.
- Cleaning memory by truncation. Merging two contradicting memory files requires reading both and keeping the newer truth, not deleting the longer one.
- Touching anything outside
~/.claude(or the project's.claude/). Config GC never wanders into source trees.
Best Practices
- Run after big additions, not just on a calendar: installing a 50-skill pack is exactly when overlap with existing skills appears.
- When two skills overlap, prefer disabling the one with the weaker trigger description — it's the one that was probably never firing anyway.
- Permission cleanup is the highest-value channel per minute spent: redundant allow-entries make security review harder.
- Keep
gc_log.mdforever. It's tiny, and "when did I disable that hook and why" comes up more often than you'd think.
Related Skills
skill-stocktake— audits skill quality; config-gc audits skill existence. Run stocktake on what survives GC.workspace-surface-audit— the additive counterpart: recommends what to install. config-gc is the subtractive half of the same lifecycle.configure-ecc— after installing skills with it, run config-gc to reconcile overlaps with your pre-existing setup.continuous-learning— produces the memory files this skill later audits.security-review— pairs well with the permissions channel.
How can the creator link this skill?
Add the canonical catalog link to the repository README so users can inspect current installs and available audits. The publishing guide covers the complete discovery path.
<a href="https://skillzs.dev/skills/affaan-m/everything-claude-code/config-gc">View config-gc on skillZs</a>