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amelnagdy/delegate-skills28 installs

agy-delegate

Delegate a coding task to the Google Antigravity CLI (`agy`) as a background implementer, then review its diff and land it yourself. Use this whenever the user wants to hand implementation work to Antigravity or agy - phrasings like "have Antigravity do X", "delegate this to agy", "run it through agy", or "use Antigravity to implement/fix/refactor" - or wants to run a queue of coding tasks through agy while staying the reviewer. DO NOT USE for tasks small enough to do inline, or when the user wants the code written directly without delegating.

How do I install this agent skill?

npx skills add https://github.com/amelnagdy/delegate-skills --skill agy-delegate
view source ↗

Is this agent skill safe to install?

  • Gen Agent Trust Hubpass

    A utility for delegating coding tasks to the Google Antigravity CLI (`agy`). It includes a relay script to manage execution, capture results, and provide a structured interface for orchestrating agents to review and land changes.

  • Socketpass

    No alerts

  • Snykpass

    Risk: LOW · No issues

What does this agent skill do?

Antigravity Delegate

You are the orchestrator. This skill lets you hand a bounded coding task to a separate implementer - the Google Antigravity CLI (agy) - then review what it produced and land it yourself. You write the brief and own the judgment; Antigravity does the typing in its own conversation; you verify and commit.

Nothing here is specific to one orchestrating agent. The loop needs only the ability to run a shell command and read a file, so any comparable agent can drive it. It is designed for and run on Claude Code; treat other orchestrators as designed-for, not yet proven.

When NOT to use this

  • The task is small enough to just do inline - delegation overhead is not worth it.
  • The agy CLI is not installed or not authenticated. Install it from Antigravity's CLI docs and run the first-launch setup.
  • You want to write the code yourself, or you only need a review without edits. This relay does not expose a proven CLI-enforced read-only mode yet.

Prerequisites (check once)

  1. agy help succeeds. If not, install the Antigravity CLI and complete first-launch setup.
  2. agy models succeeds. That proves the CLI can authenticate and list the available model labels.
  3. You are in (or will point --cd at) the target git repository.

Choose the implementer model

agy has a configured default model, so --model is optional. Use it when the human has a preferred Antigravity model label for the task. Otherwise let Antigravity use its own current default rather than guessing.

The loop

Run these five steps per task. Steps 1, 4, and 5 are your judgment; 2 and 3 are mechanical.

1. Write the brief

Antigravity sees only the text you send plus what it can inspect in the workspace - no chat history, no shared context. Everything the task needs goes in the brief: the goal, the current state, what to change, what to leave untouched, the project's actual gate commands, and a report contract. Tell Antigravity it will not commit (you will). Keep one task per brief. Full guidance and a template: references/writing-the-brief.md.

2. Dispatch

Send the brief to Antigravity with the bundled helper. It wraps agy --print, captures the run, and writes a structured result.json - so your only job is "run a command, read a file." (<skill-dir> below is this skill's installed directory - the folder containing this SKILL.md.)

node "<skill-dir>/scripts/relay.mjs" --brief brief.txt --cd /path/to/repo
# choose a model label:                 add --model "<label from agy models>"
# enable Antigravity terminal sandbox:  add --sandbox
# resume the most recent conversation:  add --resume-last  (delta brief only)
# see all options:                      node .../relay.mjs --help

The helper starts a fresh Antigravity project by default and passes --add-dir <repo> (the --cd path, absolute) so agy has an explicit workspace. It does not pass --dangerously-skip-permissions by default. Mechanics, flags, and the result.json shape: references/dispatch-and-poll.md.

3. Wait for completion

The helper blocks until Antigravity finishes, so back it with whatever your orchestrator offers and resume when it returns:

  • Claude Code: run the Bash call with run_in_background: true; you are notified on completion.
  • Plain shell / other agents: run it in the foreground for short tasks, or background it and poll the result file.

Do not trust progress trackers over reality: a run is finished when result.json is written and the process has exited. Read the working tree, not a status line.

4. Review - do not trust the self-report

Antigravity's result.json includes its own final message and any gate claims. Re-verify, don't accept:

  • Re-run the project's gates yourself (the test/lint/build commands from step 1).
  • Read the diff against the brief: did Antigravity do what was asked, nothing more and nothing less? touchedFiles in the result is your starting point.
  • Run the relevant guard skills on the diff if you have them installed.
  • For schema/migration changes, round-trip them; for removals, grep for dangling references.

Full checklist: references/review-and-land.md.

5. Land it

The implementer edits the working tree; the orchestrator commits. Only after the gates pass and the diff holds:

  • Commit the verified work yourself, with a clear message.
  • If it needs changes, send a delta brief with --resume-last and review again.

Permission model

Antigravity owns its own permission policy. The relay does not bypass it by default. Use --dangerously-skip-permissions only when the human explicitly accepts that Antigravity may auto-approve tool permission requests. Use --sandbox when you want Antigravity's terminal sandbox enabled for the run. Antigravity's own help says --dangerously-skip-permissions auto-approves all tool permission requests without prompting, including a request to act outside the sandbox. Do not treat --sandbox as an enforced boundary when the flags are combined; treat the run as full access.

Authorization model

Delegation is something the human opts into. Once they have ("run this queue", "proceed"), committing verified, gate-passing work is the agreed contract. Two limits on that mandate: surface, don't absorb (report Antigravity's design decisions, defensible-but-unasked turns, and non-blocking nitpicks rather than silently keeping them) and stop for scope changes (if correct completion needs going beyond the brief, ask - don't expand the mandate yourself). The full treatment is in references/review-and-land.md.

References

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/amelnagdy/delegate-skills/agy-delegate">View agy-delegate on skillZs</a>