clanker-agent/packages/coding-agent/docs/packages.md
Harivansh Rathi 67168d8289 chore: rebrand companion-os to clanker-agent
- Rename all package names from companion-* to clanker-*
- Update npm scopes from @mariozechner to @harivansh-afk
- Rename config directories .companion -> .clanker
- Rename environment variables COMPANION_* -> CLANKER_*
- Update all documentation, README files, and install scripts
- Rename package directories (companion-channels, companion-grind, companion-teams)
- Update GitHub URLs to harivansh-afk/clanker-agent
- Preserve full git history from companion-cloud monorepo
2026-03-26 16:22:52 -04:00

7.4 KiB

clanker can help you create clanker packages. Ask it to bundle your extensions, skills, prompt templates, or themes.

Clanker Packages

Clanker packages bundle extensions, skills, prompt templates, and themes so you can share them through npm or git. A package can declare resources in package.json under the clanker key, or use conventional directories.

Table of Contents

Install and Manage

Security: Clanker packages run with full system access. Extensions execute arbitrary code, and skills can instruct the model to perform any action including running executables. Review source code before installing third-party packages.

clanker install npm:@foo/bar@1.0.0
clanker install git:github.com/user/repo@v1
clanker install https://github.com/user/repo  # raw URLs work too
clanker install /absolute/path/to/package
clanker install ./relative/path/to/package

clanker remove npm:@foo/bar
clanker list    # show installed packages from settings
clanker update  # update all non-pinned packages

By default, install and remove write to global settings (~/.clanker/agent/settings.json). Use -l to write to project settings (.clanker/settings.json) instead. Project settings can be shared with your team, and clanker installs any missing packages automatically on startup.

To try a package without installing it, use --extension or -e. This installs to a temporary directory for the current run only:

clanker -e npm:@foo/bar
clanker -e git:github.com/user/repo

Package Sources

Clanker accepts three source types in settings and clanker install.

npm

npm:@scope/pkg@1.2.3
npm:pkg
  • Versioned specs are pinned and skipped by clanker update.
  • Global installs use npm install -g.
  • Project installs go under .clanker/npm/.

git

git:github.com/user/repo@v1
git:git@github.com:user/repo@v1
https://github.com/user/repo@v1
ssh://git@github.com/user/repo@v1
  • Without git: prefix, only protocol URLs are accepted (https://, http://, ssh://, git://).
  • With git: prefix, shorthand formats are accepted, including github.com/user/repo and git@github.com:user/repo.
  • HTTPS and SSH URLs are both supported.
  • SSH URLs use your configured SSH keys automatically (respects ~/.ssh/config).
  • For non-interactive runs (for example CI), you can set GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT=0 to disable credential prompts and set GIT_SSH_COMMAND (for example ssh -o BatchMode=yes -o ConnectTimeout=5) to fail fast.
  • Refs pin the package and skip clanker update.
  • Cloned to ~/.clanker/agent/git/<host>/<path> (global) or .clanker/git/<host>/<path> (project).
  • Runs npm install after clone or pull if package.json exists.

SSH examples:

# git@host:path shorthand (requires git: prefix)
clanker install git:git@github.com:user/repo

# ssh:// protocol format
clanker install ssh://git@github.com/user/repo

# With version ref
clanker install git:git@github.com:user/repo@v1.0.0

Local Paths

/absolute/path/to/package
./relative/path/to/package

Local paths point to files or directories on disk and are added to settings without copying. Relative paths are resolved against the settings file they appear in. If the path is a file, it loads as a single extension. If it is a directory, clanker loads resources using package rules.

Creating a Clanker Package

Add a clanker manifest to package.json or use conventional directories. Include the clanker-package keyword for discoverability.

{
  "name": "my-package",
  "keywords": ["clanker-package"],
  "clanker": {
    "extensions": ["./extensions"],
    "skills": ["./skills"],
    "prompts": ["./prompts"],
    "themes": ["./themes"]
  }
}

Paths are relative to the package root. Arrays support glob patterns and !exclusions.

The package gallery displays packages tagged with clanker-package. Add video or image fields to show a preview:

{
  "name": "my-package",
  "keywords": ["clanker-package"],
  "clanker": {
    "extensions": ["./extensions"],
    "video": "https://example.com/demo.mp4",
    "image": "https://example.com/screenshot.png"
  }
}
  • video: MP4 only. On desktop, autoplays on hover. Clicking opens a fullscreen player.
  • image: PNG, JPEG, GIF, or WebP. Displayed as a static preview.

If both are set, video takes precedence.

Package Structure

Convention Directories

If no clanker manifest is present, clanker auto-discovers resources from these directories:

  • extensions/ loads .ts and .js files
  • skills/ recursively finds SKILL.md folders and loads top-level .md files as skills
  • prompts/ loads .md files
  • themes/ loads .json files

Dependencies

Third party runtime dependencies belong in dependencies in package.json. Dependencies that do not register extensions, skills, prompt templates, or themes also belong in dependencies. When clanker installs a package from npm or git, it runs npm install, so those dependencies are installed automatically.

Clanker bundles core packages for extensions and skills. If you import any of these, list them in peerDependencies with a "*" range and do not bundle them: @mariozechner/clanker-ai, @mariozechner/clanker-agent-core, @mariozechner/clanker-coding-agent, @mariozechner/clanker-tui, @sinclair/typebox.

Other clanker packages must be bundled in your tarball. Add them to dependencies and bundledDependencies, then reference their resources through node_modules/ paths. Clanker loads packages with separate module roots, so separate installs do not collide or share modules.

Example:

{
  "dependencies": {
    "shitty-extensions": "^1.0.1"
  },
  "bundledDependencies": ["shitty-extensions"],
  "clanker": {
    "extensions": ["extensions", "node_modules/shitty-extensions/extensions"],
    "skills": ["skills", "node_modules/shitty-extensions/skills"]
  }
}

Package Filtering

Filter what a package loads using the object form in settings:

{
  "packages": [
    "npm:simple-pkg",
    {
      "source": "npm:my-package",
      "extensions": ["extensions/*.ts", "!extensions/legacy.ts"],
      "skills": [],
      "prompts": ["prompts/review.md"],
      "themes": ["+themes/legacy.json"]
    }
  ]
}

+path and -path are exact paths relative to the package root.

  • Omit a key to load all of that type.
  • Use [] to load none of that type.
  • !pattern excludes matches.
  • +path force-includes an exact path.
  • -path force-excludes an exact path.
  • Filters layer on top of the manifest. They narrow down what is already allowed.

Enable and Disable Resources

Use clanker config to enable or disable extensions, skills, prompt templates, and themes from installed packages and local directories. Works for both global (~/.clanker/agent) and project (.clanker/) scopes.

Scope and Deduplication

Packages can appear in both global and project settings. If the same package appears in both, the project entry wins. Identity is determined by:

  • npm: package name
  • git: repository URL without ref
  • local: resolved absolute path