nemoclaw-contributor-update-docs

Scan recent git commits for changes that affect user-facing behavior, then draft or update the corresponding documentation pages for release prep. Use when…

npx skills add https://github.com/nvidia/nemoclaw --skill nemoclaw-contributor-update-docs

Update Docs from Commits

Scan recent git history for commits that affect user-facing behavior and draft documentation updates for each.

Prerequisites

  • You must be in the NemoClaw git repository (NemoClaw).
  • The docs/ directory must exist with the current doc set.

When to Use

  • After a batch of features or fixes has landed and docs may be stale.
  • Before a release, to catch any doc gaps.
  • During daily release prep, before opening the release-note docs PR.
  • Before cutting a release tag, so release-note docs land on the same release train.
  • When maintainers run /nemoclaw-contributor-update-docs for vX.Y.Z, treat it as pre-tag release-prep docs for vX.Y.Z unless the tag already exists.
  • After a release only when maintainers missed the pre-tag docs step and need a catch-up PR.
  • When a contributor asks "what docs need updating?"

Step 0: Load the Skip List

Before scanning commits, read docs/.docs-skip if it exists. This file lists features and commits that are merged but should not be documented yet (experimental, under review, etc.).

cat docs/.docs-skip

Parse these sections from the file:

  • skip-features: — substring patterns matched against commit messages and changed file paths. Any commit whose message or file list contains a listed string is excluded.
  • skip-terms: — terms that must never appear in generated documentation. Check all drafted content against this list before writing. If a drafted sentence contains a skip-term, remove that sentence or the entire section. This is a hard gate — no skip-term may appear in any doc output.

Ignore comment lines (starting with #) and inline comments (everything after #).

Keep the loaded skip list in memory for use throughout the skill execution and the whole documentation process.

Step 0.5: Find Release Announcement Notes

When the user asks for release-prep docs for a specific version n (for example 0.0.63), first determine whether this is pre-tag release prep or post-release recovery. For pre-tag release prep, use the draft release plan, maintainer context, PR list, and commit scan as source context because the announcement may not exist yet. For post-release recovery, find the NemoClaw GitHub discussion announcement for that release before drafting release notes. Use any available announcement as source context alongside the commit scan, especially for release themes, PR grouping, contributor thanks, and maintainer wording.

For post-release recovery, or when the user says the announcement already exists, search recent discussions and select the announcement whose title or body references v<n> or NemoClaw v<n>:

gh api graphql -f owner=NVIDIA -f name=NemoClaw -f query='
query($owner: String!, $name: String!) {
  repository(owner: $owner, name: $name) {
    discussions(first: 50, orderBy: {field: CREATED_AT, direction: DESC}) {
      nodes {
        number
        title
        url
        body
        createdAt
        category { name }
      }
    }
  }
}'

Prefer discussions in the Announcements category. If the discussion body is unavailable through gh api, use the GitHub discussion URL supplied by the user or fetch the discussion page content through the available tools. If no matching discussion exists during pre-tag release prep, continue from the commit scan and report that no announcement source was used. If no matching discussion exists during post-release recovery, continue from the commit scan and report the missing announcement in the final summary.

Step 1: Identify Relevant Commits

Determine the commit range. The user may provide one explicitly (e.g., "since v0.1.0" or "last 30 commits"). If not, default to commits since the head of the main branch.

# Commits since a tag
git log v0.1.0..HEAD --oneline --no-merges

# Or last 50 commits
git log -50 --oneline --no-merges

Filter to commits that are likely to affect docs. Apply every rule below before proceeding. A commit excluded by any rule must not produce doc changes.

  1. Commit type: feat, fix, refactor, perf commits often change behavior. docs commits are already doc changes, but still need a review pass when they fall in the scanned range.
  2. Files changed: Changes to nemoclaw/src/, nemoclaw-blueprint/, bin/, scripts/, or policy-related code are high-signal.
  3. Ignore: Changes limited to test/, .github/, or internal-only modules.
  4. Skip list: Exclude any commit whose short hash appears in skip-commits, or whose commit message or changed file paths contain a skip-features substring. Report skipped commits in the final summary under a "Skipped (docs-skip)" heading.
  5. Agent support matrix: Do not document agent support (e.g., Claude Code, OpenHands, Goose) unless the agent is listed in the tested agent support matrix in the quickstart or platform docs. Commits that add or modify agent integration code should only produce doc updates for agents already in the matrix. Report excluded agents under "Skipped (not in agent matrix)" in the summary.
# Show files changed per commit to assess impact
git log v0.1.0..HEAD --oneline --no-merges --name-only

Step 2: Map Commits to Doc Pages

For each relevant commit, determine which doc page(s) it affects. Use this mapping as a starting point:

Code areaLikely doc page(s)
nemoclaw/src/commands/ (launch, connect, status, logs)docs/reference/commands.mdx
nemoclaw/src/commands/ (new command)May need a new page or entry in docs/reference/commands.mdx
nemoclaw/src/blueprint/docs/reference/architecture.mdx
nemoclaw/src/cli.ts or nemoclaw/src/index.tsdocs/reference/commands.mdx, docs/get-started/quickstart.mdx
nemoclaw-blueprint/orchestrator/docs/reference/architecture.mdx
nemoclaw-blueprint/policies/docs/reference/network-policies.mdx
nemoclaw-blueprint/blueprint.yamldocs/reference/architecture.mdx, docs/inference/how-inference-routing-works.mdx
scripts/ (setup, start)docs/get-started/quickstart.mdx
Dockerfiledocs/reference/architecture.mdx
Inference-related changesStart at docs/inference/how-inference-routing-works.mdx, then update the focused provider, model, setup, management, or validation page that owns the behavior.

If a commit does not map to any existing page but introduces a user-visible concept, flag it as needing a new page. If a commit already changes files under docs/, include those pages in the target page list and run a docs review or edit pass against them using the style guidance in Step 5. Do not assume an existing doc change is complete, correctly placed, or style-compliant just because it landed with the source commit.

Step 3: Read the Commit Details

For each commit that needs a doc update, read the full diff to understand the change:

git show <commit-hash> --stat
git show <commit-hash>

Extract:

  • What changed (new flag, renamed command, changed default, new feature).
  • Why it changed (from the commit message body, linked issue, or PR description).
  • Any breaking changes or migration steps.

Step 4: Read the Current Doc Page

Before editing, read the full target doc page to understand its current content and structure. For target pages that were already changed by a scanned commit, compare the committed doc diff against the source behavior and the style guidance before deciding whether to edit further.

Identify where the new content should go. Follow the page's existing structure.

Step 5: Draft the Update

Before writing, verify that the commit was not excluded in Step 1. Do not draft content for commits matched by the skip list or for agent integrations not in the tested agent support matrix. After drafting, scan the content for any skip-terms from docs/.docs-skip. Remove any sentence or section that contains a skip-term. If in doubt, skip the commit and report it.

Write the doc update following these conventions:

  • Active voice, present tense, second person.
  • No unnecessary bold. Reserve bold for UI labels and parameter names.
  • No em dashes unless used sparingly. Prefer commas or separate sentences.
  • Start sections with an introductory sentence that orients the reader.
  • No superlatives. Say what the feature does, not how great it is.
  • Copyable code examples use language-specific fences such as bash, sh, or powershell, without prompt markers.
  • Shared NemoClaw CLI examples use $$nemoclaw. In shared OpenClaw/Hermes variant pages, write host CLI examples with the $$nemoclaw build-time placeholder so the docs build renders nemoclaw on OpenClaw pages and nemohermes on Hermes pages before Fern renders fenced code blocks.
  • Do not duplicate code blocks for binary-name-only differences. Use one fenced block with $$nemoclaw when the only difference is nemoclaw versus nemohermes; keep <AgentOnly> only when the surrounding text, flags, behavior, or setup steps actually differ.
  • Use console only for terminal transcripts that include prompts, output, or interactive sessions.
  • Include the SPDX header if creating a new page.
  • Match existing frontmatter format if creating a new page.
  • Always write NVIDIA in all caps. Wrong: Nvidia, nvidia.
  • Always capitalize NemoClaw correctly. Wrong: nemoclaw (in prose), Nemoclaw.
  • Always capitalize OpenShell correctly. Wrong: openshell (in prose), Openshell, openShell.
  • Do not number section titles. Wrong: "Section 1: Configure Inference" or "Step 3: Verify." Use plain descriptive titles.
  • No colons in titles. Wrong: "Inference: Cloud and Local." Write "Cloud and Local Inference" instead.
  • Use colons only to introduce a list. Do not use colons as general-purpose punctuation between clauses.

When updating an existing page:

  • Add content in the logical place within the existing structure.
  • Do not reorganize sections unless the change requires it.
  • Update any cross-references or "Next Steps" links if relevant.

Release prep only: When updating docs/about/release-notes.mdx:

  • For each release-note bullet that corresponds to a deeper doc page, end the bullet with For more information, refer to [DOC PAGE](/doc/path).
  • Link to the most specific existing page that explains the behavior, command, setup flow, or troubleshooting path.
  • Do not add a link when no deeper page exists or when the only possible target is unrelated or too broad.
  • Keep the source docs link as a normal MDX link so Fern can publish both rendered and Markdown routes.

When creating a new page:

  • Follow the frontmatter template from existing pages in docs/.
  • Add the page to the appropriate navigation entry in docs/index.yml.

Step 6: Present the Results

After drafting all updates, present a summary to the user:

## Doc Updates from Commits

### Updated pages
- `docs/reference/commands.mdx`: Added `eject` command documentation (from commit abc1234).
- `docs/reference/network-policies.mdx`: Updated policy schema for new egress rule (from commit def5678).

### New pages needed
- None (or list any new pages created).

### Skipped (docs-skip)
- `feat(sandbox): add experimental-flag` (abc1234) — matched skip-features: "experimental-flag".

### Commits with no doc impact
- `chore(deps): bump typescript` (abc1234) — internal dependency, no user-facing change.
- `test: add launch command test` (def5678) — test-only change.

Step 7: Apply Release Prep Updates

Skip this step when the user only asked for ordinary doc catch-up and no release prep is involved.

If the user invoked this skill for release prep, finish the release-specific doc work before verification:

  1. Determine the documented release version n from the user's request. If the user did not provide a release version, ask for it before opening the release-prep PR.
  2. For the default pre-tag path, label the PR with the release being prepared. Release labels use vX.Y.Z format. For example, release-note docs for release 0.0.63 use label v0.0.63.
  3. Use the next patch release label only as a post-release recovery fallback when the release tag or announcement already exists and maintainers missed the pre-tag docs step. For example, a catch-up docs PR after release 0.0.63 uses label v0.0.64. Increment only the patch component; if the version is nonstandard or pre-release, ask before choosing a label.
  4. Update .agents/skills/nemoclaw-user-guide/SKILL.md only if the release changes the AI-agent documentation entry points or routing guidance.

Step 8: Build and Verify

After making changes, build the docs locally:

npm run docs

Check for:

  • Build warnings or errors.
  • Broken cross-references.
  • Correct rendering of new content.
  • Markdown documentation routes and navigation still match the changed source pages.

Step 9: Open the Docs PR

Commit changes and open a pull request with a concise summary of the doc updates and a source summary that links each identified merged PR to its matching doc page. Include the PR number, affected doc page, links, and description of the doc change in this shape:

- #<doc-impacting-PR-number> -> `docs/path.mdx`: Description of the doc change reflecting the source code changes in the PR.

Apply the area: docs label and the correct release label so reviewers can identify doc-only changes for the intended release train. Add area: skills only if the PR changes a file under .agents/skills/. When creating the PR with gh pr create, pass the labels. For example, a pre-tag release-note docs PR for 0.0.63 uses --label "area: docs" --label v0.0.63. A post-release recovery docs refresh for 0.0.63 uses --label "area: docs" --label v0.0.64. If the release label does not exist, report that instead of substituting another label. Follow nemoclaw-contributor-create-pr for the PR mechanics, including Git and GitHub Access Hard Stop and PR CI and Automated Review Follow-Up.

Tips

  • When in doubt about whether a commit needs a doc update, check if the commit message references a CLI flag, config option, or user-visible behavior.
  • Group related commits that touch the same doc page into a single update rather than making multiple small edits.
  • If a commit is a breaking change, add a note at the top of the relevant section using a :::{warning} admonition.
  • PRs that are purely internal refactors with no behavior change do not need doc updates, even if they touch high-signal directories.
  • To suppress documentation for a merged feature that is not ready for public docs, add it to docs/.docs-skip. Remove the entry once the feature is ready to document.

Summary of Steps

User says: "Catch up the docs for everything merged since v0.1.0."

  1. Run git log v0.1.0..HEAD --oneline --no-merges --name-only.
  2. Filter to feat, fix, refactor, perf commits touching user-facing code.
  3. Map each to a doc page.
  4. Read the commit diffs and current doc pages.
  5. For release-specific docs, use the draft release plan, maintainer context, PR list, commit scan, and any available announcement as source context.
  6. Draft doc updates reflecting the source code changes in the commits following the style guide.
  7. Release prep only: Determine the release label from the user-requested documented release version. For the default pre-tag path, use the release being prepared, such as v0.0.63 for release 0.0.63.
  8. Post-release recovery only: If maintainers missed the pre-tag docs step and the release already shipped, use the next patch release label. For a post-release docs refresh for 0.0.63, use label v0.0.64.
  9. Release prep only: Update .agents/skills/nemoclaw-user-guide/SKILL.md only if the AI-agent documentation entry points or routing guidance changed.
  10. Present the summary.
  11. Build with npm run docs to verify.
  12. Release prep only: Commit changes and open a pull request with the area: docs label and the selected release label. Use the current release label for pre-tag release-note docs, and use the next patch label only for post-release recovery. Include area: skills only if the PR changes .agents/skills/. Include a concise summary of the doc updates and a source summary that links each identified merged PR to its matching doc page. Include the PR number, affected doc page, links, and description of the doc change in this shape:
- #<doc-impacting-PR-number> -> `docs/path.mdx`: Description of the doc change reflecting the source code changes in the PR.

If the selected release label does not exist, report that the PR was created without the release label or that PR creation failed because the label was missing. Follow up after PR creation using PR CI and Automated Review Follow-Up; use Git and GitHub Access Hard Stop if access or authentication blocks progress.