linear-type-labeler

Classifies Linear issues and applies a Type label from the Sentry workspace's label taxonomy based on the content of each issue's title and description.

npx skills add https://github.com/getsentry/sdk-skills --skill linear-type-labeler

Linear Type Labeler

Classifies Linear issues and applies a Type label from the Sentry workspace's label taxonomy based on the content of each issue's title and description.

Requirements

This skill requires the Linear MCP server to be configured.

Type Label Reference

Type labels in the Sentry workspace (workspace-level, not per-team):

LabelWhen to use
BugSomething is broken, regression, error, crash, incorrect behavior
FeatureNew capability, integration, API, SDK support — something that doesn't exist yet
ImprovementMaking existing functionality better — performance, DX, UX, reliability
TaskChore, investigation, spike, migration, cleanup, operational work
Tracking IssueParent/umbrella tracking a larger body of work; has sub-issues or a checklist
DocsDocumentation, RFC, write-up, changelog, guide
TestsWriting or fixing tests, coverage, test infrastructure

Workflow

Step 1 — Identify issues to process

Two modes:

A — List of Linear IDs provided (e.g. SDK-123, SDK-456):

  • Fetch each issue by ID using get_issue. Skip the team-fetch step entirely.

B — No IDs provided:

  • Infer the team: (1) current GitHub repository name — for the getsentry org, the repo name matches the Linear team name, (2) explicitly stated by the user, (3) if still ambiguous, ask.

Step 2 — Fetch label IDs

Use query_data to fetch workspace-level labels and build a UUID map:

query_data: fetch all labels for the workspace (not the team)
→ filter to those whose parent label name is "Type"
→ build a map: { "Bug": "<uuid>", "Feature": "<uuid>", ... }

If the workspace has no "Type" label group, surface that to the user before proceeding.

Step 3 — Fetch and filter issues

If in mode A (list of IDs): use the already-fetched issues from Step 1. Filter client-side: keep only those where none of the issue's label IDs appear in the Step 2 UUID map values.

If in mode B (team): use query_data to list issues for the team, including each issue's label IDs. Paginate (limit 50, use cursor) until done. Filter client-side: keep only issues where none of the issue's label IDs appear in the Step 2 UUID map values (i.e., no Type label assigned yet).

Announce the total candidate count before continuing. If there are more than 25 candidates, process in chunks of 25, confirming each chunk before the next.

Step 4 — Classify each issue

For each candidate issue, read its title and description. Apply heuristics in priority order — stop at the first match:

  1. Title or description is clearly about testing work: mentions "test", "tests", "coverage", "test infra", "test suite", "unit test", "integration test" → Tests
  2. Title or description is clearly about documentation: mentions "docs", "README", "changelog", "RFC", "spec", "guide", "write-up", "develop.sentry.dev" → Docs
  3. Title contains [META], [EPIC], "Track", "Tracking"; or description has a checklist of Linear/GitHub issue links → Tracking Issue
  4. Title starts with "Fix", "Fixes", "Broken", "Error", "Crash", "Regression" → Bug
  5. Title starts with "Improve", "Optimize", "Enhance"; or is a refactor with user-visible impact (changes behavior, performance, or API ergonomics) → Improvement
  6. Title starts with "Investigate", "Spike", "Migrate", "Update", "Clean up", "Chore"; or is a refactor with no user-visible change → Task
  7. Title starts with "Add", "Support", "Implement", "New", "Introduce"; or adds something that doesn't exist yet → Feature

When ambiguous between Feature and Improvement: does it add something that doesn't exist at all, or make something existing better? Former → Feature, latter → Improvement.

When ambiguous between Task and Improvement: is there a user-visible benefit (better performance, reliability, DX, API ergonomics)? If yes → Improvement. If it's purely internal with no user-visible impact → Task.

Assign exactly one Type label. Mark confidence:

  • High — clear signal in title or description
  • Low — genuinely ambiguous; flag for human review, don't guess

Step 5 — Present the plan

Show a summary table before writing anything:

| Issue   | Title                  | Proposed Type | Confidence          |
|---------|------------------------|---------------|---------------------|
| SDK-123 | Fix crash on startup   | Bug           | High                |
| SDK-456 | Add OAuth support      | Feature       | High                |
| SDK-789 | Some vague title       | Task          | Low — please review |

Ask: "Should I apply these labels? Reply with any corrections (e.g. 'SDK-789 → Bug') and I'll update the plan before applying."

If the user provides corrections, update the table and show the revised plan before proceeding.

Step 6 — Apply labels

For each approved classification:

  1. Call get_issue to fetch the issue's current label IDs immediately before writing
  2. Append the Type label UUID from the Step 2 map
  3. Call save_issue with the full combined label set

Always re-fetch and always pass the full combined set. Linear replaces labels on update — labels added between Step 3 and now would be silently stripped if you use the cached label list.

Report as you go: "SDK-123 → Bug", "SDK-456 → Feature".

Edge Cases

  • Issue already has a Type label: Skip it; don't overwrite human classifications.
  • Very short title, no description: Flag as low-confidence; surface for human review.
  • Issue belongs to multiple types: Pick the primary type (bug fix with a docs update → Bug).

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