Performs initial binary triage by surveying memory layout, strings, imports/exports, and functions to quickly understand what a binary does and identify suspicious behavior. Use when first examining a binary, when user asks to triage/survey/analyze a program, or wants an overview before deeper reverse engineering.
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test the triage skill", "run triage tests", "validate antithesis triage", "test:triage", or "smoke test triage". Orchestrates end-to-end testing of the antithesis-triage skill by running real triage operations via sub-agents and reviewing the results for bugs, skill compliance issues, and papercuts. --- # Test: Antithesis Triage Skill End-to-end test harness for the `antithesis-triage` skill. Spawn sub-agents that perform real triage operations, then review their work for issues. **The top-level agent MUST NOT use the antithesis-triage skill directly.** All triage operations happen inside sub-agents. The top-level agent only orchestrates and reviews. ## Prerequisites Before starting, verify the same prerequisites the triage skill requires: ```bash which snouty && which agent-browser && which jq ``` Also confirm `ANTITHESIS_TENANT` is set: ```bash echo "$ANTITHESIS_TENANT" ``` If any prerequisite is missing, stop and report which ones are unavailable. ## Phase 1: Discover Runs Spawn a **general-purpose sub-agent** with the Agent tool. Provide these instructions, replacing `{{TENANT}}` with the actual value of the `$ANTITHESIS_TENANT` environment variable and `{{TRIAGE_SKILL}}` with the absolute path to `antithesis-triage/SKILL.md` in this repository: ``` Read the skill file at {{TRIAGE_SKILL}} and follow its instructions to list recent runs for the tenant "{{TENANT}}". Follow the "Summarize recent runs" workflow.
Skill files are scattered across GitHub and communities, difficult to search, and hard to evaluate. SkillWink organizes open-source skills into a searchable, filterable library you can directly download and use.
We provide keyword search, version updates, multi-metric ranking (downloads / likes / comments / updates), and open SKILL.md standards. You can also discuss usage and improvements on skill detail pages.
Sort by downloads/likes/comments/updated to find higher-quality skills.
4. Which import methods are supported?
Upload archive: .zip / .skill (recommended)
Upload skills folder
Import from GitHub repository
Note: file size for all methods should be within 10MB.
5. How to use in Claude / Codex?
Typical paths (may vary by local setup):
Claude Code:~/.claude/skills/
Codex CLI:~/.codex/skills/
One SKILL.md can usually be reused across tools.
6. Can one skill be shared across tools?
Yes. Most skills are standardized docs + assets, so they can be reused where format is supported.
Example: retrieval + writing + automation scripts as one workflow.
7. Are these skills safe to use?
Some skills come from public GitHub repositories and some are uploaded by SkillWink creators. Always review code before installing and own your security decisions.
8. Why does it not work after import?
Most common reasons:
Wrong folder path or nested one level too deep
Invalid/incomplete SKILL.md fields or format
Dependencies missing (Python/Node/CLI)
Tool has not reloaded skills yet
9. Does SkillWink include duplicates/low-quality skills?
We try to avoid that. Use ranking + comments to surface better skills: