Setup & Installation

Install Alon Search Skill Plus using the ClawHub CLI or OpenClaw CLI:

clawhub install alon-search-skill-plus

If the CLI is not installed:

npx clawhub@latest install alon-search-skill-plus

Or install with OpenClaw CLI:

openclaw skills install alon-search-skill-plus

View on ClawHub · View on GitHub

What This Skill Does

Alon Search Skill Plus is a Software Development skill for OpenClaw by alondotsh.

Search Skill Plus

Enhanced skill search with additional sources including ClawHub and GitHub repositories that can be adapted into Skills.

When to Use

When users describe a need and want to find an existing Skill to solve it.

Examples:

  • "Is there a skill that can auto-generate changelogs?"
  • "Find me a skill for frontend design"
  • "I need a skill that can automate browser actions"
  • "Search Toolify-related skills"

Data Sources (by trust level)

Tier 1 - Official / High Trust (show first)

Source URL Notes
anthropics/skills github.com/anthropics/skills Official examples, most reliable
ComposioHQ/awesome-claude-skills github.com/ComposioHQ/awesome-claude-skills Hand-picked, 12k+ stars

Tier 2 - Community Curated (secondary)

Source URL Notes
travisvn/awesome-claude-skills github.com/travisvn/awesome-claude-skills Community curated, 21k+ stars
skills.sh skills.sh Vercel's official directory

Tier 3 - Aggregators (use with caution)

Source URL Notes Security Warning
skillsmp.com skillsmp.com Auto-scraped, requires extra filtering -
ClawHub clawhub.ai OpenClaw-style skill registry ⚠️ Known malicious skill attacks (RCE via fake CLI tools)

Tier 4 - GitHub Extended Discovery (reference / adaptation candidates)

Source URL Notes Output Label
GitHub topic search github.com/topics/claude-code / topics/claude-skill Finds standalone skill repos not listed in curated directories Standalone Skill Repo
GitHub code search github.com/search Finds repos containing SKILL.md, plugin.json, or skill-like workflows Standalone Skill Repo
GitHub general repos github.com Finds tools/scripts that can be wrapped as a skill with light changes Adaptable GitHub Repo

Search Process

Step 1: Parse User Intent

Extract from user description:

  • Core functionality keywords (e.g., changelog, browser, frontend)
  • Use case (e.g., development, testing, design)
  • Special requirements (e.g., language support, specific framework)

Step 1.5: Derive Controlled Search Keywords

This skill is not a free-form semantic search engine. It should derive a small, controlled keyword set from user intent.

Keyword budget rules:

  • Limit the search plan to 1-2 primary keywords
  • If expansion is needed, add at most 1-2 extra keywords
  • The limit applies to keyword generation, not the number of search sources
  • Reuse the same keyword set across the allowed sources
  • If results remain weak after the controlled expansion, report that results are limited instead of continuing to drift

When expansion is allowed:

  • Start with the primary keyword set only
  • Expand only if the first-pass search yields fewer than 3 high-relevance results
  • High relevance means the result clearly matches the user's requested function or scenario, not just a loose topical overlap
  • If the first pass already yields 3+ high-relevance results, do not expand
  • After expansion, stop once the search yields 3-5 high-relevance results or enough material for a useful ranked answer
  • If expansion still does not produce at least 2 high-relevance results, explicitly report that results are limited

Mode A: User describes a scenario

  • Convert the scenario into 1-2 high-signal functional keywords
  • Add 1 platform/domain keyword only when the scenario clearly depends on one
  • Prefer concise action words over vague nouns

Examples:

  • "I want a skill to turn meeting recordings into structured notes"
    • Primary keywords: transcribe, summarize
  • "I need something to help publish Markdown to WeChat"
    • Primary keywords: publish, formatter
    • Optional platform keyword: wechat

Mode B: User already gives keywords

  • Preserve the user's original keywords first
  • Expand only when the original search returns too few relevant results
  • Add at most 1-2 close variants, such as:
    • near-synonyms
    • higher-level functional terms
    • common implementation terms

Examples:

  • User keyword: subtitle
    • Expansion: transcribe
  • User keyword: wechat
    • Expansion: publish, formatter

Expansion priority (used only when needed):

  • Prefer functional keywords
    • transcribe
    • summarize
    • browser
    • commit
    • translate
    • scrape
    • deploy
  • Then platform/domain keywords when clearly required
    • wechat
    • github
    • youtube
    • reddit
    • obsidian
  • Then implementation keywords if still needed
    • cli
    • workflow
    • formatter
    • adapter
    • wrapper
  • Avoid vague generic words unless the user explicitly uses them
    • tool
    • automation
    • agent
    • helper
    • assistant

Do NOT:

  • Expand across multiple dimensions at once unless evidence is strong
  • Turn one user request into a long keyword list
  • Add generic terms by default
  • Pretend keyword expansion is the same as semantic retrieval

Step 2: Multi-Source Search

IMPORTANT: Prioritize the known 6 sources first. GitHub may be used as an extended source, but only for GitHub-hosted repositories. Do NOT search the general internet beyond the listed sites plus GitHub.

Search by priority:

1. Search Tier 1 (official/high trust) first
2. If fewer than 5 results, continue to Tier 2
3. If still insufficient, search Tier 3 with strict filtering
4. If still insufficient, search Tier 4 on GitHub for:
   - standalone skill repositories
   - repositories containing `SKILL.md`
   - repositories that are not skills yet but are strong adaptation candidates
5. If still nothing found, tell user honestly

Before searching, briefly record the keyword plan internally:

  • Primary keywords
  • Expanded keywords if any
  • Why expansion was needed if any

Recommended search flow:

  1. Run the first pass with primary keywords only
  2. Judge whether there are at least 3 high-relevance results across the trusted sources searched so far
  3. Only then decide whether controlled keyword expansion is justified
  4. Run at most one expansion round
  5. If results are still sparse, stop and report limited coverage instead of continuing to broaden the query

Allowed search queries (use site: to restrict):

site:github.com/anthropics/skills {keywords}
site:github.com/ComposioHQ/awesome-claude-skills {keywords}
site:github.com/travisvn/awesome-claude-skills {keywords}
site:skills.sh {keywords}
site:skillsmp.com {keywords}
site:clawhub.ai {keywords}
site:github.com "SKILL.md" {keywords}
site:github.com "claude skill" {keywords}
site:github.com "plugin.json" {keywords}
site:github.com {keywords} ("automation" OR "cli" OR "workflow")

Search methods:

  • GitHub repos: Use site:github.com/{repo} to restrict search scope
  • GitHub extended discovery: Use GitHub search/topic pages only, then inspect repo metadata manually
  • skills.sh: WebFetch to scrape search results from skills.sh only
  • skillsmp.com: WebFetch with additional verification
  • ClawHub: WebFetch clawhub.ai with strict security review

Result sufficiency rules:

  • 0-1 high-relevance results: clearly insufficient, expansion is allowed
  • 2 high-relevance results: borderline; expansion is allowed only if the results do not cover the user's scenario well
  • 3-5 high-relevance results: sufficient; stop expanding
  • 6+ high-relevance results: more than enough; rank and filter instead of expanding

Do NOT:

  • Search the entire web
  • Use broad queries without site: restriction
  • Include results from unknown non-GitHub sources
  • Present ordinary GitHub code as a ready-to-install skill unless it actually includes skill packaging

Step 3: Quality Filtering (Critical)

Must filter out the following:

Filter Condition Reason
GitHub stars < 10 Not community verified
Last update > 6 months ago Possibly abandoned
No SKILL.md file Not a standard skill package
README too sparse Quality concerns
Contains suspicious code patterns Security risk

Extended GitHub rules:

  • Repos with SKILL.md can be recommended as Standalone Skill Repo
  • Repos without SKILL.md may still be shown as Adaptable GitHub Repo only if:
    • the core functionality is highly relevant
    • setup is simple and local-first
    • converting it into a skill appears low effort
    • the repo is not abandoned
  • Never mix these two categories together without labeling the difference clearly

Security checks:

  • Requests sensitive permissions (e.g., ~/.ssh, env variables)
  • External network requests to unknown domains
  • Contains eval() or dynamic code execution
  • Modifies system files
  • ClawHub specific: Check for fake CLI tools, suspicious install scripts
  • GitHub adaptable repos: Review install scripts, shell wrappers, binary downloads, and postinstall hooks before suggesting adaptation

Step 4: Rank Results

Scoring formula:

Score = Source Weight × 0.35 + Stars Weight × 0.25 + Recency Weight × 0.2 + Relevance × 0.1 + Packaging Weight × 0.1

Source weights:
- Tier 1: 1.0
- Tier 2: 0.7
- Tier 3: 0.4 (skillsmp.com), 0.3 (ClawHub - lower due to security concerns)
- Tier 4 standalone skill repo: 0.55
- Tier 4 adaptable GitHub repo: 0.35

Packaging weights:
- Has `SKILL.md`: 1.0
- Has skill-like manifest/instructions only: 0.6
- Requires light adaptation into a skill: 0.3

Step 5: Format Output

Return Top 5-10 results:

## Found X relevant Skills

Search keywords used: `keyword-a`, `keyword-b`

### Recommended
1. **[skill-name](github-url)** - Source: anthropics/skills
   - Function: xxx
   - Stars: xxx | Last updated: xxx
   - Install: `/plugin marketplace add xxx`

### Worth considering
2. **[skill-name](github-url)** - Source: ComposioHQ
   ...

### From Tier 3 (review carefully before use)
- [skill-name](url) - Source: ClawHub ⚠️
  - Note: Review code before installation

### Adaptable GitHub Repos
- [repo-name](github-url) - Type: Adaptable GitHub Repo
  - Function: xxx
  - Stars: xxx | Last updated: xxx
  - Skill readiness: Low / Medium / High
  - Adaptation idea: Wrap existing CLI/script with `SKILL.md` and a thin workflow

When GitHub extended results are used, split the output into:

  • Ready to use Skills
  • Adaptable GitHub Repos

Do not merge them into a single ranked list without labels. If keyword expansion was used, say so explicitly in one short line.

Example

User: Is there a skill that helps write commit messages?

Search process:

  1. Extract keywords: commit, message, git
  2. Search Tier 1: Found git-commit-assistant in anthropics/skills
  3. Search Tier 2: Found semantic-commit in ComposioHQ
  4. Filter: Exclude results with stars < 10
  5. Rank: Official sources first

Output:

## Found 3 relevant Skills

### Recommended
1. **git-commit-assistant** - Source: anthropics/skills (official)
   - Function: Generate semantic commit messages
   - Install: `/plugin marketplace add anthropics/claude-code`

2. **semantic-commit** - Source: ComposioHQ
   - Function: Follow conventional commits spec
   - Stars: 890 | Last updated: 2 weeks ago

Important Notes

  1. Never recommend unverified Skills - Better to recommend fewer than to recommend risky ones
  2. Stay cautious with Tier 3 sources - Results from skillsmp.com and ClawHub must be double-checked
  3. ClawHub security warning - Snyk discovered malicious skills on ClawHub.ai that use fake CLI tools for RCE. Always:
    • Review skill source code before installation
    • Check for suspicious network requests
    • Verify the skill author's credibility
    • Avoid skills that require running untrusted install scripts
  4. If nothing suitable is found - Tell the user honestly, suggest using skill-from-github or skill-from-notebook to create their own
  5. GitHub repo results are reference candidates first - They are not automatic endorsements or guaranteed plug-and-play Skills
  6. Always show GitHub star count for GitHub-hosted results - Stars are a useful but imperfect trust signal
  7. Security concerns - Clearly inform users of risks, let them decide

About Alon

Public skill from Alon's real daily workflows.

Version History

Latest version: 0.1.4

First published: Apr 3, 2026. Last updated: Apr 3, 2026.

1 version released.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Alon Search Skill Plus free to use?
Yes. Alon Search Skill Plus is a free, open-source skill available on the OpenClaw Skills Registry. You can install and use it at no cost, and the source code is publicly available for review and contribution.
What languages/platforms does Alon Search Skill Plus support?
It runs on any platform that supports OpenClaw, including macOS, Linux, and Windows. As long as you have the OpenClaw runtime installed, Alon Search Skill Plus will work seamlessly across operating systems.
How do I update Alon Search Skill Plus?
Run openclaw skills update alon-search-skill-plus to get the latest version. OpenClaw will download and apply the update automatically, preserving your existing configuration.
Can I use Alon Search Skill Plus with other skills?
Yes. OpenClaw skills are composable — you can combine Alon Search Skill Plus with any other installed skill in your workflows. This allows you to build powerful multi-step automations by chaining skills together.