openclaw 网盘下载
OpenClaw

技能详情(站内镜像,无评论)

首页 > 技能库 > Linux installer

Installs, launches, and uninstalls Linux desktop apps by resolving the safest supported source first, then running a local helper CLI. Use when the user asks...

系统与自动化

许可证:MIT-0

MIT-0 ·免费使用、修改和重新分发。无需归因。

版本:v1.0.0

统计:⭐ 0 · 22 · 0 current installs · 0 all-time installs

0

安装量(当前) 0

🛡 VirusTotal :良性 · OpenClaw :良性

Package:baladoodle/linux-installer

安全扫描(ClawHub)

  • VirusTotal :良性
  • OpenClaw :良性

OpenClaw 评估

The skill's code, instructions, and requirements line up with its stated purpose (resolving and installing Linux desktop apps); it does run system package-manager and sudo commands (with user confirmation) and reads local OpenClaw config, so review and caution are still warranted before installing.

目的

Name/description match the included code and catalog: the CLI resolves install candidates and runs package-manager commands. The helper reads a local OpenClaw config (~/.openclaw/openclaw.json) to check the unsafe-community setting, which is coherent with the documented opt-in behavior.

说明范围

SKILL.md restricts actions to resolving candidates, asking for confirmation, and then running explicit install/uninstall/launch commands. The code implements validations and will call local package tools (flatpak, snap, apt/dnf/pacman/zypper, nix, aur helpers, wine) and may bootstrap tooling via sudo when confirmed — this matches the documentation. It does not instruct broad system scans or exfiltration.

安装机制

No remote downloads or obscure install URLs: the intended install is 'pip install -e .' from the skill directory (setup.py is included). The skill is instruction-plus-code (console entry points) and does not pull arbitrary archives from unknown hosts during install. The runtime may execute package-manager network actions, but those are expected for installing OS packages.

证书

The skill declares no secrets or required env vars. It does read ~/.openclaw/openclaw.json (to honor unsafeCommunityInstalls) and expands environment variables in catalog entries. It will run sudo and system package commands when performing installs/uninstalls — this is proportionate to the purpose but requires giving those commands elevated privileges at runtime (user confirmation is required per the docs).

持久

always is false and the skill does not request to be force-enabled. It only reads local config and the bundled catalog; there is no sign it modifies other skills or system configurations beyond performing package installs when explicitly confirmed by the user.

综合结论

This skill appears internally consistent for resolving and installing Linux desktop apps, but check these before you install/use it: 1) Inspect the bundled catalog.json for any apps you care about (it will run package-manager commands that install software with sudo). 2) The helper reads ~/.openclaw/openclaw.json to allow unreviewed installs if you opt in — do not enable unsafeCommunityInstalls unless you understand the risk. 3) Installing the…

安装(复制给龙虾 AI)

将下方整段复制到龙虾中文库对话中,由龙虾按 SKILL.md 完成安装。

请把本段交给龙虾中文库(龙虾 AI)执行:为本机安装 OpenClaw 技能「Linux installer」。简介:Installs, launches, and uninstalls Linux desktop apps by resolving the safest s…。
请 fetch 以下地址读取 SKILL.md 并按文档完成安装:https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openclaw/skills/refs/heads/main/skills/baladoodle/linux-installer/SKILL.md
(来源:yingzhi8.cn 技能库)

SKILL.md

打开原始 SKILL.md(GitHub raw)

---
name: linux-installer
description: Installs, launches, and uninstalls Linux desktop apps by resolving the safest supported source first, then running a local helper CLI. Use when the user asks to install software like GIMP, Notepad++, or other desktop apps on Linux and wants the install command plus the command to launch or remove it.
---

# Linux Installer

## What This Skill Does

Resolves the best supported install path for a Linux desktop app, explains the recommendation briefly, asks for confirmation before any system change, performs the install, and returns the exact launch or uninstall command.

If the chosen source needs missing tooling like `snapd`, `flatpak`, `wine`, or `winetricks`, the helper can bootstrap that tooling first through the host's native package manager.

It can also return curated community workarounds when no official Linux package exists. These must be clearly labeled and require an extra explicit confirmation before install.

When no curated or official path exists, the helper may surface unreviewed community suggestions from public package metadata. These are research results, not trusted install metadata.

Default source preference is:

1. Flatpak
2. Snap
3. Native package manager
4. openSUSE `zypper`
5. Arch `pacman`
6. Native Arch AUR helper
7. Nix profile install
8. AppImage
9. Curated official manual/archive fallback
10. Curated Wine/manual fallback

Community workarounds are only allowed when they are explicitly curated in the catalog.

Unreviewed community suggestions may be installed only when:

1. `skills.entries.linux-installer.unsafeCommunityInstalls` is enabled in `openclaw.json`
2. the user explicitly confirms the unreviewed install
3. the install command includes `--allow-unsafe`

## Prerequisites

Before using this skill, ensure the helper CLI is installed:

```bash
cd ~/.openclaw/skills/linux-installer
pip install -e .
```

## Workflow

If you are expanding curated coverage, use [CATALOG_GUIDE.md](./CATALOG_GUIDE.md) to decide which apps belong in `catalog.json` and which should rely on dynamic discovery.

When the user asks to install an app:

1. Resolve the best path:

```bash
linux-installer resolve "gimp"
```

2. Summarize the result:
   - chosen source
   - package id
   - whether it is an official package, fallback, or community workaround
   - whether it is curated or unreviewed
   - missing tooling, if any
   - tooling bootstrap command, if any
   - source URL, if available
   - public summary and any best-effort review note
   - exact install command
   - launch command
   - warnings or fallbacks

3. Ask for confirmation before installing.

4. If the selected result is a community workaround, ask for a second explicit confirmation that acknowledges it is unofficial/community-maintained.

5. If the selected result is an unreviewed suggestion, explain that:
   - it was discovered dynamically from public package metadata
   - it is not maintainer-reviewed
   - opt-in support for unreviewed suggestions must be enabled first
   - it requires a separate unreviewed-install confirmation

6. After confirmation, run:

```bash
linux-installer install "gimp" --source flatpak --package org.gimp.GIMP --yes
```

For a community workaround, include `--allow-community`:

```bash
linux-installer install "roblox" --source flatpak --package org.vinegarhq.Sober --yes --allow-community
```

For an unreviewed suggestion, include `--allow-unsafe` and ensure opt-in support for unreviewed suggestions is enabled in `openclaw.json`.

7. Return the launch command:

```bash
linux-installer run-info "gimp" --source flatpak --package org.gimp.GIMP
```

8. Optionally launch the installed app:

```bash
linux-installer run "gimp" --source flatpak --package org.gimp.GIMP
```

9. For removal, prefer the helper's uninstall command. If the result is a manual or unsafe removal path, return the command or manual steps instead of improvising:

```bash
linux-installer uninstall "gimp" --source flatpak --package org.gimp.GIMP --yes
```

## Rules

- Never install anything before the user confirms.
- Never install a community workaround without a second explicit confirmation.
- Never install an unreviewed suggestion unless opt-in support is enabled and the user explicitly accepts the unreviewed path.
- Prefer the helper CLI output over ad hoc shell reasoning.
- If `resolve` says no safe automated path was found, do not invent install steps.
- Manual/archive fallbacks may surface curated `manual_steps`, but the helper must not auto-download or auto-run them.
- Manual/archive and other unsafe removal flows may surface `manual_steps`, but the helper must not auto-delete them unless the uninstall path is explicitly curated and safe.
- Wine/manual flows are higher risk and should be presented as fallback options, not defaults.
- Community workarounds must be presented as unofficial, curated alternatives.
- Unreviewed suggestions must be presented as research findings, not trusted recommendations.
- Always tell the user the exact command to launch the app after install.