A Node.js CLI tool that automatically generates configuration files for various AI development tools from unified AI rule files. Features selective generation, comprehensive import/export capabilities, and supports major AI development tools with rules, commands, MCP, ignore files, subagents and skills.
Note
If you are interested in Rulesync latest news, please follow the maintainer's X(Twitter) account: @dyoshikawa1993
npm install -g rulesync
# or
brew install rulesync
# And then
rulesync --version
rulesync --helpDownload pre-built binaries from the latest release. These binaries are built using Bun's single-file executable bundler.
Quick Install (Linux/macOS - No sudo required):
curl -fsSL https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/install.sh | bashOptions:
- Install specific version:
curl -fsSL https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/install.sh | bash -s -- v6.4.0 - Custom directory:
RULESYNC_HOME=~/.local curl -fsSL https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/install.sh | bash
Manual installation (requires sudo)
curl -L https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/rulesync-linux-x64 -o rulesync && \
chmod +x rulesync && \
sudo mv rulesync /usr/local/bin/curl -L https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/rulesync-linux-arm64 -o rulesync && \
chmod +x rulesync && \
sudo mv rulesync /usr/local/bin/curl -L https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/rulesync-darwin-arm64 -o rulesync && \
chmod +x rulesync && \
sudo mv rulesync /usr/local/bin/curl -L https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/rulesync-darwin-x64 -o rulesync && \
chmod +x rulesync && \
sudo mv rulesync /usr/local/bin/Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/rulesync-windows-x64.exe" -OutFile "rulesync.exe"; `
Move-Item rulesync.exe C:\Windows\System32\Or using curl (if available):
curl -L https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/rulesync-windows-x64.exe -o rulesync.exe && \
mv rulesync.exe /path/to/your/bin/curl -L https://github.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/releases/latest/download/SHA256SUMS -o SHA256SUMS
# Linux/macOS
sha256sum -c SHA256SUMS
# Windows (PowerShell)
# Download SHA256SUMS file first, then verify:
Get-FileHash rulesync.exe -Algorithm SHA256 | ForEach-Object {
$actual = $_.Hash.ToLower()
$expected = (Get-Content SHA256SUMS | Select-String "rulesync-windows-x64.exe").ToString().Split()[0]
if ($actual -eq $expected) { "âś“ Checksum verified" } else { "âś— Checksum mismatch" }
}# Install rulesync globally
npm install -g rulesync
# Create necessary directories, sample rule files, and configuration file
rulesync init
# Install official skills (recommended)
rulesync fetch dyoshikawa/rulesync --features skillsOn the other hand, if you already have AI tool configurations:
# Import existing files (to .rulesync/**/*)
rulesync import --targets claudecode # From CLAUDE.md
rulesync import --targets cursor # From .cursorrules
rulesync import --targets copilot # From .github/copilot-instructions.md
rulesync import --targets claudecode --features rules,mcp,commands,subagents
# And more tool supports
# Generate unified configurations with all features
rulesync generate --targets "*" --features "*"Rulesync supports both generation and import for All of the major AI coding tools:
| Tool | rules | ignore | mcp | commands | subagents | skills | hooks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AGENTS.md | ✅ | 🎮 | 🎮 | 🎮 | |||
| AgentsSkills | âś… | ||||||
| Claude Code | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ |
| Codex CLI | ✅ 🌏 | 🌏 | 🌏 | 🎮 | ✅ 🌏 | ||
| Gemini CLI | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | 🎮 | ✅ 🌏 | |
| GitHub Copilot | âś… | âś… | âś… | âś… | âś… | ||
| Cursor | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ |
| Factory Droid | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ||
| OpenCode | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | |
| Cline | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ 🌏 | |||
| Kilo Code | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ 🌏 | ✅ 🌏 | ||
| Roo Code | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | 🎮 | ✅ 🌏 | |
| Qwen Code | âś… | âś… | |||||
| Kiro | âś… | âś… | âś… | âś… | âś… | âś… | |
| Google Antigravity | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ 🌏 | ||||
| JetBrains Junie | âś… | âś… | âś… | ||||
| AugmentCode | âś… | âś… | |||||
| Windsurf | âś… | âś… | |||||
| Warp | âś… | ||||||
| Replit | âś… | âś… | |||||
| Zed | âś… |
- âś…: Supports project mode
- 🌏: Supports global mode
- 🎮: Supports simulated commands/subagents/skills (Project mode only)
Author rules once, generate everywhere. Rulesync turns a unified ruleset into tool-native formats so teams stop duplicating instructions across multiple AI assistants.
Let developers pick the assistant that fits their flow—Copilot, Cursor, Cline, Claude Code, and more—without rewriting team standards.
Rulesync emits plain configuration files you can commit, review, and ship. If you ever uninstall Rulesync, your generated files keep working.
New team members get the same conventions, context, and guardrails immediately, keeping code style and quality consistent across tools.
Compose rules, MCP configs, commands, and subagents for different tools or scopes (project vs. global) without fragmenting your workflow.
AI tool ecosystems evolve quickly. Rulesync helps you add, switch, or retire tools while keeping your rules intact.
Rulesync is trusted by leading companies and recognized by the industry:
- Anthropic Official Customer Story: Classmethod Inc. - Improving AI coding tool consistency with Rulesync
- Asoview Inc.: Adopting Rulesync for unified AI development rules
- KAKEHASHI Tech Blog: Building multilingual systems for the LLM era with a monorepo and a "living specification"
# Initialize new project (recommended: organized rules structure)
rulesync init
# Import existing configurations (to .rulesync/rules/ by default)
rulesync import --targets claudecode --features rules,ignore,mcp,commands,subagents,skills
# Fetch configurations from a Git repository
rulesync fetch owner/repo
rulesync fetch owner/repo@v1.0.0 --features rules,commands
rulesync fetch https://github.com/owner/repo --conflict skip
# Generate all features for all tools (new preferred syntax)
rulesync generate --targets "*" --features "*"
# Generate specific features for specific tools
rulesync generate --targets copilot,cursor,cline --features rules,mcp
rulesync generate --targets claudecode --features rules,subagents
# Generate only rules (no MCP, ignore files, commands, or subagents)
rulesync generate --targets "*" --features rules
# Generate simulated commands and subagents
rulesync generate --targets copilot,cursor,codexcli --features commands,subagents --simulate-commands --simulate-subagents
# Dry run: show changes without writing files
rulesync generate --dry-run --targets claudecode --features rules
# Check if files are up to date (for CI/CD pipelines)
rulesync generate --check --targets "*" --features "*"
# Add generated files to .gitignore
rulesync gitignore
# Update rulesync to the latest version (single-binary installs)
rulesync update
# Check for updates without installing
rulesync update --check
# Force update even if already at latest version
rulesync update --forceRulesync provides two dry run options for the generate command that allow you to see what changes would be made without actually writing files:
Show what would be written or deleted without actually writing any files. Changes are displayed with a [DRY RUN] prefix.
rulesync generate --dry-run --targets claudecode --features rulesSame as --dry-run, but exits with code 1 if files are not up to date. This is useful for CI/CD pipelines to verify that generated files are committed.
# In your CI pipeline
rulesync generate --check --targets "*" --features "*"
echo $? # 0 if up to date, 1 if changes neededNote
--dry-run and --check cannot be used together.
The fetch command allows you to fetch configuration files directly from a Git repository (GitHub/GitLab).
Note
This feature is in development and may change in future releases.
Note: The fetch command searches for feature directories (rules/, commands/, skills/, subagents/, etc.) directly at the specified path, without requiring a .rulesync/ directory structure. This allows fetching from external repositories like vercel-labs/agent-skills or anthropics/skills.
# Full URL format
rulesync fetch https://github.com/owner/repo
rulesync fetch https://github.com/owner/repo/tree/branch
rulesync fetch https://github.com/owner/repo/tree/branch/path/to/subdir
rulesync fetch https://gitlab.com/owner/repo # GitLab (planned)
# Prefix format
rulesync fetch github:owner/repo
rulesync fetch gitlab:owner/repo # GitLab (planned)
# Shorthand format (defaults to GitHub)
rulesync fetch owner/repo
rulesync fetch owner/repo@ref # Specify branch/tag/commit
rulesync fetch owner/repo:path # Specify subdirectory
rulesync fetch owner/repo@ref:path # Both ref and path| Option | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
--target, -t <target> |
Target format to interpret files as (e.g., 'rulesync', 'claudecode') | rulesync |
--features <features> |
Comma-separated features to fetch (rules, commands, subagents, skills, ignore, mcp, hooks) | * (all) |
--output <dir> |
Output directory relative to project root | .rulesync |
--conflict <strategy> |
Conflict resolution: overwrite or skip |
overwrite |
--ref <ref> |
Git ref (branch/tag/commit) to fetch from | Default branch |
--path <path> |
Subdirectory in the repository | . (root) |
--token <token> |
Git provider token for private repositories | GITHUB_TOKEN or GH_TOKEN env |
# Fetch skills from external repositories
rulesync fetch vercel-labs/agent-skills --features skills
rulesync fetch anthropics/skills --features skills
# Fetch all features from a public repository
rulesync fetch dyoshikawa/rulesync --path .rulesync
# Fetch only rules and commands from a specific tag
rulesync fetch owner/repo@v1.0.0 --features rules,commands
# Fetch from a private repository (uses GITHUB_TOKEN env var)
export GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_xxxx
rulesync fetch owner/private-repo
# Or use GitHub CLI to get the token
GITHUB_TOKEN=$(gh auth token) rulesync fetch owner/private-repo
# Preserve existing files (skip conflicts)
rulesync fetch owner/repo --conflict skip
# Fetch from a monorepo subdirectory
rulesync fetch owner/repo:packages/my-packageYou can configure Rulesync by creating a rulesync.jsonc file in the root of your project.
Rulesync provides a JSON Schema for editor validation and autocompletion. Add the $schema property to your rulesync.jsonc:
Example:
// rulesync.jsonc
{
"$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/refs/heads/main/config-schema.json",
// List of tools to generate configurations for. You can specify "*" to generate all tools.
"targets": ["cursor", "claudecode", "geminicli", "opencode", "codexcli"],
// Features to generate. You can specify "*" to generate all features.
"features": ["rules", "ignore", "mcp", "commands", "subagents", "hooks"],
// Base directories for generation.
// Basically, you can specify a `["."]` only.
// However, for example, if your project is a monorepo and you have to launch the AI agent at each package directory, you can specify multiple base directories.
"baseDirs": ["."],
// Delete existing files before generating
"delete": true,
// Verbose output
"verbose": false,
// Silent mode - suppress all output (except errors)
"silent": false,
// Advanced options
"global": false, // Generate for global(user scope) configuration files
"simulateCommands": false, // Generate simulated commands
"simulateSubagents": false, // Generate simulated subagents
"simulateSkills": false, // Generate simulated skills
}Rulesync supports a local configuration file (rulesync.local.jsonc) for machine-specific or developer-specific settings. This file is automatically added to .gitignore by rulesync gitignore and should not be committed to the repository.
Configuration Priority (highest to lowest):
- CLI options
rulesync.local.jsoncrulesync.jsonc- Default values
Example usage:
// rulesync.local.jsonc (not committed to git)
{
"$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dyoshikawa/rulesync/refs/heads/main/config-schema.json",
// Override targets for local development
"targets": ["claudecode"],
// Enable verbose output for debugging
"verbose": true,
}When multiple targets write to the same output file, the last target in the array wins. This is the "last-wins" behavior.
For example, both agentsmd and opencode generate AGENTS.md:
{
// opencode wins because it comes last
"targets": ["agentsmd", "opencode"],
"features": ["rules"],
}In this case:
agentsmdgeneratesAGENTS.mdfirstopencodegeneratesAGENTS.mdsecond, overwriting the previous file
If you want agentsmd's output instead, reverse the order:
{
// agentsmd wins because it comes last
"targets": ["opencode", "agentsmd"],
"features": ["rules"],
}Example:
---
root: true # true that is less than or equal to one file for overview such as `AGENTS.md`, false for details such as `.agents/memories/*.md`
localRoot: false # (optional, default: false) true for project-specific local rules. Claude Code: generates CLAUDE.local.md; Others: appends to root file
targets: ["*"] # * = all, or specific tools
description: "Rulesync project overview and development guidelines for unified AI rules management CLI tool"
globs: ["**/*"] # file patterns to match (e.g., ["*.md", "*.txt"])
agentsmd: # agentsmd and codexcli specific parameters
# Support for using nested AGENTS.md files for subprojects in a large monorepo.
# This option is available only if root is false.
# If subprojectPath is provided, the file is located in `${subprojectPath}/AGENTS.md`.
# If subprojectPath is not provided and root is false, the file is located in `.agents/memories/*.md`.
subprojectPath: "path/to/subproject"
cursor: # cursor specific parameters
alwaysApply: true
description: "Rulesync project overview and development guidelines for unified AI rules management CLI tool"
globs: ["*"]
antigravity: # antigravity specific parameters
trigger: "always_on" # always_on, glob, manual, or model_decision
globs: ["**/*"] # (optional) file patterns to match when trigger is "glob"
description: "When to apply this rule" # (optional) used with "model_decision" trigger
---
# Rulesync Project Overview
This is Rulesync, a Node.js CLI tool that automatically generates configuration files for various AI development tools from unified AI rule files. The project enables teams to maintain consistent AI coding assistant rules across multiple tools.
...Hooks run scripts at lifecycle events (e.g. session start, before tool use). Events use canonical camelCase in this file; Cursor uses them as-is; Claude Code gets PascalCase in .claude/settings.json; OpenCode hooks are generated as a JavaScript plugin at .opencode/plugins/rulesync-hooks.js.
Event support:
- Cursor:
sessionStart,preToolUse,postToolUse,stop,sessionEnd,beforeSubmitPrompt,subagentStop,preCompact,afterFileEdit,afterShellExecution,postToolUseFailure,subagentStart,beforeShellExecution,beforeMCPExecution,afterMCPExecution,beforeReadFile,afterAgentResponse,afterAgentThought,beforeTabFileRead,afterTabFileEdit - Claude Code:
sessionStart,preToolUse,postToolUse,stop,sessionEnd,beforeSubmitPrompt,subagentStop,preCompact,permissionRequest,notification,setup - OpenCode:
sessionStart,preToolUse,postToolUse,stop,afterFileEdit,afterShellExecution,permissionRequest
Note: Rulesync implements OpenCode hooks as a plugin, so importing from OpenCode to rulesync is not supported. OpenCode only supports command-type hooks (not prompt-type).
Use optional override keys so tool-specific events and config live in one file without leaking to others: cursor.hooks for Cursor-only events, claudecode.hooks for Claude-only, opencode.hooks for OpenCode-only. Events in shared hooks that a tool does not support are skipped for that tool (and a warning is logged at generate time).
Example:
{
"version": 1,
"hooks": {
"sessionStart": [{ "type": "command", "command": ".rulesync/hooks/session-start.sh" }],
"postToolUse": [{ "matcher": "Write|Edit", "command": ".rulesync/hooks/format.sh" }],
"stop": [{ "command": ".rulesync/hooks/audit.sh" }]
},
"cursor": {
"hooks": {
"afterFileEdit": [{ "command": ".cursor/hooks/format.sh" }]
}
},
"claudecode": {
"hooks": {
"notification": [
{ "matcher": "permission_prompt", "command": "$CLAUDE_PROJECT_DIR/.claude/hooks/notify.sh" }
]
}
},
"opencode": {
"hooks": {
"afterShellExecution": [{ "command": ".rulesync/hooks/post-shell.sh" }]
}
}
}Example:
---
description: "Review a pull request" # command description
targets: ["*"] # * = all, or specific tools
copilot: # copilot specific parameters (optional)
description: "Review a pull request"
antigravity: # antigravity specific parameters
trigger: "/review" # Specific trigger for workflow (renames file to review.md)
turbo: true # (Optional, default: true) Append // turbo for auto-execution
---
target_pr = $ARGUMENTS
If target_pr is not provided, use the PR of the current branch.
Execute the following in parallel:
...Example:
---
name: planner # subagent name
targets: ["*"] # * = all, or specific tools
description: >- # subagent description
This is the general-purpose planner. The user asks the agent to plan to
suggest a specification, implement a new feature, refactor the codebase, or
fix a bug. This agent can be called by the user explicitly only.
claudecode: # for claudecode-specific parameters
model: inherit # opus, sonnet, haiku or inherit
copilot: # for GitHub Copilot specific parameters
tools:
- web/fetch # agent/runSubagent is always included automatically
opencode: # for OpenCode-specific parameters
mode: subagent # must be set so OpenCode treats the agent as a subagent
model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-20250514
temperature: 0.1
tools:
write: false
edit: false
bash: false
permission:
bash:
"git diff": allow
---
You are the planner for any tasks.
Based on the user's instruction, create a plan while analyzing the related files. Then, report the plan in detail. You can output files to @tmp/ if needed.
Attention, again, you are just the planner, so though you can read any files and run any commands for analysis, please don't write any code.Example:
---
name: example-skill # skill name
description: >- # skill description
A sample skill that demonstrates the skill format
targets: ["*"] # * = all, or specific tools
claudecode: # for claudecode-specific parameters
allowed-tools:
- "Bash"
- "Read"
- "Write"
- "Grep"
codexcli: # for codexcli-specific parameters
short-description: A brief user-facing description
---
This is the skill body content.
You can provide instructions, context, or any information that helps the AI agent understand and execute this skill effectively.
The skill can include:
- Step-by-step instructions
- Code examples
- Best practices
- Any relevant context
Skills are directory-based and can include additional files alongside SKILL.md.Example:
{
"mcpServers": {
"serena": {
"description": "Code analysis and semantic search MCP server",
"type": "stdio",
"command": "uvx",
"args": [
"--from",
"git+https://github.com/oraios/serena",
"serena",
"start-mcp-server",
"--context",
"ide-assistant",
"--enable-web-dashboard",
"false",
"--project",
"."
],
"env": {}
},
"context7": {
"description": "Library documentation search server",
"type": "stdio",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@upstash/context7-mcp"],
"env": {}
}
}
}Rulesync supports a single ignore list that can live in either location below:
.rulesync/.aiignore(recommended).rulesyncignore(project root)
Rules and behavior:
- You may use either location.
- When both exist, Rulesync prefers
.rulesync/.aiignore(recommended) over.rulesyncignore(legacy) when reading. - If neither file exists yet, Rulesync defaults to creating
.rulesync/.aiignore.
Notes:
- Running
rulesync initwill create.rulesync/.aiignoreif no ignore file is present.
Example:
tmp/
credentials/You can use global mode via Rulesync by enabling --global option. It can also be called as user scope mode.
Currently, supports rules and commands generation for Claude Code. Import for global files is supported for rules and commands.
-
Create an any name directory. For example, if you prefer
~/.aiglobal, run the following command.mkdir -p ~/.aiglobal -
Initialize files for global files in the directory.
cd ~/.aiglobal rulesync init
-
Edit
~/.aiglobal/rulesync.jsoncto enable global mode.{ "global": true, } -
Edit
~/.aiglobal/.rulesync/rules/overview.mdto your preferences.--- root: true --- # The Project Overview ...
-
Generate rules for global settings.
# Run in the `~/.aiglobal` directory rulesync generate
Note
Currently, when in the directory enabled global mode:
rulesync.jsonconly supportsglobal,features,deleteandverbose.Featurescan be set"rules"and"commands". Other parameters are ignored.rules/*.mdonly supports single file hasroot: true, and frontmatter parameters withoutrootare ignored.- Only Claude Code is supported for global mode commands.
Simulated commands, subagents and skills allow you to generate simulated features for cursor, codexcli and etc. This is useful for shortening your prompts.
- Prepare
.rulesync/commands/*.md,.rulesync/subagents/*.mdand.rulesync/skills/*/SKILL.mdfor your purposes. - Generate simulated commands, subagents and skills for specific tools that are included in cursor, codexcli and etc.
rulesync generate \ --targets copilot,cursor,codexcli \ --features commands,subagents,skills \ --simulate-commands \ --simulate-subagents \ --simulate-skills
- Use simulated commands, subagents and skills in your prompts.
-
Prompt examples:
# Execute simulated commands. By the way, `s/` stands for `simulate/`. s/your-command # Execute simulated subagents Call your-subagent to achieve something. # Use simulated skills Use the skill your-skill to achieve something.
-
Rulesync provides official skills that you can install using the fetch command:
rulesync fetch dyoshikawa/rulesync --features skillsThis will install the Rulesync documentation skill to your project.
Rulesync provides an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server that enables AI agents to manage your Rulesync files. This allows AI agents to discover, read, create, update, and delete files dynamically.
Note
The MCP server exposes the only one tool to minimize your agent's token usage. Approximately less than 1k tokens for the tool definition.
rulesync mcpThis starts an MCP server using stdio transport that AI agents can communicate with.
Add the Rulesync MCP server to your .rulesync/mcp.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"rulesync-mcp": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "rulesync", "mcp"],
"env": {}
}
}
}You can try adding the following to .claude/settings.json or .claude/settings.local.json:
{
+ "enableAllProjectMcpServers": true
}According to the documentation, this means:
Automatically approve all MCP servers defined in project .mcp.json files
Google Antigravity has a known limitation where it won't load rules, workflows, and skills if the .agent/rules/, .agent/workflows/, and .agent/skills/ directories are listed in .gitignore, even with "Agent Gitignore Access" enabled.
Workaround: Instead of adding these directories to .gitignore, add them to .git/info/exclude:
# Remove from .gitignore (if present)
# **/.agent/rules/
# **/.agent/workflows/
# **/.agent/skills/
# Add to .git/info/exclude
echo "**/.agent/rules/" >> .git/info/exclude
echo "**/.agent/workflows/" >> .git/info/exclude
echo "**/.agent/skills/" >> .git/info/exclude.git/info/exclude works like .gitignore but is local-only, so it won't affect Antigravity's ability to load the rules while still excluding these directories from Git.
Note: .git/info/exclude can't be shared with your team since it's not committed to the repository.
MIT License
