KS
Killer-Skills

linear-issue — how to use linear-issue how to use linear-issue, linear-issue setup guide, linear-issue vs n8n, linear-issue alternative, linear-issue install, what is linear-issue, linear-issue GitHub CLI integration, linear-issue automation workflow, linear-issue low-code platform, linear-issue self-hosted setup

v1.0.0
GitHub

About this Skill

Perfect for Project Management Agents needing integrated issue tracking and GitHub workflow automation. linear-issue is a skill that utilizes external tools like Linear MCP and GitHub CLI to automate issue analysis and download attachments.

Features

Requires Linear MCP (mcp__linear) connection for functionality
Utilizes GitHub CLI (gh) for fetching linked PRs and issues
Supports optional Notion MCP (mcp__notion) integration for enhanced workflow
Deploys automation capabilities via n8n and low-code platform integration
Leverages TypeScript for robust and scalable workflow automation
Enables self-hosted setup for secure and customizable issue management

# Core Topics

n8n-io n8n-io
[177.8k]
[55472]
Updated: 3/6/2026

Quality Score

Top 5%
85
Excellent
Based on code quality & docs
Installation
SYS Universal Install (Auto-Detect)
Cursor IDE Windsurf IDE VS Code IDE
> npx killer-skills add n8n-io/n8n/linear-issue

Agent Capability Analysis

The linear-issue MCP Server by n8n-io is an open-source Categories.official integration for Claude and other AI agents, enabling seamless task automation and capability expansion. Optimized for how to use linear-issue, linear-issue setup guide, linear-issue vs n8n.

Ideal Agent Persona

Perfect for Project Management Agents needing integrated issue tracking and GitHub workflow automation.

Core Value

Empowers agents to fetch linked PRs and issues using GitHub CLI, and manage Linear issues with Linear MCP, enhancing project tracking and collaboration capabilities through protocols like GitHub authentication and Linear API connectivity.

Capabilities Granted for linear-issue MCP Server

Automating Linear issue updates
Fetching linked GitHub PRs
Debugging issue assignment using Linear MCP and GitHub CLI

! Prerequisites & Limits

  • Requires Linear MCP connection
  • GitHub CLI installation and authentication
  • Optional Notion MCP for extended functionality
SKILL.md
Readonly

Linear Issue Analysis

Start work on Linear issue $ARGUMENTS

Prerequisites

This skill depends on external tools. Before proceeding, verify availability:

Required:

  • Linear MCP (mcp__linear): Must be connected. Without it the skill cannot function at all.
  • GitHub CLI (gh): Must be installed and authenticated. Run gh auth status to verify. Used to fetch linked PRs and issues.

Optional (graceful degradation):

  • Notion MCP (mcp__notion): Needed only if the issue links to Notion docs. If unavailable, note the Notion links in the summary and tell the user to check them manually.
  • Loom transcript skill (/loom-transcript): Needed only if the issue contains Loom videos. If unavailable, note the Loom links in the summary for the user to watch.
  • curl: Used to download images. Almost always available; if missing, skip image downloads and note it.

If a required tool is missing, stop and tell the user what needs to be set up before continuing.

Instructions

Follow these steps to gather comprehensive context about the issue:

1. Fetch the Issue and Comments from Linear

Use the Linear MCP tools to fetch the issue details and comments together:

  • Use mcp__linear__get_issue with the issue ID to get full details including attachments
  • Include relations to see blocking/related/duplicate issues
  • Immediately after, use mcp__linear__list_comments with the issue ID to fetch all comments

Both calls should be made together in the same step to gather the complete context upfront.

2. Analyze Attachments and Media (MANDATORY)

IMPORTANT: This step is NOT optional. You MUST scan and fetch all visual content from BOTH the issue description AND all comments.

Screenshots/Images (ALWAYS fetch):

  1. Scan the issue description AND all comments for ALL image URLs:
    • <img> tags
    • Markdown images ![](url)
    • Raw URLs (github.com/user-attachments, imgur.com, etc.)
  2. For EACH image found (in description or comments):
    • Download using curl -sL "url" -o /path/to/image.png (GitHub URLs require following redirects) OR the linear mcp
    • Use the Read tool on the downloaded file to view it
    • Describe what you see in detail
  3. Do NOT skip images - they often contain critical context like error messages, UI states, or configuration

Loom Videos (ALWAYS fetch transcript):

  1. Scan the issue description AND all comments for Loom URLs (loom.com/share/...)
  2. For EACH Loom video found (in description or comments):
    • Use the /loom-transcript skill to fetch the FULL transcript
    • Summarize key points, timestamps, and any demonstrated issues
  3. Loom videos often contain crucial reproduction steps and context that text alone cannot convey

3. Fetch Related Context

Related Linear Issues:

  • Use mcp__linear__get_issue for any issues mentioned in relations (blocking, blocked by, related, duplicates)
  • Summarize how they relate to the main issue

GitHub PRs and Issues:

  • If GitHub links are mentioned, use gh CLI to fetch PR/issue details:
    • gh pr view <number> for pull requests
    • gh issue view <number> for issues
  • Download images attached to issues: curl -H "Authorization: token $(gh auth token)" -L <image-url> -o image.png

Notion Documents:

  • If Notion links are present, use mcp__notion__notion-fetch with the Notion URL or page ID to retrieve document content
  • Summarize relevant documentation

4. Review Comments

Comments were already fetched in Step 1. Review them for:

  • Additional context and discussion history
  • Any attachments or media linked in comments (process in Step 2)
  • Clarifications or updates to the original issue description

5. Identify Affected Node (if applicable)

Determine whether this issue is specific to a particular n8n node (e.g. a trigger, action, or tool node). Look for clues in:

  • The issue title (e.g. "Linear trigger", "Slack node", "HTTP Request")
  • The issue description and comments mentioning node names
  • Labels or tags on the issue (e.g. node:linear, node:slack)
  • Screenshots showing a specific node's configuration or error

If the issue is node-specific:

  1. Find the node type ID. Use Grep to search for the node's display name (or keywords from it) in packages/frontend/editor-ui/data/node-popularity.json to find the exact node type ID. For reference, common ID patterns are:

    • Core nodes: n8n-nodes-base.<camelCaseName> (e.g. "HTTP Request" → n8n-nodes-base.httpRequest)
    • Trigger variants: n8n-nodes-base.<name>Trigger (e.g. "Gmail Trigger" → n8n-nodes-base.gmailTrigger)
    • Tool variants: n8n-nodes-base.<name>Tool (e.g. "Google Sheets Tool" → n8n-nodes-base.googleSheetsTool)
    • LangChain/AI nodes: @n8n/n8n-nodes-langchain.<camelCaseName> (e.g. "OpenAI Chat Model" → @n8n/n8n-nodes-langchain.lmChatOpenAi)
  2. Look up the node's popularity score from packages/frontend/editor-ui/data/node-popularity.json. Use Grep to search for the node ID in that file. The popularity score is a log-scale value between 0 and 1. Use these thresholds to classify:

    ScoreLevelDescriptionExamples
    ≥ 0.8HighCore/widely-used nodes, top ~5%HTTP Request (0.98), Google Sheets (0.95), Postgres (0.83), Gmail Trigger (0.80)
    0.4–0.8MediumRegularly used integrationsSlack (0.78), GitHub (0.64), Jira (0.65), MongoDB (0.63)
    < 0.4LowNiche or rarely used nodesAmqp (0.34), Wise (0.36), CraftMyPdf (0.33)

    Include the raw score and the level (high/medium/low) in the summary.

  3. If the node is not found in the popularity file, note that it may be a community node or a very new/niche node.

6. Assess Effort/Complexity

After gathering all context, assess the effort required to fix/implement the issue. Use the following T-shirt sizes:

SizeApproximate effort
XS≤ 1 hour
S≤ 1 day
M2-3 days
L3-5 days
XL≥ 6 days

To make this assessment, consider:

  • Scope of changes: How many files/packages need to be modified? Is it a single node fix or a cross-cutting change?
  • Complexity: Is it a straightforward parameter change, a new API integration, a new credential type, or an architectural change?
  • Testing: How much test coverage is needed? Are E2E tests required?
  • Risk: Could this break existing functionality? Does it need backward compatibility?
  • Dependencies: Are there external API changes, new packages, or cross-team coordination needed?
  • Documentation: Does this require docs updates, migration guides, or changelog entries?

Provide the T-shirt size along with a brief justification explaining the key factors that drove the estimate.

7. Present Summary

Before presenting, verify you have completed:

  • Downloaded and viewed ALL images in the description AND comments
  • Fetched transcripts for ALL Loom videos in the description AND comments
  • Fetched ALL linked GitHub issues/PRs via gh CLI
  • Listed all comments on the issue
  • Checked whether the issue is node-specific and looked up popularity if so
  • Assessed effort/complexity with T-shirt size

After gathering all context, present a comprehensive summary including:

  1. Issue Overview: Title, status, priority, assignee, labels
  2. Description: Full issue description with any clarifications from comments
  3. Visual Context: Summary of screenshots/videos (what you observed in each)
  4. Affected Node (if applicable): Node name, node type ID (n8n-nodes-base.xxx), popularity score with level (e.g. 0.64 — medium popularity)
  5. Related Issues: How this connects to other work
  6. Technical Context: Any PRs, code references, or documentation
  7. Effort Estimate: T-shirt size (XS/S/M/L/XL) with justification
  8. Next Steps: Suggested approach based on all gathered context

Notes

  • The issue ID can be provided in formats like: AI-1975, node-1975, or just 1975 (will search)
  • If no issue ID is provided, ask the user for one

Related Skills

Looking for an alternative to linear-issue or building a Categories.official AI Agent? Explore these related open-source MCP Servers.

View All

flags

Logo of facebook
facebook

flags is a feature flag management system that enables developers to check flag states, compare channels, and debug feature behavior differences across release channels.

243.6k
0
Design

extract-errors

Logo of facebook
facebook

extract-errors is a skill that assists in extracting and managing error codes in React applications using yarn extract-errors command.

243.6k
0
Design

fix

Logo of facebook
facebook

fix is a technical skill that resolves lint errors, formatting issues, and ensures code quality in declarative, frontend, and UI projects

243.6k
0
Design

flow

Logo of facebook
facebook

Flow is a type checking system for JavaScript, used to validate React code and ensure consistency across applications

243.6k
0
Design