Get the FREE Ultimate OpenClaw Setup Guide →

source-management

Scanned
npx machina-cli add skill anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins/source-management --openclaw
Files (1)
SKILL.md
5.6 KB

Source Management

If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see CONNECTORS.md.

Knows what sources are available, helps connect new ones, and manages how sources are queried.

Checking Available Sources

Determine which MCP sources are connected by checking available tools. Each source corresponds to a set of MCP tools:

SourceKey capabilities
~~chatSearch messages, read channels and threads
~~emailSearch messages, read individual emails
~~cloud storageSearch files, fetch document contents
~~project trackerSearch tasks, typeahead search
~~CRMQuery records (accounts, contacts, opportunities)
~~knowledge baseSemantic search, keyword search

If a tool prefix is available, the source is connected and searchable.

Guiding Users to Connect Sources

When a user searches but has few or no sources connected:

You currently have [N] source(s) connected: [list].

To expand your search, you can connect additional sources in your MCP settings:
- ~~chat — messages, threads, channels
- ~~email — emails, conversations, attachments
- ~~cloud storage — docs, sheets, slides
- ~~project tracker — tasks, projects, milestones
- ~~CRM — accounts, contacts, opportunities
- ~~knowledge base — wiki pages, knowledge base articles

The more sources you connect, the more complete your search results.

When a user asks about a specific tool that is not connected:

[Tool name] isn't currently connected. To add it:
1. Open your MCP settings
2. Add the [tool] MCP server configuration
3. Authenticate when prompted

Once connected, it will be automatically included in future searches.

Source Priority Ordering

Different query types benefit from searching certain sources first. Use these priorities to weight results, not to skip sources:

By Query Type

Decision queries ("What did we decide..."):

1. ~~chat (conversations where decisions happen)
2. ~~email (decision confirmations, announcements)
3. ~~cloud storage (meeting notes, decision logs)
4. Wiki (if decisions are documented)
5. Task tracker (if decisions are captured in tasks)

Status queries ("What's the status of..."):

1. Task tracker (~~project tracker — authoritative status)
2. ~~chat (real-time discussion)
3. ~~cloud storage (status docs, reports)
4. ~~email (status update emails)
5. Wiki (project pages)

Document queries ("Where's the doc for..."):

1. ~~cloud storage (primary doc storage)
2. Wiki / ~~knowledge base (knowledge base)
3. ~~email (docs shared via email)
4. ~~chat (docs shared in channels)
5. Task tracker (docs linked to tasks)

People queries ("Who works on..." / "Who knows about..."):

1. ~~chat (message authors, channel members)
2. Task tracker (task assignees)
3. ~~cloud storage (doc authors, collaborators)
4. ~~CRM (account owners, contacts)
5. ~~email (email participants)

Factual/Policy queries ("What's our policy on..."):

1. Wiki / ~~knowledge base (official documentation)
2. ~~cloud storage (policy docs, handbooks)
3. ~~email (policy announcements)
4. ~~chat (policy discussions)

Default Priority (General Queries)

When query type is unclear:

1. ~~chat (highest volume, most real-time)
2. ~~email (formal communications)
3. ~~cloud storage (documents and files)
4. Wiki / ~~knowledge base (structured knowledge)
5. Task tracker (work items)
6. CRM (customer data)

Rate Limiting Awareness

MCP sources may have rate limits. Handle them gracefully:

Detection

Rate limit responses typically appear as:

  • HTTP 429 responses
  • Error messages mentioning "rate limit", "too many requests", or "quota exceeded"
  • Throttled or delayed responses

Handling

When a source is rate limited:

  1. Do not retry immediately — respect the limit
  2. Continue with other sources — do not block the entire search
  3. Inform the user:
Note: [Source] is temporarily rate limited. Results below are from
[other sources]. You can retry in a few minutes to include [source].
  1. For digests — if rate limited mid-scan, note which time range was covered before the limit hit

Prevention

  • Avoid unnecessary API calls — check if the source is likely to have relevant results before querying
  • Use targeted queries over broad scans when possible
  • For digests, batch requests where the API supports it
  • Cache awareness: if a search was just run, avoid re-running the same query immediately

Source Health

Track source availability during a session:

Source Status:
  ~~chat:        ✓ Available
  ~~email:        ✓ Available
  ~~cloud storage:  ✓ Available
  ~~project tracker:        ✗ Not connected
  ~~CRM:   ✗ Not connected
  ~~knowledge base:      ⚠ Rate limited (retry in 2 min)

When reporting search results, include which sources were searched so the user knows the scope of the answer.

Adding Custom Sources

The enterprise search plugin works with any MCP-connected source. As new MCP servers become available, they can be added to the .mcp.json configuration. The search and digest commands will automatically detect and include new sources based on available tools.

To add a new source:

  1. Add the MCP server configuration to .mcp.json
  2. Authenticate if required
  3. The source will be included in subsequent searches automatically

Source

git clone https://github.com/anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins/blob/main/enterprise-search/skills/source-management/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Keeps track of connected MCP sources for enterprise search. Detects available sources, guides adding new ones, and manages source priority ordering and rate-limiting awareness to improve results and resilience.

How This Skill Works

It determines connected sources by inspecting MCP tool prefixes. It provides guided prompts for connecting new sources through MCP settings and authentication. It enforces a per query type priority order to improve result relevance while remaining aware of rate limits.

When to Use It

  • You want to broaden search coverage by connecting additional MCP sources.
  • You need to verify which sources are currently connected.
  • You want to optimize result relevance using source priority by query type.
  • You are encountering rate limits and need guidance on handling throttling.
  • You are validating connectivity after adding a new source.

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Open MCP settings to view connected sources.
  2. Step 2: Add the MCP server configuration for a tool and authenticate when prompted.
  3. Step 3: Review and apply the source priority ordering for your query types to influence results.

Best Practices

  • Regularly audit connected sources and prefixes to confirm connectivity.
  • Use the recommended priorities per query type to balance results.
  • Connect all relevant sources (chat, email, cloud storage, etc.) to maximize coverage.
  • Monitor for rate-limiting signals (HTTP 429) and implement backoff.
  • Test searches across decision, status, and document queries to validate ordering.

Example Use Cases

  • A product team searches across chat, cloud storage, and knowledge base to surface decisions.
  • Support teams combine chat conversations with CRM data to resolve issues faster.
  • Legal reviews documents by querying cloud storage and the knowledge base.
  • Sales teams pull accounts and emails from CRM and email for context on opportunities.
  • Operations track project statuses using the project tracker and chat for quick updates.

Frequently Asked Questions

Add this skill to your agents
Sponsor this space

Reach thousands of developers