A Claude Code plugin marketplace featuring the Compound Engineering Plugin — tools that make each unit of engineering work easier than the last.
/plugin marketplace add EveryInc/compound-engineering-plugin
/plugin install compound-engineering/add-plugin compound-engineering
This repo includes a Bun/TypeScript CLI that converts Claude Code plugins to OpenCode, Codex, Factory Droid, Pi, Gemini CLI, GitHub Copilot, Kiro CLI, Windsurf, OpenClaw, and Qwen Code.
# convert the compound-engineering plugin into OpenCode format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to opencode
# convert to Codex format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to codex
# convert to Factory Droid format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to droid
# convert to Pi format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to pi
# convert to Gemini CLI format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to gemini
# convert to GitHub Copilot format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to copilot
# convert to Kiro CLI format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to kiro
# convert to OpenClaw format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to openclaw
# convert to Windsurf format (global scope by default)
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to windsurf
# convert to Windsurf workspace scope
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to windsurf --scope workspace
# convert to Qwen Code format
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to qwen
# auto-detect installed tools and install to all
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin install compound-engineering --to allLocal dev:
bun run src/index.ts install ./plugins/compound-engineering --to opencodeOutput format details per target
| Target | Output path | Notes |
|---|---|---|
opencode |
~/.config/opencode/ |
Commands as .md files; opencode.json MCP config deep-merged; backups made before overwriting |
codex |
~/.codex/prompts + ~/.codex/skills |
Each command becomes a prompt + skill pair; descriptions truncated to 1024 chars |
droid |
~/.factory/ |
Tool names mapped (Bash→Execute, Write→Create); namespace prefixes stripped |
pi |
~/.pi/agent/ |
Prompts, skills, extensions, and mcporter.json for MCPorter interoperability |
gemini |
.gemini/ |
Skills from agents; commands as .toml; namespaced commands become directories (workflows:plan → commands/workflows/plan.toml) |
copilot |
.github/ |
Agents as .agent.md with Copilot frontmatter; MCP env vars prefixed with COPILOT_MCP_ |
kiro |
.kiro/ |
Agents as JSON configs + prompt .md files; only stdio MCP servers supported |
openclaw |
~/.openclaw/extensions/<plugin>/ |
Entry-point TypeScript skill file; openclaw-extension.json for MCP servers |
windsurf |
~/.codeium/windsurf/ (global) or .windsurf/ (workspace) |
Agents become skills; commands become flat workflows; mcp_config.json merged |
qwen |
~/.qwen/extensions/<plugin>/ |
Agents as .yaml; env vars with placeholders extracted as settings; colon separator for nested commands |
All provider targets are experimental and may change as the formats evolve.
Sync your personal Claude Code config (~/.claude/) to other AI coding tools. Omit --target to sync to all detected supported tools automatically:
# Sync to all detected tools (default)
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync
# Sync skills and MCP servers to OpenCode
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target opencode
# Sync to Codex
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target codex
# Sync to Pi
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target pi
# Sync to Droid
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target droid
# Sync to GitHub Copilot (skills + MCP servers)
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target copilot
# Sync to Gemini (skills + MCP servers)
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target gemini
# Sync to Windsurf
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target windsurf
# Sync to Kiro
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target kiro
# Sync to Qwen
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target qwen
# Sync to OpenClaw (skills only; MCP is validation-gated)
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target openclaw
# Sync to all detected tools
bunx @every-env/compound-plugin sync --target allThis syncs:
- Personal skills from
~/.claude/skills/(as symlinks) - Personal slash commands from
~/.claude/commands/(as provider-native prompts, workflows, or converted skills where supported) - MCP servers from
~/.claude/settings.json
Skills are symlinked (not copied) so changes in Claude Code are reflected immediately.
Supported sync targets:
opencodecodexpidroidcopilotgeminiwindsurfkiroqwenopenclaw
Notes:
- Codex sync preserves non-managed
config.tomlcontent and now includes remote MCP servers. - Command sync reuses each provider's existing Claude command conversion, so some targets receive prompts or workflows while others receive converted skills.
- Copilot sync writes personal skills to
~/.copilot/skills/and MCP config to~/.copilot/mcp-config.json. - Gemini sync writes MCP config to
~/.gemini/and avoids mirroring skills that Gemini already discovers from~/.agents/skills, which prevents duplicate-skill warnings. - Droid, Windsurf, Kiro, and Qwen sync merge MCP servers into the provider's documented user config.
- OpenClaw currently syncs skills only. Personal command sync is skipped because this repo does not yet have a documented user-level OpenClaw command surface, and MCP sync is skipped because the current official OpenClaw docs do not clearly document an MCP server config contract.
Plan → Work → Review → Compound → Repeat
| Command | Purpose |
|---|---|
/ce:plan |
Turn feature ideas into detailed implementation plans |
/ce:work |
Execute plans with worktrees and task tracking |
/ce:review |
Multi-agent code review before merging |
/ce:compound |
Document learnings to make future work easier |
Each cycle compounds: plans inform future plans, reviews catch more issues, patterns get documented.
Each unit of engineering work should make subsequent units easier—not harder.
Traditional development accumulates technical debt. Every feature adds complexity. The codebase becomes harder to work with over time.
Compound engineering inverts this. 80% is in planning and review, 20% is in execution:
- Plan thoroughly before writing code
- Review to catch issues and capture learnings
- Codify knowledge so it's reusable
- Keep quality high so future changes are easy
- Full component reference - all agents, commands, skills
- Compound engineering: how Every codes with agents
- The story behind compounding engineering