Babysitter rust-sdk-specialist
Rust SDK development with zero-cost abstractions
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/a5c-ai/babysitter
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/a5c-ai/babysitter "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/library/specializations/sdk-platform-development/skills/rust-sdk-specialist" ~/.claude/skills/a5c-ai-babysitter-rust-sdk-specialist && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
library/specializations/sdk-platform-development/skills/rust-sdk-specialist/SKILL.mdsource content
Rust SDK Specialist Skill
Overview
This skill specializes in developing high-performance Rust SDKs with zero-cost abstractions, memory safety guarantees, and async support through tokio or async-std.
Capabilities
- Design Rust SDK architecture with traits and generics
- Implement async with tokio or async-std runtimes
- Configure cargo publishing to crates.io
- Ensure memory safety patterns without runtime overhead
- Design ergonomic APIs with builder patterns
- Implement proper error handling with thiserror/anyhow
- Support feature flags for optional functionality
- Configure no_std support where applicable
Target Processes
- Multi-Language SDK Strategy
- SDK Architecture Design
- SDK Testing Strategy
Integration Points
- crates.io package registry
- cargo for building and testing
- tokio async runtime
- reqwest/hyper for HTTP
- serde for serialization
- tracing for observability
Input Requirements
- API specification
- Async runtime preference (tokio/async-std)
- MSRV (Minimum Supported Rust Version)
- Feature flag requirements
- no_std requirements (if any)
Output Artifacts
- Rust crate source code
- Cargo.toml configuration
- Integration and unit tests
- Examples directory
- Documentation (rustdoc)
- CI configuration
Usage Example
skill: name: rust-sdk-specialist context: apiSpec: ./openapi.yaml msrv: "1.70" asyncRuntime: tokio httpClient: reqwest errorHandling: thiserror features: - blocking - native-tls - rustls
Best Practices
- Use traits for abstraction without overhead
- Implement From/Into for type conversions
- Provide both async and blocking APIs via features
- Use the newtype pattern for type safety
- Document with rustdoc and examples
- Follow Rust API guidelines