Skillshub sponsor-finder

Find which of a GitHub repository's dependencies are sponsorable via GitHub Sponsors. Uses deps.dev API for dependency resolution across npm, PyPI, Cargo, Go, RubyGems, Maven, and NuGet. Checks npm funding metadata, FUNDING.yml files, and web search. Verifies every link. Shows direct and transitive dependencies with OSSF Scorecard health data. Invoke with /sponsor followed by a GitHub owner/repo (e.g. "/sponsor expressjs/express").

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/ComeOnOliver/skillshub
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/ComeOnOliver/skillshub "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/github/awesome-copilot/sponsor-finder" ~/.claude/skills/comeonoliver-skillshub-sponsor-finder && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/github/awesome-copilot/sponsor-finder/SKILL.md
source content

Sponsor Finder

Discover opportunities to support the open source maintainers behind your project's dependencies. Accepts a GitHub

owner/repo
(e.g.
/sponsor expressjs/express
), uses the deps.dev API for dependency resolution and project health data, and produces a friendly sponsorship report covering both direct and transitive dependencies.

Your Workflow

When the user types

/sponsor {owner/repo}
or provides a repository in
owner/repo
format:

  1. Parse the input — Extract
    owner
    and
    repo
    .
  2. Detect the ecosystem — Fetch manifest to determine package name + version.
  3. Get full dependency tree — deps.dev
    GetDependencies
    (one call).
  4. Resolve repos — deps.dev
    GetVersion
    for each dep →
    relatedProjects
    gives GitHub repo.
  5. Get project health — deps.dev
    GetProject
    for unique repos → OSSF Scorecard.
  6. Find funding links — npm
    funding
    field, FUNDING.yml, web search fallback.
  7. Verify every link — fetch each URL to confirm it's live.
  8. Group and report — by funding destination, sorted by impact.

Step 1: Detect Ecosystem and Package

Use

get_file_contents
to fetch the manifest from the target repo. Determine the ecosystem and extract the package name + latest version:

FileEcosystemPackage name fromVersion from
package.json
NPM
name
field
version
field
requirements.txt
PYPIlist of package namesuse latest (omit version in deps.dev call)
pyproject.toml
PYPI
[project.dependencies]
use latest
Cargo.toml
CARGO
[package] name
[package] version
go.mod
GO
module
path
extract from go.mod
Gemfile
RUBYGEMSgem namesuse latest
pom.xml
MAVEN
groupId:artifactId
version

Step 2: Get Full Dependency Tree (deps.dev)

This is the key step. Use

web_fetch
to call the deps.dev API:

https://api.deps.dev/v3/systems/{ECOSYSTEM}/packages/{PACKAGE}/versions/{VERSION}:dependencies

For example:

https://api.deps.dev/v3/systems/npm/packages/express/versions/5.2.1:dependencies

This returns a

nodes
array where each node has:

  • versionKey.name
    — package name
  • versionKey.version
    — resolved version
  • relation
    "SELF"
    ,
    "DIRECT"
    , or
    "INDIRECT"

This single call gives you the entire dependency tree — both direct and transitive — with exact resolved versions. No need to parse lockfiles.

URL encoding

Package names containing special characters must be percent-encoded:

  • @colors/colors
    %40colors%2Fcolors
  • Encode
    @
    as
    %40
    ,
    /
    as
    %2F

For repos without a single root package

If the repo doesn't publish a package (e.g., it's an app not a library), fall back to reading

package.json
dependencies directly and calling deps.dev
GetVersion
for each.


Step 3: Resolve Each Dependency to a GitHub Repo (deps.dev)

For each dependency from the tree, call deps.dev

GetVersion
:

https://api.deps.dev/v3/systems/{ECOSYSTEM}/packages/{NAME}/versions/{VERSION}

From the response, extract:

  • relatedProjects
    → look for
    relationType: "SOURCE_REPO"
    projectKey.id
    gives
    github.com/{owner}/{repo}
  • links
    → look for
    label: "SOURCE_REPO"
    url
    field

This works across all ecosystems — npm, PyPI, Cargo, Go, RubyGems, Maven, NuGet — with the same field structure.

Efficiency rules

  • Process in batches of 10 at a time.
  • Deduplicate — multiple packages may map to the same repo.
  • Skip deps where no GitHub project is found (count as "unresolvable").

Step 4: Get Project Health Data (deps.dev)

For each unique GitHub repo, call deps.dev

GetProject
:

https://api.deps.dev/v3/projects/github.com%2F{owner}%2F{repo}

From the response, extract:

  • scorecard.checks
    → find the
    "Maintained"
    check →
    score
    (0–10)
  • starsCount
    — popularity indicator
  • license
    — project license
  • openIssuesCount
    — activity indicator

Use the Maintained score to label project health:

  • Score 7–10 → ⭐ Actively maintained
  • Score 4–6 → ⚠️ Partially maintained
  • Score 0–3 → 💤 Possibly unmaintained

Efficiency rules

  • Only fetch for unique repos (not per-package).
  • Process in batches of 10 at a time.
  • This step is optional — skip if rate-limited and note in output.

Step 5: Find Funding Links

For each unique GitHub repo, check for funding information using three sources in order:

5a: npm
funding
field (npm ecosystem only)

Use

web_fetch
on
https://registry.npmjs.org/{package-name}/latest
and check for a
funding
field:

  • String:
    "https://github.com/sponsors/sindresorhus"
    → use as URL
  • Object:
    {"type": "opencollective", "url": "https://opencollective.com/express"}
    → use
    url
  • Array: collect all URLs

5b:
.github/FUNDING.yml
(repo-level, then org-level fallback)

Step 5b-i — Per-repo check: Use

get_file_contents
to fetch
{owner}/{repo}
path
.github/FUNDING.yml
.

Step 5b-ii — Org/user-level fallback: If 5b-i returned 404 (no FUNDING.yml in the repo itself), check the owner's default community health repo: Use

get_file_contents
to fetch
{owner}/.github
path
FUNDING.yml
.

GitHub supports a default community health files convention: a

.github
repository at the user/org level provides defaults for all repos that lack their own. For example,
isaacs/.github/FUNDING.yml
applies to all
isaacs/*
repos.

Only look up each unique

{owner}/.github
repo once — reuse the result for all repos under that owner. Process in batches of 10 owners at a time.

Parse the YAML (same for both 5b-i and 5b-ii):

  • github: [username]
    https://github.com/sponsors/{username}
  • open_collective: slug
    https://opencollective.com/{slug}
  • ko_fi: username
    https://ko-fi.com/{username}
  • patreon: username
    https://patreon.com/{username}
  • tidelift: platform/package
    https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/{platform-package}
  • custom: [urls]
    → use as-is

5c: Web search fallback

For the top 10 unfunded dependencies (by number of transitive dependents), use

web_search
:

"{package name}" github sponsors OR open collective OR funding

Skip packages known to be corporate-maintained (React/Meta, TypeScript/Microsoft, @types/DefinitelyTyped).

Efficiency rules

  • Check 5a and 5b for all deps. Only use 5c for top unfunded ones.
  • Skip npm registry calls for non-npm ecosystems.
  • Deduplicate repos — check each repo only once.
  • One
    {owner}/.github
    check per unique owner
    — reuse the result for all their repos.
  • Process org-level lookups in batches of 10 owners at a time.

Step 6: Verify Every Link (CRITICAL)

Before including ANY funding link, verify it exists.

Use

web_fetch
on each funding URL:

  • Valid page → ✅ Include
  • 404 / "not found" / "not enrolled" → ❌ Exclude
  • Redirect to valid page → ✅ Include final URL

Verify in batches of 5 at a time. Never present unverified links.


Step 7: Output the Report

Output discipline

Minimize intermediate output during data gathering. Do NOT announce each batch ("Batch 3 of 7…", "Now checking funding…"). Instead:

  • Show one brief status line when starting each major phase (e.g., "Resolving 67 dependencies…", "Checking funding links…")
  • Collect ALL data before producing the report. Never drip-feed partial tables.
  • Output the final report as a single cohesive block at the end.

Report template

## 💜 Sponsor Finder Report

**Repository:** {owner}/{repo} · {ecosystem} · {package}@{version}
**Scanned:** {date} · {total} deps ({direct} direct + {transitive} transitive)

---

### 🎯 Ways to Give Back

Sponsoring just {N} people/orgs supports {sponsorable} of your {total} dependencies — a great way to invest in the open source your project depends on.

1. **💜 @{user}** — {N} direct + {M} transitive deps · ⭐ Maintained
   {dep1}, {dep2}, {dep3}, ...
   https://github.com/sponsors/{user}

2. **🟠 Open Collective: {name}** — {N} direct + {M} transitive deps · ⭐ Maintained
   {dep1}, {dep2}, {dep3}, ...
   https://opencollective.com/{name}

3. **💜 @{user2}** — {N} direct dep · 💤 Low activity
   {dep1}
   https://github.com/sponsors/{user2}

---

### 📊 Coverage

- **{sponsorable}/{total}** dependencies have funding options ({percentage}%)
- **{destinations}** unique funding destinations
- **{unfunded_direct}** direct deps don't have funding set up yet ({top_names}, ...)
- All links verified ✅

Report format rules

  • Lead with "🎯 Ways to Give Back" — this is the primary output. Numbered list, sorted by total deps covered (descending).
  • Bare URLs on their own line — not wrapped in markdown link syntax. This ensures they're clickable in any terminal emulator.
  • Inline dep names — list the covered dependency names in a comma-separated line under each sponsor, so the user sees exactly what they're funding.
  • Health indicator inline — show ⭐/⚠️/💤 next to each destination, not in a separate table column.
  • One "📊 Coverage" section — compact stats. No separate "Verified Funding Links" table, no "No Funding Found" table.
  • Unfunded deps as a brief note — just the count + top names. Frame as "don't have funding set up yet" rather than highlighting a gap. Never shame projects for not having funding — many maintainers prefer other forms of contribution.
  • 💜 GitHub Sponsors, 🟠 Open Collective, ☕ Ko-fi, 🔗 Other
  • Prioritize GitHub Sponsors links when multiple funding sources exist for the same maintainer.

Error Handling

  • If deps.dev returns 404 for the package → fall back to reading the manifest directly and resolving via registry APIs.
  • If deps.dev is rate-limited → note partial results, continue with what was fetched.
  • If
    get_file_contents
    returns 404 for the repo → inform user repo may not exist or is private.
  • If link verification fails → exclude the link silently.
  • Always produce a report even if partial — never fail silently.

Critical Rules

  1. NEVER present unverified links. Fetch every URL before showing it. 5 verified links > 20 guessed links.
  2. NEVER guess from training knowledge. Always check — funding pages change over time.
  3. Always be encouraging, never shaming. Frame results positively — celebrate what IS funded, and treat unfunded deps as an opportunity, not a failing. Not every project needs or wants financial sponsorship.
  4. Lead with action. The "🎯 Ways to Give Back" section is the primary output — bare clickable URLs, grouped by destination.
  5. Use deps.dev as primary resolver. Fall back to registry APIs only if deps.dev is unavailable.
  6. Always use GitHub MCP tools (
    get_file_contents
    ),
    web_fetch
    , and
    web_search
    — never clone or shell out.
  7. Be efficient. Batch API calls, deduplicate repos, check each owner's
    .github
    repo only once.
  8. Focus on GitHub Sponsors. Most actionable platform — show others but prioritize GitHub.
  9. Deduplicate by maintainer. Group to show real impact of sponsoring one person.
  10. Show the actionable minimum. Tell users the fewest sponsorships to support the most deps.
  11. Minimize intermediate output. Don't announce each batch. Collect all data, then output one cohesive report.