writing-hookify-rules▌
anthropics/claude-code · updated Apr 8, 2026
Define patterns and messages that trigger Claude warnings or blocks on specific agent actions.
- ›Supports four event types (bash commands, file edits, agent stop, user prompts) plus an \"all\" catch-all, each with regex or multi-condition matching
- ›Rules use markdown files with YAML frontmatter stored in .claude/hookify.{name}.local.md ; changes take effect immediately on next tool use
- ›Two matching modes: simple pattern field for single-condition rules, or advanced conditions array for
Writing Hookify Rules
Overview
Hookify rules are markdown files with YAML frontmatter that define patterns to watch for and messages to show when those patterns match. Rules are stored in .claude/hookify.{rule-name}.local.md files.
Rule File Format
Basic Structure
---
name: rule-identifier
enabled: true
event: bash|file|stop|prompt|all
pattern: regex-pattern-here
---
Message to show Claude when this rule triggers.
Can include markdown formatting, warnings, suggestions, etc.
Frontmatter Fields
name (required): Unique identifier for the rule
- Use kebab-case:
warn-dangerous-rm,block-console-log - Be descriptive and action-oriented
- Start with verb: warn, prevent, block, require, check
enabled (required): Boolean to activate/deactivate
true: Rule is activefalse: Rule is disabled (won't trigger)- Can toggle without deleting rule
event (required): Which hook event to trigger on
bash: Bash tool commandsfile: Edit, Write, MultiEdit toolsstop: When agent wants to stopprompt: When user submits a promptall: All events
action (optional): What to do when rule matches
warn: Show message but allow operation (default)block: Prevent operation (PreToolUse) or stop session (Stop events)- If omitted, defaults to
warn
pattern (simple format): Regex pattern to match
- Used for simple single-condition rules
- Matches against command (bash) or new_text (file)
- Python regex syntax
Example:
event: bash
pattern: rm\s+-rf
Advanced Format (Multiple Conditions)
For complex rules with multiple conditions:
---
name: warn-env-file-edits
enabled: true
event: file
conditions:
- field: file_path
operator: regex_match
pattern: \.env$
- field: new_text
operator: contains
pattern: API_KEY
---
You're adding an API key to a .env file. Ensure this file is in .gitignore!
Condition fields:
field: Which field to check- For bash:
command - For file:
file_path,new_text,old_text,content
- For bash:
operator: How to matchregex_match: Regex pattern matchingcontains: Substring checkequals: Exact matchnot_contains: Substring must NOT be presentstarts_with: Prefix checkends_with: Suffix check
pattern: Pattern or string to match
All conditions must match for rule to trigger.
Message Body
The markdown content after frontmatter is shown to Claude when the rule triggers.
Good messages:
- Explain what was detected
- Explain why it's problematic
- Suggest alternatives or best practices
- Use formatting for clarity (bold, lists, etc.)
Example:
⚠️ **Console.log detected!**
You're adding console.log to production code.
**Why this matters:**
- Debug logs shouldn't ship to production
- Console.log can expose sensitive data
- Impacts browser performance
**Alternatives:**
- Use a proper logging library
- Remove before committing
- Use conditional debug builds
Event Type Guide
bash Events
Match Bash command patterns:
---
event: bash
pattern: sudo\s+|rm\s+-rf|chmod\s+777
---
Dangerous command detected!
Common patterns:
- Dangerous commands:
rm\s+-rf,dd\s+if=,mkfs - Privilege escalation:
sudo\s+,su\s+ - Permission issues:
chmod\s+777,chown\s+root
file Events
Match Edit/Write/MultiEdit operations:
---
event: file
pattern: console\.log\(|eval\(|innerHTML\s*=
---
Potentially problematic code pattern detected!
Match on different fields:
---
event: file
conditions:
- field: file_path
operator: regex_match
pattern: \.tsx?$
- field: new_text
operator: regex_match
pattern: console\.log\(
---
Console.log in TypeScript file!
Common patterns:
- Debug code:
console\.log\(,debugger,print\( - Security risks:
eval\(,innerHTML\s*=,dangerouslySetInnerHTML - Sensitive files:
\.env$,credentials,\.pem$ - Generated files:
node_modules/,dist/,build/
stop Events
Match when agent wants to stop (completion checks):
---
event: stop
pattern: .*
---
Before stopping, verify:
- [ ] Tests were run
- [ ] Build succeeded
- [ ] Documentation updated
Use for:
- Reminders about required steps
- Completion checklists
- Process enforcement
prompt Events
Match user prompt content (advanced):
---
event: prompt
conditions:
- field: user_prompt
operator: contains
pattern: deploy to production
---
Production deployment checklist:
- [ ] Tests passing?
- [ ] Reviewed by team?
- [ ] Monitoring ready?
Pattern Writing Tips
Regex Basics
Literal characters: Most characters match themselves
rmmatches "rm"console.logmatches "console.log"
Special characters need escaping:
.(any char) →\.(literal dot)()→\(\)(literal parens)[]→\[\](literal brackets)
Common metacharacters:
\s- whitespace (space, tab, newline)\d- digit (0-9)\w- word character (a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _).- any character+- one or more*- zero or more?- zero or one|- OR
Examples:
rm\s+-rf Matches: rm -rf, rm -rf
console\.log\( Matches: console.log(
(eval|exec)\( Matches: eval( or exec(
chmod\s+777 Matches: chmod 777, chmod 777
API_KEY\s*= Matches: API_KEY=, API_KEY =
Testing Patterns
Test regex patterns before using:
python3 -c "import re; print(re.search(r'your_pattern', 'test text'))"
Or use online regex testers (regex101.com with Python flavor).
Common Pitfalls
Too broad:
pattern: log # Matches "log", "login", "dialog", "catalog"
Better: console\.log\(|logger\.
Too specific:
pattern: rm -rf /tmp # Only matches exact path
Better: rm\s+-rf
Escaping issues:
- YAML quoted strings:
"pattern"requires double backslashes\\s - YAML unquoted:
pattern: \sworks as-is - Recommendation: Use unquoted patterns in YAML
File Organization
Location: All rules in .claude/ directory
Naming: .claude/hookify.{descriptive-name}.local.md
Gitignore: Add .claude/*.local.md to .gitignore
Good names:
hookify.dangerous-rm.local.mdhookify.console-log.local.mdhookify.require-tests.local.mdhookify.sensitive-files.local.md
Bad names:
hookify.rule1.local.md(not descriptive)hookify.md(missing .local)danger.local.md(missing hookify prefix)
Workflow
Creating a Rule
- Identify unwanted behavior
- Determine which tool is involved (Bash, Edit, etc.)
- Choose event type (bash, file, stop, etc.)
- Write regex pattern
- Create
.claude/hookify.{name}.local.mdfile in project root - Test immediately - rules are read dynamically on next tool use
Refining a Rule
- Edit the
.local.mdfile - Adjust pattern or message
- Test immediately - changes take effect on next tool use
Disabling a Rule
Temporary: Set enabled: false in frontmatter
Permanent: Delete the .local.md file
Examples
See ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/examples/ for complete examples:
dangerous-rm.local.md- Block dangerous rm commandsconsole-log-warning.local.md- Warn about console.logsensitive-files-warning.local.md- Warn about editing .env files
Quick Reference
Minimum viable rule:
---
name: my-rule
enabled: true
event: bash
pattern: dangerous_command
---
Warning message here
Rule with conditions:
---
name: my-rule
enabled: true
event: file
conditions:
- field: file_path
operator: regex_match
pattern: \.ts$
- field: new_text
operator: contains
pattern: any
---
Warning message
Event types:
bash- Bash commandsfile- File editsstop- Completion checksprompt- User inputall- All events
Field options:
- Bash:
command - File:
file_path,new_text,old_text,content - Prompt:
user_prompt
Operators:
regex_match,contains,equals,not_contains,starts_with,ends_with
Discussion
Product Hunt–style comments (not star reviews)- No comments yet — start the thread.
Ratings
4.6★★★★★31 reviews- ★★★★★Henry Garcia· Dec 28, 2024
I recommend writing-hookify-rules for anyone iterating fast on agent tooling; clear intent and a small, reviewable surface area.
- ★★★★★Liam Haddad· Dec 12, 2024
writing-hookify-rules reduced setup friction for our internal harness; good balance of opinion and flexibility.
- ★★★★★Nikhil Flores· Nov 19, 2024
Useful defaults in writing-hookify-rules — fewer surprises than typical one-off scripts, and it plays nicely with `npx skills` flows.
- ★★★★★Rahul Santra· Nov 11, 2024
writing-hookify-rules fits our agent workflows well — practical, well scoped, and easy to wire into existing repos.
- ★★★★★Advait Desai· Nov 3, 2024
We added writing-hookify-rules from the explainx registry; install was straightforward and the SKILL.md answered most questions upfront.
- ★★★★★Noor Kapoor· Oct 22, 2024
Keeps context tight: writing-hookify-rules is the kind of skill you can hand to a new teammate without a long onboarding doc.
- ★★★★★Liam Jackson· Oct 14, 2024
Solid pick for teams standardizing on skills: writing-hookify-rules is focused, and the summary matches what you get after install.
- ★★★★★Layla Khanna· Oct 10, 2024
Registry listing for writing-hookify-rules matched our evaluation — installs cleanly and behaves as described in the markdown.
- ★★★★★Pratham Ware· Oct 2, 2024
writing-hookify-rules has been reliable in day-to-day use. Documentation quality is above average for community skills.
- ★★★★★Sakshi Patil· Sep 5, 2024
Keeps context tight: writing-hookify-rules is the kind of skill you can hand to a new teammate without a long onboarding doc.
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