How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/teams:get-release-datesThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
This skill provides functionality to fetch OpenShift release information including GA dates and development start dates from the Sippy API.
This skill provides functionality to fetch OpenShift release information including GA dates and development start dates from the Sippy API.
Use this skill when you need to:
Python 3 Installation
which python3Network Access
sippy.dptools.openshift.orgFirst, ensure Python 3 is available:
python3 --version
If Python 3 is not installed, guide the user through installation for their platform.
The script is located at:
plugins/teams/skills/get-release-dates/get_release_dates.py
Execute the script with the release parameter:
# Get dates for release 4.21
python3 plugins/teams/skills/get-release-dates/get_release_dates.py \
--release 4.21
# Get dates for release 4.20
python3 plugins/teams/skills/get-release-dates/get_release_dates.py \
--release 4.20
The script outputs JSON data with the following structure:
{
"release": "4.21",
"found": true,
"ga": "2026-02-17T00:00:00Z",
"development_start": "2025-09-02T00:00:00Z",
"previous_release": "4.20"
}
Field Descriptions:
release: The release identifier that was queriedfound: Boolean indicating if the release exists in Sippyga: GA (General Availability) date. If null, the release is still in development.development_start: When development started for this releaseprevious_release: The previous release in the sequence (empty string if none)If Release Not Found:
{
"release": "99.99",
"found": false
}
Release Status - Development vs GA'd:
ga is null, the release is still under active development
{
"release": "4.21",
"found": true,
"development_start": "2025-09-02T00:00:00Z",
"previous_release": "4.20"
}
ga has a timestamp, the release has reached General Availability
{
"release": "4.17",
"found": true,
"ga": "2024-10-01T00:00:00Z",
"development_start": "2024-05-17T00:00:00Z",
"previous_release": "4.16"
}
Based on the release dates:
ga is null: Release is still in developmentga has a timestamp: Release has reached General Availabilitydevelopment_start and ga dates
ga - development_startdevelopment_startprevious_release to navigate the release sequencefound field before using the release in other operationsThe script handles several error scenarios:
Network Errors: If unable to reach Sippy API
Error: URL Error: [reason]
HTTP Errors: If API returns an error status
Error: HTTP Error 404: Not Found
Invalid Release: Script returns exit code 1 with found: false in output
Parsing Errors: If API response is malformed
Error: Failed to fetch release dates: [details]
The script outputs JSON to stdout with:
found: truefound: falseThe script queries the Sippy releases API:
The full API response includes:
releases: Array of all available release identifiersga_dates: Simple mapping of release to GA datedates: Detailed mapping with GA and development_start datesrelease_attrs: Extended attributes including previous releasepython3 plugins/teams/skills/get-release-dates/get_release_dates.py \
--release 4.21
Output:
{
"release": "4.21",
"found": true,
"development_start": "2025-09-02T00:00:00Z",
"previous_release": "4.20"
}
python3 plugins/teams/skills/get-release-dates/get_release_dates.py \
--release 4.17
Output:
{
"release": "4.17",
"found": true,
"ga": "2024-10-01T00:00:00Z",
"development_start": "2024-05-17T00:00:00Z",
"previous_release": "4.16"
}
python3 plugins/teams/skills/get-release-dates/get_release_dates.py \
--release 99.99
Output:
{
"release": "99.99",
"found": false
}
Exit code: 1
This skill can be used in conjunction with other teams skills:
plugins/teams/skills/list-regressions/SKILL.mdplugins/teams/README.mdnpx claudepluginhub fsgreco/openshift--ai-helpers --plugin teamsGuides collaborative design exploration before implementation: explores context, asks clarifying questions, proposes approaches, and writes a design doc for user approval.
Creates structured, bite-sized implementation plans from specs or requirements before writing code. Useful for breaking down multi-step tasks into testable steps with file structure and task boundaries.
Synthesizes the current conversation into a structured spec (PRD) and publishes it to the project issue tracker with a ready-for-agent label, without interviewing the user.