Instruments ASP.NET Core, Node.js, and Python webapps hosted in Azure with App Insights telemetry via code changes and resource provisioning.
From awesome-copilotnpx claudepluginhub ctr26/dotfiles --plugin awesome-copilotThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
LICENSE.txtexamples/appinsights.bicepreferences/ASPNETCORE.mdreferences/AUTO.mdreferences/NODEJS.mdreferences/PYTHON.mdscripts/appinsights.ps1Fetches up-to-date documentation from Context7 for libraries and frameworks like React, Next.js, Prisma. Use for setup questions, API references, and code examples.
Uses ctx7 CLI to fetch current library docs, manage AI coding skills (install/search/generate), and configure Context7 MCP for AI editors.
Fetches up-to-date documentation from Context7 for libraries and frameworks like React, Next.js, Prisma. Use for setup questions, API references, and code examples.
This skill enables sending telemetry data of a webapp to Azure App Insights for better observability of the app's health.
Use this skill when the user wants to enable telemetry for their webapp.
The app in the workspace must be one of these kinds
Find out the (programming language, application framework, hosting) tuple of the application the user is trying to add telemetry support in. This determines how the application can be instrumented. Read the source code to make an educated guess. Confirm with the user on anything you don't know. You must always ask the user where the application is hosted (e.g. on a personal computer, in an Azure App Service as code, in an Azure App Service as container, in an Azure Container App, etc.).
If the app is a C# ASP.NET Core app hosted in Azure App Service, use AUTO guide to help user auto-instrument the app.
Manually instrument the app by creating the AppInsights resource and update the app's code.
Use one of the following options that fits the environment.
No matter which option you choose, recommend the user to create the App Insights resource in a meaningful resource group that makes managing resources easier. A good candidate will be the same resource group that contains the resources for the hosted app in Azure.