From vercel-labs-agent-skills-2
Deploys and manages Vercel projects via CLI using token-based authentication from env vars or .env files, skipping interactive login. Guides token/project discovery and export with bash.
npx claudepluginhub ctr26/dotfiles --plugin vercel-agent-skillsThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Deploy and manage projects on Vercel using the CLI with token-based authentication, without relying on `vercel login`.
Installs Vercel CLI, authenticates via interactive login or token, links local projects, verifies API access, and pulls env vars for Vercel setup.
Provides Vercel CLI expert guidance for deploying projects, managing environment variables, linking projects/repos, viewing logs, managing domains, and command-line Vercel interactions.
Guides Vercel CLI usage for deploying, managing, and developing projects on Vercel. Covers project linking, local dev, monorepos, CI/CD, env vars, domains, and debugging via decision tree.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Deploy and manage projects on Vercel using the CLI with token-based authentication, without relying on vercel login.
Before running any Vercel CLI commands, identify where the token is coming from. Work through these scenarios in order:
VERCEL_TOKEN is already set in the environmentprintenv VERCEL_TOKEN
If this returns a value, you're ready. Skip to Step 2.
.env file under VERCEL_TOKENgrep '^VERCEL_TOKEN=' .env 2>/dev/null
If found, export it:
export VERCEL_TOKEN=$(grep '^VERCEL_TOKEN=' .env | cut -d= -f2-)
.env file under a different nameLook for any variable that looks like a Vercel token (Vercel tokens typically start with vca_):
grep -i 'vercel' .env 2>/dev/null
Inspect the output to identify which variable holds the token, then export it as VERCEL_TOKEN:
export VERCEL_TOKEN=$(grep '^<VARIABLE_NAME>=' .env | cut -d= -f2-)
If none of the above yield a token, ask the user to provide one. They can create a Vercel access token at vercel.com/account/tokens.
Important: Once VERCEL_TOKEN is exported as an environment variable, the Vercel CLI reads it natively — do not pass it as a --token flag. Putting secrets in command-line arguments exposes them in shell history and process listings.
# Bad — token visible in shell history and process listings
vercel deploy --token "vca_abc123"
# Good — CLI reads VERCEL_TOKEN from the environment
export VERCEL_TOKEN="vca_abc123"
vercel deploy
Similarly, check for the project ID and team scope. These let the CLI target the right project without needing vercel link.
# Check environment
printenv VERCEL_PROJECT_ID
printenv VERCEL_ORG_ID
# Or check .env
grep -i 'vercel' .env 2>/dev/null
If you have a project URL (e.g. https://vercel.com/my-team/my-project), extract the team slug:
# e.g. "my-team" from "https://vercel.com/my-team/my-project"
echo "$PROJECT_URL" | sed 's|https://vercel.com/||' | cut -d/ -f1
If you have both VERCEL_ORG_ID and VERCEL_PROJECT_ID in your environment, export them — the CLI will use these automatically and skip any .vercel/ directory:
export VERCEL_ORG_ID="<org-id>"
export VERCEL_PROJECT_ID="<project-id>"
Note: VERCEL_ORG_ID and VERCEL_PROJECT_ID must be set together — setting only one causes an error.
Ensure the Vercel CLI is installed and up to date:
npm install -g vercel
vercel --version
Always deploy as preview unless the user explicitly requests production. Choose a method based on what you have available.
When VERCEL_TOKEN and VERCEL_PROJECT_ID are set in the environment, deploy directly:
vercel deploy -y --no-wait
With a team scope (either via VERCEL_ORG_ID or --scope):
vercel deploy --scope <team-slug> -y --no-wait
Production (only when explicitly requested):
vercel deploy --prod --scope <team-slug> -y --no-wait
Check status:
vercel inspect <deployment-url>
Use this when you have a token and team but no pre-existing project ID.
# Does the project have a git remote?
git remote get-url origin 2>/dev/null
# Is it already linked to a Vercel project?
cat .vercel/project.json 2>/dev/null || cat .vercel/repo.json 2>/dev/null
With git remote (preferred):
vercel link --repo --scope <team-slug> -y
Reads the git remote and connects to the matching Vercel project. Creates .vercel/repo.json. More reliable than plain vercel link, which matches by directory name.
Without git remote:
vercel link --scope <team-slug> -y
Creates .vercel/project.json.
Link to a specific project by name:
vercel link --project <project-name> --scope <team-slug> -y
If the project is already linked, check orgId in .vercel/project.json or .vercel/repo.json to verify it matches the intended team.
A) Git Push Deploy — has git remote (preferred)
Git pushes trigger automatic Vercel deployments.
git add .
git commit -m "deploy: <description of changes>"
git push
sleep 5
vercel ls --format json --scope <team-slug>
Find the latest entry in the deployments array.B) CLI Deploy — no git remote
vercel deploy --scope <team-slug> -y --no-wait
Check status:
vercel inspect <deployment-url>
git clone <repo-url>
cd <repo-name>
vercel link --repo --scope <team-slug> -y
.vercel/ DirectoryA linked project has either:
.vercel/project.json — from vercel link. Contains projectId and orgId..vercel/repo.json — from vercel link --repo. Contains orgId, remoteName, and a projects map.Not needed when VERCEL_ORG_ID + VERCEL_PROJECT_ID are both set in the environment.
Do NOT run vercel project inspect or vercel link in an unlinked directory to detect state — they will interactively prompt or silently link as a side-effect. vercel ls is safe (in an unlinked directory it defaults to showing all deployments for the scope). vercel whoami is safe anywhere.
# Set for all environments
echo "value" | vercel env add VAR_NAME --scope <team-slug>
# Set for a specific environment (production, preview, development)
echo "value" | vercel env add VAR_NAME production --scope <team-slug>
# List environment variables
vercel env ls --scope <team-slug>
# Pull env vars to local .env.local file
vercel env pull --scope <team-slug>
# Remove a variable
vercel env rm VAR_NAME --scope <team-slug> -y
# List recent deployments
vercel ls --format json --scope <team-slug>
# Inspect a specific deployment
vercel inspect <deployment-url>
# View build logs (requires Vercel CLI v35+)
vercel inspect <deployment-url> --logs
# View runtime request logs (follows live by default; add --no-follow for a one-shot snapshot)
vercel logs <deployment-url>
# List domains
vercel domains ls --scope <team-slug>
# Add a domain to the project — linked or env-linked directory (1 arg)
vercel domains add <domain> --scope <team-slug>
# Add a domain — unlinked directory (requires <project> positional)
vercel domains add <domain> <project> --scope <team-slug>
If this project is managed by Stripe Projects. Ask the user before running any paid or destructive plan change — upgrades bill a real card, downgrades remove seats.
First run stripe projects status --json to confirm the Vercel resource's local name. The examples below assume the default (vercel-plan); substitute the actual name if it was renamed at stripe projects add time.
stripe projects add vercel/pro (or stripe projects upgrade vercel-plan pro)stripe projects downgrade vercel-plan hobbyFull details: https://vercel.com/docs/plans/pro-plan
VERCEL_TOKEN as a --token flag. Export it as an environment variable and let the CLI read it natively..env files first..vercel/ files directly. The CLI manages this directory. Reading them (e.g. to verify orgId) is fine.--format json when structured output will help with follow-up steps.-y on commands that prompt for confirmation to avoid interactive blocking.Check the environment and any .env files present:
printenv | grep -i vercel
grep -i vercel .env 2>/dev/null
If the CLI fails with Authentication required:
vercel whoami (uses VERCEL_TOKEN from environment).Verify the scope is correct:
vercel whoami --scope <team-slug>
Check the build logs:
vercel inspect <deployment-url> --logs
Common causes:
package.json is complete and committed.vercel env add.vercel.json. Vercel auto-detects frameworks (Next.js, Remix, Vite, etc.) from package.json; override with vercel.json if detection is wrong.npm install -g vercel