The deploy-site skills index crawl was capped at ~3k ClawHub entries
because CATALOG_WALK_BUDGET_SECONDS applied to max_items=0 walks too.
Only enforce the wall-clock budget for bounded browse requests and pass
limit=0 from build_skills_index so CI walks the full catalog.
Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>
Browse renders one page but the cold-cache fallback walked the entire
50k+ ClawHub catalog, then sliced off the first N — pure waste behind the
12s budget band-aid. _load_catalog_index now takes max_items: browse's
empty-query path bounds the walk to its limit and stops early; the offline
index builder still passes limit=0 (unbounded) and walks to exhaustion.
A bounded walk is partial, so it is not written to the shared full-catalog
cache (same poison-guard as the budget-truncated case).
parallel_search_sources accepted an overall_timeout but never honoured it.
The ThreadPoolExecutor ran inside a `with ... as pool` block, whose __exit__
calls shutdown(wait=True); even after as_completed() raised TimeoutError on
schedule, leaving the block blocked the caller until every worker finished.
A single slow source (e.g. ClawHub) therefore stalled the entire browse for
minutes. Manage the executor manually and shut it down with
wait=False, cancel_futures=True in a finally, so the timeout actually returns
and not-yet-started work is dropped.
ClawHubSource._load_catalog_index walked up to 750 sequential pages with no
wall-clock bound (each request under its own timeout=30, so nothing errored),
and wrote the result to the index cache unconditionally — so an interrupted or
slow walk poisoned the cache with a partial catalog. Add a
CATALOG_WALK_BUDGET_SECONDS deadline that breaks the walk early, and only write
the cache when the walk reaches a natural stop (cursor exhausted or page cap),
never on a budget-truncated walk.
Adds regression tests covering both bugs (timeout honoured + slow source
flagged; budget abort does not poison cache) plus their happy-path invariants.
* fix(skills): pull full ClawHub catalog into the skills index
The website was showing 200 ClawHub skills out of 20k+ because
`ClawHubSource.search("")` for empty queries went straight to a single
unpaginated request. ClawHub's API caps any single page at 200 items and
returns a `nextCursor`; we grabbed page 1 and stopped, so the cached
index served from hermes-agent.nousresearch.com had a silent 99%
truncation.
End users never hit clawhub.ai directly (the index is rebuilt twice
daily by .github/workflows/skills-index.yml and served as a static JSON
on the docs site), so the cap-and-cache architecture is correct — it
just wasn't being filled.
Changes:
- `ClawHubSource.search(query="")` now routes through the existing
`_load_catalog_index()` paginating walker instead of the unpaginated
listing fallback (non-empty queries still hit the fast catalog search).
- `_load_catalog_index()` max_pages 50 → 250 (50k-skill ceiling; live
catalog is ~20k as of May 2026, with headroom for growth).
- `build_skills_index.py`: per-source crawl limits split out — ClawHub
and LobeHub get 100k, others keep their effective caps.
- `EXPECTED_FLOORS["clawhub"]` 50 → 5000 so the next pagination
regression hard-fails the CI build instead of silently shipping a
degenerate index.
Test plan:
- New unit test `test_search_empty_query_paginates_full_catalog`
exercises the cursor-following path with three mocked pages (450
total items) and asserts all pages are walked.
- Existing 9 ClawHub tests + 127 broader skills_hub tests all pass.
- E2E against live ClawHub API: walker reached 9700+ skills across 49
pages before this commit landed, paginating well past the previous
50-page cap.
* fix(skills): raise ClawHub ceilings — live catalog is 50k, not 20k
E2E walk against live ClawHub API hit my initial 250-page cap at 49,698
skills with cursor=yes still pending. The catalog is roughly 2.5x larger
than the docstring estimate.
- max_pages 250 → 750 (150k ceiling, walks terminate on cursor=None
well before this in practice)
- SOURCE_LIMITS['clawhub'] 100k → 200k
- EXPECTED_FLOORS['clawhub'] 5000 → 20000