developer coding user risk: low
Codebase Onboarding Guide Generator
Analyzes the source code in the project or workspace and generates a detailed Markdown technical onboarding guide. The guide covers README summary, technology stack, system overvie…
PROMPT
**Context:**
I am a developer who has just joined the project and I am using you, an AI coding assistant, to gain a deep understanding of the existing codebase. My goal is to become productive as quickly as possible and to make informed technical decisions based on a solid understanding of the current system.
**Primary Objective:**
Analyze the source code provided in this project/workspace and generate a **detailed, clear, and well-structured Markdown document** that explains the system’s architecture, features, main flows, key components, and technology stack.
This document should serve as a **technical onboarding guide**.
Whenever possible, improve navigability by providing **direct links to relevant files, classes, and functions**, as well as code examples that help clarify the concepts.
---
## **Detailed Instructions — Please address the following points:**
### 1. **README / Instruction Files Summary**
- Look for files such as `README.md`, `LEIAME.md`, `CONTRIBUTING.md`, or similar documentation.
- Provide an objective yet detailed summary of the most relevant sections for a new developer, including:
- Project overview
- How to set up and run the system locally
- Adopted standards and conventions
- Contribution guidelines (if available)
---
### 2. **Detailed Technology Stack**
- Identify and list the complete technology stack used in the project:
- Programming language(s), including versions when detectable (e.g., from `package.json`, `pom.xml`, `.tool-versions`, `requirements.txt`, `build.gradle`, etc.).
- Main frameworks (backend, frontend, etc. — e.g., Spring Boot, .NET, React, Angular, Vue, Django, Rails).
- Database(s):
- Type (SQL / NoSQL)
- Name (PostgreSQL, MongoDB, etc.)
- Core architecture style (e.g., Monolith, Microservices, Serverless, MVC, MVVM, Clean Architecture).
- Cloud platform (if identifiable via SDKs or configuration — AWS, Azure, GCP).
- Build tools and package managers (Maven, Gradle, npm, yarn, pip).
- Any other relevant technologies (caching, message brokers, containerization — Docker, Kubernetes).
- **Reference and link the configuration files that demonstrate each item.**
---
### 3. **System Overview and Purpose**
- Clearly describe what the system does and who it is for.
- What problems does it solve?
- List the core functionalities.
- If possible, relate the system to the business domains involved.
- Provide a high-level description of the main features.
---
### 4. **Project Structure and Reading Recommendations**
- **Entry Point:**
Where should I start exploring the code? Identify the main entry points (e.g., `main.go`, `index.js`, `Program.cs`, `app.py`, `Application.java`).
**Provide direct links to these files.**
- **General Organization:**
Explain the overall folder and file structure. Highlight important conventions.
**Use real folder and file name examples.**
- **Configuration:**
Are there main configuration files? (e.g., `config.yaml`, `.env`, `appsettings.json`)
Which configurations are critical?
**Provide links.**
- **Reading Recommendation:**
Suggest an order or a set of key files/modules that should be read first to quickly grasp the project’s core concepts.
---
### 5. **Key Components**
- Identify and describe the most important or central modules, classes, functions, or services.
- Explain the responsibilities of each component.
- Describe their responsibilities and interdependencies.
- For each component:
- Include a representative code snippet
- Provide a link to where it is implemented
- **Provide direct links and code examples whenever possible.**
---
### 6. **Execution and Data Flows**
- Describe the most common or critical workflows or business processes (e.g., order processing, user authentication).
- Explain how data flows through the system:
- Where data is persisted
- How it is read, modified, and propagated
- **Whenever possible, illustrate with examples and link to relevant functions or classes.**
#### 6.1 **Database Schema Overview (if applicable)**
- For data-intensive applications:
- Identify the main entities/tables/collections
- Describe their primary relationships
- Base this on ORM models, migrations, or schema files if available
---
### 7. **Dependencies and Integrations**
- **Dependencies:**
List the main external libraries, frameworks, and SDKs used.
Briefly explain the role of each one.
**Provide links to where they are configured or most commonly used.**
- **Integrations:**
Identify and explain integrations with external services, additional databases, third-party APIs, message brokers, etc.
How does communication occur?
**Point to the modules/classes responsible and include links.**
#### 7.1 **API Documentation (if applicable)**
- If the project exposes APIs:
- Is there evidence of API documentation tools or standards (e.g., Swagger/OpenAPI, Javadoc, endpoint-specific docstrings)?
- Where can this documentation be found or how can it be generated?
---
### 8. **Diagrams**
- Generate high-level diagrams to visualize the system architecture and behavior:
- Component diagram (highlighting main modules and their interactions)
- Data flow diagram (showing how information moves through the system)
- Class diagram (showing key classes and relationships, if applicable)
- Simplified deployment diagram (where components run, if detectable)
- Simplified infrastructure/deployment diagram (if infrastructure details are apparent)
- **Create these diagrams using Mermaid syntax inside the Markdown file.**
- Diagrams should be **high-level**; extensive detailing is not required.
---
### 9. **Testing**
- Are there automated tests?
- Unit tests
- Integration tests
- End-to-end (E2E) tests
- Where are they located in the project?
- Which testing framework(s) are used?
- How are tests typically executed?
- How can tests be run locally?
- Is there any CI/CD strategy involving tests?
---
### 10. **Error Handling and Logging**
- How does the application generally handle errors?
- Is there a standard pattern (e.g., global middleware, custom exceptions)?
- Which logging library is used?
- Is there a standard logging format?
- Is there visible integration with monitoring tools (e.g., Datadog, Sentry)?
---
### 11. **Security Considerations**
- Are there evident security mechanisms in the code?
- Authentication
- Authorization (middleware/filters)
- Input validation
- Are specific security libraries prominently used (e.g., Spring Security, Passport.js, JWT libraries)?
- Are there notable security practices?
- Secrets management
- Protection against common attacks
---
### 12. **Other Relevant Observations (Including Build/Deploy)**
- Are there files related to **build or deployment**?
- `Dockerfile`
- `docker-compose.yml`
- Build/deploy scripts
- CI/CD configuration files (e.g., `.github/workflows/`, `.gitlab-ci.yml`)
- What do these files indicate about how the application is built and deployed?
- Is there anything else crucial or particularly helpful for a new developer?
- Known technical debt mentioned in comments
- Unusual design patterns
- Important coding conventions
- Performance notes
---
## **Final Output Format**
- Generate the complete response as a **well-formatted Markdown (`.md`) document**.
- Use **clear and direct language**.
- Organize content with **titles and subtitles** according to the numbered sections above.
- **Include relevant code snippets** (short and representative).
- **Include clickable links** to files, functions, classes, and definitions whenever a specific code element is mentioned.
- Structure the document using the numbered sections above for readability.
**Whenever possible:**
- Include **clickable links** to files, functions, and classes.
- Show **short, representative code snippets**.
- Use **bullet points or tables** for lists.
---
### **IMPORTANT**
The analysis must consider **ALL files in the project**.
Read and understand **all necessary files** required to fully execute this task and achieve a complete understanding of the system.
---
### **Action**
Please analyze the source code currently available in my environment/workspace and generate the Markdown document as requested.
The output file name must follow this format:
`<yyyy-mm-dd-project-name-app-dev-discovery_cursor.md>`
REQUIRED CONTEXT
- project source code
- workspace files
ROLES & RULES
Role assignments
- You are an AI coding assistant.
- Provide an objective yet detailed summary of the most relevant sections.
- Identify and list the complete technology stack used in the project.
- Clearly describe what the system does and who it is for.
- Provide direct links to relevant files, classes, and functions.
- Include a representative code snippet.
- Generate high-level diagrams using Mermaid syntax inside the Markdown file.
- Generate the complete response as a well-formatted Markdown (.md) document.
- Include relevant code snippets (short and representative).
- Include clickable links to files, functions, classes, and definitions.
- Use bullet points or tables for lists.
- Analyze ALL files in the project.
EXPECTED OUTPUT
- Format
- markdown
- Schema
- markdown_sections · 1. README / Instruction Files Summary, 2. Detailed Technology Stack, 3. System Overview and Purpose, 4. Project Structure and Reading Recommendations, 5. Key Components, 6. Execution and Data Flows, 6.1 Database Schema Overview (if applicable), 7. Dependencies and Integrations, 7.1 API Documentation (if applicable), 8. Diagrams, 9. Testing, 10. Error Handling and Logging, 11. Security Considerations, 12. Other Relevant Observations (Including Build/Deploy)
- Constraints
-
- well-formatted Markdown document
- organize with titles and subtitles per numbered sections 1-12
- include clickable links to files/classes/functions
- include short representative code snippets
- include high-level Mermaid diagrams
- use bullet points or tables for lists
- output file name format <yyyy-mm-dd-project-name-app-dev-discovery_cursor.md>
SUCCESS CRITERIA
- Analyze the source code provided in the project/workspace
- Generate a detailed, clear, and well-structured Markdown document
- Explain the system’s architecture, features, main flows, key components, and technology stack
- Serve as a technical onboarding guide
- Improve navigability with direct links and code examples
CAVEATS
- Dependencies
-
- source code currently available in the environment/workspace
- ALL files in the project
- Missing context
-
- Method to infer or specify 'project-name' and date for filename.
- Exact format for clickable links if workspace linking is unavailable.
- Ambiguities
-
- Unclear how to determine 'project-name' for the output filename format.
- Assumes environment supports direct clickable links to files, classes, and functions; format unspecified if not in an IDE.
- Does not explicitly state handling for projects lacking certain elements (e.g., no database, no tests).
QUALITY
- OVERALL
- 0.90
- CLARITY
- 0.90
- SPECIFICITY
- 0.95
- REUSABILITY
- 0.85
- COMPLETENESS
- 0.95
IMPROVEMENT SUGGESTIONS
- Replace filename format with a placeholder like '[YYYY-MM-DD]-[PROJECT-NAME]-app-dev-discovery_cursor.md' and instruct to infer project name from root folder or package.json.
- Add instruction: 'For sections not applicable (e.g., no database), note 'N/A' with brief explanation.'
- Specify link format example: '[File Name](path/to/file.ext#Lline) using relative paths.'
- Include guidance on diagram detail level: 'Limit to 5-10 key components per diagram.'
USAGE
Copy the prompt above and paste it into your AI of choice — Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or anywhere else you're working. Replace any placeholder sections with your own context, then ask for the output.
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