kubernetes-workload-design
Kubernetes Workload Design
Overview
Use this skill to design Kubernetes workloads that scale predictably and roll out safely under real traffic behavior.
Scope Boundaries
- Use this skill when the task matches the trigger condition described in
description. - Do not use this skill when the primary task falls outside this skill's domain.
Shared References
- Autoscaling and rollout decision rules:
references/autoscaling-and-rollout-decision-rules.md
Templates And Assets
- Workload sizing template:
assets/workload-sizing-template.md
- Rollout strategy checklist:
assets/rollout-strategy-checklist.md
Inputs To Gather
- Traffic profile and latency/SLO targets.
- CPU/memory/concurrency characteristics.
- Rollout risk tolerance and availability requirements.
- Observability signals for scaling and rollback decisions.
Deliverables
- Workload sizing and scaling plan.
- Rollout strategy with guardrails and rollback triggers.
- Resilience assumptions and saturation behavior notes.
- Verification plan for load and deployment behavior.
Workflow
- Define resource and scaling assumptions in
assets/workload-sizing-template.md. - Choose scaling/rollout strategy using
references/autoscaling-and-rollout-decision-rules.md. - Validate rollout readiness via
assets/rollout-strategy-checklist.md. - Run representative load and rollout verification.
- Publish residual capacity and rollout risks with owners.
Quality Standard
- Resource sizing reflects measured workload behavior.
- Autoscaling avoids oscillation and delayed recovery.
- Rollout controls match service criticality.
- Rollback criteria are objective and monitored.
Failure Conditions
- Stop when workload design lacks safe rollout or capacity guarantees.
- Stop when autoscaling signals do not correlate with user impact.
- Escalate when saturation risk remains unmitigated.
More from kentoshimizu/sw-agent-skills
graph-algorithms
Graph algorithm workflow for modeling entities/relations and selecting traversal, path, ordering, or flow strategies. Use when correctness or performance depends on graph representation and algorithm choice; do not use for schema-only modeling or deployment topology planning.
14bash-style-guide
Style, review, and refactoring standards for Bash shell scripting. Trigger when `.sh` files, files with `#!/usr/bin/env bash` or `#!/bin/bash`, or CI workflow blocks with `shell: bash` are created, modified, or reviewed and Bash-specific quality controls (quoting safety, error handling, portability, readability) must be enforced. Do not use for generic POSIX `sh`, PowerShell, or language-specific application style rules. In multi-language pull requests, run together with other applicable `*-style-guide` skills.
11architecture-clean-architecture
Clean Architecture workflow for enforcing dependency direction, stable domain boundaries, and use-case-centered application design. Use when teams must separate business rules from frameworks and delivery mechanisms; do not use for isolated module cleanup without boundary implications.
11powershell-style-guide
Style, review, and refactoring standards for PowerShell scripting. Trigger when `.ps1`, `.psm1`, `.psd1` files, or CI workflow blocks with `shell: pwsh` or `shell: powershell` are created, modified, or reviewed and PowerShell-specific quality controls (error handling, parameter validation, readability, operational safety) must be enforced. Do not use for Bash, generic POSIX `sh`, or language-specific application style rules. In multi-language pull requests, run together with other applicable `*-style-guide` skills.
10github-codeowners-management
Govern CODEOWNERS rules so review routing reflects real ownership and risk boundaries on GitHub. Use when repository ownership mapping or mandatory reviewer rules must be defined, updated, or audited; do not use for non-GitHub runtime architecture or data-layer design.
9security-authentication
Security workflow for authentication architecture, credential lifecycle, and session/token assurance. Use when login, identity proofing, MFA, or session security decisions are required; do not use for authorization policy design or non-security quality tuning.
9