From aws-agents
Extends existing AgentCore agent projects with cross-session memory, app integration, VPC networking, multi-agent systems, Bedrock Agent migrations, browser/code interpreter tools, and resource teardown.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/aws-agents:agents-buildThis skill is limited to the following tools:
The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Add capabilities to your AgentCore agent project.
Add capabilities to your AgentCore agent project.
Do NOT use for:
agents-connectagents-get-startedagents-deploy$ARGUMENTS can be:
Run agentcore --version. This skill requires v0.9.0 or later.
If older: "Run agentcore update to get the latest version."
Read agentcore/agentcore.json to understand the current project — framework, existing resources, agent configuration.
If agentcore/agentcore.json is not found:
agentcore/agentcore.json in parent directories (up to 3 levels). If found, tell them: "Found an AgentCore project at <path>. Are you working in that project?"cd into it and try again."Do not just say "go use agents-get-started" and stop — that loses the developer's context about what they actually wanted to do.
Important disambiguation — before routing to a build reference, check if the prompt is actually a connect or debug concern:
agents-connect, not buildagents-debug, not buildBased on the developer's prompt and $ARGUMENTS, load the appropriate reference:
| Developer intent | Reference to load |
|---|---|
| Add memory, remember things, user preferences, cross-session | references/memory.md |
| Call agent from app, invoke from code, streaming, SDK client, agent URL, execute shell in session | references/integrate.md |
| VPC, private network, RDS, internal API, subnet, security group | references/vpc.md |
| Multi-agent, orchestrator, specialist, A2A, delegation, agent handoff | references/multi-agent.md |
| Custom headers from caller to agent, header allowlist, tenant ID/correlation ID/trace propagation | references/request-headers.md |
| Migrate Bedrock Agent, import agent, move to AgentCore | references/migrate.md |
| Browser tool, web navigation, form filling, scraping, Nova Act, Playwright, live view | references/browser.md |
| Code Interpreter, execute code, sandbox, run Python/JS/TS, data analysis in agent, pandas | references/code-interpreter.md |
| Delete agent, remove resource, tear down, clean up, destroy, start fresh | references/teardown.md |
| Change model, switch model, use Haiku/Sonnet/Nova, different model | Inline — see "Changing the model" below |
If the developer asks about the difference between local dev and deployed (e.g., "why does my memory work after deploy but not locally?"), load references/local-vs-deployed.md alongside the specific workflow reference.
Read the matching file into context and follow its Process section step by step — do not summarize.
If the intent is ambiguous, ask the developer which capability they want to add.
The model is configured in app/<AgentName>/model/load.py (scaffolded by agentcore create). To change it:
app/<AgentName>/model/load.pymodel_id parameter in the BedrockModel() constructor# Default (scaffolded by CLI)
return BedrockModel(model_id="global.anthropic.claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929-v1:0")
# Switch to Haiku for cost savings
return BedrockModel(model_id="us.anthropic.claude-3-5-haiku-20241022-v1:0")
# Switch to Nova Lite
return BedrockModel(model_id="amazon.nova-lite-v1:0")
Cross-region inference profile prefixes (us., eu., apac., global.) control where inference runs. Use global. for maximum throughput, or a geographic prefix for data residency. Not all models support all prefixes — check the Bedrock inference profiles docs.
After changing the model:
agents-harden, update the IAM policy to scope to the new model ARNagentcore dev to test locally, then agentcore deploy to update the deployed agentNo agentcore.json change is needed — the model is configured in code, not in the project config.
--name before generating the CLI commandWhichever reference you load, most end up producing an agentcore add <resource> --name <something> command. The CLI fails late on invalid names — you'll see the error after walking through prompts, not before running the command. Validate up front:
| Resource | Max chars | Allowed | Starts with |
|---|---|---|---|
Agent (add agent) | 48 | alphanumeric + _ | letter |
| Memory, gateway, gateway-target, credential, evaluator, online-eval, policy, policy-engine | 48 | alphanumeric + _ | letter |
Count the characters before constructing the command. If the name is over the limit or contains hyphens, dots, or spaces, push back: "<name> is N characters / uses -, which the CLI rejects. How about <suggestion>?" Never run the command with an invalid name hoping the CLI message will be clear.
Note: agentcore create --name (the project name) has a stricter 23-char limit and does not allow underscores. That's covered in agents-get-started; if you see the developer re-running create, flag the 23-char limit specifically.
Depends on the workflow — see the loaded reference for specific outputs.
npx claudepluginhub andrekurait/claude-marketplace-test --plugin aws-agentsExtends existing AgentCore agent projects with cross-session memory, app integration, VPC networking, multi-agent systems, Bedrock Agent migrations, browser/code interpreter tools, and resource teardown.
Builds, tests, migrates, and deploys Amazon Bedrock AgentCore agents with guidance on Memory, Gateway/MCP tools, Identity, Observability, and security policy.
Guides building and deploying production AI agents on AWS with Bedrock, AgentCore, and Strands Agents SDK, including Terraform and observability.