
wp-abilities-api
★ 1,800by wordpress · part of wordpress/agent-skills
WordPress Abilities API registration, REST exposure, and client-side consumption for WordPress 6.9+. Register abilities and categories in PHP using wp_register_ability() and wp_register_ability_category() with stable IDs, labels, and metadata Expose abilities to clients via the /wp-json/wp-abilities/v1/ REST endpoints by setting meta.show_in_rest: true Consume abilities in JavaScript using the @wordpress/abilities package for client-side access and permission checks Requires WordPress 6.9+...
WordPress Abilities API registration, REST exposure, and client-side consumption for WordPress 6.9+. Register abilities and categories in PHP using wp_register_ability() and wp_register_ability_category() with stable IDs, labels, and metadata Expose abilities to clients via the /wp-json/wp-abilities/v1/ REST endpoints by setting meta.show_in_rest: true Consume abilities in JavaScript using the @wordpress/abilities package for client-side access and permission checks Requires WordPress 6.9+...
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This is the exact playbook injected into your agent when the skill activates — shown here so you can audit it before installing. You don't need to read it to use the skill.
name: wp-abilities-api description: "Use when working with the WordPress Abilities API (wp_register_ability, wp_register_ability_category, /wp-json/wp-abilities/v1/*, @wordpress/abilities) including defining abilities, categories, meta, REST exposure, and permissions checks for clients." compatibility: "Targets WordPress 6.9+ (PHP 7.2.24+). Filesystem-based agent with bash + node. Some workflows require WP-CLI."
WP Abilities API
When to use
Use this skill when the task involves:
- registering abilities or ability categories in PHP,
- exposing abilities to clients via REST (
wp-abilities/v1), - consuming abilities in JS (notably
@wordpress/abilities), - diagnosing “ability doesn’t show up” / “client can’t see ability” / “REST returns empty”.
Inputs required
- Repo root (run
wp-project-triagefirst if you haven’t). - Target WordPress version(s) and whether this is WP core or a plugin/theme.
- Where the change should live (plugin vs theme vs mu-plugin).
Procedure
Before deciding what to register, read references/domain-vs-projection.md — abilities live at the domain capability layer; MCP / Command Palette / REST exposure is a projection. Registration shape and exposure shape are different decisions, and conflating them forces re-registration every time a consumer's constraints change.
1) Confirm availability and version constraints
- If this is WP core work, check
signals.isWpCoreCheckoutandversions.wordpress.core. - If the project targets WP < 6.9, you may need the Abilities API plugin/package rather than relying on core.
2) Find existing Abilities usage
Search for these in the repo:
wp_register_ability(wp_register_ability_category(wp_abilities_api_initwp_abilities_api_categories_initwp-abilities/v1@wordpress/abilities
If none exist, decide whether you’re introducing Abilities API fresh (new registrations + client consumption) or only consuming.
3) Register categories (optional)
If you need a logical grouping, register an ability category early (see references/php-registration.md).
4) Register abilities (PHP)
For grouping decisions (how many abilities to register, and where to put filters vs. new ability names), read references/grouping-heuristic.md first — it keeps you from shipping one atomic ability per REST operation.
To avoid drift between the ability and the existing UI / REST code path, see references/shared-core-service.md — abilities, REST handlers, CLI commands, and UI controllers should be thin adapters over a shared service. The reference also covers the metric trap (REST handlers that emit usage telemetry) and the AGENTS.md rule for keeping registrations in sync when underlying code paths change.
For shared helper patterns when multiple execute callbacks delegate to existing REST controllers, see references/plugin-family-patterns.md (identify the shared-API-client vs zero-arg-controllers shape) and references/delegate-helper-pattern.md (one helper shape that works, and when not to use it).
For standardized WP_Error codes that let agents reason about retry vs. escalation, see references/error-code-vocabulary.md.
Implement the ability in PHP registration with:
- stable
id(namespaced), label/description,category,meta:- add
readonly: truewhen the ability is informational, - set
show_in_rest: truefor abilities you want visible to clients.
- add
Use the documented init hooks for Abilities API registration so they load at the right time (see references/php-registration.md).
5) Confirm REST exposure
- Verify the REST endpoints exist and return expected results (see
references/rest-api.md). - If the client still can’t see the ability, confirm
meta.show_in_restis enabled and you’re querying the right endpoint.
6) Consume from JS (if needed)
- Prefer
@wordpress/abilitiesAPIs for client-side access and checks. - Ensure build tooling includes the dependency and the project’s build pipeline bundles it.
Verification
wp-project-triageindicatessignals.usesAbilitiesApi: trueafter your change (if applicable).- REST check (in a WP environment): endpoints under
wp-abilities/v1return your ability and category when expected. - If the repo has tests, add/update coverage near:
- PHP: ability registration and meta exposure
- JS: ability consumption and UI gating
Failure modes / debugging
- Ability never appears:
- registration code not running (wrong hook / file not loaded),
- missing
meta.show_in_rest, - incorrect category/ID mismatch.
- REST shows ability but JS doesn’t:
- wrong REST base/namespace,
- JS dependency not bundled,
- caching (object/page caches) masking changes.
- Execute callback returns unexpected errors or silently ignores input:
input_schemadefaults aren't being applied, pagination key drift between the ability and the backing, orempty()-based ID validation — seereferences/input-schema-gotchas.md.
Escalation
- If you’re uncertain about version support, confirm target WP core versions and whether Abilities API is expected from core or as a plugin.
- For canonical details, consult:
references/rest-api.mdreferences/php-registration.md
npx skills add https://github.com/wordpress/agent-skills --skill wp-abilities-apiRun this in your project — your agent picks the skill up automatically.
No common issues documented yet. If you hit a problem, the repository's GitHub Issues page is the best place to look.