limacharlie-reporting
Use this skill when users need interactive HTML reports, dashboards, charts, or visualizations for LimaCharlie data. You generate the HTML, this skill serves it on localhost.
$ Installer
git clone https://github.com/tekgrunt/boot-test /tmp/boot-test && cp -r /tmp/boot-test/.claude-plugin/plugins/limacharlie-skills/skills/limacharlie-reporting ~/.claude/skills/boot-test// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill
name: limacharlie-reporting description: Use this skill when users need interactive HTML reports, dashboards, charts, or visualizations for LimaCharlie data. You generate the HTML, this skill serves it on localhost.
LimaCharlie Reporting Skill
Overview
This skill lets you create rich, interactive HTML reports that open in a browser instead of displaying in the terminal. You generate whatever HTML you want - tables, charts, dashboards, visualizations - and this skill serves it on localhost.
When to Use This Skill
Use this when users want:
- Visual reports, dashboards, or charts
- Billing analysis with graphs
- Interactive tables with sorting/filtering
- MITRE ATT&CK coverage heatmaps
- Any data visualization that's better in a browser than text
How It Works
Three simple steps:
- You generate HTML (with any charts, tables, styling you want)
- Call
create_and_serve_report(html)- This spawns Python'shttp.serveras a background subprocess - User opens the localhost URL in their browser
The implementation uses Python's built-in http.server module running as a subprocess, serving files directly from /tmp. This approach is simple, reliable, and requires no complex threading or process management. You have complete freedom to generate whatever HTML makes sense.
Basic Usage
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, '/full/path/to/skills/limacharlie-reporting')
from lib import create_and_serve_report
# Generate your HTML however you want
html = """
<h1>My Report</h1>
<p>Some analysis here...</p>
<table>
<tr><th>Metric</th><th>Value</th></tr>
<tr><td>Sensors</td><td>45</td></tr>
<tr><td>Cost</td><td>$1,234</td></tr>
</table>
"""
# Serve it
url = create_and_serve_report(html, title="My Report")
print(f"\nReport ready: {url}")
The URL will be something like http://localhost:8080/report-abc123.html.
Adding Charts with Chart.js
Chart.js is a simple, popular charting library. Here's how to use it:
html = """
<h1>Billing Trend</h1>
<canvas id="myChart" width="400" height="200"></canvas>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/chart.js@4.4.0/dist/chart.umd.min.js"></script>
<script>
const ctx = document.getElementById('myChart');
new Chart(ctx, {
type: 'line',
data: {
labels: ['Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr'],
datasets: [{
label: 'Monthly Cost ($)',
data: [800, 950, 1100, 1234],
borderColor: 'rgb(75, 192, 192)',
tension: 0.1
}]
},
options: {
responsive: true,
plugins: {
title: {
display: true,
text: 'Cost Trend'
}
}
}
});
</script>
"""
url = create_and_serve_report(html, title="Billing Dashboard")
Chart.js Quick Reference:
- Line charts:
type: 'line' - Bar charts:
type: 'bar' - Pie/Donut:
type: 'pie'ortype: 'doughnut' - Docs: https://www.chartjs.org/docs/latest/
Creating Interactive Tables
For sortable, filterable tables, you can generate simple HTML tables or use libraries like DataTables:
# Simple HTML table (users can still sort/filter in browser with Ctrl+F)
html = """
<h1>Sensor Inventory</h1>
<table border="1" style="width:100%; border-collapse: collapse;">
<thead>
<tr style="background: #f0f0f0;">
<th>Hostname</th>
<th>Platform</th>
<th>Status</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr><td>web-01</td><td>linux</td><td>online</td></tr>
<tr><td>db-01</td><td>linux</td><td>online</td></tr>
<tr><td>win-dc01</td><td>windows</td><td>offline</td></tr>
</tbody>
</table>
"""
url = create_and_serve_report(html, title="Sensors")
Styling Your Reports
You can include CSS inline or link to frameworks:
html = """
<style>
.metric-card {
display: inline-block;
padding: 20px;
margin: 10px;
background: linear-gradient(135deg, #667eea 0%, #764ba2 100%);
color: white;
border-radius: 8px;
text-align: center;
}
.metric-value {
font-size: 2em;
font-weight: bold;
}
</style>
<h1>Overview</h1>
<div class="metric-card">
<div class="metric-value">$1,234</div>
<div>Total Cost</div>
</div>
<div class="metric-card">
<div class="metric-value">45</div>
<div>Active Sensors</div>
</div>
"""
url = create_and_serve_report(html, title="Dashboard")
Using Other Visualization Libraries
You can use any JavaScript library from a CDN:
- ApexCharts: Modern, interactive charts - https://apexcharts.com/
- Plotly: Scientific/statistical visualizations - https://plotly.com/javascript/
- ECharts: Rich enterprise charts - https://echarts.apache.org/
- D3.js: Custom data visualizations - https://d3js.org/
Just include the CDN script tag and use the library's API in your HTML.
API Reference
create_and_serve_report(html_content, title="Report", filename=None, wrap=True, include_chart_js=False)
Parameters:
html_content(str): Your HTML contenttitle(str): Page title (used if wrap=True)filename(str, optional): Custom filename (e.g., "billing" → "billing.html")wrap(bool): If True, wraps content in minimal HTML template. If False, uses content as complete HTML document.include_chart_js(bool): If True (and wrap=True), automatically includes Chart.js CDN script
Returns:
- (str): URL where report can be accessed (e.g.,
http://localhost:8080/report-abc123.html)
Helper: wrap_html(content, title, include_chart_js=False)
Wraps your content in a minimal HTML document with basic styling. Called automatically if wrap=True in create_and_serve_report.
Complete Example: Billing Report
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, '/full/path/to/skills/limacharlie-reporting')
from lib import create_and_serve_report
# Assume we fetched billing data from LimaCharlie MCP
total_cost = 1234.56
services = [
{'name': 'Detection & Response', 'cost': 500.00},
{'name': 'Artifact Collection', 'cost': 300.00},
{'name': 'Outputs', 'cost': 434.56}
]
# Generate HTML with inline Chart.js
html = f"""
<h1>Billing Dashboard</h1>
<p>Current billing cycle: <strong>${total_cost:,.2f}</strong></p>
<h2>Cost by Service</h2>
<canvas id="costChart" width="400" height="200"></canvas>
<h2>Service Breakdown</h2>
<table border="1" style="width:100%; border-collapse: collapse;">
<thead>
<tr style="background: #f0f0f0;">
<th>Service</th>
<th>Cost</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{''.join(f'<tr><td>{s["name"]}</td><td>${s["cost"]:,.2f}</td></tr>' for s in services)}
</tbody>
</table>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/chart.js@4.4.0/dist/chart.umd.min.js"></script>
<script>
new Chart(document.getElementById('costChart'), {{
type: 'doughnut',
data: {{
labels: {[s['name'] for s in services]},
datasets: [{{
data: {[s['cost'] for s in services]},
backgroundColor: ['#FF6384', '#36A2EB', '#FFCE56']
}}]
}},
options: {{
responsive: true,
plugins: {{
title: {{ display: true, text: 'Cost Distribution' }}
}}
}}
}});
</script>
"""
url = create_and_serve_report(html, title="Billing Report")
print(f"\n✅ Billing report ready: {url}")
Best Practices
- Keep it simple: Generate clean HTML, don't over-engineer
- Use CDNs: Link to Chart.js, Plotly, etc. from CDN (no local dependencies)
- Inline styles: Put CSS in
<style>tags for self-contained reports - Test in browser: Open the URL to verify charts render correctly
- Progressive enhancement: Start with basic HTML tables, add charts if needed
Troubleshooting
Port already in use:
- The server tries ports 8080-8090
- If all are busy, you'll get an error
- Solution: Close other local servers or check
lsof -i :8080-8090
Charts not rendering:
- Check browser console for JavaScript errors
- Verify CDN scripts are loading (requires internet connection)
- Ensure Chart.js script loads before your chart code
Report URL doesn't open:
- Server prints "Report server started at http://localhost:PORT"
- If you don't see this, check for errors in Python execution
- Try the URL manually in a browser
See Also
- EXAMPLES.md: Real-world report examples
- REFERENCE.md: Advanced techniques and tips
Repository
