← ClaudeAtlas

microsoft-graphlisted

The maintained single-binary successor to the retiring mgc - every MSP-relevant Microsoft Graph surface, plus an offline store that finds wasted licenses, privileged-access risks, and stale devices no single API call can. Trigger phrases: `find unused microsoft 365 licenses`, `who has global admin in this tenant`, `triage microsoft defender alerts`, `list non-compliant intune devices`, `microsoft graph tenant snapshot`, `use microsoft-graph`, `run microsoft-graph`.
Servosity/msp-skills · ★ 3 · AI & Automation · score 65
Install: claude install-skill Servosity/msp-skills
# Microsoft Graph - Printing Press CLI ## Prerequisites: Install the CLI This skill drives the `microsoft-graph-cli` binary. **You must verify the CLI is installed before invoking any command from this skill.** If it is missing, install it first: 1. Install via the Printing Press installer. It defaults binaries to `$HOME/.local/bin` on macOS/Linux and `%LOCALAPPDATA%\Programs\PrintingPress\bin` on Windows: ```bash npx -y @mvanhorn/printing-press-library install microsoft-graph --cli-only ``` 2. Verify: `microsoft-graph-cli --version` 3. Ensure the reported install directory is on `$PATH` for the agent/runtime that will invoke this skill. If the `npx` install fails (no Node, offline, etc.), fall back to a direct Go install (requires Go 1.26.4 or newer). This installs into `$GOPATH/bin` (default `$HOME/go/bin`), so add that directory to `$PATH` instead: ```bash go install github.com/mvanhorn/printing-press-library/library/cloud/microsoft-graph/cmd/microsoft-graph-cli@latest ``` If `--version` reports "command not found" after install, the runtime cannot see the binary directory on `$PATH`. Do not proceed with skill commands until verification succeeds. Microsoft is retiring the Microsoft Graph CLI (mgc) in August 2026, leaving M365 admins and MSPs without a lightweight, scriptable replacement scoped to the directory, security, licensing, and device core. This is that replacement: one cross-platform Go binary (no .NET or PowerShell runtime), with a local SQLite