Evidence-first ECC Tools burn and billing audit workflow. Use when investigating runaway PR creation, quota bypass, premium-model leakage, duplicate jobs, or GitHub App cost spikes in the ECC Tools repo.
Use this skill when the user suspects the ECC Tools GitHub App is burning cost, over-creating PRs, bypassing usage limits, or routing free users into premium analysis paths.
This is a focused operator workflow for the sibling ECC-Tools repo. It is not a generic billing skill and it is not a repo-wide code review pass.
Pull these ECC-native skills into the workflow when relevant:
autonomous-loops for bounded multi-step audits that cross webhooks, queues, billing, and retriesagentic-engineering for tracing the request path into discrete, provable unitscustomer-billing-ops when repo behavior and customer-impact math must be separated cleanlysearch-first before inventing helpers or re-implementing repo-local utilitiessecurity-review when auth, usage gates, entitlements, or secrets are touchedverification-loop for proving rerun safety and exact post-fix statetdd-workflowECC-Tools repo and depends on webhook handlers, queue workers, usage reservation, PR creation logic, or paid-gate enforcementECC-Tools repo, not in heiba-claude-codeECC-Tools reposrc/index.* or the main entrypoint firstIf the user asked for code changes, prioritize fixes in this order:
Keep the pass bounded to one to three direct fixes unless the same root cause clearly spans multiple files.
If pushes, PR syncs, and manual audits all enqueue the same job and the worker always creates a PR, analysis equals PR spam.
If usage is checked at the front door but only incremented in the worker, concurrent requests can all pass the gate and exceed quota.
If free queued jobs can still route into Anthropic or another premium provider when keys exist, that is real spend leakage even if the user never sees the premium result.
If pull_request.synchronize, branch pushes, or comment-triggered runs fire on app-owned branches, the app can recursively analyze its own output.
If the system can spend tokens and then fail on PR creation, file update, or branch collision, it is burning cost without shipping value.