Git Workflow and Pull Requests

VerifiedSafe

Master essential Git operations: committing, rebasing, resolving conflicts, and creating pull requests. Efficiently manage branches and synchronize with upstream repositories.

Sby Skills Guide Bot
DevelopmentIntermediate
506/2/2026
Claude Code
#git#pull-requests#rebase#fork#workflow

Recommended for

Our review

This skill handles Git operations and pull request workflows, including rebasing, conflict resolution, and PR creation.

Strengths

  • Automates rebasing and branch management
  • Handles both forks and direct repository workflows
  • Provides step-by-step conflict resolution
  • Uses GitHub CLI for creating and merging PRs

Limitations

  • Requires explicit user permission before creating a PR
  • Assumes a repository with specific configuration (e.g., .claude-workspace file)
  • Does not cover advanced Git workflows like submodules or hooks
When to use it

Use this skill when you need to prepare and submit changes via a pull request after working on a branch.

When not to use it

Do not use this skill for simple Git tasks like cloning or individual commits without the intent to create a PR.

Security analysis

Safe
Quality score85/100

The skill uses standard git and gh commands for branch management, rebasing, and PR creation. No destructive, exfiltrating, or obfuscated actions. The force-with-lease push is scoped to feature branches and follows safe practices. All critical operations require user approval.

No concerns found

Examples

Create PR from fork
I've finished my changes in my fork and want to create a pull request to the upstream repository.
Rebase branch and resolve conflicts
Rebase my current branch on top of main and help resolve any conflicts that arise.
Merge approved PR with rebase
Merge pull request #42 with rebase and delete the branch.

name: git-workflow description: > Git operations and pull request workflows. Create PRs, rebase branches, resolve conflicts, merge to upstream. Use when ready to create PR or when working with git branches and upstream.

Git Workflow

Committing Work

cd ~/Code/community-patterns

git add patterns/$GITHUB_USER/pattern.tsx
git commit -m "Add pattern: description"
git push origin main

Getting Updates (Already done in Step 1)

git fetch upstream
git pull --rebase upstream main
git push origin main

Sharing Work Upstream (Creating Pull Requests)

IMPORTANT: Wait for user to tell you to create a PR. Don't push or create PRs automatically.

Before creating any PR, you MUST update from main and rebase your branch:

Step 0: Update and Rebase Before Creating PR

Use cached repository type from workspace config:

# Read IS_FORK from .claude-workspace (set during Step 2)
IS_FORK=$(grep "^is_fork=" .claude-workspace | cut -d= -f2)

# Determine which remote to use
if [ "$IS_FORK" = "true" ]; then
  echo "Working on fork - will fetch from upstream"
  MAIN_REMOTE="upstream"
else
  echo "Working on main repo - will fetch from origin"
  MAIN_REMOTE="origin"
fi

Then fetch latest main and rebase your branch:

# Fetch latest main
git fetch $MAIN_REMOTE

# Rebase current branch on top of main
git rebase $MAIN_REMOTE/main

# If rebase succeeds, push (force-with-lease if on feature branch)
if [ "$(git branch --show-current)" != "main" ]; then
  git push origin $(git branch --show-current) --force-with-lease
else
  git push origin main
fi

If rebase has conflicts:

  1. Show conflict files: git status
  2. Help resolve conflicts
  3. Continue: git rebase --continue
  4. Then push

Why this matters:

  • Ensures your PR is based on the latest main
  • Avoids merge conflicts during PR review
  • Makes PR review easier

If User Has Their Own Fork (Most Common)

When user wants to contribute patterns from their fork to upstream:

Step 1: Ensure changes are committed and pushed to their fork

cd ~/Code/community-patterns
git status  # Verify all changes are committed
git push origin main

Step 2: Update and rebase (see Step 0 above)

Step 3: Create pull request to upstream

gh pr create \
  --repo jkomoros/community-patterns \
  --title "Add: pattern name" \
  --body "$(cat <<'EOF'
## Summary
- Brief description of the pattern
- Key features
- Use cases

## Testing
- [x] Pattern compiles without errors
- [x] Tested in browser at http://localhost:8000
- [x] All features working as expected

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
EOF
)"

If Working Directly on jkomoros/community-patterns

CRITICAL: When working directly on the upstream repository, you MUST use branches and PRs. Direct pushes to main are NOT allowed.

Step 1: Create feature branch

cd ~/Code/community-patterns
git checkout -b username/feature-name

Step 2: Commit and push branch

git add patterns/$GITHUB_USER/
git commit -m "Add: pattern name"
git push origin username/feature-name

Step 3: Update and rebase (see Step 0 above)

Step 4: Create pull request

gh pr create \
  --title "Add: pattern name" \
  --body "$(cat <<'EOF'
## Summary
- Brief description

## Testing
- [x] Tested and working

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
EOF
)"

Step 5: Merge with rebase (when approved)

gh pr merge PR_NUMBER --rebase --delete-branch

Important Notes

  • Always wait for user permission before creating PRs
  • All PRs are merged with --rebase (NOT --squash or --merge)
  • This preserves individual commit history
  • Commit frequently locally, but only create PR when user asks
  • PRs will be reviewed before merging to upstream
  • After merge, everyone gets your patterns automatically on next update
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