Agent skill

git-workflow-expert

Git branching strategies, conflict resolution, rebase workflows, monorepo patterns, and advanced operations like cherry-pick, bisect, and reflog recovery. Activate on "git", "branching strategy", "merge conflict", "rebase", "cherry-pick", "monorepo git", "git bisect", "git reflog", "squash commits". NOT for GitHub Actions CI/CD (use github-actions-pipeline-builder), GitHub API/webhooks, or PR review processes (use code-review-checklist).

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Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/curiositech/some_claude_skills/tree/main/.claude/skills/git-workflow-expert

Metadata

Additional technical details for this skill

tags
git workflow branching-strategy merge-conflict
pairs with
[
    {
        "skill": "github-actions-pipeline-builder",
        "reason": "Git branching strategies determine which CI/CD pipelines trigger on which events"
    },
    {
        "skill": "monorepo-management",
        "reason": "Monorepo git workflows require specialized branching, tagging, and merge strategies"
    },
    {
        "skill": "code-review-checklist",
        "reason": "PR-based code review workflows depend on sound git branching practices"
    }
]

SKILL.md

Git Workflow Expert

Master git operations from daily workflow to disaster recovery. Covers branching strategies, merge vs rebase decisions, conflict resolution, monorepo patterns, and advanced operations that most developers never learn but desperately need.

When to Use

Use for:

  • Choosing a branching strategy for a project (trunk-based, GitHub Flow, git-flow)
  • Resolving merge conflicts (especially complex multi-file conflicts)
  • Rebase workflows (interactive rebase, rebase onto, autosquash)
  • Cherry-picking across branches
  • Using git bisect to find bug-introducing commits
  • Recovering lost work with reflog
  • Monorepo git patterns (sparse checkout, subtree, submodules)
  • Cleaning up messy git history
  • Setting up git hooks for quality gates
  • Force push safety and shared branch protocols

NOT for:

  • GitHub Actions / CI/CD pipelines (use github-actions-pipeline-builder)
  • PR review process and checklists (use code-review-checklist)
  • GitHub API / webhooks / repository management
  • Git LFS setup (mention it, but not the core focus)

Core Decision: Branching Strategy

mermaid
flowchart TD
    Start[New project or rethinking strategy?] --> Team{Team size?}
    Team -->|Solo or 2-3| Trunk[Trunk-Based Development]
    Team -->|4-15| GHFlow[GitHub Flow]
    Team -->|15+ or regulated| Q2{Release cadence?}
    Q2 -->|Continuous deploy| GHFlow
    Q2 -->|Scheduled releases| GitFlow[Git-Flow]
    Q2 -->|Multiple supported versions| GitFlow

    Trunk --> T1[Main branch only]
    T1 --> T2[Short-lived feature branches < 1 day]
    T2 --> T3[Feature flags for incomplete work]

    GHFlow --> G1[main + feature branches]
    G1 --> G2[PR-based review]
    G2 --> G3[Deploy from main after merge]

    GitFlow --> GF1[main + develop + feature + release + hotfix]
    GF1 --> GF2[Formal release branches]
    GF2 --> GF3[Hotfix branches from main]

Strategy Comparison

Dimension Trunk-Based GitHub Flow Git-Flow
Branch lifetime Hours Days Days-weeks
Merge frequency Multiple/day Daily Per-sprint
CI requirement Mandatory Strong Optional
Rollback mechanism Feature flags Revert commit Release branch
Best for High-trust teams Most web projects Versioned releases
Worst for Junior-heavy teams Multiple live versions Fast iteration

Merge vs Rebase Decision

mermaid
flowchart TD
    Q[Integrating changes?] --> Shared{Is the branch shared?}
    Shared -->|Yes, others push to it| Merge[Use merge]
    Shared -->|No, only me| Q2{Want clean history?}
    Q2 -->|Yes| Rebase[Use rebase]
    Q2 -->|No, preserve context| Merge
    Rebase --> Q3{Long-lived branch?}
    Q3 -->|Yes, many conflicts expected| RebaseOnto[Consider rebase --onto]
    Q3 -->|No| RebaseSimple[Simple rebase]

Anti-Pattern: Rebase Shared Branches

Novice: "I'll rebase main into the shared feature branch to keep it clean." Expert: Never rebase branches others are pushing to. Rebase rewrites commit SHAs — anyone who already pulled will get duplicate commits and merge hell. Use merge for shared branches, rebase for personal branches. Detection: Multiple developers report "weird duplicate commits" after a pull.

Anti-Pattern: Merge Commit Soup

Novice: "I'll just merge main into my feature branch every morning to stay current." Expert: Daily merge commits from main create an unreadable history. Instead: git rebase main on your personal branch (one clean operation), or if you must merge, at least squash when merging back to main. Timeline: Before 2020, merge was the default. Modern teams prefer rebase for feature branches, merge (or squash-merge) for PRs.


Conflict Resolution

The Calm Approach

bash
# 1. Before resolving: understand what happened
git log --merge --oneline          # Show conflicting commits
git diff --name-only --diff-filter=U  # List conflicted files

# 2. For each file: understand both sides
git diff :2:file :3:file           # :2 = ours, :3 = theirs

# 3. Resolve, then verify
git add resolved-file.ts
git diff --cached                  # Review what you're about to commit

# 4. After all files resolved
git merge --continue               # or git rebase --continue

Anti-Pattern: Accept Ours/Theirs Blindly

Novice: "This conflict is too complex, I'll just git checkout --ours . and be done." Expert: Blindly accepting one side loses the other person's work. If a conflict is genuinely too complex, use a 3-way merge tool (git mergetool) to see base + ours + theirs simultaneously. For large-scale conflicts, consider rerere (reuse recorded resolution) to cache conflict solutions. Detection: Features mysteriously disappear after merges.


Advanced Operations

Cherry-Pick Workflow

bash
# Pick a specific commit from another branch
git cherry-pick abc123

# Pick a range (exclusive start, inclusive end)
git cherry-pick abc123..def456

# Cherry-pick without committing (stage only)
git cherry-pick --no-commit abc123

# If conflicts: resolve then
git cherry-pick --continue

When to cherry-pick: Hotfixes that need to go to multiple release branches. Bug fixes from a feature branch that's not ready to merge.

When NOT to: If you need many commits, merge or rebase instead. Cherry-pick creates duplicate commits with different SHAs.

Git Bisect (Find Bug-Introducing Commit)

bash
# Start bisect
git bisect start
git bisect bad                     # Current commit is broken
git bisect good v1.2.0             # This tag was working

# Git checks out a middle commit. Test it, then:
git bisect good                    # or: git bisect bad

# Repeat until git identifies the first bad commit

# Automated bisect with a test script:
git bisect start HEAD v1.2.0
git bisect run npm test            # Runs test at each step automatically

Reflog Recovery (Undo Almost Anything)

bash
# See recent HEAD positions
git reflog --oneline -20

# Recover a dropped stash
git stash list                     # Empty? Check reflog:
git fsck --no-reflogs | grep commit  # Find dangling commits
git show <sha>                     # Inspect to find your stash

# Undo a bad rebase
git reflog
# Find the SHA before the rebase started
git reset --hard HEAD@{5}          # Reset to that point

# Recover deleted branch
git reflog | grep "branch-name"
git checkout -b recovered-branch <sha>

Interactive Rebase (Clean History)

bash
# Rewrite last 5 commits
git rebase -i HEAD~5

# In the editor:
# pick   abc123 Add user model        ← keep as-is
# squash def456 Fix typo in user model ← squash into previous
# reword ghi789 Add auth              ← edit commit message
# drop   jkl012 WIP debugging         ← remove entirely
# edit   mno345 Add migration         ← pause to amend

# Autosquash: commits prefixed with "fixup!" or "squash!" auto-arrange
git commit --fixup abc123          # Creates "fixup! Add user model"
git rebase -i --autosquash HEAD~5  # Automatically squashes it

Monorepo Git Patterns

Sparse Checkout (Work on Subset)

bash
# Enable sparse checkout
git sparse-checkout init --cone
git sparse-checkout set packages/core packages/cli

# Now only packages/core and packages/cli are checked out
# Other directories exist in git but aren't on disk

Subtree (Embed Another Repo)

bash
# Add a subtree
git subtree add --prefix=libs/shared https://github.com/org/shared.git main --squash

# Pull updates
git subtree pull --prefix=libs/shared https://github.com/org/shared.git main --squash

# Push changes back upstream
git subtree push --prefix=libs/shared https://github.com/org/shared.git feature-x

Submodules vs Subtree

Dimension Submodules Subtree
Model Pointer to external repo Copy of external repo
Clone Requires --recurse-submodules Just works
Update git submodule update git subtree pull
CI complexity Higher (need init step) Lower
Best for Large vendored deps Small shared libs
Footgun risk High (detached HEAD trap) Low

Git Hooks for Quality

bash
# .git/hooks/pre-commit (or use husky/lefthook)
#!/bin/sh
# Run linter on staged files only
npx lint-staged

# .git/hooks/commit-msg
#!/bin/sh
# Enforce conventional commits
if ! grep -qE "^(feat|fix|docs|style|refactor|test|chore)(\(.+\))?: .+" "$1"; then
  echo "Commit message must follow Conventional Commits format"
  exit 1
fi

# .git/hooks/pre-push
#!/bin/sh
# Run tests before push
npm test || exit 1

Anti-Pattern: Skipping Hooks

Novice: "The pre-commit hook is slow, I'll just --no-verify." Expert: If hooks are too slow, fix the hooks (use lint-staged for incremental linting, parallelize tests). --no-verify becomes a habit that defeats the purpose. If you truly need to skip once (emergency hotfix), document why in the commit message.


Branching Strategy Selection Logic

When the user asks which branching strategy to use, apply these rules in order:

Hard constraints (override everything)

  1. Multi-version library (hasMultipleVersions: true AND isLibrary: true) → git-flow

    • Reasoning: Maintaining v2.x hotfixes while developing v3.x requires long-lived release branches. Trunk-based cannot serve two audiences.
    • Migration from trunk-based: Create release/vN.x branches from the last tag on each major. Backport via cherry-pick.
  2. Regulated industry (isRegulated: true) → git-flow

    • Reasoning: Auditors expect named release branches with approval gates, a clear trail from commit to production, and the ability to point at a branch and say "this is what shipped." Trunk-based can technically satisfy this with tags, but the audit conversation is easier with git-flow.
    • Note: If CI maturity is high AND the compliance team is open to it, trunk-based with deploy tags + signed commits is superior. But assume the compliance team is not open to it.

CI maturity gate

  1. Low CI maturity (ciMaturity: 'low') → github-flow
    • Reasoning: Trunk-based without comprehensive CI means broken code on main. GitHub Flow (feature branches + PR review + merge) provides a human safety net. Recommend investing in CI, then graduating to trunk-based.
    • Migration to trunk-based later: Shorten branch lifetimes to <1 day, add branch protection requiring green CI, then drop the requirement for PR approval on small changes.

Default (most teams)

  1. Everything elsetrunk-based
    • Reasoning: Smallest feedback loops, least merge pain, forces good CI habits. Feature flags handle incomplete work. Short-lived branches (<1 day) are acceptable as a concession.
    • If team is >15 people: Consider trunk-based with short-lived feature branches (still trunk-based — the branch lives <24h and auto-deletes after merge).

Migration paths

From To Steps
git-flow → trunk-based 1. Merge develop into main. 2. Delete develop. 3. Set branch protection on main (require CI green). 4. Adopt feature flags for incomplete work. 5. Shorten branch lifetime target to <1 day.
git-flow → github-flow 1. Merge develop into main. 2. Delete develop and all release/* branches. 3. PR directly to main. 4. Tag releases from main.
github-flow → trunk-based 1. Reduce PR size to <200 lines. 2. Add comprehensive CI. 3. Allow direct push to main for trivial changes. 4. Keep PRs for larger changes but merge same-day.

Force Push Safety

bash
# NEVER force push to main/master
# Use --force-with-lease instead of --force
git push --force-with-lease origin feature-branch

# --force-with-lease checks that remote hasn't been updated
# since your last fetch. Prevents overwriting others' work.

# Set as default (never use bare --force again):
git config --global alias.pushf "push --force-with-lease"

References

  • references/advanced-rebase-patterns.md — Consult for complex rebase scenarios: rebase --onto, interactive rebase strategies, handling rebase conflicts in long-lived branches
  • references/monorepo-git-strategies.md — Consult for monorepo-specific patterns: sparse checkout optimization, CODEOWNERS, path-based CI triggers, large repo performance

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