From compound-engineering
Commits changes, pushes to remote, and opens or updates pull requests. Handles description-only PR flows and full workflow with customizable modes.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/compound-engineering:ce-commit-push-pr [PR ref] [mode:pipeline] [archive:on|off] [babysit:off|continuous|checkpoint][PR ref] [mode:pipeline] [archive:on|off] [babysit:off|continuous|checkpoint]The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
**Asking the user:** When this skill says "ask the user", use the platform's blocking question tool: `AskUserQuestion` in Claude Code (call `ToolSearch` with `select:AskUserQuestion` first if its schema isn't loaded), `request_user_input` in Codex, `ask_question` in Antigravity CLI (`agy`), `ask_user` in Pi (requires the `pi-ask-user` extension). Fall back to presenting the question in chat onl...
Asking the user: When this skill says "ask the user", use the platform's blocking question tool: AskUserQuestion in Claude Code (call ToolSearch with select:AskUserQuestion first if its schema isn't loaded), request_user_input in Codex, ask_question in Antigravity CLI (agy), ask_user in Pi (requires the pi-ask-user extension). Fall back to presenting the question in chat only when no blocking tool exists in the harness or the call errors (e.g., Codex edit modes) — not because a schema load is required. Never silently skip the question.
[] from the existing-PR check means "no open PR" (report and stop); a non-zero check is unknown (resolve gh auth status / connectivity first — never treat it as "no PR"). With an open PR, run Step 4 (PR mode using the existing PR's URL), then Step 5 to preview, confirm, and apply via gh pr edit.mode:pipeline modifier — set by orchestrated callers (e.g., lfg). Run the resolved mode non-interactively: suppress every blocking ask. Step 5's existing-PR rewrite question defaults to not rewriting; in description-update mode the preview ask is skipped and the rewrite applies directly (the update invocation itself is the apply intent); any other suppressed ask takes its conservative documented default (keep the current branch; if Pre-A cannot resolve a base, stop and report rather than guess).
Gather the repository context by running each command below as its own shell tool call — a single argv-style invocation (just the program and its arguments). Do not join them with ;, &&, ||, pipes, $(...), or redirects like 2>/dev/null: that syntax parses only under POSIX shells and aborts under Windows PowerShell. Read each command's exit status directly — a non-zero exit is a normal state to interpret (no PR yet, no origin/HEAD, detached HEAD), not a failure to suppress.
Run them in order — the existing-PR check needs the branch name from git branch --show-current:
| Command | Purpose | Non-zero exit / empty output means |
|---|---|---|
git rev-parse --show-toplevel | Repo root | Not a git repository — report and stop |
git status | Working-tree state | (fails only outside a repo) |
git diff HEAD | Uncommitted changes | Unborn repo with no commits yet |
git branch --show-current | Current branch (<branch>) | Empty output = detached HEAD (Step 1 handles it) |
git log --oneline -10 | Recent commit / PR-title style | Unborn repo — no history yet |
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref origin/HEAD | Remote default branch | No origin/HEAD set — resolve per Step 1 |
gh pr list --head <branch> --state open --json number,url,title,body,state,headRefName,headRepositoryOwner | Open PR for this branch (run only once <branch> is non-empty) | Exit 0 with [] = no open PR. Non-zero = gh missing, unauthenticated, or offline — PR state is unknown, not "none"; never treat a non-zero check as "no PR"; re-check before creating (Step 5) |
Substitute <branch> with the current branch from git branch --show-current, and pass the branch name only. Two traps:
gh pr list with an empty --head drops the filter and lists unrelated PRs. Resolve it after Step 1 creates a branch.<owner>:<branch> — gh pr list --head does not accept that syntax and silently returns [] for it, which reads as "no PR" and opens a duplicate. The PR lives on the base repo, so make gh target the base: rely on its default-repo resolution, or pass -R <base-owner>/<repo> explicitly when the default is the fork.Everything gathered here is a snapshot taken before any action — treat it as a hint, not ground truth. Re-verify the branch, remote, and existing-PR state immediately before each consequential step (push in Step 3, gh pr create in Step 5), since they can change between gathering and acting.
The remote default branch returns something like origin/main; strip the origin/ prefix. If that command exited non-zero (no origin/HEAD set) or returned bare HEAD, try gh repo view --json defaultBranchRef --jq '.defaultBranchRef.name'. If both fail, fall back to main. For the existing-PR check: an empty [] array means no open PR for this branch; a non-zero exit means gh is missing, unauthenticated, or offline — treat PR state as unknown (not "no PR") and re-run the check, or gh auth status, before creating a new PR in Step 5 rather than assuming none exists.
Branch routing:
HEAD before continuing. Derive the branch name from the change content, run git checkout -b <branch-name>, re-read git branch --show-current, and use that result for the rest of the workflow. Do not ask whether to create the branch — invoking the full commit/push/PR workflow is already confirmation that the work should become branch-backed. If the derived branch name already exists, choose a non-conflicting suffix or ask only if the conflict cannot be resolved safely.If the PR check returned a non-empty array, do not blindly take index 0 — in a base repo with multiple forks, another contributor's PR can share the same branch name (--head filters by branch only, not <owner>:<branch>). Select the entry whose headRepositoryOwner and headRefName match the current head — the branch/fork this workflow is pushing. Note the URL and body from that entry (all entries are open — the check filtered --state open). If exactly one entry matches, use it; if multiple entries share the branch name from different owners and none can be confirmed as the current head's, treat it as ambiguous and stop/surface rather than acting on the wrong PR. Step 5 uses the URL to route between new-PR and existing-PR application. Step 4 uses the existing body as preservation context when rewriting.
Match repo style for commit messages and PR titles (project instructions in context > recent commits > conventional commits as default). With conventional commits, default to fix: over feat: when ambiguous — adding code to remedy broken or missing behavior is fix:. Reserve feat: for capabilities the user could not previously accomplish. The user may override.
If on the default branch, branch creation needs to handle stale local <base>, unpushed commits on local <base>, and uncommitted changes that collide with the fresh remote base. Read references/branch-creation.md and follow its decision flow before continuing.
Scan changed files for naturally distinct concerns. If they clearly group into separate logical changes, create separate commits (2-3 max). Group at file level only — no git add -p. When ambiguous, one commit is fine.
Stage and commit each group. Avoid git add -A and git add . — they sweep in .env, build artifacts, and generated files:
git add file1 file2 file3 && git commit -m "$(cat <<'EOF'
commit message here
EOF
)"
Then push. Immediately before pushing, re-confirm you are on the intended feature branch (git branch --show-current) — the branch gathered in Context is a hint, and Step 1 may have created or switched branches since. Push the live HEAD so it reflects the current checkout, never a stale branch name:
git push -u origin HEAD
If the working tree is clean and all commits are already pushed, this step is a no-op.
You MUST read references/pr-description-writing.md in full — the core principle at the top governs every step. The only input it needs from this skill is the PR ref, if one was identified by mode dispatch (description-only with a pasted URL, description update, or confirmed existing-PR rewrite in full workflow). If Step 1 found an existing PR, pass its URL to Step 4 when rewriting so PR mode fetches the existing body and can preserve Related: / Fixes references already present there.
Evidence decision before composition. CE no longer owns a dedicated capture workflow; modern harnesses provide their own browser, screenshot, terminal recording, and artifact capture tools. Treat evidence as user-supplied context or as validation prose, not as a separate skill dispatch.
## Demo, ## Screenshots, or ## Evidence, matching the artifact type. Do not invent or upload evidence.Otherwise, if the branch diff changes behavior a reviewer would need evidence for (UI, CLI output, API behavior with runnable code, generated artifacts, workflow output, ranking/scoring logic, deployment or config behavior), include a concise validation note in the PR body describing what was exercised and how it behaved. If no real run was possible because of unavailable credentials, paid services, deploy-only infrastructure, hardware, or missing local setup, say that plainly in the validation section.
Do not block PR creation solely because no visual artifact exists. Test output and manual validation notes are acceptable validation evidence, but do not label test output as "Demo" or "Screenshots."
Concept teaching gate before composition. Use the repo root gathered in Context (resolving it with git rev-parse --show-toplevel if you don't already have it) and read <repo-root>/.compound-engineering/config.local.yaml with the native file-read tool. Only an active (non-commented) pr_teaching_section: key counts — lines starting with # are YAML comments, and the shipped template documents keys as commented examples; matching those would silently flip the gate. The gate is off only when the active value is exactly false; a missing file, missing key, or any other value means the default: on. The same read resolves pr_teaching_archive: — on only when the active value is exactly true, otherwise off — and a per-run archive:on|off token overrides the archive key for this invocation.
Then continue with the rest of the reference (Steps A through E, including the Step B2 concept judgment when the gate is on) to compose the title and body — Step E is the pre-apply coverage audit and must run before the body is returned.
Description-only mode — print the title and body. Stop unless the user asks to apply.
New PR (full workflow, no existing PR from Step 1) — immediately before creating, always re-run gh pr list --head <branch> --state open --json number,url,headRefName,headRepositoryOwner (branch name only; target the base repo on a fork, per Context) so a PR that appeared since Step 1, or was missed because the Step 1 check came back unknown, is not duplicated. If it now shows a PR whose headRepositoryOwner/headRefName match the current head, switch to the existing-PR path; disambiguate multi-fork matches by head owner as in Step 1 rather than assuming index 0. If this re-check itself exits non-zero, resolve gh auth status / connectivity before creating rather than assuming none exists. Otherwise apply per "Applying via gh" below using gh pr create. Report the URL.
Existing PR (full workflow, found in Step 1) — the new commits are already on the PR from Step 3. Report the PR URL, then ask whether to rewrite the description.
Description update mode, or existing-PR rewrite confirmed — preview before applying. Ask: "New title: <title> (<N> chars). Summary leads with: <first two sentences>. Total body: <L> lines. Apply?" If declined, the user may pass focus text back for a regenerate; do not apply. If confirmed, apply per "Applying via gh" below using gh pr edit and report the URL.
Explainer archival — runs only in full workflow, with pr_teaching_archive on, a composed ## New concepts section, and the apply confirmed (new-PR create, or existing-PR rewrite accepted); a declined rewrite skips archival entirely so no unlinked doc commit is left behind. All paths resolve from the repo root gathered in Context, never the CWD. With two taught concepts, write one file per concept and stage both in the single commit. Execute as explicit transitions immediately before the gh call:
git check-ignore -q docs/explainers/YYYY-MM-DD-<concept-slug>.md (from the repo root) — the check works on not-yet-created paths. If the path is ignored, print a one-line warning and skip archival entirely, writing nothing (never git add -f).title, date, input_shape: concept, subject, and the teaching content. If the file already exists from a prior run, overwrite it.git add those file(s) only (never -A), commit with docs(explainer): teach <concept>[, <concept>], and push. If the commit reports nothing to commit, the doc is already committed from a prior run — keep the link and continue.## New concepts section before applying. Build the URL for the repo's actual host — e.g. gh browse -n -b <head-branch> -- <path> (prints the link on whatever host gh targets, GitHub Enterprise included) — do not hardcode github.com, or the link 404s on GHE.If the doc write, commit, or push fails, warn and continue to PR creation without the link — never strand the flow between commit and PR.
Concept trailer — when a body applied by this run contains a ## New concepts section, print one line after the PR URL in every mode: New concepts: <name>[, <name>]. In interactive full-workflow runs follow it with one line per taught concept: Run /ce-explain <name> to go deeper. No trailer when this run applied no body — including a rewrite that was declined or pipeline-defaulted to no — or no PR exists.
Babysit handoff — default on. In interactive full workflow, after reporting a newly-created PR URL (or after new commits land on an existing open PR), auto-invoke ce-babysit-pr on that PR by default: announce it in one non-blocking line (e.g. "Babysitting toward merge-ready — watching CI + incoming review; pass babysit:off to skip"), then invoke — never block on a yes/no. Off is the explicit choice: babysit:off skips it this run (babysit:continuous / babysit:checkpoint forces that watch mode); auto_babysit: false in <repo-root>/.compound-engineering/config.local.yaml is a standing opt-out, read with the same gate semantics as pr_teaching_section (only an active, non-commented value of exactly false disables; a missing file/key or any other value means the default on; a babysit:off token overrides the config for this run).
Do not fire (auto-detected, no flag needed): mode:pipeline (the orchestrated caller owns follow-on steps), description-only / description-update modes, no PR created or updated this run, non-GitHub (babysit's own guard stops it), or a head branch you cannot push to. Fork PRs are drivable — not a hard-off. A fork-to-upstream PR (the common open-source case) is babysittable whenever you can push to its head branch, which holds for a PR whose branch this skill just pushed (you own the fork): babysit reads state on the base repo (from the PR URL) and pushes fixes to the head repo (your fork). Hard-off only when the head is genuinely not pushable (e.g. someone else's PR). Soft-degrade: a checkpoint-only harness runs one tick and prints the resume command instead of a live loop.
The body must be written to a temp file and passed via --body-file <path>. Never use --body-file -, stdin pipes, heredoc-to-stdin, or --body "$(cat ...)" — wrappers and stdin handling can silently produce an empty PR body while gh still exits 0 and returns a URL.
BODY_FILE=$(mktemp "${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/ce-pr-body.XXXXXX") && cat >> "$BODY_FILE" <<'__CE_PR_BODY_END__'
<the composed body markdown goes here, verbatim>
__CE_PR_BODY_END__
The quoted sentinel keeps $VAR, backticks, and any literal EOF inside the body from being expanded.
For <TITLE>: substitute verbatim. If it contains ", `, $, or \, escape them or switch to single quotes.
gh pr create --title "<TITLE>" --body-file "$BODY_FILE" # new PR
gh pr edit --title "<TITLE>" --body-file "$BODY_FILE" # existing PR
npx claudepluginhub sergevatel/compound-engineering-pluginCommits changes, pushes to a remote, and opens a GitHub PR. Supports full workflow, description-only, and description-update modes.
Automates git commit, push, and pull request creation via GitHub CLI. Handles full workflow, PR description-only flows, and description updates. Useful for shipping code or drafting PR descriptions.
Creates GitHub Pull Requests using GitHub CLI: detects existing PRs for branches, pushes changes, generates titles/bodies from commits. Handles monorepos/submodules. Use for /create-pr or PR/review requests.