pr-create

Get changes into a PR, monitor CI, fix any failures, and notify the user when the PR is ready for review.

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Install skill "pr-create" with this command: npx skills add posit-dev/skills/posit-dev-skills-pr-create

PR Creator Skill

Get changes into a PR, monitor CI, fix any failures, and notify the user when the PR is ready for review.

The user may already have commits ready on a feature branch, or may have uncommitted changes, or both. Adapt the workflow to the current state.

Task List Integration

CRITICAL: Use Claude Code's task list system for progress tracking and session recovery. Use TaskCreate, TaskUpdate, and TaskList tools throughout execution.

Task Hierarchy

[Main Task] "Create PR: [branch-name]" └── [CI Task] "CI Run #1" (status: failed, reason: lint) └── [Fix Task] "Fix: lint" └── [CI Task] "CI Run #2" (status: failed, reason: test failures) └── [Fix Task] "Fix: test failures" └── [CI Task] "CI Run #3" (status: passed)

At the start, always call TaskList to check for existing PR tasks. If a "Create PR" task exists with status in_progress, resume using the Session Recovery section below.

Process

Step 1: Assess Current State

Check for a --reviewer argument in the user's message. If present, store the value for use in Step 5. It may be a GitHub handle (@username ) or a name (Jane Doe ).

Create the main PR task:

TaskCreate:

  • subject: "Create PR: [branch-name or 'pending']"
  • description: "Create pull request from current changes."
  • activeForm: "Checking git status"

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [pr task ID]
  • status: "in_progress"

Determine the base branch and current state:

git status git diff --stat

Detect the default branch (main, master, develop, etc.)

gh repo view --json defaultBranchRef --jq '.defaultBranchRef.name' git log --oneline <base-branch>..HEAD gh pr view 2>/dev/null

Determine the starting point:

State Next Step

On base branch with uncommitted changes Step 2 (create branch)

On feature branch with uncommitted changes Step 3 (commit)

On feature branch with commits, nothing uncommitted Step 4 (sync)

PR already exists for this branch Inform user, ask whether to update or monitor CI

No changes anywhere Inform user "No changes detected. Nothing to do." and stop

Update task with branch info:

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [pr task ID]
  • subject: "Create PR: [actual-branch-name]"
  • metadata: {"branch": "[branch-name]", "baseBranch": "[base-branch]"}

Step 2: Create Branch (if needed)

If currently on the base branch:

git checkout -b <descriptive-branch-name>

Use the project's branch naming conventions if documented in CLAUDE.md or AGENTS.md. Otherwise use:

  • feat/short-description for features

  • fix/short-description for bug fixes

  • refactor/short-description for refactoring

  • docs/short-description for documentation

Step 3: Stage and Commit Changes (if needed)

Skip this step entirely if there are no uncommitted changes.

Stage specific files rather than using git add -A :

git status git add <file1> <file2> ... git diff --cached --stat git commit -m "$(cat <<'EOF' <type>: <short summary>

<optional longer description> EOF )"

Follow the project's commit conventions if documented in CLAUDE.md or AGENTS.md. Otherwise use conventional commits: feat: , fix: , refactor: , docs: , test: , chore: .

If the commit fails due to a pre-commit hook:

  • Read the error output to understand what the hook requires

  • Fix the flagged issues

  • Stage the fixed files

  • Create a new commit (do NOT amend the previous commit)

Step 4: Sync with Base Branch (if needed)

git fetch origin git log --oneline HEAD..origin/<base-branch> | head -20

If up to date (no output), proceed to Step 5.

If behind, inform the user how many commits behind and offer options using AskUserQuestion :

  • Rebase (recommended when no PR exists yet)

  • Merge (safer with many commits or shared branches)

  • Skip (proceed without syncing)

Do NOT rebase or merge without user confirmation.

If conflicts arise, inform the user and help resolve them.

Step 5: Draft PR Title and Body

Get user approval on the PR content now, before running pre-flight checks. This keeps the user engaged while they're focused on the task.

5a. Gather context:

git log --oneline <base-branch>..HEAD git diff <base-branch>...HEAD --stat

5b. Draft the PR title and body:

Follow the project's PR conventions if documented in CLAUDE.md or AGENTS.md. Otherwise:

  • Title: Under 70 characters, describes the change

  • Body: Start with issue references on the first line (e.g. Closes #45 ), then a structured description:

[issue references: Fixes #...]

Summary

<summary>

Verification

<how to verify>

Summary: Give an overview of the changes in the PR. The target audience is an experienced developer who works in this code base and needs to be informed about design or architectural changes. Highlight key decisions, structures and patterns.

Verification: include an example that demonstrates the changes in the PR as seen or used by the intended audience. For code packages, include a small, reproducible exmaple. For apps and interfaces, describe the steps required to see the new behavior.

5c. Preview and get user approval:

CRITICAL: Use AskUserQuestion to show the user the proposed PR title and body. Also include a reviewer question in this same interaction:

  • If a --reviewer was provided, resolve and confirm the GitHub handle (see below), then show it as part of the preview.

  • If no reviewer was given, ask in the same AskUserQuestion call whether they want to request a review from anyone (free-text, optional).

Resolving a reviewer by name (not handle): If the reviewer value doesn't look like a GitHub handle (no @ , not clearly a username), look up the correct handle:

Check recent contributors in the repo first

gh api repos/{owner}/{repo}/contributors --jq '.[].login' | head -20

Search GitHub users if not found in contributors

gh api search/users?q=<name>+in:name --jq '.items[] | "(.login) (.name // "")"' | head -10

Confirm the resolved handle with the user before storing it.

Store the confirmed reviewer handle in task metadata:

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [pr task ID]
  • metadata: {"reviewer": "<github-handle>"}

Include approval options directly in the AskUserQuestion call for the PR preview. The options should be:

  • "Looks good, proceed" (default) — approve and immediately continue to Step 6

  • "Looks good, tell me what you'll do next" — approve but show the plan outline before continuing

Do NOT create the PR until the user has selected one of these options.

5d. Show plan outline (only if user selected option 2):

Present the following before continuing:

Here's what I'll do next:

  • Run local checks (if available for this project)

  • Push the branch to origin

  • Create the PR as a draft with the approved title and body

  • Monitor CI and fix any failures

  • Publish the PR (remove draft status) once CI passes

  • Request a review from @<reviewer> (if applicable)

I'll auto-fix small issues (formatting, lint, type errors, test failures). If anything bigger comes up, I'll check with you first.

After showing the outline, ask one more AskUserQuestion to confirm before proceeding to Step 6.

Step 6: Run Local Pre-flight Checks

This step catches most CI failures before pushing.

Determine the project's local check commands by consulting (in priority order):

  • CLAUDE.md or AGENTS.md in the project root (may specify lint, test, build commands)

  • Project config files: package.json (scripts), Makefile , pyproject.toml , DESCRIPTION , Justfile , Taskfile.yml , etc.

  • CI workflow files in .github/workflows/ to understand what CI will run

Run the checks that are available locally. Common patterns:

  • Lint/format: npm run lint , ruff check , air format , biome check , etc.

  • Build: npm run build , pip install -e . , devtools::check() , etc.

  • Type check: npm run check-types , mypy , pyright , etc.

  • Tests: npm test , pytest , devtools::test() , cargo test , etc.

If no local check commands are discoverable, skip this step and rely on CI.

Fixing failures:

Obvious, mechanical fixes — fix autonomously:

  • Formatting issues (run auto-formatter if available)

  • Lint errors with clear fixes

  • Simple build, test, or type errors with obvious corrections

  • Stage the fixed files and commit the fix (specific files, not git add -A )

  • Re-run the failing check to confirm it passes

  • ALWAYS call out changes made in this step in the final summary

Non-obvious failures — use AskUserQuestion to present the issue and offer resolution options

Step 7: Push Branch

git push -u origin <branch-name>

Step 8: Create Pull Request

Create the PR as a draft so it is not prematurely sent for review while CI is still running.

GitHub's markdown parser renders every newline literally — do not wrap long lines in the PR body. Write each paragraph as a single unbroken line.

gh pr create --draft --title "<approved-title>" --body "$(cat <<'EOF' <approved-body> EOF )"

Capture the PR URL and store in task metadata:

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [pr task ID]
  • metadata: {"prUrl": "<url>", "prNumber": <N>, "prTitle": "<title>", "commits": <count>}

Step 9: Monitor CI

Create a CI run task:

TaskCreate:

  • subject: "CI Run #[N]: monitoring"
  • description: "Monitoring CI run for PR #[number]"
  • activeForm: "Monitoring CI Run #[N]"

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [ci task ID]
  • addBlockedBy: [pr task ID]
  • status: "in_progress"

Wait for CI to start, then monitor:

List workflow runs for this PR

gh run list --branch <branch-name> --limit 5

Watch a specific run silently until completion

--exit-status returns exit code 0 on success, non-zero on failure

gh run watch <run-id> --exit-status > /dev/null 2>&1 echo "Exit: $?"

Or check status without blocking

gh run view <run-id>

IMPORTANT: Do NOT run gh run watch without redirecting output. It generates thousands of lines of repeated status updates. Always redirect to /dev/null and rely on the exit code.

Store run ID in task:

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [ci task ID]
  • metadata: {"runId": "[run-id]", "status": "running"}

Step 10: Handle CI Results

If CI Passes:

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [ci task ID]
  • subject: "CI Run #[N]: passed"
  • status: "completed"
  • metadata: {"status": "passed"}

Publish the PR (remove draft status):

gh pr ready <pr-number>

Request a review (if a reviewer was stored in task metadata):

gh pr edit <pr-number> --add-reviewer <github-handle>

  • STOP HERE - do not merge

  • Report to user with PR URL, branch, and CI status

If CI Fails:

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [ci task ID]

  • subject: "CI Run #[N]: failed"

  • status: "completed"

  • metadata: {"status": "failed", "failureReason": "[brief reason]"}

Get failure details:

--log-failed can produce thousands of lines. Use a targeted approach:

Summary of which jobs/steps failed

gh run view <run-id>

Failed logs, limited to the last 40 lines (where the error usually is)

gh run view <run-id> --log-failed 2>&1 | tail -40

Search for specific errors if needed

gh run view <run-id> --log-failed 2>&1 | grep -A 5 -B 5 "error|Error|FAIL|failed"

Work from the bottom of the output upward — the actual error is almost always near the end.

Reproduce locally using the project's local check commands (discovered in Step 6).

Create a fix task:

TaskCreate:

  • subject: "Fix: [failure reason]"
  • description: "Fixing CI failure from Run #[N]: [detailed error]"
  • activeForm: "Fixing [failure reason]"

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [fix task ID]

  • addBlockedBy: [ci task ID]

  • status: "in_progress"

Fix the issue, verify locally, then commit and push:

git add <specific-files> git commit -m "$(cat <<'EOF' fix: <what was fixed> EOF )" git push

Mark fix task completed:

TaskUpdate:

  • taskId: [fix task ID]

  • status: "completed"

Return to Step 9 — monitor the new CI run (increment run number)

Repeat until CI passes.

Step 11: Final Report

Mark main PR task as completed.

Call TaskList to gather all CI run and fix tasks, then generate the summary:

PR Ready for Review

PR: #<number> <title> Branch: &#x3C;branch-name> -> &#x3C;base-branch> Commits: <count> CI Status: All checks passed Reviewer: @<handle> (if requested)

CI Runs

  • Run #1: Failed (lint) -> Fixed in [hash]
  • Run #2: Passed

Note: This PR has NOT been merged. Please review and merge manually.

Session Recovery

If resuming from an interrupted session:

TaskList shows: ├── PR task in_progress, no CI tasks │ └── PR was created, start monitoring CI (Step 9) ├── PR task in_progress, CI task in_progress │ └── Resume monitoring CI run from task metadata runId ├── PR task in_progress, CI task failed, no fix task │ └── Analyze failure and create fix task (Step 10) ├── PR task in_progress, fix task in_progress │ └── Continue fixing, then push and monitor new CI run ├── PR task completed │ └── PR is done, show final report └── No tasks exist └── Fresh start (Step 1)

When resuming, use gh run view <runId> from CI task metadata to check if the run is still active, completed, or superseded. Inform the user of the current state before resuming.

Important Rules

  • NEVER merge the PR - only create it and ensure CI passes

  • NEVER force push unless explicitly asked

  • NEVER push to base branch directly

  • Continue fixing until CI passes - don't give up after one failure

  • Preserve commit history - don't squash unless asked

  • ALWAYS preview PR title and body with the user before creating

  • ALWAYS stage specific files - never use git add -A or git add .

  • NEVER amend commits unless explicitly asked - always create new commits for fixes

  • ALWAYS open PRs as drafts - use gh pr create --draft ; publish with gh pr ready only after CI passes

  • NEVER request a review before CI passes

  • Do NOT wrap markdown lines in PR bodies - GitHub renders every newline literally

Error Handling

Authentication issues: If gh commands fail with auth errors, inform the user to run gh auth login .

Branch conflicts: Offer rebase or merge options. Resolve conflicts if any, then continue.

PR already exists: Inform user a PR already exists for this branch. Ask if they want to update it or monitor its CI.

Pre-commit hook failures: Read the hook error output, fix the flagged issues, stage the fixes, and create a new commit. Do NOT amend.

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