| name | backend-pr-workflow |
| description | Pedantic backend PR workflow skill that follows repo-local workflow docs, GitHub issue linkage, safe Django migrations, and downtime-safe schema changes. |
| allowed-tools | Read Bash Glob Grep |
Backend PR Workflow Skill
When to Use This Skill
Use this Skill whenever you are:
- Creating or reviewing a backend PR that touches Django models, migrations, or
production data.
- Preparing a PR for Django4Lyfe / Workforce backend or a similar repo that
uses GitHub as the active workflow system.
- Planning a release or hotfix and want to ensure the workflow (branches, tags,
and migrations) is correct and downtime-safe.
If the target repo has its own harness docs, treat AGENTS.md as the
canonical entrypoint and follow any linked workflow/release/migration docs or
directory-scoped AGENTS.md files for per-topic truth. CLAUDE.md should be
treated as a pointer, not as a unique rule source. This Skill is the default
baseline when repo-local docs are absent or thin.
Example Prompts
- “Use the
backend-pr-workflow skill to review this Django4Lyfe PR’s branch name, linked issues, migrations, and downtime-safety. Here are the branch name, base branch, and PR title: …”
- “Before I open this backend PR, run
backend-pr-workflow on my planned title, description, and migration summary and tell me all [BLOCKING] and [SHOULD_FIX] issues.”
- “For this hotfix PR on Django4Lyfe, use
backend-pr-workflow to check that my base branch, title, and release plan follow our backend workflow.”
- “I’ve added a new nullable field and a backfill migration. Use
backend-pr-workflow to verify that my migrations and rollout plan are downtime-safe.”
Severity Tags & Output Shape
When this Skill reviews a PR or workflow plan, the response must be
structured and tagged:
- Start with a 1–3 sentence summary of what was checked.
- Then use sections:
What’s aligned – bullets of things that follow the workflow.
Needs changes – bullets with severity tags:
[BLOCKING] – must fix before merge or deploy.
[SHOULD_FIX] – important but not strictly blocking for merge.
[NIT] – minor consistency or documentation suggestions.
Each bullet in Needs changes should:
- Point to the specific item (branch name, PR title, description, migration
file, release plan).
- State the problem and the concrete correction the author should make.
Example bullet:
[SHOULD_FIX] Branch name 'misc/work' does not match the repo's documented feature-branch convention. Rename it to something clearer like 'feature/1234-user-auth' or 'feature/user-auth'.
Inputs This Skill Expects
Before giving a full review, this Skill should gather:
- The repository and context (e.g. Django4Lyfe backend / monolith).
- The branch name.
- The PR title and PR description (or the planned ones).
- The base branch (what the PR targets:
dev, release, master, etc.).
- Whether the PR:
- Includes Django model changes.
- Adds, modifies, or deletes migrations.
- Is a normal feature/bugfix, a hotfix, or a release PR.
If any of these are missing or unclear, ask the user to provide them before
doing a full workflow review.
Before applying the checklist, inspect the repo harness:
- Read
AGENTS.md first.
- Load linked workflow/release/runbook docs or relevant directory-scoped
AGENTS.md files when they exist.
- Detect local-ci support only when
local-ci is on PATH and repo root
contains .local-ci.toml.
- Detect the validated deploy helper when
scripts/deploy/trigger_validated_backend_deploy.sh exists.
- If workflow rules are tribal knowledge or only implied by stale docs, emit a
[SHOULD_FIX] harness finding recommending a repo-docs update.
Checklist 1 – Repo-Local Branch / PR Conventions
This Skill treats the target repo's current AGENTS.md, runbooks, and PR
template as the source of truth.
1.1 Branch name
Check the branch name:
- First, inspect the target repo's documented convention.
- For Django4Lyfe today, the backend docs now prefer neutral repo-local names
such as:
feature/employee-import
bugfix/1234-employee-import
chore/ci-cleanup
- If the repo includes an issue number in branch names, treat it as helpful
traceability, not a universal requirement unless the repo docs explicitly say
otherwise.
If the branch does not follow this pattern, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] – with a suggested corrected branch name that matches the repo
docs.
- Upgrade to
[BLOCKING] only if current CI or automation still explicitly
depends on a pattern and would fail without it.
1.2 Multi-repo work and sub-tickets
When a feature spans multiple repositories, prefer:
- one planning issue in
DiversioTeam/monolith when the work is cross-repo
- repo-local execution issues when ownership or tooling lives in one code repo
- clear links between the planning issue and the execution PR
Explain the risk of collapsing unrelated repo work into one opaque thread:
- ownership becomes unclear
- review history is harder to follow
- repo-local execution tooling cannot attach cleanly
If the user appears to be shoving cross-repo work into one PR or one unclear
issue reference, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] – recommending a monolith planning issue and separate
repo-local execution work where appropriate.
1.3 Commit messages
Check or remind the user that:
- Commit messages should follow the repo-local harness.
- For Django4Lyfe today, the backend docs prefer a clear summary and allow an
issue reference when it improves traceability.
- If commit-msg hooks or repo docs enforce something stricter, follow that
repository-local rule instead of inventing a global one.
If commit messages are vague, misleading, or clearly violate a documented
repo-local rule, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] – asking the author to fix future commits and, where
practical, to rewrite recent history before merge.
1.4 PR title
The PR title must:
- Follow the repo-local PR guidance.
- For Django4Lyfe today, that means a clear summary title; issue linkage should
live in the PR body using GitHub-native references such as:
Closes #1234
Refs DiversioTeam/monolith#1234
If not, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] – and propose a corrected title or PR-body linkage that
matches the repo docs.
Checklist 2 – WIP Signalling & Base Branch
2.1 WIP / draft status
Check whether the work is still in progress:
- If the author indicates the PR is not ready for review yet:
- The PR should be in draft mode, or
- The title or label should clearly include
WIP / [WIP].
If not, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] – asking the author to convert to draft or annotate the PR as
WIP to avoid premature review.
2.2 Base branch selection
Confirm the base branch matches the project’s release workflow:
- Normal feature / bugfix work:
- Base branch should be
dev (the integration branch).
- Merging into
dev runs validation only — no staging deploy.
- On an open PR to
dev, local-ci on the exact PR head is the real backend
validation path; GitHub Actions may still show only safety or advisory jobs.
- Staging promotion:
- Base branch should be
release.
- A PR from
dev → release is a promotion PR — merging moves the
candidate to release; staging deploy then happens from the exact
origin/release head via repo-local local-ci / deploy helper steps.
- Hotfix that must bypass the current
release contents:
- Base branch should be
master.
- Production release:
release → master after staging validation; production deploy then runs
from the exact origin/master head, not from PR merge itself.
If a PR targets the wrong base branch:
- Emit
[BLOCKING] and recommend the correct base, explaining whether the
change belongs in dev, release, or should be a master hotfix.
If the repo’s harness docs specify a different default (e.g. custom long-lived
branches in AGENTS.md or a linked workflow doc), follow that instead.
Checklist 3 – PR Description & Self-Review
This Skill expects PR authors to be their own first reviewer.
3.1 PR description quality
Check that the description (or planned description):
- Follows any existing PR template for the repo, if one exists.
- Clearly explains:
- What changed.
- Why it changed (the problem or goal).
- Whether there are any breaking changes and what reviewers should
inspect carefully.
- Any required secrets, DB dumps, or setup information, with guidance to
share secrets via 1Password / Slack and to clean up messages.
- Any manual steps needed for deploy:
- Env vars to add/update.
- Buckets or external resources to create.
- Management commands or scripts to run.
- Whether a DB snapshot is recommended before deploy (for heavy data
changes).
If key context is missing, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] – listing the missing items and suggesting how to include
them.
3.2 Self-review checklist
Prompt the author to confirm they have checked:
- Branch is up to date with the base branch; diff is not polluted by unrelated
files.
- All debugging code is removed:
- No
print() / ipdb / pdb left behind.
- Tests have been added or updated for new functionality.
- Remote CI is green when applicable.
- If the repo supports local-ci (
command -v local-ci + .local-ci.toml),
repo-owned local validation has been run on the intended commit/worktree.
If that local-ci run fails, treat it as blocking and dig into the failure
before calling the PR ready.
- Active Python type gate is passing for touched files:
- Detect in this order unless repo docs/CI differ:
ty, then pyright,
then mypy.
- If
ty is configured, it is mandatory and blocking.
- Pre-commit hooks and coding conventions have been applied.
- Code coverage has not regressed significantly.
- For Django changes: migrations have been cleaned up and regenerated if there
were multiple schema iterations.
If any of these fail obviously based on the PR description or user input, emit
appropriate [SHOULD_FIX] or [BLOCKING] bullets. Type-gate failures should
generally be [BLOCKING] for merge readiness.
Checklist 4 – Releases, Hotfixes, and Tags
This Skill enforces a clean release flow.
4.1 Normal release flow (via dev → release → master)
For normal deployments, check that:
- Feature/bugfix PRs merge into
dev (integration branch).
- To stage changes:
- A promotion PR is opened from
dev → release.
- A local-ci run on that promotion PR head is only a preflight. In
Django4Lyfe today it can run the full parity lanes, but exact
origin/release validation still happens after merge.
- If that preflight fails, stop and dig into the harness/code instead of
treating it as a footnote.
- Merging that PR does not deploy automatically.
- If the validated deploy helper exists, use it from the clean
origin/release checkout; it validates with local-ci and then triggers
staging deploy.
- Otherwise, if the repo supports local-ci, validate the exact
origin/release head locally and follow the repo-local deploy path.
- Before releasing to production:
- The version (e.g. in
pyproject.toml) is bumped to the intended release
version using YYYY.MM.DD or YYYY.MM.DD-N.
- When ready to release:
- A PR is created from
release → master with a title like
Release: 21st January 2026 or Release 2: 21st January 2026.
- The release PR lists all tickets / PRs included in the description.
- A local-ci run on that release PR head is still only a preflight. In
Django4Lyfe today it can run the full parity lanes, but exact
origin/master parity happens on the clean merged branch head.
- If the validated deploy helper exists, use it from the clean
origin/master checkout; it validates with local-ci and then triggers
production deploy.
- Otherwise, if the repo supports local-ci, validate the exact
origin/master head locally and follow the repo-local deploy path.
- Post-release:
- Create a GitHub Release targeting
master.
- Sync
master back into release and dev per repo docs.
If any of these are obviously missing from the plan, emit [SHOULD_FIX].
4.2 Hotfix flow
For hotfixes, enforce:
- The hotfix PR targets
master (not release or dev).
- The title clearly indicates a hotfix, e.g.
Hotfix Release: 21st January 2026.
- After merge:
- if the validated deploy helper exists, use it from the clean
origin/master checkout; it validates with local-ci and then triggers
deploy
- otherwise, validate the exact
origin/master head with local-ci when
supported and follow the repo-local deploy path
- merge changes back into
release and dev so the integration branch
does not drift from production
- create a GitHub Release with the same
YYYY.MM.DD[-N] version
If a supposed hotfix PR is targeting dev or release, or a hotfix is not
planned to be merged back into release and dev, emit [BLOCKING].
Checklist 5 – Migrations: Cleanup and Regeneration
When the PR includes Django model changes, this Skill should be pedantic about
migrations.
5.1 Avoid noisy chains of migrations from one PR
If the PR has multiple intermediate migrations for the same feature
(...x1.py, ...x2.py, ...x3.py, etc.), recommend cleaning them up before
merge:
- Identify which migrations were added by this PR vs. which already exist on
the main branches.
- Conceptual cleanup workflow:
- Migrate back to the migration just before the first PR-specific
migration.
- Delete only the migrations introduced by this PR.
- Regenerate a minimal set of migrations representing the final schema.
- Apply the new migrations locally and ensure tests pass.
Never recommend deleting migrations that are already on production.
If the PR clearly contains many iterative migrations for one feature, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] – asking the author to collapse them into a clean final
migration set.
5.2 Respect environment-specific tooling
When suggesting commands, align with the repo’s tooling:
- For Django4Lyfe / Optimo, prefer:
uv run / .bin/django wrappers as documented in AGENTS.md or linked
repo-local docs.
This Skill should conceptually describe the migration cleanup steps, not hard
code commands that may become outdated.
Checklist 6 – Downtime-Safe Schema Changes
This is the most critical part of the Skill for production stability.
6.1 Deleting a field or table
If the PR both:
- Removes a field from the database (or drops a table), and
- Removes or changes code that uses that field,
then:
- Highlight the deployment risk:
- Between the time migrations run and the time all web workers are updated,
old code can still expect the field and will throw errors if it is already
dropped.
Enforce the safe two-step pattern:
- PR 1 – Code-only removal
- Remove all usage of the field/table from code (queries, serializers,
forms, admin, etc.).
- Keep the field in the DB so old and new code can still run.
- Deploy fully.
- PR 2 – Schema removal
- Add a migration that drops the field/table.
- Deploy once no running code expects it.
If a single PR contains both the schema drop and remaining code references, or
removes code and schema at once in a way that risks downtime, emit:
[BLOCKING] – and explicitly recommend splitting into two PRs as above.
6.2 Adding a non-volatile default on a large table
For a new column on a large / hot table with a static default (e.g.
is_active = True):
- Explain the risk:
- A naive
AddField with default can cause a long-running table rewrite and
lock, blocking writes and potentially causing errors.
Enforce a safe pattern:
- Migration 1 – Add nullable column, no default
- Add the column with
null=True and no default.
- This ensures the
ALTER TABLE ... ADD COLUMN is fast.
- Migration 2 – Set default and backfill
- For Postgres 11+:
- Use
RunSQL to set the default for new rows only, avoiding a full
table rewrite.
- For existing rows:
- Use a data migration, background job, or batched updates to set the
value in manageable chunks, ideally with
atomic = False for large
operations.
If the PR adds a non-nullable column with a default on a table that likely has
many rows, emit:
[SHOULD_FIX] or [BLOCKING] depending on table size and risk, and
describe the two-step pattern above.
6.3 Adding a volatile default (e.g. UUID, timestamps)
For defaults that require dynamic values (e.g. generate UUIDs, timestamps):
- Warn that:
- Setting such defaults on existing rows inside an atomic migration, for a
large table, can be very slow and lock-heavy.
Recommend:
- Add the column as nullable without default.
- Backfill in batches using a non-atomic migration or out-of-band job.
- Only then, if needed, add a default for new rows.
If a PR uses a volatile default in a way that will backfill a large table
inside an atomic migration, emit:
[BLOCKING] – and propose the batched, non-atomic backfill approach.
How This Skill Should Behave in Practice
When invoked, this Skill should:
- Gather the inputs listed above (branch, PR title/description, base branch,
migration/schema summary).
- Apply each checklist in order:
- Repo-local branch and PR conventions.
- WIP & base branch.
- PR description & self-review.
- Release/hotfix flow.
- Migrations.
- Downtime-safe schema changes.
- Emit:
- A short summary paragraph.
What’s aligned bullets.
Needs changes bullets with [BLOCKING], [SHOULD_FIX], [NIT].
- Be direct and pedantic but constructive:
- Treat automation, traceability, and downtime-safety as hard
requirements, not nice-to-haves.
- Always provide specific, actionable corrections rather than vague
guidance.
- When rules are missing from the repo harness, call that out explicitly as
a documentation/tooling problem, not just a one-off nit.
Compatibility Notes
This Skill is designed to work with both Claude Code and OpenAI Codex.
- Claude Code: install the corresponding plugin and use its slash commands (see
plugins/backend-pr-workflow/commands/).
- Codex: install the Skill directory and invoke
name: backend-pr-workflow.
For installation, see this repo's README.md.