| name | merge-pr |
| description | Merge a pull request with status checks, squash merge, and branch cleanup. Handles worktree contexts. |
| disable-model-invocation | true |
| argument-hint | [PR-number] |
Merge Pull Request
Merge a pull request with consistent practices: verify checks, squash merge, clean up the branch, and pull the latest base branch.
Command Options
$ARGUMENTS: PR number (optional — defaults to the PR for the current branch)
Your task
Step 1: Identify the PR
- If a PR number was provided, use it
- Otherwise, detect from the current branch:
gh pr view --json number,title,state,headRefName,baseRefName
- Confirm the PR exists and is open
- Display the PR title and number before proceeding
Step 2: Verify merge readiness
Check each of the following and report status:
- CI status: Run
gh pr checks to verify all required checks have passed
- Merge conflicts: Run
gh pr view --json mergeable to verify no conflicts
- Review feedback: Run
gh pr view --json reviewDecision,reviews to surface any unresolved review threads or a pending "changes requested" — advisory, not a hard gate. (Carries over the review-thread awareness from the retired /review-pr.)
If CI has not passed, stop and report. Do not proceed with the merge.
Step 3: Merge the PR
- Squash merge:
gh pr merge --squash
- Do not pass
--delete-branch — GitHub is configured to auto-delete remote branches on merge. Local branch cleanup is handled in Step 4.
Step 4: Detect worktree context
Before updating local state, determine whether you are inside a git worktree:
git rev-parse --git-dir
git rev-parse --git-common-dir
- If these values are identical, you are in a normal repo — proceed with Step 5a.
- If they differ, you are in a worktree — proceed with Step 5b.
Step 5a: Update local state (normal repo)
After gh pr merge completes:
- Switch to the base branch (e.g.,
main, master, or whatever baseRefName was detected in Step 1) and pull: git switch <base-branch> && git pull
- Delete the local feature branch with
git branch -D <branch-name> (force-delete is required because squash merges produce a different SHA, so -d cannot detect the branch as merged)
Then skip to Step 6.
Step 5b: Update local state (worktree)
When inside a worktree, git switch to the base branch will fail because it is checked out in another worktree. Handle this differently:
-
Find the primary worktree on the base branch:
git worktree list --porcelain
Parse the output to find the worktree entry whose branch matches refs/heads/<base-branch>. Extract its path.
-
Pull the base branch from the primary worktree:
git -C <primary-worktree-path> pull
-
Do not delete the branch or remove the worktree automatically. The branch cannot be deleted while it is checked out in a worktree, and removing the worktree would destroy the user's current working directory. Instead, provide the cleanup commands in the completion report.
Step 6: Confirm completion
Normal repo — report:
## Merge Complete
- PR: #N — [title]
- Remote branch: deleted
- Local branch: deleted (or kept — reason)
- Local <base-branch>: up to date
Worktree — report:
## Merge Complete
- PR: #N — [title]
- Remote branch: deleted
- Local <base-branch>: up to date (pulled in primary worktree)
## Worktree cleanup (run from outside this directory)
git worktree remove <this-worktree-path>
git branch -D <branch-name>
Important
- Always squash merge. This keeps main history clean with one commit per PR.
- Do not merge if CI has not passed. This is the one hard gate.
- Do not amend or rewrite commits as part of the merge process.
- Squash merges require force-delete.
git branch -d cannot detect squash-merged branches, so -D is the correct flag for cleanup after a confirmed merge.