| name | backport |
| description | Backport a merged PR to a release branch, resolving conflicts if needed |
| argument-hint | <PR number> <target branch> |
Backport PR
Backport a merged PR to a release branch staging area. Uses the existing
scripts/backport_to_staging.sh for the happy path, then resolves conflicts
manually if the diff does not apply cleanly.
Usage
/backport 12345 v4 # release branch
/backport 12345 v4-devnet-2 # devnet branch
Workflow
Step 1: Validate Arguments
Confirm exactly two arguments are provided: a PR number and a target branch.
Supported target branches:
- Release branches:
v2, v3, v4
- Devnet branches:
v4-devnet-1, v4-devnet-2, etc.
Abort if:
- Missing arguments -> "Usage: /backport "
Step 2: Validate PR State
gh pr view <PR> --repo AztecProtocol/aztec-packages --json state,title
Abort if:
state is not MERGED -> "PR # is , only merged PRs can be backported."
Step 3: Check if Already Backported
Check whether this PR has already been backported to the staging branch by
looking for its PR number in the commit log:
STAGING_BRANCH="backport-to-${TARGET_BRANCH}-staging"
git fetch origin "$STAGING_BRANCH" 2>/dev/null
if git log "origin/$STAGING_BRANCH" --oneline --grep="(#<PR_NUMBER>)" | grep -q .; then
echo "PR #<PR_NUMBER> has already been backported to $STAGING_BRANCH."
fi
Abort if the PR number appears in the staging branch commit log. Show the
matching commit(s) and tell the user the backport already exists.
Step 4: Create Isolated Worktree
Create a temporary worktree so the backport does not disturb the user's current
branch or working tree. Save the original directory to return to later.
ORIGINAL_DIR=$(pwd)
REPO_ROOT=$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
WORKTREE_DIR=$(mktemp -d)
git worktree add "$WORKTREE_DIR" HEAD
cd "$WORKTREE_DIR"
All subsequent steps run inside the worktree. On completion or failure, always
clean up (see Step 10).
Step 5: Attempt Automated Backport
Run the backport script from the worktree:
./scripts/backport_to_staging.sh <PR_NUMBER> <TARGET_BRANCH>
If the script succeeds: Skip to Step 10 (cleanup and report).
If the script fails: Continue to Step 6 (conflict resolution).
Step 6: Assess Conflicts
The script will have left the worktree on the backport-to-<TARGET_BRANCH>-staging
branch with partially applied changes and .rej files for hunks that failed.
-
Verify current branch is backport-to-<TARGET_BRANCH>-staging
-
Identify the state of the working tree:
git status
-
Find all reject files:
find . -name '*.rej' -not -path './node_modules/*' -not -path './.git/*'
-
Get the full PR diff for reference:
gh pr diff <PR_NUMBER>
Step 7: Resolve Conflicts
For each .rej file:
- Read the reject file to understand what hunk failed to apply
- Read the current version of the corresponding source file on the staging branch
- Understand the intent of the change from the PR diff context
- Apply the change manually by editing the source file, adapting the change to
the current state of the code on the release branch
- Delete the
.rej file after resolving
Also check for files that may need to be created or deleted based on the PR diff
but were not handled by the partial apply.
Important considerations:
- The release branch may have diverged significantly from
next. Do not assume
the surrounding code is the same as in the original PR.
- When adapting changes, preserve the semantic intent of the PR, not the exact
line-by-line diff.
- If a file referenced in the diff does not exist at all on the release branch,
evaluate whether it should be created or if the change is irrelevant. If
irrelevant, skip it and note this in the final report.
Step 8: Verify Build
Check if changes exist in yarn-project:
git diff --name-only | grep '^yarn-project/' || true
If yarn-project changes exist, run from yarn-project:
yarn build
Check if changes exist outside yarn-project:
git diff --name-only | grep -v '^yarn-project/' || true
If changes exist outside yarn-project, run bootstrap from the repo root:
./bootstrap.sh build yarn-project
Fix any build errors that arise from the backport adaptation.
Step 9: Finish with Script
Clean up and let the script handle commit, push, and PR management:
find . -name '*.rej' -delete
git add -A
./scripts/backport_to_staging.sh --continue <PR_NUMBER> <TARGET_BRANCH>
Step 10: Cleanup and Report
Return to the original directory and remove the temporary worktree:
cd "$ORIGINAL_DIR"
git worktree remove "$WORKTREE_DIR"
Always clean up the worktree, even if earlier steps failed. If git worktree remove fails (e.g., uncommitted changes), use git worktree remove --force.
Print a summary:
- PR number and title that was backported
- Target branch and staging branch name
- Whether conflicts were encountered and resolved
- Link to the staging PR (if one was created or already exists)
Key Points
- Always use a worktree: All backport work happens in a temporary git worktree
so the user's current branch and working tree are never disturbed. Always clean
up the worktree when done, even on failure.
- Script first, manual second: Always try the automated script first. It handles
branch setup, authorship, push, and PR management. Only do manual conflict
resolution if it fails.
- Use
--continue after resolving: The script's --continue mode picks up where
the initial run left off (commit, push, PR creation, body update).
- Preserve author attribution: The script uses
--author to set the original PR
author on the commit. The committer stays as whoever runs the command (GPG signing
works).
- Verify builds but skip tests: Run
yarn build or bootstrap to confirm the
backport compiles. Do not run the full test suite -- that is CI's job.
- Semantic, not mechanical: When resolving conflicts, adapt the change to the
release branch's code state. The goal is the same behavioral change, not an exact
diff match.
- Clean up
.rej files: Always delete .rej files before committing.
- Staging branch convention: The staging branch is always
backport-to-{TARGET_BRANCH}-staging (e.g., backport-to-v4-staging,
backport-to-v4-devnet-2-staging). Multiple backports accumulate on the same
staging branch and get merged together.