| name | update-nanoclaw |
| description | Efficiently bring upstream NanoClaw updates into a customized install, with preview, selective cherry-pick, and low token usage. |
About
Your NanoClaw fork drifts from upstream as you customize it. This skill pulls upstream changes into your install without losing your modifications.
Run /update-nanoclaw in Claude Code.
How it works
Preflight: checks for clean working tree (git status --porcelain). If upstream remote is missing, asks you for the URL (defaults to https://github.com/qwibitai/nanoclaw.git) and adds it. Detects the upstream branch name (main or master).
Backup: creates a timestamped backup branch and tag (backup/pre-update-<hash>-<timestamp>, pre-update-<hash>-<timestamp>) before touching anything. Safe to run multiple times.
Preview: runs git log and git diff against the merge base to show upstream changes since your last sync. Groups changed files into categories:
- Skills (
.claude/skills/): unlikely to conflict unless you edited an upstream skill
- Source (
src/): may conflict if you modified the same files
- Build/config (
package.json, tsconfig*.json, container/): review needed
Update paths (you pick one):
merge (default): git merge upstream/<branch>. Resolves all conflicts in one pass.
cherry-pick: git cherry-pick <hashes>. Pull in only the commits you want.
rebase: git rebase upstream/<branch>. Linear history, but conflicts resolve per-commit.
abort: just view the changelog, change nothing.
Conflict preview: before merging, runs a dry-run (git merge --no-commit --no-ff) to show which files would conflict. You can still abort at this point.
Conflict resolution: opens only conflicted files, resolves the conflict markers, keeps your local customizations intact.
Validation: runs npm run build and npm test.
Rollback
The backup tag is printed at the end of each run:
git reset --hard pre-update-<hash>-<timestamp>
Backup branch backup/pre-update-<hash>-<timestamp> also exists.
Token usage
Only opens files with actual conflicts. Uses git log, git diff, and git status for everything else. Does not scan or refactor unrelated code.
Goal
Help a user with a customized NanoClaw install safely incorporate upstream changes without a fresh reinstall and without blowing tokens.
Operating principles
- Never proceed with a dirty working tree.
- Always create a rollback point (backup branch + tag) before touching anything.
- Prefer git-native operations (fetch, merge, cherry-pick). Do not manually rewrite files except conflict markers.
- Default to MERGE (one-pass conflict resolution). Offer REBASE as an explicit option.
- Keep token usage low: rely on
git status, git log, git diff, and open only conflicted files.
Step 0: Preflight (stop early if unsafe)
Run:
git status --porcelain
If output is non-empty:
- Tell the user to commit or stash first, then stop.
Confirm remotes:
git remote -v
If upstream is missing:
- Ask the user for the upstream repo URL (default:
https://github.com/qwibitai/nanoclaw.git).
- Add it:
git remote add upstream <user-provided-url>
- Then:
git fetch upstream --prune
Determine the upstream branch name:
git branch -r | grep upstream/
- If
upstream/main exists, use main.
- If only
upstream/master exists, use master.
- Otherwise, ask the user which branch to use.
- Store this as UPSTREAM_BRANCH for all subsequent commands. Every command below that references
upstream/main should use upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH instead.
Fetch:
git fetch upstream --prune
Step 1: Create a safety net
Capture current state:
HASH=$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)
TIMESTAMP=$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)
Create backup branch and tag (using timestamp to avoid collisions on retry):
git branch backup/pre-update-$HASH-$TIMESTAMP
git tag pre-update-$HASH-$TIMESTAMP
Save the tag name for later reference in the summary and rollback instructions.
Step 2: Preview what upstream changed (no edits yet)
Compute common base:
BASE=$(git merge-base HEAD upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH)
Show upstream commits since BASE:
git log --oneline $BASE..upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH
Show local commits since BASE (custom drift):
git log --oneline $BASE..HEAD
Show file-level impact from upstream:
git diff --name-only $BASE..upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH
Bucket the upstream changed files:
- Skills (
.claude/skills/): unlikely to conflict unless the user edited an upstream skill
- Source (
src/): may conflict if user modified the same files
- Build/config (
package.json, package-lock.json, tsconfig*.json, container/, launchd/): review needed
- Other: docs, tests, misc
Present these buckets to the user and ask them to choose one path using AskUserQuestion:
- A) Full update: merge all upstream changes
- B) Selective update: cherry-pick specific upstream commits
- C) Abort: they only wanted the preview
- D) Rebase mode: advanced, linear history (warn: resolves conflicts per-commit)
If Abort: stop here.
Step 3: Conflict preview (before committing anything)
If Full update or Rebase:
Step 4A: Full update (MERGE, default)
Run:
git merge upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH --no-edit
If conflicts occur:
- Run
git status and identify conflicted files.
- For each conflicted file:
- Open the file.
- Resolve only conflict markers.
- Preserve intentional local customizations.
- Incorporate upstream fixes/improvements.
- Do not refactor surrounding code.
git add <file>
- When all resolved:
- If merge did not auto-commit:
git commit --no-edit
Step 4B: Selective update (CHERRY-PICK)
If user chose Selective:
- Recompute BASE if needed:
BASE=$(git merge-base HEAD upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH)
- Show commit list again:
git log --oneline $BASE..upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH
- Ask user which commit hashes they want.
- Apply:
git cherry-pick <hash1> <hash2> ...
If conflicts during cherry-pick:
- Resolve only conflict markers, then:
git add <file>
git cherry-pick --continue
If user wants to stop:
git cherry-pick --abort
Step 4C: Rebase (only if user explicitly chose option D)
Run:
git rebase upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH
If conflicts:
- Resolve conflict markers only, then:
git add <file>
git rebase --continue
If it gets messy (more than 3 rounds of conflicts):
git rebase --abort
- Recommend merge instead.
Step 5: Validation
Run:
npm run build
npm test (do not fail the flow if tests are not configured)
If build fails:
- Show the error.
- Only fix issues clearly caused by the merge (missing imports, type mismatches from merged code).
- Do not refactor unrelated code.
- If unclear, ask the user before making changes.
Step 6: Summary + rollback instructions
Show:
- Backup tag: the tag name created in Step 1
- New HEAD:
git rev-parse --short HEAD
- Upstream HEAD:
git rev-parse --short upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH
- Conflicts resolved (list files, if any)
- Remaining local diff vs upstream:
git diff --name-only upstream/$UPSTREAM_BRANCH..HEAD
Tell the user:
- To rollback:
git reset --hard <backup-tag-from-step-1>
- Backup branch also exists:
backup/pre-update-<HASH>-<TIMESTAMP>
- Restart the service to apply changes:
- If using launchd:
launchctl unload ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.ghostclaw.plist && launchctl load ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.ghostclaw.plist
- If running manually: restart
npm run dev