| name | repo-timeline |
| description | Analyzes a repository or branch and generates a meaningful, engineer-friendly timeline of changes — grouping commits into logical units with short and detailed descriptions, using git history, changelogs, GitHub PRs, and Linear tickets. Use when you want to understand what changed, when, and why in a codebase. |
| argument-hint | [branch] [--since "time"] [--focus "areas"] [--depth brief|detailed] [--sources git,github,linear] |
| context | fork |
| allowed-tools | ["AskUserQuestion","Bash","Read","Glob","Grep","WebSearch","WebFetch","mcp__claude_ai_Linear__list_issues","mcp__claude_ai_Linear__get_issue","mcp__claude_ai_Linear__list_comments","mcp__claude_ai_Linear__list_teams","mcp__claude_ai_Linear__get_user"] |
Repo Timeline
Visualize the history of a repository or branch as a meaningful, grouped timeline — not raw git log, but an engineer-friendly narrative of what changed, when, and why.
Preferences
On startup, use the Read tool to load ~/.claude/skills/repo-timeline/preferences.md. If it doesn't exist, use defaults.
Context
On startup, use Bash to detect: current git branch, repo root (git rev-parse --show-toplevel), repo name (basename $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)), remote URL (git remote get-url origin), and GitHub repo name (gh repo view --json nameWithOwner -q .nameWithOwner). Skip any that fail.
Command routing
Check $ARGUMENTS:
help → display help then stop
config → interactive setup then stop
reset → delete ~/.claude/skills/repo-timeline/preferences.md, confirm, stop
- branch name — if argument looks like a branch name (no
-- prefix), use it as the target branch
- flags — parse
--since, --until, --focus, --depth, --sources
- empty — use current branch with defaults
Flags
Parse from $ARGUMENTS:
--since <time> — start of time range (e.g., "2 weeks ago", "2026-01-01", "last tag")
--until <time> — end of time range (defaults to now)
--focus <areas> — comma-separated paths or areas to emphasize (e.g., "api,auth,frontend")
--depth brief|detailed — "brief" for one-liners, "detailed" for full descriptions (default from preferences)
--sources <list> — comma-separated sources: git, github, linear, changelog (default: all available)
Help
Repo Timeline — Engineer-friendly timeline of repository changes
Usage:
/repo-timeline Current branch, full history
/repo-timeline feature/auth Specific branch
/repo-timeline --since "2 weeks ago" Time-bounded timeline
/repo-timeline --focus "api,auth" Focus on specific areas
/repo-timeline --depth brief One-liners only
/repo-timeline --depth detailed Full descriptions with context
/repo-timeline --sources git,github Only specific sources
/repo-timeline config Set preferences
/repo-timeline reset Clear preferences
/repo-timeline help This help
Flags:
--since <time> Start of time range (e.g., "1 month ago", "v2.0.0")
--until <time> End of time range (default: now)
--focus <areas> Comma-separated paths/areas to emphasize
--depth brief|detailed Level of detail (default: from preferences)
--sources <list> Sources to use: git, github, linear, changelog
Examples:
/repo-timeline Full timeline of current branch
/repo-timeline main --since "last month" Main branch, last month
/repo-timeline --focus "src/api" --depth detailed
/repo-timeline --since "v1.0.0" --until "v2.0.0" Between releases
/repo-timeline develop --sources git,github
Current preferences:
(read from preferences.md)
Config
Use AskUserQuestion:
Q1 — "Default timeline depth?" (Brief — one-liner per group, Detailed — with descriptions and file lists, Auto — brief for large ranges, detailed for short)
Q2 — "Which sources to include by default?" (multiSelect: true)
- Git (commits, tags, branches)
- GitHub (PR titles, descriptions, labels via
gh)
- Linear (linked tickets and context via MCP)
- Changelog (CHANGELOG.md, HISTORY.md, release notes)
Q3 — "Default time range?" (Full history, Last 30 days, Last sprint / 2 weeks, Since last tag/release)
Q4 — "Grouping strategy?" (By time period — weekly/daily buckets, By topic — features/fixes/refactors, By release — between tags, Auto-detect)
Save to ~/.claude/skills/repo-timeline/preferences.md.
Reset
Delete ~/.claude/skills/repo-timeline/preferences.md and confirm: "Preferences cleared. Using defaults."
First-time detection
If no preferences file exists, show:
"First time using /repo-timeline? Run /repo-timeline config to set defaults, or continue — I'll auto-detect the best settings."
Then proceed with defaults:
- Depth: auto
- Sources: all available
- Time range: full history (capped at 200 commits)
- Grouping: auto-detect
Steps
1. Gather repo context and available sources
Detect available sources in parallel:
Git (always):
git rev-parse --git-dir
git branch --show-current
git tag --sort=-creatordate --format='%(refname:short) %(creatordate:short)' | head -10
GitHub (check gh CLI):
gh auth status 2>&1
Linear (try MCP):
Try list_teams to verify access. If it fails, skip gracefully.
Changelog files:
Use Glob to check for: CHANGELOG.md, CHANGELOG, HISTORY.md, CHANGES.md, RELEASES.md, release-notes/.
Report: Sources available: Git, GitHub, Linear, Changelog (or whichever are found).
If --sources flag is set, filter to only those.
2. Determine scope
Apply flags and preferences to determine:
- Branch: from argument or current branch
- Time range: from
--since/--until, or preference default, or auto (full history capped at 200 commits)
- Focus filter: from
--focus — will be used to filter/highlight relevant changes
If --since references a tag (e.g., "v1.0.0"), resolve it:
git log -1 --format=%ai v1.0.0
3. Collect raw data
Git history
git log [branch] --since="<time>" --until="<time>" --format="%H|%h|%ai|%an|%s|%b" --no-merges
git log [branch] --since="<time>" --until="<time>" --format="%H|%h|%ai|%an|%s" --merges
Also collect file-level stats:
git log [branch] --since="<time>" --until="<time>" --stat --format="%h"
And tags in range:
git tag --sort=creatordate --contains <start-commit> --no-contains <end-commit>
GitHub PRs (if available)
gh pr list --state merged --base <branch> --limit 50 --json number,title,body,labels,mergedAt,author,headRefName
If a time range is set, filter merged PRs within that window.
Linear tickets (if available)
Extract ticket IDs from commit messages and PR branch names (pattern: AIS-\d+, or configured prefix).
For each unique ticket ID found, fetch:
get_issue — title, status, description
list_comments — recent comments for context
Changelog (if available)
Read CHANGELOG.md or equivalent. Parse entries that fall within the time range.
4. Analyze and group
Cluster the raw data into meaningful groups. Strategy depends on preference or auto-detection:
By topic (default for short ranges):
- Analyze commit messages, PR titles, and file paths
- Group into categories: Features, Bug Fixes, Refactoring, Infrastructure, Documentation, Tests
- Within each category, sub-group by feature area (auth, API, frontend, etc.)
By time period (default for long ranges):
- Bucket into weeks or months depending on range length
- Within each bucket, sub-group by topic
By release (when tags are present):
- Group between consecutive tags
- Within each release, sub-group by topic
For each group:
- Short summary: one-line description of the group's changes
- Long summary: 2-3 sentence description with key details (if depth is detailed)
- Key files: most-changed files in this group
- Contributors: authors involved
- Linked context: PR numbers, Linear tickets, changelog entries
If --focus is set, highlight groups that match the focus areas and de-emphasize others.
5. Generate timeline
Produce the timeline in this format:
## Timeline: [repo-name] / [branch]
Period: [start] — [end] | [N] commits | [N] contributors
---
### [Release Tag / Time Period / Topic Group]
_[date range]_ | [N commits] | by [authors]
**[Short summary — one line describing the group]**
[If detailed depth:]
[Long summary — 2-3 sentences with key details, linked PRs, tickets]
Key changes:
- [Bullet point per significant change]
- [PR #123 — title] [AIS-456]
- [File/area affected]
---
### [Next group...]
...
---
## Summary
- **Total**: [N] commits across [time range]
- **Contributors**: [list]
- **Focus areas**: [if --focus was used, show what matched]
- **Sources used**: Git, GitHub PRs, Linear tickets, Changelog
6. Present and offer drill-down
Display the timeline. Then offer follow-up options via AskUserQuestion:
- "Zoom into a specific period" — narrow the time range
- "Zoom into a specific area" — re-run with a focus filter
- "Show more detail on group N" — expand a specific group
- "Export as markdown" — (note: read-only skill, just output the raw markdown for copy)
- "Done" — finish
If the user picks a drill-down, re-run steps 3-5 with the narrowed scope and present again.
7. Learn
- If user consistently uses a specific depth, save as default
- If user always focuses on certain areas, note it
- If user prefers a specific grouping strategy, save it
- If user uses a specific time range pattern, save it
Principles
- Narrative over noise — group and summarize. Never dump raw git log. An engineer should understand what happened by reading the timeline, not by decoding commit hashes.
- Read-only — never modify files, branches, or tickets. Only observe and report.
- Graceful degradation — if GitHub/Linear/changelog isn't available, produce the timeline from git alone. Always produce something useful.
- Context-rich — correlate commits with PRs, tickets, changelogs, and tags. The more connections, the more meaningful the timeline.
- Respect focus — when the user specifies focus areas, make those prominent and de-emphasize the rest. Don't filter out, just re-prioritize.