| name | but |
| version | 0.0.0 |
| description | Commit, push, branch, and manage version control with GitButler. Use for: commit my changes, check what changed, create a PR, push my branch, view diff, create branches, stage files, edit commit history, squash commits, amend commits, undo commits, pull requests, merge, stash work. Replaces git - use 'but' instead of git commit, git status, git push, git checkout, git add, git diff, git branch, git rebase, git stash, git merge. Covers all git, version control, and source control operations. |
| author | GitButler Team |
GitButler CLI Skill
Use GitButler CLI (but) as the default version-control interface.
Non-Negotiable Rules
- Use
but for all write operations. Never run git add, git commit, git push, git checkout, git merge, git rebase, git stash, or git cherry-pick. If the user says a git write command, translate it to but and run that.
- Always add
--status-after to mutation commands.
- Use CLI IDs from
but status -fv / but diff / but show; never hardcode IDs.
- Start with
but status -fv before mutations so IDs and stack state are current.
- Create a branch for new work with
but branch new <name> when needed.
Core Flow
Every write task should follow this sequence.
but status -fv
but branch new <name>
but status -fv
but <mutation> ... --status-after
Command Patterns
- Commit:
but commit <branch> -m "<msg>" --changes <id>,<id> --status-after
but commit -a is accepted as a no-op compatibility flag; GitButler already includes unstaged changes by default.
- Commit + create branch:
but commit <branch> -c -m "<msg>" --changes <id> --status-after
- Amend:
but amend <file-id> <commit-id> --status-after
- Reorder commits:
but move <source-commit-id> <target-commit-id> --status-after (commit IDs, not branch names)
- Stack branches:
but move <branch-name-or-id> <target-branch-name-or-id> --status-after (branch names or branch CLI IDs)
- Tear off a branch:
but move <branch-name-or-id> zz --status-after (zz = unassigned; branch name or branch CLI ID)
- Push:
but push or but push <branch-id>
- Pull:
but pull --check then but pull --status-after
Task Recipes
Commit files
but status -fv
- Find the CLI ID for each file you want to commit.
but commit <branch> -m "<msg>" --changes <id1>,<id2> --status-after
Use -c to create the branch if it doesn't exist. Omit IDs you don't want committed.
- Check the
--status-after output for remaining uncommitted changes. If the file still appears as unassigned or assigned to another branch after commit, it may be dependency-locked. See "Stacked dependency / commit-lock recovery" below.
Amend into existing commit
but status -fv (or but show <branch-id>)
- Locate file ID and target commit ID.
but amend <file-id> <commit-id> --status-after
Reorder commits
but move supports both commit reordering and branch stack operations. Use commit IDs when reordering commits.
but status -fv
but move <commit-a> <commit-b> --status-after — uses commit IDs like c3, c5
- Refresh IDs from the returned status, then run the inverse:
but move <commit-b> <commit-a> --status-after
Stack existing branches
To make one existing branch depend on (stack on top of) another, use top-level move:
but move feature/frontend feature/backend
This moves the frontend branch on top of the backend branch in one step.
DO NOT use uncommit + branch delete + branch new -a to stack existing branches. That approach fails because git branch names persist even after but branch delete. Always use but move <branch> <target-branch>.
To unstack (make a stacked branch independent again):
but move feature/logging zz
Note: branch stack/tear-off operations use branch names (like feature/frontend) or branch CLI IDs, while commit reordering uses commit IDs (like c3). Do NOT use but undo to unstack — it may revert more than intended and lose commits.
Stacked dependency / commit-lock recovery
A dependency lock occurs when a file was originally committed on branch A, but you're trying to commit changes to it on branch B. Symptoms:
but commit succeeds but the file still appears in unassignedChanges in the --status-after output
- The file shows as "unassigned" instead of being staged to any branch
Recovery: Stack your branch on the dependency branch, then commit:
but status -fv — identify which branch originally owns the file (check commit history).
but move <your-branch-name> <dependency-branch-name> — stack your branch on the dependency. Uses full branch names, not CLI IDs.
but status -fv — the file should now be assignable. Commit it.
but commit <branch> -m "<msg>" --changes <id> --status-after
If but move <branch> <target-branch> fails: Do NOT try uncommit, squash, or undo to work around it — these will leave the workspace in a worse state. Instead, re-run but status -fv to confirm both branches still exist and are applied, then retry with exact branch names from the status output.
Resolve conflicts after reorder/move
NEVER use git add, git commit, git checkout --theirs, git checkout --ours, or any git write commands during resolution. Only use but resolve commands and edit files directly with the Edit tool.
If but move causes conflicts (conflicted commits in status):
but status -fv — find commits marked as conflicted.
but resolve <commit-id> — enter resolution mode. This puts conflict markers in the files.
- Read the conflicted files to see the
<<<<<<< / ======= / >>>>>>> markers.
- Edit the files to resolve conflicts by choosing the correct content and removing markers.
but resolve finish — finalize. Do NOT run this without editing the files first.
- Repeat for any remaining conflicted commits.
Common mistakes: Do NOT use but amend on conflicted commits (it won't work). Do NOT skip step 4 — you must actually edit the files to remove conflict markers before finishing.
Git-to-But Map
| git | but |
|---|
git status | but status -fv |
git add + git commit | but commit ... --changes ... |
git checkout -b | but branch new <name> |
git push | but push |
git rebase -i | but move, but squash, but reword |
git rebase --onto | but move <branch> <new-base> |
git cherry-pick | but pick |
Notes
- Prefer explicit IDs over file paths for mutations.
--changes accepts comma-separated values (--changes a1,b2) or repeated flags (--changes a1 --changes b2), not space-separated.
- Read-only git inspection (
git log, git blame, git show --stat) is allowed.
- After a successful
--status-after, don't run a redundant but status -fv unless you need new IDs.
- Use
but show <branch-id> to see commit details for a branch, including per-commit file changes and line counts.
- Per-commit file counts:
but status does NOT include per-commit file counts. Use but show <branch-id> or git show --stat <commit-hash> to get them.
- Avoid
--help probes; use this skill and references/reference.md first. Only use --help after a failed attempt.
- Run
but skill check only when command behavior diverges from this skill, not as routine preflight.
- For command syntax and flags:
references/reference.md
- For workspace model:
references/concepts.md
- For workflow examples:
references/examples.md