| name | finishing-a-development-branch |
| description | Use when implementation is complete, all tests pass, and you need to decide how to integrate the work - guides completion of development work by presenting structured options for merge, PR, or cleanup |
Finishing a Development Branch
Overview
Guide completion of development work by presenting clear options and handling chosen workflow.
Core principle: Verify tests → Present options → Execute choice → Clean up.
Announce at start: "I'm using the finishing-a-development-branch skill to complete this work."
The Process
Step 1: Verify Tests
Before presenting options, verify tests pass:
npm test / cargo test / pytest / go test ./...
If tests fail:
Tests failing (<N> failures). Must fix before completing:
[Show failures]
Cannot proceed with merge/PR until tests pass.
Stop. Don't proceed to Step 2.
If tests pass: Continue to Step 2.
Step 2: Determine Base Branch
git merge-base HEAD main 2>/dev/null || git merge-base HEAD master 2>/dev/null
Or ask: "This branch split from main - is that correct?"
Step 3: Present Options
Present exactly these 4 options:
Implementation complete. What would you like to do?
1. Merge back to <base-branch> locally
2. Push and create a Pull Request
3. Keep the branch as-is (I'll handle it later)
4. Discard this work
Which option?
Don't add explanation - keep options concise.
Step 4: Execute Choice
Option 1: Merge Locally
git checkout <base-branch>
git pull
git merge <feature-branch>
<test command>
git branch -d <feature-branch>
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 5)
Option 2: Push and Create PR
git push -u origin <feature-branch>
gh pr create --title "<title>" --body "$(cat <<'EOF'
## Summary
<2-3 bullets of what changed>
## Test Plan
- [ ] <verification steps>
EOF
)"
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 5)
Option 3: Keep As-Is
Report: "Keeping branch . Worktree preserved at ."
Don't cleanup worktree.
Option 4: Discard
Confirm first:
This will permanently delete:
- Branch <name>
- All commits: <commit-list>
- Worktree at <path>
Type 'discard' to confirm.
Wait for exact confirmation.
If confirmed:
git checkout <base-branch>
git branch -D <feature-branch>
Then: Cleanup worktree (Step 5)
Step 5: Cleanup Worktree
For Options 1, 2, 4:
Check if in worktree:
git worktree list | grep $(git branch --show-current)
If yes:
git worktree remove <worktree-path>
For Option 3: Keep worktree.
Rescue: leaked secret
Use this section after the branch is already merged + pushed to a public remote and you notice the diff included a secret (personal email in commit author metadata, API key in a config example, internal hostname in a doc). The destructive nature means treat it as a separate flow, not Step 4 above.
Scope: rewriting public history is irreversible from your end and disruptive for downstream clones / forks. Confirm the leak is worth the cost before running.
Recipe (placeholders, substitute your own values)
git tag backup-pre-rewrite
brew install git-filter-repo
git filter-repo --email-callback '
return b"<numeric-id>+<username>@users.noreply.github.com" if email == b"<your-old-email>" else email
'
git remote add origin <your-repo-url>
git push --force-with-lease origin main
What <numeric-id> is
GitHub's privacy noreply email format is <numeric-id>+<username>@users.noreply.github.com. Find your numeric id with:
gh api users/<your-username> --jq .id
Both forms (<numeric-id>+<username>@users.noreply.github.com and bare <username>@users.noreply.github.com for newer accounts) route to your inbox if email privacy is enabled in GitHub settings.
Gotchas
- filter-repo removes origin on purpose, expecting you to push the rewritten history to a fresh repo. If you're rewriting in-place, re-add origin (step 4 above).
- Paths-filtered CI workflows don't trigger on a metadata-only force-push (no file content changed →
paths: filter sees no match). Add workflow_dispatch: to your workflow so you can manually re-run validation post-rewrite.
- All commit SHAs change. Anyone who pinned to a SHA, anyone who has the repo cloned, anyone who has a fork — they all need to invalidate their state. Plan a heads-up message.
- Public-cache residue: GitHub's web UI clears immediately, but external mirrors (Sourcegraph, Software Heritage, GitHub search index) may retain the leaked content for hours-to-weeks. The rewrite stops the leak from propagating; it does not fully erase it. If the secret was a credential, rotate the credential too — don't trust the rewrite to fix it.
Quick Reference
| Option | Merge | Push | Keep Worktree | Cleanup Branch |
|---|
| 1. Merge locally | ✓ | - | - | ✓ |
| 2. Create PR | - | ✓ | ✓ | - |
| 3. Keep as-is | - | - | ✓ | - |
| 4. Discard | - | - | - | ✓ (force) |
Common Mistakes
Skipping test verification
- Problem: Merge broken code, create failing PR
- Fix: Always verify tests before offering options
Open-ended questions
- Problem: "What should I do next?" → ambiguous
- Fix: Present exactly 4 structured options
Automatic worktree cleanup
- Problem: Remove worktree when might need it (Option 2, 3)
- Fix: Only cleanup for Options 1 and 4
No confirmation for discard
- Problem: Accidentally delete work
- Fix: Require typed "discard" confirmation
Red Flags
Never:
- Proceed with failing tests
- Merge without verifying tests on result
- Delete work without confirmation
- Force-push without explicit request
Always:
- Verify tests before offering options
- Present exactly 4 options
- Get typed confirmation for Option 4
- Clean up worktree for Options 1 & 4 only
Integration
Called by:
- subagent-driven-development (Step 7) - After all tasks complete
- executing-plans (Step 5) - After all batches complete
Pairs with:
- using-git-worktrees - Cleans up worktree created by that skill
Related skills
writing-plans — generates the plan document that you reference in the merge commit message. Use this skill after writing-plans is complete.
verification-before-completion — verify tests pass before presenting merge options. This skill's Step 1 depends on verification evidence.
requesting-code-review → receiving-code-review — handle code review feedback using these skills before finishing the branch.