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maestrorevert
Git-aware revert of feature, phase, or individual task. Safely undoes implementation with task state rollback.
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Git-aware revert of feature, phase, or individual task. Safely undoes implementation with task state rollback.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
基于 SOC 职业分类
Use when bootstrapping, updating, or reviewing AGENTS.md — teaches what makes effective agent memory, how to structure sections, signal vs noise filtering, and when to prune stale entries
Use before any creative work - creating features, building components, adding functionality, or modifying behavior. Explores user intent, requirements and design before implementation.
Use when encountering any bug, test failure, or unexpected behavior, before proposing fixes
Deep discovery and specification for ambitious features. Full BMAD-inspired interview with classification, vision, journeys, domain analysis, and FR synthesis. Same output contract (spec.md + plan.md) as a standard feature but far richer. Use for multi-component systems, regulated domains, or unclear requirements.
Use when facing 2+ independent tasks that can be worked on without shared state or sequential dependencies
Use when working with Docker containers — debugging container failures, writing Dockerfiles, docker-compose for integration tests, image optimization, or deploying containerized applications
| name | maestro:revert |
| description | Git-aware revert of feature, phase, or individual task. Safely undoes implementation with task state rollback. |
| argument-hint | <feature> [--phase <N>] [--task <name>] |
| stage | execution |
| audience | both |
Revert undoes implementation work at feature, phase, or task granularity. It creates NEW revert commits -- original history is never destroyed. After reverting, maestro task state is rolled back so tasks can be re-implemented.
Core principle: git revert is additive. It records the undo as new history. The original commits remain reachable via reflog and git log. This is the safe default.
If you are thinking about git reset --hard, stop. Read the Danger Zones section first. There are almost always safer alternatives.
| Situation | Scope | Command |
|---|---|---|
| Task produced wrong result | --task <name> | Revert that task's commits |
| Phase approach was wrong | --phase <N> | Revert all commits in phase N |
| Feature needs complete restart | No scope flag | Revert entire feature |
| Single bad commit (known SHA) | Manual | git revert --no-edit <sha> |
Exceptions (ask your human partner):
Start here: Have the commits been pushed to a remote that others pull from?
Commits pushed to shared remote?
|
+-- YES --> Use `git revert` (ALWAYS)
| Creates new commits that undo the old ones.
| Safe for shared history. No force push needed.
|
+-- NO (local only) --> How clean do you need it?
|
+-- Keep changes staged --> `git reset --soft <target>`
| Files stay in index. You can re-commit differently.
|
+-- Keep changes unstaged --> `git reset --mixed <target>` (default)
| Files in working tree, not staged. Review before re-committing.
|
+-- Destroy changes completely --> `git reset --hard <target>`
| [DESTRUCTIVE] Working tree matches target. Changes are GONE.
| Requires explicit user confirmation. See Danger Zones.
|
+-- History is tangled beyond repair --> Branch recreation
Create new branch from known-good point, cherry-pick what to keep.
See reference/git-operations.md for branch recreation protocol.
Decision summary:
| Strategy | Pushed? | Preserves history? | Risk level |
|---|---|---|---|
git revert | Yes or No | Yes (additive) | Safe |
git reset --soft | No only | Partial (moves HEAD) | Low |
git reset --mixed | No only | Partial (moves HEAD) | Low |
git reset --hard | No only | No (destroys changes) | DESTRUCTIVE |
| Branch recreation | Either | Yes (new branch) | Complex |
Default: always use git revert unless you have a specific reason not to. The other strategies exist for edge cases, not convenience.
Before ANY revert operation, run these checks. Do not skip them.
git status --porcelain
If output is non-empty: STOP. Uncommitted changes will complicate the revert.
git stash push -m "pre-revert backup"git add -A && git commit -m "wip: save before revert"git branch --show-current
Confirm you are on the branch where the revert should happen. Reverting on the wrong branch is recoverable but messy.
git log --oneline origin/$(git branch --show-current)..HEAD 2>/dev/null
If this shows commits: you have local-only work. A git reset might be appropriate (see Decision Tree).
If this shows nothing: all commits are pushed. Use git revert only.
If the remote tracking branch does not exist, treat all commits as local-only but confirm with the user.
git tag pre-revert-$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)
This lightweight tag marks the current HEAD. If anything goes wrong, you can return here:
git reset --hard pre-revert-<timestamp>
test -d .git/rebase-merge -o -d .git/rebase-apply && echo "REBASE IN PROGRESS"
test -f .git/MERGE_HEAD && echo "MERGE IN PROGRESS"
test -f .git/CHERRY_PICK_HEAD && echo "CHERRY-PICK IN PROGRESS"
If any operation is in progress: STOP. Complete or abort it first.
See reference/safety-checks.md for extended pre-flight validation (submodules, CI state, stash management).
$ARGUMENTS
<feature>: Feature name (optional -- if omitted, enter Guided Selection)--phase <N>: Revert only phase N (optional)--task <name>: Revert only a specific task (optional)Determine what to revert:
--phase or --task flag. Revert all commits in the feature.--phase N specified. Revert commits from phase N only.--task <name> specified. Revert a single task's commit(s).If no <feature> argument, proceed to Guided Selection:
maestro_feature_list (MCP) or maestro feature-list (CLI) and review recent git history: git log --oneline --since="7 days ago" --grep="maestro"Match feature argument against maestro_feature_list output. If not found: report and stop.
Read the feature's plan.md and feature.json to understand structure.
Goal: Build the complete list of commits to revert for the target scope.
Task state source: Call maestro_task_list or maestro_status to get all tasks and their summaries. Task summaries from maestro_task_done include commit SHAs for traceability.
BR-enhanced path (if feature.json has beads_epic_id):
br list --status closed --parent {epic_id} --all --json
Parse close_reason for SHAs (format: sha:{7char}). Scope by labels for --phase/--task.
Task summary path: Parse commit SHAs from maestro_task_done summaries stored in task state. Scope by phase or task name as needed.
Plan-update commits (always check):
git log --oneline --all --grep="maestro(plan): mark task" -- .maestro/features/{feature-name}/plan.md
Feature creation commit (feature-level revert only):
git log --oneline --all --grep="chore(maestro): " -- .maestro/features/{feature-name}/
If no SHAs found in scope: report "No completed tasks found in the specified scope. Nothing to revert." and stop.
See reference/git-operations.md for the full SHA resolution protocol with edge cases.
For each SHA, verify it exists:
git cat-file -t {sha}
Missing SHA (rebased/squashed/force-pushed):
# Try to find replacement by commit message
git log --all --oneline --grep="{original commit message}"
If found: offer replacement. If not: skip and warn.
Merge commit detection:
git cat-file -p {sha} # Check for multiple "parent" lines
If merge commit found, ask user: Proceed with -m 1, skip merge commits, or cancel.
Cherry-pick duplicate detection: Compare commit messages. For identical subjects, compare patches. Remove older duplicate from revert list.
See reference/git-operations.md for full reconciliation protocol and edge cases.
## Revert Plan
**Scope**: {feature | phase N | task name}
**Feature**: {feature_description} ({feature-name})
**Commits to revert** (reverse chronological order):
1. `{sha7}` -- {commit message}
2. `{sha7}` -- {commit message} [plan-update]
3. `{sha7}` -- {commit message} [feature creation]
**Affected files**:
{list of files changed by these commits}
**Task state updates**:
- {task_name}: done --> pending
**Safety**: Backup tag created at `pre-revert-{timestamp}`
Confirmation 1 -- Target: "Revert {scope} of feature '{description}'? This will undo {N} commits."
Confirmation 2 -- Final: "Ready to execute? This will create revert commits (original commits are preserved in history)."
See reference/confirmation-and-plan.md for the revision loop and summary format.
Revert in reverse chronological order (newest first):
# Standard commits
git revert --no-edit {sha_newest}
git revert --no-edit {sha_next}
# ...continue for each SHA
# Merge commits (if user approved)
git revert --no-edit -m 1 {merge_sha}
CRITICAL: Validate each git revert succeeds before continuing to the next.
On conflict:
git diff --name-only --diff-filter=Ugit checkout --theirs {file} && git add {file}After resolving: git revert --continue
Task state -- For each reverted task, the task needs to be reset to pending. Since maestro v2 does not have a direct "reset to pending" for done tasks via MCP, the orchestrator should note which tasks were reverted. If maestro_task_block / maestro_task_unblock can be used to cycle the state, use that. Otherwise, manually update the task state files in .maestro/features/{feature-name}/tasks/.
git add .maestro/features/{feature-name}/
git commit -m "maestro(revert): update task state for reverted {scope}"
BR mirror (if beads_epic_id exists):
br update {issue_id} --status open --json
Feature state (feature-level revert only): Update feature.json status back to approved or executing as appropriate.
Verify:
CI=true {test_command}
Report pass/fail. If tests fail: warn user and offer to debug.
## Revert Complete
**Scope**: {scope}
**Feature**: {feature_description}
**Commits reverted**: {count} ({impl} implementation, {plan} plan-update, {feature} feature creation)
**Tests**: {pass | fail}
**Backup tag**: pre-revert-{timestamp}
**Task state updated**: {N} tasks reset to pending
**Next**:
- `maestro:implement {feature-name}` -- Re-implement reverted tasks
- `maestro_status` / `maestro status` -- Check overall progress
- To undo this revert: see Rollback-of-Rollback below
A single task "add validation" needs to be undone.
# Safety pre-checks
git status --porcelain # Must be empty
git branch --show-current # Confirm correct branch
git tag pre-revert-20250315-1430 # Backup
# Resolve: maestro_task_list shows task "03-add-validation" is done, summary includes "sha: a1b2c3d"
# Reconcile
git cat-file -t a1b2c3d # Verify exists
# Execute
git revert --no-edit a1b2c3d
# Update task state: reset task to pending in .maestro/features/{feature-name}/tasks/
git add .maestro/features/auth/
git commit -m "maestro(revert): update task state for reverted task 'add validation'"
# Verify
bun test
Phase 2 of the "payments" feature had 3 completed tasks. All must be undone.
# Safety pre-checks (same as above)
git tag pre-revert-20250315-1445
# Resolve: maestro_task_list shows 3 done tasks in phase 2
# SHAs from task summaries: d4e5f6g (newest), b2c3d4e, f7g8h9i (oldest)
# Execute in reverse chronological order
git revert --no-edit d4e5f6g
git revert --no-edit b2c3d4e
git revert --no-edit f7g8h9i
# Update task state for all 3 tasks: reset to pending
git add .maestro/features/payments/
git commit -m "maestro(revert): update task state for reverted phase 2"
bun test
The entire "notifications" feature needs to be undone, including feature creation.
# Safety pre-checks
git tag pre-revert-20250315-1500
# Resolve: 5 implementation commits + 2 plan-update commits + 1 feature creation
# Order by date, newest first
# Execute all reverts
git revert --no-edit {sha1} # newest implementation
git revert --no-edit {sha2}
git revert --no-edit {sha3}
git revert --no-edit {sha4}
git revert --no-edit {sha5} # oldest implementation
git revert --no-edit {sha6} # plan-update
git revert --no-edit {sha7} # plan-update
git revert --no-edit {sha8} # feature creation
# Task state: all tasks reset to pending
# Feature state: status reset to "approved"
git add .maestro/features/
git commit -m "maestro(revert): reset feature 'notifications' fully"
bun test
Operations that destroy data or rewrite history. Each requires explicit user confirmation before execution.
| Operation | What it does | Destructive? | Confirmation required |
|---|---|---|---|
git revert | Creates new undo commit | No (additive) | Standard 2-phase |
git reset --soft | Moves HEAD, keeps staged | Moderate | "Confirm local-only reset" |
git reset --mixed | Moves HEAD, unstages | Moderate | "Confirm local-only reset" |
git reset --hard | Moves HEAD, destroys working tree | YES | "I understand this destroys uncommitted work" |
git push --force | Overwrites remote history | YES | Double confirm + backup tag verified |
git branch -D | Deletes branch (even unmerged) | YES | Confirm branch is not needed |
git reset --hard without a backup tag. The tag must exist BEFORE the reset.git push --force to a shared branch. If others have pulled, their history diverges.git revert. It is always safe. The "ugly" revert commits in history are a small price for safety.# Find lost commits via reflog
git reflog --all | head -20
# Recover to a reflog entry
git reset --hard HEAD@{N}
# Recover a deleted branch
git reflog | grep "checkout: moving from {branch}"
git checkout -b {branch} {sha_from_reflog}
See reference/danger-zones.md for the full destructive operations catalog with confirmation dialog templates and recovery procedures for each operation.
Sometimes you revert and then realize the revert was wrong. Here is how to undo a revert.
# Find the revert commit(s)
git log --oneline --grep="Revert" | head -5
# Revert the revert (re-applies original changes)
git revert --no-edit {revert_commit_sha}
This creates a new commit that re-applies the original changes. History shows: original --> revert --> re-apply. Clean and traceable.
Use when: You want to fully undo the revert and restore all original changes. Works whether or not the revert was pushed.
# If you know the original SHAs (in chronological order, oldest first)
git cherry-pick {original_sha_oldest}
git cherry-pick {original_sha_next}
# ...continue for remaining commits
Use when: You want to re-apply only SOME of the original commits, not all. Or when the revert commit itself has been amended/squashed and reverting it would not cleanly restore the originals.
# If commits were never pushed and backup tag exists
git reset --hard pre-revert-{timestamp}
git tag -d pre-revert-{timestamp} # Clean up tag after
Use when: The revert was local-only and you want to pretend it never happened. This is a destructive operation -- see Danger Zones.
Update maestro task state to reflect re-applied work:
done state with updated summaries (use the new SHA if cherry-picked)br update {issue_id} --status closed --jsonRecommended workflow:
maestro_init / maestro init -- Initialize maestro for the projectmaestro_feature_create / maestro feature-create -- Create a new featuremaestro_plan_write / maestro plan-write -- Write the implementation planmaestro:implement -- Execute the implementationmaestro:review -- Verify implementation correctnessmaestro_status / maestro status -- Check progressmaestro:revert -- You are here. Undo implementation if neededRevert is the safety valve for maestro:implement. It undoes commits and resets task state so you can re-implement with maestro:implement. Use maestro_status after reverting to confirm the feature state is correct. Revert depends on atomic commits from implementation -- the cleaner the commit history, the more precise the revert.