Git Workflow Standards (Mark)
Goal
Enable consistent, traceable git history that tracks LLM prompt count per feature/bug fix while following conventional commits format.
When to Use This Skill
Use when:
- •User asks to commit changes
- •Creating or managing branches
- •Working with git history
- •Setting up pull requests
- •Any git operation mentioned in prompt
Do NOT use when:
- •User explicitly says "do not commit"
- •Working in a non-git directory (no .git folder)
Process
- •Check status: Run
git statusandgit diffto see changes - •Review conventions: Check
git log --oneline -10for existing commit style - •Stage changes:
git add <files> - •Commit: Use conventional format with original prompt in description
- •Stop: Do not push unless explicitly told to
Constraints
- •ALWAYS commit after every prompt (unless user says "do not commit")
- •One commit per prompt (unless prompt asks for multiple)
- •NEVER auto-push - wait for explicit push instruction
- •Include simplified prompts leading up to the commit in the commit description (shortened if lengthy)
- •Match existing style from repository history
Auto-Commit Policy
ALWAYS commit after every prompt unless explicitly told NOT to
This allows tracking how many LLM prompts a feature or bug fix required.
Commit Workflow
After completing work on a prompt:
# 1. Check what changed git status git diff # 2. Stage changes git add <files> # 3. Commit with descriptive message (see format below) git commit -m "type(component): description" # 4. DO NOT push (unless explicitly told to)
Commit Message Format
Use conventional commits format:
<type>[(<component>)]: <description>
Types
- •
feat- New feature - •
fix- Bug fix - •
docs- Documentation changes - •
style- Code style/formatting (no logic change) - •
refactor- Code refactoring - •
perf- Performance improvements - •
test- Adding or fixing tests - •
chore- Maintenance tasks, dependencies - •
ci- CI/CD changes - •
meta- Repository/meta changes (init, config, etc.)
Examples
# Simple changes git commit -m "meta: init files" git commit -m "feat(cli): add verbose flag" git commit -m "fix(parser): handle empty input" # With component git commit -m "ci(lint): add basedpyright check" git commit -m "docs(readme): update installation steps" git commit -m "refactor(utils): extract helper functions"
Including Prompts Leading Up to the Commit
Commit description should include the simplified prompts leading up to the commit (shortened/redacted if lengthy):
# For short prompts git commit -m "feat(api): add user authentication endpoint" -m "Prompts: add login with jwt tokens; wire refresh token flow" # For longer prompts (redact verbose parts) git commit -m "fix(parser): handle edge case in csv parsing" -m "Prompts: fix issue where empty lines cause crash [diagnostic output redacted]; add regression test"
Redaction guidelines:
- •Keep the core request/intent
- •Remove large pasted diagnostic output
- •Remove excessive context dumps
- •Keep it readable in one line
Push Policy
NEVER auto-push unless explicitly told TO do so
Default behavior: commit locally only.
When told to push:
# Push current branch git push # Push specific branch git push origin <branch-name>
Commit Frequency
One commit per prompt (unless the prompt specifically asks for multiple commits):
User: "Add user authentication" → Do work → git commit -m "feat(auth): add user authentication" -m "Prompt: Add user authentication" User: "Now add password reset" → Do work → git commit -m "feat(auth): add password reset" -m "Prompt: add password reset"
Branch Naming
If creating branches:
- •
feature/<name>- New features - •
fix/<name>- Bug fixes - •
docs/<name>- Documentation - •
refactor/<name>- Refactoring
Checking Past Commits
To understand commit style from history:
# View recent commits git log --oneline -20 # View commit with message git log -1
Match the style of existing commits in the repository.
Testing Skills
After creating or updating this skill:
- •Check the description triggers properly when git operations are mentioned
- •Verify commit format examples render correctly
- •Test that Constraints section is easily scannable
- •Confirm all existing content is preserved
Integration
This skill extends dev-standards-majo. Always ensure dev-standards-majo is loaded for:
- •AGENTS.md maintenance
- •Universal code principles
- •Documentation policies
Works alongside:
- •
python-majo— For Python-specific development and commits - •
js-bun-majo— For JavaScript/Bun development and commits - •
shell-majo— For shell scripting and commits - •
writing-docs-majo— For documentation commits - •
task-planning-majo— For complex multi-step work - •
running-windows-commands-majo— For git operations on Windows