gt

This skill should be used when working with Graphite (gt) for stacked pull requests. Use when users mention gt commands, stack management, PR workflows, or when dealing with dependent branches. Essential for understanding stack navigation, branch relationships, and Graphite's mental model.

$ インストール

git clone https://github.com/dagster-io/erk /tmp/erk && cp -r /tmp/erk/.claude/skills/gt ~/.claude/skills/erk

// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill


name: gt description: This skill should be used when working with Graphite (gt) for stacked pull requests. Use when users mention gt commands, stack management, PR workflows, or when dealing with dependent branches. Essential for understanding stack navigation, branch relationships, and Graphite's mental model.

Graphite

Overview

Graphite (gt) is a CLI tool for managing stacked pull requests - breaking large features into small, incremental changes built on top of each other. This skill provides the mental model, command reference, and workflow patterns needed to work effectively with gt.

Core Mental Model

Stacks are Linear Chains

A stack is a sequence of branches where each branch (except trunk) has exactly one parent:

VALID STACK (linear):
main → feature-a → feature-b → feature-c

INVALID (not a stack):
main → feature-a → feature-b
            └─────→ feature-x

Key Concepts

  • Parent-Child Relationships: Every branch tracked by gt (except trunk) has exactly one parent branch it builds upon
  • Auto-restacking: When modifying a branch, gt automatically rebases all upstack branches to include changes
  • Directional Navigation:
    • Downstack/Down: Toward trunk (toward the base) - gt down moves from feature-b → feature-a → main
    • Upstack/Up: Away from trunk (toward the tip) - gt up moves from feature-a → feature-b → feature-c
  • Trunk: The main branch (usually main or master) that all stacks build upon

Stack Visualization - CRITICAL MENTAL MODEL

When working with Graphite stacks, always visualize trunk at the BOTTOM:

TOP ↑    feat-3  ← upstack (leaf)
         feat-2
         feat-1
BOTTOM ↓ main    ← downstack (trunk)

Directional Terminology - MUST UNDERSTAND

  • UPSTACK / UP = away from trunk = toward TOP = toward leaves
  • DOWNSTACK / DOWN = toward trunk = toward BOTTOM = toward main

Detailed Examples

Given stack: main → feat-1 → feat-2 → feat-3

If current branch is feat-1:

  • Upstack: feat-2, feat-3 (children, toward top)
  • Downstack: main (parent, toward bottom)

If current branch is feat-3 (at top):

  • Upstack: (nothing, already at top/leaf)
  • Downstack: feat-2, feat-1, main (ancestors, toward bottom)

Why This Mental Model Is Critical

🔴 Commands depend on this visualization:

  • gt up / gt down navigate the stack
  • land-stack traverses branches in specific direction
  • Stack traversal logic (parent/child relationships)

🔴 Common mistake: Thinking "upstack" means "toward trunk"

  • WRONG: upstack = toward main ❌
  • CORRECT: upstack = away from main ✅

🔴 PR landing order: Always bottom→top (main first, then each layer up)

Metadata Storage

All gt metadata is stored in the shared .git directory (accessible across worktrees):

  • .git/.graphite_repo_config - Repository-level configuration (trunk branch)
  • .git/.graphite_cache_persist - Branch relationships (parent-child graph)
  • .git/.graphite_pr_info - Cached GitHub PR information

Important: Metadata is shared across all worktrees since it's in the common .git directory.

Essential Commands

Common Workflow Commands

CommandAliasPurpose
gt create [name]gt cCreate new branch stacked on current branch and commit staged changes
gt modifygt mModify current branch (amend commit) and auto-restack children
gt submitgt sPush branches and create/update PRs
gt submit --stackgt ssSubmit entire stack (up + down)
gt sync-Sync from remote and prompt to delete merged branches

Navigation Commands

CommandAliasPurpose
gt up [steps]gt uMove up stack (away from trunk)
gt down [steps]gt dMove down stack (toward trunk)
gt topgt tMove to tip of stack
gt bottomgt bMove to bottom of stack
gt checkout [branch]gt coInteractive branch checkout

Stack Management

CommandPurpose
gt restackEnsure each branch has its parent in git history
gt moveRebase current branch onto different parent
gt foldFold branch's changes into parent
gt splitSplit current branch into multiple single-commit branches
gt logVisualize stack structure

Branch Info & Management

CommandPurpose
gt branch infoShow branch info (parent, children, commit SHA)
gt parentShow parent branch name
gt childrenShow children branch names
gt track [branch]Start tracking branch with gt (set parent)
gt untrack [branch]Stop tracking branch with gt
gt delete [name]Delete branch and update metadata
gt rename [name]Rename branch and update metadata

Workflow Patterns

Pattern 1: Creating a New Stack

Build a feature in multiple reviewable chunks:

# 1. Start from trunk
gt checkout main
git pull

# 2. Create first branch
gt create phase-1 -m "Add API endpoints"
# ... make changes ...
git add .
gt modify -m "Add API endpoints"

# 3. Create second branch on top
gt create phase-2 -m "Update frontend"
# ... make changes ...
git add .
gt modify -m "Update frontend"

# 4. Submit entire stack
gt submit --stack

# Result: 2 PRs created
# PR #101: phase-1 (base: main)
# PR #102: phase-2 (base: phase-1)

Pattern 2: Responding to Review Feedback

Update a branch in the middle of a stack:

# Navigate down to target branch
gt down  # Repeat as needed

# Make changes
# ... edit files ...
git add .

# Modify (auto-restacks upstack branches)
gt modify -m "Address review feedback"

# Resubmit stack
gt submit --stack

Pattern 3: Adding to Existing Stack

Insert a new branch in the middle:

# Checkout the parent where you want to insert
gt checkout phase-1

# Create new branch with --insert
gt create phase-1.5 --insert -m "Add validation"

# Select which child to move onto new branch
# Interactive prompt appears

# Submit new PR
gt submit

Pattern 4: Syncing After Merges

Clean up after PRs merge on GitHub:

# Run sync
gt sync

# Prompts to delete merged branches
# Confirms deletion
y

# Result:
# - Merged branches deleted locally
# - Remaining branches rebased onto trunk
# - PR bases updated on GitHub

Pattern 5: Splitting Large Changes

Break up a large commit into reviewable pieces:

# Checkout branch with large commit
gt checkout large-feature

# Split into single-commit branches
gt split

# Rename branches meaningfully
gt rename add-api-endpoints
gt up
gt rename add-frontend
gt up
gt rename add-tests

# Submit
gt submit --stack

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Don't use git rebase directly: Use gt modify or gt restack - gt needs to update metadata during rebasing

  2. Don't delete branches with git branch -d: Use gt delete - metadata needs to be updated to re-parent children

  3. Don't assume gt submit only affects current branch: It submits downstack too (all ancestors). Use gt submit --stack to include upstack

  4. Don't forget to gt sync after merges: Stale branches accumulate and metadata gets outdated

  5. ⚠️ NEVER use gt log short for branch status: The output format is counterintuitive and confuses agents. Use gt branch info, gt parent, or gt children for explicit metadata access instead

Quick Decision Tree

When to use gt commands:

  • Start new workgt create (sets parent relationship)
  • Edit current branchgt modify (auto-restacks children)
  • Navigate stackgt up/down/top/bottom (move through chain)
  • View structuregt log (see visualization)
  • Get parent branchgt branch info (parse "Parent:" line)
  • Get branch relationshipsgt parent / gt children (quick access)
  • Submit PRsgt submit --stack (create/update all PRs)
  • After mergesgt sync (clean up + rebase)
  • Reorganizegt move (change parent)
  • Combine workgt fold (merge into parent)
  • Split workgt split (break into branches)

Resources

references/

Contains detailed command reference and comprehensive mental model documentation:

  • gt-reference.md - Complete command reference, metadata format details, and advanced patterns

Load this reference when users need detailed information about specific gt commands, metadata structure, or complex workflow scenarios.