--- name: sync description: Sync the current session branch with its upstream branch, or publish the current session branch to a remote. Use when the user asks to sync a branch, pull latest changes, rebase onto upstream, push current branch, publish branch, or set upstream. --- # Sync Changes Sync the current session branch with its upstream branch, or publish the current session branch to a remote. Use when the user asks to sync a branch, pull latest changes, rebase onto upstream, push current branch, publish branch, or set upstream. ## Guidelines - **Never force-push** (`--force`, `--force-with-lease`) without explicit user approval. - **Never skip pre-push hooks** (do not use `--no-verify`). - **Never rewrite or drop commits** during rebase without asking the user. - When in doubt about conflict resolution — ask the user. ## Workflow 1. Check for uncommitted changes first. If there are uncommitted changes, use the `/commit` skill to commit them before continuing. 2. Check whether the current session branch has an upstream branch. 3. If the current session branch has an upstream branch: 3.1. Fetch the upstream remote first so tracking refs are up to date. ``` git fetch ``` 3.2. Check ahead/behind counts. If the branch is already in sync (0 ahead, 0 behind), stop and report that no sync is needed. ``` git rev-list --left-right --count HEAD...@{u} ``` 3.3. If behind, rebase onto the upstream tracking branch. ``` git rebase @{u} ``` 3.4. If there are merge conflicts, resolve them by preserving the intent of both sides. Stage the resolved files and continue the rebase. ``` git add git rebase --continue ``` If conflict resolution is unclear, ask the user how to proceed. If the user wants to stop the rebase, abort it: ``` git rebase --abort ``` 3.5. If the branch has local commits (ahead > 0), push them to the remote after a successful rebase. ``` git push ``` If the push is rejected because the rebase rewrote history, explain the situation to the user and ask for approval before force-pushing. 4. If the current session branch does not have an upstream branch: 4.1. Determine the remote to publish to. - If there is only one remote, use it. - If there are multiple remotes, use the #tool:vscode/askQuestions tool to ask which remote to use. 4.2. Publish the current branch and set upstream in one step. ``` git push -u HEAD ``` ## Validation After the workflow completes, validate the result with explicit checks: 1. Verify the working tree is clean: ``` git status --porcelain ``` 2. Verify sync state (ahead/behind counts are both 0): ``` git rev-list --left-right --count HEAD...@{u} ``` 3. If the branch was newly published, verify the upstream branch is configured: ``` git rev-parse --abbrev-ref --symbolic-full-name @{u} ```