danverbraganza

jj-vcs

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0
# Install this skill:
npx skills add danverbraganza/jujutsu-skill --skill "jj-vcs"

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# Description

Guides agents through using the Jujutsu (jj) version control system. Activate when the user mentions jj, jujutsu, or when working in a repository with a .jj directory. Teaches proper workflow for atomic commits and change management.

# SKILL.md


name: jj-vcs
description: Guides agents through using the Jujutsu (jj) version control system. Activate when the user mentions jj, jujutsu, or when working in a repository with a .jj directory. Teaches proper workflow for atomic commits and change management.


Jujutsu (jj) Version Control System

This skill helps you work with Jujutsu, a Git-compatible VCS with mutable commits and automatic rebasing.

Tested with jj v0.37.0 - Commands may differ in other versions.

Important: Automated/Agent Environment

When running as an agent, always use -m flags to provide messages inline rather than relying on editor prompts:

# Always use -m to avoid editor prompts
jj desc -m "message"      # NOT: jj desc
jj new -m "message"       # NOT: jj new (then describe separately)
jj squash -m "message"    # NOT: jj squash (which opens editor)
jj commit -m "message"    # NOT: jj commit

Editor-based commands will fail in non-interactive environments.

Core Concepts

The Working Copy is a Commit

In jj, your working directory is always a commit (referenced as @). Changes are automatically snapshotted when you run any jj command. There is no staging area.

Commits Are Mutable

CRITICAL: Unlike git, jj commits can be freely modified. This enables a high-quality commit workflow:

  1. Create a commit with your intended message first
  2. Make your changes
  3. The commit automatically captures your work
  4. Refine the commit using squash, split, or absorb as needed

Change IDs vs Commit IDs

  • Change ID: A stable identifier (like tqpwlqmp) that persists when a commit is rewritten
  • Commit ID: A content hash (like 3ccf7581) that changes when commit content changes

Prefer using Change IDs when referencing commits in commands.

Essential Workflow

Starting Work: Describe First, Then Code

Always create your commit message before writing code:

# First, describe what you intend to do
jj desc -m "Add user authentication to login endpoint"

# Then make your changes - they automatically become part of this commit
# ... edit files ...

# Check status
jj st

Creating Atomic Commits

Each commit should represent ONE logical change. Use this format for commit messages:

"Verb object" - exactly one sentence, no period

Examples:
- "Add validation to user input forms"
- "Fix null pointer in payment processor"
- "Remove deprecated API endpoints"
- "Update dependencies to latest versions"

Viewing History

# View recent commits
jj log

# View with patches
jj log -p

# View specific commit
jj show <change-id>

# View diff of working copy
jj diff

Moving Between Commits

# Create a new empty commit on top of current
jj new

# Create new commit with message
jj new -m "Commit message"

# Edit an existing commit (working copy becomes that commit)
jj edit <change-id>

Refining Commits

Squashing Changes

Move changes from current commit into its parent:

# Squash all changes into parent
jj squash

# Squash interactively (choose what to move)
jj squash -i

Splitting Commits

Divide a commit that does too much:

# Split current commit interactively
jj split

# Split a specific commit
jj split -r <change-id>

Absorbing Changes

Automatically distribute changes to the commits that last modified those lines:

# Absorb working copy changes into appropriate ancestor commits
jj absorb

Abandoning Commits

Remove a commit entirely (descendants are rebased to its parent):

jj abandon <change-id>

Working with Bookmarks (Branches)

Bookmarks are jj's equivalent to git branches:

# Create a bookmark at current commit
jj bookmark create my-feature

# Move bookmark to a different commit
jj bookmark move my-feature -r <change-id>

# List bookmarks
jj bookmark list

# Delete a bookmark
jj bookmark delete my-feature

Git Integration

Working with Existing Git Repos

# Clone a git repository
jj git clone <url>

# Initialize jj in an existing git repo
jj git init --colocate

Switching Between jj and git (Colocated Repos)

In a colocated repository (where both .jj/ and .git/ exist), you can use both jj and git commands. However, there are important considerations:

Switching to git mode (e.g., for merge workflows):

# First, ensure your jj working copy is clean
jj st

# Then checkout a branch with git
git checkout <branch-name>

Switching back to jj mode:

# Use jj edit to resume working with jj
jj edit <change-id>

# Or simply run any jj command - it will snapshot the working copy
jj st

Important notes:
- Git may complain about uncommitted changes if jj's working copy differs from the git HEAD
- Always ensure your work is committed in jj before switching to git
- After git operations, jj will detect and incorporate the changes on next command

Pushing Changes (Mirrored Repository Context)

NOTE: You are likely working on a mirrored clone of the repository, not the original. This mirror has its own remote configured.

When the user asks you to push changes:

# Push a specific bookmark to the remote
jj git push -b <bookmark-name>

# Example: push the main bookmark
jj git push -b main

Before pushing, ensure:
1. Your bookmark points to the correct commit (bookmarks don't auto-advance like git branches)
2. The commits are refined and atomic
3. The user has explicitly requested the push

IMPORTANT: Unlike git branches, jj bookmarks do not automatically move when you create new commits. You must manually update them before pushing:

# Move an existing bookmark to the current commit
jj bookmark move my-feature --to @

# Then push it
jj git push -b my-feature

If no bookmark exists for your changes, create one first:

# Create a bookmark at the current commit
jj bookmark create my-feature

# Then push it
jj git push -b my-feature

Handling Conflicts

jj allows committing conflicts - you can resolve them later:

# View conflicts
jj st

# Resolve conflicts with external tool
jj resolve

# Continue working despite conflicts - jj allows this

Preserving Commit Quality

IMPORTANT: Because commits are mutable, always refine them:

  1. Review your commit: jj show @ or jj diff
  2. Is it atomic? One logical change per commit
  3. Is the message clear? "Verb object" format, one sentence
  4. Are there unrelated changes? Use jj split to separate them
  5. Should changes be elsewhere? Use jj squash or jj absorb

Quick Reference

Action Command
Describe commit jj desc -m "message"
View status jj st
View log jj log
View diff jj diff
New commit jj new -m "message"
Edit commit jj edit <id>
Squash to parent jj squash
Split commit jj split
Auto-distribute jj absorb
Abandon commit jj abandon <id>
Create bookmark jj bookmark create <name>
Push bookmark jj git push -b <name>

Best Practices Summary

  1. Describe first: Set the commit message before coding
  2. One change per commit: Keep commits atomic and focused
  3. Use change IDs: They're stable across rewrites
  4. Refine commits: Leverage mutability for clean history
  5. Embrace the workflow: No staging area, no stashing - just commits

# Supported AI Coding Agents

This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:

Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.