Release Workflow
Steps
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Run tests: cargo run -- hook pre-merge --yes
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Check current version: Read version in Cargo.toml
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Review commits: Check commits since last release to understand scope of changes
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Credit contributors: Check for external PR authors and issue reporters (see "Credit External Contributors" and "Credit Issue Reporters" below)
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Confirm release type with user: Present changes summary and ask user to confirm patch/minor/major (see below)
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Bump version (must run on a clean tree — before editing CHANGELOG): cargo release X.Y.Z -p worktrunk -x --no-publish --no-push --no-tag --no-verify --no-confirm && cargo check
This bumps Cargo.toml , Cargo.lock , and applies pre-release-replacements (e.g., SKILL.md), then auto-commits. We'll reset this commit in step 8 to fold in the CHANGELOG.
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Update CHANGELOG: Add ## X.Y.Z section at top with changes (see MANDATORY verification below)
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Commit: Reset the auto-commit from step 6, stage everything, and create the final release commit: git reset --soft HEAD~1 && git add -A && git commit -m "Release vX.Y.Z"
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Merge to main: wt merge --no-remove (rebases onto main, pushes, keeps worktree)
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Tag and push: git tag vX.Y.Z && git push origin vX.Y.Z
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Wait for release workflow: Poll with gh pr checks --required or gh run view <run-id> every 60 seconds until complete (avoid gh run watch — it can hang). Non-required checks are ignored
The tag push triggers the release workflow which builds binaries and publishes to crates.io, Homebrew, and winget automatically.
CHANGELOG Review
Check commits since last release for missing entries:
git log v<last-version>..HEAD --oneline
IMPORTANT: Don't trust commit messages. Commit messages often undersell or misdescribe changes. For any commit that might be user-facing:
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Run git show <commit> --stat to see what files changed
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If it touches user-facing code (commands, CLI, output), read the actual diff
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Look for changes bundled together — a "rename flag" commit might also add new features
Common patterns where commit messages mislead:
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"Refactor X" commits that also change behavior
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"Rename flag" commits that add new functionality
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"Fix Y" commits that also improve error messages or add hints
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CI/test commits that include production code fixes
Notable changes to document:
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New features or commands
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User-visible behavior changes
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Bug fixes users might encounter
Section order: Improved, Fixed, Documentation, Internal. Documentation is for help text, web docs, and terminology improvements. Internal is for selected notable internal changes (not everything).
Within each section, order by impact:
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Breaking/behavior changes (affect existing users' workflows)
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New user-facing features and commands
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Performance improvements users will notice
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Minor enhancements and display changes
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Niche/platform-specific improvements (Nix, Windows-only, etc.)
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Developer/internal tooling exposed to users
Breaking changes: Note inline with the entry, not as a separate section:
- Feature name: Description. (Breaking: old behavior no longer supported)
Skip: internal refactors, test additions (unless user-facing like shell completion tests).
Credit External Contributors
For any changelog entry where an external contributor (not the repo owner) authored the commit, add credit with their GitHub username:
- Feature name: Description. (#123, thanks @contributor)
Find external contributors:
git log v<last-version>..HEAD --format="%an <%ae>" | sort -u
Then for each external contributor's commit, find their GitHub username from the commit (usually in the email or PR).
Credit Issue Reporters
When a fix or feature addresses a user-reported issue in this repo, thank the reporter — not just the PR author. Users who take time to report bugs, request features, or provide reproduction steps deserve recognition. (Don't credit reporters from upstream/external repos — only issues filed here.)
- Feature name: Description. (#456, thanks @reporter for reporting)
For fixes that reference issues:
- Bug fix: Description. Fixes #123. (thanks @reporter)
Finding reporters — do ALL three steps:
Issues may have been filed months before the fix. Bug reports also appear as PR comments, not just issues. These steps are complementary; each catches things the others miss.
Extract every issue/PR reference from every commit (PRIMARY):
git log v<last-version>..HEAD --format="%B" | grep -oE '#[0-9]+' | sort -un
For each referenced number: run gh issue view N --json title,author,state . This catches issues filed months ago — the most commonly missed credits.
Check PR comments for bug reports (catches reports that never became issues): For feature PRs referenced in commits, check comment threads for users reporting problems:
gh pr view NNN --json comments --jq '.comments[] | "(.author.login): (.body[:150])"'
Survey every issue opened or closed since last release (catches unreferenced matches):
git log -1 --format=%cs v<last-version> gh issue list --state all --search "created:>=<date>" --json number,title,author --limit 100 gh issue list --state closed --search "closed:>=<date>" --json number,title,author --limit 100
Cross-reference every title against changes in this release.
When to credit:
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Bug reports with clear reproduction steps (in issues OR PR comments)
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Feature requests that shaped the implementation
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Performance reports with measurements (like "takes 15s")
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Users who helped diagnose issues through discussion
Skip credit for: issues opened by the repo owner, trivial reports, or issues that were substantially different from what was implemented.
Link Significant Features to Docs
For major features with dedicated documentation, include a docs link. Use full URLs so links work from GitHub releases:
- Hook system: Shell commands that run at key points in worktree lifecycle. Docs (#234, thanks @contributor for the suggestion)
Link when there's substantial documentation the user would benefit from reading — new commands, feature pages, or Tips & Patterns sections. Skip for minor improvements.
MANDATORY: Verify Each Changelog Entry
After drafting changelog entries, you MUST spawn a subagent to verify each bullet point is accurate. This is non-negotiable — changelog mistakes are a recurring problem.
The subagent should:
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Take the list of drafted changelog entries
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For each entry, find the commit(s) it describes and read the actual diff
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Verify the entry accurately describes what changed
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Check for missing changes that should be documented
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Report any inaccuracies or omissions
Subagent prompt template:
Verify these changelog entries for version X.Y.Z are accurate.
Previous version: [e.g., v0.1.9] Commits to check: git log v<previous>..HEAD
Entries to verify: [paste drafted entries]
For EACH entry:
- Find the relevant commit(s) using git log and git show
- Read the actual diff, not just the commit message
- Confirm the entry accurately describes the user-facing change
- Flag if the entry overstates, understates, or misdescribes the change
Also check:
- Are there user-facing changes NOT covered by these entries?
- Verify each "thanks @..." attribution (right person, right role — author vs reporter)
Report format:
- Entry: [entry text] Status: ✅ Accurate / ⚠️ Needs revision / ❌ Incorrect Evidence: [what you found in the diff] Suggested fix: [if needed]
Do not finalize the changelog until the subagent confirms all entries are accurate.
If verification finds problems: Escalate to the user. Show them the subagent's findings and ask how to proceed. Don't attempt to resolve ambiguous changelog entries autonomously — the user knows the intent behind their changes better than you do.
Confirm Release Type
Before proceeding with changelog and version bump, confirm the release type with the user.
After reviewing commits, present:
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Current version (e.g., 0.2.0 )
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Brief summary of changes (new features, bug fixes, breaking changes)
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Your recommendation for release type with reasoning
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The three options: patch, minor, major
Use AskUserQuestion to get explicit confirmation. Example:
Current version: 0.2.0 Changes since v0.2.0:
- Added
state clearcommand (new feature) - Added
previous-branchstate key (new feature) - No breaking changes
Recommendation: Minor release (0.3.0) — new features, no breaking changes
Do not proceed until user confirms the release type. The user may have context about upcoming changes or preferences that affect versioning.
Version Guidelines
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Second digit (0.1.0 → 0.2.0): Backward incompatible changes
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Third digit (0.1.0 → 0.1.1): Everything else
Current project status: early release, breaking changes acceptable, optimize for best solution over compatibility.
Troubleshooting
Release workflow fails after tag push
If the workflow fails (e.g., cargo publish error), fix the issue, then recreate the tag:
gh release delete vX.Y.Z --yes # Delete GitHub release git push origin :refs/tags/vX.Y.Z # Delete remote tag git tag -d vX.Y.Z # Delete local tag git tag vX.Y.Z && git push origin vX.Y.Z # Recreate and push
The new tag will trigger a fresh workflow run with the fixed code.