Files
claude-code-action/examples/auto-fix-ci-signed/commands/fix-ci-signed.md
km-anthropic 7929f4a47f feat: Add auto-fix CI workflow examples
- Add auto-fix-ci example with inline git commits
- Add auto-fix-ci-signed example with signed commits via MCP
- Include corresponding slash commands for both workflows
- Examples demonstrate automated CI failure detection and fixing
2025-08-21 11:24:49 -07:00

6.0 KiB

description, allowed_tools
description allowed_tools
Analyze and fix CI failures with signed commits using MCP tools Edit,MultiEdit,Write,Read,Glob,Grep,LS,Bash(bun:*),Bash(npm:*),Bash(npx:*),Bash(gh:*),mcp__github_file_ops__commit_files,mcp__github_file_ops__delete_files

Fix CI Failures with Signed Commits

You are tasked with analyzing CI failure logs and fixing the issues using MCP tools for signed commits. Follow these steps:

Context Provided

$ARGUMENTS

Important Context Information

Look for these key pieces of information in the arguments:

  • Failed CI Run URL: Link to the failed CI run
  • Failed Jobs: List of jobs that failed
  • PR Number: The PR number to comment on
  • Branch Name: The fix branch you're working on
  • Base Branch: The original PR branch
  • Error logs: Detailed logs from failed jobs

CRITICAL: Use MCP Tools for Git Operations

IMPORTANT: You MUST use MCP tools for all git operations to ensure commits are properly signed. DO NOT use git commands directly via Bash.

  • Use mcp__github_file_ops__commit_files to commit and push changes
  • Use mcp__github_file_ops__delete_files to delete files

Step 1: Analyze the Failure

Parse the provided CI failure information to understand:

  • Which jobs failed and why
  • The specific error messages and stack traces
  • Whether failures are test-related, build-related, or linting issues

Step 2: Search and Understand the Codebase

Use MCP search tools to locate the failing code:

  • Use mcp_github_file_ops_server__search_files or mcp_github_file_ops_server__file_search to find failing test names or functions
  • Use mcp_github_file_ops_server__read_file to read source files mentioned in error messages
  • Review related configuration files (package.json, tsconfig.json, etc.)

Step 3: Apply Targeted Fixes

Make minimal, focused changes:

  • For test failures: Determine if the test or implementation needs fixing
  • For type errors: Fix type definitions or correct the code logic
  • For linting issues: Apply formatting using the project's tools
  • For build errors: Resolve dependency or configuration issues
  • For missing imports: Add the necessary imports or install packages

Requirements:

  • Only fix the actual CI failures, avoid unrelated changes
  • Follow existing code patterns and conventions
  • Ensure changes are production-ready, not temporary hacks
  • Preserve existing functionality while fixing issues

Step 4: Verify Fixes Locally

Run available verification commands using Bash:

  • Execute the failing tests locally to confirm they pass
  • Run the project's lint command (check package.json for scripts)
  • Run type checking if available
  • Execute any build commands to ensure compilation succeeds

Step 5: Commit and Push Changes Using MCP

CRITICAL: You MUST use MCP tools for committing and pushing:

  1. Prepare all your file changes (using Edit/MultiEdit/Write tools as needed)
  2. Use mcp__github_file_ops__commit_files to commit and push all changes
    • Pass the file paths you've edited in the files array
    • Set message to describe the specific fixes (e.g., "Fix CI failures: remove syntax errors and format code")
    • The MCP tool will automatically create the branch specified in "Branch Name:" from the context and push signed commits

IMPORTANT: The MCP tool will create the branch from the context automatically. The branch name from "Branch Name:" in the context will be used.

Example usage:

mcp__github_file_ops__commit_files with:
- files: ["src/utils/retry.ts", "src/other/file.ts"]  // List of file paths you edited
- message: "Fix CI failures: [describe specific fixes]"

Note: The branch will be created from the Base Branch specified in the context.

Step 6: Create PR Comment (REQUIRED - DO NOT SKIP)

CRITICAL: You MUST create a PR comment after pushing. This step is MANDATORY.

After successfully pushing the fixes, you MUST create a comment on the original PR to notify about the auto-fix. DO NOT end the task without completing this step.

  1. Extract the PR number from the context provided in arguments (look for "PR Number:" in the context)
  2. MANDATORY: Execute the gh CLI command below to create the comment
  3. Verify the comment was created successfully

YOU MUST RUN THIS COMMAND (replace placeholders with actual values from context):

gh pr comment PR_NUMBER --body "## 🤖 CI Auto-Fix Available (Signed Commits)

Claude has analyzed the CI failures and prepared fixes with signed commits.

[**→ Create pull request to fix CI**](https://github.com/OWNER/REPO/compare/BASE_BRANCH...FIX_BRANCH?quick_pull=1)

_This fix was generated automatically based on the [failed CI run](FAILED_CI_RUN_URL)._"

IMPORTANT REPLACEMENTS YOU MUST MAKE:

  • Replace PR_NUMBER with the actual PR number from "PR Number:" in context
  • Replace OWNER/REPO with the repository from "Repository:" in context
  • Replace BASE_BRANCH with the branch from "Base Branch:" in context
  • Replace FIX_BRANCH with the branch from "Branch Name:" in context
  • Replace FAILED_CI_RUN_URL with the URL from "Failed CI Run:" in context

DO NOT SKIP THIS STEP. The task is NOT complete until the PR comment is created.

Step 7: Final Verification

BEFORE CONSIDERING THE TASK COMPLETE, verify you have:

  1. Fixed all CI failures
  2. Committed the changes using mcp_github_file_ops_server__push_files
  3. Verified the branch was pushed successfully
  4. CREATED THE PR COMMENT using gh pr comment command from Step 6

If you have NOT created the PR comment, go back to Step 6 and execute the command.

Important Guidelines

  • Always use MCP tools for git operations to ensure proper commit signing
  • Focus exclusively on fixing the reported CI failures
  • Maintain code quality and follow the project's established patterns
  • If a fix requires significant refactoring, document why it's necessary
  • When multiple solutions exist, choose the simplest one that maintains code quality
  • THE TASK IS NOT COMPLETE WITHOUT THE PR COMMENT

Begin by analyzing the failure details provided above.