release-cherry-pick-missing-reverts
Find reverts that landed on pytorch/pytorch main but are missing from a release branch (release/X.Y) because the reverted commit was already shipped in a…
npx skills add https://github.com/pytorch/test-infra --skill release-cherry-pick-missing-revertsRelease: Cherry-pick missing reverts
When a commit ships in a release candidate (so it is on release/X.Y) and is
later reverted on main, the revert does not automatically reach the
release branch — the buggy commit is still present in release/X.Y. These are
missing reverts: the revert must be cherry-picked onto the release branch.
This skill finds those missing reverts and opens one cherry-pick PR per
revert against pytorch/pytorch:release/X.Y, each on its own branch in the
user's fork. It never pushes to release/X.Y directly.
The detector is tools/analytics/github_analyze.py (run daily by the
GitHub Analytics Daily workflow). It is the same script this skill lives
next to in test-infra, but the cherry-picks operate on a pytorch/pytorch
checkout.
Inputs
| Input | Required | Example | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Release branch | yes | release/2.13 | The branch to cherry-pick reverts onto. |
| Source | one of | a GHA run URL, or "run the analyzer" | Either a GitHub Analytics Daily run URL/ID whose log already has the analysis, or run the analyzer locally for fresh data. |
| pytorch/pytorch path | yes (for cherry-pick) | ~/pytorch | A checkout with upstream → pytorch/pytorch and origin → the user's fork. |
| Fork remote | defaults to origin | origin | Where the cherry-pick branches are pushed. |
| Tracker issue | optional | 186934 | The [vX.Y.Z] Release Tracker issue. When given, post one cherry-pick nomination comment per opened PR (see Step 4). |
If the release branch was not supplied, ask for it before doing anything — do
not guess. If a tracker issue is given, the matching release/X.Y should agree
with the tracker's version (e.g. issue [v2.13.0] Release Tracker →
release/2.13); confirm before posting comments.
When to use this skill
Use when the user asks to:
- Find / list missing reverts for a release branch
- Cherry-pick the reverts flagged by the analytics run to
release/X.Y - Act on a
GitHub Analytics Dailyrun that printed🔴 WARNING: This is possibly a revert of a commit that was included in a release candidate
Background: what "missing revert" means and how it is flagged
analyze_reverts_missing_from_branch compares main against the release branch
and, for every revert that is on main but not on the release branch, checks
whether the reverted commit carries a release-candidate tag
(v[0-9]+.[0-9]+.[0-9]+-rc[0-9]+). Three outcomes per revert (the analyzer
prints the status lines with two spaces after the emoji, e.g.
🔴 WARNING; match on the emoji, not the exact spacing):
🔴 WARNING ...— the reverted commit carries an RC tag, so it may be inrelease/X.Y. Treat as a missing-revert candidate, but verify before acting (see caveat below).✅ DETECTED: The reverted commit ... was cherry-picked to <branch>— the revert is already on the release branch. Skip.🟢 STATUS: ... may not be needed— the reverted commit was never in the release branch. Skip.
Caveat — the WARNING is a heuristic, not a guarantee. The tag regex matches an RC tag from any release line, not just the target. For
release/2.13a commit that only ever shipped in av2.12.0-rcN(and was never onrelease/2.13) is still flagged🔴. So a🔴 WARNINGdoes not prove the reverted commit is on the target branch — Step 3 must confirm withgit merge-base --is-ancestorbefore cherry-picking, or it may try to revert code that isn't there (empty/conflicting cherry-pick).
Each flagged entry prints, in order:
Reverted GitHub Commit: <reverted_sha> # the bad commit still in release/X.Y
🏷️ Tags matching ... : v2.13.0-rc1 ... # proof it shipped in an RC
Commit Hash: <revert_sha> # the revert commit on main -> cherry-pick THIS
Author / Date / Title: Revert "<orig title> (#<PR>)"
🔴 WARNING: ...
The value to cherry-pick is Commit Hash (the revert commit on main), not
the reverted commit.
Step 1 — Get the list of missing reverts
Option A — from a referenced run (when the user points at a
GitHub Analytics Daily run):
# Find the github-analyze job id for the run, then fetch its log.
gh api repos/pytorch/test-infra/actions/runs/<RUN_ID>/jobs \
-q '.jobs[] | select(.name=="github-analyze") | .id'
gh api repos/pytorch/test-infra/actions/jobs/<JOB_ID>/logs > /tmp/ghanalyze.log
Option B — run the analyzer locally (preferred for fresh data; the CI log
can be stale). From a pytorch/pytorch checkout with upstream →
pytorch/pytorch:
git -C <pytorch> fetch upstream main release/X.Y --tags
python test-infra/tools/analytics/github_analyze.py \
--repo-path <pytorch> --remote upstream \
--branch release/X.Y --analyze-missing-reverts-from-branch | tee /tmp/ghanalyze.log
Step 2 — Parse the flagged reverts
Extract every entry whose status line contains the 🔴 (WARNING) emoji — match
on the emoji rather than exact text/spacing, since the analyzer emits two spaces
(🔴 WARNING). For each, capture:
revert_sha← theCommit Hash:line (cherry-pick target)reverted_sha← theReverted GitHub Commit:linepr← the#NNNNin theTitle:line (the original PR that was reverted)title← theTitle:text
A revert with ✅ DETECTED or 🟢 STATUS is not missing — skip it. Report
the counts (flagged vs skipped) so nothing is silently dropped.
Reverts of Phabricator diffs print
Reverted Phabricator Diff:instead ofReverted GitHub Commit:; the analyzer never resolves a GitHub SHA for them, so they can't get a🔴 WARNINGand won't appear here. They are out of scope for this skill (no GitHub commit to cherry-pick).
Step 3 — One cherry-pick PR per missing revert
Operate on the pytorch/pytorch checkout. For each flagged revert:
REL=release/X.Y
git -C <pytorch> fetch upstream "$REL" main --tags
# Confirm the reverted commit is actually on the target branch before reverting
# it (the 🔴 WARNING can fire on an RC tag from a different release line). If it
# is not an ancestor, skip and report "reverted commit not in <REL>".
git -C <pytorch> merge-base --is-ancestor <reverted_sha> "upstream/$REL" \
|| { echo "skip: <reverted_sha> not in $REL"; continue; }
BR="cherry-pick-revert-<PR>-${REL#release/}" # e.g. cherry-pick-revert-185760-2.13
git -C <pytorch> checkout -B "$BR" "upstream/$REL"
git -C <pytorch> cherry-pick -x <revert_sha>
-xrecords(cherry picked from commit <revert_sha>)in the message.- On conflict: do not force-resolve blindly. Report the conflicting
files for that revert, run
git cherry-pick --abort, and leave it out of the PR batch (note it in the summary as "needs manual cherry-pick"). Continue with the others.
Push to the fork and open the PR against the release branch:
git -C <pytorch> push origin "$BR"
gh pr create --repo pytorch/pytorch --base "$REL" --head "<fork-owner>:$BR" \
--title "[$REL] Revert \"<orig title> (#<PR>)\"" \
--body "<see PR body below>"
Never push to release/X.Y itself, and never open the PR with --base main.
PR body
Cherry-pick of the main-branch revert <revert_sha> onto release/X.Y.
The reverted commit <reverted_sha> (#<PR>) shipped in a release candidate
(v X.Y.0-rcN) and is present in release/X.Y, but the revert only landed on
main. This cherry-picks the revert so release/X.Y matches main.
Detected by tools/analytics/github_analyze.py --analyze-missing-reverts-from-branch
(GitHub Analytics Daily). Cherry-pick (-x): (cherry picked from commit <revert_sha>).
This PR was authored with the assistance of an AI coding agent.
Step 4 — Nominate on the release tracker (if a tracker issue was given)
For each cherry-pick PR opened in Step 3, post one comment on the tracker issue
in the tracker's standard nomination format. The landed trunk PR is the
original PR that was reverted (the #<PR> from the revert title), and the
release branch PR is the cherry-pick PR:
gh issue comment <tracker_issue> --repo pytorch/pytorch --body "Link to landed trunk PR (if applicable):
* https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/<PR>
Link to release branch PR:
* https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/<cherry_pick_PR>
Criteria Category:
* cherry-pick revert"
One comment per revert. Only comment for PRs actually opened in Step 3 — skip the ones that were skipped or hit a conflict. Like opening PRs, posting to the tracker is outward-facing: confirm first.
Step 5 — Summary
Report a table: PR, original title, revert_sha, and outcome — PR #<n> opened,
skipped (already on <branch>), skipped (reverted commit not in <branch>), or
conflict — needs manual cherry-pick. Include the new branch names, PR URLs, and
(if a tracker issue was given) the tracker comment links.
Guardrails
- Confirm before opening PRs or commenting. Creating multiple cherry-pick PRs and posting tracker comments are outward-facing actions — list what will be opened/posted and confirm first.
- Never push to
release/X.Y; only to fork branches, PRs target the release branch for review. - Skip non-missing reverts (
✅ DETECTED/🟢 STATUS). - Verify the reverted commit is on the target branch (
git merge-base --is-ancestor) before cherry-picking —🔴 WARNINGcan be a false positive for RC tags from another release line. - Stop on cherry-pick conflicts for that revert (abort + report); do not hand-resolve unless the user asks.
- Requires
ghauthenticated forpytorch/pytorchand a pytorch checkout whoseoriginis the user's fork.