review-pull-request
About
This Claude Skill performs comprehensive GitHub pull request reviews using the GitHub CLI. It analyzes diffs, checks commit history, verifies CI/CD status, and provides severity-leveled feedback (blocking/suggestion/nit/praise). Use it when assigned to review a PR, for self-review before requesting others, or for post-merge quality audits.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/review-pull-requestCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
Review Pull Request
Review GitHub pull request end-to-end — from understand the change through submit structured feedback. Uses gh CLI for all GitHub interactions and produces severity-leveled review comments.
When Use
- Pull request ready for review and assigned to you
- Performing second review after author addresses feedback
- Reviewing your own PR before requesting others' review (self-review)
- Auditing merged PR for post-merge quality assessment
- When you want structured review process rather than ad-hoc scanning
Inputs
- Required: PR identifier (number, URL, or
owner/repo#number) - Optional: Review focus (security, performance, correctness, style)
- Optional: Codebase familiarity level (familiar, somewhat, unfamiliar)
- Optional: Time budget for review (quick scan, standard, thorough)
Steps
Step 1: Understand Context
Read PR description and understand what change is trying to accomplish.
- Fetch PR metadata:
gh pr view <number> --json title,body,author,baseRefName,headRefName,labels,additions,deletions,changedFiles,reviewDecision - Read PR title and description:
- What problem does this PR solve?
- What approach did author take?
- Are there any specific areas author wants reviewed?
- Check PR size and assess time required:
PR Size Guide:
+--------+-----------+---------+-------------------------------------+
| Size | Files | Lines | Review Approach |
+--------+-----------+---------+-------------------------------------+
| Small | 1-5 | <100 | Read every line, quick review |
| Medium | 5-15 | 100-500 | Focus on logic changes, skim config |
| Large | 15-30 | 500- | Review by commit, focus on critical |
| | | 1000 | files, flag if should be split |
| XL | 30+ | 1000+ | Flag for splitting. Review only the |
| | | | most critical files. |
+--------+-----------+---------+-------------------------------------+
- Review commit history:
gh pr view <number> --json commits --jq '.commits[].messageHeadline'- Are commits logical and well-structured?
- Does history tell a story (each commit a coherent step)?
- Check CI/CD status:
gh pr checks <number>- All checks passing?
- Checks failing? Note which ones — affects review
Got: Clear understanding of what PR does, why exists, how big, whether CI green. This context shapes review approach.
If fail: PR description empty or unclear? Note this as first piece of feedback. PR without context = review antipattern. gh commands fail? Verify you authenticated (gh auth status) and have access to repository.
Step 2: Analyze the Diff
Read actual code changes systematically.
- Fetch full diff:
gh pr diff <number> - For small/medium PRs, read entire diff sequentially
- For large PRs, review by commit:
gh pr diff <number> --patch # full patch format - For each changed file, evaluate:
- Correctness: Does code do what PR says it does?
- Edge cases: Boundary conditions handled?
- Error handling: Errors caught and handled appropriately?
- Security: Any injection, auth, or data exposure risks?
- Performance: Any obvious O(n^2) loops, missing indexes, or memory issues?
- Naming: New variables/functions/classes named clearly?
- Tests: New behaviors covered by tests?
- Take notes as you read, classifying each observation by severity
Got: Set of observations covering correctness, security, performance, quality for every meaningful change in diff. Each observation has severity level.
If fail: Diff too large to review effectively? Flag it: "This PR changes {N} files and {M} lines. I recommend splitting it into smaller PRs for more effective review." Still review highest-risk files.
Step 3: Classify Feedback
Organize observations into severity levels.
- Classify each observation:
Feedback Severity Levels:
+-----------+------+----------------------------------------------------+
| Level | Icon | Description |
+-----------+------+----------------------------------------------------+
| Blocking | [B] | Must fix before merge. Bugs, security issues, |
| | | data loss risks, broken functionality. |
| Suggest | [S] | Should fix, but won't block merge. Better |
| | | approaches, missing edge cases, style issues that |
| | | affect maintainability. |
| Nit | [N] | Optional improvement. Style preferences, minor |
| | | naming suggestions, formatting. |
| Praise | [P] | Good work worth calling out. Clever solutions, |
| | | thorough testing, clean abstractions. |
+-----------+------+----------------------------------------------------+
- For each Blocking item, explain:
- What's wrong (specific issue)
- Why matters (the impact)
- How to fix (concrete suggestion)
- For each Suggest item, explain alternative and why it's better
- Keep Nits brief — one sentence is enough
- Include at least one Praise if anything positive stands out
Got: Sorted list of feedback items with clear severity levels. Blocking items have fix suggestions. Ratio should generally be: few Blocking, some Suggest, minimal Nit, at least one Praise.
If fail: Everything seems blocking? PR may need to be reworked rather than patched. Consider requesting changes at PR level rather than line-by-line comments. Nothing seems wrong? Say so — "LGTM" is valid feedback when code good.
Step 4: Write Review Comments
Compose review with structured, actionable feedback.
- Write review summary (top-level comment):
- One sentence: what PR does (confirm understanding)
- Overall assessment: approve, request changes, or comment
- Key items: list Blocking issues (if any) and top Suggest items
- Praise: call out good work
- Write inline comments for specific code locations:
# Post inline comments via gh API gh api repos/{owner}/{repo}/pulls/{number}/comments \ -f body="[B] This SQL query is vulnerable to injection. Use parameterized queries instead.\n\n\`\`\`suggestion\ndb.query('SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = $1', [userId])\n\`\`\`" \ -f commit_id="<sha>" \ -f path="src/users.js" \ -F line=42 \ -f side="RIGHT" - Format feedback consistently:
- Start each comment with severity tag:
[B],[S],[N], or[P] - Use GitHub suggestion blocks for concrete fixes
- Link to documentation for style/pattern suggestions
- Start each comment with severity tag:
- Submit review:
# Approve gh pr review <number> --approve --body "Review summary here" # Request changes (when blocking issues exist) gh pr review <number> --request-changes --body "Review summary here" # Comment only (when unsure or providing FYI feedback) gh pr review <number> --comment --body "Review summary here"
Got: Submitted review with clear, actionable feedback. Author knows exactly what to fix (Blocking), what to consider (Suggest), what went well (Praise).
If fail: gh pr review fails? Check permissions. You need write access to repo or to be requested reviewer. Inline comments fail? Fall back to putting all feedback in review body with file:line references.
Step 5: Follow Up
Track review resolution.
- After author responds or pushes updates:
gh pr view <number> --json reviewDecision,reviews - Re-review only changes that address your feedback:
gh pr diff <number> # check new commits - Verify Blocking items resolved before approving
- Resolve comment threads as issues are addressed
- Approve when all Blocking items fixed:
gh pr review <number> --approve --body "All blocking issues resolved. LGTM."
Got: Blocking issues verified as fixed. Review conversation resolved. PR approved or further changes requested with specific remaining items.
If fail: Author disagrees with feedback? Discuss in PR thread. Focus on impact (why matters) rather than authority. Disagreement persists on non-blocking items? Yield gracefully — author owns code.
Checks
- PR context understood (purpose, size, CI status)
- All changed files reviewed (or highest-risk files for XL PRs)
- Feedback classified by severity (Blocking/Suggest/Nit/Praise)
- Blocking items have specific fix suggestions
- At least one Praise included for positive aspects
- Review decision matches feedback (approve only if no Blocking items)
- Inline comments reference specific lines with severity tags
- CI/CD checks verified (green before approval)
- Follow-up completed after author revisions
Pitfalls
- Rubber-stamp: Approve without actually reading diff. Every approval = assertion of quality
- Nit avalanche: Drown author in style preferences. Save nits for mentoring situations; skip them in time-sensitive reviews
- Miss the forest: Review line-by-line without understand overall design. Read PR description and commit history first
- Block on style: Formatting and naming almost never blocking. Reserve Blocking for bugs, security, data integrity
- No praise: Only pointing out problems is demoralizing. Good code deserves recognition
- Review scope creep: Comment on code not changed in PR. Pre-existing issues bother you? File separate issue
See Also
review-software-architecture— System-level architecture review (complementary to PR-level review)security-audit-codebase— Deep security analysis for PRs with security-sensitive changescreate-pull-request— Other side of process: creating PRs easy to reviewcommit-changes— Clean commit history makes PR review significantly easier
GitHub Repository
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