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awesome-copilot/skills/copilot-pr-autopilot/references/api-quirks.md
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Gordon Lam d47a6c93b7 Add copilot-pr-autopilot skill (#1944)
* Add copilot-pr-autopilot skill

Skill that drives any GitHub pull request through repeated rounds of
Copilot Code Review until the agent has either resolved every thread
or explicitly escalated it to the human. Triggered via GraphQL (no
@copilot mention needed), triages every open thread with a fix /
decline / escalate rubric, replies and resolves each thread citing
the pushed SHA, then re-triggers until HEAD is reviewed with zero
threads awaiting the agent's reply.

Includes step scripts (01 request-review, 02 check-review-status,
03 list-open-threads, 08 reply-and-resolve, 10 cleanup-outdated),
shared library (_lib.ps1) with gh-CLI wrappers (Invoke-Gh,
Invoke-GhGraphQL, ConvertFrom-GhJson, Assert-GhReady), reply
templates, and reference docs for each step.

Repo-agnostic. Requires gh CLI on PATH and repo Triage/Write for
full autopilot; external PR authors get single-iteration mode with
manual re-trigger via the UI re-request button or a substantive
push.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Address review: split per-step references + add recap-gate circuit breaker

- Fix #1: give steps 1/7/10 their own reference files
  (01-request-review.md, 07-commit-push.md, 10-cleanup.md); trim the
  inline bodies out of orchestration.md so it stays cross-cutting only.
- Fix #3: add a recurring round-cap & recap gate to 09-convergence.md —
  default STOP every 10th round, recap all prior rounds, detect drift
  (out-of-scope / over-engineering / wrong-direction / belongs-in-separate-PR)
  with CONTINUE / REVERT-AND-SHIP / HAND-OFF verdicts. Agent reasoning,
  no new script.
- Surface the gate from SKILL.md and orchestration.md; regenerate
  docs/README.skills.md. Markdown-only change; scripts unchanged.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* docs(copilot-pr-autopilot): surface recap gate in decision pseudo-code; clarify Copilot+human convergence and round definition

- Inject the round-cap recap gate into the '## Decision: loop back or exit'
  pseudo-code else-branch so an agent following the code block (not just the
  prose) runs the STOP-every-10th-round check before looping.
- Broaden the 'never terminal' paragraph: non-convergence is driven by a
  Copilot finding OR a human review comment (this skill handles both); the
  loop ends only when there are no new comments from either source AND every
  open thread (Copilot or human) has an agent reply/escalation.
- Define a 'round' explicitly as one execution of step 1 (01-request-review),
  i.e. one Copilot-review trigger — the cap counts review rounds, not tool
  calls or fix edits.

Markdown-only; no script changes.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* copilot-pr-autopilot: make recap-gate round count deterministic

Add 09-review-round.ps1: counts Copilot Code Review submissions straight
from the PR's API history (full GraphQL pagination), so the recap-gate
trigger is a derived number, not a fallible agent mental tally. This
removes the exact failure mode the skill exists to survive — a count
drifting across a long run (the real 156-round case).

The script reports Round + RecapDue (Round % RecapInterval == 0) only;
it never stops the loop or picks the verdict. CONTINUE / REVERT-AND-SHIP
/ HAND-OFF stays agent reasoning. 09-convergence.md updated to reference
the deterministic count while preserving 'no script stops the loop' and
'non-convergence = Copilot finding OR human comment'.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Regenerate docs/README.skills.md for copilot-pr-autopilot (add 09-review-round.ps1)

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-07-01 11:09:58 +10:00

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# GitHub API Quirks (Verified)
API behaviors that matter for the Copilot review loop. All verified
against the current API surface — read this before reaching for an
alternative API or modifying the bundled scripts.
## GraphQL trigger — `requestReviewsByLogin` is the supported path
```graphql
mutation($p: ID!) {
requestReviewsByLogin(input: {
pullRequestId: $p,
botLogins: ["copilot-pull-request-reviewer"]
}) {
pullRequest { number }
}
}
```
Verified empirically against personal repos without Copilot Pro AND
org repos with Copilot Enterprise. Works for both initial-add and
re-request (no special re-request mutation).
Three GraphQL traps:
1. Mutation is **`requestReviewsByLogin`**, NOT `requestReviews`.
`RequestReviewsInput` (used by `requestReviews`) does not expose a
`botLogins` field, so it can't request a bot reviewer at all —
`botLogins` is the central field on `requestReviewsByLogin`.
2. Field is **`botLogins`**, NOT `userLogins`. The latter returns
`Could not resolve user with login 'Copilot'`.
3. Slug is **`copilot-pull-request-reviewer`** (the App slug). The
display login `Copilot` returns `Could not resolve bot with slug
'Copilot'`.
Verify success via a new `copilot_work_started` event on the issue's
events feed — `GET /repos/{o}/{r}/issues/{n}/events` (see SKILL.md
Gotchas "HTTP 200 / exit 0 is NOT proof"). Empirically this event
type IS exposed on the `/events` endpoint (verified across 20+
trigger rounds on PR 236); it is not timeline-only.
`01-request-review.ps1` enforces this by comparing the event `id`
(monotonic) before and after the trigger.
### Other trigger paths — DO NOT USE
- **`requestReviews` with `botLogins`** → input type rejects the
field. Don't try variants.
- **REST `POST /pulls/<n>/requested_reviewers` with
`reviewers[]=Copilot`** → can return HTTP 201 while silently
dropping the bot. Not used by the script.
- **`gh pr edit --add-reviewer Copilot`** → returns `'Copilot' not
found` on current `gh`. Not used by the script.
## GraphQL `latestReviews` — stale cache, do NOT use
```graphql
# DO NOT — stale projection:
pullRequest(number:$pr){ latestReviews(first:50){ nodes{...} } }
# USE INSTEAD — always current:
pullRequest(number:$pr){ reviews(last:100){ nodes{...} } }
```
`latestReviews` is a "latest per user" projection with stale-cache
behavior: a fresh Copilot review can be absent for several minutes
after submission, while `reviews(last:100)` reflects it immediately.
Using `latestReviews` for in-flight or convergence checks causes the
script to operate on an obsolete commit OID — either falsely
declaring convergence or timing out for a review that already
exists.
`02-check-review-status.ps1` uses `reviews(last:100)` filtered
client-side to the Copilot reviewer login. It also emits a stderr
warning when the result is exactly 100 reviews, so the caller knows
the boundary was hit and the latest Copilot review COULD be older
than the window — practically only possible if 100+ non-Copilot
reviews landed after the last Copilot review, which doesn't happen
in normal use. If you ever see the warning and the loop misbehaves,
fetch the full review list manually:
```bash
gh pr view <n> --json reviews --jq '.reviews[] | select(.author.login | test("copilot-pull-request-reviewer"))'
```
### Tie-break for multiple Copilot reviews
When more than one Copilot review shares the same `submittedAt`
(rare server-side clock collision under burst re-triggers), the
script first prefers the review whose `commit.oid == HEAD`, then
falls back to a stable sort. The intent is "the review that
matches the current code is the one the agent should reply to" —
preventing a stale-OID review from winning the tie and falsely
flipping `ReviewAtHead` to false.
## Reply + resolve mutations — both work
```graphql
mutation($tid: ID!, $body: String!) {
addPullRequestReviewThreadReply(input: {
pullRequestReviewThreadId: $tid,
body: $body
}) { comment { id } }
}
mutation($tid: ID!) {
resolveReviewThread(input: { threadId: $tid }) {
thread { isResolved }
}
}
```
## `isOutdated` ≠ `isResolved` — current unresolved state is truth
A thread can be `isOutdated: true` (Copilot's comment points at lines
that have since changed) while still `isResolved: false`. These
threads:
- Still need reply + resolve in the per-round loop. A thread can
become outdated mid-round when your own fix shifts the cited
lines. Filtering on `!isOutdated` would silently drop those
threads, leaving the PR's open-conversations list non-empty even
after the underlying code is fixed.
- `03-list-open-threads.ps1` therefore lists every unresolved
thread with no `isOutdated` filter.
- `10-cleanup-outdated.ps1` is a safety net only — for the rare
case where a thread becomes outdated AFTER your last per-round
fetch.
## Review latency — don't poll faster than ~3 min
Copilot reviews typically post 36 minutes after the request,
occasionally up to ~10 minutes. There is no progress signal;
polling more often than every ~3 min wastes API budget without
making the review arrive sooner.
## `gh api graphql -F` coerces strings — use `-f` for `String!`
The `gh` CLI distinguishes its two flag forms:
- `-F key=value` — type inference. Values parsing as int, bool, or
null are sent as that JSON literal.
- `-f key=value` — always sends as raw string.
For any GraphQL variable declared `String!` (e.g. `owner`, `repo`,
`body`, `tid`, `after`), use **`-f`** at call sites. A reply body that
happens to be `"true"`, `"null"`, or all digits would otherwise be
coerced and the call fails with a type error. Keep `-F` only for
genuinely numeric or boolean variables (e.g. `pr: Int!`).
> Note: the shared `Invoke-Gh` wrapper may internally rewrite
> `-f field=<body>` into `-F field=@<tempfile>` when the body contains
> embedded `"` (Windows PowerShell 5.1 native-arg quoting bug — see
> below). Even via `@file`, `-F` still applies type inference to the
> file content (gh's documented behaviour) — this rewrite is safe
> only because the rewrite trigger ("body contains `"`") guarantees
> the content is a string that no JSON literal (`123`, `true`,
> `null`, etc.) would match. Treat this `-F ...=@file` usage as an
> internal transport detail of the wrapper, not as permission to
> use `-F ...=@file` for arbitrary strings at call sites.
```powershell
# Wrong — body could be coerced AND, under Windows PowerShell 5.1,
# any embedded `"` in $Body will be mis-split by the native-arg
# passer (gh sees a truncated body or a "received N args" error).
gh api graphql -f query=$q -F body=$Body
# Right — go through Invoke-Gh / Invoke-GhGraphQL. The shared helper
# auto-rewrites `-f field=<body>` and `-F field=<body>` pairs whose
# body contains `"` to `-F field=@<tempfile>` so the value is read
# from disk and never appears on the command line. This works
# identically on Windows PowerShell 5.1 and PowerShell 7+.
Invoke-GhGraphQL -GhArgs @('-f',"query=$q",'-f',"body=$Body") -Context 'reply body'
```
Calling `gh` directly (e.g. via `& gh ...` or raw `gh api graphql`)
bypasses the cross-version tempfile rewrite — if your value contains
`"` you'll re-introduce the PowerShell-5.1-only splitting bug. Always
funnel `gh` calls through `Invoke-Gh` / `Invoke-GhGraphQL`.
## Native `gh` exit codes bypass `$ErrorActionPreference`
`gh` is a native executable, not a PowerShell cmdlet, so a non-zero
exit does **not** throw even when `$ErrorActionPreference = 'Stop'`.
Without an explicit check the script will print misleading success
messages after a failed API call, and the loop will falsely declare
convergence on auth issues, rate limits, or transient 5xx.
Additional trap: `gh api graphql` can exit 0 for an HTTP 200 whose
JSON body carries a top-level `errors` array. Treat that as a failed
call too.
The shared helpers in [scripts/_lib.ps1](../scripts/_lib.ps1)
(`Invoke-Gh` and `Invoke-GhGraphQL`) run `gh` via `& gh @args`
with stderr redirected to a temp file (`2>$errFile`), then read
`$LASTEXITCODE` and return `{ExitCode, Stdout, Stderr}`.
`Invoke-GhGraphQL` additionally parses the GraphQL `errors` array
on the response body and throws on either failure mode. All
bundled scripts dot-source `_lib.ps1` and use these wrappers — do
the same in any new script.
## `git stash push` argument order
```bash
git stash push -m "local-build" -- src/path/a src/path/b # correct
git stash push -- src/path/a src/path/b -m "local-build" # SILENTLY drops -m
```
The `-m` MUST come before the `--` path separator.