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1gitworkflows(7)
2===============
3
4NAME
5----
2de9b711 6gitworkflows - An overview of recommended workflows with Git
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7
8SYNOPSIS
9--------
7791a1d9 10[verse]
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11git *
12
13
14DESCRIPTION
15-----------
16
17This document attempts to write down and motivate some of the workflow
18elements used for `git.git` itself. Many ideas apply in general,
19though the full workflow is rarely required for smaller projects with
20fewer people involved.
21
22We formulate a set of 'rules' for quick reference, while the prose
23tries to motivate each of them. Do not always take them literally;
24you should value good reasons for your actions higher than manpages
25such as this one.
26
27
28SEPARATE CHANGES
29----------------
30
31As a general rule, you should try to split your changes into small
32logical steps, and commit each of them. They should be consistent,
33working independently of any later commits, pass the test suite, etc.
34This makes the review process much easier, and the history much more
35useful for later inspection and analysis, for example with
36linkgit:git-blame[1] and linkgit:git-bisect[1].
37
38To achieve this, try to split your work into small steps from the very
39beginning. It is always easier to squash a few commits together than
40to split one big commit into several. Don't be afraid of making too
41small or imperfect steps along the way. You can always go back later
6cf378f0 42and edit the commits with `git rebase --interactive` before you
db37745e 43publish them. You can use `git stash push --keep-index` to run the
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44test suite independent of other uncommitted changes; see the EXAMPLES
45section of linkgit:git-stash[1].
46
47
48MANAGING BRANCHES
49-----------------
50
51There are two main tools that can be used to include changes from one
52branch on another: linkgit:git-merge[1] and
53linkgit:git-cherry-pick[1].
54
55Merges have many advantages, so we try to solve as many problems as
56possible with merges alone. Cherry-picking is still occasionally
57useful; see "Merging upwards" below for an example.
58
59Most importantly, merging works at the branch level, while
60cherry-picking works at the commit level. This means that a merge can
61carry over the changes from 1, 10, or 1000 commits with equal ease,
62which in turn means the workflow scales much better to a large number
63of contributors (and contributions). Merges are also easier to
64understand because a merge commit is a "promise" that all changes from
65all its parents are now included.
66
67There is a tradeoff of course: merges require a more careful branch
68management. The following subsections discuss the important points.
69
70
71Graduation
72~~~~~~~~~~
73
74As a given feature goes from experimental to stable, it also
75"graduates" between the corresponding branches of the software.
76`git.git` uses the following 'integration branches':
77
78* 'maint' tracks the commits that should go into the next "maintenance
79 release", i.e., update of the last released stable version;
80
81* 'master' tracks the commits that should go into the next release;
82
83* 'next' is intended as a testing branch for topics being tested for
84 stability for master.
85
86There is a fourth official branch that is used slightly differently:
87
88* 'pu' (proposed updates) is an integration branch for things that are
89 not quite ready for inclusion yet (see "Integration Branches"
90 below).
91
92Each of the four branches is usually a direct descendant of the one
93above it.
94
95Conceptually, the feature enters at an unstable branch (usually 'next'
96or 'pu'), and "graduates" to 'master' for the next release once it is
97considered stable enough.
98
99
100Merging upwards
101~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
102
103The "downwards graduation" discussed above cannot be done by actually
104merging downwards, however, since that would merge 'all' changes on
105the unstable branch into the stable one. Hence the following:
106
107.Merge upwards
108[caption="Rule: "]
109=====================================
58ebd936 110Always commit your fixes to the oldest supported branch that requires
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111them. Then (periodically) merge the integration branches upwards into each
112other.
113=====================================
114
115This gives a very controlled flow of fixes. If you notice that you
116have applied a fix to e.g. 'master' that is also required in 'maint',
117you will need to cherry-pick it (using linkgit:git-cherry-pick[1])
118downwards. This will happen a few times and is nothing to worry about
119unless you do it very frequently.
120
121
122Topic branches
123~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
124
125Any nontrivial feature will require several patches to implement, and
126may get extra bugfixes or improvements during its lifetime.
127
128Committing everything directly on the integration branches leads to many
129problems: Bad commits cannot be undone, so they must be reverted one
130by one, which creates confusing histories and further error potential
131when you forget to revert part of a group of changes. Working in
132parallel mixes up the changes, creating further confusion.
133
134Use of "topic branches" solves these problems. The name is pretty
135self explanatory, with a caveat that comes from the "merge upwards"
136rule above:
137
138.Topic branches
139[caption="Rule: "]
140=====================================
141Make a side branch for every topic (feature, bugfix, ...). Fork it off
142at the oldest integration branch that you will eventually want to merge it
143into.
144=====================================
145
146Many things can then be done very naturally:
147
148* To get the feature/bugfix into an integration branch, simply merge
149 it. If the topic has evolved further in the meantime, merge again.
150 (Note that you do not necessarily have to merge it to the oldest
151 integration branch first. For example, you can first merge a bugfix
152 to 'next', give it some testing time, and merge to 'maint' when you
153 know it is stable.)
154
155* If you find you need new features from the branch 'other' to continue
156 working on your topic, merge 'other' to 'topic'. (However, do not
157 do this "just habitually", see below.)
158
159* If you find you forked off the wrong branch and want to move it
160 "back in time", use linkgit:git-rebase[1].
161
162Note that the last point clashes with the other two: a topic that has
163been merged elsewhere should not be rebased. See the section on
164RECOVERING FROM UPSTREAM REBASE in linkgit:git-rebase[1].
165
166We should point out that "habitually" (regularly for no real reason)
167merging an integration branch into your topics -- and by extension,
168merging anything upstream into anything downstream on a regular basis
169-- is frowned upon:
170
171.Merge to downstream only at well-defined points
172[caption="Rule: "]
173=====================================
174Do not merge to downstream except with a good reason: upstream API
175changes affect your branch; your branch no longer merges to upstream
176cleanly; etc.
177=====================================
178
179Otherwise, the topic that was merged to suddenly contains more than a
180single (well-separated) change. The many resulting small merges will
181greatly clutter up history. Anyone who later investigates the history
182of a file will have to find out whether that merge affected the topic
183in development. An upstream might even inadvertently be merged into a
184"more stable" branch. And so on.
185
186
187Throw-away integration
188~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
189
190If you followed the last paragraph, you will now have many small topic
191branches, and occasionally wonder how they interact. Perhaps the
192result of merging them does not even work? But on the other hand, we
193want to avoid merging them anywhere "stable" because such merges
194cannot easily be undone.
195
196The solution, of course, is to make a merge that we can undo: merge
197into a throw-away branch.
198
199.Throw-away integration branches
200[caption="Rule: "]
201=====================================
202To test the interaction of several topics, merge them into a
203throw-away branch. You must never base any work on such a branch!
204=====================================
205
206If you make it (very) clear that this branch is going to be deleted
207right after the testing, you can even publish this branch, for example
208to give the testers a chance to work with it, or other developers a
209chance to see if their in-progress work will be compatible. `git.git`
210has such an official throw-away integration branch called 'pu'.
211
212
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213Branch management for a release
214~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
215
216Assuming you are using the merge approach discussed above, when you
217are releasing your project you will need to do some additional branch
218management work.
219
220A feature release is created from the 'master' branch, since 'master'
221tracks the commits that should go into the next feature release.
222
223The 'master' branch is supposed to be a superset of 'maint'. If this
224condition does not hold, then 'maint' contains some commits that
225are not included on 'master'. The fixes represented by those commits
226will therefore not be included in your feature release.
227
228To verify that 'master' is indeed a superset of 'maint', use git log:
229
230.Verify 'master' is a superset of 'maint'
231[caption="Recipe: "]
232=====================================
c8e1c3d3 233`git log master..maint`
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234=====================================
235
236This command should not list any commits. Otherwise, check out
237'master' and merge 'maint' into it.
238
239Now you can proceed with the creation of the feature release. Apply a
240tag to the tip of 'master' indicating the release version:
241
242.Release tagging
243[caption="Recipe: "]
244=====================================
48a8c26c 245`git tag -s -m "Git X.Y.Z" vX.Y.Z master`
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246=====================================
247
2de9b711 248You need to push the new tag to a public Git server (see
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249"DISTRIBUTED WORKFLOWS" below). This makes the tag available to
250others tracking your project. The push could also trigger a
251post-update hook to perform release-related items such as building
252release tarballs and preformatted documentation pages.
253
254Similarly, for a maintenance release, 'maint' is tracking the commits
255to be released. Therefore, in the steps above simply tag and push
256'maint' rather than 'master'.
257
258
259Maintenance branch management after a feature release
260~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
261
262After a feature release, you need to manage your maintenance branches.
263
264First, if you wish to continue to release maintenance fixes for the
265feature release made before the recent one, then you must create
266another branch to track commits for that previous release.
267
268To do this, the current maintenance branch is copied to another branch
269named with the previous release version number (e.g. maint-X.Y.(Z-1)
270where X.Y.Z is the current release).
271
272.Copy maint
273[caption="Recipe: "]
274=====================================
275`git branch maint-X.Y.(Z-1) maint`
276=====================================
277
278The 'maint' branch should now be fast-forwarded to the newly released
279code so that maintenance fixes can be tracked for the current release:
280
281.Update maint to new release
282[caption="Recipe: "]
283=====================================
284* `git checkout maint`
285* `git merge --ff-only master`
286=====================================
287
288If the merge fails because it is not a fast-forward, then it is
289possible some fixes on 'maint' were missed in the feature release.
290This will not happen if the content of the branches was verified as
291described in the previous section.
292
293
294Branch management for next and pu after a feature release
295~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
296
297After a feature release, the integration branch 'next' may optionally be
298rewound and rebuilt from the tip of 'master' using the surviving
299topics on 'next':
300
301.Rewind and rebuild next
302[caption="Recipe: "]
303=====================================
328c6cb8 304* `git switch -C next master`
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305* `git merge ai/topic_in_next1`
306* `git merge ai/topic_in_next2`
307* ...
308=====================================
309
310The advantage of doing this is that the history of 'next' will be
311clean. For example, some topics merged into 'next' may have initially
312looked promising, but were later found to be undesirable or premature.
313In such a case, the topic is reverted out of 'next' but the fact
314remains in the history that it was once merged and reverted. By
315recreating 'next', you give another incarnation of such topics a clean
316slate to retry, and a feature release is a good point in history to do
317so.
318
319If you do this, then you should make a public announcement indicating
320that 'next' was rewound and rebuilt.
321
322The same rewind and rebuild process may be followed for 'pu'. A public
323announcement is not necessary since 'pu' is a throw-away branch, as
324described above.
325
326
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327DISTRIBUTED WORKFLOWS
328---------------------
329
330After the last section, you should know how to manage topics. In
331general, you will not be the only person working on the project, so
332you will have to share your work.
333
334Roughly speaking, there are two important workflows: merge and patch.
335The important difference is that the merge workflow can propagate full
336history, including merges, while patches cannot. Both workflows can
337be used in parallel: in `git.git`, only subsystem maintainers use
338the merge workflow, while everyone else sends patches.
339
340Note that the maintainer(s) may impose restrictions, such as
341"Signed-off-by" requirements, that all commits/patches submitted for
342inclusion must adhere to. Consult your project's documentation for
343more information.
344
345
346Merge workflow
347~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
348
349The merge workflow works by copying branches between upstream and
350downstream. Upstream can merge contributions into the official
351history; downstream base their work on the official history.
352
353There are three main tools that can be used for this:
354
355* linkgit:git-push[1] copies your branches to a remote repository,
356 usually to one that can be read by all involved parties;
357
358* linkgit:git-fetch[1] that copies remote branches to your repository;
359 and
360
361* linkgit:git-pull[1] that does fetch and merge in one go.
362
0b444cdb 363Note the last point. Do 'not' use 'git pull' unless you actually want
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364to merge the remote branch.
365
366Getting changes out is easy:
367
368.Push/pull: Publishing branches/topics
369[caption="Recipe: "]
370=====================================
371`git push <remote> <branch>` and tell everyone where they can fetch
372from.
373=====================================
374
375You will still have to tell people by other means, such as mail. (Git
f3f0c518 376provides the linkgit:git-request-pull[1] to send preformatted pull
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377requests to upstream maintainers to simplify this task.)
378
379If you just want to get the newest copies of the integration branches,
380staying up to date is easy too:
381
382.Push/pull: Staying up to date
383[caption="Recipe: "]
384=====================================
385Use `git fetch <remote>` or `git remote update` to stay up to date.
386=====================================
387
388Then simply fork your topic branches from the stable remotes as
389explained earlier.
390
391If you are a maintainer and would like to merge other people's topic
392branches to the integration branches, they will typically send a
393request to do so by mail. Such a request looks like
394
395-------------------------------------
396Please pull from
397 <url> <branch>
398-------------------------------------
399
0b444cdb 400In that case, 'git pull' can do the fetch and merge in one go, as
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401follows.
402
403.Push/pull: Merging remote topics
404[caption="Recipe: "]
405=====================================
406`git pull <url> <branch>`
407=====================================
408
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409Occasionally, the maintainer may get merge conflicts when they try to
410pull changes from downstream. In this case, they can ask downstream to
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411do the merge and resolve the conflicts themselves (perhaps they will
412know better how to resolve them). It is one of the rare cases where
413downstream 'should' merge from upstream.
414
415
416Patch workflow
417~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
418
419If you are a contributor that sends changes upstream in the form of
420emails, you should use topic branches as usual (see above). Then use
421linkgit:git-format-patch[1] to generate the corresponding emails
422(highly recommended over manually formatting them because it makes the
423maintainer's life easier).
424
425.format-patch/am: Publishing branches/topics
426[caption="Recipe: "]
427=====================================
428* `git format-patch -M upstream..topic` to turn them into preformatted
429 patch files
430* `git send-email --to=<recipient> <patches>`
431=====================================
432
433See the linkgit:git-format-patch[1] and linkgit:git-send-email[1]
434manpages for further usage notes.
435
436If the maintainer tells you that your patch no longer applies to the
437current upstream, you will have to rebase your topic (you cannot use a
438merge because you cannot format-patch merges):
439
440.format-patch/am: Keeping topics up to date
441[caption="Recipe: "]
442=====================================
443`git pull --rebase <url> <branch>`
444=====================================
445
446You can then fix the conflicts during the rebase. Presumably you have
447not published your topic other than by mail, so rebasing it is not a
448problem.
449
450If you receive such a patch series (as maintainer, or perhaps as a
451reader of the mailing list it was sent to), save the mails to files,
0b444cdb 452create a new topic branch and use 'git am' to import the commits:
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453
454.format-patch/am: Importing patches
455[caption="Recipe: "]
456=====================================
457`git am < patch`
458=====================================
459
460One feature worth pointing out is the three-way merge, which can help
461if you get conflicts: `git am -3` will use index information contained
462in patches to figure out the merge base. See linkgit:git-am[1] for
463other options.
464
465
466SEE ALSO
467--------
468linkgit:gittutorial[7],
469linkgit:git-push[1],
470linkgit:git-pull[1],
471linkgit:git-merge[1],
472linkgit:git-rebase[1],
473linkgit:git-format-patch[1],
474linkgit:git-send-email[1],
475linkgit:git-am[1]
476
477GIT
478---
941b9c52 479Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite