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Simple Git Workflow guide
Mithi Sevilla edited this page Oct 3, 2020
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- Fork the
mithi/mithi-repository
repository to your own account using the fork button on the top-right of the GitHub page. - Clone your repository ie:
git clone git@github.com:username/mithi-repository.git
git clone https://github.com/username/mithi-repository.git
- Inside the directory, add upstream, ie:
git remote add upstream git@github.com:mithi/mithi-repository.git
git remote add upstream https://github.com/mithi/mithi-repository.git
git checkout master
- Create a branch:
git branch my-branch-name
- Check out the branch:
git checkout my-branch-name
- Do your work and commit it to the branch
- Make smaller commits rather than larger and don't commit in one commit things that are not logically connected
- Squash commits it the commits are too small to prevent polluting the commit history
- You can push your work to GitHub as often as you like:
git push origin my-branch-name
- Make sure that you committed all the work to your
my-branch-name
branch - Update your branch from upstream one last time
- Push all the patches to GitHub:
git push origin my-branch-name
- Create a pull request against
mithi/mithi-repository
using the web interface in your account - If you have forgotten to get all the latest changes from upstream before pushing to your remote branch then you would see a message on github in the pull request about 'This branch is out-of-date with the base branch'. To fix, follow instructions on rebasing your local branch (below.) Then you have to force push to your remote branch (Blog Link):
git push origin my-work --force
- Wait for the request to be reviewed
- If changes are requested, make the changes, commit them to your
my-branch-name
branch, and push the new commits to GitHub:git push origin my-work
- Allow changes by maintainers to your pull request how?
- Repeat until the request is merged (person merging should choose 'Rebase and Merge')
- Delete the branch when merged
git branch -D my-work
If somebody else's (or yours) changes were merged to the main repo and you want your local repo to reflect them, do:
- Fetch the changes from upstream:
git fetch
- Go to your local master branch:
git checkout master
- Rebase it:
git rebase upstream/master
- Push your local master to your GitHub:
git push origin master
Please avoid doing git pull
, having fetch & rebase workflow results in a more readable history.
You can and probably should update your current work branch too to avoid merge conflicts in your future pull request:
- Checkout the branch:
git checkout my-work
- Rebase against your master:
git rebase master
- Work as before
If you like this project, consider:
- Buying Mithi a coffee ☕ ☕ ☕
- Submitting a PR. What kind?
- Sharing this project to all your friends. Thanks! ❤️