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closes #238 Co-authored-by: pat-s <patrick.schratz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Patrick Schratz <pat-s@noreply.codeberg.org> Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/Codeberg/Documentation/pulls/377 Co-authored-by: crapStone <crapstone01@gmail.com> Co-committed-by: crapStone <crapstone01@gmail.com>
84 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
84 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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eleventyNavigation:
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key: PullRequestsGitFlow
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title: Pull requests and Git flow
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parent: Collaborating
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order: 20
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---
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## Benefits of a pull-request based workflow
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> **_TLDR:_** _Keep an eye on your repository and organization permissions. Don't take sweets from strangers. Use pull requests. Easy to review, easy to manage, and only the project maintainers/owners have permission to merge them._
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Although it is perfectly possible to use a Git project on Codeberg just as single shared central repository for individuals and teams, a collaborative workflow based on pull requests provides many benefits:
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- The "hot" project repository requires only very few maintainers with full rights to sign off pull requests. Contributors can easily work on forked repositories.
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- Each pull request collects the full edit history for a fix or feature branch. Contributors can squash this, or keep it, just as they prefer.
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### Cheat sheet
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Let's say, you would like to contribute to our "examples" project [knut/examples](https://codeberg.org/knut/examples).
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First, fork the project you would like to work on, by clicking the `Fork` button in the top-right corner of the project page:
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Then, clone it onto your local machine. We assume that [you have set up your SSH keys](/security/ssh-key). This has to be done only once:
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```shell
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git clone git@codeberg.org:<YOURCODEBERGUSERNAME>/examples.git
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```
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Now, let's create a feature branch, do some changes, commit, push, edit, commit, push, ..., edit, commit, push:
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```shell
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git checkout -b my_cool_feature_branch
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# do some changes
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git commit -m "first feature"
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git push # here you get asked to set your upstream URL, just confirm
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# do more work, edit...
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git add new_file.png
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git commit -m "second feature introducing a new file"
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git push
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# ...
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git commit -m "more work, tidy-up"
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git push
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```
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Now you can create a pull request by selecting your feature branch, and clicking on the pull request button:
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### Keep it up-to-date: rebase pull requests to upstream
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Sometimes the upstream project repository is evolving while we are working on a feature branch, and we need to rebase and resolve merge conflicts for upstream changes into our feature branch. This is not hard:
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In order to track the `upstream` repository, we'll add a second remote that is pointing to the original project. This has to be done only once:
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```shell
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git remote add upstream git@codeberg.org:knut/examples.git
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```
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You can also use the SSH variant here for public projects, if you want to be
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able to pull without specifying your credentials.
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Now, let's pull from `upstream`, and rebase our local branch against the latest `HEAD` of the upstream project repository (e.g. the `main` branch):
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```shell
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git pull --rebase upstream main
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git pull
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```
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That's it. You can now push your changes, and create the pull request as usual by clicking on the "New Pull Request" button.
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## A friendly note on owner rights, and force push permissions
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Please keep in mind that project owners can do _everything_, including editing and rewriting the history using `force-push`. In some cases, this is a useful feature
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(for example to undo accidental commits or clean up PRs),
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but in most cases a transparent history based on a pull-request based workflow is surely preferable,
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especially for the default branches of your project where other people rely on intact history.
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**Warning** If you accidentally leaked sensitive data, say, leaked credentials,
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keep in mind that commits stay directly accessible, e.g. from the user
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activity tab or a Pull Request feed, for a while.
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Please contact us if you really need to remove such data from the public.
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