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Re: GIT workflow
From: |
Mikko Rantalainen |
Subject: |
Re: GIT workflow |
Date: |
Thu, 14 Nov 2013 15:20:10 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/24.1.0 |
Vladimir 'φ-coder/phcoder' Serbinenko, 2013-11-10 19:01 (Europe/Helsinki):
Hello, all. We've switched to git some time ago, now we should have some
kind of workflow documents. In particular I think of following points:
- Developpers with commit access can create branches as they see fit as
long as it's prefixed by their name and they don't do sth nasty like
storing binary or unrelated files.
- When committing bigger work should we merge or squash? I think that
squash should be possible if developper desires. Is there any reason to
use merges?
Squashed merge is identical to rebase && merge --no-ff except for the
detail that squashing loses any meaningful history for the patch series.
I'd seriously suggest rebase followed by merge --no-ff over squashed
merges. The only exception is the case where commits in the original
work are not logical patches but instead random snapshots of the
directory tree during development of the patch. In that case, squashing
the patch series loses no valuable information.
The reason to keep patch series: git bisect
- Which commits should we sign? All? Some? Official releases?
Depends on what you mean by "sign". If you mean
Signed-off-by: A U Thor <address@hidden>
that's the "Developer Certificate Of Origin":
http://elinux.org/Developer_Certificate_Of_Origin
Other projects (e.g Grub) can decide their own policy for such metadata.
Additional info is available at
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1962094/what-is-the-sign-off-feature-in-git-for
If you mean digitally signed, the correct method is to use signed tags
for all the releases meant for non-developers. See "git help tag" and
look for "--sign".
--
Mikko
- GIT workflow, Vladimir 'φ-coder/phcoder' Serbinenko, 2013/11/10
- Re: GIT workflow,
Mikko Rantalainen <=