A successful Git branching model

http://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/


In this post I present the development model that I’ve introduced for all of myprojects (both at work and private) about a year ago, and which has turned outto be very successful. I’ve been meaning to write about it for a while now, butI’ve never really found the time to do so thoroughly, until now. I won’t talkabout any of the projects’ details, merely about the branching strategy andrelease management.

It focuses around Git as the tool for the versioning ofall of our source code.

Why git?

For a thorough discussion on the pros and cons of Git compared to centralizedsource code control systems, see theweb. There are plenty of flamewars going on there. As a developer, I prefer Git above all other tools aroundtoday. Git really changed the way developers think of merging and branching.From the classic CVS/Subversion world I came from, merging/branching hasalways been considered a bit scary (“beware of merge conflicts, they biteyou!”) and something you only do every once in a while.

But with Git, these actions are extremely cheap and simple, and they areconsidered one of the core parts of your daily workflow, really. For example,in CVS/Subversion books, branching and merging isfirst discussed in the later chapters (for advanced users), while ineveryGitbook, it’s already covered in chapter 3(basics).

As a consequence of its simplicity and repetitive nature, branching and mergingare no longer something to be afraid of. Version control tools are supposed toassist in branching/merging more than anything else.

Enough about the tools, let’s head onto the development model. The model thatI’m going to present here is essentially no more than a set of procedures thatevery team member has to follow in order to come to a managed softwaredevelopment process.

Decentralized but centralized

The repository setup that we use and that works well with this branching model,is that with a central “truth” repo. Note that this repo is only consideredto be the central one (since Git is a DVCS, there is no such thing as a centralrepo at a technical level). We will refer to this repo as origin, since thisname is familiar to all Git users.

Each developer pulls and pushes to origin. But besides the centralizedpush-pull relationships, each developer may also pull changes from other peersto form sub teams. For example, this might be useful to work together with twoor more developers on a big new feature, before pushing the work in progress toorigin prematurely. In the figure above, there are subteams of Alice and Bob,Alice and David, and Clair and David.

Technically, this means nothing more than that Alice has defined a Git remote,named bob, pointing to Bob’s repository, and vice versa.

The main branches

At the core, the development model is greatly inspired by existing models outthere. The central repo holds two main branches with an infinite lifetime:

  • master
  • develop

The master branch at origin should be familiar to every Git user. Parallelto the master branch, another branch exists called develop.

We consider origin/master to be the main branch where the source code ofHEAD always reflects a production-ready state.

We consider origin/develop to be the main branch where the source code ofHEAD always reflects a state with the latest delivered development changesfor the next release. Some would call this the “integration branch”. This iswhere any automatic nightly builds are built from.

When the source code in the develop branch reaches a stable point and isready to be released, all of the changes should be merged back into mastersomehow and then tagged with a release number. How this is done in detail willbe discussed further on.

Therefore, each time when changes are merged back into master, this is a newproduction release by definition. We tend to be very strict at this, so thattheoretically, we could use a Git hook script to automatically build androll-out our software to our production servers everytime there was a commit onmaster.

Supporting branches

Next to the main branches master and develop, our development model uses avariety of supporting branches to aid parallel development between teammembers, ease tracking of features, prepare for production releases and toassist in quickly fixing live production problems. Unlike the main branches,these branches always have a limited life time, since they will be removedeventually.

The different types of branches we may use are:

  • Feature branches
  • Release branches
  • Hotfix branches

Each of these branches have a specific purpose and are bound to strict rules asto which branches may be their originating branch and which branches must betheir merge targets. We will walk through them in a minute.

By no means are these branches “special” from a technical perspective. Thebranch types are categorized by how we use them. They are of course plain oldGit branches.

Feature branches

May branch off from: develop
Must merge back into: develop
Branch naming convention: anything except master, develop, release-*,or hotfix-*

Feature branches (or sometimes called topic branches) are used to develop newfeatures for the upcoming or a distant future release. When startingdevelopment of a feature, the target release in which this feature will beincorporated may well be unknown at that point. The essence of a feature branchis that it exists as long as the feature is in development, but will eventuallybe merged back into develop (to definitely add the new feature to theupcoming release) or discarded (in case of a disappointing experiment).

Feature branches typically exist in developer repos only, not in origin.

Creating a feature branch

When starting work on a new feature, branch off from the develop branch.

$ git checkout -b myfeature develop
Switched to a new branch "myfeature"
Incorporating a finished feature on develop

Finished features may be merged into the develop branch definitely add themto the upcoming release:

$ git checkout develop
Switched to branch 'develop'
$ git merge --no-ff myfeature
Updating ea1b82a..05e9557
(Summary of changes)
$ git branch -d myfeature
Deleted branch myfeature (was 05e9557).
$ git push origin develop

The --no-ff flag causes the merge to always create a new commit object, evenif the merge could be performed with a fast-forward. This avoids losinginformation about the historical existence of a feature branch and groupstogether all commits that together added the feature. Compare:

In the latter case, it is impossible to see from the Git history which of thecommit objects together have implemented a feature—you would have to manuallyread all the log messages. Reverting a whole feature (i.e. a group of commits),is a true headache in the latter situation, whereas it is easily done if the--no-ff flag was used.

Yes, it will create a few more (empty) commit objects, but the gain is muchbigger that that cost.

Unfortunately, I have not found a way to make --no-ff the default behaviourof git merge yet, but it really should be.

Release branches

May branch off from: develop
Must merge back into: develop and master
Branch naming convention: release-*

Release branches support preparation of a new production release. They allowfor last-minute dotting of i’s and crossing t’s. Furthermore, they allow forminor bug fixes and preparing meta-data for a release (version number, builddates, etc.). By doing all of this work on a release branch, the developbranch is cleared to receive features for the next big release.

The key moment to branch off a new release branch from develop is whendevelop (almost) reflects the desired state of the new release. At least allfeatures that are targeted for the release-to-be-built must be merged in todevelop at this point in time. All features targeted at future releases maynot—they must wait until after the release branch is branched off.

It is exactly at the start of a release branch that the upcoming release getsassigned a version number—not any earlier. Up until that moment, the developbranch reflected changes for the “next release”, but it is unclear whether that“next release” will eventually become 0.3 or 1.0, until the release branch isstarted. That decision is made on the start of the release branch and iscarried out by the project’s rules on version number bumping.

Creating a release branch

Release branches are created from the develop branch. For example, sayversion 1.1.5 is the current production release and we have a big releasecoming up. The state of develop is ready for the “next release” and we havedecided that this will become version 1.2 (rather than 1.1.6 or 2.0). So webranch off and give the release branch a name reflecting the new versionnumber:

$ git checkout -b release-1.2 develop
Switched to a new branch "release-1.2"
$ ./bump-version.sh 1.2
Files modified successfully, version bumped to 1.2.
$ git commit -a -m "Bumped version number to 1.2"
[release-1.2 74d9424] Bumped version number to 1.2
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)

After creating a new branch and switching to it, we bump the version number.Here, bump-version.sh is a fictional shell script that changes some filesin the working copy to reflect the new version. (This can of course be a manualchange—the point being that some files change.) Then, the bumped versionnumber is committed.

This new branch may exist there for a while, until the release may be rolledout definitely. During that time, bug fixes may be applied in this branch(rather than on the develop branch). Adding large new features here isstrictly prohibited. They must be merged into develop, and therefore, waitfor the next big release.

Finishing a release branch

When the state of the release branch is ready to become a real release, someactions need to be carried out. First, the release branch is merged intomaster (since every commit on master is a new release by definition,remember). Next, that commit on master must be tagged for easy futurereference to this historical version. Finally, the changes made on the releasebranch need to be merged back into develop, so that future releases alsocontain these bug fixes.

The first two steps in Git:

$ git checkout master
Switched to branch 'master'
$ git merge --no-ff release-1.2
Merge made by recursive.
(Summary of changes)
$ git tag -a 1.2

The release is now done, and tagged for future reference.
Edit: You might as well want to use the -s or -u <key> flags to signyour tag cryptographically.

To keep the changes made in the release branch, we need to merge those backinto develop, though. In Git:

$ git checkout develop
Switched to branch 'develop'
$ git merge --no-ff release-1.2
Merge made by recursive.
(Summary of changes)

This step may well lead to a merge conflict (probably even, since we havechanged the version number). If so, fix it and commit.

Now we are really done and the release branch may be removed, since we don’tneed it anymore:

$ git branch -d release-1.2
Deleted branch release-1.2 (was ff452fe).

Hotfix branches

May branch off from: master
Must merge back into: develop and master
Branch naming convention: hotfix-*

Hotfix branches are very much like release branches in that they are also meantto prepare for a new production release, albeit unplanned. They arise from thenecessity to act immediately upon an undesired state of a live productionversion. When a critical bug in a production version must be resolvedimmediately, a hotfix branch may be branched off from the corresponding tag onthe master branch that marks the production version.

The essence is that work of team members (on the develop branch) cancontinue, while another person is preparing a quick production fix.

Creating the hotfix branch

Hotfix branches are created from the master branch. For example, sayversion 1.2 is the current production release running live and causing troublesdue to a severe bug. But changes on develop are yet unstable. We may thenbranch off a hotfix branch and start fixing the problem:

$ git checkout -b hotfix-1.2.1 master
Switched to a new branch "hotfix-1.2.1"
$ ./bump-version.sh 1.2.1
Files modified successfully, version bumped to 1.2.1.
$ git commit -a -m "Bumped version number to 1.2.1"
[hotfix-1.2.1 41e61bb] Bumped version number to 1.2.1
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)

Don’t forget to bump the version number after branching off!

Then, fix the bug and commit the fix in one or more separate commits.

$ git commit -m "Fixed severe production problem"
[hotfix-1.2.1 abbe5d6] Fixed severe production problem
5 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)

Finishing a hotfix branch

When finished, the bugfix needs to be merged back into master, but also needsto be merged back into develop, in order to safeguard that the bugfix isincluded in the next release as well. This is completely similar to how releasebranches are finished.

First, update master and tag the release.

$ git checkout master
Switched to branch 'master'
$ git merge --no-ff hotfix-1.2.1
Merge made by recursive.
(Summary of changes)
$ git tag -a 1.2.1

Edit: You might as well want to use the -s or -u <key> flags to signyour tag cryptographically.

Next, include the bugfix in develop, too:

$ git checkout develop
Switched to branch 'develop'
$ git merge --no-ff hotfix-1.2.1
Merge made by recursive.
(Summary of changes)

The one exception to the rule here is that, when a release branch currentlyexists, the hotfix changes need to be merged into that release branch, insteadof develop. Back-merging the bugfix into the release branch willeventually result in the bugfix being merged into develop too, when therelease branch is finished. (If work in develop immediately requires thisbugfix and cannot wait for the release branch to be finished, you may safelymerge the bugfix into develop now already as well.)

Finally, remove the temporary branch:

$ git branch -d hotfix-1.2.1
Deleted branch hotfix-1.2.1 (was abbe5d6).

Summary

While there is nothing really shocking new to this branching model, the “bigpicture” figure that this post began with has turned out to be tremendouslyuseful in our projects. It forms an elegant mental model that is easy tocomprehend and allows team members to develop a shared understanding of thebranching and releasing processes.

A high-quality PDF version of the figure is provided here. Go ahead and hang iton the wall for quick reference at any time.

Update: And for anyone who requested it: here’s thegitflow-model.src.keyof the main diagram image (Apple Keynote).


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