45 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
45 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: How I Git
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date: 2024-03-29
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permalink: archive/2024/03/29/how-i-git
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tags:
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- software-development
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- git
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cta: ~
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snippet: |
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Here's more about how I use Git.
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---
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After [Wednesday's email][wednesday], someone said, "It sounds like you and I use git very differently." So, I wanted to explain what my typical Git workflow is.
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I used to use Git Flow, but now, I almost never create a new branch when starting a new task.
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I keep my workflow as simple as possible by using trunk-based development and working on a single branch as much as I can.
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Before I start, I make sure any uncommitted changes are committed or reset and that the automated tests, static analysis, coding standards checks, etc., are passing so I know I'm starting from a good place.
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Then, I start working on the task.
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I like to work in small steps and make small, regular commits, but I don't always push each individual commit to the remote repository.
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Sometimes, I'll make a number of "work in progress" commits and squash them into one before pushing them.
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I want the time between making and pushing the commit to be as short as possible, and I want each commit to be deployable.
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If I'm doing test-driven development, I'll typically commit each time a test is passing - whether it's adding a new test or extending one.
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I run any tests often whilst writing code to ensure they pass, either using a watch command or a keybinding in Neovim.
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I won't push a commit that would cause the code to not work, a test to fail, or block any other (potentially more urgent) changes from being pushed to production.
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If I push a commit that breaks the CI pipeline, I'll fix it quickly, which is usually possible as the changes are small.
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If not, I'll revert the commit to get back to a deployable state as quickly as possible.
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If I'm going to add a feature flag, I'll usually know that in advance and avoid rushing to add one later if a more urgent task comes in.
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By keeping each commit in a working and deployable state, a change can be feature flagged and deployed but not activated until the feature flag is enabled.
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[wednesday]: {{site.url}}/archive/2024/03/27/hotfixing-without-branches
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