daily-email: add 2023-09-26
Which branch should be in which environment?
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title: >
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Which branch should be in which environment?
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pubDate: 2023-09-26
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permalink: >
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archive/2023/09/26/which-branch-should-be-in-which-environment
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tags:
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- software-development
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- git
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- trunk-based-development
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- feature-flags
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---
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A common question is which [Git] branch should be on which environment.
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Most projects I've worked on have two or more environments: production, staging (or test) and development.
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Earlier in my career, we used Git Flow heavily. A Git branching workflow based on having different branches - i.e. `develop`, `master` and any arbitrary short-lived feature, hotfix and release branches.
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These matched nicely with our three environments.
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Usually, the `develop` branch would be used in the development environment. The `master` branch would be on staging and a tagged release from `master` on production.
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## What about now?
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I prefer trunk-based development, where there is one long-lived branch to which everyone commits their changes.
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There's only one branch, so you can either follow continuous deployment and use the same branch for all environments - including production - or separate production using a dedicated branch or tag if you need more control.
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The mainline branch is used in all pre-production environments, such as staging and development.
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## What about differences between the environments?
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What if we need differences, such as a feature that must be enabled in a particular environment if the same code is on both?
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My go-to approach is feature flagging, and this approach is something I'll describe more in tomorrow's email.
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