When working with a SCM system, when should you branch?
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There are several uses for branching. One of the most common uses is for separating projects that once had a common code base. This is very useful to experiment with your code, without affecting the main trunk. In general, you would see two branch types:
You may be interested in checking out the following article, which explains the principles of branching, and when to use them: |
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In general term, the main purpose of branching (a VCS - Version Control System - feature) is to achieve code isolation. You have at least one branch, which can be enough for sequential development, and is used for many tasks being recording (committed) on that same unique branch. But that model shows quickly its limit: When you have a development effort (refactoring, evolution, bug-fixes, ...) and you realize you cannot safely make those changes in the same branch than your current development branch (because you would break API, or introduce code that would break everything), then you need a another branch. So that is your answer right there: A branch can be useful even if you are the only one working on the source code, of if you are many. (a branch called "VonC" means nothing to another developer: What if "VonC" leaves the project? What are you supposed to do with it? A branch is not a tag (SVN is a Revision System which tries to propose versioning features like branching and tagging through directories with cheap file copy: that does not mean a tag is a branch) To define a branch means also defining a merge workflow: you need to know where to merge your branch when you are done with it. It defines the term codeline (branch which records significant evolution steps of the code, either through tags at certain points, or through important merge back to the branch) It introduce the mainline model (a central codeline to record releases), and describes various purposes for branching:
Other interesting concepts around VCS: Basics concepts |
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All the 21th century SCMs are telling you: Branch for every task you've to work on, no matter whether this is a new feature, a bugfix, a test, whatever. This is called topic branch, and it changes the way you work with your SCM. You get:
Tools that can do it: Tools that CAN'T do it:
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It also depends on the SCM tool you are using. Modern SCMs (git, mercurial, etc.) make it increasingly easy to create and destroy branches whenever needed. This allows you to, for example, make one branch per bug that you are working on. Once you merge your results into the trunk, you discard the branch. Other SCMs, for example subversion and CVS, have a much "heavier" branching paradigm. That means, a branch is considered appropriate only for something bigger than a twenty-something-line patch. There, branches are classically used to track entire development tracks, like a previous or future product version. |
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It depends on what type of SCM you're using. In the newer distributed versions (like git and mercurial), you're creating branches all the time and remerging anyway. I'll often work on a separate branch for a while just because someone's broken the build on the mainline, or because the network's down, and then merge changes back in later when it's fixed, and it's so easy to do that it's not even annoying. The document (short and readable) that most helped me understand what was going in in the distributed systems is: http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/UnderstandingMercurial. In the older systems with a central repository, (like CVS, SVN and ClearCase), then it's a much more serious issue which needs to be decided at a team level, and the answer should be more like 'to maintain an old release whilst allowing development to continue on the main line', or 'as part of a major experiment'. The distributed model is much better, I think, and lacking only nice graphical tools to become the dominant paradigm. However it's not as widely understood, and the concepts are different, so it can be confusing for new users. |
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When you need to make significant and/or experimental changes to your codebase, particularly if you want to commit intermediate changes, without affecting trunk. |
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There are various purposes for branching:
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See Eric Sink's article on branching from his Source Control How-to. |
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I find the advice from Laura Wingerd & Christopher Seiwald at Perforce is really concise and useful:
See http://www.perforce.com/perforce/papers/bestpractices.html for a detailed explanation of each of them and other best practice. |
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When you need to make changes, based on your current branch, not destined for the next release from that branch (and not before). For example, we work on trunk usually. Around the time of release, someone's going to need to make a change that we don't want in the current release (it may be before release, at the moment it's usually after release). This is when we branch, to put the release on its own branch and continue development for the next release on trunk. |
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The need for branching may also arise: |
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Leaving all the technicalities aside..... Branch when you know its easier to merge back! Keeping in mind that merging will always be effected with how the work is carried out in a project. Once this achieved all the other tertiary issues will come in to play. |
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Whenever you feel like it. You probably won't very frequently if you work with a centralized SCM since the branches are part of the official repository, and that doesn't really invite much experimentation, not to mention that merges really hurt. OTOH, there's no technical difference between a branch and a checkout in distributed SCMs, and merges are a lot easier. You'll feel like branching a whole lot more often. |
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Visual Studio TFS branch guidance. Concepts apply to any source control system. |
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