Suppose we have an application that's stable.

Tomorrow, someone reports a big ol' bug that we decide to hotfix right away. So we create a branch for that hotfix off of "master", we name it "2011_Hotfix", and we push it up so that all of the developers can collaborate on fixing it.

We fix the bug, and merge "2011_Hotfix" into "master" as well as into the current development branch. And push "master."

What do we do with "2011_Hotfix" now? Should it just sit out there as a branch forever until the end of time or should we now delete it, since it has served its purpose? It seems unclean to just leave branches lying around everywhere, as the list of branches will likely become very long, most of which aren't even necessary anymore.

In the event that it should be deleted, what will happen to its history? Will that be maintained, even though the actual branch is no longer available? Also, how would I remove a remote branch?

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It often helps to think of branches as ideas. A fairly good rule of thumb is that if you're done working on the ideas that the branch represents - including done testing and incorporating those changes (merging them into master) - you're done with the branch itself. – Jefromi Mar 17 '11 at 4:30
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You can safely remove a branch with git branch -d yourbranch. If it contains unmerged changes (ie, you would lose commits by deleting the branch), git will tell you and won't delete it.

So, deleting a merged branch is cheap and won't make you lose any history.

To delete a remote branch, use git push origin :mybranch, assuming your remote name is origin and the remote branch you want do delete is named mybranch.

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"deleting a merged branch is cheap" but so is keeping it around. There is no significant performance hit in terms of the time or space git uses, if you keep it around. That said, I would delete the branch because all the commits are already there in the history of master, so it does make things much cleaner. – MatrixFrog Mar 17 '11 at 3:37
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What you need to do is tag anything that you release. Keep branches around for when you are actively developing.

Delete old branches with

git branch -d branch_name

Delete them from the server with

git push origin --delete branch_name

or the old syntax

git push origin :branch_name

which reads as "push nothing into branch_name at origin".

That said, as long as the DAG (directed acyclic graph) can point to it, the commits will be there in history.

Google "git-flow" and that may give some more insight on release management, branching and tagging.

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If it's been successfully merged back and maybe even tagged then I would say it has no use anymore. So you can safely do git branch -d branchname.

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