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I've submitted a change to an Open Source project on Github, and received code review comments from one of the core team members.

I would like to update the code taking into account the review comments, and re-submit it. What is the best workflow for doing this? From my limited knowledge of git/github, I could do any of the following:

  1. Update the code as a new commit, and add both the initial and updated commit to my pull request.

  2. Somehow (??) rollback the old commit from my repository, and create a single new commit containing everything, then raise a pull request for that?

  3. git commit has an amend feature, but I've heard that you shouldn't use it after you've pushed the commit outside of your local repository? In this case I have made the change on my local PC and pushed to my github branch of the project. Would this be OK to use 'amend'?

  4. Something else?

It seems like option 2/3 would be nice, as the open source project would only have one commit in their history which would implement everything, but I'm not sure how to do this.

Note: I don't know if this affects the answer or not, but I didn't make the changes in a separate branch, I just did a commit on top of master

2 Answers 2

280

To update a pull request

To update a pull request (point #1), the only thing you need to do is checkout the same branch the pull request is from and push to it again:

cd /my/fork
git checkout master
...
git commit -va -m "Correcting for PR comments"
git push

Optional - Cleaning commit history

You may be asked to squash your commits together so that the repository history is clean, or yourself want to remove intermediary commits which distract from "the message" in your pull request (point #2). For example if your commit history looks like this:

$ git remote add parent [email protected]:other-user/project.git
$ git fetch parent
$ git log --oneline parent/master..master
e4e32b8 add test case as per PR comments
eccaa56 code standard fixes as per PR comments
fb30112 correct typos and fatal error
58ae094 fixing problem

It's a good idea to squash things together so they appear as a single commit:

$ git rebase -i parent/master 

This will prompt you to choose how to rewrite the history of your pull request, the following will be in your editor:

pick 58ae094 fixing actual problem
pick fb30112 correct typos
pick eccaa56 code standard fixes
pick e4e32b8 add test case as per PR comments

For any commit you want to be part of the previous commit - change pick to squash:

pick 58ae094 fixing actual problem
squash fb30112 correct typos
squash eccaa56 code standard fixes
squash e4e32b8 add test case as per PR comments

And close your editor. Git will then rewrite the history and prompt you to provide a commit message for the one combined commit. Amend accordingly and your commit history will now be concise:

$ git log --oneline parent/master..master
9de3202 fixing actual problem

Push that to your fork:

$ git push -f
Counting objects: 19, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (5/5), done.
Writing objects: 100% (11/11), 978 bytes, done.
Total 11 (delta 9), reused 7 (delta 6)
To [email protected]:me/my-fork.git
   f1238d0..9de3202  HEAD -> master

and your pull request will contain a single commit, incorporating all changes previously split into several commits.

Changing history on public repos is a bad thing

Rewriting history and using git push -f on a branch that, potentially, someone else has already cloned is a bad thing - it causes the repository's history and that of the checkout to diverge.

However, amending the history of your fork to correct the change you are proposing to be integrated into a repository - is a good thing. As such have no reservations squashing "noise" out of your pull requests.

A note on branches

In the above I show the pull request as having come from the master branch of your fork, there's nothing wrong with that necessarily but it does create certain limitations such as, if this is your standard technique, only being able to have one PR open per repository. It's a better idea though to create a branch for each individual change you wish to propose:

$ git branch feature/new-widgets
$ git checkout feature/new-widgets
...
Hack hack hack
...
$ git push
# Now create PR from feature/new-widgets
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  • 33
    +1 for mentioning how to clean up the commits rather than pushing additional fixup commits.
    – mgalgs
    Sep 14, 2013 at 3:50
  • 4
    I ran into some problems picking/squashing and this answer helped me out. Also noticed that Github removed the previous conversation after I did git push -f. There wasn't a lot of comments, but that's something I wasn't expecting.
    – Hitesh
    Dec 4, 2013 at 19:31
  • 6
    Just to be clear, when rebasing to have a clean history, you are indeed changing your public commits, you are just assuming that no-one cares because it is a fork.
    – brita_
    Feb 7, 2015 at 11:02
  • 2
    Follow-up: best practice when master changes during your PR? Jun 4, 2015 at 16:09
  • 4
    Consider that rewriting history on pull requests that were reviewed (or that in general have commenting about/referring code) could lead to confusion, since the history won't match anymore what comments were referring to. There is no easy solution: somebody will close the PR and refer it in a new one (to not rewrite history); my idea'd be to just backup the latest commit SHA that is being reset/rewritten and refer it in a comment on the PR, after the forced-push has been performed. IF prune doesn't remove that detached commit then its history will still be matching PR's comments. Jul 24, 2018 at 9:25
245

Just add a new commit to the branch used in the pull request and push the branch to GitHub. The pull request will automatically be updated with the additional commit.

#2 and #3 are unnecessary. If people want to see only where your branch was merged in (and not the additional commits), they can use git log --first-parent to only view the merge commit in the log.

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  • 7
    master is a branch too, so technically it does not matter :)
    – poke
    Oct 30, 2011 at 22:16
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    @OrionEdwards - as poke mentioned, master is a branch, thus, updating it will cause any pull requests based on it to be updated as well. (This is a good reason to use a separate branch for anything you plan to submit a pull request for.)
    – Amber
    Oct 30, 2011 at 22:34
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    Since the code is still in review it's usually better to fix the commit(s) rather than introducing additional fixup commits that just clutter the history...
    – mgalgs
    Sep 14, 2013 at 3:49
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    @mgalgs That's a matter of preference.
    – Amber
    Sep 17, 2013 at 15:00
  • 5
    I don't like this answer for reasons explained in the blog post I just wrote; I believe the other answer is much better. Mar 24, 2015 at 14:12

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