5

I'm a little unclear on the forkflow that is to follow a fork on github.

What if I have several small independent fixes of various bugs in the original repository, of a medium-sized project, say, OpenGrok?

  • Do I create separate branches for each relatively small unrelated bugfix?

  • Do I create each branch from master, or could I branch one unrelated branch from the next?

  • Do I commit the fixes into master?

I mean, over time, I still want to preserve the history and all, but I'm just afraid that after a while there'll be a complete mess in regards to a lot of meaningless branches for relatively minor bug fixes.

I plan to contribute a number of non-related fixes for a given project, and trying to do some planning of the development approach.

1 Answer 1

4

There are several possible workflows when forking a project on github and you plan to submit changes upstream. This is one of the workflows I usually tend to follow (I'm going to call the repo from which I've forked as the remote source and my repo as origin):

  • Fork the main branch used by source, let's say master into origin/my-dev.
  • origin/mydev is where all my changes and main development go.
  • I regularly rebase remote/master onto origin/master (this step is redundant but sometimes it is easy for me to have everything in one remote).
  • Merge either source/master or the rebased origin/master into origin/my-dev whenever you want to pick up changes from upstream.
  • If I would like to submit a patch or a bugfix upstream, I would start a new feature branch that I could use for the pull-request. I'll call it origin/my-feature-1. I create this branch off an upto date origin/master (or source/master)
  • I cherry-pick the changes for this feature that I've made in origin/my-dev into origin/my-feature-1. Perform any testing after this step.
  • Submit a pull request from origin/my-feature-1
  • If your pull-request gets approved, the changes would be merged into source/master (and origin/master too).
  • Perform a merge from origin/master (or source/master) into origin/my-dev.
  • As far as the lifetime of the branches go, I usually tend to get rid of the short-lived topic or feature branches after I've merged it upstream (Branches are just lightweight pointers in git referencing certain commit).

Keep repeating this workflow over and over.

The key idea is that your pull-request should not pose any serious conflicts for the upstream maintainer or he/she is going to blindly reject the contribution.

An example I've illustrated, when you want to contribute D2 and D3 from origin/my-dev upstream. D2' and D3' are rebased versions of D2 and D3. Commits with U are upstream commits in source, D are your downstream commits in origin. The ones with the M suffix are merges.

Visually this is what it would look like:

source/master             origin/my-dev
     U1
     U2   Initial-fork
     U3-----------\
     |             \
     |              \------------D1
     |                           D2
     U4 Sync up from upstream    |
     U5-----------\              D3
     |             \             |
     U6             \------------DM4                        origin/feature-1
     |                           |
     |                           |     Starting point of feature-1
     U7------------------------------------------------------------D2'  (Rebased version of D2)
     |                           |                                 D3'  (Rebased version of D3)
     |                           D5                                /
     U8                          D6      Pull-request             /
     |                           |       getting merged upstream /
     UM9--------------------------------------------------------/
     |                           |
     |              Resync       |
     |-------------\ my-dev      |
     U9             \            |
     U10             \-----------DM7
     |                           |
     |                           |
3
  • I'm still a bit unclear of what is the long-term approach here: do you keep these feature-branches? Also, how would I even name them, if they're just bugfix branches, not really any feature? Also, when you do a rebase of your own main branch, how do you keep the history / ensure you can go back at any point in the future? (I'm asking, because with rebase and fast-forward, the commit sha1 will change etc.)
    – cnst
    Apr 5, 2013 at 1:29
  • @cnst - It does not matter if it is a feature or a bugfix, the same workflow can be applied irrespective of that. It is better to name your branches indicative of the bug you're trying to fix such as: fix-deadlock, fix-397 (if you're fixing the bug number 397). If you're asking about origin/master, you would have noticed that I do not commit anything directly on origin/master, and all my merges or rebases from remote/master are fast-forward ones, hence I mentioned that it is redundant. BTW Fast-forward merge does not change any commit's SHA1. All my commits go in origin/my-dev only
    – Tuxdude
    Apr 5, 2013 at 1:39
  • So you don't really need origin/master, right? you could always create feature(contribution) branch from source(remote)/master.
    – John Jang
    Jan 9, 2018 at 7:44

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.