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I having been using git flow for a while now. I am curious to learn about a specific use case.

For one of my projects I have a ticket for a new website feature. This ticket depends on many sub-tasks. I would like to create a feature branch for the main ticket, and then for each sub-task create a feature branch off of the parent feature branch.

Let's assume I have a ticket PROJ-500 and I create a feature branch for it

git flow feature start PROJ-500

Then I want to integrate tickets PROJ-501 through PROJ-515 into PROJ-500 before integrating the whole thing into develop. Is there a way for me to do something like

git flow feature start PROJ-511 -b PROJ-500

Then over time these sub-tasks get completed and when their feature is finished, the branch is merged into PROJ-500.

git flow feature finish PROJ-511

The above command would merge PROJ-511 into PROJ-500

And once all sub-tasks are completed then PROJ-500 will be finished and merged into develop.

This way the new website feature is integrate into develop as a single unit rather than piecemeal.

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  • Does this not do it? git flow feature start PROJ-511 PROJ-500? The link you posted in the comment to DerekS' answer suggests that it should.
    – Paul Hicks
    Dec 8, 2014 at 1:57

5 Answers 5

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+50

You can create a sub-feature branch via

git flow feature start PROJ-511 feature/PROJ-500

But you cannot use the GitFlow tool to merge the branch back into the main feature branch because if you do

git flow feature finish PROJ-511

the feature will be merged into develop. Ergo sub-features are not supported, you need to do it manually.

Alternatives: The requirement is not new, though. There is an open issue as well as a fork project claiming to support finishing features into branches other than develop. I also found a pull request with an implementation of that feature. You might want to try that modification and see if you are happy with it.


Update 2019-12-13: As user Matěj Kříž just mentioned in his comment, user Tony Chemit has written an answer here a few months after mine, pointing to gitflow-avh as an alternative to the original gitflow product. It supports sub-features out of the box with the syntax shown above. Some years have passed by and nowadays the AVH edition is part of the normal installation of Git for Windows, I just verified this on my local box and tested the sub-feature option. I.e. for Windows users it just works right after Git installation.

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  • 1
    @pymarco: Thanks for accepting the answer. I am curious though: Have you tried any of the alternatives? If so, which one and what was the outcome? Does it work as expected? Maybe other readers can learn something from your experience. :-)
    – kriegaex
    Dec 9, 2014 at 9:45
  • Sorry, but I have not had time to return to this. I will try at some point.
    – pymarco
    Feb 5, 2015 at 18:16
  • 3
    Why the downvote? Downvotes are meant to be used for badly written, sloppy answers showing no sign of research effort or knowledge. Anyway, thanks.
    – kriegaex
    Jun 2, 2015 at 20:01
  • If you use gitflow-avh version look lower at stackoverflow.com/a/29353800/472611 @tony-chemit answer Dec 11, 2019 at 15:15
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As I understood, gitflow is quite abandoned.

gitflow-avh replaces it and offers this feature (see https://github.com/petervanderdoes/gitflow#creating-featurereleasehotfixsupport-branches).

I just try it and it works well to me.

git flow feature start PROJ-511 feature/PROJ-500
git flow feature finish PROJ-511

PROJ-511 was merged into feature/PROJ-500.

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16

As already mentioned, we can start a new feature using any base branch with

git flow feature start PROJ-511 feature/PROJ-500

And to finish the sub feature we can temporarly change git flow configuration to use our feature branch instead of develop:

git flow config set develop feature/PROJ-500 && git flow feature finish PROJ-511

This way, git flow runs all commands and sanity checks. Finally, To restore config, we can run

git flow config set develop develop 
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Update (November 5, 2020): As noted in the newer answer here, this is possible with gitflow-avh which has replaced the original git flow.

===================

Original Answer:

I don't think there is a method for this in git flow, but it is fairly simple with just git.

git checkout PROJ-500
git checkout -b PROJ-511
...do your PROJ-511 work...
git checkout PROJ-500
git merge PROJ-511
git branch -d PROJ-511
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  • 2
    Thanks Derek for responding. Yes, I could follow that workflow. But git flow encapsulates a number of commands and sanity checks that I prefer to utilize for sub-feature development. For example here is a link to git-flow-feature - github.com/nvie/gitflow/blob/develop/git-flow-feature
    – pymarco
    Apr 10, 2014 at 3:14
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Simply you can make it from a base feature or even a branch as you like

git flow feature start new-feature-name original-feature-or-base-branch

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