RidgeRun Developer Manual/Methodologies/Gitflow: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
|||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
==About Gitflow Methodologies== | == About Gitflow Methodologies == | ||
A "gitflow" methodology is no more than a set of practices that defined the workflow for software development involving a version control system like git. RidgeRun follows a gitflow based on the [https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/comparing-workflows/feature-branch-workflow feature branch] model. This model has several advantages: | |||
*It is very well suited for project scheduled on release cycles. | |||
*Allows to maintain a stable code base for all developers involved after each release, which synergizes very well with continuous integration practices. | |||
*Feature branches allow to implement pull requests. | |||
*Development isolation. Each developer works on its branch and does not affects the development of other branch by other developers. | |||
*There are very well defined roles for a git branch, for example, there is the development branch, the master branches, the hotfix branches, etc. | |||
== Some particular considerations on the feature branch model == | |||
=== Rebasing branches === | |||
<noinclude> | <noinclude> | ||
{{RidgeRun Developer Manual/Foot|Methodologies|Methodologies/Project Cycles}} | {{RidgeRun Developer Manual/Foot|Methodologies|Methodologies/Project Cycles}} | ||
</noinclude> | </noinclude> |
Revision as of 14:48, 3 November 2020
WORK IN PROGRESS. Please Contact RidgeRun OR email to support@ridgerun.com if you have any questions. |
RidgeRun Developer Manual |
---|
Coding Styles |
Development Tools |
Editors |
Debugging Tools |
|
Profiling Tools |
Methodologies |
Design Patterns |
RidgeRun Developer Manual/Testing |
RidgeRun Developer Manual/Build Systems |
Contact Us |
About Gitflow Methodologies
A "gitflow" methodology is no more than a set of practices that defined the workflow for software development involving a version control system like git. RidgeRun follows a gitflow based on the feature branch model. This model has several advantages:
- It is very well suited for project scheduled on release cycles.
- Allows to maintain a stable code base for all developers involved after each release, which synergizes very well with continuous integration practices.
- Feature branches allow to implement pull requests.
- Development isolation. Each developer works on its branch and does not affects the development of other branch by other developers.
- There are very well defined roles for a git branch, for example, there is the development branch, the master branches, the hotfix branches, etc.
Some particular considerations on the feature branch model
Rebasing branches