git-style-guide

A Git Style Guide

Github星跟踪图

Git Style Guide

This is a Git Style Guide inspired by How to Get Your Change Into the Linux
Kernel
,
the git man pages and various practices popular
among the community.

Translations are available in the following languages:

If you feel like contributing, please do so! Fork the project and open a pull
request.

Table of contents

  1. Branches
  2. Commits
  3. Messages
  4. Merging
  5. Misc.

Branches

  • Choose short and descriptive names:

    # good
    $ git checkout -b oauth-migration
    
    # bad - too vague
    $ git checkout -b login_fix
    
  • Identifiers from corresponding tickets in an external service (eg. a GitHub
    issue) are also good candidates for use in branch names. For example:

    # GitHub issue #15
    $ git checkout -b issue-15
    
  • Use lowercase in branch names. External ticket identifiers with uppercase
    letters are a valid exception. Use hyphens to separate words.

    $ git checkout -b new-feature      # good
    $ git checkout -b T321-new-feature # good (Phabricator task id)
    $ git checkout -b New_Feature      # bad
    
  • When several people are working on the same feature, it might be convenient
    to have personal feature branches and a team-wide feature branch.
    Use the following naming convention:

    $ git checkout -b feature-a/master # team-wide branch
    $ git checkout -b feature-a/maria  # Maria's personal branch
    $ git checkout -b feature-a/nick   # Nick's personal branch
    

    Merge at will the personal branches to the team-wide branch (see "Merging").
    Eventually, the team-wide branch will be merged to "master".

  • Delete your branch from the upstream repository after it's merged, unless
    there is a specific reason not to.

    Tip: Use the following command while being on "master", to list merged
    branches:

    $ git branch --merged, grep -v "\*"
    

Commits

  • Each commit should be a single logical change. Don't make several
    logical changes in one commit. For example, if a patch fixes a bug and
    optimizes the performance of a feature, split it into two separate commits.

    Tip: Use git add -p to interactively stage specific portions of the
    modified files.

  • Don't split a single logical change into several commits. For example,
    the implementation of a feature and the corresponding tests should be in the
    same commit.

  • Commit early and often. Small, self-contained commits are easier to
    understand and revert when something goes wrong.

  • Commits should be ordered logically. For example, if commit X depends
    on changes done in commit Y, then commit Y should come before commit X.

Note: While working alone on a local branch that has not yet been pushed, it's
fine to use commits as temporary snapshots of your work. However, it still
holds true that you should apply all of the above before pushing it.

Messages

  • Use the editor, not the terminal, when writing a commit message:

    # good
    $ git commit
    
    # bad
    $ git commit -m "Quick fix"
    

    Committing from the terminal encourages a mindset of having to fit everything
    in a single line which usually results in non-informative, ambiguous commit
    messages.

  • The summary line (ie. the first line of the message) should be
    descriptive yet succinct. Ideally, it should be no longer than
    50 characters. It should be capitalized and written in imperative present
    tense. It should not end with a period since it is effectively the commit
    title:

    # good - imperative present tense, capitalized, fewer than 50 characters
    Mark huge records as obsolete when clearing hinting faults
    
    # bad
    fixed ActiveModel::Errors deprecation messages failing when AR was used outside of Rails.
    
  • After that should come a blank line followed by a more thorough
    description. It should be wrapped to 72 characters and explain why
    the change is needed, how it addresses the issue and what side-effects
    it might have.

    It should also provide any pointers to related resources (eg. link to the
    corresponding issue in a bug tracker):

    Short (50 chars or fewer) summary of changes
    
    More detailed explanatory text, if necessary. Wrap it to
    72 characters. In some contexts, the first
    line is treated as the subject of an email and the rest of
    the text as the body.  The blank line separating the
    summary from the body is critical (unless you omit the body
    entirely); tools like rebase can get confused if you run
    the two together.
    
    Further paragraphs come after blank lines.
    
    - Bullet points are okay, too
    
    - Use a hyphen or an asterisk for the bullet,
      followed by a single space, with blank lines in
      between
    
    The pointers to your related resources can serve as a footer
    for your commit message. Here is an example that is referencing
    issues in a bug tracker:
    
    Resolves: #56, #78
    See also: #12, #34
    
    Source http://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html
    

    Ultimately, when writing a commit message, think about what you would need
    to know if you run across the commit in a year from now.

  • If a commit A depends on commit B, the dependency should be
    stated in the message of commit A. Use the SHA1 when referring to
    commits.

    Similarly, if commit A solves a bug introduced by commit B, it should
    also be stated in the message of commit A.

  • If a commit is going to be squashed to another commit use the --squash and
    --fixup flags respectively, in order to make the intention clear:

    $ git commit --squash f387cab2
    

    (Tip: Use the --autosquash flag when rebasing. The marked commits will be
    squashed automatically.)

Merging

  • Do not rewrite published history. The repository's history is valuable in
    its own right and it is very important to be able to tell what actually
    happened
    . Altering published history is a common source of problems for
    anyone working on the project.

  • However, there are cases where rewriting history is legitimate. These are
    when:

    • You are the only one working on the branch and it is not being reviewed.

    • You want to tidy up your branch (eg. squash commits) and/or rebase it onto
      the "master" in order to merge it later.

    That said, never rewrite the history of the "master" branch or any other
    special branches (ie. used by production or CI servers).

  • Keep the history clean and simple. Just before you merge your branch:

    1. Make sure it conforms to the style guide and perform any needed actions
      if it doesn't (squash/reorder commits, reword messages etc.)

    2. Rebase it onto the branch it's going to be merged to:

      [my-branch] $ git fetch
      [my-branch] $ git rebase origin/master
      # then merge
      

      This results in a branch that can be applied directly to the end of the
      "master" branch and results in a very simple history.

      (Note: This strategy is better suited for projects with short-running
      branches. Otherwise it might be better to occassionally merge the
      "master" branch instead of rebasing onto it.)

  • If your branch includes more than one commit, do not merge with a
    fast-forward:

    # good - ensures that a merge commit is created
    $ git merge --no-ff my-branch
    
    # bad
    $ git merge my-branch
    

Misc.

  • There are various workflows and each one has its strengths and weaknesses.
    Whether a workflow fits your case, depends on the team, the project and your
    development procedures.

    That said, it is important to actually choose a workflow and stick with it.

  • Be consistent. This is related to the workflow but also expands to things
    like commit messages, branch names and tags. Having a consistent style
    throughout the repository makes it easy to understand what is going on by
    looking at the log, a commit message etc.

  • Test before you push. Do not push half-done work.

  • Use annotated tags
    for marking releases or other important points in the history. Prefer
    lightweight tags
    for personal use, such as to bookmark commits for future reference.

  • Keep your repositories at a good shape by performing maintenance tasks
    occasionally:

License

cc license

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International license
.

Credits

Agis Anastasopoulos / @agisanast / http://agis.io
... and contributors!

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创建于2015-03-29 20:25:23
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最后一次提交2022-09-17 17:57:29
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