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Restructure release branch sections
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@@ -115,39 +115,39 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC 2119](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119).
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into the master branch, that work should have happened against the master
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branch in the first place. One exception to this is version bump commits.
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4. There are two types of release branches; short-term, and long-term.
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6. Short-Term Release Branches
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1. Used for creating a specific versioned release.
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2. A short-term release branch is RECOMMENDED if there is a lengthy
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pre-release verification process to avoid a code freeze on the master
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branch.
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3. MUST have a name of "release-VERSION". For example for version
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"2.11.4" the release branch name MUST be "release-2.11.4".
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4. When using a short-term release branch, the version bump commit and
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release tag MUST be made directly on the release branch itself.
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5. Only very minor changes should be performed on a short-term release
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branch directly. Any larger changes SHOULD be done in the master branch,
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and SHOULD be pulled into the release branch by rebasing it on top of the
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master branch the same was a change branch pulls in updates from its
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source branch.
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6. After the version bump commit and release tag have been created, the
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release branch MUST be merged back into its source branch and then
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deleted. Typically the source branch will be the master branch.
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7. Long-Term Release Branches
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1. Used for work on versions which are not currently part of the master
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branch. Typically this is useful when you need to create a new
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maintenance release for a older version.
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2. The branch name MUST have a non-specific version number. For example
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a long-term release branch for creating new 2.9.x releases would be
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named "release-2.9".
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3. To create a new release from a long-term release branch, you MUST
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create a version bump commit and release tag directly on the release
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branch.
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4. A long-term release branch MUST be created from the relevant release
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tag. For example if there is a security fix for all 2.9.x releases,
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the latest of which is "2.9.7", we create a new branch called
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"release-2.9" off of the "2.9.7" release tag. The security fix
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release will then end up being version "2.9.8".
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8. Bug Fixes & Rollback
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5. Short-Term Release Branches
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1. Used for creating a specific versioned release.
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2. A short-term release branch is RECOMMENDED if there is a lengthy
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pre-release verification process to avoid a code freeze on the master
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branch.
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3. MUST have a name of "release-VERSION". For example for version
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"2.11.4" the release branch name MUST be "release-2.11.4".
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4. When using a short-term release branch, the version bump commit and
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release tag MUST be made directly on the release branch itself.
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5. Only very minor changes should be performed on a short-term release
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branch directly. Any larger changes SHOULD be done in the master
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branch, and SHOULD be pulled into the release branch by rebasing it
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on top of the master branch the same was a change branch pulls in
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updates from its source branch.
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6. After the version bump commit and release tag have been created, the
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release branch MUST be merged back into its source branch and then
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deleted. Typically the source branch will be the master branch.
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6. Long-Term Release Branches
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1. Used for work on versions which are not currently part of the master
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branch. Typically this is useful when you need to create a new
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maintenance release for a older version.
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2. The branch name MUST have a non-specific version number. For example
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a long-term release branch for creating new 2.9.x releases would be
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named "release-2.9".
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3. To create a new release from a long-term release branch, you MUST
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create a version bump commit and release tag directly on the release
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branch.
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4. A long-term release branch MUST be created from the relevant release
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tag. For example if there is a security fix for all 2.9.x releases,
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the latest of which is "2.9.7", we create a new branch called
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"release-2.9" off of the "2.9.7" release tag. The security fix
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release will then end up being version "2.9.8".
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6. Bug Fixes & Rollback
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1. You MUST NOT under any circumstances force push to the master branch.
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2. If a change branch which has been merged into the master branch is found
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to have a bug in it, the bug fix work MUST be done as a new separate
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@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC 2119](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119).
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reason the merge must be undone, you MUST undo the merge by reverting the
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merge commit itself. Effectively creating a new commit that reverses all
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the relevant changes.
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9. Git Best Practices
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7. Git Best Practices
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1. All commit messages SHOULD follow the Commit Guidelines and format from
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the official git
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documentation:
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