Merge pull request #31 from jimeh/rework-common-flow-v2

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2026-01-13 09:50:28 +00:00
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@@ -1,8 +1,6 @@
Git Common-Flow {{version}}
===========================
# Git Common-Flow {{version}}
Introduction
------------
## Introduction
Common-Flow is an attempt to gather a sensible selection of the most common
usage patterns of git into a single and concise specification. It is based on
@@ -15,8 +13,7 @@ In short, Common-Flow is essentially GitHub Flow with the addition of versioned
releases, optional release branches, and without the requirement to deploy to
production all the time.
Summary
-------
## Summary
- The "main" branch is the mainline branch with latest changes, and must not be
broken.
@@ -25,12 +22,12 @@ Summary
- Rebase change branches early and often.
- When a change branch is stable and ready, it is merged back in to main.
- A release is just a git tag who's name is the exact release version string
(e.g. "2.11.4").
- Release branches can be used to avoid change freezes on main. They are not
(e.g. "2.11.4" or "v2.11.4").
- Release branches can be used when the release process and verification might
be lengthy, allowing main to remain open for new changes. They are not
required, instead they are available if you need them.
Terminology
-----------
## Terminology
- **Main Branch** - Must be named "main", must always have passing tests, and is
not guaranteed to always work in production environments.
@@ -49,8 +46,7 @@ Terminology
- **Release Branches** - Used both for short-term preparations of a release, and
for long-term maintenance of older versions.
Git Common-Flow Specification (Common-Flow)
-------------------------------------------
## Git Common-Flow Specification (Common-Flow)
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",
"SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be
@@ -65,7 +61,7 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC
branch".
2. The main branch MUST always be in a non-broken state with its test suite
passing.
3. The main branch IS NOT guaranteed to always work in production
3. The main branch is not guaranteed to always work in production
environments. Despite test suites passing it may at times contain
unfinished work. Only releases may be considered safe for production use.
4. The main branch SHOULD always be in a "as near as possibly ready for
@@ -96,12 +92,12 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC
"--force-with-lease" git push option when doing so instead of the regular
"--force".
9. If there is a truly valid technical reason to not use rebase when
updating change branches, then you can update change branches via merge
updating change branches, then you MAY update change branches via merge
instead of rebase. The decision to use merge MUST only be taken after all
possible options to use rebase have been tried and failed. People not
understanding how to use rebase is NOT a valid reason to use merge. If
you do decide to use merge instead of rebase, you MUST NOT use a mixture
of both methods, pick one and stick to it.
of both methods.
4. Pull Requests
1. To merge a change branch into its merge target, you MUST open a "pull
request" (or equivalent).
@@ -114,18 +110,37 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC
-i" to present a cleaner and easier to follow commit history for your
reviewers.
4. A pull request MUST only be merged when the change branch is up-to-date
with its source branch, the test suite is passing, and you and others are
happy with the change. This is especially important if the merge target
is the main branch.
with its source branch, the test suite and other CI checks are passing,
and you and others are happy with the changes. This is especially
important if the merge target is the main branch.
5. To get feedback, help, or generally just discuss a change branch with
others, it is RECOMMENDED you create a pull request and discuss the
others, it is RECOMMENDED you create a draft pull request and discuss the
changes with others there. This leaves a clear and visible history of
how, when, and why the code looks and behaves the way it does.
5. Versioning
5. Git Best Practices
1. It is RECOMMENDED that all commit messages follow the Conventional
Commits specification (<https://www.conventionalcommits.org/>). This
provides a structured format that integrates well with Semantic
Versioning, and enables automated changelog generation. At minimum,
commit messages SHOULD follow the Commit Guidelines from the official git
documentation:
<https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project#_commit_guidelines>
2. You SHOULD always use "--force-with-lease" when doing a force push. The
regular "--force" option is dangerous and destructive. More information:
<https://www.codestudy.net/blog/git-push-force-with-lease-vs-force/>
3. You SHOULD understand and be comfortable with rebasing:
<https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Rebasing>
4. It is RECOMMENDED that you always do "git pull --rebase" instead of "git
pull" to avoid unnecessary merge commits. You can make this the default
behavior of "git pull" with "git config --global pull.rebase true".
5. When using Conventional Commits, it is RECOMMENDED to use tooling to
automate version bumping and generate changelogs from commit messages.
This pairs well with the release process and ensures changelogs are
consistent and complete.
6. Versioning
1. A "version string" is a typically mostly numeric string that identifies a
specific version of a project. The version string itself MUST NOT have a
"v" prefix, but the version string can be displayed with a "v" prefix to
indicate it is a version that is being referred to.
"v" prefix, but the version string can be displayed with a "v" prefix.
2. The source of truth for a project's version MUST be a git tag with a name
based on the version string. This kind of tag MUST be referred to as a
"release tag".
@@ -141,60 +156,59 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC
"v" prefix. For example, "v2.11.4" is bad, and "2.11.4" is good.
6. It is OPTIONAL, but RECOMMENDED that the version string follows Semantic
Versioning (<http://semver.org/>).
6. Releases
7. Releases
1. To create a new release, you MUST create a git tag named as the exact
version string of the release. This kind of tag MUST be referred to as a
"release tag".
2. The release tag name can OPTIONALLY be prefixed with "v". For example,
the tag name can be either "2.11.4" or "v2.11.4". It is however
RECOMMENDED that you do not use a "v" prefix. You MUST NOT use a mixture
of "v" prefixed and non-prefixed tags. Pick one form and stick to it.
the tag name can be either "2.11.4" or "v2.11.4". Note that this "v"
prefix is only for the tag name itself, the version string (as defined in
section 6.1) MUST NOT have a "v" prefix.
3. If the version string is hard-coded into the code-base, you MUST create a
"version bump" commit which changes the hard-coded version string of the
project.
4. When using version bump commits, the release tag MUST be placed on the
version bump commit.
5. If you are not using a release branch, then the release tag, and if
version bump commit, unless using a release pull request.
5. It is OPTIONAL to use a "release pull request" to propose a release. A
release pull request contains the version bump commit and any
release-related changes (changelog updates, etc.). When using release
pull requests, the release tag SHOULD be placed on the resulting merge
commit.
6. If you are not using a release branch, then the release tag, and if
relevant the version bump commit, MUST be created directly on the main
branch.
6. The version bump commit SHOULD have a commit message following the
Conventional Commits format. For example, "chore(release): 2.11.4" or
"chore: bump version to 2.11.4". Alternatively, a simple "Bump version to
2.11.4" format is acceptable.
7. It is RECOMMENDED that release tags are lightweight tags, but you can
OPTIONALLY use annotated tags if you want to include changelog
information in the release tag itself.
8. If you use annotated release tags, the first line of the annotation
7. If you are using Conventional Commits, the version bump commit MUST also
follow the format. For example, "chore(release): 2.11.4". Otherwise, a
simple "Bump version to 2.11.4" format is acceptable.
8. Release tags SHOULD be lightweight tags unless you need features that
annotated tags provide. Annotated tags allow you to include changelog
information in the tag itself, GPG sign the tag, or include additional
metadata like the tagger's name and email.
9. If you use annotated release tags, the first line of the annotation
SHOULD read "Release VERSION". For example for version "2.11.4" the first
line of the tag annotation SHOULD read "Release 2.11.4". The second line
MUST be blank, and the changelog MUST start on the third line.
9. When using Conventional Commits, breaking changes MUST be indicated
either by appending "!" after the type/scope (e.g. "feat!:" or
"feat(api)!:"), or by including a "BREAKING CHANGE:" footer in the commit
message. Breaking changes correspond to a MAJOR version bump in Semantic
Versioning.
10. When using Conventional Commits along with Semantic Versioning, commits
of type "fix" correspond to PATCH releases, commits of type "feat"
correspond to MINOR releases, and commits with breaking changes
correspond to MAJOR releases. This alignment enables automated version
determination and changelog generation.
7. Short-Term Release Branches
MUST be blank, and the changelog SHOULD start on the third line.
10. It is OPTIONAL, but RECOMMENDED for high-security projects, to GPG sign
release tags. This provides cryptographic verification that the release
was created by a trusted party.
8. Short-Term Release Branches
1. Any branch that has a name starting with "release-" SHOULD be referred to
as a "release branch".
2. Any release branch which has a name ending with a specific version
string, MUST be referred to as a "short-term release branch".
3. Use of short-term release branches are OPTIONAL, and intended to be used
to create a specific versioned release.
4. A short-term release branch is RECOMMENDED if there is a lengthy
prerelease verification process to avoid a code freeze on the main
branch.
4. A short-term release branch is RECOMMENDED if there is a lengthy release
verification process to avoid a code freeze on the main branch.
5. Short-term release branches MUST have a name of "release-VERSION". For
example for version "2.11.4" the release branch name MUST be
"release-2.11.4".
6. When using a short-term release branch to create a release, the release
tag and if used, version bump commit, MUST be placed directly on the
short-term release branch itself.
7. Only very minor changes should be performed on a short-term release
6. When using a short-term release branch to create a release, the version
bump commit if used, MUST be created on the short-term release branch.
The release tag MUST be placed on the version bump commit, or on the
merge commit when using a release pull request to merge the release
branch.
7. Only very minor changes SHOULD be performed on a short-term release
branch directly. Any larger changes SHOULD be done in the main branch,
and SHOULD be pulled into the release branch by rebasing it on top of the
main branch the same way a change branch pulls in updates from its source
@@ -202,7 +216,7 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC
8. After a release tag has been created, the release branch MUST be merged
back into its source branch and then deleted. Typically the source branch
will be the main branch.
8. Long-term Release Branches
9. Long-Term Release Branches
1. Any release branch which has a name ending with a nonspecific version
string, MUST be referred to as a "long-term release branch". For example,
"release-2.11" is a long-term release branch, while "release-2.11.4" is a
@@ -213,21 +227,24 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC
version.
3. A long-term release branch MUST have a name with a nonspecific version
number. For example, a long-term release branch for creating new 2.9.x
releases MUST be named "release-2.9".
releases MUST be named "release-2.9", or "release-2" for all 2.x.x
releases when main has moved to 3.x.x.
4. Long-term release branches for maintenance releases of older versions
MUST be created from the relevant release tag. For example, if the main
branch is on version 2.11.4 and there is a security fix for all 2.9.x
releases, the latest of which is "2.9.7". Create a new branch called
"release-2.9" from the "2.9.7" release tag. The security fix release will
then end up being version "2.9.8".
then end up being version "2.9.8". Similarly, if main is on 3.x.x and you
need to maintain the entire 2.x.x line, create a "release-2" branch from
the latest 2.x.x release tag.
5. To create a new release from a long-term release branch, you MUST follow
the same process as a release from the main branch, except the long-term
release branch takes the place of the main branch.
6. A long-term release branch should be treated with the same respect as the
6. A long-term release branch SHOULD be treated with the same respect as the
main branch. It is effectively the main branch for the release series in
question. Meaning it MUST always be in a non-broken state, MUST NOT be
force pushed to, etc.
9. Bug Fixes & Rollback
10. Bug Fixes & Rollback
1. You MUST NOT under any circumstances force push to the main branch or to
long-term release branches.
2. If a change branch which has been merged into the main branch is found to
@@ -238,38 +255,8 @@ interpreted as described in [RFC
reason the merge must be undone, you MUST undo the merge by reverting the
merge commit itself. Effectively creating a new commit that reverses all
the relevant changes.
10. Git Best Practices
1. It is RECOMMENDED that all commit messages follow the Conventional
Commits specification (<https://www.conventionalcommits.org/>). This
provides a structured format that integrates well with Semantic
Versioning, and enables automated changelog generation. At minimum,
commit messages SHOULD follow the Commit Guidelines from the official git
documentation:
<https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project#_commit_guidelines>
2. You SHOULD never blindly commit all changes with "git commit -a". It is
RECOMMENDED you use "git add -i" or "git add -p" to add individual
changes to the staging area so you are fully aware of what you are
committing.
3. You SHOULD always use "--force-with-lease" when doing a force push. The
regular "--force" option is dangerous and destructive. More information:
<https://www.codestudy.net/blog/git-push-force-with-lease-vs-force/>
4. You SHOULD understand and be comfortable with rebasing:
<https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Rebasing>
5. It is RECOMMENDED that you always do "git pull --rebase" instead of "git
pull" to avoid unnecessary merge commits. You can make this the default
behavior of "git pull" with "git config --global pull.rebase true".
6. It is RECOMMENDED that all branches be merged using "git merge --no-ff".
This makes sure the reference to the original branch is kept in the
commits, allows one to revert a merge by reverting a single merge commit,
and creates a merge commit to mark the integration of the branch with
main.
7. When using Conventional Commits, it is RECOMMENDED to use tooling to
automatically generate changelogs from commit messages. This pairs well
with the release process and ensures changelogs are consistent and
complete.
FAQ
---
## FAQ
### Why use Common-Flow instead of Git Flow, and how does it differ?
@@ -355,8 +342,28 @@ complicated task and you're short on time, a short-term release branch gives you
an instant fix to the situation at hand. You can then resolve the issues with
the main branch later.
About
-----
### How do I handle monorepos?
Common-Flow works well with monorepos. The key considerations are:
- Use a single main branch for the entire monorepo. This keeps things simple and
ensures all packages/projects are always in a consistent state.
- For versioning, you have two main options:
- **Unified versioning**: All packages share the same version number. Simple
to manage, but may result in version bumps for packages that haven't
changed.
- **Independent versioning**: Each package has its own version. Use tags with
a package prefix, e.g., "package-a-2.1.0" or "package-a-v2.1.0". This allows
packages to evolve at their own pace.
- Change branches can span multiple packages. Describe the scope in the branch
name if helpful, e.g., "update-auth-across-services".
- For releases, if using independent versioning, you can create release branches
per package when needed, e.g., "release-package-a-2.1".
The core workflow remains the same: don't break main, use change branches, and
tag releases.
## About
The Git Common-Flow specification is authored by [Jim
Myhrberg](https://jimeh.me/).
@@ -364,7 +371,6 @@ Myhrberg](https://jimeh.me/).
If you'd like to leave feedback, please [open an issue on
GitHub](https://github.com/jimeh/common-flow/issues).
License
-------
## License
[Creative Commons - CC BY 4.0](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)