From aa3d03a4a43fb4318e775cc34a4d4dbae8d26345 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jim Myhrberg Date: Tue, 4 Jul 2017 11:48:34 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Add docs directory --- docs/.nojekyll | 0 docs/404.html | 64 ++++++++++ docs/css/main.css | 121 ++++++++++++++++++ docs/index.html | 258 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ docs/js/ui.js | 46 +++++++ docs/robots.txt | 1 + docs/sitemap.xml | 12 ++ docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.html | 258 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.svg | 2 + 9 files changed, 762 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/.nojekyll create mode 100644 docs/404.html create mode 100644 docs/css/main.css create mode 100644 docs/index.html create mode 100644 docs/js/ui.js create mode 100644 docs/robots.txt create mode 100644 docs/sitemap.xml create mode 100644 docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.html create mode 100644 docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.svg diff --git a/docs/.nojekyll b/docs/.nojekyll new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e69de29 diff --git a/docs/404.html b/docs/404.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5e41f7e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/404.html @@ -0,0 +1,64 @@ + + + + + + + + + + +404 Page Not Found | Git Common Flow + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
+ + + + + +
+
+
+

404

+

Page not found :(

+

The requested page could not be found.

+
+ +
+
+
+ + + diff --git a/docs/css/main.css b/docs/css/main.css new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ded4d81 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/css/main.css @@ -0,0 +1,121 @@ +body { color: #777; } + +.pure-img-responsive { max-width: 100%; height: auto; } + +/* +Add transition to containers so they can push in and out. +*/ +#layout, #menu, .menu-link { -webkit-transition: all 0.2s ease-out; -moz-transition: all 0.2s ease-out; -ms-transition: all 0.2s ease-out; -o-transition: all 0.2s ease-out; transition: all 0.2s ease-out; } + +/* +This is the parent `
` that contains the menu and the content area. +*/ +#layout { position: relative; left: 0; padding-left: 0; } + +#layout.active #menu { left: 150px; width: 150px; } + +#layout.active .menu-link { left: 150px; } + +/* +The content `
` is where all your content goes. +*/ +.content { margin: 0 auto; padding: 0 2em; max-width: 800px; margin-bottom: 50px; line-height: 1.6em; } + +.header { margin: 0; color: #333; text-align: center; padding: 2.5em 2em 0; border-bottom: 1px solid #eee; } + +.header h1 { margin: 0.2em 0; font-size: 3em; font-weight: 300; } + +.header h2 { font-weight: 300; color: #ccc; padding: 0; margin-top: 0; } + +.content-subhead { margin: 50px 0 20px 0; font-weight: 300; color: #888; } + +/* +The `#menu` `
` is the parent `
` that contains the `.pure-menu` that +appears on the left side of the page. +*/ +#menu { margin-left: -150px; /* "#menu" width */ width: 150px; position: fixed; top: 0; left: 0; bottom: 0; z-index: 1000; /* so the menu or its navicon stays above all content */ background: #191818; overflow-y: auto; -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch; } + +/* +All anchors inside the menu should be styled like this. +*/ +#menu a { color: #999; border: none; padding: 0.6em 0 0.6em 0.6em; } + +/* +Remove all background/borders, since we are applying them to #menu. +*/ +#menu .pure-menu, #menu .pure-menu ul { border: none; background: transparent; } + +/* +Add that light border to separate items into groups. +*/ +#menu .pure-menu ul, #menu .pure-menu .menu-item-divided { border-top: 1px solid #333; } + +/* +Change color of the anchor links on hover/focus. +*/ +#menu .pure-menu li a:hover, #menu .pure-menu li a:focus { background: #333; } + +/* +This styles the selected menu item `
  • `. +*/ +#menu .pure-menu-selected, #menu .pure-menu-heading { background: #1f8dd6; } + +/* +This styles a link within a selected menu item `
  • `. +*/ +#menu .pure-menu-selected a { color: #fff; } + +/* +This styles the menu heading. +*/ +#menu .pure-menu-heading { font-size: 110%; color: #fff; margin: 0; } + +/* -- Dynamic Button For Responsive Menu -------------------------------------*/ +/* +The button to open/close the Menu is custom-made and not part of Pure. Here's +how it works: +*/ +/* +`.menu-link` represents the responsive menu toggle that shows/hides on +small screens. +*/ +.menu-link { position: fixed; display: block; /* show this only on small screens */ top: 0; left: 0; /* "#menu width" */ background: #000; background: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.7); font-size: 10px; /* change this value to increase/decrease button size */ z-index: 10; width: 2em; height: auto; padding: 2.1em 1.6em; } + +.menu-link:hover, .menu-link:focus { background: #000; } + +.menu-link span { position: relative; display: block; } + +.menu-link span, .menu-link span:before, .menu-link span:after { background-color: #fff; width: 100%; height: 0.2em; } + +.menu-link span:before, .menu-link span:after { position: absolute; margin-top: -0.6em; content: " "; } + +.menu-link span:after { margin-top: 0.6em; } + +/* -- Responsive Styles (Media Queries) ------------------------------------- */ +/* +Hides the menu at `48em`, but modify this based on your app's needs. +*/ +@media (min-width: 48em) { .header, .content { padding-left: 2em; padding-right: 2em; } + #layout { padding-left: 150px; /* left col width "#menu" */ left: 0; } + #menu { left: 150px; } + .menu-link { position: fixed; left: 150px; display: none; } + #layout.active .menu-link { left: 150px; } } +@media (max-width: 48em) { /* Only apply this when the window is small. Otherwise, the following case results in extra padding on the left: Make the window small. Tap the menu to trigger the active state. Make the window large again. */ + #layout.active { position: relative; left: 150px; } } +html { height: 100%; } + +body { font-family: 'Open Sans', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 16px; font-weight: 400; line-height: 1.5; color: #1a1a1a; background-color: #fdfdfd; } + +h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 { font-family: 'Open Sans Condensed', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: 700; color: #333; } + +h1 { font-size: 2.5em; line-height: 1.2; } + +ol ol, ul ol { list-style-type: lower-roman; } + +.content { margin-top: 80px; } + +.content a { word-break: break-word; } + +.content code { background-color: rgba(27, 31, 35, 0.05); border-radius: 3px; font-family: "SFMono-Regular", Consolas, "Liberation Mono", Menlo, Courier, monospace; font-size: 90%; margin: 0; padding: 0.2em; } + +#menu .pure-menu-label { color: #999; border: none; padding: 0.6em 0 0.6em 0.6em; } diff --git a/docs/index.html b/docs/index.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3f69576 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/index.html @@ -0,0 +1,258 @@ + + + + + + + + + + +Git Common-Flow 1.0.0-rc.1 | Git Common Flow + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
    + + + + + +
    +
    +

    Git Common-Flow 1.0.0-rc.1

    + +

    + +

    Summary

    + +

    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 +the original variant +of GitHub Flow, while taking +into account how a lot of open source projects use git.

    + +

    TL;DR: Common-Flow is basically GitHub Flow with the addition of versioned +releases, maintenance releases for old versions, and without the requirement to +deploy to production all the time.

    + +

    Terminology

    + +
      +
    • Master Branch - Must always have passing tests, is considered bleeding +edge, and must be named master.
    • +
    • Change Branches - Any branch that introduces changes like a new feature, a +bug fix, etc.
    • +
    • Source Branch - The branch that a change branch was created from. New +changes in the source branch should be incorporated into the change branch via +rebasing.
    • +
    • Merge Target - A branch that is the intended merge target for a change +branch. Typically the merge target branch will be the same as the source +branch.
    • +
    • Maintenance Branches - Used for maintaining old versions and releasing +PATCH updates when the master branch has moved on. Should follow a +stable-X.Y naming pattern, where X is MAJOR version and Y is MINOR +version.
    • +
    • Pull Request - A means of requesting that a change branch is merged in to +its merge target, allowing others to review, discuss and approve the changes.
    • +
    • Release - Consists of a version bump commit directly on the master branch, +and a git tag named according to the new version string placed on said commit.
    • +
    • Maintenance Release - Just like a regular release, except the version bump +commit and release tag are on a maintenance branch instead of the master +branch.
    • +
    + +

    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 +interpreted as described in RFC 2119.

    + +
      +
    1. The Master Branch +
        +
      1. A branch named "master" MUST exist and it MUST be referred to as the +"master branch".
      2. +
      3. The master branch MUST be considered bleeding edge.
      4. +
      5. The master branch MUST always be in a non-broken state with its test +suite passing.
      6. +
      7. The master branch SHOULD always be in a "as near as possible ready for +release/production" state to reduce the friction of creating a new +release.
      8. +
      +
    2. +
    3. Changes +
        +
      1. Changes MUST be performed on a separate branch that SHOULD be referred to +as a "change branch". All change branches MUST have descriptive names. It +is RECOMMENDED that you commit often locally, and you SHOULD regularly +push your work to the same named branch on the remote server.
      2. +
      3. When a change branch is created, the branch that it is created from +SHOULD be referred to as the "source branch". Each change branch also +needs a designated "merge target branch", typically this will be the same +as the source branch.
      4. +
      5. Change branches MUST be regularly updated with any changes from their +source branch. This MUST be done by rebasing the change branch on top of +the source branch. To be clear you MUST NOT merge a source branch into a +change branch.
      6. +
      7. After rebasing a change branch on top of its source branch you MUST push +the change branch to the remote server. This will require you do a force +push, and you SHOULD use the "--force-with-lease" git push option.
      8. +
      9. To merge a change branch into its merge target branch, you MUST open a +"pull request" (or equivalent) so others can review and approve your +changes.
      10. +
      11. 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 master branch.
      12. +
      13. To get feedback, help, or generally just discuss a change branch with +others, it is RECOMMENDED you do this by creating a pull request and +discuss the changes with others there.
      14. +
      +
    4. +
    5. Git Best Practices +
        +
      1. All commit messages SHOULD follow the Commit Guidelines and format from +the official git +documentation: +https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project
      2. +
      3. You SHOULD always use "--force-with-lease" when doing a force push. The +plain "--force" option is dangerous and destructive. More +information: +https://developer.atlassian.com/blog/2015/04/force-with-lease/
      4. +
      5. You SHOULD understand and be comfortable with +rebasing: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Rebasing
      6. +
      7. 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".
      8. +
      9. 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 master.
      10. +
      +
    6. +
    7. Versioning +
        +
      1. The project MUST have its version hard-coded somewhere in the +code-base. It is RECOMMENDED that this is done in a file called "VERSION" +located in the root of the project.
      2. +
      3. If you are using a "VERSION" file in the root of the project, this MUST +only contain the exact version string.
      4. +
      5. The version string SHOULD follow the Semantic Versioning +(http://semver.org/) format. Use of Semantic Versioning is OPTIONAL, +but the version string MUST NOT have a "v" prefix. For example "v2.11.4" +is bad, and "2.11.4" is good.
      6. +
      +
    8. +
    9. Releases +
        +
      1. To create a new release, you MUST create a "version bump" commit directly +on the master branch which changes the hard-coded version value of the +project. The version bump commit MUST have a git tag created on it and +named as the exact version string.
      2. +
      3. A version bump commit MUST have a commit message title of "Bump version +to VERSION". For example, if the new version string is "2.11.4", the +first line of the commit message MUST read: "Bump version to 2.11.4"
      4. +
      5. The release tag on the version bump commit MUST be named exactly the same +as the version string. The tag name can OPTIONALLY be prefixed with +"v". For example the tag name can be either "2.11.4" or "v2.11.4".
      6. +
      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. +
      9. If you use annotated release tags, the first line of the annotation MUST +read "Release VERSION". For example for version "2.11.4" the first line +of the tag annotation would read "Release 2.11.4". The second line must +be blank, and the changelog MUST start on the third line.
      10. +
      +
    10. +
    11. Bug Fixes & Rollback +
        +
      1. You MUST NOT under any circumstances force push to the master branch.
      2. +
      3. If a change branch which has been merged in to the master branch is found +to have a bug in it, the bug fix work MUST be done as a new separate +change branch and MUST follow the same workflow as any other change +branch.
      4. +
      5. If a change branch is wrongfully merged in to master, or for any other +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.
      6. +
      +
    12. +
    13. Maintenance Releases +
        +
      1. Any branch that has a name starting with "stable-" SHOULD be referred to +as a "maintenance branch".
      2. +
      3. Maintenance branches are used for managing new releases of older +versions. Typically this is used to provide security updates for older +versions when the master branch has moved on to a point that a new +release for the old version cannot be made from the master branch.
      4. +
      5. A "maintenance release" is identical to a regular release, except the +version bump commit and the release tag are placed on the maintenance +branch instead of on the master branch.
      6. +
      7. A maintenance branch SHOULD follow a "stable-X.Y" naming pattern, where +"X" is the MAJOR version and "Y" is the minor version.
      8. +
      9. A maintenance branch MUST be created from the relevant release tag. For +example if there is a security fix for all 2.9.x releases, the latest of +which is "2.9.7", we create a new branch called "stable-2.9" off of the +"2.9.7" release tag. The security fix release will then end up being +version "2.9.8".
      10. +
      11. When working on a maintenance release, the relevant maintenance branch +MUST be thought of as the master branch for that maintenance work.
      12. +
      13. Changes in a maintenance branch SHOULD typically come from work being +done against the master branch. Meaning changes SHOULD only trickle +downwards from the master branch. If a change needs to trickle back up +into the master branch, that work should have happened against the master +branch in the first place.
      14. +
      +
    14. +
    + +

    About

    + +

    The Git Common-Flow specification is authored +by Jim Myhrberg.

    + +

    If you'd like to leave feedback, +please open an issue on GitHub.

    + +

    License

    + +

    Creative Commons - CC BY 3.0

    + + +
    +
    +
    + + + diff --git a/docs/js/ui.js b/docs/js/ui.js new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6d7c20b --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/js/ui.js @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +(function (window, document) { + + var layout = document.getElementById('layout'), + menu = document.getElementById('menu'), + menuLink = document.getElementById('menuLink'), + content = document.getElementById('main'); + + function toggleClass(element, className) { + var classes = element.className.split(/\s+/), + length = classes.length, + i = 0; + + for(; i < length; i++) { + if (classes[i] === className) { + classes.splice(i, 1); + break; + } + } + // The className is not found + if (length === classes.length) { + classes.push(className); + } + + element.className = classes.join(' '); + } + + function toggleAll(e) { + var active = 'active'; + + e.preventDefault(); + toggleClass(layout, active); + toggleClass(menu, active); + toggleClass(menuLink, active); + } + + menuLink.onclick = function (e) { + toggleAll(e); + }; + + content.onclick = function(e) { + if (menu.className.indexOf('active') !== -1) { + toggleAll(e); + } + }; + +}(this, this.document)); diff --git a/docs/robots.txt b/docs/robots.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8401d2a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/robots.txt @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +Sitemap: https://commonflow.org/sitemap.xml diff --git a/docs/sitemap.xml b/docs/sitemap.xml new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7e7120f --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/sitemap.xml @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ + + + +https://commonflow.org/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.html + + +https://commonflow.org/404.html + + +https://commonflow.org/ + + diff --git a/docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.html b/docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..67b592d --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.html @@ -0,0 +1,258 @@ + + + + + + + + + + +Git Common-Flow 1.0.0-rc.1 | Git Common Flow + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
    + + + + + +
    +
    +

    Git Common-Flow 1.0.0-rc.1

    + +

    + +

    Summary

    + +

    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 +the original variant +of GitHub Flow, while taking +into account how a lot of open source projects use git.

    + +

    TL;DR: Common-Flow is basically GitHub Flow with the addition of versioned +releases, maintenance releases for old versions, and without the requirement to +deploy to production all the time.

    + +

    Terminology

    + +
      +
    • Master Branch - Must always have passing tests, is considered bleeding +edge, and must be named master.
    • +
    • Change Branches - Any branch that introduces changes like a new feature, a +bug fix, etc.
    • +
    • Source Branch - The branch that a change branch was created from. New +changes in the source branch should be incorporated into the change branch via +rebasing.
    • +
    • Merge Target - A branch that is the intended merge target for a change +branch. Typically the merge target branch will be the same as the source +branch.
    • +
    • Maintenance Branches - Used for maintaining old versions and releasing +PATCH updates when the master branch has moved on. Should follow a +stable-X.Y naming pattern, where X is MAJOR version and Y is MINOR +version.
    • +
    • Pull Request - A means of requesting that a change branch is merged in to +its merge target, allowing others to review, discuss and approve the changes.
    • +
    • Release - Consists of a version bump commit directly on the master branch, +and a git tag named according to the new version string placed on said commit.
    • +
    • Maintenance Release - Just like a regular release, except the version bump +commit and release tag are on a maintenance branch instead of the master +branch.
    • +
    + +

    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 +interpreted as described in RFC 2119.

    + +
      +
    1. The Master Branch +
        +
      1. A branch named "master" MUST exist and it MUST be referred to as the +"master branch".
      2. +
      3. The master branch MUST be considered bleeding edge.
      4. +
      5. The master branch MUST always be in a non-broken state with its test +suite passing.
      6. +
      7. The master branch SHOULD always be in a "as near as possible ready for +release/production" state to reduce the friction of creating a new +release.
      8. +
      +
    2. +
    3. Changes +
        +
      1. Changes MUST be performed on a separate branch that SHOULD be referred to +as a "change branch". All change branches MUST have descriptive names. It +is RECOMMENDED that you commit often locally, and you SHOULD regularly +push your work to the same named branch on the remote server.
      2. +
      3. When a change branch is created, the branch that it is created from +SHOULD be referred to as the "source branch". Each change branch also +needs a designated "merge target branch", typically this will be the same +as the source branch.
      4. +
      5. Change branches MUST be regularly updated with any changes from their +source branch. This MUST be done by rebasing the change branch on top of +the source branch. To be clear you MUST NOT merge a source branch into a +change branch.
      6. +
      7. After rebasing a change branch on top of its source branch you MUST push +the change branch to the remote server. This will require you do a force +push, and you SHOULD use the "--force-with-lease" git push option.
      8. +
      9. To merge a change branch into its merge target branch, you MUST open a +"pull request" (or equivalent) so others can review and approve your +changes.
      10. +
      11. 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 master branch.
      12. +
      13. To get feedback, help, or generally just discuss a change branch with +others, it is RECOMMENDED you do this by creating a pull request and +discuss the changes with others there.
      14. +
      +
    4. +
    5. Git Best Practices +
        +
      1. All commit messages SHOULD follow the Commit Guidelines and format from +the official git +documentation: +https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Distributed-Git-Contributing-to-a-Project
      2. +
      3. You SHOULD always use "--force-with-lease" when doing a force push. The +plain "--force" option is dangerous and destructive. More +information: +https://developer.atlassian.com/blog/2015/04/force-with-lease/
      4. +
      5. You SHOULD understand and be comfortable with +rebasing: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Rebasing
      6. +
      7. 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".
      8. +
      9. 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 master.
      10. +
      +
    6. +
    7. Versioning +
        +
      1. The project MUST have its version hard-coded somewhere in the +code-base. It is RECOMMENDED that this is done in a file called "VERSION" +located in the root of the project.
      2. +
      3. If you are using a "VERSION" file in the root of the project, this MUST +only contain the exact version string.
      4. +
      5. The version string SHOULD follow the Semantic Versioning +(http://semver.org/) format. Use of Semantic Versioning is OPTIONAL, +but the version string MUST NOT have a "v" prefix. For example "v2.11.4" +is bad, and "2.11.4" is good.
      6. +
      +
    8. +
    9. Releases +
        +
      1. To create a new release, you MUST create a "version bump" commit directly +on the master branch which changes the hard-coded version value of the +project. The version bump commit MUST have a git tag created on it and +named as the exact version string.
      2. +
      3. A version bump commit MUST have a commit message title of "Bump version +to VERSION". For example, if the new version string is "2.11.4", the +first line of the commit message MUST read: "Bump version to 2.11.4"
      4. +
      5. The release tag on the version bump commit MUST be named exactly the same +as the version string. The tag name can OPTIONALLY be prefixed with +"v". For example the tag name can be either "2.11.4" or "v2.11.4".
      6. +
      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. +
      9. If you use annotated release tags, the first line of the annotation MUST +read "Release VERSION". For example for version "2.11.4" the first line +of the tag annotation would read "Release 2.11.4". The second line must +be blank, and the changelog MUST start on the third line.
      10. +
      +
    10. +
    11. Bug Fixes & Rollback +
        +
      1. You MUST NOT under any circumstances force push to the master branch.
      2. +
      3. If a change branch which has been merged in to the master branch is found +to have a bug in it, the bug fix work MUST be done as a new separate +change branch and MUST follow the same workflow as any other change +branch.
      4. +
      5. If a change branch is wrongfully merged in to master, or for any other +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.
      6. +
      +
    12. +
    13. Maintenance Releases +
        +
      1. Any branch that has a name starting with "stable-" SHOULD be referred to +as a "maintenance branch".
      2. +
      3. Maintenance branches are used for managing new releases of older +versions. Typically this is used to provide security updates for older +versions when the master branch has moved on to a point that a new +release for the old version cannot be made from the master branch.
      4. +
      5. A "maintenance release" is identical to a regular release, except the +version bump commit and the release tag are placed on the maintenance +branch instead of on the master branch.
      6. +
      7. A maintenance branch SHOULD follow a "stable-X.Y" naming pattern, where +"X" is the MAJOR version and "Y" is the minor version.
      8. +
      9. A maintenance branch MUST be created from the relevant release tag. For +example if there is a security fix for all 2.9.x releases, the latest of +which is "2.9.7", we create a new branch called "stable-2.9" off of the +"2.9.7" release tag. The security fix release will then end up being +version "2.9.8".
      10. +
      11. When working on a maintenance release, the relevant maintenance branch +MUST be thought of as the master branch for that maintenance work.
      12. +
      13. Changes in a maintenance branch SHOULD typically come from work being +done against the master branch. Meaning changes SHOULD only trickle +downwards from the master branch. If a change needs to trickle back up +into the master branch, that work should have happened against the master +branch in the first place.
      14. +
      +
    14. +
    + +

    About

    + +

    The Git Common-Flow specification is authored +by Jim Myhrberg.

    + +

    If you'd like to leave feedback, +please open an issue on GitHub.

    + +

    License

    + +

    Creative Commons - CC BY 3.0

    + + +
    +
    +
    + + + diff --git a/docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.svg b/docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.svg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7aa1f3c --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/spec/1.0.0-rc.1.svg @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ + +
    Create change branch
    Create change branch
    Add commits
    Add commits
    Create pull request
    Create pull request
    Discuss, review, refactor
    Discuss, review, refactor
    Rebase if needed
    Rebase if needed
    Merge pull request
    Merge pull request
    2.12.0
    2.12.0
    Version bump commit & release tag
    Version bump commit &amp; release tag
    2.11.4
    2.11.4
    Version bump commit & release tag
    Version bump commit &amp; release tag
    \ No newline at end of file