Skip to content

Utility library to rebase and aggregate your project branches

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

costajob/git_commands

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Table of Contents

Workflow

This script facilitates adopting a subset of the branch-featuring workflow characterised by:

  • each feature will have its own branch
  • integration of feature branch with defaukt one happens via rebasing to maintain a straight commits line
  • is not an issue to force-with-lease push feature pranch to origin
  • release branches are created aggregating multiple branches

Scope

The scope of this gem is helping out in the following cases:

  • you have multiple feature branches waiting for release due to some reason (i.e. long QA time...), and need to keep them aligned with master
  • you need to quickly aggregate branches for a release
  • you want to cleanup local and remote branches upon release

Installation

Just install the gem to use the binaries commands.

gem install git_commands

GIT

The library uses the Ruby command line execution to invoke the git command as a separate process.
I assume you have the GIT program on your path.

Usage

Here are the main commands:

Arguments

All of the available commands come with the same set of arguments:

Help

Display the help of a specific command by:

rebase --help
Usage: rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --origin=upstream --default=production --branches=feature/love_me_tender,fetaure/teddybear
    -r, --repo=REPO                  The path to the existing GIT repository
    -o, --origin=ORIGIN              Specify the remote alias (origin)
    -d, --default=DEFAULT            Specify the default branch (master)
    -b, --branches=BRANCHES          Specify branches as: 1. a comma-separated list of names 2. the path to a file containing names on each line 3. via pattern matching
    -h, --help                       Prints this help

Repository

You have to specify the absolute path to the GIT repository you want to work with. The path must be a folder initialized as a valid GIT repository (a check via rev-parse is performed), otherwise an error is raised:

rebase --repo=invalid
'invalid' is not a valid GIT repository!

Branches

As with the repository you always have to specify the list of branches you want to work with. There are different options:

List of branches

Specify a comma separated list of branch names:

rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=feature/love_me_tender,feature/teddybear,feature/return_to_sender

Loading branches file...
Successfully loaded 3 branches:
01. feature/love_me_tender
02. feature/teddybear
03. feature/return_to_sender
Path to a names file

Specify an absolute path to a file containing the branches names on each line:

File /Users/Elvis/greatest_hits/.branches:

feature/love_me_tender
feature/teddybear
feature/return_to_sender
feature/in_the_ghetto
rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits/.branches

Loading branches file...
Successfully loaded 4 branches:
01. feature/love_me_tender
02. feature/teddybear
03. feature/return_to_sender
04. feature/in_the_ghetto
Pattern matching

In case you want to work with a set of branches with a common pattern, you have to specify a greedy operator with the wild card you want to match.
Just consider you have not to specify origin/ as the name of the branch, since is managed by the script for you:

rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=*der

Loading branches file...
Successfully loaded 2 branches:
01. feature/love_me_tender
02. feature/return_to_sender
Checking

Each loaded branch is validated for existence (but for branches loaded via pattern matching, already fetched from origin).
In case the validation fails, the branch is filtered from the resulting list.

rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=noent,feature/love_me_tender

Loading branches file...
Successfully loaded 1 branch:
01. feature/love_me_tender

In case no branches have been loaded, an error is raised:

rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=noent1,noent2
No branches loaded!
Default branch

Default branch cannot be included into the branches list for obvious reasons:

rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=master,feature/love_me_tender

Loading branches file...
Successfully loaded 1 branch:
01. feature/love_me_tender

Commands

Here are the available GIT commands:

Rebase

This command is useful in case you have to rebase several branches with origin/master (or another specified default) frequently. A confirmation is asked to before rebasing.

rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=feature/love_me_tender,feature/teddybear,feature/return_to_sender
...
Changing origin

The rebasing runs considering master branch as the default one and origin as the remote alias.
In case you need to rebase against a different origin and default branch you can specify them by command line:

rebase --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --origin=upstream --default=production --branches=feature/love_me_tender

Loading branches file...
Successfully loaded 1 branch:
01. feature/love_me_tender

Proceed rebasing these branches with upstream/production (Y/N)?

Remove

This command remove the specified branches locally and remotely.
A confirmation is asked before removal.

remove --repo=/temp/top_20 --branches=*obsolete*
...

Aggregate

This command aggregates all of the specified branches into a single one in case you want to create a release branch.
A confirmation is asked before aggregating.

aggregate --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=*ready*
...
Aggregate naming

The created aggregate branch follows a default naming convention pattern: release/<timestamp>

Each of the term within the < and > chars are replaced by related (upcased) environment variables, but for the timestamp, that is computed at runtime in the yyyymmdd format.
Consider a valid pattern should at least contain one replaceable part within the < and > chars.

You can overwrite the naming pattern by specifying the following environment variables:

  • AGGREGATE_NAME - the name to be used directly for the aggregator branch, without any pattern replacements
  • AGGREGATE_PATTERN - change the default pattern by specifying the related environment variables for each parts within the < and > chars
Examples

Passing directly the aggregate name:

AGGREGATE_NAME=my_aggregate aggregate --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=*ready*
...
Aggregate branches into my_aggregate (Y/N)?

Using the default pattern:

aggregate --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=*ready*
...
Aggregate branches into release/20170307 (Y/N)?

Using a custom pattern:

RELEASE_TYPE=bugfix \
RISK=HIGH \
PROGRESSIVE=3 \
AGGREGATE_PATTERN="release/rc-<progressive>.<release_type>_<risk>_<timestamp>" aggregate --repo=/Users/Elvis/greatest_hits --branches=*ready*
...
Aggregate branches into release/rc-3.bugfix_HIGH_20170307 (Y/N)?

About

Utility library to rebase and aggregate your project branches

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published