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Working with pull requests
To make best use of GitHub's pull request facility (see eg. https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo) we use the following procedure:
- No major changes happen in the main repositories of the deegree group directly
- Everybody is invited to fork the deegree repositories on GitHub (possibly on a per organisation basis, but personal forks are of course also welcome)
- Every contribution should be prepared as a pull request: https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests
- Every two weeks the TMC goes over the pull requests and decides if it goes into the main repository or not
- Everybody is invited to join the TMC meetings (IRC channel #deegree on freenode) to talk about the pull requests, especially the actual implementers!
As noted on https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests, we think that this follows the best practices for OpenSource projects.
In order to create a pull request for a new feature or a bugfix it is advisable to follow these steps:
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create your own fork on GitHub
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add the original deegree repository as remote to your local clone, eg.
git add remote deegree git://github.com/deegree/deegree3.gitfor the deegree3 repository -
create a feature branch based on the current deegree master:
git checkout deegree/mastergit checkout -b <my-new-branch-name>
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implement what you want to implement within your new branch
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create a pull request from that branch to the deegree master
If the deegree master is changed during your implementation phase, it might be a good idea to merge these changes into your branch from time to time using git merge deegree/master. Make sure you've previously fetched the remote changes using git fetch --all.