Gitflow Workflow
Gitflow is a legacy Git workflow that was originally a disruptive and novel strategy for managing Git branches. Gitflow has fallen in popularity in favor of trunk-based workflows, which are now considered best practices for modern continuous software development and DevOps practices. Gitflow also can be challenging to use with CI/CD. This post details Gitflow for historical purposes.
What is Gitflow?
Giflow is an alternative Git branching model that involves the use of feature branches and multiple primary branches. It was first published and made popular by Vincent Driessen at nvie. Compared to trunk-based development, Giflow has numerous, longer-lived branches and larger commits. Under this model, developers create a feature branch and delay merging it to the main trunk branch until the feature is complete. These long-lived feature branches require more collaboration to merge and have a higher risk of deviating from the trunk branch. They can also introduce conflicting updates.
Gitflow can be used for projects that have a scheduled release cycle and for the DevOps best practice of continuous delivery. This workflow doesn’t add any new concepts or commands beyond what’s required for the Feature Branch Workflow. Instead, it assigns very specific roles to different branches and defines how and when they should interact. In addition to feature
branches, it uses individual branches for preparing, maintaining, and recording releases. Of course, you also get to leverage all the benefits of the Feature Branch Workflow: pull requests, isolated experiments, and more efficient collaboration.
Getting Started
Gitflow is really just an abstract idea of a Git workflow. This means it dictates what kind of branches to set up and how to merge them together. We will touch on the purposes of the branches below. The git-flow toolset is an actual command line tool that has an installation process. The installation process for git-flow is straightforward. Packages for git-flow are available on multiple operating systems. On OSX systems, you can execute brew install git-flow
. On windows you will need to download and install git-flow. After installing git-flow you can use it in your project by executing git flow init
. Git-flow is a wrapper around Git. The git flow init
command is an extension of the default [git init](https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/setting-up-a-repository/git-init)
command and doesn't change anything in your repository other than creating branches for you.
How it works
Develop and main branches
Instead of a single main
branch, this workflow uses two branches to record the history of the project. The main
branch stores the official release history, and the develop
branch serves as an integration branch for features. It's also convenient to tag all commits in the main
branch with a version number.
The first step is to complement the default main
with a develop
branch. A simple way to do this is for one developer to create an empty develop
branch locally and push it to the server:
git branch develop
git push -u origin develop
This branch will contain the complete history of the project, whereas main
will contain an abridged version. Other developers should now clone the central repository and create a tracking branch for develop.
When using the git-flow extension library, executing git flow init
on an existing repo will create the develop
branch:
$ git flow init
Initialized empty Git repository in ~/project/.git/No branches exist yet. Base branches must be created now.Branch name for production releases: [main]Branch name for "next release" development: [develop]
How to name your supporting branch prefixes?
Feature branches? [feature/]
Release branches? [release/]
Hotfix branches? [hotfix/]
Support branches? [support/]
Version tag prefix? []
$ git branch* develop main
Feature branches
Each new feature should reside in its own branch, which can be pushed to the central repository for backup/collaboration. But, instead of branching off of main
, feature
branches use develop
as their parent branch. When a feature is complete, it gets merged back into develop. Features should never interact directly with main
.
Note that feature
branches combined with the develop
branch is, for all intents and purposes, the Feature Branch Workflow. But, the Gitflow workflow doesn’t stop there.
Feature
branches are generally created off to the latest develop
branch.
Creating a feature branch
Without the git-flow extensions:
git checkout develop
git checkout -b feature_branch
When using the git-flow extension:
git flow feature start feature_branch
Continue your work and use Git like you normally would.
Finishing a feature branch
When you’re done with the development work on the feature, the next step is to merge the feature_branch
into develop
.
Without the git-flow extensions:
git checkout develop
git merge feature_branch
Using the git-flow extensions:
git flow feature finish feature_branch
Release branches
Once develop
has acquired enough features for a release (or a predetermined release date is approaching), you fork a release
branch off of develop
. Creating this branch starts the next release cycle, so no new features can be added after this point—only bug fixes, documentation generation, and other release-oriented tasks should go in this branch. Once it's ready to ship, the release
branch gets merged into main
and tagged with a version number. In addition, it should be merged back into develop
, which may have progressed since the release was initiated.
Using a dedicated branch to prepare releases makes it possible for one team to polish the current release while another team continues working on features for the next release. It also creates well-defined phases of development (e.g., it's easy to say, “This week we're preparing for version 4.0,” and to actually see it in the structure of the repository).
Making release
branches is another straightforward branching operation. Like feature
branches, release
branches are based on the develop
branch. A new release
branch can be created using the following methods.
Without the git-flow extensions:
git checkout develop
git checkout -b release/0.1.0
When using the git-flow extensions:
$ git flow release start 0.1.0
Switched to a new branch 'release/0.1.0'
Once the release is ready to ship, it will get merged it into main
and develop
, then the release
branch will be deleted. It’s important to merge back into develop
because critical updates may have been added to the release
branch and they need to be accessible to new features. If your organization stresses code review, this would be an ideal place for a pull request.
To finish a release
branch, use the following methods:
Without the git-flow extensions:
git checkout main
git merge release/0.1.0
Or with the git-flow extension:
git flow release finish '0.1.0'
Hotfix branches
Maintenance or “hotfix”
branches are used to quickly patch production releases. Hotfix
branches are a lot like release
branches and feature
branches except they're based on main
instead of develop
. This is the only branch that should fork directly off of main
. As soon as the fix is complete, it should be merged into both main
and develop
(or the current release
branch), and main
should be tagged with an updated version number.
Having a dedicated line of development for bug fixes lets your team address issues without interrupting the rest of the workflow or waiting for the next release cycle. You can think of maintenance branches as ad hoc release
branches that work directly with main
. A hotfix
branch can be created using the following methods:
Without the git-flow extensions:
git checkout main
git checkout -b hotfix_branch
When using the git-flow extensions:
$ git flow hotfix start hotfix_branch
Similar to finishing a release
branch, a hotfix
branch gets merged into both main
and develop.
git checkout main
git merge hotfix_branch
git checkout develop
git merge hotfix_branch
git branch -D hotfix_branch
$ git flow hotfix finish hotfix_branch
Example
A complete example demonstrating a Feature Branch Flow is as follows. Assuming we have a repo setup with a main
branch.
git checkout maingit checkout -b develop
git checkout -b feature_branch
# work happens on feature branch
git checkout develop
git merge feature_branch
git checkout main
git merge develop
git branch -d feature_branch
In addition to the feature
and release
flow, a hotfix
example is as follows:
git checkout main
git checkout -b hotfix_branch
# work is done commits are added to the hotfix_branchgit checkout develop
git merge hotfix_branch
git checkout main
git merge hotfix_branch
Summary
Here we discussed the Gitflow Workflow. Gitflow is one of many styles of Git workflows you and your team can utilize.
Some key takeaways to know about Gitflow are:
- The workflow is great for a release-based software workflow.
- Gitflow offers a dedicated channel for hotfixes to production.
The overall flow of Gitflow is:
- A
develop
branch is created frommain
- A
release
branch is created fromdevelop
Feature
branches are created fromdevelop
- When a
feature
is complete it is merged into thedevelop
branch - When the
release
branch is done it is merged intodevelop
andmain
- If an issue in
main
is detected ahotfix
branch is created frommain
- Once the
hotfix
is complete it is merged to bothdevelop
andmain