| name | git-workflow-and-versioning |
| description | Use when making any code change. Use when committing, branching, resolving conflicts, or when you need to organize work across multiple parallel streams. |
Git Workflow and Versioning
Overview
Git is your safety net. Treat commits as save points, branches as sandboxes, and history as documentation. With AI agents generating code at high speed, disciplined version control is the mechanism that keeps changes manageable, reviewable, and reversible.
When to Use
Always. Every code change flows through git.
Core Principles
1. Commit Early, Commit Often
Each successful increment gets its own commit. Don't accumulate large uncommitted changes.
Work pattern:
Implement slice → Test → Verify → Commit → Next slice
Not this:
Implement everything → Hope it works → Giant commit
Commits are save points. If the next change breaks something, you can revert to the last known-good state instantly.
2. Atomic Commits
Each commit does one logical thing:
# Good: Each commit is self-contained
git log --oneline
a1b2c3d Add task creation endpoint with validation
d4e5f6g Add task creation form component
h7i8j9k Connect form to API and add loading state
m1n2o3p Add task creation tests (unit + integration)
# Bad: Everything mixed together
git log --oneline
x1y2z3a Add task feature, fix sidebar, update deps, refactor utils
3. Descriptive Messages
Commit messages explain the why, not just the what:
# Good: Explains intent
feat: add email validation to registration endpoint
Prevents invalid email formats from reaching the database.
Uses Zod schema validation at the route handler level,
consistent with existing validation patterns in auth.ts.
# Bad: Describes what's obvious from the diff
update auth.ts
Format:
<type>: <short description>
<optional body explaining why, not what>
Types:
feat — New feature
fix — Bug fix
refactor — Code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
test — Adding or updating tests
docs — Documentation only
chore — Tooling, dependencies, config
4. Never Mix Concerns
Don't combine formatting changes with behavior changes. Don't combine refactors with features. Each type of change should be a separate commit:
# Good: Separate concerns
git commit -m "refactor: extract validation logic to shared utility"
git commit -m "feat: add phone number validation to registration"
# Bad: Mixed concerns
git commit -m "refactor validation and add phone number field"
Branching Strategy
Feature Branches
main (always deployable)
│
├── feature/task-creation ← One feature per branch
├── feature/user-settings ← Parallel work
└── fix/duplicate-tasks ← Bug fixes
- Branch from
main (or the team's default branch)
- Keep branches short-lived (merge within 1-3 days)
- Delete branches after merge
Branch Naming
feature/<short-description> → feature/task-creation
fix/<short-description> → fix/duplicate-tasks
chore/<short-description> → chore/update-deps
refactor/<short-description> → refactor/auth-module
Working with Worktrees
For parallel AI agent work, use git worktrees to run multiple branches simultaneously:
git worktree add ../project-feature-a feature/task-creation
git worktree add ../project-feature-b feature/user-settings
ls ../
project/ ← main branch
project-feature-a/ ← task-creation branch
project-feature-b/ ← user-settings branch
git worktree remove ../project-feature-a
Benefits:
- Multiple agents can work on different features simultaneously
- No branch switching needed (each directory has its own branch)
- If one experiment fails, delete the worktree — nothing is lost
- Changes are isolated until explicitly merged
The Save Point Pattern
Agent starts work
│
├── Makes a change
│ ├── Test passes? → Commit → Continue
│ └── Test fails? → Revert to last commit → Investigate
│
├── Makes another change
│ ├── Test passes? → Commit → Continue
│ └── Test fails? → Revert to last commit → Investigate
│
└── Feature complete → All commits form a clean history
This pattern means you never lose more than one increment of work. If an agent goes off the rails, git reset --hard HEAD takes you back to the last successful state.
Change Summaries
After any modification, provide a structured summary. This makes review easier, documents scope discipline, and surfaces unintended changes:
CHANGES MADE:
- src/routes/tasks.ts: Added validation middleware to POST endpoint
- src/lib/validation.ts: Added TaskCreateSchema using Zod
THINGS I DIDN'T TOUCH (intentionally):
- src/routes/auth.ts: Has similar validation gap but out of scope
- src/middleware/error.ts: Error format could be improved (separate task)
POTENTIAL CONCERNS:
- The Zod schema is strict — rejects extra fields. Confirm this is desired.
- Added zod as a dependency (72KB gzipped) — already in package.json
This pattern catches wrong assumptions early and gives reviewers a clear map of the change. The "DIDN'T TOUCH" section is especially important — it shows you exercised scope discipline and didn't go on an unsolicited renovation.
Pre-Commit Hygiene
Before every commit:
git diff --staged
git diff --staged | grep -i "password\|secret\|api_key\|token"
npm test
npm run lint
npx tsc --noEmit
Automate this with git hooks:
{
"lint-staged": {
"*.{ts,tsx}": ["eslint --fix", "prettier --write"],
"*.{json,md}": ["prettier --write"]
}
}
Handling Generated Files
- Commit generated files only if the project expects them (e.g.,
package-lock.json, Prisma migrations)
- Don't commit build output (
dist/, .next/), environment files (.env), or IDE config (.vscode/settings.json unless shared)
- Always have a
.gitignore that covers: node_modules/, dist/, .env, .env.local, *.pem
Using Git for Debugging
git bisect start
git bisect bad HEAD
git bisect good <known-good-commit>
git log --oneline -20
git diff HEAD~5..HEAD -- src/
git blame src/services/task.ts
git log --grep="validation" --oneline
Common Rationalizations
| Rationalization | Reality |
|---|
| "I'll commit when the feature is done" | One giant commit is impossible to review, debug, or revert. Commit each slice. |
| "The message doesn't matter" | Messages are documentation. Future you (and future agents) will need to understand what changed and why. |
| "I'll squash it all later" | Squashing destroys the development narrative. Prefer clean incremental commits from the start. |
| "Branches add overhead" | Branches are free and prevent conflicting work from colliding. Use them. |
| "I don't need a .gitignore" | Until .env with production secrets gets committed. Set it up immediately. |
Red Flags
- Large uncommitted changes accumulating
- Commit messages like "fix", "update", "misc"
- Formatting changes mixed with behavior changes
- No
.gitignore in the project
- Committing
node_modules/, .env, or build artifacts
- Long-lived branches that diverge significantly from main
- Force-pushing to shared branches
Verification
For every commit: