| name | git-workflow |
| description | Git workflow patterns including branching strategies, commit conventions, merge vs rebase, conflict resolution, and collaborative development best practices for teams of all sizes. |
| origin | ECC |
Git Workflow Patterns
Best practices for Git version control, branching strategies, and collaborative development.
When to Activate
- Setting up Git workflow for a new project
- Deciding on branching strategy (GitFlow, trunk-based, GitHub flow)
- Writing commit messages and PR descriptions
- Resolving merge conflicts
- Managing releases and version tags
- Onboarding new team members to Git practices
Branching Strategies
GitHub Flow (Simple, Recommended for Most)
Best for continuous deployment and small-to-medium teams.
main (protected, always deployable)
│
├── feature/user-auth → PR → merge to main
├── feature/payment-flow → PR → merge to main
└── fix/login-bug → PR → merge to main
Rules:
main is always deployable
- Create feature branches from
main
- Open Pull Request when ready for review
- After approval and CI passes, merge to
main
- Deploy immediately after merge
Trunk-Based Development (High-Velocity Teams)
Best for teams with strong CI/CD and feature flags.
main (trunk)
│
├── short-lived feature (1-2 days max)
├── short-lived feature
└── short-lived feature
Rules:
- Everyone commits to
main or very short-lived branches
- Feature flags hide incomplete work
- CI must pass before merge
- Deploy multiple times per day
GitFlow (Complex, Release-Cycle Driven)
Best for scheduled releases and enterprise projects.
main (production releases)
│
└── develop (integration branch)
│
├── feature/user-auth
├── feature/payment
│
├── release/1.0.0 → merge to main and develop
│
└── hotfix/critical → merge to main and develop
Rules:
main contains production-ready code only
develop is the integration branch
- Feature branches from
develop, merge back to develop
- Release branches from
develop, merge to main and develop
- Hotfix branches from
main, merge to both main and develop
When to Use Which
| Strategy | Team Size | Release Cadence | Best For |
|---|
| GitHub Flow | Any | Continuous | SaaS, web apps, startups |
| Trunk-Based | 5+ experienced | Multiple/day | High-velocity teams, feature flags |
| GitFlow | 10+ | Scheduled | Enterprise, regulated industries |
Commit Messages
Conventional Commits Format
<type>(<scope>): <subject>
[optional body]
[optional footer(s)]
Types
| Type | Use For | Example |
|---|
feat | New feature | feat(auth): add OAuth2 login |
fix | Bug fix | fix(api): handle null response in user endpoint |
docs | Documentation | docs(readme): update installation instructions |
style | Formatting, no code change | style: fix indentation in login component |
refactor | Code refactoring | refactor(db): extract connection pool to module |
test | Adding/updating tests | test(auth): add unit tests for token validation |
chore | Maintenance tasks | chore(deps): update dependencies |
perf | Performance improvement | perf(query): add index to users table |
ci | CI/CD changes | ci: add PostgreSQL service to test workflow |
revert | Revert previous commit | revert: revert "feat(auth): add OAuth2 login" |
Good vs Bad Examples
# BAD: Vague, no context
git commit -m "fixed stuff"
git commit -m "updates"
git commit -m "WIP"
# GOOD: Clear, specific, explains why
git commit -m "fix(api): retry requests on 503 Service Unavailable
The external API occasionally returns 503 errors during peak hours.
Added exponential backoff retry logic with max 3 attempts.
Closes #123"
Commit Message Template
Create .gitmessage in repo root:
# <type>(<scope>): <subject>
# # Types: feat, fix, docs, style, refactor, test, chore, perf, ci, revert
# Scope: api, ui, db, auth, etc.
# Subject: imperative mood, no period, max 50 chars
#
# [optional body] - explain why, not what
# [optional footer] - Breaking changes, closes #issue
Enable with: git config commit.template .gitmessage
Merge vs Rebase
Merge (Preserves History)
git checkout main
git merge feature/user-auth
Use when:
- Merging feature branches into
main
- You want to preserve exact history
- Multiple people worked on the branch
- The branch has been pushed and others may have based work on it
Rebase (Linear History)
git checkout feature/user-auth
git rebase main
Use when:
- Updating your local feature branch with latest
main
- You want a linear, clean history
- The branch is local-only (not pushed)
- You're the only one working on the branch
Rebase Workflow
git checkout feature/user-auth
git fetch origin
git rebase origin/main
git push --force-with-lease origin feature/user-auth
When NOT to Rebase
# NEVER rebase branches that:
- Have been pushed to a shared repository
- Other people have based work on
- Are protected branches (main, develop)
- Are already merged
# Why: Rebase rewrites history, breaking others' work
Pull Request Workflow
PR Title Format
<type>(<scope>): <description>
Examples:
feat(auth): add SSO support for enterprise users
fix(api): resolve race condition in order processing
docs(api): add OpenAPI specification for v2 endpoints
PR Description Template
## What
Brief description of what this PR does.
## Why
Explain the motivation and context.
## How
Key implementation details worth highlighting.
## Testing
- [ ] Unit tests added/updated
- [ ] Integration tests added/updated
- [ ] Manual testing performed
## Screenshots (if applicable)
Before/after screenshots for UI changes.
## Checklist
- [ ] Code follows project style guidelines
- [ ] Self-review completed
- [ ] Comments added for complex logic
- [ ] Documentation updated
- [ ] No new warnings introduced
- [ ] Tests pass locally
- [ ] Related issues linked
Closes #123
Code Review Checklist
For Reviewers:
For Authors:
Conflict Resolution
Identify Conflicts
git checkout main
git merge feature/user-auth --no-commit --no-ff
Resolve Conflicts
git status
git mergetool
git checkout --ours src/auth/login.ts
git checkout --theirs src/auth/login.ts
git add src/auth/login.ts
git commit
Conflict Prevention Strategies
git checkout feature/user-auth
git fetch origin
git rebase origin/main
Branch Management
Naming Conventions
# Feature branches
feature/user-authentication
feature/JIRA-123-payment-integration
# Bug fixes
fix/login-redirect-loop
fix/456-null-pointer-exception
# Hotfixes (production issues)
hotfix/critical-security-patch
hotfix/database-connection-leak
# Releases
release/1.2.0
release/2024-01-hotfix
# Experiments/POCs
experiment/new-caching-strategy
poc/graphql-migration
Branch Cleanup
git branch --merged main | grep -v "^\*\|main" | xargs -n 1 git branch -d
git fetch -p
git branch -d feature/user-auth
git branch -D feature/user-auth
git push origin --delete feature/user-auth
Stash Workflow
git stash push -m "WIP: user authentication"
git stash list
git stash pop
git stash apply stash@{2}
git stash drop stash@{0}
Release Management
Semantic Versioning
MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
MAJOR: Breaking changes
MINOR: New features, backward compatible
PATCH: Bug fixes, backward compatible
Examples:
1.0.0 → 1.0.1 (patch: bug fix)
1.0.1 → 1.1.0 (minor: new feature)
1.1.0 → 2.0.0 (major: breaking change)
Creating Releases
git tag -a v1.2.0 -m "Release v1.2.0
Features:
- Add user authentication
- Implement password reset
Fixes:
- Resolve login redirect issue
Breaking Changes:
- None"
git push origin v1.2.0
git tag -l
git tag -d v1.2.0
git push origin --delete v1.2.0
Changelog Generation
git log v1.1.0..v1.2.0 --oneline --no-merges
npx conventional-changelog -i CHANGELOG.md -s
Git Configuration
Essential Configs
git config --global user.name "Your Name"
git config --global user.email "your@email.com"
git config --global init.defaultBranch main
git config --global pull.rebase true
git config --global push.default current
git config --global help.autocorrect 1
git config --global diff.algorithm histogram
git config --global color.ui auto
Useful Aliases
[alias]
co = checkout
br = branch
ci = commit
st = status
unstage = reset HEAD --
last = log -1 HEAD
visual = log --oneline --graph --all
amend = commit --amend --no-edit
wip = commit -m "WIP"
undo = reset --soft HEAD~1
contributors = shortlog -sn
Gitignore Patterns
# Dependencies
node_modules/
vendor/
# Build outputs
dist/
build/
*.o
*.exe
# Environment files
.env
.env.local
.env.*.local
# IDE
.idea/
.vscode/
*.swp
*.swo
# OS files
.DS_Store
Thumbs.db
# Logs
*.log
logs/
# Test coverage
coverage/
# Cache
.cache/
*.tsbuildinfo
Common Workflows
Starting a New Feature
git checkout main
git pull origin main
git checkout -b feature/user-auth
git add .
git commit -m "feat(auth): implement OAuth2 login"
git push -u origin feature/user-auth
Updating a PR with New Changes
git add .
git commit -m "feat(auth): add error handling"
git push origin feature/user-auth
Syncing Fork with Upstream
git remote add upstream https://github.com/original/repo.git
git fetch upstream
git checkout main
git merge upstream/main
git push origin main
Undoing Mistakes
git reset --soft HEAD~1
git reset --hard HEAD~1
git revert HEAD
git push origin main
git checkout HEAD -- path/to/file
git commit --amend -m "New message"
git add forgotten-file
git commit --amend --no-edit
Git Hooks
Pre-Commit Hook
#!/bin/bash
npm run lint || exit 1
npm test || exit 1
if git diff --cached | grep -E '(password|api_key|secret)'; then
echo "Possible secret detected. Commit aborted."
exit 1
fi
Pre-Push Hook
#!/bin/bash
npm run test:all || exit 1
if git diff origin/main | grep -E 'console\.log'; then
echo "Remove console.log statements before pushing."
exit 1
fi
Anti-Patterns
# BAD: Committing directly to main
git checkout main
git commit -m "fix bug"
# GOOD: Use feature branches and PRs
# BAD: Committing secrets
git add .env # Contains API keys
# GOOD: Add to .gitignore, use environment variables
# BAD: Giant PRs (1000+ lines)
# GOOD: Break into smaller, focused PRs
# BAD: "Update" commit messages
git commit -m "update"
git commit -m "fix"
# GOOD: Descriptive messages
git commit -m "fix(auth): resolve redirect loop after login"
# BAD: Rewriting public history
git push --force origin main
# GOOD: Use revert for public branches
git revert HEAD
# BAD: Long-lived feature branches (weeks/months)
# GOOD: Keep branches short (days), rebase frequently
# BAD: Committing generated files
git add dist/
git add node_modules/
# GOOD: Add to .gitignore
Quick Reference
| Task | Command |
|---|
| Create branch | git checkout -b feature/name |
| Switch branch | git checkout branch-name |
| Delete branch | git branch -d branch-name |
| Merge branch | git merge branch-name |
| Rebase branch | git rebase main |
| View history | git log --oneline --graph |
| View changes | git diff |
| Stage changes | git add . or git add -p |
| Commit | git commit -m "message" |
| Push | git push origin branch-name |
| Pull | git pull origin branch-name |
| Stash | git stash push -m "message" |
| Undo last commit | git reset --soft HEAD~1 |
| Revert commit | git revert HEAD |