Git convention
Make sure you follow Semantic Versioning
Version numbers are handled automatically by using semantic-release.
Commit Messages
Make sure to decorate your commit messages with either Conventional Commits or simple-commit-message:
fix: an example fix message
as the subjectfeat: this is a new feature
as the subjecte.g. feat: message
+BREAKING CHANGE:
in the footer of the commit. See example below.
If you are working on a single component update, you can use a decoration and a scope in parenthesis:
fix(ExampleComponent): an example fix message
feat(ExampleComponent): this is a new feature
You can also use the following decorators – but keep in mind, they won't be included in the releases change log:
chore:
docs:
style:
build:
ci:
refactor:
perf:
test:
Example of a breaking change commit message:
feat: commit subject with optional decoratorBody with textSeveral linesBREAKING CHANGE:Subject (will be a list item):Markdown text over several lines.Additional text such as:1. List item2. List item
You can find more info in the docs of semantic-release and Conventional Commits.
Ignore CI run
You can either include [skip ci]
in your commit message or let your branch name end with --skip-ci
.
Rebasing
Squash commits
If you have to make a small fix after you committed:
- Make and commit the new change
- Squash and rebase with the previous commit
- Force push to your branch
Rebase onto main
If you are working on a branch for a long period, it might be necessary to do a rebase on main once in a while:
git fetch origin && git rebase origin/main
Pull Requests
When you have committed changes to your branch, go to Github Pull Requests and open a New pull request
.
You will most likely get the yellow notification bar mentioning that a branch had a recent push. Click on the Compare and pull request
button. This will take you to the page for opening a pull request. Fill out the template under the Write tab
.
Request a reviewer, create the pull request and watch the results of the pipeline checks.