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everything-claude-code/skills/git-workflow/SKILL.md

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git-workflow Git workflow patterns including branching strategies, commit conventions, merge vs rebase, conflict resolution, and collaborative development best practices for teams of all sizes. 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

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)

# Creates a merge commit
git checkout main
git merge feature/user-auth

# Result:
# *   merge commit
# |\
# | * feature commits
# |/
# * main commits

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)

# Rewrites feature commits onto target branch
git checkout feature/user-auth
git rebase main

# Result:
# * feature commits (rewritten)
# * main commits

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

# Update feature branch with latest main (before PR)
git checkout feature/user-auth
git fetch origin
git rebase origin/main

# Fix any conflicts
# Tests should still pass

# Force push (only if you're the only contributor)
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:

  • Does the code solve the stated problem?
  • Are there any edge cases not handled?
  • Is the code readable and maintainable?
  • Are there sufficient tests?
  • Are there security concerns?
  • Is the commit history clean (squashed if needed)?

For Authors:

  • Self-review completed before requesting review
  • CI passes (tests, lint, typecheck)
  • PR size is reasonable (<500 lines ideal)
  • Related to a single feature/fix
  • Description clearly explains the change

Conflict Resolution

Identify Conflicts

# Check for conflicts before merge
git checkout main
git merge feature/user-auth --no-commit --no-ff

# If conflicts, Git will show:
# CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in src/auth/login.ts
# Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.

Resolve Conflicts

# See conflicted files
git status

# View conflict markers in file
# <<<<<<< HEAD
# content from main
# =======
# content from feature branch
# >>>>>>> feature/user-auth

# Option 1: Manual resolution
# Edit file, remove markers, keep correct content

# Option 2: Use merge tool
git mergetool

# Option 3: Accept one side
git checkout --ours src/auth/login.ts    # Keep main version
git checkout --theirs src/auth/login.ts  # Keep feature version

# After resolving, stage and commit
git add src/auth/login.ts
git commit

Conflict Prevention Strategies

# 1. Keep feature branches small and short-lived
# 2. Rebase frequently onto main
git checkout feature/user-auth
git fetch origin
git rebase origin/main

# 3. Communicate with team about touching shared files
# 4. Use feature flags instead of long-lived branches
# 5. Review and merge PRs promptly

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

# Delete local branches that are merged
git branch --merged main | grep -v "^\*\|main" | xargs -n 1 git branch -d

# Delete remote-tracking references for deleted remote branches
git fetch -p

# Delete local branch
git branch -d feature/user-auth  # Safe delete (only if merged)
git branch -D feature/user-auth  # Force delete

# Delete remote branch
git push origin --delete feature/user-auth

Stash Workflow

# Save work in progress
git stash push -m "WIP: user authentication"

# List stashes
git stash list

# Apply most recent stash
git stash pop

# Apply specific stash
git stash apply stash@{2}

# Drop stash
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

# Create annotated tag
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"

# Push tag to remote
git push origin v1.2.0

# List tags
git tag -l

# Delete tag
git tag -d v1.2.0
git push origin --delete v1.2.0

Changelog Generation

# Generate changelog from commits
git log v1.1.0..v1.2.0 --oneline --no-merges

# Or use conventional-changelog
npx conventional-changelog -i CHANGELOG.md -s

Git Configuration

Essential Configs

# User identity
git config --global user.name "Your Name"
git config --global user.email "your@email.com"

# Default branch name
git config --global init.defaultBranch main

# Pull behavior (rebase instead of merge)
git config --global pull.rebase true

# Push behavior (push current branch only)
git config --global push.default current

# Auto-correct typos
git config --global help.autocorrect 1

# Better diff algorithm
git config --global diff.algorithm histogram

# Color output
git config --global color.ui auto

Useful Aliases

# Add to ~/.gitconfig
[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

# 1. Update main branch
git checkout main
git pull origin main

# 2. Create feature branch
git checkout -b feature/user-auth

# 3. Make changes and commit
git add .
git commit -m "feat(auth): implement OAuth2 login"

# 4. Push to remote
git push -u origin feature/user-auth

# 5. Create Pull Request on GitHub/GitLab

Updating a PR with New Changes

# 1. Make additional changes
git add .
git commit -m "feat(auth): add error handling"

# 2. Push updates
git push origin feature/user-auth

Syncing Fork with Upstream

# 1. Add upstream remote (once)
git remote add upstream https://github.com/original/repo.git

# 2. Fetch upstream
git fetch upstream

# 3. Merge upstream/main into your main
git checkout main
git merge upstream/main

# 4. Push to your fork
git push origin main

Undoing Mistakes

# Undo last commit (keep changes)
git reset --soft HEAD~1

# Undo last commit (discard changes)
git reset --hard HEAD~1

# Undo last commit pushed to remote
git revert HEAD
git push origin main

# Undo specific file changes
git checkout HEAD -- path/to/file

# Fix last commit message
git commit --amend -m "New message"

# Add forgotten file to last commit
git add forgotten-file
git commit --amend --no-edit

Git Hooks

Pre-Commit Hook

#!/bin/bash
# .git/hooks/pre-commit

# Run linting
npm run lint || exit 1

# Run tests
npm test || exit 1

# Check for secrets
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
# .git/hooks/pre-push

# Run full test suite
npm run test:all || exit 1

# Check for console.log statements
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