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Trunk-based pull-request GitHub workflow

Table of contents

Carbon repositories follow a few basic principles:

  • Development directly on the trunk branch and revert to green.
  • Always use pull requests, rather than pushing directly.
  • Changes should be small, incremental, and review-optimized.
  • Preserve linear history by rebasing or squashing pull requests rather than using unsquashed merge commits.

These principles try to optimize for several different uses or activities with version control:

  • Continuous integration and bisection to identify failures and revert to green.
  • Code review both at the time of commit and follow-up review after commit.
  • Understanding how things evolve over time, which can manifest in different ways:
    • When were things introduced?
    • How does the main branch and project evolve over time?
    • How was a bug or surprising thing introduced?

Note that this document focuses on the mechanical workflow and branch management. Details of the code review process are in their own document.

Trunk based development

We work in a simple trunk-based development model. This means all development activity takes place on a single common trunk branch in the repository (our default branch). We focus on small, incremental changes rather than feature branches or the "scaled" variations of this workflow.

Green tests

The trunk branch should always stay "green". That means that if tests fail or if we discover bugs or errors, we revert to a "green" state by default, where the failure or bug is no longer present. Fixing forward is fine if that will be comparably fast and efficient. The goal isn't to dogmatically avoid fixing forward, but to prioritize getting back to green quickly. We hope to eventually tool this through automatic continuous-integration powered submit queues, but even those can fail and the principle remains.

Always use pull requests (with review) rather than pushing directly

We want to ensure that changes to Carbon are always reviewed, and the simplest way to do this is to consistently follow a pull request workflow. Even if the change seems trivial, still go through a pull request -- it'll likely be trivial to review. Always wait for someone else to review your pull request rather than just merging it, even if you have permission to do so.

Our GitHub repositories are configured to require pull requests and review before they are merged, so this rule is enforced automatically.

Small, incremental changes

Developing in small, incremental changes improves code review time, continuous integration, and bisection. This means we typically squash pull requests into a single commit when landing. We use two fundamental guides for deciding how to split up pull requests:

  1. Ensure that each pull request builds and passes any tests cleanly when you request review and when it lands. This will ensure bisection and continuous integration can effectively process them.

  2. Without violating the first point, try to get each pull request to be "just right": not too big, not too small. You don't want to separate a pattern of tightly related changes into separate requests when they're easier to review as a set or batch, and you don't want to bundle unrelated changes together. Typically you should try to keep the pull request as small as you can without breaking apart tightly coupled changes. However, listen to your code reviewer if they ask to split things up or combine them.

While the default is to squash pull requests into a single commit, during the review you typically want to leave the development history undisturbed until the end so that comments on any particular increment aren't lost. We typically use the GitHub squash-and-merge functionality to land things.

Managing pull requests with multiple commits

Sometimes, it will make sense to land a series of separate commits for a single pull request through rebasing. This can happen when there is important overarching context that should feed into the review, but the changes can be usefully decomposed when landing them. When following this model, each commit you intend to end up on the trunk branch needs to follow the same fundamental rules as the pull request above: they should each build and pass tests when landed in order, and they should have well written, cohesive commit messages.

Prior to landing the pull request, you are expected to rebase it to produce this final commit sequence, either interactively or not. This kind of rebase rewrites the history in Git, which can make it hard to track the resolution of code review comments. Typically, only do this as a cleanup step when the review has finished, or when it won't otherwise disrupt code review. It is healthy and expected to add "addressing review comments" commits during the review and then squashing them away before the pull request is merged.

Linear history

We want the history of the trunk branch of each repository to be as simple and easy to understand as possible. While Git has strong support for managing complex history and merge patterns, we find understanding and reasoning about the history -- especially for humans -- to be at least somewhat simplified by sticking to a linear progression. As a consequence, we either squash pull requests or rebase them when merging them.