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From: Carlos Pereira <jose.carlos.pereira@ist.utl.pt>
To: git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: git best strategy for two version development
Date: Sat, 08 Feb 2014 08:55:38 +0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <52F5F10A.2080708@ist.utl.pt> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20140208035610.GK635004@vauxhall.crustytoothpaste.net>

On 02/08/2014 03:56 AM, brian m. carlson wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 08, 2014 at 02:06:41AM +0000, Carlos Pereira wrote:
>    
>> Hello,
>>
>> I am a git and CVS newbie, I bought and red most of the excellent
>> Pro Git book by Scott Chacon, but I still have a doubt. I have a
>> package that I distribute in two versions differing only in one
>> library: version_A uses this library, version_B uses my own code to
>> replace it. For strategic reasons I want to keep it this way for the
>> time being. Both versions have the same documentation, the same data
>> files, and 99% of the source code is the same (a few makefile
>> changes, two additional files in version_B and some minor changes: a
>> diff -r has only 170 lines). The question is what is the best
>> strategy to manage a situation like this with git?
>>
>> Shall I maintain two different repositories? I don't think so...
>>
>> Apparently the best solution would be to maintain two long term
>> branches, say mater_A and master_B, and merge all later developments
>> in both branches, keeping the initial difference... Specifically:
>>
>> 1) do some new work in branch master_A, commit, etc.
>> 2) checkout master_B and merge the new work in master_B, without
>> merging the initial diff between the two versions.
>>
>> What is the better way to do that?
>>      
> That's pretty much the way to do it.  If you check in master-A, then
> create the master-B branch off of that, copying in the code from B and
> checking it in, then when you merge from master-A to master-B, git will
> basically do the right thing.  Changes you make on master-A that are
> specific to that version will probably conflict, but they should be easy
> to fix up.
>    
You are right! git does not try to merge everything, only changes 
commited on the other branch (branch-A), after creating branch-B... 
otherwise it would be reverting the work done on the current branch, 
which does not make much sense...

Thank you very much...
C
> I basically do this for a consulting project for a client: there's
> generic code in master, and a special branch for the client.  Since most
> changes don't touch the modified code, conflicts are infrequent, and I
> can fix them up when they occur.  I also do it for my dotfiles, which
> vary slightly between home and work.
>
> You could also make the changes to master-B as a set of commits on top
> of master-A, and always rebase master-B on master-A, but this isn't a
> good solution if other people are going to be using your code.  It has
> the benefits of keeping the history free of frequent merges, which may
> or may not be important to you; it doesn't really bother me very much.
>
>    

  reply	other threads:[~2014-02-08  8:43 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2014-02-08  2:06 git best strategy for two version development Carlos Pereira
2014-02-08  3:56 ` brian m. carlson
2014-02-08  8:55   ` Carlos Pereira [this message]
2014-02-08 12:09 ` Øystein Walle

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