>
> On Dec 13, 2010, at 11:16 AM, Neal Kreitzinger wrote:
>
>> "Hans-Christoph Steiner" <hans@at.or.at> wrote in message
>> news:7EAE16CF-A9A8-47A6-9294-3646CCDB0E9C@at.or.at...
>>>
>>> Hey all,
>>>
>>> (and my second post on this list...)
>>>
>>> I've gotten pretty good at git, and its helping me already with managing
>>> the very odd workflows I have with the software I work a lot on
>>> called Pd
>>> (
http://puredata.info). My role in Pd development is like a Linux
>>> lieutenant.
>>>
>>> I also the main dev for an app called Pd-extended, which is based on Pd.
>>> Now I'm stuck trying to figure out how to use git to match my current
>>> workflow for Pd-extended, which is a kind of long-lived branch, almost
>>> like a friendly fork. So its kind of close to the Linux workflow with me
>>> as a lieutenant, but not quite.
>>>
>>> What makes it tricky is that I make releases directly from my repo that
>>> are widely used. So my repo is both lieutenant and dictator at the same
>>> time. So that's where I am stumped. I want to be able to rebase and
>>> push to a public repo, but that would be stupid. So there has got to be
>>> another way.
>>>
>>> .hc
>>>
>> I don't think pushing to a public repo is stupid. You could create a bare
>> repo with a Pd branch and Pd-extended branch that contain the production
>> versions of Pd and Pd-extended. The main reason our shop chose git is
>> because it allows us to easily have multiple concurrent versions of
>> production by having a branch for each of our custom versions. These
>> versions eventually get merged together into a major release, but in the
>> meantime they are longlived branches representing the productional
>> customized system for each major customer.
>>
>> *If* you end up merging Pd and Pd-extended at some point, then you could
>> have another branch for that, e.g. master or Pd-master or whatever. BTW,
>> you do not have to use master as the representative of your final merged
>> work so don't think that is the way you HAVE to do it. It's just the
>> default, and a common practice for systems with a single version of
>> production. Master can become vestigial or secondary, if you choose to
>> create a new branch called Pd-master, etc. to represent your eventual
>> merges
>> of Pd and Pd-extended.
>
>
> For me the biggest feature that I am looking for is the automatic
> merging of commits, and second, having a branch that puts my collection
> of patches/commits ahead of the Pd master so that its easy to manage the
> patches. I don't think I see how I could do that with this multiple
> branches idea. Is that possible?
>