4.4 KiB
Your Fork’s Master: Update Often, Commit Never
It is highly recommended for QMK development, regardless of what is
being done or where, to keep your master branch updated,
but never commit to it. Instead, do all your
changes in a development branch and issue pull requests from your
branches when you’re developing.
To reduce the chances of merge conflicts — instances where two or
more users have edited the same part of a file concurrently — keep your
master branch relatively up-to-date, and start any new
developments by creating a new branch.
Updating your master branch
To keep your master branch updated, it is recommended to
add the QMK Firmware repository (“repo”) as a remote repository in git.
To do this, open your Git command line interface and enter:
git remote add upstream https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware.git
The name upstream is arbitrary, but a common convention;
you can give the QMK remote any name that suits you. Git’s
remote command uses the syntax
git remote add <name> <url>,
<name> being shorthand for the remote repo. This name
can be used with many Git commands, including but not limited to
fetch, pull and push, to specify
the remote repo on which to act.
To verify that the repository has been added, run
git remote -v, which should return the following:
$ git remote -v
origin https://github.com/<your_username>/qmk_firmware.git (fetch)
origin https://github.com/<your_username>/qmk_firmware.git (push)
upstream https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware.git (fetch)
upstream https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware.git (push)
Now that this is done, you can check for updates to the repo by
running git fetch upstream. This retrieves the branches and
tags — collectively referred to as “refs” — from the QMK repo, which now
has the nickname upstream. We can now compare the data on
our fork origin to that held by QMK.
To update your fork’s master, run the following, hitting the Enter key after each line:
git checkout master
git fetch upstream
git pull upstream master
git push origin master
This switches you to your master branch, retrieves the
refs from the QMK repo, downloads the current QMK master
branch to your computer, and then uploads it to your fork.
Making Changes
To make changes, create a new branch by entering:
git checkout -b dev_branch
git push --set-upstream origin dev_branch
This creates a new branch named dev_branch, checks it
out, and then saves the new branch to your fork. The
--set-upstream argument tells git to use your fork and the
dev_branch branch every time you use git push
or git pull from this branch. It only needs to be used on
the first push; after that, you can safely use git push or
git pull, without the rest of the arguments.
With git push, you can use -u in place of
--set-upstream — -u is an alias for
--set-upstream.
You can name your branch nearly anything you want, though it is recommended to name it something related to the changes you are going to make.
By default git checkout -b will base your new branch on
the branch that is currently checked out. You can base your new branch
on an existing branch that is not checked out by adding the name of the
existing branch to the command:
git checkout -b dev_branch master
Now that you have a development branch, open your text editor and make whatever changes you need to make. It is recommended to make many small commits to your branch; that way, any change that causes issues can be more easily traced and undone if needed. To make your changes, edit and save any files that need to be updated, add them to Git’s staging area, and then commit them to your branch:
git add path/to/updated_file
git commit -m "My commit message."
git add adds files that have been changed to Git’s
staging area, which is Git’s “loading zone.” This contains the
changes that are going to be committed by
git commit, which saves the changes to the repo. Use
descriptive commit messages so you can know what was changed at a
glance.
If you’ve changed multiple files, you can use
git add -- path/to/file1 path/to/file2 ... to add all your
desired files.
Publishing Your Changes
The last step is to push your changes to your fork. To do this, enter
git push. Git will then publish the current state of
dev_branch to your fork.