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0.13.7 Aug 25, 2024
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#62 in Development tools

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MIT license

465KB
12K SLoC

git-next

Trunk-based developement manager.

A source-control branching model, where developers collaborate on code in a single branch called ‘trunk’, resist any pressure to create other long-lived development branches by employing documented techniques. They therefore avoid merge hell, do not break the build, and live happily ever after. - source

  • Status: BETA - dog-fooding

git-next is a combined server and command-line tool that enables trunk-based development workflows where each commit must pass CI before being included in the main branch.

Features

  • Allows enforcing the requirement for each commit to pass the CI pipeline before being included in the main branch
  • Provides a server component that manages the trunk-based development process
  • Ensure a consistent, high-quality codebase by preventing untested changes from being added to main
  • Requires each commit uses conventional commit format.

See Behaviour to learn how we do this.

Prerequisits

See .cargo/config.toml for how they are configured.

Installation

You can install git-next from https://crates.io/:

cargo install git-next

If you use mise:

mise use -g cargo:git-next

Or you can install git-next from source after cloning:

cargo install --path crates/cli

Roadmap

  • cli
  • server
  • notifications - notify user when intervention required (e.g. to rebase)
  • tui overview
  • webui overview

Branch Names

git-next uses three branches, main, next and dev, although they do not need to have those names. In the documentation we will use those names, but each repo must specify the names of the branches to use for each, even if they happen to have those same names.

Configuration

  • The branches to use for main, next and dev must be specified in either the .git-next.toml in the repo itself, or in the server configuration file, git-next-server.toml. See below for details.
  • CI checks should be configured to run when the next branch is pushed.
  • The dev branch must have the main branch as an ancestor.
  • The next branch must have the main branch as an ancestor.

Server

The server is configured by the git-next-server.toml file.

listen

The server should listen for webhook notifications from each forge.

[listen]
http = { addr = "0.0.0.0", port = 8080 }
url = "https://localhost:8080"
http

The server needs to be able to receive webhook notifications from your forge, (e.g. github.com). You can do this via any method that suits your environment, e.g. ngrok or a reverse proxy from a web server that itself can route traffic to the machine you are running the git-next server on.

Specify the address and port the server should listen to for incoming webhooks. This is the address and port that your reverse proxy should route traffic to.

  • addr - the IP address the server should bind to
  • port - the IP port the server should bind to
url

The HTTPS URL for forges to send webhooks to.

Your forges need to know where they should route webhooks to. This should be an address this is accessible to the forge. So, for github.com, it would need to be a publicly accessible HTTPS URL. For a self-hosted forge, e.g. ForgeJo, on your own network, then it only needs to be accessible from the server your forge is running on.

shout

The server should be able to notify the user when manual intervention is required.

[shout]
desktop = true

[shout.webhook]
url = "https//localhost:9090"
secret = "secret-password"

[shout.email]
from = "git-next@example.com"
to = "developer@example.com"

[shout.email.smtp]
hostname = "smtp.example.com"
username = "git-next@example.com"
password = "MySecretEmailPassword42"
desktop

When specified as true, desktop notifications will be sent for some events.

webhook

Will send a POST request for some events.

  • url - the URL to POST the notification to and the
  • secret - the sync key used to sign the webhook payload

See Notifications for more details.

email

Will send an email for some events.

  • from - the email address to send the email from
  • to - the email address to send the email to

With just from and to specified, git-next will attempt to send emails with sendmail if it is configured.

Alternativly, you can use an SMTP relay.

smtp

Will send emails using an SMTP relay.

  • hostname - the SMTP relay server
  • username - the account to authenticate as
  • password - the password to authenticate with

storage

[storage]
path = "./data"

git-next will create a bare clone of each repo that you configure it to monitor. They will all be created in the directory specified here. This data does not need to be backed up, as any missing information will be cloned when the server starts up.

  • path - directory to store local copies of monitored repos

forge

Within the forge tree, specify each forge you want to monitor repos on.

Give your forge an alias, e.g. default, gh, github.

e.g.

[forge.github]
forge_type = "GitHub"
hostname = "github.com"
user = "username"
token = "api-key"
max_dev_commits = 25
  • forge_type - one of: ForgeJo or GitHub
  • hostname - the hostname for the forge.
  • user - the user to authenticate as
  • token - application token for the user. See Forges below for the permissions required for each forge.
  • max_dev_commits - [optional] the maximum number of commits allowed between dev and main. Defaults to 25.

Generally, the user will need to be able to push to main and to force-push to next.

repos

For each forge, you need to specify which repos on the forge you want to monitor. They do not need to be owned by the user, but they user must have the push and force-push permissions as mentioned above for each of the repositories.

e.g.

[forge.github.repos]
my-repo = { repo = "owner/repo", branch = "main", gitdir = "/home/pcampbell/project/my-repo" }

[forge.github.repos.other-repo]
repo = "user/other"
branch = "master"
main = "master"
next = "ci-testing"
dev = "trunk"

Note that toml allows specifying the values on one line, or across multiple lines. Both are equivalent. What is not equivalent between my-repo and other-repo, is that one will require a configuration file within the repo itself. other-repo specifies the main, next and dev branches to be used, but my-repo doesn't.

A sample .git-next-toml file that would need to exist in my-repo's owner/repo repo, on the main branch:

[branches]
main = "main"
next = "next"
dev = "dev"
  • repo - the owner and name of the repo to be monitored
  • branch - the branch to look for a .git-next.toml file if needed
  • gitdir - (optional) you can use a local copy of the repo
  • main - the branch to use as main
  • next - the branch to use as next
  • dev - the branch to use as dev
gitdir

Additional notes on using gitdir:

When you specify the gitdir value, the repo cloned in that directory will be used for perform the equivalent of git fetch, git push and git push --force-with-lease.

These commands will not affect the contents of your working tree, nor will it change any local branches. Only the details about branches on the remote forge will be updated.

Currently git-next can only use a gitdir if the forge and repo is the same one specified as the origin remote. Otherwise the behaviour is untested and undefined.

Webhook Notifications

When sending a Webhook Notification to a user they are sent using the Standard Webhooks format. That means all POST messages have the following headers:

  • Webhook-Id
  • Webhook-Signature
  • Webhook-Timestamp

Events

Dev Not Based on Main

This message type indicates that the dev branch is not based on main.

Action Required: Rebase the dev branch onto the main branch.

Sample payload:

{
  "data": {
    "branches": {
      "dev": "dev",
      "main": "main"
    },
    "forge_alias": "jo",
    "repo_alias": "kxio",
    "log": [
      "* 9bfce91 (origin/dev) fix: add log graph to notifications",
      "| * c37bd2c (origin/next, origin/main) feat: add log graph to notifications",
      "|/",
      "* 8c19680 refactor: macros use a more common syntax"
    ]
  },
  "timestamp": "1721760933",
  "type": "branch.dev.not-on-main"
}

CI Check Failed

This message type indicates that the commit on the tip of the next branch has failed the configured CI checks.

Action Required: Either update the commit to correct the issue CI raised, or, if the issue is transient (e.g. a network issue), re-run/re-start the job in your CI.

Sample payload:

{
  "data": {
    "commit": {
      "sha": "c37bd2caf6825f9770d725a681e5cfc09d7fd4f2",
      "message": "feat: add log graph to notifications (1 of 2)"
    },
    "forge_alias": "jo",
    "repo_alias": "kxio",
    "log": [
      "* 9bfce91 (origin/dev) feat: add log graph to notifications (2 of 2)",
      "* c37bd2c (origin/next) feat: add log graph to notifications (1 of 2)",
      "* 8c19680 (origin/main) refactor: macros use a more common syntax"
    ]
  },
  "timestamp": "1721760933",
  "type": "cicheck.failed"
}

Repo Config Load Failed

This message type indicates that git-next wasn't able to load the configuration for the repo from the git-next.toml file in the repository.

Action Required: Review the reason provided.

Sample payload:

{
  "data": {
    "reason": "File not found: .git-next.toml",
    "forge_alias": "jo",
    "repo_alias": "kxio"
  },
  "timestamp": "1721760933",
  "type": "config.load.failed"
}

Webhook Registration Failed

This message type indicates that git-next wasn't able to register it's webhook with the forge repository, so will not receive updates when the branches in the repo are updated.

Action Required: Review the reason provided.

Sample payload:

{
  "data": {
    "reason": "repo config not loaded",
    "forge_alias": "jo",
    "repo_alias": "kxio"
  },
  "timestamp": "1721760933",
  "type": "webhook.registration.failed"
}

Behaviour

The branch names are configurable, but we will talk about main, next and dev.

Development happens on the dev branch, where each commit is expected to be able to pass the CI checks.

(Note: in the diagrams, mermaid isn't capable of showing main and next on the same commit, so we show next as empty)

gitGraph
    commit
    commit

    branch next

    branch dev
    commit
    commit
    commit

When the git-next server sees that the dev branch is ahead of the next branch, it will push the next branch fast-forward one commit along the dev branch.

gitGraph
    commit
    commit

    branch next
    commit

    branch dev
    commit
    commit

It will then wait for the CI checks to pass for the newly updated next branch. When the CI checks for the next branch pass, it will push the main branch fast-forward to the next branch. We return to the top and start again.

gitGraph
    commit
    commit
    commit

    branch next

    branch dev
    commit
    commit

If the CI checks should fail for the next branch, the developer should amend that commit in the history of their dev branch. They should then force-push their rebased dev branch.

gitGraph
    commit
    commit

    branch next
    commit

    checkout main

    branch dev
    commit

    commit
    commit

git-next will then detect that the next branch is no longer part of the dev branch ancestory, and will reset next back to main. We then return to the top, where git-next sees that dev is ahead of next.

When the dev branch is on the same commit as the main branch, then there are no pending commits and git-next will wait until it receives a webhook indicating that there has been a push to one of the branches. At which point it will start at the top again.

Important

The dev branch should have the next branch as an ancestor.

However, when the commit on tip of the next branch has failed CI and is amended, this will not be the case. When this happens git-next will force-push the next branch back to the same commit as the main branch.

This is the only time a force-push will happen in git-next.

In short, the next branch belongs to git-next. Don't try to update it yourself. git-next will update the next it as it sees fit.

Getting Started

To use git-next for trunk-based development, follow these steps:

Initialise the repo (optional)

You need to specify which branches you are using. You can do this in the repo, or in the server configuration.

To create a default config file for the repo, run this command in the root of your repo:

git next init

This will create a .git-next.toml file. Default

By default the expected branches are main, next and dev. Each of these three branches must exist in your repo.

Initialise the server

The server uses the file git-next-server.toml for configuration. It expects to find this file the the current directory when executed.

The create the default config file, run this command:

git next server init

This will create a git-next-server.toml file. Default

Edit this file to your needs. See the Configuration section above.

Run the server

In the directory with your git-next-server.toml file, run the command:

git next server start

Forges

The following forges are supported:

  • ForgeJo (probably compatible with Gitea, but not tested)
  • GitHub

Note: ForgeJo is a hard fork of Gitea, but currently they are largely compatible. For now using a forge_type of ForgeJo with a Gitea instance will probably work okay. The only API calls we make are around registering and unregistering webhooks. So, as long as those APIs remain the same, they should be compatible.

ForgeJo

Configure the forge in git-next-server.toml like:

[forge.jo]
forge_type = "ForgeJo"
hostname = "git.myforgejo.com"
user = "bob"
token = "..."

[forge.jo.repos]
hello = { repo = "user/hello", branch = "main", gitdir = "/opt/git/projects/user/hello.git" }             # maps to https://git.example.net/user/hello on the branch 'main'
world = { repo = "user/world", branch = "master", main = "master", next = "upcoming", "dev" = "develop" } # maps to the 'master' branch

The token is created on your ForgeJo instance at (for example) https://git.myforgejo.com/user/settings/applications and requires the write:repository permission.

GitHub

Configure the forge in git-next-server.toml like:

[forge.gh]
forge_type = "GitHub"
hostname = "github.com" # required even for GitHub
user = "bob"
token = "..."

[forge.gh.repos]
hello = { repo = "user/hello", branch = "main", gitdir = "/opt/git/projects/user/hello.git" }             # maps to https://github.com/user/hello on the branch 'main'
world = { repo = "user/world", branch = "master", main = "master", next = "upcoming", "dev" = "develop" } # maps to the 'master' branch

The token is created here and requires the repo and admin:repo_hook permissions.

Docker

git-next is available as a Docker image.

docker pull docker pull git.kemitix.net/kemitix/git-next:latest

Docker Compose

Here is an example docker-compose.yml:

services:
  server:
    image: git.kemitix.net/kemitix/git-next:latest
    container_name: git-next-server
    restart: unless-stopped
    environment:
      RUST_LOG: "hyper=warn,info"
    ports:
      - 8080:8092
    volumes:
      - ./:/app/

Note: this assumes the git-next-server.toml has a listen.http.port of 8092 and that you are using a reverse proxy to route traffic arriving at listen.url to port 8080.

Docker Run

This will run with the server start options:

docker run -it -p "8080:8092" -v .:/app/ git.kemitix.net/kemitix/git-next:latest

To perform server init:

docker run -it -v .:/app/ git.kemitix.net/kemitix/git-next:latest server init

To perform repo init:

docker run -it -v .:/app/ git.kemitix.net/kemitix/git-next:latest init

TUI support is not available in the docker container. See kemitix/git-next#154.

Contributing

Contributions to git-next are welcome! If you find a bug or have a feature request, please create an issue. If you'd like to contribute code, feel free to submit changes.

Before you start committing, run the just install-hooks command to setup the Git Hooks. (Get Just)

Crate Dependency

The following diagram shows the dependency between the crates that make up git-next:

stateDiagram-v2

    cli --> core
    cli --> forge_forgejo
    cli --> forge_github

    forge_forgejo --> core

    forge_github --> core

License

git-next is released under the MIT License.

Dependencies

~36–77MB
~1.5M SLoC