[Docs] Clarify Zadig usage in FAQ Docs (#6360)
[jackhill/qmk/firmware.git] / docs / newbs_best_practices.md
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480651cf 1# Best Practices
2
3## Or, "How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Git."
4
5This document aims to instruct novices in the best ways to have a smooth experience in contributing to QMK. We will walk through the process of contributing to QMK, detailing some ways to make this task easier, and then later we'll break some things in order to teach you how to fix them.
6
7This document assumes a few things:
8
91. You have a GitHub account, and have [forked the qmk_firmware repository](getting_started_github.md) to your account.
102. You've [set up your build environment](newbs_getting_started.md?id=environment-setup).
11
12
13## Your fork's master: Update Often, Commit Never
14
15It 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.
16
17To 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.
18
19### Updating your master branch
20
21To 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:
22
23```
24git remote add upstream https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware.git
25```
26
27To verify that the repository has been added, run `git remote -v`, which should return the following:
28
29```
30$ git remote -v
31origin https://github.com/<your_username>/qmk_firmware.git (fetch)
32origin https://github.com/<your_username>/qmk_firmware.git (push)
33upstream https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware.git (fetch)
34upstream https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware.git (push)
35```
36
37Now that this is done, you can check for updates to the repo by running `git fetch upstream`. This retrieves the branches and tags &mdash; collectively referred to as "refs" &mdash; 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.
38
39To update your fork's master, run the following, hitting the Enter key after each line:
40
41```
42git checkout master
43git fetch upstream
44git pull upstream master
45git push origin master
46```
47
48This 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.
49
50### Making Changes
51
52To make changes, create a new branch by entering:
53
54```
55git checkout -b dev_branch
56git push --set-upstream origin dev_branch
57```
58
59This 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.
60
61!> With `git push`, you can use `-u` in place of `--set-upstream` &mdash; `-u` is an alias for `--set-upstream`.
62
63You 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.
64
65By default `git checkout -b` will base your new branch on the branch that is 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:
66
67```
68git checkout -b dev_branch master
69```
70
71Now 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:
72
73```
74git add path/to/updated_file
75git commit -m "My commit message."
76```
77
78`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.
79
80!> If you've changed a lot of files, but all the files are part of the same change, you can use `git add .` to add all the changed files that are in your current directory, rather than having to add each file individually.
81
82### Publishing Your Changes
83
84The last step is to push your changes to your fork. To do this, enter `git push`. Git now publishes the current state of `dev_branch` to your fork.
85
86
87## Resolving Merge Conflicts
88
89Sometimes when your work in a branch takes a long time to complete, changes that have been made by others conflict with changes you have made to your branch when you open a pull request. This is called a *merge conflict*, and is what happens when multiple people edit the same parts of the same files.
90
91### Rebasing Your Changes
92
93A *rebase* is Git's way of taking changes that were applied at one point, reversing them, and then applying the same changes to another point. In the case of a merge conflict, you can rebase your branch to grab the changes that were made between when you created your branch and the present time.
94
95To start, run the following:
96
97```
98git fetch upstream
99git rev-list --left-right --count HEAD...upstream/master
100```
101
102The `git rev-list` command entered here returns the number of commits that differ between the current branch and QMK's master branch. We run `git fetch` first to make sure we have the refs that represent the current state of the upstream repo. The output of the `git rev-list` command entered returns two numbers:
103
104```
105$ git rev-list --left-right --count HEAD...upstream/master
1067 35
107```
108
109The first number represents the number of commits on the current branch since it was created, and the second number is the number of commits made to `upstream/master` since the current branch was created, and thus, the changes that are not recorded in the current branch.
110
111Now that the current states of both the current branch and the upstream repo are known, we can start a rebase operation:
112
113```
114git rebase upstream/master
115```
116
117This tells Git to undo the commits on the current branch, and then reapply them against QMK's master branch.
118
119```
120$ git rebase upstream/master
121First, rewinding head to replay your work on top of it...
122Applying: Commit #1
123Using index info to reconstruct a base tree...
124M conflicting_file_1.txt
125Falling back to patching base and 3-way merge...
126Auto-merging conflicting_file_1.txt
127CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in conflicting_file_1.txt
128error: Failed to merge in the changes.
129hint: Use 'git am --show-current-patch' to see the failed patch
130Patch failed at 0001 Commit #1
131
132Resolve all conflicts manually, mark them as resolved with
133"git add/rm <conflicted_files>", then run "git rebase --continue".
134You can instead skip this commit: run "git rebase --skip".
135To abort and get back to the state before "git rebase", run "git rebase --abort".
136```
137
138This tells us that we have a merge conflict, and gives the name of the file with the conflict. Open the conflicting file in your text editor, and somewhere in the file, you'll find something like this:
139
140```
141<<<<<<< HEAD
142<p>For help with any issues, email us at support@webhost.us.</p>
143=======
144<p>Need help? Email support@webhost.us.</p>
145>>>>>>> Commit #1
146```
147
148The line `<<<<<<< HEAD` marks the beginning of a merge conflict, and the `>>>>>>> Commit #1` line marks the end, with the conflicting sections separated by `=======`. The part on the `HEAD` side is from the QMK master version of the file, and the part marked with the commit message is from the current branch and commit.
149
150Because Git tracks *changes to files* rather than the contents of the files directly, if Git can't find the text that was in the file previous to the commit that was made, it won't know how to edit the file. Re-editing the file will solve the conflict. Make your changes, and then save the file.
151
152```
153<p>Need help? Email support@webhost.us.</p>
154```
155
156Now run:
157
158```
159git add conflicting_file_1.txt
160git rebase --continue
161```
162
163Git logs the changes to the conflicting file, and continues applying the commits from our branch until it reaches the end.