I found your usage of master
a bit confusing as I never knew
whether you meant the platform repository as a whole or just its
master branch.
My solution to this would be the following:
- You have one central repository for the platform.
- You have one central repository per project.
- Every developer has his/her own repository local.
The central platform repository
This is where only the platform code goes to. Use e.g. your
existing repo as a starting point here.
The central project repository
This is a clone of the platform repository and keeps all the code
of a project. Init it with
$ git clone --bare /path/to/platform
The developer's local repository
Init
You, as a developer, start by cloning the project repository.
$ git clone /path/to/project
Making changes to the project
Now, make your changes, commit them and push them to the projects
bare repo.
$ editor some-file
$ git add -p some-file
$ git commit
$ git push
Pull changes made by other developers to the projects bare repo
by using git pull
.
Making changes to the platform
As you also want to make changes to the platform itself, you also
need a way to access the platform repo. So you add it as a
remote repo to your local repo:
$ git remote add platform /path/to/platform
$ git fetch platform
As you can see now with git branch -a
, your local repo knows
about the platform. Now you want to make some changes to the
platform. First you create a local branch central which is a
clone of the master branch of the platform repo:
$ git checkout -b central platform/master
You can always check which branch you're on by using git branch
or git status
. Now you make your changes and commit them (to
central, where your on). As central is connected to
platform/master (checkout cat .git/config
) you can push your
changes to the platform repo by simply using git push
. Also
git pull
works without any other arguments.
Use git checkout master
and git checkout central
to change
between your branches.
Get a new platform version into your project
Note: You need to have done the work from the previous section.
First change to your platform branch and pull in the new version
of the platform:
$ git checkout central
$ git pull
Now go back to your project branch and merge the changes made in
the platform into your project branch.
$ git checkout master
$ git merge central
If a conflict occurs, something like this happens:
$ git merge central
Auto-merging index.html
CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in index.html
Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.
Open the files with the conflicts, resolve them, add them to the
staging area and commit the merge:
$ editor index.html
$ git add index.html
$ git commit
Now push your changes to the project's bare repo:
$ git push
More about merge conflicts: Pro Git: Basic Merge Conflicts
If you do not want to change the platforms repo, but merge
changes from there into your project use
$ git remote add platform /path/to/platform
$ git fetch platform
$ git merge platform/master
The git remote add
is only needed the first time you merge.
The other two are always required.
The part about merging is based on the Pro Git Book which is
licensed under cc-by-sa. All other content of this post may be
considered public domain.