Daniel Rotter
Posted on November 23, 2023
Most of the projects respectively teams I have seen so far do not seem to care too much about a clean git history.
Therefore the git history of many projects look more like the following comic shows:
Of course, xkcd might try to exaggerate a bit, but unfortunately, I have seen commit
messages like those way too often. This includes messages like:
- adding stuff (what stuff? this could be about anything)
- fix bug (that does not even scratch the surface)
- iuwqruphsdauifj (aka just hitting the keyboard)
- fix CI (this one is often repeated in multiple consecutive commits and followed by one using swear words)
A good commit message acts as documentation and can be immensely helpful when trying to figure something out later.
Very often only single-line commit messages are used (I am guilty of that myself), but even the git commit
documentation page mentions that it is recommended to begin a commit
using a short line acting as a heading, which can be followed by a thorough description. An example of a thorough
description is this (at the time of writing) recent commit in the Linux
kernel.
Yes, almost everything until the start of the diff itself is the commit message, and while I am not that fluent with the
development of an operating system, I am pretty sure that there is quite some interesting information in it, which
might be useful when hunting down a bug or trying to better understand some decisions later.
But having a clean commit history does not stop at commit messages. Although this is already a big help, git can help a
lot more when it is being mastered. Some features only work well if branches are kept
healthy, i.e. every commit represents a
working state. So instead of just ending with saying that a clean history is important, I would like to promote an in
my opinion way too unpopular feature of git.
Finding bugs with git bisect
Some time ago I prepared a small example in my git-bisect-example
repository, which contains a small application written in
Node.js. This application is a very simple calculator, which has been implemented incrementally
using multiple commits. Unfortunately, one of these commits contains an error, which leads the +
operator to subtract
two numbers.
$ node index.js
First operator: 5
Operator: +
Second operator: 2
3
So everybody who knows basic arithmetic should see that there is something odd here. What seems even odder to the
development team is that they are absolutely certain that this was working properly at some point. So after looking at
the output of git log
they remember that the addition of two numbers was working properly after the commit
d3c66b49c330e58a70fe0abda56b691e1bb5db75
. So they switch to this commit
and execute the program again.
$ git switch -d d3c66b49c330e58a70fe0abda56b691e1bb5db75
HEAD is now at d3c66b4 Refactor to use switch to differ between different operators
$ node index.js
First operator: 5
Operator: +
Second operator: 2
7
This shows that the development team was right about that, and the problem space has been reduced to a specific set of
commits. Now a developer can go through all of those commits, test again, and can find the (hopefully small) commit
causing the issue. However, if the issues persisted for quite a long time there could be hundreds of commits in between,
which still results in a very high effort.
Luckily, git comes with an awesome command called git bisect
. bisect
stands for "binary search commit", and this is
exactly what it does. It performs a binary search using the git
history, which leads to much less effort when looking for a specific commit. Let's see how that works in practice.
First of all the binary search is started using git bisect start
followed by a git bisect good
indicating that the
currently checked out commit is not working.
$ git bisect start
status: waiting for both good and bad commits
$ git bisect good
status: waiting for bad commit, 1 good commit known
Afterwards, git switch -
is used to checkout the previously checked out commit, which was failing before. Therefore we
can mark this commit as working using git bisect bad
.
$ git switch -
warning: you are switching branch while bisecting
Previous HEAD position was d3c66b4 Refactor to use switch to differ between different operators
Switched to branch 'master'
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.
$ git bisect bad
Bisecting: 2 revisions left to test after this (roughly 1 step)
[3eaa08756c7ae6273effa173a3aba7d1fe4a8929] Added support for multiplication
By marking one commit as bad and one as good we have defined the range in which the error must have been introduced.
After doing so, git has checked out the commit in the middle of the range. Now we can do the same test again, realize
that the error does not happen in this commit, and mark it as a good one.
$ node index.js
First operator: 5
Operator: +
Second operator: 2
7
$ git bisect good
Bisecting: 0 revisions left to test after this (roughly 1 step)
[124439abe0fb289109f915dcdd07f1ecb0041f79] Add support for subtraction
By doing so half of the commits have already been eliminated as the cause of the bug. Since the older commit used to
work and the commit in the middle of the range is still working, the error must be introduced later. Git knows that now
and automatically checked out the next commit, which is in the middle of the even narrower range left.
So let's test again and type git bisect bad
afterwards since we will see that the error occurs now.
$ node index.js
First operator: 5
Operator: +
Second operator: 2
3
$ git bisect bad
Bisecting: 0 revisions left to test after this (roughly 0 steps)
[c4dc15f032ca15dcc84cd877a0babf4b0dfc1e8d] Add support for division
Again, the commits in question can be put in half, and git checks out the next commit for us to check. This one is
working again, so we will mark it as a good commit.
$ node index.js
First operator: 5
Operator: +
Second operator: 3
8
$ git bisect good
124439abe0fb289109f915dcdd07f1ecb0041f79 is the first bad commit
commit 124439abe0fb289109f915dcdd07f1ecb0041f79
Author: Daniel Rotter <daniel.rotter@gmail.com>
Date: Sat Feb 19 11:12:05 2022 +0100
Add support for subtraction
index.js | 2 ++
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
Now git can already tell us the exact commit that caused the error. We can have a closer look by using the git show
command.
$ git show 124439abe0fb289109f915dcdd07f1ecb0041f79
commit 124439abe0fb289109f915dcdd07f1ecb0041f79
Author: Daniel Rotter <daniel.rotter@gmail.com>
Date: Sat Feb 19 11:12:05 2022 +0100
Add support for subtraction
diff --git a/index.js b/index.js
index 7800bbe..6a83dd9 100644
--- a/index.js
+++ b/index.js
@@ -9,6 +9,8 @@ let result;
switch (operator) {
case "+":
result = operand1 + operand2;
+ case "-":
+ result = operand1 - operand2;
break;
case "*":
result = operand1 * operand2;
Knowing that these two added lines are causing the error makes bug hunting a lot easier. In this example, the reason
was a missing break
statement.
Now this was a rather small example, but the interesting part is that binary
search has a logarithmic complexity, i.e. the savings get much
bigger with an increasing number of commits, e.g. if the specified range contains 100 commits roughly 7 steps will be
necessary to find the commit in question.
This process can even be further automated if there is a script that can tell if the code contains the error. In that
case the git bisect run
command can be used, which will spare
developers from typing git bisect bad
and git bisect good
after testing for the defect manually.
The importance of a clean history
But now the catch: All of this can only work with a clean git history containing only working commits. Imagine that
the development team is not so strict about branches being healthy. This might lead to situations in which already the
bootstrapping of the application and therefore every program execution fails. In that case, the git bisect
command
is rendered useless since developers using it cannot tell if the error they are looking for appears in the current
commit or if the program already failed before the error could appear.
So having a clean and healthy branch is not just an academic exercise, if features like git bisect
should be used
having a clean history is non-optional. And it would really be a pity to not be able to use one of git's most awesome
features. This is one of the reasons I consider keeping all commits
green a best practice.
Keeping a clean history
As mentioned previously, it is not that easy to convince an entire team to only create green, i.e. working, commits.
Especially if there is a workflow using pull requests in place it might also take quite some effort to check if all
commits within this pull request are working. The problem is that the code hosting platforms I know only check the
latest commit when a branch is pushed, i.e. if a developer commits multiple times locally and pushes all those commits
at once the only thing a reviewer can say for sure is that the state from the last commit does not fail any pipeline (if
one is setup).
I have seen quite a lot of arguing about this, but what works pretty well in my experience is to squash commits when a
pull request is merged. Squashing means that instead of keeping all commits in the history they will be combined into
one new single commit.
Imagine a git history that generates the following output when using git log --graph --oneline
(i.e. showing the graph
on the left and compress commits to a single line):
$ git log --graph --oneline
* 8836470 (HEAD -> feature) Commit 6
* cec57f4 Commit 5
* c555d59 Commit 4
* e715723 Commit 3
* 55bc924 Commit 2
* 719d88d Commit 1
* 9ce9b8c (main) Initialize repository
So there is currently a branch called feature
checked out, which adds some more commits on top of the main
branch.
When we execute a git merge
with the --no-ff
option it will generate a new merge commit, which has two parent
commits and all currently existing commits continue to do so.
$ git switch main
Switched to branch 'main'
$ git merge --no-ff
Merge made by the 'ort' strategy.
README.md | 2 ++
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
$ git log --graph --oneline
* 8869431 (HEAD -> main) Merge branch 'feature'
|\
| * 8836470 (feature) Commit 6
| * cec57f4 Commit 5
| * c555d59 Commit 4
| * e715723 Commit 3
| * 55bc924 Commit 2
| * 719d88d Commit 1
|/
* 9ce9b8c Initialize repository
Now the graph on the left shows two different paths that will be combined in the merge commit. Seeing the entire
history with all commits can also be valuable, but only if all commits are properly working. If those commits are not
working and/or contain commit messages like shown in the introduction of this blog post they will cause more harm than
good by bloating the git history for no good reason. This complicates everything, especially the git bisect
command
shown previously.
Squashing commits can be done by using the --squash
option of the git merge
command. Then the changes from all
commits will be added to the staging area, from where they can be committed as usual.
$ git merge --squash feature
Updating 9ce9b8c..8836470
Fast-forward
Squash commit -- not updating HEAD
README.md | 2 ++
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
$ git commit -m "Feature"
[main a0ebc67] Feature
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
After this procedure, the history looks completely different, although the end result is the same. All commits from the
feature
branch have not landed in the main
branch, instead, all changes are squashed into a single commit.
$ git log --graph --oneline
* a0ebc67 (HEAD -> main) Feature
* 9ce9b8c Initialize repository
This leads to a linear history and if pull requests are properly reviewed to working commits and therefore to a clean
history. Teams working with pull requests usually do such pull request reviews, sometimes even with manual testing,
which should avoid having commits that do not work at all.
So by always squashing commits when merging pull requests, it is much easier to keep a clean history with only green
commits. This also ensures that features like git bisect
can do their work properly. The only downside with
regards to git bisect
I can think of is that it yields bigger commits when pull requests are squashed, which makes
hunting down the error harder since the commit might return hundreds of lines, and not just a few. However, this is
still better than not being able to use the feature at all, because some developers commit code not working properly.
Luckily both
GitHub
and Bitbucket support squashing commits when merging
pull requests.
A completely different approach would be to use continuous
integration, and by that I do not
mean the pipeline running tests, but the process of directly committing to the main
branch. This is often combined
with automatic tests, which also helps with keeping a clean history. However, that is a completely different workflow
with other trade-offs. My only recommendation is to try keeping the git history as clean as possible. How that is
done exactly should probably be decided within the team.
Posted on November 23, 2023
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