npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

git-pr-train

v2.5.1

Published

A tool to help manage PR chains

Downloads

141

Readme

pr-train 🚃

git pr-train helps you manage your PR chain when you need split a long PR into smaller ones.

What does it do?

If you have a chain of PRs, git pr-train:

  1. Makes sure all your branches in the chain get updated when you modify any of them
  2. Creates GitHub PRs for you with a table of contents

Doing those two things manually can be (very) tedious and frustrating, believe you me.

Usage

Install with npm i -g git-pr-train.

Run git pr-train --init in your repo root to generate a .pr-train.yml file (don't forget to gitignore).

Now whenever you have a chain of branches, list them in .pr-train.yml to tell pr-train which branches form the chain, and you're good to go.

Basic usage examples

  • git pr-train -p will merge branches sequentially one into another and push
  • git pr-train -r -p -f will rebase branches instead of merging and then push with --force.
  • git pr-train -h to print usage information

Automatically create GitHub PRs from chained branches

Pre-requisite: Create a ${HOME}/.pr-train file with a single line which is your GH personal access token (you can create one here). The repo scope, with Full control of private repositories is needed.

Run git pr-train -p --create-prs to create GitHub PRs with a "content table" section. PR titles are taken from the commit message titles of each branch HEAD. You'll be prompted before the PRs are created.

If you run with --create-prs again, pr-train will only override the Table of Contents in your PR, it will not change the rest of the PR descriptions.

Pro-tip: If you want to update the ToCs in your GitHub PRs, just update the PR titles and re-run pr train with --create-prs - it will do the right thing.

Draft PRs

To create PRs in draft mode (if your repo allows), pass the -d or --draft argument on the command line (in addition to -c/--create-prs).

You can also configure PRs to be created in draft mode by default if you add the following section to your .pr-train.yml file:

prs:
  draft-by-default: true

trains:
  # etc

Specifying this option will allow you to omit the -d/--draft parameter (though you still need to specify -c/--create-prs) when you want to create/update PRs.

Example with explanation

You finished coding a feature and now you have a patch that is over 1000 SLOCs long. That's a big patch. As a good citizen, you want to split the diff into multiple PRs, e.g.:

  • fred_billing-refactor_frontend_bits
  • fred_billing-refactor_backend_bits
  • fred_billing-refactor_tests

That's what we call that a PR train.

If you modify a branch (or e.g. merge/rebase fred_billing-refactor_frontend_bits on top of master), you'll want all the other branches to receive the change. git pr-train does that by merging (or rebasing) each branch into their child branch (i.e., branch 1 into branch 2, branch 2 into branch 3 etc).

If you wish, it also makes sure there is a "combined" branch (which contains the code of all subbranches, and you can build it and run tests on it - please see the Chained PR workflows section below).

Now everytime you make a change to any branch in the train, run git pr-train -p to merge and push branches or git pr-train -rpf to rebase branches and force-push (if you prefer rebasing).

.pr-train.yml config

The .pr-train.yml file contains simple configuration that describes your trains. For example, the "billing refactor" example from above would be expressed as:

trains:
  big billing refactoring:
    - fred_billing-refactor_frontend_bits
    - fred_billing-refactor_backend_bits
    - fred_billing-refactor_tests
  #
  # ...config for older trains follows...

With this config, fred_billing-refactor_frontend_bits branch will be the first one in the train and fred_billing-refactor_tests will be the last.

Chained PR workflows

"One-by-one" workflow

If you want to merge your branches one by one from the "bottom" as they get LGTM'd (i.e., they compile, pass tests and make sense on their own):

  1. Merge the LGTM'd branch into master
  2. Merge master into next train branch (or rebase that branch on top of master)
  3. Change the GitHub PR base to master so that the diff only contains the expected changes
  4. Delete the merged branch from .pr-train.yml
  5. Run git pr-train to propagate the changes through the train

Note that steps 1-3 are not pr-train specific, that's just how one-by-one workflow generally works.

"Combined Branch" workflow

Sometimes, you may want to split your code into PRs that cannot be merged separately (e.g., code changes first, then tests and snapshot updates last). In those cases it might be useful to have a branch that combines code from all the subbranches - we call that a "combined branch". It points to the same commit as the last sub-branch in the train with the exception that the PR created for this branch would be based off master (i.e., it will contain the full diff).

The idea is that you get LGTMs for all sub-branches in the train and then the combined branch is what you merge into master.

If you want to use this workflow, add a combined branch to the train config like so:

trains:
  big billing refactoring:
    - fred_billing-refactor_frontend_bits
    - fred_billing-refactor_backend_bits
    - fred_billing-refactor_tests
    - fred_billing-refactor_combined:
        combined: true
  #
  # ...config for older trains follows...

Unlike the sub-branches, the combined branch doesn't need to exist when you run the command; pr-train will make sure it's created, and it points to the last sub-branch in the train. Just make sure it's listed as the last branch in the train config.

Running PR train

Run git pr-train in your working dir when you're on any branch that belongs to a PR train. You don't have to be on the first branch, any branch will do. Use -r/--rebase option if you'd like to rebase branches on top of each other rather than merge (note: you will have to push with git pr-train -pf in that case).

git pr-train -p will merge/rebase and push your updated changes to remote origin (configurable via --remote option).

No master? No problem!

All your base are belong to us. - CATS

Are you working in a repository that doesn't use master as the main (default) branch? For example, newer repos use main instead. Or do you have a different branch that you want all PR trains to use as a base?

Add a section to the top of the config like so:

prs:
  main-branch-name: main

trains:
  # existing train config

Override the base branch when creating PRs

You can override the base branch to use when creating PRs by passing the --base <branch-name>. This takes precedence over the main branch specified in the config file.

e.g. git pr-train -p -c -b feat/my-feature-base

Print the PR links to the terminal

To have the command output include a link to the PR that was created or updated, simply add print-urls: true to the prs section of the config file.