The Maven plugin that supports various Git workflows, including Vincent Driessen's successful Git branching model and GitHub Flow.
Currently a Java implementation of Git version control system JGit doesn't support .gitattributes
.
This plugin runs Git and Maven commands from the command line ensuring that all Git features work properly.
See what's changed - CHANGELOG
The plugin is available from Maven Central.
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>com.amashchenko.maven.plugin</groupId>
<artifactId>gitflow-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.19.0</version>
<configuration>
<!-- optional configuration -->
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
gitflow:release-start
- Starts a release branch and updates version(s) to release version.gitflow:release-finish
- Merges a release branch and updates version(s) to next development version.gitflow:release
- Releases project w/o creating a release branch.gitflow:feature-start
- Starts a feature branch and optionally updates version(s).gitflow:feature-finish
- Merges a feature branch.gitflow:hotfix-start
- Starts a hotfix branch and updates version(s) to hotfix version.gitflow:hotfix-finish
- Merges a hotfix branch.gitflow:support-start
- Starts a support branch from the production tag.gitflow:version-update
- Updates version in release or support branch, optionally tagging and pushing it to the remote repository.gitflow:help
- Displays help information.
The gitflow-maven-plugin is very versatile. It can be easily configured to use different Git workflows.
The GitHub Flow is a lightweight, branch-based workflow that supports teams and projects where deployments are made regularly.
To configure this plugin to use single branch model, such as GitHub Flow, just set the developmentBranch
parameter to the same value as the productionBranch
in your pom.xml file.
<gitFlowConfig>
<developmentBranch>master</developmentBranch>
</gitFlowConfig>
That's it!
The plugin will automatically use Maven Wrapper for internal Maven goals if plugin is started with the wrapper.
The versions-maven-plugin
and tycho-versions-plugin
are used internally to update versions and properties of the project. To change versions of internal plugins use versionsMavenPluginVersion
and tychoVersionsPluginVersion
properties respectively.
If your project consists of multiple modules with and without parent-child relationships, you have to supply additional arguments if you want to update all module versions. In case of the versions-maven-plugin
, there is processAllModules
, which can be supplied as follows:
mvn gitflow:<goal> -DargLine='-DprocessAllModules'
The plugin looks for the .gitmodules
file and if it exists the git submodule update
command will be executed before each Git commit. This is needed to avoid leaving working copy in dirty state which can happen when switching between branches.
To explicitly control whether Git submodules will be updated before commit the updateGitSubmodules
parameter can be used. Setting it to true
will enable Git submodules update and false
will disable it even if .gitmodules
file exists. The default value is not set, meaning the plugin tries to automatically determine if update is needed.
Since version 1.1.0
this plugin supports Eclipse plugin projects which are build with Tycho.
To enable this feature put <tychoBuild>true</tychoBuild>
into <configuration>
section of this plugin in your pom.xml file.
The tycho-versions-plugin
Maven plugin will be used to set versions instead of versions-maven-plugin
.
Feature name will not be appended to project version on gitflow:feature-start
goal even if the skipFeatureVersion
is set to false
.
If version has qualifier then it will not be removed in the release or hotfix goals.
To sign tags and/or commits you need to configure GPG and install personal key. Read more Git Tools - Signing Your Work.
Next you need to configure Git to use your personal key.
git config --global user.signingkey GPG_key_id
Sometimes you need to tell Git where the GPG program is. Use gpg.program
option for that.
git config --global gpg.program "path_to_gpg"
The gitflow:release
, gitflow:release-finish
and gitflow:hotfix-finish
goals have gpgSignTag
parameter. Set it to true
to sign tags with configured personal key. The default value is false
.
All goals have gpgSignCommit
parameter. Set it to true
to sign commits with configured personal key. The default value is false
.
Reproducible builds are a set of software development practices that create an independently-verifiable path from source to binary code.
To configure your Maven build to support reproducible builds follow official guide.
If your project has project.build.outputTimestamp
property this plugin will update its value whenever the versions are updated.
This can be disabled by setting the configuration parameter updateOutputTimestamp
to false
.
All parameters are optional. The gitFlowConfig
parameters defaults are the same as in the example below.
Maven and Git executables are assumed to be in the PATH, if executables are not available in the PATH or you want to use different version use mvnExecutable
and gitExecutable
parameters.
The installProject
parameter controls whether the Maven install
goal will be called during the mojo execution. The default value for this parameter is false
(i.e. the project will NOT be installed).
Since 1.0.7
version of this plugin the output of the executed commands will NOT be printed into the console. This can be changed by setting verbose
parameter to true
.
<configuration>
<mvnExecutable>path_to_maven_executable</mvnExecutable>
<gitExecutable>path_to_git_executable</gitExecutable>
<installProject>false</installProject>
<verbose>false</verbose>
<gitFlowConfig>
<productionBranch>master</productionBranch>
<developmentBranch>develop</developmentBranch>
<featureBranchPrefix>feature/</featureBranchPrefix>
<releaseBranchPrefix>release/</releaseBranchPrefix>
<hotfixBranchPrefix>hotfix/</hotfixBranchPrefix>
<supportBranchPrefix>support/</supportBranchPrefix>
<versionTagPrefix></versionTagPrefix>
<origin>origin</origin>
</gitFlowConfig>
<commitMessages>
<!-- since 1.2.1, see Customizing commit messages -->
</commitMessages>
</configuration>
Since 1.2.1
commit messages can be changed in plugin's configuration section in pom.xml. Commit messages defaults are seen below.
<configuration>
<commitMessages>
<featureStartMessage>Update versions for feature branch</featureStartMessage>
<featureFinishMessage>Update versions for development branch</featureFinishMessage>
<hotfixStartMessage>Update versions for hotfix</hotfixStartMessage>
<hotfixFinishMessage>Update for next development version</hotfixFinishMessage>
<hotfixVersionUpdateMessage>Update to hotfix version</hotfixVersionUpdateMessage>
<releaseStartMessage>Update versions for release</releaseStartMessage>
<releaseFinishMessage>Update for next development version</releaseFinishMessage>
<releaseVersionUpdateMessage>Update for next development version</releaseVersionUpdateMessage>
<!-- git merge messages -->
<!-- Default git merge commit message will be used if left empty or undefined. -->
<releaseFinishMergeMessage></releaseFinishMergeMessage>
<releaseFinishDevMergeMessage></releaseFinishDevMergeMessage>
<featureFinishDevMergeMessage></featureFinishDevMergeMessage>
<featureSquashMessage></featureSquashMessage>
<hotfixFinishMergeMessage></hotfixFinishMergeMessage>
<hotfixFinishDevMergeMessage></hotfixFinishDevMergeMessage>
<hotfixFinishReleaseMergeMessage></hotfixFinishReleaseMergeMessage>
<hotfixFinishSupportMergeMessage></hotfixFinishSupportMergeMessage>
<!-- / git merge messages -->
<tagHotfixMessage>Tag hotfix</tagHotfixMessage>
<tagReleaseMessage>Tag release</tagReleaseMessage>
<tagVersionUpdateMessage>Tag version update</tagVersionUpdateMessage>
<!-- Migration Note: This was called <updateDevToAvoidConflitsMessage> in version 1.11.0, but has been deprecated in favour of the correctly spelt one below. -->
<updateDevToAvoidConflictsMessage>Update develop to production version to avoid merge conflicts</updateDevToAvoidConflictsMessage>
<updateDevBackPreMergeStateMessage>Update develop version back to pre-merge state</updateDevBackPreMergeStateMessage>
<updateReleaseToAvoidConflictsMessage>Update release to hotfix version to avoid merge conflicts</updateReleaseToAvoidConflictsMessage>
<updateReleaseBackPreMergeStateMessage>Update release version back to pre-merge state</updateReleaseBackPreMergeStateMessage>
<updateFeatureBackMessage>Update feature branch back to feature version</updateFeatureBackMessage>
<featureFinishIncrementVersionMessage>Increment feature version</featureFinishIncrementVersionMessage>
<supportStartMessage>Update versions for support branch</supportStartMessage>
<versionUpdateMessage>Update versions</versionUpdateMessage>
</commitMessages>
</configuration>
Maven properties can be used in commit messages. For example <featureStartMessage>updating ${project.artifactId} project for feature branch</featureStartMessage>
will produce message where
${project.artifactId}
will be substituted for projects <artifactId>
.
Note that although ${project.version}
can be used, any changes to version introduced by this goal won't be reflected in a commit message for this goal (see Custom properties).
Commit messages can be prefixed by using commitMessagePrefix
parameter. Leading or trailing whitespaces can be preserved by using xml:space="preserve"
attribute e.g. <commitMessagePrefix xml:space="preserve">[gitflow] </commitMessagePrefix>
.
@{version}
will be replaced with the updated version.
@{featureName}
will be replaced in feature-
goals with the name of the current feature.
The argLine
parameter can be used to pass command line arguments to the underlying Maven commands. For example, -DcreateChecksum
in mvn gitflow:release-start -DargLine=-DcreateChecksum
will be passed to all underlying Maven commands.
Maven property can be updated with the new version by setting the versionProperty
parameter with the property you want to update.
For example, -DversionProperty=revision
will update the <revision>
property defined in the project pom.xml.
The skipUpdateVersion
parameter can be used to skip updating <version>
in the pom.xml. The default value is false
(i.e. the version will be updated).
To support CI friendly versioning in projects which use <version>${revision}</version>
set versionProperty
to revision
and skipUpdateVersion
to true
.
The gitflow:release-finish
, gitflow:release
and gitflow:hotfix-finish
goals have skipTag
parameter. This parameter controls whether the release/hotfix will be tagged in Git.
The default value is false
(i.e. the release/hotfix will be tagged).
The gitflow:feature-start
goal has skipFeatureVersion
parameter which controls whether the feature name will be appended to the project version or not.
The default value is false
(e.g. if the project version is 1.0.0-SNAPSHOT
and feature name is feature_name
then after the execution it will be 1.0.0-feature_name-SNAPSHOT
).
The gitflow:feature-start
goal has featureNamePattern
parameter which allows to enforce naming of the feature branches with a regular expression. Doesn't have effect if it isn't set or left blank.
By default it isn't set.
The gitflow:feature-finish
goal has incrementVersionAtFinish
parameter which if set to true
will increment version number during feature finish. The default is false
.
All -finish
goals have keepBranch
parameter which controls whether created support branch will be kept in Git after the goal finishes.
The default value is false
(i.e. the supporting branch will be deleted). If the pushRemote
parameter is set to true
and keepBranch
is false
remote branch will be deleted as well.
All -finish
goals and gitflow:release
have skipTestProject
parameter which controls whether Maven test
goal will be called before merging branches.
The default value is false
(i.e. the project will be tested before merging branches).
All release
goals have allowSnapshots
parameter which controls whether SNAPSHOT dependencies are allowed. The default value is false
(i.e. build fails if there SNAPSHOT dependency in project).
The gitflow:release-start
and gitflow:release-finish
have commitDevelopmentVersionAtStart
parameter which controls whether the next development version is set and committed at start or after finish.
By default the value is false
which means that the next development version is set on the development branch after the release branch has been merged onto the development branch when finishing the release.
This has the benefit of being able to easily cancel the release process simply by deleting the release branch.
If the value is true
then versioning happens on gitflow:release-start
. First the project version is set to the release version on the development branch and the release branch is created.
Then the development branch is set to the next development version.
This allows the development branch to continue immediately with a new version and helps avoid any future merge conflicts related to project versioning.
Has effect only when there are separate development and production branches.
The gitflow:release-start
goal has sameBranchName
parameter which can be used to use the same name for the release branch. The default value is false
.
By itself the default releaseBranchPrefix
is not a valid branch name. You must change it when setting sameBranchName
to true
.
Will have no effect if the branchName
parameter is set.
The gitflow:release-start
goal has branchName
parameter which controls how the release branch will be named.
The gitflow:release-start
goal has fromCommit
parameter which allows to start the release from the specific commit (SHA).
The gitflow:release-start
and gitflow:release-finish
goals have useSnapshotInRelease
parameter which allows to start the release with SNAPSHOT version and finish it without this value in project version. By default the value is false
.
For example, if the release version is 1.0.2
and useSnapshotInRelease
is set to true
and using gitflow:release-start
goal then the release version will be 1.0.2-SNAPSHOT
and when finishing the release with gitflow:release-finish
goal, the release version will be 1.0.2
The gitflow:release
and gitflow:release-start
goals have skipReleaseMergeProdBranch
parameter which prevents merging the release branch into the production branch. The default value is false
.
The gitflow:hotfix-start
and gitflow:hotfix-finish
goals have useSnapshotInHotfix
parameter which allows to start the hotfix with SNAPSHOT version and finish it without this value in the version. By default the value is false
.
For example, if the hotfix version is 1.0.2.1
and useSnapshotInHotfix
is set to true
and using gitflow:hotfix-start
goal then the hotfix version will be 1.0.2.1-SNAPSHOT
and when finishing the release with gitflow:hotfix-finish
goal, the release version will be 1.0.2.1
The gitflow:hotfix-finish
goal supports the parameter skipMergeDevBranch
which prevents merging the hotfix branch into the development branch.
The gitflow:hotfix-finish
goal supports the parameter skipMergeProdBranch
which prevents merging the hotfix branch into the production branch and deletes the hotfix branch leaving only the tagged commit. Useful, along with skipMergeDevBranch
, to allow hotfixes to very old code that are not applicable to current development.
The gitflow:release-finish
and gitflow:hofix-finish
goals have noBackMerge
and noBackMergeHotfix
parameters respectively. They control which branch is merged to development branch. If set to true
then release or hotfix branch will be merged to development branch. If set to false
and tag is present (skipTag
parameter is set to false
) then tag will be merged. If there is no tag then production branch will be merged to development branch.
The gitflow:release-finish
and gitflow:release
goals have digitsOnlyDevVersion
parameter which will remove qualifiers from the next development version if set to true
.
For example, if the release version is 1.0.0-Final
then development version will be 1.0.1-SNAPSHOT
.
The default value is false
(i.e. qualifiers will be preserved in next development version).
The gitflow:release-finish
and gitflow:release
goals have versionDigitToIncrement
parameter which controls which digit to increment in the next development version. Starts from zero.
For example, if the release version is 1.2.3.4
and versionDigitToIncrement
is set to 1
then the next development version will be 1.3.0.0-SNAPSHOT
.
If not set or set to not valid value defaults to increment last digit in the version.
The gitflow:hotfix-start
goal has hotfixVersionDigitToIncrement
parameter which controls which digit to increment in the hotfix version. Starts from zero.
Versioninig can be controlled by using Maven version policy implementation. Create appropriate implementation and add it as dependency to the project, use projectVersionPolicyId
parameter to set policy id to use. If policy is set then other parameters controlling the generation of version are ignored (i.e. digitsOnlyDevVersion
, versionDigitToIncrement
).
Version update of all modules ignoring groupId and artifactId can be forced by setting versionsForceUpdate
parameter to true
. The default value is false
.
At the start of the each goal remote branch(es) will be fetched and compared with the local branch(es). If the local branch doesn't exist it will be checked out from the remote.
Both of these options can be turned off by setting fetchRemote
parameter to false
.
At the end of the -finish
goals development or production and development branches will be pushed to remote. This can be turned off by setting pushRemote
parameter to false
.
At the end of the -start
goals newly created branch (release / feature / hotfix) can be pushed to the remote. This can be achieved by setting pushRemote
parameter to true
.
The default remote name is origin
. It can be customized with <gitFlowConfig><origin>custom_origin</origin></gitFlowConfig>
configuration in pom.xml.
Git push-options can be added to push command with the gitPushOptions
parameter. Multiple options can be added separated with a space e.g. -DgitPushOptions="merge_request.create merge_request.target=develop merge_request.label='Super feature'"
.
Release branch can be rebased instead of merged by setting releaseRebase
parameter to true
. The default value is false
(i.e. merge will be performed).
Release branch can be merged without --no-ff
option by setting releaseMergeNoFF
parameter to false
. The default value is true
(i.e. merge --no-ff
will be performed).
The releaseMergeNoFF
parameter has no effect when releaseRebase
parameter is set to true
.
Release branch can be merged with --ff-only
option by setting releaseMergeFFOnly
parameter to true
. The default value is false
(i.e. The --ff-only
option won't be used).
Feature branch can be squashed before merging by setting featureSquash
parameter to true
. The default value is false
(i.e. merge w/o squash will be performed).
The preFeatureFinishGoals
parameter can be used in gitflow:feature-finish
goal to run defined Maven goals before the finishing and merging a feature.
E.g. mvn gitflow:feature-finish -DpreFeatureFinishGoals=test
will run mvn test
goal in the feature branch before merging into the development branch.
The postFeatureFinishGoals
parameter can be used in gitflow:feature-finish
goal to run defined Maven goals after merging a feature.
E.g. mvn gitflow:feature-finish -postFeatureFinishGoals=test
will run mvn test
goal in the development branch after merging a feature.
The preReleaseGoals
parameter can be used in gitflow:release-finish
and gitflow:release
goals to run defined Maven goals before the release.
E.g. mvn gitflow:release-finish -DpreReleaseGoals=test
will run mvn test
goal in the release branch before merging into the production branch.
The postReleaseGoals
parameter can be used in gitflow:release-finish
and gitflow:release
goals to run defined Maven goals after the release.
E.g. mvn gitflow:release-finish -DpostReleaseGoals=deploy
will run mvn deploy
goal in the production branch after the release.
The gitflow:hotfix-finish
goal has preHotfixGoals
and postHotfixGoals
parameters which can be used to run defined Maven goals before and after the hotfix respectively.
Maven can be run in non-interactive (batch) mode. By using non-interactive mode goals can be run in continuous integration environment.
To put Maven in the batch mode use -B
or --batch-mode
option.
Releases could be performed without prompting for the release version during gitflow:release-start
or gitflow:release
goals by telling Maven to run in non-interactive (batch) mode.
The releaseVersion
parameter can be used to set the release version in non-interactive mode. If releaseVersion
parameter is not set then the default release version will be used.
mvn -B gitflow:release-start gitflow:release-finish
To release w/o creating separate release branch use gitflow:release
goal.
mvn -B gitflow:release
This gives the ability to perform releases in non-interactive mode (e.g. in CI server).
The gitflow:release-finish
and gitflow:release
goals have developmentVersion
parameter which can be used to set the next development version in non-interactive mode.
The gitflow:feature-start
and gitflow:feature-finish
goals have featureName
parameter which can be used to set a name of the feature in non-interactive mode.
The gitflow:feature-finish
goal has featureBranch
parameter which can be used to set feature branch name in non-interactive mode. It must start with the feature branch prefix. The featureBranch
will be used instead of featureName
if both are set.
The gitflow:hotfix-start
goal has fromBranch
parameter which can be used to set starting branch of the hotfix. It can be set to production branch or one of the support branches.
If it is left blank then hotfix will be started from the production branch.
The gitflow:hotfix-start
and gitflow:hotfix-finish
goals have hotfixVersion
parameter which can be used to set version of the hotfix.
If it is left blank in gitflow:hotfix-start
goal then the default version will be used.
The gitflow:hotfix-finish
goal has hotfixBranch
parameter which can be used to set hotfix branch name in non-interactive mode. It must start with the hotfix branch prefix. The hotfixBranch
will be used instead of hotfixVersion
if both are set.
The gitflow:support-start
goal can be run in non-interactive mode. Use tagName
parameter to set tag from which supporting branch will be started.
If tagName
is not set but the goal is running in non-interactive mode then the last tag will be used.
The gitflow:support-start
goal has supportBranchName
parameter which can be used to set branch name to use instead of the default.
The gitflow:support-start
goal has useSnapshotInSupport
parameter which allows to start the support with SNAPSHOT version.