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Branching Strategy in Team Foundation Server

While attending TechReady (an internal Microsoft training conference) last week, I learned a lot -- not only about future versions of our products, but also numerous tips and tricks for current versions. One of the most valuable insights I gained was from a session on branching in Team Foundation Server (TFS). If you've read my previous post on structuring Visual Studio solutions, then you know that I'm a proponent of branching from the start in order to easily support parallel development and periodically stabilizing for a release.

I had previously read the TFS Branching Guidance on CodePlex, although I admit it has been a rather long time. Nevertheless, I still understood the commonly used Main, Dev, and Release branches. However, I discovered during the session last week that I had a fundamental misunderstanding about baseless merges in TFS. Prior to last week, I thought a baseless merge occurred when the source and target do not share any ancestry in the branching tree. In other words, I thought that as long as the target resides on a branch that can be traced through some lineage to the source branch, then TFS has sufficient "knowledge" (i.e. algorithms) to merge changes from the source to the target.

As I stated before, this was a misunderstanding on my part. When I asked a question about trying to delay the branching for stabilization for as long as possible, the presenters of the session -- James Pickell and Mario Rodriguez -- pointed out that a baseless merge occurs whenever the target is not in a "first level" branch from the source. In other words, you can automerge from parent-to-child (or child-to-parent), but you cannot automerge from grandchild-to-grandparent.

So, what does all of the mean in practical terms?

It all comes down to how -- and when -- you actually branch your code.

In the interest of not reinventing the wheel, allow me to pilfer one of the images from the updated TFS Branching Guide 2.0:

Figure 1: Basic branch plan

See full-sized image.

Note that this is a basic branch plan, but it is sufficient to demonstrate the concept. You may very well have a more complex branching strategy (e.g. a large organization like Microsoft in order to support "feature teams"). However, the essential pattern still applies.

The question that I asked during the session was essentially why not postpone branching for as long as possible? In other words, why not branch Release first, and then branch for hotfixes and service packs as necessary? In my mind, this alternative approach reduces the merge effort by only branching at the point in time when we actually need a branch (e.g. to stabilize for a release). At some later point in time after the release when we actually need a hotfix or service pack branch, then we'll create it from the Release branch. In response to my question, Mario termed this "reactive branching" -- which seems like a very good way to describe it. To help visualize the difference, I mocked up the following figure.

Figure 2: "Reactive" branch plan

See full-sized image.

There are a couple of significant problems with reactive branching:

  • In order to merge code changes from a QFE (a.k.a. hotfix) or service pack back into Main (and remember, we almost always want the fixes in QFEs to be incorporated into Main), we would either need to first automerge the changes into the Release branch and then merge the changes into Main -- or else perform a baseless merge (which, generally speaking, we want to avoid). If we merge the changes into the Release branch, then that code no longer reflects the actual Release build (e.g. v1.0) but rather the Release build plus some number of changes. Yes, we could still use labels to "snapshot" the source code for the Release version, but as James pointed out, labels can be manipulated and therefore may not be sufficiently "bulletproof" to meet your requirements.
  • We could still use reactive branching, but avoid merging through Release by renaming a branch (e.g. the Release branch is renamed to Service Pack, and a new Release branch is created and "locked down" from a permissions perspective). However, this requires significantly more work with each release -- work that can be avoided altogether by using the branching strategy shown in Figure 1.

So, in summary, while it may seem a little backwards to create your Service Pack branch before your Release branch, there are compelling reasons to do so. As for me, I now consider my "reactive branching" strategy to be a thing of the past.

Thanks to James and Mario for setting me straight!

By the way, if you haven't read the branching guidance created by the VSTS Rangers, I highly recommend it. Very good stuff.

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