# Using Jujutsu with GitHub and GitLab Projects This guide assumes a basic understanding of either Git or Mercurial. ## Set up an SSH key As of October 2023 it's recommended to set up an SSH key to work with GitHub projects. See [GitHub's Tutorial][gh]. This restriction may be lifted in the future, see [issue #469][http-auth] for more information and progress on authenticated HTTP. ## Basic workflow The simplest way to start with Jujutsu is to create a stack of commits first. You will only need to create a branch when you need to push the stack to a remote. There are two primary workflows: using a generated branch name or naming a branch. ### Using a generated branch name In this example we're letting Jujutsu auto-create a branch. ```shell # Start a new commit off of the default branch. $ jj new main # Refactor some files, then add a description and start a new commit $ jj commit -m 'refactor(foo): restructure foo()' # Add a feature, then add a description and start a new commit $ jj commit -m 'feat(bar): add support for bar' # Let Jujutsu generate a branch name and push that to GitHub. Note that we # push the working-copy commit's *parent* because the working-copy commit # itself is empty. $ jj git push -c @- ``` ### Using a named branch In this example, we create a branch named `bar` and then push it to the remote. ```shell # Start a new commit off of the default branch. $ jj new main # Refactor some files, then add a description and start a new commit $ jj commit -m 'refactor(foo): restructure foo()' # Add a feature, then add a description and start a new commit $ jj commit -m 'feat(bar): add support for bar' # Create a branch so we can push it to GitHub. Note that we created the branch # on the working-copy commit's *parent* because the working copy itself is empty. $ jj branch create bar -r @- # `bar` now contains the previous two commits. # Push the branch to GitHub (pushes only `bar`) $ jj git push ``` While it's possible to create a branch in advance and commit on top of it in a Git-like manner, you will then need to move the branch manually when you create a new commits. Unlike Git, Jujutsu will not do it automatically. ## Updating the repository As of October 2023, Jujutsu has no equivalent to a `git pull` command (see [issue #1039][sync-issue]). Until such a command is added, you need to use `jj git fetch` followed by a `jj rebase -d $main_branch` to update your changes. [sync-issue]: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/1039 ## Working in a Git co-located repository After doing `jj init --git-repo=.`, Git will be in a [detached HEAD state][detached], which is unusual, as Git mainly works with branches. In a co-located repository, every `jj` command will automatically synchronize Jujutsu's view of the repo with Git's view. For example, `jj commit` updates the HEAD of the Git repository, enabling an incremental migration. ```shell $ nvim docs/tutorial.md $ # Do some more work. $ jj commit -m "Update tutorial" # Create a branch on the working-copy commit's parent $ jj branch create doc-update -r @- $ jj git push ``` ## Working in a Jujutsu repository In a Jujutsu repository, the workflow is simplified. If there's no need for explicitly named branches, you can just generate one for a change. As Jujutsu is able to create a branch for a revision. ```shell $ # Do your work $ jj commit $ # Push change "mw", letting Jujutsu automatically create a branch called $ # "push-mwmpwkwknuz" $ jj git push --change mw ``` ## Addressing review comments There are two workflows for addressing review comments, depending on your project's preference. Many projects prefer that you address comments by adding commits to your branch[^1]. Some projects (such as Jujutsu and LLVM) instead prefer that you keep your commits clean by rewriting them and then force-pushing[^2]. ### Adding new commits If your project prefers that you address review comments by adding commits on top, you can do that by doing something like this: ```shell $ # Create a new commit on top of the `your-feature` branch from above. $ jj new your-feature $ # Address the comments by updating the code. Then review the changes. $ jj diff $ # Give the fix a description and create a new working-copy on top. $ jj commit -m 'address pr comments' $ # Update the branch to point to the new commit. $ jj branch set your-feature -r @- $ # Push it to your remote $ jj git push ``` Notably, the above workflow creates a new commit for you. The same can be achieved without creating a new commit. > **Warning** > We strongly suggest to `jj new` after the example below, as all further edits > still get amended to the previous commit. ```shell $ # Create a new commit on top of the `your-feature` branch from above. $ jj new your-feature $ # Address the comments by updating the code. Then review the changes. $ jj diff $ # Give the fix a description. $ jj describe -m 'address pr comments' $ # Update the branch to point to the current commit. $ jj branch set your-feature -r @ $ # Push it to your remote $ jj git push ``` ### Rewriting commits If your project prefers that you keep commits clean, you can do that by doing something like this: ```shell $ # Create a new commit on top of the second-to-last commit in `your-feature`, $ # as reviewers requested a fix there. $ jj new your-feature- # NOTE: the trailing hyphen is not a typo! $ # Address the comments by updating the code. Then review the changes. $ jj diff $ # Squash the changes into the parent commit $ jj squash $ # Push the updated branch to the remote. Jujutsu automatically makes it a $ # force push $ jj git push --branch your-feature ``` The hyphen after `your-feature` comes from the [revset](https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/blob/main/docs/revsets.md) syntax. ## Working with other people's branches By default `jj git clone` and `jj git fetch` clone all active branches from the remote. This means that if you want to iterate or test another contributor's branch you can `jj new ` onto it. If your remote has a large amount of old, inactive branches or this feature is undesirable, set `git.auto-local-branch = false` in the config file. You can find more information on that setting [here][auto-branch]. ## Using GitHub CLI GitHub CLI will have trouble finding the proper Git repository path in jj repos that aren't [co-located](./git-compatibility.md#co-located-jujutsugit-repos) (see [issue #1008]). You can configure the `$GIT_DIR` environment variable to point it to the right path: ```shell $ GIT_DIR=.jj/repo/store/git gh issue list ``` You can make that automatic by installing [direnv](https://direnv.net) and defining hooks in a `.envrc` file in the repository root to configure `$GIT_DIR`. Just add this line into `.envrc`: ```shell export GIT_DIR=$PWD/.jj/repo/store/git ``` and run `direnv allow` to approve it for direnv to run. Then GitHub CLI will work automatically even in repos that aren't co-located so you can execute commands like `gh issue list` normally. [issue #1008]: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/1008 ## Useful Revsets Log all revisions across all local branches that aren't on the main branch nor on any remote: ```shell $ jj log -r 'branches() & ~(main | remote_branches())' ``` Log all revisions that you authored, across all branches that aren't on any remote: ```shell $ jj log -r 'mine() & branches() & ~remote_branches()' ``` Log all remote branches that you authored or committed to: ```shell $ jj log -r 'remote_branches() & (mine() | committer(your@email.com))' ``` Log all descendants of the current working copy that aren't on any remote: ```shell $ jj log -r '::@ & ~remote_branches()' ``` ## Merge conflicts For a detailed overview, how Jujutsu handles conflicts, revisit the [tutorial][tut]. [^1]: This is a GitHub-style review, as GitHub currently only is able to compare branches. [^2]: If you're wondering why we prefer clean commits in this project, see e.g. [this blog post][stacked] [auto-branch]: config.md#automatic-local-branch-creation [detached]: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-checkout#_detached_head [gh]: https://docs.github.com/en/authentication/connecting-to-github-with-ssh/generating-a-new-ssh-key-and-adding-it-to-the-ssh-agent [http-auth]: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/469 [tut]: tutorial.md#Conflicts [stacked]: https://jg.gg/2018/09/29/stacked-diffs-versus-pull-requests/ ## Using several remotes It is common to use several remotes when contributing to a shared repository. For example, "upstream" can designate the remote where the changes will be merged through a pull-request while "origin" is your private fork of the project. In this case, you might want to `jj git fetch` from "upstream" and to `jj git push` to "origin". You can configure the default remotes to fetch from and push to in your configuration file (for example `.jj/repo/config.toml`): ```toml [git] fetch = "upstream" push = "origin" ``` The default for both `git.fetch` and `git.push` is "origin".