Version Control with Git

Pull Requests

Overview

Teaching: 5 min
Exercises: 10 min
Questions
  • How can I contribute to a repository to which I don’t have write access?

Objectives
  • Understand what it means to fork a repository

  • Be able to fork a repository on GitHub

  • Understand how to submit a pull request

Pull Requests are a great solution for contributing to repositories to which you don’t have write access. Adding other people as collaborators to a remote repository is a good idea, but sometimes you may not have a specific group of potential collaborators in mind.

This is especially true of open source projects, in which the community of potential contributors can be very big. Keeping the source code safe–but at the same allowing new people to make contributions–is one of the keys to success in open source.

Leveraging the power of Git, GitHub provides a functionality called Pull Requests. Essentially, it’s “requesting the owner of the repository to pull in your contributions”. As the owner of a repository, you may or may not accept a pull request. But as a contributor, pull requests provide a path to engage with the community.

The process

Conceptual illustration of a pull request - image adapted from [here](http://acrl.ala.org/techconnect/post/coding-collaboration-on-github)

Advice for submitting Pull Requests

After submitting your pull request

Your PR may get merged just as it is. It’s very normal, too, for there to be some discussion (on GitHub) and a request for further edits to be made. Given that your pull request haven’t been merged get, you can make changes by adding further commits to your branch and pushing them. In either case, your PR will update automatically once you have pushed your commits.

Exercise

Let’s look at the workflow and try to repeat it:

  1. Fork this repository by clicking on the Fork button at the top of the page.

  2. Clone the repository from YOUR GitHub account. When you run git remote -v you should get something like this:

     origin	https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/more-papers.git(fetch)
     origin	https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/more-papers.git(push)
    
  3. cd into the directory you just cloned. Make changes you want to contribute. Commit and push them back to your repository. You won’t be able to push back to the repository you forked from because you are not added as a contributor!
  4. Go to your GitHub account and in the forked repository find a green button for creating Pull Requests. Click it and follow the instructions.
  5. The owner of the original repository gets a notification that someone created a pull request - the request can be reviewed, commented and merged in (or not) via GitHub.

Key Points