benbyf Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 Feel like this is a perennial question and probably a duplicate...BUT I have a load of new PW sites and in the past I've git'ed on the template/ folders to gitlab, bitbucket, github or similar. What are people doing to version control with PW as I would love to add more than the templates folder ideally (as I often make custom Modules) but wondered what people's strategies are? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elabx Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 Might be easier to tell what I exclude which is: /site/assets /vendor multiple things like "site/modules/ComposerModule" , example of any module that I manage through composer rather than git. .env - I do this to be able to include config.php in version control. On my todo is to try: https://github.com/uiii/processwire to also handle PW core as a composer dependency. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cwsoft Posted November 27 Share Posted November 27 Similar here. I init my PW Git repos inside the site folder and to exclude some stuff via .gitignore. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
da² Posted November 27 Share Posted November 27 I add to Git site and wire. On wire I have some Git patches that I may apply again after updating to a new version, and each wire version may solve or add bugs, so I add it to version control. So .gitignore files exclude vendor directory and : Quote site/assets/cache/**/ site/assets/cache/*.maint site/assets/sessions/sess_* site/assets/logs/*.txt site/templates/css/*.css site/templates/css/*.map I need some files in assets, so I exclude everything that is not needed and keep the rest. I also add the database.sql to Git, a clean version ready to be deployed on a new site. Everytime I do changes in admin I export the DB. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AndZyk Posted November 27 Share Posted November 27 (edited) I add Git in the root folder and can recommend GitKraken as app. 😀 I have a develop and a master branch and an origin remote. Our remote repositories are hosted on Bitbucket. This is my current .gitignore file: Spoiler # OS .DS_Store # Visual Studio Code /.vscode/ /*.code-workspace # CodeKit /config.codekit3 /.sass-cache # Node node_modules/ # Apache /.htaccess # Composer /composer.lock /vendor/ # ProcessWire /site/config.php /site/config-dev.php /site/assets/ # SEO /robots.txt /googlec*.html /BingSiteAuth.xml Regards, Andreas Edited November 28 by AndZyk 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benbyf Posted November 27 Author Share Posted November 27 @AndZyk do you include /wire/ in your repo then and why? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wbmnfktr Posted November 27 Share Posted November 27 I use Git in the project root as well, and only put things in .gitignore I really don't want to have in that repo. Best case scenario is that I have the full project, besides database dumps, in my repo. # .gitignore .ddev/ site/assets/backups/ site/assets/cache/ site/assets/logs/ site/assets/ProCache-* site/assets/pwpc/ site/assets/sessions/ site/config-dev.php Database dumps are a thing of its own. Managed projects are backed up quite often, long time projects with not that many updates will be backed up once every 3 months. From un-Managed projects I keep only the latest version I worked on - most of the time the release day or when something was updated. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AndZyk Posted November 28 Share Posted November 28 (edited) On 11/27/2024 at 5:35 PM, benbyf said: @AndZyk do you include /wire/ in your repo then and why? Hello @benbyf, yes I include the wire folder in my repo. I am no Git expert but looked how .gitignore files for other CMS are recommended here in this popular collection on GitHub: https://github.com/github/gitignore Most other CMS like WordPress, TYPO3, Joomla!, Kirby etc. recommend to add Git in the root folder and track the core folders. For WordPress now it is recommended to optionally ignore the core folders, but at the time I was looking that wasn't the case. Here are my pros and cons for adding Git in the root folder: Pros One repo for the complete website You can clone the complete website with one command Sometimes there are important files in the root, like f.e. Service Workers or Composer packages You know which version of the CMS is used You can use new functions of the CMS without keeping track of the CMS version somewhere else If someone modifies or hacks your wire folder, you could see the differences Cons More commits Larger repo But ProcessWire gets a master version only once or twice a year, so the cons are for me not noticeable. Of course as I said I am no Git expert and everybody is free to use Git how they want. 😀 Regards, Andreas Edited November 28 by AndZyk typo 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JamesFletcher Posted Tuesday at 12:35 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 12:35 PM On 11/28/2024 at 2:30 PM, AndZyk said: Hello @benbyf, yes I include the wire folder in my repo. I am no Git expert but looked how .gitignore files for other CMS are recommended here in this popular collection on GitHub: https://github.com/github/gitignore Most other CMS like WordPress, TYPO3, Joomla!, Kirby etc. recommend to add Git in the root folder and track the core folders. For WordPress now it is recommended to optionally ignore the core folders, but at the time I was looking that wasn't the case. Here are my pros and cons for adding Git in the root folder: Pros One repo for the complete website You can clone the complete website with one command Sometimes there are important files in the root, like f.e. Service Workers or Composer packages You know which version of the CMS is used You can use new functions of the CMS without keeping track of the CMS version somewhere else If someone modifies or hacks your wire folder, you could see the differences Cons More commits Larger repo But ProcessWire gets a master version only once or twice a year, so the cons are for me not noticeable. Of course as I said I am no Git expert and everybody is free to use Git how they want. 😀 Regards, Andreas Thank you so much. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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