IMPORTANT:
Github Actions and workflow processes should be assigned to your development team who will review and fixes the notifications visible on the deployment logs. Once all log items are reviewed and fixed by your development team, the StagingPro code deployments will be successful.
Staging Pro Repository and Branches
When you install Before installing StagingPro in your tenant, it creates a separate repository and separate branches; does not use your existing Git repository. you need to create an organisation repository in GitHub and add StagingPro as an Admin collaborator. Then you can associate your organisation repository with your StagingPro tenant. StagingPro will automatically create branches based on your linked environment setup in StagingPro
When you add Git users in the ‘Connect GitHub’ tab, it gets associated with the separate repository associated with StagingProcreates team member branches for each environment branch (e.g. Production, Staging, UAT etc).
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Code commits to the respective StagingPro branch, will show up in the History & Rollback > Code Deployment tab
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As a general rule of thumb, developers first commit codes to their local branch, before it reviewed and approved for merge with a shared branch (e.g. Production branch)
After StagingPro is linked with your Git repository, the active branches are programmatically generated and these names must NOT be changed.
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StagingPro Git Branch workflow
As part of theme deployment workflow, consider the following StagingPro setup showing your mapped environments for Production, Staging and UAT.
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StagingPro repository on your Git Organisation
Webhook configured environments Production, Staging, UAT
Storefront channels per environment
GitHub users developer and designer.
GitHub user branches
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This is accessible under the ‘History & Rollback’ tab and click on ‘Code Deployment’ sub-tab. This shows the list of git commits of your connected GitHub repository that is visible within your StagingPro environment
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Status case: Awaiting Approval
A Git commit is visible on the grid, but requires your approval before the code is merged to the respective environment.
You get two options:
Approve and Deploy - where you can deploy the code straightaway
Generate Preview and Approve Later - where you can preview the codes on a generated preview site for visual reference
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If you click to Generate Preview, you can select the version of Node.Js compatible with your Git commit preview and click to Launch. Please give it some time (up to 5 minutes) as it spins up a temporary preview url for visual validation.
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Status case: If you approve the code
The code will be committed to the respective branch and you will see the status of ‘Merge Successful | Theme deployed’
You will also see a ‘Rollback’ option to rollback to a previous version if required.
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Status case: If there are errors/conflicts
If a conflict is detected in config.json, click to view and resolve any errors/conflicts
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Status case: If you reject the code
The status will show as ‘Rejected|Code Not approved’
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A few GitHub FAQS
Q1. After giving Admin access to StagingPro Git repository, I see some autogenerated code branches
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e.g. Productione347c1, so should I keep the names as it is?
A1. Yes, that is correct. These environment branch names are autogenerated and required for code commit tracking. Please do not delete or rename these branches as it will affect the GitHub integration.
The branches are created i) per environment ii) per channel and iii) per team member
Q2. What is the purpose of developer branches?
A2. As best practice, developers are given their own branches so they can commit their codes to their own branch at the first instance, or for more frequent code commits at the developers convenience without affecting the environment branch.
Q3. Are there any benefits to using a developer branch over a more typical git feature branch (e.g. feature/TICKET-description-of-the-change)?
A3. Yes indeed! The developer can commit to their branch first. Once the task is complete, they can merge the code from their branch to the environment branch. If many developers are working on a common task, they can commit codes to each of their individual branches without affecting the other developer branches. And can merge their code easily.
Q4. What purpose does the Main/Master branch serve in a typical setup?
A4. Master branch is generally used as a buffer branch and is the default branch while creating a repo in GitHub. This master ‘buffer’ branch can be left as it is. Instead use the autogenerated active branches that is automatically (with a name such as Productione347c1) created during your GitHub integration and linking process.
Q5. Is there a way to export from Bigcommerce to Github through StagingPro? Or will I need to download the current theme through storefront and upload it to Github separately?
A5. As long as GitHub integration is connected and at a minimum, one team member user is added in the ‘Settings’ section, then yes - StagingPro automatically downloads the theme into the connected branch.
Q6. When I commit changes in Github, will those changes will appear as rollback options in StagingPro?
A6. Correct. After the GitHub integration is set, commit changes are tracked and rollback options are visible on the deployments grid.
Q7. Can you explain how version control works for StagingPro with multiple development teams as part of existing CI/CD pipelines?
A7. When you successfully configure the GitHub integration on your StagingPro tenant, your GIT commits will be visible on the ‘Code Deployment’ tab which displays incremental version numbers. The code branches are created i) per environment ii) per channel and iii) per repo team member. Refer the ‘StagingPro Git Branch workflow’ section of this document. Under Settings > Status Notifications you can enable the Deployment Notifications checkbox for team notifications through i) Email ii) Teams and iii) Slack for shared visibility and effective collaboration.