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Azure DevOps Explained

You're reading from   Azure DevOps Explained Get started with Azure DevOps and develop your DevOps practices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800563513
Length 438 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Stefano Demiliani Stefano Demiliani
Author Profile Icon Stefano Demiliani
Stefano Demiliani
Sjoukje Zaal Sjoukje Zaal
Author Profile Icon Sjoukje Zaal
Sjoukje Zaal
Sjoukje Zaal Sjoukje Zaal
Author Profile Icon Sjoukje Zaal
Sjoukje Zaal
Amit Malik Amit Malik
Author Profile Icon Amit Malik
Amit Malik
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: DevOps Principles and Azure DevOps Project Management
2. Chapter 1: Azure DevOps Overview FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Managing Projects with Azure DevOps Boards 4. Section 2: Source Code and Builds
5. Chapter 3: Source Control Management with Azure DevOps 6. Chapter 4: Understanding Azure DevOps Pipelines 7. Chapter 5: Running Quality Tests in a Build Pipeline 8. Chapter 6: Hosting Your Own Azure Pipeline Agent 9. Section 3: Artifacts and Deployments
10. Chapter 7: Using Artifacts with Azure DevOps 11. Chapter 8: Deploying Applications with Azure DevOps 12. Section 4: Advanced Features of Azure DevOps
13. Chapter 9: Integrating Azure DevOps with GitHub 14. Chapter 10: Using Test Plans with Azure DevOps 15. Chapter 11: Real-World CI/CD Scenarios with Azure DevOps 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Handling a pull request

All the different ways to handle a pull request that we've described converge to a unique point: in Azure DevOps, the Pull requests window opens, and you need to fill in the details of your pull request activity. As an example, this is the pull request that we started after the previous commit on the development branch:

Figure 3.55 – New pull request window

Here, you can immediately see that the pull request merges a branch into another branch (in my case, development will be merged into master). You need to provide a title and a description of this pull request (that clearly describes the changes and the implementations you made in the merge), as well as attach links and add team members (users or groups) that will be responsible for reviewing this pull request. You can also include work items (this option will be automatically included if you completed a commit attached to a work item previously).

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