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Building Enterprise JavaScript Applications

You're reading from   Building Enterprise JavaScript Applications Learn to build and deploy robust JavaScript applications using Cucumber, Mocha, Jenkins, Docker, and Kubernetes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788477321
Length 764 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Daniel Li Daniel Li
Author Profile Icon Daniel Li
Daniel Li
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Importance of Good Code FREE CHAPTER 2. The State of JavaScript 3. Managing Version History with Git 4. Setting Up Development Tools 5. Writing End-to-End Tests 6. Storing Data in Elasticsearch 7. Modularizing Our Code 8. Writing Unit/Integration Tests 9. Designing Our API 10. Deploying Our Application on a VPS 11. Continuous Integration 12. Security – Authentication and Authorization 13. Documenting Our API 14. Creating UI with React 15. E2E Testing in React 16. Managing States with Redux 17. Migrating to Docker 18. Robust Infrastructure with Kubernetes 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Releasing code

We now have a sizable chunk of features that we can release. We should create a release branch from dev. This release branch should be named after the version of the release, prefixed by release/, such as release/0.1.0. The code to be released should then be deployed to a staging server, where automated UI testing, manual testing, and acceptance testing should be conducted (more on these later). Any bug fixes should be committed on the release branch and merged back into the dev branch. When the release branch is ready, it can then be merged into master.

No new features should be added to the release branch except bug fixes and hotfixes. Any new features, non-critical bug fixes, or bug fixes that are unrelated to the release should be committed to a bug-fix branch.

So, the first question is how do we name/version our releases? For this project...

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