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Azure DevOps Explained

You're reading from  Azure DevOps Explained

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800563513
Pages 438 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Authors (3):
Sjoukje Zaal Sjoukje Zaal
Profile icon Sjoukje Zaal
Stefano Demiliani Stefano Demiliani
Profile icon Stefano Demiliani
Amit Malik Amit Malik
Profile icon Amit Malik
View More author details

Table of Contents (17) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1: DevOps Principles and Azure DevOps Project Management
2. Chapter 1: Azure DevOps Overview 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

Working with pull requests

Pull requests allow you to notify your team members that a new implementation has been completed and must be merged with a specified branch. By using pull requests, members of your team can review your code (by stepping through files and see the modifications that a particular commit introduces), provide review comments on minor issues, and approve or reject those modifications. This is the recommended practice to use when using source control management with Azure DevOps.

You can view the incoming pull requests for a specific repository on Azure DevOps by selecting the Pull requests menu from the Repos hub, as shown in the following screenshot:

Figure 3.49 – Pull requests view

You can also filter this list to view only your pull requests or only the Active, Completed, or Abandoned pull requests.

A pull request can be created in different ways, as follows:

  • Manually from the Azure DevOps pull request page
  • From...
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