Check in your work to the team's codebase
Use the Pending Changes page (Keyboard: Ctrl + 0, P) to check in your code to the team’s codebase.
What do you want to do?
Specify the files you want to check in
Associate work items
Check in your changes
Resolve check-in policy warnings
Perform a gated check in
Subscribe to alerts
Work from the command prompt
Get tips
You can specify which file changes you want to check in by dragging them between the Included Changes and Excluded Changes sections of the Pending Changes page. You can also scope your check-in as you work in other areas of Visual Studio:
In Solution Explorer, select one of the following:
The solution
One or more of the code projects
One or more files
After you select the items, open their context menu, and choose Check In.
In Source Control Explorer, select one or more items with pending changes or one or more folders that contain items with pending changes. (Items with pending changes are indicated by this symbol: ). Open the context menu for the selected items, and choose Check In.
When you change files in your codebase, you typically do so to complete a task, fix a bug, or satisfy the demand of some other kind of work item. When you check in the changes, you should associate such work items with the changes you are checking in. Benefits of doing so include:
A team member who looks at the work item can link directly to the changeset to see the work that you did.
A team member who reviews the history of a file you changed can view the changeset and see the work items that were the justification for the change.
If you build your changes in your automated build system (for example with a CI Build or a Gated Check-in Build) your team members can see in which completed build the task was completed or the bug was fixed.
To associate work items with your check-in:
Choose the Add Work Item by ID link in the Related Work Items section.
Drag a work item from a query window into the Related Work Items section.
Next to each work item, select how it should be related to your check-in: Associate or Resolve (available only if the work item is not already in a state that precludes this relationship, such as Resolved, Done, or Closed).
Suggerimento
You can open the context menu of an associated work item and then choose:
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Open Work Item to open the work item in a provisional tab. If you want to see the work item in a regular tab, open the context menu for the tab and choose Open Tab (Keyboard: Ctrl + Alt + Home).
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Remove Work Item if you do not want to associate the work item with your check-in.
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New Linked Work Item, Create Copy of Work Item, or Link to An Existing Item.
In Team Explorer, choose Home, and then choose Pending Changes (Keyboard: Ctrl + 0, P).
On the Pending Changes page, enter a Comment so that teammates who later need to review and understand the history of your files will understand what you did. For example: Implemented shopping cart controller.
Some teams prefer that their members to provide certain kinds of information about each check-in. In some cases they even implement a check-in policy to require this. If an Administrator of your team project has enabled check-in notes, then you can type the information into each field in the Notes section.
Choose the Check In button.
One of the following outcomes occurs.
All the included file changes from your workspace along with the comment, check-in notes, and links to related work items are stored on the server as a single changeset on your server.
The system presents you with conflicts between your changes the latest version of the files on the server. See Resolve Team Foundation Version Control conflicts.
Administrators of your team project can implement check-in policies to encourage your team to follow best practices. For example, a check-in policy can encourage team members to associate at least one work item with their changes. For more information, see Set and Enforce Quality Gates.
In some cases, you might want to override these check-in policies. In the Policy Warnings section, choose Override Warnings.
In the Reason box, explain why you chose to override the policy.
If you are checking in changes into version control folders that are controlled by a gated check-in build process, the Gated Check-in dialog box appears. For information about how to complete your check-in operation, see Check in to a folder that is controlled by a gated check-in build process.
If you want to be notified when someone checks in code in your TFVC team project, you can subscribe to receive email alerts. Here’s how.
- Checkin command: View pending changes and check in files
You can undock the Pending Changes page from Team Explorer and open it in a new window.
You can toggle between list and tree view from the Actions menu.
Before checking in new code, you should consider conducting a code review. See Day in the life of an ALM Developer: Suspend work, fix a bug, and conduct a code review.
You can manage and, if necessary, undo your pending changes. See Develop code and manage pending changes.
If you need to set aside your changes, see Suspend your work and manage your shelvesets.
A check-in is performed atomically—the operation either succeeds completely or fails completely (with one exception). If any one of the changes cannot be submitted to your Team Foundation server, none of the changes is committed and a changeset is not created. For example, if you lose network connectivity in the middle of a check-in, the whole operation fails.
The exception is the association of work items with the changeset. If work item association fails but all other aspects of the check-in succeed, then the changeset is created. You can manually associate a work item with a changeset. See Link work items to support traceability.