I want clean history, but that really means (a) clean and (b) history.
People can (and probably should) rebase their private trees (their own work). That’s a cleanup. But never other peoples code. That’s a “destroy history”
So the history part is fairly easy. There’s only one major rule, and one minor clarification:
- You must never EVER destroy other peoples history. You must not rebase commits other people did.
[…]
If you are working with git together with other people, it’s worth a read.
Review iterations mean messy comits there though. And full documented history in Git seems preferable because you don’t have to switch tools, and for persistence and robustness too, in case of repo/review platform changes (switching platforms etc).