-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 102
Branching
We encourage the use of features/bug fixes branches when working against the d365fo.tools repo. Read more about it here
-
Make sure that you have selected your local repository
-
Make sure that you have selected the development branch
-
Click on the development branch icon in the top
-
Click on the New branch button in the drop down menu
-
Fill in the name of the desired branch
-
Click on Create branch when ready
- We recommend that you provide a meaningful name, without spaces
-
Make sure that the branch was created and your local repository is switched to that
-
Do your magic and commit stuff to your branch
-
When you are ready to create a pull request (PR), simply click on the Publish branch button in the top menu
-
To create a PR, simply click on the Branch menu item in the very top of the window and click on the Create pull request option
-
Your default browser will now load and go to github
-
Make sure that you compared the branch against the development branch in the d365fo.tools repository
- Install as a non-Administrator
- Install as a Administrator
- Import d365fo.tools module
- List available commands from d365fo.tools module
- Get help content for a command
- Start, Stop and List services
- Import users into the D365FO environment
- Import external users into the D365FO environment
- Enable users in the D365FO environment
- Update users in the D365FO environment
- Provision D365FO environment to new Azure AD tenant
- Import a bacpac file into a Tier1 environment
- List modules / models
- Compile module
- Install AzCopy
- Install SqlPackage
- Install Nuget
- Speed up LCS download via AzCopy
- Download latest bacpac from LCS via AzCopy
- Register NuGet source
- Configure Azure Logic App
- Fix AzureStorageConfig
- Run a runnable class
- Update users in environment
- Work with Azure Storage Account
- Work with packages, resource label files, language and lables
- Working with the different D365 services