Branching with the Neon CLI
Learn how to create and delete branches with the Neon CLI
The examples in this guide demonstrate creating, viewing, and deleting branches using the Neon CLI. For other branch-related CLI commands, refer to Neon CLI commands — branches. This guide also describes how to use the --api-key
option to authenticate CLI branching commands from the command line.
The examples show the default table
output format. The Neon CLI also supports json
and yaml
output formats. For example, if you prefer output in json
, add --output json
to your Neon CLI command.
Prerequisites
- The Neon CLI. See Install the Neon CLI for instructions.
- To run CLI commands, you must either authenticate through your browser or supply an API key using the
--api-key
option. See Connect with the Neon CLI.
Create a branch with the CLI
The following Neon CLI command creates a branch. If your Neon account has more than one project, you will be required to specify a project ID using the --project-id
option. To view the CLI documentation for this command, refer to the Neon CLI reference.
The command response includes the branch ID, the compute ID, and and the connection URI for connecting to the branch.
tip
You can use the --name
option with a neon branches create
command to specify your own branch name instead of using the name generated by Neon. For example: neon branches create --name mybranch
. Also, for any Neon CLI command, you can specify --output json
to change the command output from the default table format to JSON format.
tip
The Neon CLI provides a neon connection-string
command you can use to extract a connection uri programmatically. See Neon CLI commands — connection-string.
Create a branch from a non-default parent
Using the option --parent
, you can specify any non-default branch that you want to use as the parent for your new branch, depending on the needs of your development workflow.
In this example, we're creating a branch for a hotfix called alex/hotfix
using the long-lived development branch dev/alex
as the parent:
List branches with the CLI
The following Neon CLI command lists all branches in your Neon project, as well as any branches shared with you. If your Neon account has more than one project, you will be required to specify a project ID using the --project-id
option. To view the CLI documentation for this method, refer to the Neon CLI reference.
Delete a branch with the CLI
The following Neon CLI command deletes the specified branch. If your Neon account has more than one project, you will be required to specify a project ID using the --project-id
option. To view the CLI documentation for this command, refer to the Neon CLI reference. You can delete a branch by its ID or name.
Branching automation with the Neon CLI
The Neon CLI enables easy automation of branching operations for integration into your workflows or toolchains. To facilitate authentication to Neon when running a CLI command, the Neon CLI allows you to use an API key. For information about obtaining an API key, see Create an API key.
To use an API key, you can store it in an environment variable on your system. This prevents the key from being hardcoded into your automation scripts or exposed in another way. For example, you can add the following line to your shell's profile file (.bashrc
or .bash_profile
for bash shell):
After exporting your key, source the profile file (source ~/.bashrc
or source ~/.bash_profile
), or start a new terminal session.
You do not need to specify the variable name explicitly when using a Neon CLI command. A Neon CLI command looks for a NEON_API_KEY
variable setting by default.
This API key configuration ensures that the API key is kept secure while still providing a way to authenticate your CLI commands. Remember, you should handle your API key with the same level of security as your other credentials.
Resetting a branch from its parent
Depending on your development workflow, you might need to periodically reset a branch to match the latest state of its parent. This is useful, for example, when resetting a long-lived development branch back to the main branch before starting work on a new feature.
Use the following command to reset a branch to the current state (HEAD) of its parent branch:
Example:
This example resets a developer's branch to match the latest state of its parent branch:
If the branch you want to reset has child branches, you need to include the preserve-under-name
parameter. This will save the current state of your branch under a new name before performing the reset. The child branches will then show this newly named branch as their parent. This step ensures that your original branch can be reset cleanly, as all child branches will have been transferred to the new parent name.
For example, here we are resetting dev/alex
to its parent while preserving its latest state under the branch name dev/alex_backup
:
For more details, see Reset from parent.
Restoring a branch to its own or another branch's history
Using the CLI, you can restore a branch to an earlier point in its history or another branch's history using the following command:
This command restores the branch main
to an earlier timestamp in it's own history, saving to a backup branch called main_restore_backup_2024-02-20
Results of the operation:
For full details about the different restore options available with this command, see Restoring using the CLI.
Need help?
Join our Discord Server to ask questions or see what others are doing with Neon. Users on paid plans can open a support ticket from the console. For more detail, see Getting Support.
Last updated on