From 6f1e074c3d5a6703149f314f392ec9d386953f60 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Martin Roth Date: Thu, 29 Oct 2015 12:43:10 -0600 Subject: Documentation: coreboot Gerrit Etiquette and Guidelines As the community has grown, so has the need to formalize some of the guidelines that the community lives by. When the community was small, it was easy to communicate these things just from one person to another. Now, with more people joining the community every day, it seems that it's time to write some of these things down, allowing people to understand our policies immediately instead of making them learn our practices as they make mistakes. As it says in the document: The following rules are the requirements for behavior in the coreboot codebase in gerrit. These have mainly been unwritten rules up to this point, and should be familiar to most users who have been active in coreboot for a period of time. Following these rules will help reduce friction in the community. Change-Id: If80e933fcfb04b86fd5efe6423cda448118d7a3c Signed-off-by: Martin Roth Reviewed-on: http://review.coreboot.org/12256 Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) Reviewed-by: David Hendricks Reviewed-by: Alexandru Gagniuc Reviewed-by: Stefan Reinauer Reviewed-by: Paul Menzel Reviewed-by: Ronald G. Minnich --- Documentation/gerrit_guidelines.md | 263 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 263 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/gerrit_guidelines.md diff --git a/Documentation/gerrit_guidelines.md b/Documentation/gerrit_guidelines.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..3140ff5eae --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/gerrit_guidelines.md @@ -0,0 +1,263 @@ +coreboot Gerrit Etiquette and Guidelines +======================================== + +The following rules are the requirements for behavior in the coreboot +codebase in gerrit. These have mainly been unwritten rules up to this +point, and should be familiar to most users who have been active in +coreboot for a period of time. Following these rules will help reduce +friction in the community. + +Note that as with many rules, there are exceptions. Some have been noted +in the 'More Detail' section. If you feel there is an exception not listed +here, please discuss it in the mailing list to get this document updated. +Don't just assume that it's okay, even if someone on IRC says it is. + + +Summary: +-------- +These are the expectations for committing, reviewing, and submitting code +into coreboot git and gerrit. While breaking individual rules may not have +immediate consequences, the coreboot leadership may act on repeated or +flagrant violations with or without notice. + +* Don't violate the licenses. +* Let non-trivial patches sit in a review state for at least 24 hours +before submission. +* Try to coordinate with platform maintainers when making changes to +platforms. +* If you give a patch a -2, you are responsible for giving concrete +recommendations for what could be changed to resolve the issue the patch +addresses. +* Don't modify other people's patches without their consent. +* Be respectful to others when commenting. +* Don’t submit patches that you know will break other platforms. + + +More detail: +------------ +* Don't violate the licenses. If you're submitting code that you didn't +write yourself, make sure the license is compatible with the license of the +project you're submitting the changes to. If you’re submitting code that +you wrote that might be owned by your employer, make sure that your +employer is aware and you are authorized to submit the code. For +clarification, see the Developer's Certificate of Origin in the coreboot +[Signed-off-by policy](http://www.coreboot.org/Development_Guidelines#Sign-off_Procedure). + +* Let non-trivial patches sit in a review state for at least 24 hours +before submission. Remember that there are coreboot developers in timezones +all over the world, and everyone should have a chance to contribute. +Trivial patches would be things like whitespace changes or spelling fixes. +In general, small changes that don’t impact the final binary output. The +24-hour period would start at submission, and would be restarted at any +update which significantly changes any part of the patch. Patches can be +'Fast-tracked' and submitted in under this 24 hour with the agreement of at +least 3 +2 votes. + +* Do not +2 patches that you authored or own, even for something as trivial +as whitespace fixes. When working on your own patches, it’s easy to +overlook something like accidentally updating file permissions or git +submodule commit IDs. Let someone else review the patch. An exception to +this would be if two people worked in the patch together. If both +2 the +patch, that is acceptable, as each is giving a +2 to the other's work. + +* Try to coordinate with platform maintainers and other significant +contributors to the code when making changes to platforms. The platform +maintainers are the users who initially pushed the code for that platform, +as well as users who have made significant changes to a platform. To find +out who maintains a piece of code, please use util/scripts/maintainers.go +or refer to the original author of the code in git log. + +* If you give a patch a -2, you are responsible for giving concrete +recommendations for what could be changed to resolve the issue the patch +addresses. If you feel strongly that a patch should NEVER be merged, you +are responsible for defending your position and listening to other points +of view. Giving a -2 and walking away is not acceptable, and may cause your + -2 to be removed by the coreboot leadership after no less than a week. A + notification that the -2 will be removed unless there is a response will + be sent out at least 2 days before it is removed. + +* Don't modify other people's patches unless you have coordinated this with +the owner of that patch. Not only is this considered rude, but your changes +could be unintentionally lost. An exception to this would be for patches +that have not been updated for more than 90 days. In that case, the patch +can be taken over if the original author does not respond to requests for +updates. Alternatively, a new patch can be pushed with the original +content, and both patches should be updated to reference the other. + +* Be respectful to others when commenting on patches. Comments should +be kept to the code, and should be kept in a polite tone. We are a +worldwide community and English is a difficult language. Assume your +colleagues are intelligent and do not intend disrespect. Resist the urge to +retaliate against perceived verbal misconduct, such behavior is not +conducive to getting patches merged. + +* Don’t submit code that you know will break other platforms. If your patch +affects code that is used by other platforms, it should be compatible with +those platforms. While it would be nice to update any other platforms, you +must at least provide a path that will allow other platforms to continue +working. + + +Recommendations for gerrit activity: +------------------------------------ +These guidelines are less strict than the ones listed above. These are more +of the “good idea” variety. You are requested to follow the below +guidelines, but there will probably be no actual consequences if they’re +not followed. That said, following the recommendations below will speed up +review of your patches, and make the members of the community do less work. + +* Each patch should be kept to one logical change, which should be +described in the title of the patch. Unrelated changes should be split out +into separate patches. Fixing whitespace on a line you’re editing is +reasonable. Fixing whitespace around the code you’re working on should be a +separate ‘cleanup’ patch. Larger patches that touch several areas are fine, +so long as they are one logical change. Adding new chips and doing code +cleanup over wide areas are two examples of this. + +* Test your patches before submitting them to gerrit. It's also appreciated +if you add a line to the commit message describing how the patch was +tested. This prevents people from having to ask whether and how the patch +was tested. Examples of this sort of comment would be ‘TEST=Built +platform’ or ‘Tested by building and booting platform’. Stating that the +patch was not tested is also fine, although you might be asked to do some +testing in cases where that would be reasonable. + +* Take advantage of the lint tools to make sure your patches don’t contain +trivial mistakes. By running ‘make gitconfig’, the lint-stable tools are +automatically put in place and will test your patches before they are +committed. As a violation of these tools will cause the jenkins build test +to fail, it’s to your advantage to test this before pushing to gerrit. + +* Don't submit patch trains longer than around 20 patches unless you +understand how to manage long patch trains. Long patch trains can become +difficult to handle and tie up the build servers for long periods of time +if not managed well. Rebasing a patch train over and over as you fix +earlier patches in the train can hide comments, and make people review the +code multiple times to see if anything has changed between revisions. When +pushing long patch trains, it is recommended to only push the full patch +train once - the initial time, and only to rebase three or four patches at +a time. + +* Run 'make what-jenkins-does' locally on patch trains before submitting. +This helps verify that the patch train won’t tie up the jenkins builders +for no reason if there are failing patches in the train. For running +parallel builds, you can specify the number of cores to use by setting the +the CPUS environment variable. Example: + make what-jenkins-does CPUS=8 + +* Use a topic when pushing a train of patches. This groups the commits +together so people can easily see the connection at the top level of +gerrit. Topics can be set for individual patches in gerrit by going into +the patch and clicking on the icon next to the topic line. Topics can also +be set when you push the patches into gerrit. For example, to push a set of +commits with the the i915-kernel-x60 set, use the command: + git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master/i915-kernel-x60 + +* If one of your patches isn't ready to be merged, make sure it's obvious +that you don't feel it's ready for merge yet. The preferred way to show +this is by marking in the commit message that it’s not ready until X. The +commit message can be updated easily when it’s ready to be pushed. +Examples of this are "WIP: title" or "[NEEDS_TEST]: title". Another way to +mark the patch as not ready would be to give it a -1 or -2 review, but +isn't as obvious as the commit message. These patches can also be pushed as +drafts as shown in the next guideline. + +* When pushing patches that are not for submission, these should be marked +as such. This can be done in the title ‘[DONOTSUBMIT]’, or can be pushed as +draft commits, so that only explicitly added reviewers will see them. These +sorts of patches are frequently posted as ideas or RFCs for the community +to look at. To push a draft, use the command: + git push origin HEAD:refs/drafts/master + +* Respond to anyone who has taken the time to review your patches, even if +it's just to say that you disagree. While it may seem annoying to address a +request to fix spelling or 'trivial' issues, it’s generally easy to handle +in gerrit’s built-in editor. If you do use the built-in editor, remember to +get that change to your local copy before re-pushing. It's also acceptable +to add fixes for these sorts of comments to another patch, but it's +recommended that that patch be pushed to gerrit before the initial patch +gets submitted. + +* Consider breaking up large individual patches into smaller patches +grouped by areas. This makes the patches easier to review, but increases +the number of patches. The way you want to handle this is a personal +decision, as long as each patch is still one logical change. + +* If you have an interest in a particular area or mainboard, set yourself +up as a ‘maintainer’ of that area by adding yourself to the MAINTAINERS +file in the coreboot root directory. Eventually, this should automatically +add you as a reviewer when an area that you’re listed as a maintainer is +changed. + +* Submit mainboards that you’re working on to the board-status repo. This +helps others and shows that these mainboards are currently being +maintained. At some point, boards that are not up to date in the +board-status repo will probably end up getting removed from the coreboot +master branch. + +* Abandon patches that are no longer useful, or that you don’t intend to +keep working on to get submitted. + +* Bring attention to patches that you would like reviewed. Add reviewers, +ask for reviewers on IRC or even just rebase it against the current +codebase to bring it to the top of the gerrit list. If you’re not sure who +would be a good reviewer, look in the MAINTAINERS file or git history of +the files that you’ve changed, and add those people. + +* Familiarize yourself with the coreboot [commit message +guidelines](http://www.coreboot.org/Git#Commit_messages), before pushing +patches. This will help to keep annoying requests to fix your commit +message to a minimum. + +* If there have been comments or discussion on a patch, verify that the +comments have been addressed before giving a +2. If you feel that a comment +is invalid, please respond to that comment instead of just ignoring it. + +* Be conscientious when reviewing patches. As a reviewer who approves (+2) +a patch, you are responsible for the patch and the effect it has on the +codebase. In the event that the patch breaks things, you are expected to +be actively involved in the cleanup effort. This means you shouldn’t +2 a +patch just because you trust the author of a patch - Make sure you +understand what the implications of a patch might be, or leave the review +to others. Partial reviews, reviewing code style, for example, can be given +a +1 instead of a +2. This also applies if you think the patch looks good, +but may not have the experience to know if there may be unintended +consequences. + +* If there is still ongoing discussion to a patch, try to wait for a +conclusion to the discussion before submitting it to the tree. If you feel +that someone is just bikeshedding, maybe just state that and give a time +that the patch will be submitted if no new objections are raised. + +* When working with patch trains, for minor requests it’s acceptable to +create a fix addressing a comment in another patch at the end of the patch +train. This minimizes rebases of the patch train while still addressing the +request. For major problems where the change doesn’t work as intended or +breaks other platforms, the change really needs to go into the original +patch. + + +Expectations contributors should have: +-------------------------------------- +* Don't expect that people will review your patch unless you ask them to. +Adding other people as reviewers is the easiest way. Asking for reviews for +individual patches in the IRC channel, or by sending a direct request to an +individual through your favorite messenger is usually the best way to get a +patch reviewed quickly. + +* Don't expect that your patch will be submitted immediately after getting +a +2. As stated previously, non-trivial patches should wait at least 24 +hours before being submitted. That said, if you feel that your patch or +series of patches has been sitting longer than needed, you can ask for it +to be submitted on IRC, or comment that it's ready for submission in the +patch. This will move it to the top of the list where it's more likely to +be noticed and acted upon. + +* Reviews are about the code. It's easy to take it personally when someone +is criticising your code, but the whole idea is to get better code into our +codebase. Again, this also applies in the other direction: review code, +criticize code, but don’t make it personal. + + +Requests for clarification and suggestions for updates to these guidelines +should be sent to the coreboot mailing list at . -- cgit v1.2.3