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[thirdparty/git.git] / Documentation / SubmittingPatches
1 Submitting Patches
2 ==================
3
4 == Guidelines
5
6 Here are some guidelines for people who want to contribute their code to this
7 software. There is also a link:MyFirstContribution.html[step-by-step tutorial]
8 available which covers many of these same guidelines.
9
10 [[base-branch]]
11 === Decide what to base your work on.
12
13 In general, always base your work on the oldest branch that your
14 change is relevant to.
15
16 * A bugfix should be based on `maint` in general. If the bug is not
17 present in `maint`, base it on `master`. For a bug that's not yet
18 in `master`, find the topic that introduces the regression, and
19 base your work on the tip of the topic.
20
21 * A new feature should be based on `master` in general. If the new
22 feature depends on other topics that are in `next`, but not in
23 `master`, fork a branch from the tip of `master`, merge these topics
24 to the branch, and work on that branch. You can remind yourself of
25 how you prepared the base with `git log --first-parent master..`.
26
27 * Corrections and enhancements to a topic not yet in `master` should
28 be based on the tip of that topic. If the topic has not been merged
29 to `next`, it's alright to add a note to squash minor corrections
30 into the series.
31
32 * In the exceptional case that a new feature depends on several topics
33 not in `master`, start working on `next` or `seen` privately and
34 send out patches only for discussion. Once your new feature starts
35 to stabilize, you would have to rebase it (see the "depends on other
36 topics" above).
37
38 * Some parts of the system have dedicated maintainers with their own
39 repositories (see the section "Subsystems" below). Changes to
40 these parts should be based on their trees.
41
42 To find the tip of a topic branch, run `git log --first-parent
43 master..seen` and look for the merge commit. The second parent of this
44 commit is the tip of the topic branch.
45
46 [[separate-commits]]
47 === Make separate commits for logically separate changes.
48
49 Unless your patch is really trivial, you should not be sending
50 out a patch that was generated between your working tree and
51 your commit head. Instead, always make a commit with complete
52 commit message and generate a series of patches from your
53 repository. It is a good discipline.
54
55 Give an explanation for the change(s) that is detailed enough so
56 that people can judge if it is good thing to do, without reading
57 the actual patch text to determine how well the code does what
58 the explanation promises to do.
59
60 If your description starts to get too long, that's a sign that you
61 probably need to split up your commit to finer grained pieces.
62 That being said, patches which plainly describe the things that
63 help reviewers check the patch, and future maintainers understand
64 the code, are the most beautiful patches. Descriptions that summarize
65 the point in the subject well, and describe the motivation for the
66 change, the approach taken by the change, and if relevant how this
67 differs substantially from the prior version, are all good things
68 to have.
69
70 Make sure that you have tests for the bug you are fixing. See
71 `t/README` for guidance.
72
73 [[tests]]
74 When adding a new feature, make sure that you have new tests to show
75 the feature triggers the new behavior when it should, and to show the
76 feature does not trigger when it shouldn't. After any code change,
77 make sure that the entire test suite passes. When fixing a bug, make
78 sure you have new tests that break if somebody else breaks what you
79 fixed by accident to avoid regression. Also, try merging your work to
80 'next' and 'seen' and make sure the tests still pass; topics by others
81 that are still in flight may have unexpected interactions with what
82 you are trying to do in your topic.
83
84 Pushing to a fork of https://github.com/git/git will use their CI
85 integration to test your changes on Linux, Mac and Windows. See the
86 <<GHCI,GitHub CI>> section for details.
87
88 Do not forget to update the documentation to describe the updated
89 behavior and make sure that the resulting documentation set formats
90 well (try the Documentation/doc-diff script).
91
92 We currently have a liberal mixture of US and UK English norms for
93 spelling and grammar, which is somewhat unfortunate. A huge patch that
94 touches the files all over the place only to correct the inconsistency
95 is not welcome, though. Potential clashes with other changes that can
96 result from such a patch are not worth it. We prefer to gradually
97 reconcile the inconsistencies in favor of US English, with small and
98 easily digestible patches, as a side effect of doing some other real
99 work in the vicinity (e.g. rewriting a paragraph for clarity, while
100 turning en_UK spelling to en_US). Obvious typographical fixes are much
101 more welcomed ("teh -> "the"), preferably submitted as independent
102 patches separate from other documentation changes.
103
104 [[whitespace-check]]
105 Oh, another thing. We are picky about whitespaces. Make sure your
106 changes do not trigger errors with the sample pre-commit hook shipped
107 in `templates/hooks--pre-commit`. To help ensure this does not happen,
108 run `git diff --check` on your changes before you commit.
109
110 [[describe-changes]]
111 === Describe your changes well.
112
113 The log message that explains your changes is just as important as the
114 changes themselves. Your code may be clearly written with in-code
115 comment to sufficiently explain how it works with the surrounding
116 code, but those who need to fix or enhance your code in the future
117 will need to know _why_ your code does what it does, for a few
118 reasons:
119
120 . Your code may be doing something differently from what you wanted it
121 to do. Writing down what you actually wanted to achieve will help
122 them fix your code and make it do what it should have been doing
123 (also, you often discover your own bugs yourself, while writing the
124 log message to summarize the thought behind it).
125
126 . Your code may be doing things that were only necessary for your
127 immediate needs (e.g. "do X to directories" without implementing or
128 even designing what is to be done on files). Writing down why you
129 excluded what the code does not do will help guide future developers.
130 Writing down "we do X to directories, because directories have
131 characteristic Y" would help them infer "oh, files also have the same
132 characteristic Y, so perhaps doing X to them would also make sense?".
133 Saying "we don't do the same X to files, because ..." will help them
134 decide if the reasoning is sound (in which case they do not waste
135 time extending your code to cover files), or reason differently (in
136 which case, they can explain why they extend your code to cover
137 files, too).
138
139 The goal of your log message is to convey the _why_ behind your
140 change to help future developers.
141
142 The first line of the commit message should be a short description (50
143 characters is the soft limit, see DISCUSSION in linkgit:git-commit[1]),
144 and should skip the full stop. It is also conventional in most cases to
145 prefix the first line with "area: " where the area is a filename or
146 identifier for the general area of the code being modified, e.g.
147
148 * doc: clarify distinction between sign-off and pgp-signing
149 * githooks.txt: improve the intro section
150
151 If in doubt which identifier to use, run `git log --no-merges` on the
152 files you are modifying to see the current conventions.
153
154 [[summary-section]]
155 The title sentence after the "area:" prefix omits the full stop at the
156 end, and its first word is not capitalized unless there is a reason to
157 capitalize it other than because it is the first word in the sentence.
158 E.g. "doc: clarify...", not "doc: Clarify...", or "githooks.txt:
159 improve...", not "githooks.txt: Improve...". But "refs: HEAD is also
160 treated as a ref" is correct, as we spell `HEAD` in all caps even when
161 it appears in the middle of a sentence.
162
163 [[meaningful-message]]
164 The body should provide a meaningful commit message, which:
165
166 . explains the problem the change tries to solve, i.e. what is wrong
167 with the current code without the change.
168
169 . justifies the way the change solves the problem, i.e. why the
170 result with the change is better.
171
172 . alternate solutions considered but discarded, if any.
173
174 [[present-tense]]
175 The problem statement that describes the status quo is written in the
176 present tense. Write "The code does X when it is given input Y",
177 instead of "The code used to do Y when given input X". You do not
178 have to say "Currently"---the status quo in the problem statement is
179 about the code _without_ your change, by project convention.
180
181 [[imperative-mood]]
182 Describe your changes in imperative mood, e.g. "make xyzzy do frotz"
183 instead of "[This patch] makes xyzzy do frotz" or "[I] changed xyzzy
184 to do frotz", as if you are giving orders to the codebase to change
185 its behavior. Try to make sure your explanation can be understood
186 without external resources. Instead of giving a URL to a mailing list
187 archive, summarize the relevant points of the discussion.
188
189 [[commit-reference]]
190
191 There are a few reasons why you may want to refer to another commit in
192 the "more stable" part of the history (i.e. on branches like `maint`,
193 `master`, and `next`):
194
195 . A commit that introduced the root cause of a bug you are fixing.
196
197 . A commit that introduced a feature that you are enhancing.
198
199 . A commit that conflicts with your work when you made a trial merge
200 of your work into `next` and `seen` for testing.
201
202 When you reference a commit on a more stable branch (like `master`,
203 `maint` and `next`), use the format "abbreviated hash (subject,
204 date)", like this:
205
206 ....
207 Commit f86a374 (pack-bitmap.c: fix a memleak, 2015-03-30)
208 noticed that ...
209 ....
210
211 The "Copy commit summary" command of gitk can be used to obtain this
212 format (with the subject enclosed in a pair of double-quotes), or this
213 invocation of `git show`:
214
215 ....
216 git show -s --pretty=reference <commit>
217 ....
218
219 or, on an older version of Git without support for --pretty=reference:
220
221 ....
222 git show -s --date=short --pretty='format:%h (%s, %ad)' <commit>
223 ....
224
225 [[sign-off]]
226 === Certify your work by adding your `Signed-off-by` trailer
227
228 To improve tracking of who did what, we ask you to certify that you
229 wrote the patch or have the right to pass it on under the same license
230 as ours, by "signing off" your patch. Without sign-off, we cannot
231 accept your patches.
232
233 If (and only if) you certify the below D-C-O:
234
235 [[dco]]
236 .Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1
237 ____
238 By making a contribution to this project, I certify that:
239
240 a. The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I
241 have the right to submit it under the open source license
242 indicated in the file; or
243
244 b. The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best
245 of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source
246 license and I have the right under that license to submit that
247 work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part
248 by me, under the same open source license (unless I am
249 permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated
250 in the file; or
251
252 c. The contribution was provided directly to me by some other
253 person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified
254 it.
255
256 d. I understand and agree that this project and the contribution
257 are public and that a record of the contribution (including all
258 personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is
259 maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with
260 this project or the open source license(s) involved.
261 ____
262
263 you add a "Signed-off-by" trailer to your commit, that looks like
264 this:
265
266 ....
267 Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org>
268 ....
269
270 This line can be added by Git if you run the git-commit command with
271 the -s option.
272
273 Notice that you can place your own `Signed-off-by` trailer when
274 forwarding somebody else's patch with the above rules for
275 D-C-O. Indeed you are encouraged to do so. Do not forget to
276 place an in-body "From: " line at the beginning to properly attribute
277 the change to its true author (see (2) above).
278
279 This procedure originally came from the Linux kernel project, so our
280 rule is quite similar to theirs, but what exactly it means to sign-off
281 your patch differs from project to project, so it may be different
282 from that of the project you are accustomed to.
283
284 [[real-name]]
285 Also notice that a real name is used in the `Signed-off-by` trailer. Please
286 don't hide your real name.
287
288 [[commit-trailers]]
289 If you like, you can put extra tags at the end:
290
291 . `Reported-by:` is used to credit someone who found the bug that
292 the patch attempts to fix.
293 . `Acked-by:` says that the person who is more familiar with the area
294 the patch attempts to modify liked the patch.
295 . `Reviewed-by:`, unlike the other tags, can only be offered by the
296 reviewers themselves when they are completely satisfied with the
297 patch after a detailed analysis.
298 . `Tested-by:` is used to indicate that the person applied the patch
299 and found it to have the desired effect.
300
301 You can also create your own tag or use one that's in common usage
302 such as "Thanks-to:", "Based-on-patch-by:", or "Mentored-by:".
303
304 [[git-tools]]
305 === Generate your patch using Git tools out of your commits.
306
307 Git based diff tools generate unidiff which is the preferred format.
308
309 You do not have to be afraid to use `-M` option to `git diff` or
310 `git format-patch`, if your patch involves file renames. The
311 receiving end can handle them just fine.
312
313 [[review-patch]]
314 Please make sure your patch does not add commented out debugging code,
315 or include any extra files which do not relate to what your patch
316 is trying to achieve. Make sure to review
317 your patch after generating it, to ensure accuracy. Before
318 sending out, please make sure it cleanly applies to the base you
319 have chosen in the "Decide what to base your work on" section,
320 and unless it targets the `master` branch (which is the default),
321 mark your patches as such.
322
323
324 [[send-patches]]
325 === Sending your patches.
326
327 :security-ml: footnoteref:[security-ml,The Git Security mailing list: git-security@googlegroups.com]
328
329 Before sending any patches, please note that patches that may be
330 security relevant should be submitted privately to the Git Security
331 mailing list{security-ml}, instead of the public mailing list.
332
333 Learn to use format-patch and send-email if possible. These commands
334 are optimized for the workflow of sending patches, avoiding many ways
335 your existing e-mail client that is optimized for "multipart/*" mime
336 type e-mails to corrupt and render your patches unusable.
337
338 People on the Git mailing list need to be able to read and
339 comment on the changes you are submitting. It is important for
340 a developer to be able to "quote" your changes, using standard
341 e-mail tools, so that they may comment on specific portions of
342 your code. For this reason, each patch should be submitted
343 "inline" in a separate message.
344
345 Multiple related patches should be grouped into their own e-mail
346 thread to help readers find all parts of the series. To that end,
347 send them as replies to either an additional "cover letter" message
348 (see below), the first patch, or the respective preceding patch.
349
350 If your log message (including your name on the
351 `Signed-off-by` trailer) is not writable in ASCII, make sure that
352 you send off a message in the correct encoding.
353
354 WARNING: Be wary of your MUAs word-wrap
355 corrupting your patch. Do not cut-n-paste your patch; you can
356 lose tabs that way if you are not careful.
357
358 It is a common convention to prefix your subject line with
359 [PATCH]. This lets people easily distinguish patches from other
360 e-mail discussions. Use of markers in addition to PATCH within
361 the brackets to describe the nature of the patch is also
362 encouraged. E.g. [RFC PATCH] (where RFC stands for "request for
363 comments") is often used to indicate a patch needs further
364 discussion before being accepted, [PATCH v2], [PATCH v3] etc.
365 are often seen when you are sending an update to what you have
366 previously sent.
367
368 The `git format-patch` command follows the best current practice to
369 format the body of an e-mail message. At the beginning of the
370 patch should come your commit message, ending with the
371 `Signed-off-by` trailers, and a line that consists of three dashes,
372 followed by the diffstat information and the patch itself. If
373 you are forwarding a patch from somebody else, optionally, at
374 the beginning of the e-mail message just before the commit
375 message starts, you can put a "From: " line to name that person.
376 To change the default "[PATCH]" in the subject to "[<text>]", use
377 `git format-patch --subject-prefix=<text>`. As a shortcut, you
378 can use `--rfc` instead of `--subject-prefix="RFC PATCH"`, or
379 `-v <n>` instead of `--subject-prefix="PATCH v<n>"`.
380
381 You often want to add additional explanation about the patch,
382 other than the commit message itself. Place such "cover letter"
383 material between the three-dash line and the diffstat. For
384 patches requiring multiple iterations of review and discussion,
385 an explanation of changes between each iteration can be kept in
386 Git-notes and inserted automatically following the three-dash
387 line via `git format-patch --notes`.
388
389 [[attachment]]
390 Do not attach the patch as a MIME attachment, compressed or not.
391 Do not let your e-mail client send quoted-printable. Do not let
392 your e-mail client send format=flowed which would destroy
393 whitespaces in your patches. Many
394 popular e-mail applications will not always transmit a MIME
395 attachment as plain text, making it impossible to comment on
396 your code. A MIME attachment also takes a bit more time to
397 process. This does not decrease the likelihood of your
398 MIME-attached change being accepted, but it makes it more likely
399 that it will be postponed.
400
401 Exception: If your mailer is mangling patches then someone may ask
402 you to re-send them using MIME, that is OK.
403
404 [[pgp-signature]]
405 Do not PGP sign your patch. Most likely, your maintainer or other people on the
406 list would not have your PGP key and would not bother obtaining it anyway.
407 Your patch is not judged by who you are; a good patch from an unknown origin
408 has a far better chance of being accepted than a patch from a known, respected
409 origin that is done poorly or does incorrect things.
410
411 If you really really really really want to do a PGP signed
412 patch, format it as "multipart/signed", not a text/plain message
413 that starts with `-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----`. That is
414 not a text/plain, it's something else.
415
416 :security-ml-ref: footnoteref:[security-ml]
417
418 As mentioned at the beginning of the section, patches that may be
419 security relevant should not be submitted to the public mailing list
420 mentioned below, but should instead be sent privately to the Git
421 Security mailing list{security-ml-ref}.
422
423 Send your patch with "To:" set to the mailing list, with "cc:" listing
424 people who are involved in the area you are touching (the `git
425 contacts` command in `contrib/contacts/` can help to
426 identify them), to solicit comments and reviews. Also, when you made
427 trial merges of your topic to `next` and `seen`, you may have noticed
428 work by others conflicting with your changes. There is a good possibility
429 that these people may know the area you are touching well.
430
431 :current-maintainer: footnote:[The current maintainer: gitster@pobox.com]
432 :git-ml: footnote:[The mailing list: git@vger.kernel.org]
433
434 After the list reached a consensus that it is a good idea to apply the
435 patch, re-send it with "To:" set to the maintainer{current-maintainer}
436 and "cc:" the list{git-ml} for inclusion. This is especially relevant
437 when the maintainer did not heavily participate in the discussion and
438 instead left the review to trusted others.
439
440 Do not forget to add trailers such as `Acked-by:`, `Reviewed-by:` and
441 `Tested-by:` lines as necessary to credit people who helped your
442 patch, and "cc:" them when sending such a final version for inclusion.
443
444 == Subsystems with dedicated maintainers
445
446 Some parts of the system have dedicated maintainers with their own
447 repositories.
448
449 - `git-gui/` comes from git-gui project, maintained by Pratyush Yadav:
450
451 https://github.com/prati0100/git-gui.git
452
453 - `gitk-git/` comes from Paul Mackerras's gitk project:
454
455 git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
456
457 - `po/` comes from the localization coordinator, Jiang Xin:
458
459 https://github.com/git-l10n/git-po/
460
461 Patches to these parts should be based on their trees.
462
463 [[patch-flow]]
464 == An ideal patch flow
465
466 Here is an ideal patch flow for this project the current maintainer
467 suggests to the contributors:
468
469 . You come up with an itch. You code it up.
470
471 . Send it to the list and cc people who may need to know about
472 the change.
473 +
474 The people who may need to know are the ones whose code you
475 are butchering. These people happen to be the ones who are
476 most likely to be knowledgeable enough to help you, but
477 they have no obligation to help you (i.e. you ask for help,
478 don't demand). +git log -p {litdd} _$area_you_are_modifying_+ would
479 help you find out who they are.
480
481 . You get comments and suggestions for improvements. You may
482 even get them in an "on top of your change" patch form.
483
484 . Polish, refine, and re-send to the list and the people who
485 spend their time to improve your patch. Go back to step (2).
486
487 . The list forms consensus that the last round of your patch is
488 good. Send it to the maintainer and cc the list.
489
490 . A topic branch is created with the patch and is merged to `next`,
491 and cooked further and eventually graduates to `master`.
492
493 In any time between the (2)-(3) cycle, the maintainer may pick it up
494 from the list and queue it to `seen`, in order to make it easier for
495 people play with it without having to pick up and apply the patch to
496 their trees themselves.
497
498 [[patch-status]]
499 == Know the status of your patch after submission
500
501 * You can use Git itself to find out when your patch is merged in
502 master. `git pull --rebase` will automatically skip already-applied
503 patches, and will let you know. This works only if you rebase on top
504 of the branch in which your patch has been merged (i.e. it will not
505 tell you if your patch is merged in `seen` if you rebase on top of
506 master).
507
508 * Read the Git mailing list, the maintainer regularly posts messages
509 entitled "What's cooking in git.git" and "What's in git.git" giving
510 the status of various proposed changes.
511
512 == GitHub CI[[GHCI]]
513
514 With an account at GitHub, you can use GitHub CI to test your changes
515 on Linux, Mac and Windows. See
516 https://github.com/git/git/actions/workflows/main.yml for examples of
517 recent CI runs.
518
519 Follow these steps for the initial setup:
520
521 . Fork https://github.com/git/git to your GitHub account.
522 You can find detailed instructions how to fork here:
523 https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo/
524
525 After the initial setup, CI will run whenever you push new changes
526 to your fork of Git on GitHub. You can monitor the test state of all your
527 branches here: `https://github.com/<Your GitHub handle>/git/actions/workflows/main.yml`
528
529 If a branch did not pass all test cases then it is marked with a red
530 cross. In that case you can click on the failing job and navigate to
531 "ci/run-build-and-tests.sh" and/or "ci/print-test-failures.sh". You
532 can also download "Artifacts" which are tarred (or zipped) archives
533 with test data relevant for debugging.
534
535 Then fix the problem and push your fix to your GitHub fork. This will
536 trigger a new CI build to ensure all tests pass.
537
538 [[mua]]
539 == MUA specific hints
540
541 Some of patches I receive or pick up from the list share common
542 patterns of breakage. Please make sure your MUA is set up
543 properly not to corrupt whitespaces.
544
545 See the DISCUSSION section of linkgit:git-format-patch[1] for hints on
546 checking your patch by mailing it to yourself and applying with
547 linkgit:git-am[1].
548
549 While you are at it, check the resulting commit log message from
550 a trial run of applying the patch. If what is in the resulting
551 commit is not exactly what you would want to see, it is very
552 likely that your maintainer would end up hand editing the log
553 message when he applies your patch. Things like "Hi, this is my
554 first patch.\n", if you really want to put in the patch e-mail,
555 should come after the three-dash line that signals the end of the
556 commit message.
557
558
559 === Pine
560
561 (Johannes Schindelin)
562
563 ....
564 I don't know how many people still use pine, but for those poor
565 souls it may be good to mention that the quell-flowed-text is
566 needed for recent versions.
567
568 ... the "no-strip-whitespace-before-send" option, too. AFAIK it
569 was introduced in 4.60.
570 ....
571
572 (Linus Torvalds)
573
574 ....
575 And 4.58 needs at least this.
576
577 diff-tree 8326dd8350be64ac7fc805f6563a1d61ad10d32c (from e886a61f76edf5410573e92e38ce22974f9c40f1)
578 Author: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@g5.osdl.org>
579 Date: Mon Aug 15 17:23:51 2005 -0700
580
581 Fix pine whitespace-corruption bug
582
583 There's no excuse for unconditionally removing whitespace from
584 the pico buffers on close.
585
586 diff --git a/pico/pico.c b/pico/pico.c
587 --- a/pico/pico.c
588 +++ b/pico/pico.c
589 @@ -219,7 +219,9 @@ PICO *pm;
590 switch(pico_all_done){ /* prepare for/handle final events */
591 case COMP_EXIT : /* already confirmed */
592 packheader();
593 +#if 0
594 stripwhitespace();
595 +#endif
596 c |= COMP_EXIT;
597 break;
598 ....
599
600 (Daniel Barkalow)
601
602 ....
603 > A patch to SubmittingPatches, MUA specific help section for
604 > users of Pine 4.63 would be very much appreciated.
605
606 Ah, it looks like a recent version changed the default behavior to do the
607 right thing, and inverted the sense of the configuration option. (Either
608 that or Gentoo did it.) So you need to set the
609 "no-strip-whitespace-before-send" option, unless the option you have is
610 "strip-whitespace-before-send", in which case you should avoid checking
611 it.
612 ....
613
614 === Thunderbird, KMail, GMail
615
616 See the MUA-SPECIFIC HINTS section of linkgit:git-format-patch[1].
617
618 === Gnus
619
620 "|" in the `*Summary*` buffer can be used to pipe the current
621 message to an external program, and this is a handy way to drive
622 `git am`. However, if the message is MIME encoded, what is
623 piped into the program is the representation you see in your
624 `*Article*` buffer after unwrapping MIME. This is often not what
625 you would want for two reasons. It tends to screw up non ASCII
626 characters (most notably in people's names), and also
627 whitespaces (fatal in patches). Running "C-u g" to display the
628 message in raw form before using "|" to run the pipe can work
629 this problem around.