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Fix typos in documentation. Signed-off-by: Andrew Kreimer <algonell@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
75 lines
3.8 KiB
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75 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
Decision-Making Process in the Git Project
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==========================================
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Introduction
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------------
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This document describes the current decision-making process in the Git
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project. It is a descriptive rather than prescriptive doc; that is, we want to
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describe how things work in practice rather than explicitly recommending any
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particular process or changes to the current process.
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Here we document how the project makes decisions for discussions
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(with or without patches), in scale larger than an individual patch
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series (which is fully covered by the SubmittingPatches document).
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Larger Discussions (with patches)
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---------------------------------
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As with discussions on an individual patch series, starting a larger-scale
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discussion often begins by sending a patch or series to the list. This might
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take the form of an initial design doc, with implementation following in later
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iterations of the series (for example,
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link:https://lore.kernel.org/git/0169ce6fb9ccafc089b74ae406db0d1a8ff8ac65.1688165272.git.steadmon@google.com/[adding unit tests] or
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link:https://lore.kernel.org/git/20200420235310.94493-1-emilyshaffer@google.com/[config-based hooks]),
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or it might include a full implementation from the beginning.
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In either case, discussion progresses the same way for an individual patch series,
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until consensus is reached or the topic is dropped.
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Larger Discussions (without patches)
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------------------------------------
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Occasionally, larger discussions might occur without an associated patch series.
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These may be very large-scale technical decisions that are beyond the scope of
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even a single large patch series, or they may be more open-ended,
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policy-oriented discussions (examples:
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link:https://lore.kernel.org/git/ZZ77NQkSuiRxRDwt@nand.local/[introducing Rust]
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or link:https://lore.kernel.org/git/YHofmWcIAidkvJiD@google.com/[improving submodule UX]).
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In either case, discussion progresses as described above for general patch series.
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For larger discussions without a patch series or other concrete implementation,
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it may be hard to judge when consensus has been reached, as there are not any
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official guidelines. If discussion stalls at this point, it may be helpful to
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restart discussion with an RFC patch series (such as a partial, unfinished
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implementation or proof of concept) that can be more easily debated.
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When consensus is reached that it is a good idea, the original
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proposer is expected to coordinate the effort to make it happen,
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with help from others who were involved in the discussion, as
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needed.
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For decisions that require code changes, it is often the case that the original
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proposer will follow up with a patch series, although it is also common for
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other interested parties to provide an implementation (or parts of the
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implementation, for very large changes).
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For non-technical decisions such as community norms or processes, it is up to
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the community as a whole to implement and sustain agreed-upon changes.
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The project leadership committee (PLC) may help the implementation of
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policy decisions.
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Other Discussion Venues
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-----------------------
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Occasionally decision proposals are presented off-list, e.g. at the semi-regular
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Contributors' Summit. While higher-bandwidth face-to-face discussion is often
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useful for quickly reaching consensus among attendees, generally we expect to
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summarize the discussion in notes that can later be presented on-list. For an
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example, see the thread
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link:https://lore.kernel.org/git/AC2EB721-2979-43FD-922D-C5076A57F24B@jramsay.com.au/[Notes
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from Git Contributor Summit, Los Angeles (April 5, 2020)] by James Ramsay.
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We prefer that "official" discussion happens on the list so that the full
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community has opportunity to engage in discussion. This also means that the
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mailing list archives contain a more-or-less complete history of project
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discussions and decisions.
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