mirror of
https://github.com/git/git.git
synced 2024-11-27 12:03:55 +08:00
92e24c8b79
I saw some contributors hesitate to give a positive review on patches by their coworkers. When written well, a positive review does not have to be a hollow "looks good" that rubber stamps an useless approval on a topic that is not interesting to others. Let's add a few paragraphs to encourage positive reviews, which is a bit harder to give than a review to point out things to improve. Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
180 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
180 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
Reviewing Patches in the Git Project
|
|
====================================
|
|
|
|
Introduction
|
|
------------
|
|
The Git development community is a widely distributed, diverse, ever-changing
|
|
group of individuals. Asynchronous communication via the Git mailing list poses
|
|
unique challenges when reviewing or discussing patches. This document contains
|
|
some guiding principles and helpful tools you can use to make your reviews both
|
|
more efficient for yourself and more effective for other contributors.
|
|
|
|
Note that none of the recommendations here are binding or in any way a
|
|
requirement of participation in the Git community. They are provided as a
|
|
resource to supplement your skills as a contributor.
|
|
|
|
Principles
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
Selecting patch(es) to review
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
If you are looking for a patch series in need of review, start by checking
|
|
the latest "What's cooking in git.git" email
|
|
(https://lore.kernel.org/git/xmqqilm1yp3m.fsf@gitster.g/[example]). The "What's
|
|
cooking" emails & replies can be found using the query `s:"What's cooking"` on
|
|
the https://lore.kernel.org/git/[`lore.kernel.org` mailing list archive];
|
|
alternatively, you can find the contents of the "What's cooking" email tracked
|
|
in `whats-cooking.txt` on the `todo` branch of Git. Topics tagged with "Needs
|
|
review" and those in the "[New Topics]" section are typically those that would
|
|
benefit the most from additional review.
|
|
|
|
Patches can also be searched manually in the mailing list archive using a query
|
|
like `s:"PATCH" -s:"Re:"`. You can browse these results for topics relevant to
|
|
your expertise or interest.
|
|
|
|
If you've already contributed to Git, you may also be CC'd in another
|
|
contributor's patch series. These are topics where the author feels that your
|
|
attention is warranted. This may be because their patch changes something you
|
|
wrote previously (making you a good judge of whether the new approach does or
|
|
doesn't work), or because you have the expertise to provide an exceptionally
|
|
helpful review. There is no requirement to review these patches but, in the
|
|
spirit of open source collaboration, you should strongly consider doing so.
|
|
|
|
Reviewing patches
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
While every contributor takes their own approach to reviewing patches, here are
|
|
some general pieces of advice to make your reviews as clear and helpful as
|
|
possible. The advice is broken into two rough categories: high-level reviewing
|
|
guidance, and concrete tips for interacting with patches on the mailing list.
|
|
|
|
==== High-level guidance
|
|
- Remember to review the content of commit messages for correctness and clarity,
|
|
in addition to the code change in the patch's diff. The commit message of a
|
|
patch should accurately and fully explain the code change being made in the
|
|
diff.
|
|
|
|
- Reviewing test coverage is an important - but easy to overlook - component of
|
|
reviews. A patch's changes may be covered by existing tests, or new tests may
|
|
be introduced to exercise new behavior. Checking out a patch or series locally
|
|
allows you to manually mutate lines of new & existing tests to verify expected
|
|
pass/fail behavior. You can use this information to verify proper coverage or
|
|
to suggest additional tests the author could add.
|
|
|
|
- When providing a recommendation, be as clear as possible about whether you
|
|
consider it "blocking" (the code would be broken or otherwise made worse if an
|
|
issue isn't fixed) or "non-blocking" (the patch could be made better by taking
|
|
the recommendation, but acceptance of the series does not require it).
|
|
Non-blocking recommendations can be particularly ambiguous when they are
|
|
related to - but outside the scope of - a series ("nice-to-have"s), or when
|
|
they represent only stylistic differences between the author and reviewer.
|
|
|
|
- When commenting on an issue, try to include suggestions for how the author
|
|
could fix it. This not only helps the author to understand and fix the issue,
|
|
it also deepens and improves your understanding of the topic.
|
|
|
|
- Reviews do not need to exclusively point out problems. Positive
|
|
reviews indicate that it is not only the original author of the
|
|
patches who care about the issue the patches address, and are
|
|
highly encouraged.
|
|
|
|
- Do not hesitate to give positive reviews on a series from your
|
|
work colleague. If your positive review is written well, it will
|
|
not make you look as if you two are representing corporate
|
|
interest on a series that is otherwise uninteresting to other
|
|
community members and shoving it down their throat.
|
|
|
|
- Write a positive review in such a way that others can understand
|
|
why you support the goal, the approach, and the implementation the
|
|
patches took. Make sure to demonstrate that you did thoroughly read
|
|
the series and understood problem area well enough to be able to
|
|
say that the patches are written well. Feel free to "think out
|
|
loud" in your review: describe how you read & understood a complex section of
|
|
a patch, ask a question about something that confused you, point out something
|
|
you found exceptionally well-written, etc.
|
|
|
|
- In particular, uplifting feedback goes a long way towards
|
|
encouraging contributors to participate more actively in the Git
|
|
community.
|
|
|
|
==== Performing your review
|
|
- Provide your review comments per-patch in a plaintext "Reply-All" email to the
|
|
relevant patch. Comments should be made inline, immediately below the relevant
|
|
section(s).
|
|
|
|
- You may find that the limited context provided in the patch diff is sometimes
|
|
insufficient for a thorough review. In such cases, you can review patches in
|
|
your local tree by either applying patches with linkgit:git-am[1] or checking
|
|
out the associated branch from https://github.com/gitster/git once the series
|
|
is tracked there.
|
|
|
|
- Large, complicated patch diffs are sometimes unavoidable, such as when they
|
|
refactor existing code. If you find such a patch difficult to parse, try
|
|
reviewing the diff produced with the `--color-moved` and/or
|
|
`--ignore-space-change` options.
|
|
|
|
- If a patch is long, you are encouraged to delete parts of it that are
|
|
unrelated to your review from the email reply. Make sure to leave enough
|
|
context for readers to understand your comments!
|
|
|
|
- If you cannot complete a full review of a series all at once, consider letting
|
|
the author know (on- or off-list) if/when you plan to review the rest of the
|
|
series.
|
|
|
|
Completing a review
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
Once each patch of a series is reviewed, the author (and/or other contributors)
|
|
may discuss the review(s). This may result in no changes being applied, or the
|
|
author will send a new version of their patch(es).
|
|
|
|
After a series is rerolled in response to your or others' review, make sure to
|
|
re-review the updates. If you are happy with the state of the patch series,
|
|
explicitly indicate your approval (typically with a reply to the latest
|
|
version's cover letter). Optionally, you can let the author know that they can
|
|
add a "Reviewed-by: <you>" trailer if they resubmit the reviewed patch verbatim
|
|
in a later iteration of the series.
|
|
|
|
Finally, subsequent "What's cooking" emails may explicitly ask whether a
|
|
reviewed topic is ready for merging to the `next` branch (typically phrased
|
|
"Will merge to \'next\'?"). You can help the maintainer and author by responding
|
|
with a short description of the state of your (and others', if applicable)
|
|
review, including the links to the relevant thread(s).
|
|
|
|
Terminology
|
|
-----------
|
|
nit: ::
|
|
Denotes a small issue that should be fixed, such as a typographical error
|
|
or misalignment of conditions in an `if()` statement.
|
|
|
|
aside: ::
|
|
optional: ::
|
|
non-blocking: ::
|
|
Indicates to the reader that the following comment should not block the
|
|
acceptance of the patch or series. These are typically recommendations
|
|
related to code organization & style, or musings about topics related to
|
|
the patch in question, but beyond its scope.
|
|
|
|
s/<before>/<after>/::
|
|
Shorthand for "you wrote <before>, but I think you meant <after>," usually
|
|
for misspellings or other typographical errors. The syntax is a reference
|
|
to "substitute" command commonly found in Unix tools such as `ed`, `sed`,
|
|
`vim`, and `perl`.
|
|
|
|
cover letter::
|
|
The "Patch 0" of a multi-patch series. This email describes the
|
|
high-level intent and structure of the patch series to readers on the
|
|
Git mailing list. It is also where the changelog notes and range-diff of
|
|
subsequent versions are provided by the author.
|
|
+
|
|
On single-patch submissions, cover letter content is typically not sent as a
|
|
separate email. Instead, it is inserted between the end of the patch's commit
|
|
message (after the `---`) and the beginning of the diff.
|
|
|
|
#leftoverbits::
|
|
Used by either an author or a reviewer to describe features or suggested
|
|
changes that are out-of-scope of a given patch or series, but are relevant
|
|
to the topic for the sake of discussion.
|
|
|
|
See Also
|
|
--------
|
|
link:MyFirstContribution.html[MyFirstContribution]
|