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Revision as of 18:01, 21 January 2015
Anaconda Patch Review Process
To improve the quality of commits and reduce the number of typos introduced into the anaconda source, Anaconda has a mandatory patch review process. The intent is to keep this very light-weight while still increasing visibility for changes.
Note that review is no substitute for having tested your code and so you should still do that even before the submission of the code for review.
How to Submit Changes for Review
Preparing changes to be submitted
For "final" review of patches, it is best to have a local git tree to which you have committed your changes as a set of patches. If it is a small change, one commit may be sufficient. Larger changes should be broken into a regular patch series in which at each subsequent stage of patch application, the whole is usable and testable.
Please also make sure that there is a usable commit message along with each commit. These should be formatted with a simple summary (~ 70 characters or less), a blank line and then a lengthier description (if necessary).
Once your changes changes are ready to be submitted and reviewed, you can either send them as patches to the anaconda-devel-list mailing list or submit them as a pull request to the Anaconda repository on Github.
Git Configuration Tips
To make all of this work easily with git, you should set up some basic config options with git config --global. Options that are good to set are user.name, user.email, and sendemail.smtpserver
Syntax Checking of the Code & Running the Test Suite
Anaconda and other related projects include the option of running Pylint and/or a built-in testsuite. It is always a good idea to run these two on your changes before submitting them for review, ideally comparing the results of run on "clean" anaconda checked out from the master branch and result when Pylint & tests on branch with your changes.
Sending patches to the mailing list
The mailing list used for Aaconda patch review is called anaconda-patches@lists.fedorahosted.org (listinfo, archive) and you need to be subscribed to the list or else your emails will be rejected. The mandatory subscription was introduced to reduce the amount of SPAM email on the list.
You can use git format-patch from the command line to generate patches in a suitable format:
git format-patch origin/master
This will spit out a series of files named 000x-foo containing your patches. After checking that the content of these files looks reasonable you can send the patches to anaconda-devel-list for review with a command like
git send-email --to anaconda-patches@lists.fedorahosted.org --suppress-from \ --compose <patch files here>
This will let you compose an introductory mail for the patch series; if this is a single patch, you can likely send without --compose as your commit message should be enough to make it clear what you are trying to fix.
Sending a pull request
The second options fur submitting changes to the Anaconda project is by using the GitHub pull request mechanism.
To submit a change begin by forking the Anaconda repository on GitHub. Then create a "feature" branch in your forked repository and add your changes as one or more commits in the branch. Once done, submit your "feature" branch as a pull request to the main Anaconda repo.
Review Process
The 24 hour rule
As the Anaconda contributors are widely distributed across many timezones, there is a simple rule in place to assure all people have an adequate chance to see and review any proposed changes before they are pushed to the source code repository:
Wait at least 24 hours after proposing a change before pushing it to the source code repository.
This explains why your change might not yet been pushed even after being approved by one of the Anaconda contributors participating on the review. The contributor thinks the change is fine, but makes sure that others also have chance to review the patch.
24 hours it the minimum amount - especially for larger changes or something which might be expected to be controversial a longer time window needs to be expected. We aren't at this time going to put any strong constraints on how many reviews are needed or anything of that sort, though. Use your best judgement.
Branches
The main upstream development branch is called master and this is where the modRana upstream development happens. The master branch is also currently used for the builds of the Fedora Rawhide installer.
All proposed changes should first go to the master branch, if possible. From here they can be backported the applicable release branches.
Fedora release branches
The Fedora release branches are named using the f<fedora number>-branch scheme and are used as source of builds for the given Fedora release. For example f21-branch corresponds to Fedora 21.
Not only Anaconda, but also other related projects, such as Blivet and Pykickstart usually have a Fedora release branch. Other projects less dependent on the low level Fedora infrastructure, such as Initial Setup, don't have a Fedora release branch.
Feature work vs Fixes only
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RHEL release branches
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