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author | Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart@redhat.com> | 2021-11-10 15:49:01 +0100 |
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committer | Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com> | 2021-11-17 10:17:28 +0100 |
commit | 0ff0dcf6b5292e044985c38cbd83a57485ca887c (patch) | |
tree | 48b66351f080f47483d21555b7249fb25a5eec6b /docs | |
parent | 0c8c45140c8494a3b6fd36946e437dacac2573b8 (diff) | |
download | qemu-0ff0dcf6b5292e044985c38cbd83a57485ca887c.zip qemu-0ff0dcf6b5292e044985c38cbd83a57485ca887c.tar.gz qemu-0ff0dcf6b5292e044985c38cbd83a57485ca887c.tar.bz2 |
docs: rSTify the "SubmitAPullRequest" wiki
The original wiki is here[1]. I converted by copying the wiki source
into a .wiki file and convert to rST using `pandoc`:
$ pandoc -f Mediawiki -t rst submitting-a-pull-request.wiki \
-o submitting-a-pull-request.rst
This is a 1-1 conversion; no content changes.
[1] https://wiki.qemu.org/Contribute/SubmitAPullRequest
Signed-off-by: Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <20211110144902.388183-3-kchamart@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/index.rst | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/submitting-a-pull-request.rst | 76 |
2 files changed, 77 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/devel/index.rst b/docs/devel/index.rst index dbde1c4..211f887 100644 --- a/docs/devel/index.rst +++ b/docs/devel/index.rst @@ -46,3 +46,4 @@ modifying QEMU's source code. qapi-code-gen writing-monitor-commands trivial-patches + submitting-a-pull-request diff --git a/docs/devel/submitting-a-pull-request.rst b/docs/devel/submitting-a-pull-request.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8729d29 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/devel/submitting-a-pull-request.rst @@ -0,0 +1,76 @@ +Submit a Pull Request +===================== + +QEMU welcomes contributions of code, but we generally expect these to be +sent as simple patch emails to the mailing list (see our page on +`submitting a patch +<https://qemu-project.gitlab.io/qemu/devel/submitting-a-patch.html>`__ +for more details). Generally only existing submaintainers of a tree +will need to submit pull requests, although occasionally for a large +patch series we might ask a submitter to send a pull request. This page +documents our recommendations on pull requests for those people. + +A good rule of thumb is not to send a pull request unless somebody asks +you to. + +**Resend the patches with the pull request** as emails which are +threaded as follow-ups to the pull request itself. The simplest way to +do this is to use ``git format-patch --cover-letter`` to create the +emails, and then edit the cover letter to include the pull request +details that ``git request-pull`` outputs. + +**Use PULL as the subject line tag** in both the cover letter and the +retransmitted patch mails (for example, by using +``--subject-prefix=PULL`` in your ``git format-patch`` command). This +helps people to filter in or out the resulting emails (especially useful +if they are only CC'd on one email out of the set). + +**Each patch must have your own Signed-off-by: line** as well as that of +the original author if the patch was not written by you. This is because +with a pull request you're now indicating that the patch has passed via +you rather than directly from the original author. + +**Don't forget to add Reviewed-by: and Acked-by: lines**. When other +people have reviewed the patches you're putting in the pull request, +make sure you've copied their signoffs across. (If you use the `patches +tool <https://github.com/stefanha/patches>`__ to add patches from email +directly to your git repo it will include the tags automatically; if +you're updating patches manually or in some other way you'll need to +edit the commit messages by hand.) + +**Don't send pull requests for code that hasn't passed review**. A pull +request says these patches are ready to go into QEMU now, so they must +have passed the standard code review processes. In particular if you've +corrected issues in one round of code review, you need to send your +fixed patch series as normal to the list; you can't put it in a pull +request until it's gone through. (Extremely trivial fixes may be OK to +just fix in passing, but if in doubt err on the side of not.) + +**Test before sending**. This is an obvious thing to say, but make sure +everything builds (including that it compiles at each step of the patch +series) and that "make check" passes before sending out the pull +request. As a submaintainer you're one of QEMU's lines of defense +against bad code, so double check the details. + +**All pull requests must be signed**. If your key is not already signed +by members of the QEMU community, you should make arrangements to attend +a `KeySigningParty <https://wiki.qemu.org/KeySigningParty>`__ (for +example at KVM Forum) or make alternative arrangements to have your key +signed by an attendee. Key signing requires meeting another community +member \*in person\* so please make appropriate arrangements. By +"signed" here we mean that the pullreq email should quote a tag which is +a GPG-signed tag (as created with 'gpg tag -s ...'). + +**Pull requests not for master should say "not for master" and have +"PULL SUBSYSTEM whatever" in the subject tag**. If your pull request is +targeting a stable branch or some submaintainer tree, please include the +string "not for master" in the cover letter email, and make sure the +subject tag is "PULL SUBSYSTEM s390/block/whatever" rather than just +"PULL". This allows it to be automatically filtered out of the set of +pull requests that should be applied to master. + +You might be interested in the `make-pullreq +<https://git.linaro.org/people/peter.maydell/misc-scripts.git/tree/make-pullreq>`__ +script which automates some of this process for you and includes a few +sanity checks. Note that you must edit it to configure it suitably for +your local situation! |