Documentation / howto / maintain-git.txton commit Documentation: avoid "uninteresting" (e32db66)
   1From: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
   2Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2007 16:32:55 -0800
   3Subject: Addendum to "MaintNotes"
   4Abstract: Imagine that Git development is racing along as usual, when our friendly
   5 neighborhood maintainer is struck down by a wayward bus. Out of the
   6 hordes of suckers (loyal developers), you have been tricked (chosen) to
   7 step up as the new maintainer. This howto will show you "how to" do it.
   8Content-type: text/asciidoc
   9
  10How to maintain Git
  11===================
  12
  13Activities
  14----------
  15
  16The maintainer's Git time is spent on three activities.
  17
  18 - Communication (45%)
  19
  20   Mailing list discussions on general design, fielding user
  21   questions, diagnosing bug reports; reviewing, commenting on,
  22   suggesting alternatives to, and rejecting patches.
  23
  24 - Integration (50%)
  25
  26   Applying new patches from the contributors while spotting and
  27   correcting minor mistakes, shuffling the integration and
  28   testing branches, pushing the results out, cutting the
  29   releases, and making announcements.
  30
  31 - Own development (5%)
  32
  33   Scratching my own itch and sending proposed patch series out.
  34
  35The Policy
  36----------
  37
  38The policy on Integration is informally mentioned in "A Note
  39from the maintainer" message, which is periodically posted to
  40this mailing list after each feature release is made.
  41
  42 - Feature releases are numbered as vX.Y.Z and are meant to
  43   contain bugfixes and enhancements in any area, including
  44   functionality, performance and usability, without regression.
  45
  46 - One release cycle for a feature release is expected to last for
  47   eight to ten weeks.
  48
  49 - Maintenance releases are numbered as vX.Y.Z.W and are meant
  50   to contain only bugfixes for the corresponding vX.Y.Z feature
  51   release and earlier maintenance releases vX.Y.Z.V (V < W).
  52
  53 - 'master' branch is used to prepare for the next feature
  54   release. In other words, at some point, the tip of 'master'
  55   branch is tagged with vX.Y.Z.
  56
  57 - 'maint' branch is used to prepare for the next maintenance
  58   release.  After the feature release vX.Y.Z is made, the tip
  59   of 'maint' branch is set to that release, and bugfixes will
  60   accumulate on the branch, and at some point, the tip of the
  61   branch is tagged with vX.Y.Z.1, vX.Y.Z.2, and so on.
  62
  63 - 'next' branch is used to publish changes (both enhancements
  64   and fixes) that (1) have worthwhile goal, (2) are in a fairly
  65   good shape suitable for everyday use, (3) but have not yet
  66   demonstrated to be regression free.  New changes are tested
  67   in 'next' before merged to 'master'.
  68
  69 - 'pu' branch is used to publish other proposed changes that do
  70   not yet pass the criteria set for 'next'.
  71
  72 - The tips of 'master' and 'maint' branches will not be rewound to
  73   allow people to build their own customization on top of them.
  74   Early in a new development cycle, 'next' is rewound to the tip of
  75   'master' once, but otherwise it will not be rewound until the end
  76   of the cycle.
  77
  78 - Usually 'master' contains all of 'maint' and 'next' contains all
  79   of 'master'.  'pu' contains all the topics merged to 'next', but
  80   is rebuilt directly on 'master'.
  81
  82 - The tip of 'master' is meant to be more stable than any
  83   tagged releases, and the users are encouraged to follow it.
  84
  85 - The 'next' branch is where new action takes place, and the
  86   users are encouraged to test it so that regressions and bugs
  87   are found before new topics are merged to 'master'.
  88
  89
  90A Typical Git Day
  91-----------------
  92
  93A typical Git day for the maintainer implements the above policy
  94by doing the following:
  95
  96 - Scan mailing list.  Respond with review comments, suggestions
  97   etc.  Kibitz.  Collect potentially usable patches from the
  98   mailing list.  Patches about a single topic go to one mailbox (I
  99   read my mail in Gnus, and type \C-o to save/append messages in
 100   files in mbox format).
 101
 102 - Write his own patches to address issues raised on the list but
 103   nobody has stepped up solving.  Send it out just like other
 104   contributors do, and pick them up just like patches from other
 105   contributors (see above).
 106
 107 - Review the patches in the saved mailboxes.  Edit proposed log
 108   message for typofixes and clarifications, and add Acks
 109   collected from the list.  Edit patch to incorporate "Oops,
 110   that should have been like this" fixes from the discussion.
 111
 112 - Classify the collected patches and handle 'master' and
 113   'maint' updates:
 114
 115   - Obviously correct fixes that pertain to the tip of 'maint'
 116     are directly applied to 'maint'.
 117
 118   - Obviously correct fixes that pertain to the tip of 'master'
 119     are directly applied to 'master'.
 120
 121   - Other topics are not handled in this step.
 122
 123   This step is done with "git am".
 124
 125     $ git checkout master    ;# or "git checkout maint"
 126     $ git am -sc3 mailbox
 127     $ make test
 128
 129   In practice, almost no patch directly goes to 'master' or
 130   'maint'.
 131
 132 - Review the last issue of "What's cooking" message, review the
 133   topics ready for merging (topic->master and topic->maint).  Use
 134   "Meta/cook -w" script (where Meta/ contains a checkout of the
 135   'todo' branch) to aid this step.
 136
 137   And perform the merge.  Use "Meta/Reintegrate -e" script (see
 138   later) to aid this step.
 139
 140     $ Meta/cook -w last-issue-of-whats-cooking.mbox
 141
 142     $ git checkout master    ;# or "git checkout maint"
 143     $ echo ai/topic | Meta/Reintegrate -e ;# "git merge ai/topic"
 144     $ git log -p ORIG_HEAD.. ;# final review
 145     $ git diff ORIG_HEAD..   ;# final review
 146     $ make test              ;# final review
 147
 148 - Handle the remaining patches:
 149
 150   - Anything unobvious that is applicable to 'master' (in other
 151     words, does not depend on anything that is still in 'next'
 152     and not in 'master') is applied to a new topic branch that
 153     is forked from the tip of 'master'.  This includes both
 154     enhancements and unobvious fixes to 'master'.  A topic
 155     branch is named as ai/topic where "ai" is two-letter string
 156     named after author's initial and "topic" is a descriptive name
 157     of the topic (in other words, "what's the series is about").
 158
 159   - An unobvious fix meant for 'maint' is applied to a new
 160     topic branch that is forked from the tip of 'maint'.  The
 161     topic is named as ai/maint-topic.
 162
 163   - Changes that pertain to an existing topic are applied to
 164     the branch, but:
 165
 166     - obviously correct ones are applied first;
 167
 168     - questionable ones are discarded or applied to near the tip;
 169
 170   - Replacement patches to an existing topic are accepted only
 171     for commits not in 'next'.
 172
 173   The above except the "replacement" are all done with:
 174
 175     $ git checkout ai/topic ;# or "git checkout -b ai/topic master"
 176     $ git am -sc3 mailbox
 177
 178   while patch replacement is often done by:
 179
 180     $ git format-patch ai/topic~$n..ai/topic ;# export existing
 181
 182   then replace some parts with the new patch, and reapplying:
 183
 184     $ git checkout ai/topic
 185     $ git reset --hard ai/topic~$n
 186     $ git am -sc3 -s 000*.txt
 187
 188   The full test suite is always run for 'maint' and 'master'
 189   after patch application; for topic branches the tests are run
 190   as time permits.
 191
 192 - Merge maint to master as needed:
 193
 194     $ git checkout master
 195     $ git merge maint
 196     $ make test
 197
 198 - Merge master to next as needed:
 199
 200     $ git checkout next
 201     $ git merge master
 202     $ make test
 203
 204 - Review the last issue of "What's cooking" again and see if topics
 205   that are ready to be merged to 'next' are still in good shape
 206   (e.g. has there any new issue identified on the list with the
 207   series?)
 208
 209 - Prepare 'jch' branch, which is used to represent somewhere
 210   between 'master' and 'pu' and often is slightly ahead of 'next'.
 211
 212     $ Meta/Reintegrate master..pu >Meta/redo-jch.sh
 213
 214   The result is a script that lists topics to be merged in order to
 215   rebuild 'pu' as the input to Meta/Reintegrate script.  Remove
 216   later topics that should not be in 'jch' yet.  Add a line that
 217   consists of '### match next' before the name of the first topic
 218   in the output that should be in 'jch' but not in 'next' yet.
 219
 220 - Now we are ready to start merging topics to 'next'.  For each
 221   branch whose tip is not merged to 'next', one of three things can
 222   happen:
 223
 224   - The commits are all next-worthy; merge the topic to next;
 225   - The new parts are of mixed quality, but earlier ones are
 226     next-worthy; merge the early parts to next;
 227   - Nothing is next-worthy; do not do anything.
 228
 229   This step is aided with Meta/redo-jch.sh script created earlier.
 230   If a topic that was already in 'next' gained a patch, the script
 231   would list it as "ai/topic~1".  To include the new patch to the
 232   updated 'next', drop the "~1" part; to keep it excluded, do not
 233   touch the line.  If a topic that was not in 'next' should be
 234   merged to 'next', add it at the end of the list.  Then:
 235
 236     $ git checkout -B jch master
 237     $ Meta/redo-jch.sh -c1
 238
 239   to rebuild the 'jch' branch from scratch.  "-c1" tells the script
 240   to stop merging at the first line that begins with '###'
 241   (i.e. the "### match next" line you added earlier).
 242
 243   At this point, build-test the result.  It may reveal semantic
 244   conflicts (e.g. a topic renamed a variable, another added a new
 245   reference to the variable under its old name), in which case
 246   prepare an appropriate merge-fix first (see appendix), and
 247   rebuild the 'jch' branch from scratch, starting at the tip of
 248   'master'.
 249
 250   Then do the same to 'next'
 251
 252     $ git checkout next
 253     $ sh Meta/redo-jch.sh -c1 -e
 254
 255   The "-e" option allows the merge message that comes from the
 256   history of the topic and the comments in the "What's cooking" to
 257   be edited.  The resulting tree should match 'jch' as the same set
 258   of topics are merged on 'master'; otherwise there is a mismerge.
 259   Investigate why and do not proceed until the mismerge is found
 260   and rectified.
 261
 262     $ git diff jch next
 263
 264   When all is well, clean up the redo-jch.sh script with
 265
 266     $ sh Meta/redo-jch.sh -u
 267
 268   This removes topics listed in the script that have already been
 269   merged to 'master'.  This may lose '### match next' marker;
 270   add it again to the appropriate place when it happens.
 271
 272 - Rebuild 'pu'.
 273
 274     $ Meta/Reintegrate master..pu >Meta/redo-pu.sh
 275
 276   Edit the result by adding new topics that are not still in 'pu'
 277   in the script.  Then
 278
 279     $ git checkout -B pu jch
 280     $ sh Meta/redo-pu.sh
 281
 282   When all is well, clean up the redo-pu.sh script with
 283
 284     $ sh Meta/redo-pu.sh -u
 285
 286   Double check by running
 287
 288     $ git branch --no-merged pu
 289
 290   to see there is no unexpected leftover topics.
 291
 292   At this point, build-test the result for semantic conflicts, and
 293   if there are, prepare an appropriate merge-fix first (see
 294   appendix), and rebuild the 'pu' branch from scratch, starting at
 295   the tip of 'jch'.
 296
 297 - Update "What's cooking" message to review the updates to
 298   existing topics, newly added topics and graduated topics.
 299
 300   This step is helped with Meta/cook script.
 301
 302     $ Meta/cook
 303
 304   This script inspects the history between master..pu, finds tips
 305   of topic branches, compares what it found with the current
 306   contents in Meta/whats-cooking.txt, and updates that file.
 307   Topics not listed in the file but are found in master..pu are
 308   added to the "New topics" section, topics listed in the file that
 309   are no longer found in master..pu are moved to the "Graduated to
 310   master" section, and topics whose commits changed their states
 311   (e.g. used to be only in 'pu', now merged to 'next') are updated
 312   with change markers "<<" and ">>".
 313
 314   Look for lines enclosed in "<<" and ">>"; they hold contents from
 315   old file that are replaced by this integration round.  After
 316   verifying them, remove the old part.  Review the description for
 317   each topic and update its doneness and plan as needed.  To review
 318   the updated plan, run
 319
 320     $ Meta/cook -w
 321
 322   which will pick up comments given to the topics, such as "Will
 323   merge to 'next'", etc. (see Meta/cook script to learn what kind
 324   of phrases are supported).
 325
 326 - Compile, test and install all four (five) integration branches;
 327   Meta/Dothem script may aid this step.
 328
 329 - Format documentation if the 'master' branch was updated;
 330   Meta/dodoc.sh script may aid this step.
 331
 332 - Push the integration branches out to public places; Meta/pushall
 333   script may aid this step.
 334
 335Observations
 336------------
 337
 338Some observations to be made.
 339
 340 * Each topic is tested individually, and also together with other
 341   topics cooking first in 'pu', then in 'jch' and then in 'next'.
 342   Until it matures, no part of it is merged to 'master'.
 343
 344 * A topic already in 'next' can get fixes while still in
 345   'next'.  Such a topic will have many merges to 'next' (in
 346   other words, "git log --first-parent next" will show many
 347   "Merge branch 'ai/topic' to next" for the same topic.
 348
 349 * An unobvious fix for 'maint' is cooked in 'next' and then
 350   merged to 'master' to make extra sure it is Ok and then
 351   merged to 'maint'.
 352
 353 * Even when 'next' becomes empty (in other words, all topics
 354   prove stable and are merged to 'master' and "git diff master
 355   next" shows empty), it has tons of merge commits that will
 356   never be in 'master'.
 357
 358 * In principle, "git log --first-parent master..next" should
 359   show nothing but merges (in practice, there are fixup commits
 360   and reverts that are not merges).
 361
 362 * Commits near the tip of a topic branch that are not in 'next'
 363   are fair game to be discarded, replaced or rewritten.
 364   Commits already merged to 'next' will not be.
 365
 366 * Being in the 'next' branch is not a guarantee for a topic to
 367   be included in the next feature release.  Being in the
 368   'master' branch typically is.
 369
 370
 371Appendix
 372--------
 373
 374Preparing a "merge-fix"
 375~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 376
 377A merge of two topics may not textually conflict but still have
 378conflict at the semantic level. A classic example is for one topic
 379to rename an variable and all its uses, while another topic adds a
 380new use of the variable under its old name. When these two topics
 381are merged together, the reference to the variable newly added by
 382the latter topic will still use the old name in the result.
 383
 384The Meta/Reintegrate script that is used by redo-jch and redo-pu
 385scripts implements a crude but usable way to work this issue around.
 386When the script merges branch $X, it checks if "refs/merge-fix/$X"
 387exists, and if so, the effect of it is squashed into the result of
 388the mechanical merge.  In other words,
 389
 390     $ echo $X | Meta/Reintegrate
 391
 392is roughly equivalent to this sequence:
 393
 394     $ git merge --rerere-autoupdate $X
 395     $ git commit
 396     $ git cherry-pick -n refs/merge-fix/$X
 397     $ git commit --amend
 398
 399The goal of this "prepare a merge-fix" step is to come up with a
 400commit that can be squashed into a result of mechanical merge to
 401correct semantic conflicts.
 402
 403After finding that the result of merging branch "ai/topic" to an
 404integration branch had such a semantic conflict, say pu~4, check the
 405problematic merge out on a detached HEAD, edit the working tree to
 406fix the semantic conflict, and make a separate commit to record the
 407fix-up:
 408
 409     $ git checkout pu~4
 410     $ git show -s --pretty=%s ;# double check
 411     Merge branch 'ai/topic' to pu
 412     $ edit
 413     $ git commit -m 'merge-fix/ai/topic' -a
 414
 415Then make a reference "refs/merge-fix/ai/topic" to point at this
 416result:
 417
 418     $ git update-ref refs/merge-fix/ai/topic HEAD
 419
 420Then double check the result by asking Meta/Reintegrate to redo the
 421merge:
 422
 423     $ git checkout pu~5 ;# the parent of the problem merge
 424     $ echo ai/topic | Meta/Reintegrate
 425     $ git diff pu~4
 426
 427This time, because you prepared refs/merge-fix/ai/topic, the
 428resulting merge should have been tweaked to include the fix for the
 429semantic conflict.
 430
 431Note that this assumes that the order in which conflicting branches
 432are merged does not change.  If the reason why merging ai/topic
 433branch needs this merge-fix is because another branch merged earlier
 434to the integration branch changed the underlying assumption ai/topic
 435branch made (e.g. ai/topic branch added a site to refer to a
 436variable, while the other branch renamed that variable and adjusted
 437existing use sites), and if you changed redo-jch (or redo-pu) script
 438to merge ai/topic branch before the other branch, then the above
 439merge-fix should not be applied while merging ai/topic, but should
 440instead be applied while merging the other branch.  You would need
 441to move the fix to apply to the other branch, perhaps like this:
 442
 443      $ mf=refs/merge-fix
 444      $ git update-ref $mf/$the_other_branch $mf/ai/topic
 445      $ git update-ref -d $mf/ai/topic