source: trunk/doc/procedures @ 20856

Revision 20856, 8.7 KB checked in by ghudson, 20 years ago (diff)
Update to take into account import.sh support for automatic old version detection.
Line 
1This file contains a description of the process developers should go
2through to get changes into the source tree.  Although it discusses
3the use of CVS, it is not a CVS tutorial; read the CVS info pages
4(available in M-x info in emacs on Athena) for a general introduction
5to CVS.  Areas covered in this file are:
6
7  Checking out a working directory
8  Preparing changes for review
9  Reviewing changes
10  Early checkins
11  Third-party sources
12
13You should use cvs from the gnu locker with the source repository.
14People without write access to the repository can use "cvs -u" (a
15local modification to CVS) to access the repository without making
16read locks.  If you do not have write access to the repository and you
17want to submit a change, follow the guidelines below up and including
18sending mail to source-reviewers, and note in your mail that your
19reviewer should check in the change because you cannot do so.
20
21Checking out a working directory
22--------------------------------
23
24Set CVSROOT to "/afs/dev.mit.edu/source/repository" before trying to
25check out a working directory.
26
27The entire source tree is very large.  You can check it out with "cvs
28co -P all", but in almost all cases this would be a big waste of space.
29Simply check out a subdirectory of the source tree with a command like
30"cvs co -P athena/bin/olc".
31
32CVS knows nothing about AFS permissions, so all directories created
33will have the same permissions as their parent.  It is generally
34safest to do your checkouts in a private area of the filesystem.
35
36You should use the -P option for checkout because the source tree
37contains some historical directories (now empty) which will conflict
38with builds.
39
40Preparing changes for review
41----------------------------
42
43Changes to the doc hierarchy do not typically need to be reviewed;
44notification is typically good enough, since no software will break as
45a result of changes to the source tree documentation.
46
47For changes to other parts of the tree, you should perform the
48following steps while preparing your changes for review:
49
50  1. Do a "cvs update" in your working directory to merge in changes
51     other people may have made.  (You can do "cvs -n update" if you
52     want to see what needs to be merged in without actually doing the
53     merge.)
54
55  2. Be sure to test your changes.
56
57  3. Make sure your changes are made in reviewable chunks to the
58     greatest extent possible.  If you have many changes to make of
59     several different types, prepare one patch for each type of
60     change; in particular, if you have some cosmetic changes to make
61     and some functional fixes to make, submit them as two different
62     patches if they add up to a significant number of changes.  This
63     requirement creates more work for the submitter, but it greatly
64     increases the effectiveness of the review process.
65
66  4. Use "cvs diff -u -N" piped to a file to prepare your changes.  (Do
67     not cut and paste diffs from an xterm; your tabs will be
68     converted to spaces.)  If your change involves reindentation of
69     code, you may want to also use the "-w" flag to diff.  If you
70     find that your change is clearer when presented as a context diff
71     ("-c" instead of "-u"), feel free to submit it that way.
72
73  5. Look over your diffs.  Make sure you haven't been sloppy about
74     spacing, punctuation, and naming, and that you have tried to
75     conform to the guidelines in the file "standards" in this
76     directory
77
78  6. Send your diffs, along with a clear description of the change you
79     are making, to source-reviewers@mit.edu.  If the diffs are very
80     large (more than 50K), put the changes somewhere world-readable
81     (unless the source code in question is restricted) and mail a
82     pointer.
83
84  7. If you do not have write access to the source tree and submitted
85     your diff using the -w flag, submit it again without the -w flag
86     so that the full patch can be checked in by someone with write
87     access.
88
89Ideally, at least one person will respond to your mail within a day or
90two, either expressing concerns or signing onto your change.  You
91should wait at least one day for people to voice their objections.  If
92you receive objections or requests for further information from staff
93members, you must either satisfy those concerns or resolve the issue
94with the release team before committing your change.  If after one
95day, you have received no objections and someone has signed onto your
96change, you may commit your change.  You may also commit your change
97if no one objects within five days, even if no one has signed onto it.
98
99When you check in your change, be sure to include a clear log message.
100Explain why you are making the change you are making if it's not
101obvious.
102
103Reviewing changes
104-----------------
105
106Sometimes you can review a change by looking at the patch.  Other
107times you will want to check out a tree and apply the patch, with
108"patch -E -p < message-file" if you have the mail message in a file,
109or "dsgrep -p -t trn-number source-reviewers | patch -E -p" if what
110you have is a transaction number in the source-reviewers discuss
111meeting.
112
113When reviewing a change, be sure to make your position on the change
114clear.  Say "I object to this change" if you are not merely voicing a
115concern, or "I would like these questions answered before this change
116is committed" if you have asked questions and are not merely curious.
117When your objections are responded to, you should in turn respond in a
118timely fashion saying whether your objections have been satisfied or
119not.  If the dispute appears intractable, say so, so that the issue
120may be brought up before the release team.
121
122If you have reviewed a change carefully and have found nothing wrong
123with it, and no one else has responded to the change, you should sign
124onto the change rather than remaining silent.  You are encouraged to
125try out changes before signing onto them, but in some cases the
126inconvenience outweights the benefit of this consideration.
127
128Early checkins
129--------------
130
131In some cases it may be appropriate to check in a change in advance of
132the normal review period.  The following should be true of those
133cases:
134
135  1. The change is obvious and noncontroversial, such as a fix for a
136     syntax error.
137
138  2. The problem being fixed is causing an immediate difficulty,
139     usually "I'm doing a build of /mit/source and it blows out at
140     this point."
141
142The change should still be sent to source-reviewers with a note about
143the early checkin.  If the immediate difficulty is "the wash is broken
144and I want the next wash to work," then it is good to get a positive
145review of the change before checking it in.  Close to a release cycle,
146though, that can be ignored.
147
148Third-party sources
149-------------------
150
151"cvs import" is a fragile system with lots of flaws and corner cases.
152Fortunately, we have a script to make imports convenient and mostly
153error-free.  It lives in $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/import.sh, and is documented
154briefly in comments at the top of the script.  Here are some use
155cases:
156
157  # Import a nicely named tarfile.
158  $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/import.sh /tmp/bash-2.03.tar.gz
159
160  # Import a not so nicely named tarfile.
161  $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/import.sh -n pine -v 4.53 /tmp/pine4.53.tar.bz2
162
163  # Import into a non-default repository directory.
164  $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/import.sh -d third/glib2 /tmp/glib-2.2.1.tar.bz2
165
166  # Import when old-version detection doesn't work right
167  $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/import.sh -o 0.2.34 /tmp/esound-0.2.35.tar.bz2
168
169After the initial import, here are some things to pay attention to
170when adding or updating a piece of third-party software:
171
172  * If the package's build system does not use autoconf, you will
173    probably need to write a Makefile.athena file telling the build
174    system how to build it.
175
176  * If the package's build system does use autoconf, you may need to
177    write a configure.athena giving special options to pass to the
178    configure script.
179
180  * A few packages will need to be taught how to use DESTDIR.  Make
181    sure that DESTDIR references don't make it into the installed
182    program.
183
184  * If the package installs a file setuid, it needs to specify the
185    owner (probably "-o root" if it didn't specify one before).
186    Likewise, a setgid program needs a specified group owner, although
187    this is usually done already.  Other than that, our fix_owners
188    program will coerce unspecified owners and groups to 0.
189
190  * The package should create directories before installing files in
191    them.
192
193  * If possible, test your package's build and install.  Preferrably,
194    use the "do" command, something like:
195
196      do dist
197      do prepare
198      do
199      do -d /var/tmp/inst install
200
201    (Replace "do" with "sh /mit/source/packs/build/do.sh" or use a
202    shell alias.)  This testing may not be possible if the package
203    depends on other packages not in the current Athena release.
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