From 4267ee2bf351338c2aa6e1ed891e3a324108dec0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Drew DeVault Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2017 10:39:53 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Update CONTRIBUTING.md --- CONTRIBUTING.md | 37 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 35 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.md b/CONTRIBUTING.md index 74c0746c..f01eb82c 100644 --- a/CONTRIBUTING.md +++ b/CONTRIBUTING.md @@ -5,6 +5,9 @@ successful with your contribution if you visit [#sway-devel](https://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=sway-devel) on irc.freenode.net upfront and discuss your plans. +Note: rules are made to be broken. Adjust or ignore any/all of these as you see +fit, but be prepared to justify it to your peers. + ## Pull Requests If you already have your own pull request habits, feel free to use them. If you @@ -24,6 +27,15 @@ branch. Instead, when you start working on a feature, do this: 4. `git push -u origin add-so-and-so-feature` 5. Make a pull request from your feature branch +When you submit your pull request, your commit log should do most of the talking +when it comes to describing your changes and their motivation. In addition to +this, your pull request's comments will ideally include a test plan that the +reviewers can use to (1) demonstrate the problem on master, if applicable and +(2) verify that the problem no longer exists with your changes applied (or that +your new features work correctly). Document all of the edge cases you're aware +of so we can adequately test them - then verify the test plan yourself before +submitting. + ## Commit Messages Please strive to write good commit messages. Here's some guidelines to follow: @@ -50,7 +62,27 @@ message as well. See [here](https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/) for more details. -## Coding Style +## Code Review + +When your changes are submitted for review, one or more core committers will +look over them. Smaller changes might be merged with little fanfare, but larger +changes will typically see review from several people. Be prepared to receive +some feedback - you may be asked to make changes to your work. Our code review +process is: + +1. **Triage** the pull request. Do the commit messages make sense? Is a test + plan necessary and/or present? Add anyone as reviewers that you think should + be there (using the relevant GitHub feature, if you have the permissions, or + with an @mention if necessary). +2. **Review** the code. Look for code style violations, naming convention + violations, buffer overflows, memory leaks, logic errors, non-portable code + (including GNU-isms), etc. For significant changes to the public API, loop in + a couple more people for discussion. +3. **Execute** the test plan, if present. +4. **Merge** the pull request when all reviewers approve. +5. **File** follow-up tickets if appropriate. + +## Style Reference wlroots is written in C with a style similar to the [kernel style](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst), but @@ -102,7 +134,8 @@ Try to break the line in the place which you think is the most appropriate. ### Line Length Try to keep your lines under 80 columns, but you can go up to 100 if it -improves readability. +improves readability. Don't break lines indiscriminately, try to find nice +breaking points so your code is easy to read. ### Names