| Submitting Patches |
| ================== |
| |
| .. _guidelines: |
| |
| Basic guidelines |
| ---------------- |
| |
| - Patches should not mix code changes with code formatting changes |
| (except, perhaps, in very trivial cases.) |
| - Code patches should follow Mesa :doc:`coding |
| conventions <codingstyle>`. |
| - Whenever possible, patches should only affect individual Mesa/Gallium |
| components. |
| - Patches should never introduce build breaks and should be bisectable |
| (see ``git bisect``.) |
| - Patches should be properly :ref:`formatted <formatting>`. |
| - Patches should be sufficiently :ref:`tested <testing>` before |
| submitting. |
| - Patches should be :ref:`submitted <submit>` via a merge request for |
| :ref:`review <reviewing>`. |
| |
| .. _formatting: |
| |
| Patch formatting |
| ---------------- |
| |
| - Lines should be limited to 75 characters or less so that git logs |
| displayed in 80-column terminals avoid line wrapping. Note that git |
| log uses 4 spaces of indentation (4 + 75 < 80). |
| - The first line should be a short, concise summary of the change |
| prefixed with a module name. Examples: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| mesa: Add support for querying GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_LONG |
| |
| gallium: add PIPE_CAP_DEVICE_RESET_STATUS_QUERY |
| |
| i965: Fix missing type in local variable declaration. |
| |
| - Subsequent patch comments should describe the change in more detail, |
| if needed. For example: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| i965: Remove end-of-thread SEND alignment code. |
| |
| This was present in Eric's initial implementation of the compaction code |
| for Sandybridge (commit 077d01b6). There is no documentation saying this |
| is necessary, and removing it causes no regressions in piglit on any |
| platform. |
| |
| - A "Signed-off-by:" line is not required, but not discouraged either. |
| - If a patch addresses an issue in gitlab, use the Closes: tag For |
| example: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/1 |
| |
| Prefer the full url to just ``Closes: #1``, since the url makes it |
| easier to get to the bug page from ``git log`` |
| |
| **Do not use the ``Fixes:`` tag for this!** Mesa already uses |
| ``Fixes:`` for something else. |
| See :ref:`below <fixes>`. |
| |
| - If there have been several revisions to a patch during the review |
| process, they should be noted such as in this example: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| st/mesa: add ARB_texture_stencil8 support (v4) |
| |
| if we support stencil texturing, enable texture_stencil8 |
| there is no requirement to support native S8 for this, |
| the texture can be converted to x24s8 fine. |
| |
| v2: fold fixes from Marek in: |
| a) put S8 last in the list |
| b) fix renderable to always test for d/s renderable |
| fixup the texture case to use a stencil only format |
| for picking the format for the texture view. |
| v3: hit fallback for getteximage |
| v4: put s8 back in front, it shouldn't get picked now (Ilia) |
| |
| - If someone tested your patch, document it with a line like this: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Tested-by: Joe Hacker <jhacker@foo.com> |
| |
| - If the patch was reviewed (usually the case) or acked by someone, |
| that should be documented with: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Reviewed-by: Joe Hacker <jhacker@foo.com> |
| Acked-by: Joe Hacker <jhacker@foo.com> |
| |
| - When updating a merge request add all the tags (``Acked-by:``, ``Reviewed-by:``, |
| ``Fixes:``, ``Cc: mesa-stable`` and/or other) to the commit messages. |
| This provides reviewers with quick feedback if the patch has already |
| been reviewed. |
| |
| .. _fixes: |
| |
| The ``Fixes:`` tag |
| ------------------ |
| |
| If a patch addresses a issue introduced with earlier commit, that |
| should be noted in the commit message. For example:: |
| |
| Fixes: d7b3707c612 ("util/disk_cache: use stat() to check if entry is a directory") |
| |
| You can produce those fixes lines by running this command once:: |
| |
| git config --global alias.fixes "show -s --pretty='format:Fixes: %h (\"%s\")'" |
| |
| After that, using ``git fixes <sha1>`` will print the full line for you. |
| |
| The stable tag |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If you want a commit to be applied to a stable branch, you should add an |
| appropriate note to the commit message. |
| |
| Using a ``Fixes:`` tag as described in :ref:`Patch formatting <formatting>` |
| is the preferred way to nominate a commit that should be backported. |
| There are scripts that will figure out which releases to apply the patch |
| to automatically, so you don't need to figure it out. |
| |
| Alternatively, you may use a "CC:" tag. Here are some examples of such a |
| note:: |
| |
| Cc: mesa-stable |
| Cc: 20.0 <mesa-stable> |
| CC: 20.0 19.3 <mesa-stable> |
| |
| Using the CC tag **should** include the stable branches you want to |
| nominate the patch to. If you do not provide any version it is nominated |
| to all active stable branches. |
| |
| .. _testing: |
| |
| Testing Patches |
| --------------- |
| |
| It should go without saying that patches must be tested. In general, do |
| whatever testing is prudent. |
| |
| You should always run the Mesa test suite before submitting patches. The |
| test suite can be run using the 'meson test' command. All tests must |
| pass before patches will be accepted, this may mean you have to update |
| the tests themselves. |
| |
| Whenever possible and applicable, test the patch with |
| `Piglit <https://piglit.freedesktop.org>`__ and/or |
| `dEQP <https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/deqp/>`__ to |
| check for regressions. |
| |
| As mentioned at the beginning, patches should be bisectable. A good way |
| to test this is to make use of the \`git rebase\` command, to run your |
| tests on each commit. Assuming your branch is based off |
| ``origin/master``, you can run: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| $ git rebase --interactive --exec "meson test -C build/" origin/master |
| |
| replacing ``"meson test"`` with whatever other test you want to run. |
| |
| .. _submit: |
| |
| Submitting Patches |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Patches are submitted to the Mesa project via a |
| `GitLab <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa>`__ Merge Request. |
| |
| Add labels to your MR to help reviewers find it. For example: |
| |
| - Mesa changes affecting all drivers: mesa |
| - Hardware vendor specific code: amd, intel, nvidia, ... |
| - Driver specific code: anvil, freedreno, i965, iris, radeonsi, radv, |
| vc4, ... |
| - Other tag examples: gallium, util |
| |
| Tick the following when creating the MR. It allows developers to rebase |
| your work on top of master. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Allow commits from members who can merge to the target branch |
| |
| If you revise your patches based on code review and push an update to |
| your branch, you should maintain a **clean** history in your patches. |
| There should not be "fixup" patches in the history. The series should be |
| buildable and functional after every commit whenever you push the |
| branch. |
| |
| It is your responsibility to keep the MR alive and making progress, as |
| there are no guarantees that a Mesa dev will independently take interest |
| in it. |
| |
| Some other notes: |
| |
| - Make changes and update your branch based on feedback |
| - After an update, for the feedback you handled, close the feedback |
| discussion with the "Resolve Discussion" button. This way the |
| reviewers know which feedback got handled and which didn't. |
| - Old, stale MR may be closed, but you can reopen it if you still want |
| to pursue the changes |
| - You should periodically check to see if your MR needs to be rebased |
| - Make sure your MR is closed if your patches get pushed outside of |
| GitLab |
| - Please send MRs from a personal fork rather than from the main Mesa |
| repository, as it clutters it unnecessarily. |
| |
| .. _reviewing: |
| |
| Reviewing Patches |
| ----------------- |
| |
| To participate in code review, you can monitor the GitLab Mesa `Merge |
| Requests <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests>`__ |
| page, and/or register for notifications in your gitlab settings. |
| |
| When you've reviewed a patch, please be unambiguous about your review. |
| That is, state either |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Reviewed-by: Joe Hacker <jhacker@foo.com> |
| |
| or |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Acked-by: Joe Hacker <jhacker@foo.com> |
| |
| Rather than saying just "LGTM" or "Seems OK". |
| |
| If small changes are suggested, it's OK to say something like: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| With the above fixes, Reviewed-by: Joe Hacker <jhacker@foo.com> |
| |
| which tells the patch author that the patch can be committed, as long as |
| the issues are resolved first. |
| |
| These Reviewed-by, Acked-by, and Tested-by tags should also be amended |
| into commits in a MR before it is merged. |
| |
| When providing a Reviewed-by, Acked-by, or Tested-by tag in a gitlab MR, |
| enclose the tag in backticks: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| `Reviewed-by: Joe Hacker <jhacker@example.com>` |
| |
| This is the markdown format for literal, and will prevent gitlab from |
| hiding the < and > symbols. |
| |
| Review by non-experts is encouraged. Understanding how someone else goes |
| about solving a problem is a great way to learn your way around the |
| project. The submitter is expected to evaluate whether they have an |
| appropriate amount of review feedback from people who also understand |
| the code before merging their patches. |
| |
| Nominating a commit for a stable branch |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| There are several ways to nominate a patch for inclusion in the stable |
| branch and release. In order or preference: |
| |
| - By adding the ``Fixes:`` tag in the commit message as described above, if you are fixing |
| a specific commit. |
| - By adding the ``Cc: mesa-stable`` tag in the commit message as described above. |
| - By submitting a merge request against the ``staging/year.quarter`` |
| branch on gitlab. |
| |
| Please **DO NOT** send patches to mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org, it |
| is not monitored actively and is a historical artifact. |
| |
| If you are not the author of the original patch, please Cc: them in your |
| nomination request. |
| |
| The current patch status can be observed in the :ref:`staging |
| branch <stagingbranch>`. |
| |
| .. _criteria: |
| |
| Criteria for accepting patches to the stable branch |
| --------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Mesa has a designated release manager for each stable branch, and the |
| release manager is the only developer that should be pushing changes to |
| these branches. Everyone else should nominate patches using the |
| mechanism described above. The following rules define which patches are |
| accepted and which are not. The stable-release manager is also given |
| broad discretion in rejecting patches that have been nominated. |
| |
| - Patch must conform with the :ref:`Basic guidelines <guidelines>` |
| - Patch must have landed in master first. In case where the original |
| patch is too large and/or otherwise contradicts with the rules set |
| within, a backport is appropriate. |
| - It must not introduce a regression - be that build or runtime wise. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| If the regression is due to faulty piglit/dEQP/CTS/other test |
| the latter must be fixed first. A reference to the offending test(s) |
| and respective fix(es) should be provided in the nominated patch. |
| |
| - Patch cannot be larger than 100 lines. |
| - Patches that move code around with no functional change should be |
| rejected. |
| - Patch must be a bug fix and not a new feature. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| An exception to this rule, are hardware-enabling "features". For |
| example, :ref:`backports <backports>` of new code to support a |
| newly-developed hardware product can be accepted if they can be |
| reasonably determined not to have effects on other hardware. |
| |
| - Patch must be reviewed, For example, the commit message has |
| Reviewed-by, Signed-off-by, or Tested-by tags from someone but the |
| author. |
| - Performance patches are considered only if they provide information |
| about the hardware, program in question and observed improvement. Use |
| numbers to represent your measurements. |
| |
| If the patch complies with the rules it will be |
| :ref:`cherry-picked <pickntest>`. Alternatively the release |
| manager will reply to the patch in question stating why the patch has |
| been rejected or would request a backport. The stable-release manager |
| may at times need to force-push changes to the stable branches, for |
| example, to drop a previously-picked patch that was later identified as |
| causing a regression). These force-pushes may cause changes to be lost |
| from the stable branch if developers push things directly. Consider |
| yourself warned. |
| |
| .. _backports: |
| |
| Sending backports for the stable branch |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| By default merge conflicts are resolved by the stable-release manager. |
| The release maintainer should resolve trivial conflicts, but for complex |
| conflicts they should ask the original author to provide a backport or |
| de-nominate the patch. |
| |
| For patches that either need to be nominated after they've landed in |
| master, or that are known ahead of time to not not apply cleanly to a |
| stable branch (such as due to a rename), using a gitlab MR is most |
| appropriate. The MR should be based on and target the |
| staging/year.quarter branch, not on the year.quarter branch, per the |
| stable branch policy. Assigning the MR to release maintainer for said |
| branch or mentioning them is helpful, but not required. |
| |
| Git tips |
| -------- |
| |
| - ``git rebase -i ...`` is your friend. Don't be afraid to use it. |
| - Apply a fixup to commit FOO. |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| git add ... |
| git commit --fixup=FOO |
| git rebase -i --autosquash ... |
| |
| - Test for build breakage between patches e.g last 8 commits. |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| git rebase -i --exec="ninja -C build/" HEAD~8 |