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diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/contribution_guide.rst b/lib/spack/docs/contribution_guide.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..108b23a6d0 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/spack/docs/contribution_guide.rst @@ -0,0 +1,247 @@ +.. _contribution-guide: + +Contribution Guide +===================== + +This guide is intended for developers or administrators who want to +contribute a new package, feature, or bugfix to Spack. +It assumes that you have at least some familiarity with Git VCS and Github. +The guide will show a few examples of contributing workflow and discuss +the granularity of pull-requests (PRs). + +First, what is a PR? Quoting `Bitbucket's tutorials <https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/making-a-pull-request/>`_: + + Pull requests are a mechanism for a developer to notify team members that they have **completed a feature**. + The pull request is more than just a notification—it’s a dedicated forum for discussing the proposed feature + +Important is completed feature, i.e. the changes one propose in a PR should +correspond to one feature/bugfix/extension/etc. One can create PRs with +changes relevant to different ideas, however reviewing such PRs becomes tedious +and error prone. If possible, try to follow the rule **one-PR-one-package/feature.** + +Spack uses a rough approximation of the `Git Flow <http://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/>`_ branching +model. The develop branch contains the latest contributions, and master is +always tagged and points to the latest stable release. Thereby when you send +your request, make ``develop`` the destination branch on the +`Spack repository <https://github.com/LLNL/spack>`_. + +Let's assume that the current (patched) state of your fork of Spack is only +relevant to yourself. Now you come across a bug in a package or would like to +extend a package and contribute this fix to Spack. It is important that +whenever you change something that might be of importance upstream, +create a pull-request (PR) as soon as possible. Do not wait for weeks/months to +do this: a) you might forget why did you modified certain files; b) it could get +difficult to isolate this change into a stand-alone clean PR. + +Now let us discuss several approaches one may use to submit a PR while +also keeping your local version of Spack patched. + + +First approach (cherry-picking): +-------------------------------- + +First approach is as follows. +You checkout your local develop branch, which for the purpose of this guide +will be called ``develop_modified``: + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git checkout develop_modified + +Let us assume that lines in files you will be modifying +are the same in `develop_modified` branch and upstream ``develop``. +Next edit files, make sure they work for you and create a commit + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git add <files_to_be_commited> + $ git commit -m <descriptive note about changes> + +Normally we prefer that commits pertaining to a package ``<package-name>``` have +a message ``<package-name>: descriptive message``. It is important to add +descriptive message so that others, who might be looking at your changes later +(in a year or maybe two), would understand the rationale behind. + + +Next we will create a branch off upstream's ``develop`` and copy this commit. +Before doing this, while still on your modified branch, get the hash of the +last commit + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git log -1 + +and copy-paste this ``<hash>`` to the buffer. Now switch to upstream's ``develop``, +make sure it's updated, checkout the new branch, apply the patch and push to +GitHub: + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git checkout develop + $ git pull upstream develop + $ git checkout -b <descriptive_branch_name> + $ git cherry-pick <hash> + $ git push <your_origin> <descriptive_branch_name> -u + +Here we assume that local ``develop`` branch tracks upstream develop branch of +Spack. This is not a requirement and you could also do the same with remote +branches. Yet to some it is more convenient to have a local branch that +tracks upstream. + +Now you can create a PR from web-interface of GitHub. The net result is as +follows: + +#. You patched your local version of Spack and can use it further +#. You "cherry-picked" these changes in a stand-alone branch and submitted it + as a PR upstream. + + +Should you have several commits to contribute, you could follow the same +procedure by getting hashes of all of them and cherry-picking to the PR branch. +This could get tedious and therefore there is another way: + + +Second approach: +---------------- + +In the second approach we start from upstream ``develop`` (again assuming +that your local branch `develop` tracks upstream): + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git checkout develop + $ git pull upstream develop + $ git checkout -b <descriptive_branch_name> + +Next edit a few files and create a few commits by + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git add <files_to_be_part_of_the_commit> + $ git commit -m <descriptive_message_of_this_particular_commit> + +Now you can push it to your fork and create a PR + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git push <your_origin> <descriptive_branch_name> -u + +Most likely you would want to have those changes in your (modified) local +version of Spack. To that end you need to merge this branch + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git checkout develop_modified + $ git merge <descriptive_branch_name> + +The net result is similar to the first approach with a minor difference that +you would also merge upstream develop into you modified version in the last +step. Should this not be desirable, you have to follow the first approach. + + + +How to clean-up a branch by rewriting history: +----------------------------------------------- + +Sometimes you may end up on a branch that has a lot of commits, merges of +upstream branch and alike but it can't be rebased on ``develop`` due to a long +and convoluted history. If the current commits history is more of an experimental +nature and only the net result is important, you may rewrite the history. +To that end you need to first merge upstream `develop` and reset you branch to +it. So on the branch in question do: + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git merge develop + $ git reset develop + +At this point you your branch will point to the same commit as develop and +thereby the two are indistinguishable. However, all the files that were +previously modified will stay as such. In other words, you do not loose the +changes you made. Changes can be reviewed by looking at diffs + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git status + $ git diff + +One can also run GUI to visualize the current changes + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git difftool + +Next step is to rewrite the history by adding files and creating commits + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git add <files_to_be_part_of_commit> + $ git commit -m <descriptive_message> + + +Shall you need to split changes within a file into separate commits, use + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git add <file> -p + +After all changed files are committed, you can push the branch to your fork +and create a PR + +.. code-block:: console + + $ git push <you_origin> -u + + + +How to fix a bad rebase by "cherry-picking" commits: +---------------------------------------------------- + +Say you are working on a branch ``feature1``. It has several commits and is +ready to be merged. However, there are a few minor merge conflicts and so +you are asked to rebase onto ``develop`` upstream branch. Occasionally, it +happens so that a contributor rebases not on top of the upstream branch, but +on his/her local outdated copy of it. This would lead to an inclusion of the +whole lot of duplicated history and of course can not be merged as-is. + +One way to get out of troubles is to ``cherry-pick`` important commits. To +do that, first checkout a temporary back-up branch: + +.. code-block:: console + + git checkout -b tmp + +Now look at logs and save hashes of commits you would like to keep + +.. code-block:: console + + git log + +Next, go back to the original branch and reset it to ``develop``. +Before doing so, make sure that you local ``develop`` branch is up-to-date +with the upstream. + +.. code-block:: console + + git checkout feature1 + git reset --hard develop + +Now you can cherry-pick relevant commits + +.. code-block:: console + + git cherry-pick <hash1> + git cherry-pick <hash2> + + +push the modified branch to your fork + +.. code-block:: console + + git push -f + +and if everything looks good, delete the back-up: + +.. code-block:: console + + git branch -D tmp diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/index.rst b/lib/spack/docs/index.rst index 7203ed7eb7..2463a208ab 100644 --- a/lib/spack/docs/index.rst +++ b/lib/spack/docs/index.rst @@ -60,6 +60,7 @@ or refer to the full manual below. :maxdepth: 2 :caption: Contributing to Spack + contribution_guide packaging_guide developer_guide API Docs <spack> |