2015-01-21 20:05:47 +00:00
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How to submit a patch
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=====================
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Making changes
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--------------
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First create a branch for your changes:
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~~~~
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2015-04-16 20:28:06 +00:00
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$ git checkout -b my_feature origin/master
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2015-01-21 20:05:47 +00:00
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~~~~
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After making your changes, create a commit
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~~~~
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$ git add [file1] [file2] ...
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$ git commit
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~~~~
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If your branch gets out of date, you will need to update it:
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~~~~
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$ git pull --rebase
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$ gclient sync
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~~~~
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Adding a unit test
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------------------
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If you are willing to change Skia codebase, it's nice to add a test at the same
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time. Skia has a simple unittest framework so you can add a case to it.
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2015-01-30 15:00:42 +00:00
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Test code is located under the 'tests' directory.
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2015-01-21 20:05:47 +00:00
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2015-01-30 15:00:42 +00:00
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See [Writing Unit and Rendering Tests](tests) for details.
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2015-01-21 20:05:47 +00:00
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Unit tests are best, but if your change touches rendering and you can't think of
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an automated way to verify the results, consider writing a GM test or a new page
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of SampleApp. Also, if your change is the GPU code, you may not be able to write
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it as part of the standard unit test suite, but there are GPU-specific testing
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paths you can extend.
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Submitting a patch
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------------------
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For your code to be accepted into the codebase, you must complete the
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[Individual Contributor License
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Agreement](http://code.google.com/legal/individual-cla-v1.0.html). You can do
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this online, and it only takes a minute. If you are contributing on behalf of a
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corporation, you must fill out the [Corporate Contributor License Agreement](http://code.google.com/legal/corporate-cla-v1.0.html)
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and send it to us as described on that page. Add your (or your organization's)
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name and contact info to the AUTHORS file as a part of your CL.
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Now that you've made a change and written a test for it, it's ready for the code
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review! Submit a patch and getting it reviewed is fairly easy with depot tools.
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Use git-cl, which comes with [depot tools](http://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/developers/how-tos/install-depot-tools).
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For help, run git-cl help.
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### Configuring git-cl
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Before using any git-cl commands you will need to configure it to point at the
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correct code review server. This is accomplished with the following command:
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~~~~
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git cl config https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+/master/codereview.settings
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~~~~
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### Find a reviewer
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Ideally, the reviewer is someone who is familiar with the area of code you are
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touching. If you have doubts, look at the git blame for the file to see who else
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has been editing it.
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### Uploading changes for review
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Skia uses Chromium's code review [site](http://codereview.chromium.org) and the
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Rietveld open source code review tool.
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Use git cl to upload your change:
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$ git cl upload
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~~~~
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You may have to enter a Google Account username and password to authenticate
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yourself to codereview.chromium.org. A free gmail account will do fine, or any
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other type of Google account. It does not have to match the email address you
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configured using git config --global user.email above, but it can.
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The command output should include a URL, similar to
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(https://codereview.chromium.org/111893004/), indicating where your changelist
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can be reviewed.
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### Request review
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Go to the supplied URL or go to the code review page and click **Issues created
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by me**. Select the change you want to submit for review and click **Edit
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Issue**. Enter at least one reviewer's email address and click **Update Issue**.
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Now click on **Publish+Mail Comments**, add any optional notes, and send your
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change off for review. Unless you publish your change, no one will know to look
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at it.
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_Note_: If you don't see editing commands on the review page, click **Log In**
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in the upper right. _Hint_: You can add -r reviewer@example.com --send-mail to
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send the email directly when uploading a change in both gcl and git-cl.
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The review process
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------------------
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If you submit a giant patch, or do a bunch of work without discussing it with
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the relevant people, you may have a hard time convincing anyone to review it!
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Please follow the guidelines on how to conduct a code review detailed here:
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https://code.google.com/p/rietveld/wiki/CodeReviewHelp
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Code reviews are an important part of the engineering process. The reviewer will
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almost always have suggestions or style fixes for you, and it's important not to
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take such suggestions personally or as a commentary on your abilities or ideas.
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This is a process where we work together to make sure that the highest quality
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code gets submitted!
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You will likely get email back from the reviewer with comments. Fix these and
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update the patch set in the issue by uploading again. The upload will explain
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that it is updating the current CL and ask you for a message explaining the
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change. Be sure to respond to all comments before you request review of an
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update.
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If you need to update code the code on an already uploaded CL, simply edit the
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code, commit it again locally, and then run git cl upload again e.g.
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~~~~
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echo "" > GOATS
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git add GOATS
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git commit -m 'add newline fix to GOATS'
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git cl upload
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~~~~
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Once you're ready for another review, use **Publish+Mail Comments** again to
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send another notification (it is helpful to tell the review what you did with
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respect to each of their comments). When the reviewer is happy with your patch,
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they will say "LGTM" ("Looks Good To Me").
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_Note_: As you work through the review process, both you and your reviewers
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should converse using the code review interface, and send notes using
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**Publish+Mail Comments**.
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Once your commit has gone in, you should delete the branch containing your change:
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~~~~
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$ git checkout master
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$ git branch -D my_feature
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~~~~
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Final Testing
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-------------
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Skia's principal downstream user is Chromium, and any change to Skia rendering
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output can break Chromium. If your change alters rendering in any way, you are
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expected to test for and alleviate this. (You may be able to find a Skia team
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member to help you, but the onus remains on each individual contributor to avoid
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breaking Chrome.
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### Evaluating Impact on Chromium
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Keep in mind that Skia is rolled daily into Blink and Chromium. Run local tests
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and watch canary bots for results to ensure no impact. If you are submitting
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changes that will impact layout tests, follow the guides below and/or work with
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your friendly Skia-Blink engineer to evaluate, rebaseline, and land your
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changes.
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Resources:
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[How to land Skia changes that change Blink layout test results](../chrome/layouttest)
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If you're changing the Skia API, you may need to make an associated change in Chromium.
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If you do, please follow these instructions: [Landing Skia changes which require Chrome changes](../chrome/changes)
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Check in your changes
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---------------------
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### Non-Skia-committers
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If you already have committer rights, you can follow the directions below to
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commit your change directly to Skia's repository.
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If you don't have committer rights in https://skia.googlesource.com/skia.git ...
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first of all, thanks for submitting your patch! We really appreciate these
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submissions. Unfortunately, we don't yet have a way for Skia committers to mark
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a patch as "approved" and thus allow non-committers to commit them. So instead,
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please ask a Skia committer to land your patch for you or land using the commit
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queue.
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As part of this process, the Skia committer may create a new codereview
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containing your patch (perhaps with some small adjustments at her discretion).
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If so, you can mark your codereview as "Closed", and update it with a link to
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the new codereview.
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### Skia committers:
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* tips on how to apply the externally provided patch are [here](./patch)
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* when landing externally contributed patches, please note the original
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contributor's identity (and provide a link to the original codereview) in the commit message
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git-cl will squash all your commits into a single one with the description you used when you uploaded your change.
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~~~~
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git cl land
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or
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git cl land -c 'Contributor Name <email@example.com>'
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~~~~
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