diff --git a/docs/index.txt b/docs/index.txt index d85aabed4e6..b54951c064e 100644 --- a/docs/index.txt +++ b/docs/index.txt @@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ The Django open-source project :doc:`How to get involved ` | :doc:`The release process ` | :doc:`Team of committers ` | - :doc:`The Django source code repository ` + :doc:`The Django source code repository ` * **Design philosophies:** :doc:`Overview ` diff --git a/docs/internals/contributing/bugs-and-features.txt b/docs/internals/contributing/bugs-and-features.txt index 9492cde0abf..76a2bd23743 100644 --- a/docs/internals/contributing/bugs-and-features.txt +++ b/docs/internals/contributing/bugs-and-features.txt @@ -149,9 +149,8 @@ description. As with most open-source projects, code talks. If you are willing to write the code for the feature yourself or, even better, if you've already written it, -it's much more likely to be accepted. If it's a large feature that might need -multiple developers, we're always happy to give you an experimental branch in -our repository; see the :doc:`writing-code/branch-policy`. +it's much more likely to be accepted. Just fork Django on GitHub, create a +feature branch, and show us your work! See also: :ref:`documenting-new-features`. diff --git a/docs/internals/contributing/committing-code.txt b/docs/internals/contributing/committing-code.txt index 241a4b2418b..7912ff6e9c6 100644 --- a/docs/internals/contributing/committing-code.txt +++ b/docs/internals/contributing/committing-code.txt @@ -32,11 +32,91 @@ Decisions on new committers will follow the process explained in existing committer privately. Public requests for commit access are potential flame-war starters, and will be ignored. +Handling pull requests +---------------------- + +Since Django is now hosted at GitHub, many patches are provided in the form of +pull requests. When committing a pull request, make sure each individual +commit matches the commit guidelines described below. Contributors are +expected to provide the best pull requests possible. However, in practice, +committers are more familiar with the commit guidelines, and they may have to +rewrite the commit history. + +Here is one way to commit a pull request:: + + # Create a new branch tracking upstream/master -- upstream is assumed + # to be django/django. + git checkout -b pull_xxxx upstream/master + + # Download the patches from github and apply them. + curl https://github.com/django/django/pull/XXXX.patch | git am + +At this point, you can work on the code. Use ``git rebase -i`` and ``git +commit --amend`` to make sure the commits have the expected level of quality. +Once you're ready:: + + # Make sure master is ready to receive changes. + git checkout master + git pull upstream master + # Merge the work as "fast-forward" to master, to avoid a merge commit. + git merge --ff-only pull_xx + # Check that only the changes you expect will be pushed to upstream. + git push --dry-run upstream master + # Push! + git push upstream master + + # Get rid of the pull_xxxx branch. + git branch -d pull_xxxx + +An alternative is to add the contributor's repository as a new remote, do a +checkout of the branch and work from there:: + + git remote add https://github.com//django.git + git checkout pull_xxxx + +At this point, you can work on the code and continue as above. + +GitHub provides a one-click merge functionality for pull requests. This should +only be used if the pull request is 100% ready, and you have checked it for +errors (or trust the request maker enough to skip checks). Currently, it isn't +possible to control that the tests pass and that the docs build without +downloading the changes to your developement environment. + +When rewriting the commit history of a pull request, the goal is to make +Django's commit history is as usable as possible: + +* If a patch contains back-and-forth commits, then rewrite those into one. + Typically, a commit can add some code, and a second commit can fix + stylistic issues introduced in the first commit. + +* Separate changes to different commits by logical grouping: if you do a + stylistic cleanup at the same time you do other changes to a file, + separating the changes to two different commits will make reviewing + history easier. + +* Beware of merges of upstream branches in the pull requests. + +* Tests should pass and docs should build after each commit. Neither the + tests nor the docs should emit warnings. + +* Trivial and small patches usually are best done in one commit. Medium to + large work should be split in multiple commits if possible. + +Practicality beats purity, so it is up to each committer to decide how much +history mangling to do for a pull request. The main points are engaging the +community, getting work done, and having an usable commit history. + +.. _committing-guidlines: + Committing guidelines --------------------- -Please follow these guidelines when committing code to Django's Subversion -repository: +In addition, please follow the following guidelines when committing code to +Django's Git repository: + +* Never change the published history of django/django branches! **Never force- + push your changes to django/django.** If you absolutely must (for security + reasons for example) first discuss the situation with the core team. * For any medium-to-big changes, where "medium-to-big" is according to your judgment, please bring things up on the `django-developers`_ @@ -55,8 +135,23 @@ repository: * Bad: "Fixes Unicode bug in RSS API." * Bad: "Fixing Unicode bug in RSS API." + The commit message should be in lines of 72 chars maximum. There should be + a subject line, separated by a blank line and then paragraphs of 72 char + lines. The limits are soft. For the subject line, shorter is better. In the + body of the commit message more detail is better than less:: + + Fixed #18307 -- Added git workflow guidelines + + Refactored the Django's documentation to remove mentions of SVN + specific tasks. Added guidelines of how to use Git, GitHub, and + how to use pull request together with Trac instead. + + If the patch wasn't a pull request, you should credit the contributors in + the commit message: "Thanks A for report, B for the patch and C for the + review." + * For commits to a branch, prefix the commit message with the branch name. - For example: "magic-removal: Added support for mind reading." + For example: "[1.4.x] Fixed #NNNNN -- Added support for mind reading." * Limit commits to the most granular change that makes sense. This means, use frequent small commits rather than infrequent large commits. For @@ -65,31 +160,29 @@ repository: separate commit. This goes a *long way* in helping all core Django developers follow your changes. -* Separate bug fixes from feature changes. - - Bug fixes need to be added to the current bugfix branch as well as the - current trunk. +* Separate bug fixes from feature changes. Bugfixes may need to be backported + to the stable branch, according to the :ref:`backwards-compatibility policy + `. * If your commit closes a ticket in the Django `ticket tracker`_, begin - your commit message with the text "Fixed #abc", where "abc" is the + your commit message with the text "Fixed #NNNNN", where "NNNNN" is the number of the ticket your commit fixes. Example: "Fixed #123 -- Added - support for foo". We've rigged Subversion and Trac so that any commit - message in that format will automatically close the referenced ticket - and post a comment to it with the full commit message. + whizbang feature.". We've rigged Trac so that any commit message in that + format will automatically close the referenced ticket and post a comment + to it with the full commit message. If your commit closes a ticket and is in a branch, use the branch name - first, then the "Fixed #abc." For example: - "magic-removal: Fixed #123 -- Added whizbang feature." + first, then the "Fixed #NNNNN." For example: + "[1.4.x] Fixed #123 -- Added whizbang feature." - For the curious: we're using a `Trac post-commit hook`_ for this. + For the curious, we're using a `Trac plugin`_ for this. - .. _Trac post-commit hook: http://trac.edgewall.org/browser/trunk/contrib/trac-svn-post-commit-hook.cmd + .. _Trac plugin: https://github.com/aaugustin/trac-github * If your commit references a ticket in the Django `ticket tracker`_ but - does *not* close the ticket, include the phrase "Refs #abc", where "abc" - is the number of the ticket your commit references. We've rigged - Subversion and Trac so that any commit message in that format will - automatically post a comment to the appropriate ticket. + does *not* close the ticket, include the phrase "Refs #NNNNN", where "NNNNN" + is the number of the ticket your commit references. This will automatically + post a comment to the appropriate ticket. * Write commit messages for backports using this pattern:: @@ -99,9 +192,9 @@ repository: For example:: - [1.3.X] Fixed #17028 - Changed diveintopython.org -> diveintopython.net. + [1.3.x] Fixed #17028 - Changed diveintopython.org -> diveintopython.net. - Backport of r17115 from trunk. + Backport of 80c0cbf1c97047daed2c5b41b296bbc56fe1d7e3 from trunk. Reverting commits ----------------- @@ -111,14 +204,17 @@ discovered, please follow these guidelines: * Try very hard to ensure that mistakes don't happen. Just because we have a reversion policy doesn't relax your responsibility to aim for - the highest quality possible. Really: double-check your work before - you commit it in the first place! + the highest quality possible. Really: double-check your work, or have + it checked by another committer, before you commit it in the first place! * If possible, have the original author revert his/her own commit. * Don't revert another author's changes without permission from the original author. +* Use git revert -- this will make a reverse commit, but the original + commit will still be part of the commit history. + * If the original author can't be reached (within a reasonable amount of time -- a day or so) and the problem is severe -- crashing bug, major test failures, etc -- then ask for objections on the @@ -139,5 +235,9 @@ discovered, please follow these guidelines: * The release branch maintainer may back out commits to the release branch without permission if the commit breaks the release branch. +* If you mistakenly push a topic branch to django/django, just delete it. + For instance, if you did: ``git push upstream feature_antigravity``, + just do a reverse push: ``git push upstream :feature_antigravity``. + .. _django-developers: http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers .. _ticket tracker: https://code.djangoproject.com/newticket diff --git a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/branch-policy.txt b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/branch-policy.txt deleted file mode 100644 index c66f92722fd..00000000000 --- a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/branch-policy.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,171 +0,0 @@ -============= -Branch policy -============= - -In general, the trunk must be kept stable. People should be able to run -production sites against the trunk at any time. Additionally, commits to trunk -ought to be as atomic as possible -- smaller changes are better. Thus, large -feature changes -- that is, changes too large to be encapsulated in a single -patch, or changes that need multiple eyes on them -- must happen on dedicated -branches. - -This means that if you want to work on a large feature -- anything that would -take more than a single patch, or requires large-scale refactoring -- you need -to do it on a feature branch. Our development process recognizes two options -for feature branches: - -1. Feature branches using a distributed revision control system like - Git_, Mercurial_, Bazaar_, etc. - - If you're familiar with one of these tools, this is probably your best - option since it doesn't require any support or buy-in from the Django - core developers. - - However, do keep in mind that Django will continue to use Subversion - for the foreseeable future, and this will naturally limit the - recognition of your branch. Further, if your branch becomes eligible - for merging to trunk you'll need to find a core developer familiar - with your DVCS of choice who'll actually perform the merge. - - If you do decided to start a distributed branch of Django and choose to - make it public, please add the branch to the `Django branches`_ wiki - page. - -2. Feature branches using SVN have a higher bar. If you want a branch - in SVN itself, you'll need a "mentor" among the :doc:`core committers - `. This person is responsible for actually - creating the branch, monitoring your process (see below), and - ultimately merging the branch into trunk. - - If you want a feature branch in SVN, you'll need to ask in - `django-developers`_ for a mentor. - -.. _git: http://git-scm.com/ -.. _mercurial: http://mercurial.selenic.com/ -.. _bazaar: http://bazaar.canonical.com/ -.. _django branches: https://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/DjangoBranches - -Branch rules ------------- - -We've got a few rules for branches born out of experience with what makes a -successful Django branch. - -DVCS branches are obviously not under central control, so we have no way of -enforcing these rules. However, if you're using a DVCS, following these rules -will give you the best chance of having a successful branch (read: merged back -to trunk). - -Developers with branches in SVN, however, **must** follow these rules. The -branch mentor will keep on eye on the branch and **will delete it** if these -rules are broken. - -* Only branch entire copies of the Django tree, even if work is only - happening on part of that tree. This makes it painless to switch to a - branch. - -* Merge changes from trunk no less than once a week, and preferably every - couple-three days. - - In our experience, doing regular trunk merges is often the difference - between a successful branch and one that fizzles and dies. - - If you're working on an SVN branch, you should be using `svnmerge.py`_ - to track merges from trunk. - -* Keep tests passing and documentation up-to-date. As with patches, - we'll only merge a branch that comes with tests and documentation. - -.. _svnmerge.py: http://www.orcaware.com/svn/wiki/Svnmerge.py - -Once the branch is stable and ready to be merged into the trunk, alert -`django-developers`_. - -After a branch has been merged, it should be considered "dead"; write access -to it will be disabled, and old branches will be periodically "trimmed." -To keep our SVN wrangling to a minimum, we won't be merging from a given -branch into the trunk more than once. - -Using branches --------------- - -To use a branch, you'll need to do two things: - -* Get the branch's code through Subversion. - -* Point your Python ``site-packages`` directory at the branch's version of - the ``django`` package rather than the version you already have - installed. - -Getting the code from Subversion -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -To get the latest version of a branch's code, check it out using Subversion: - -.. code-block:: bash - - svn co https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches// - -...where ```` is the branch's name. See the `list of branch names`_. - -Alternatively, you can automatically convert an existing directory of the -Django source code as long as you've checked it out via Subversion. To do the -conversion, execute this command from within your ``django`` directory: - -.. code-block:: bash - - svn switch https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches// - -The advantage of using ``svn switch`` instead of ``svn co`` is that the -``switch`` command retains any changes you might have made to your local copy -of the code. It attempts to merge those changes into the "switched" code. The -disadvantage is that it may cause conflicts with your local changes if the -"switched" code has altered the same lines of code. - -(Note that if you use ``svn switch``, you don't need to point Python at the -new version, as explained in the next section.) - -.. _list of branch names: https://code.djangoproject.com/browser/django/branches - -.. _pointing-python-at-the-new-django-version: - -Pointing Python at the new Django version -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Once you've retrieved the branch's code, you'll need to change your Python -``site-packages`` directory so that it points to the branch version of the -``django`` directory. (The ``site-packages`` directory is somewhere such as -``/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages`` or -``/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages`` or ``C:\Python\site-packages``.) - -The simplest way to do this is by renaming the old ``django`` directory to -``django.OLD`` and moving the trunk version of the code into the directory -and calling it ``django``. - -Alternatively, you can use a symlink called ``django`` that points to the -location of the branch's ``django`` package. If you want to switch back, just -change the symlink to point to the old code. - -A third option is to use a path file (``.pth``). This is a feature of -the :mod:`site` module. First, make sure there are no files, directories or -symlinks named ``django`` in your ``site-packages`` directory. Then create a -text file named ``django.pth`` and save it to your ``site-packages`` directory. -That file should contain a path to your copy of Django on a single line and -optional comments. Here is an example that points to multiple branches. Just -uncomment the line for the branch you want to use ('trunk' in this example) and -make sure all other lines are commented:: - - # Trunk is a svn checkout of: - # https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk/ - # - /path/to/trunk - - # is a svn checkout of: - # https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches// - # - #/path/to/ - - # On windows a path may look like this: - # C:/path/to/ - -.. _django-developers: http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers diff --git a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/index.txt b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/index.txt index bd9b2a346a3..fe9c3cc933e 100644 --- a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/index.txt +++ b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/index.txt @@ -12,4 +12,4 @@ chances to be included in Django core: coding-style unit-tests submitting-patches - branch-policy + working-with-git diff --git a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/submitting-patches.txt b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/submitting-patches.txt index 1e28dc44914..5bd7774cb3d 100644 --- a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/submitting-patches.txt +++ b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/submitting-patches.txt @@ -6,6 +6,15 @@ We're always grateful for patches to Django's code. Indeed, bug reports with associated patches will get fixed *far* more quickly than those without patches. +Typo fixes and trivial documentation changes +-------------------------------------------- + +If you are fixing a really trivial issue, for example changing a word in the +documentation, the preferred way to provide the patch is using GitHub pull +requests without a Trac ticket. Trac tickets are still acceptable. + +See the :doc:`working-with-git` for more details on how to use pull requests. + "Claiming" tickets ------------------ @@ -69,38 +78,16 @@ Of course, going through the steps of claiming tickets is overkill in some cases. In the case of small changes, such as typos in the documentation or small bugs that will only take a few minutes to fix, you don't need to jump through the hoops of claiming tickets. Just submit your patch and be done with -it. +it. Of course, it is always acceptable, regardless of the ticket's ownership +status, to submit patches to a ticket if you happen to have a patch ready. .. _patch-style: Patch style ----------- -* Make sure your code matches our :doc:`coding-style`. - -* Submit patches in the format returned by the ``svn diff`` command. - An exception is for code changes that are described more clearly in - plain English than in code. Indentation is the most common example; it's - hard to read patches when the only difference in code is that it's - indented. - - Patches in ``git diff`` format are also acceptable. - -* When creating patches, always run ``svn diff`` from the top-level - ``trunk`` directory -- i.e. the one that contains ``django``, ``docs``, - ``tests``, ``AUTHORS``, etc. This makes it easy for other people to - apply your patches. - -* Attach patches to a ticket in the `ticket tracker`_, using the "attach - file" button. Please *don't* put the patch in the ticket description - or comment unless it's a single line patch. - -* Name the patch file with a ``.diff`` extension; this will let the ticket - tracker apply correct syntax highlighting, which is quite helpful. - -* Check the "Has patch" box on the ticket details. This will make it - obvious that the ticket includes a patch, and it will add the ticket to - the `list of tickets with patches`_. +Make sure that any contribution you do fulfills at least the following +requirements: * The code required to fix a problem or add a feature is an essential part of a patch, but it is not the only part. A good patch should also @@ -114,6 +101,37 @@ Patch style behavior of an existing feature, the patch should also contain documentation. +You can use either GitHub branches and pull requests or direct patches +to publish your work. If you use the Git workflow, then you should +announce your branch in the ticket by including a link to your branch. +When you think your work is ready to be merged in create a pull request. +See the :doc:`working-with-git` documentation for mode details. + +You can also use patches in Trac. When using this style, follow these +guidelines. + +* Submit patches in the format returned by the ``git diff`` command. + An exception is for code changes that are described more clearly in + plain English than in code. Indentation is the most common example; it's + hard to read patches when the only difference in code is that it's + indented. + +* Attach patches to a ticket in the `ticket tracker`_, using the "attach + file" button. Please *don't* put the patch in the ticket description + or comment unless it's a single line patch. + +* Name the patch file with a ``.diff`` extension; this will let the ticket + tracker apply correct syntax highlighting, which is quite helpful. + +Regardless of the way you submit your work, follow these steps. + +* Make sure your code matches our :doc:`coding-style`. + +* Check the "Has patch" box on the ticket details. This will make it + obvious that the ticket includes a patch, and it will add the ticket to + the `list of tickets with patches`_. + + Non-trivial patches ------------------- diff --git a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/unit-tests.txt b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/unit-tests.txt index 275ee154f61..9d6e76e4537 100644 --- a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/unit-tests.txt +++ b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/unit-tests.txt @@ -36,9 +36,7 @@ with this sample ``settings`` module, ``cd`` into the Django ./runtests.py --settings=test_sqlite If you get an ``ImportError: No module named django.contrib`` error, -you need to add your install of Django to your ``PYTHONPATH``. For -more details on how to do this, read -:ref:`pointing-python-at-the-new-django-version`. +you need to add your install of Django to your ``PYTHONPATH``. Using another ``settings`` module ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ diff --git a/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/working-with-git.txt b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/working-with-git.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..dee9b9e074d --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/working-with-git.txt @@ -0,0 +1,222 @@ +Working with Git and GitHub +=========================== + +Django uses `Git`_ for its source control. You can `download +`_ Git, but it's often easier to install with +your operating system's package manager. + +Django's `Git repository`_ is hosted on `GitHub`_, and it is recommended +that you also work using GitHub. + +After installing Git the first thing you should do is setup your name and +email:: + + $ git config --global user.name "Firstname Lastname" + $ git config --global user.email "your_email@youremail.com" + +Note that ``user.name`` should be your real name, not your GitHub nick. GitHub +should know the email you use in the ``user.email`` field, as this will be +used to associate your commits with your GitHub account. + +Now we are going to show how to create a GitHub pull request containing the +changes for Trac ticket #xxxxx. By creating a fully ready pull request you +will make the committers' job easier, and thus your work is more likely to be +merged into Django. You can also upload a traditional patch to Trac, but it's +less practical for reviews. + +.. _Git: http://git-scm.com/ +.. _GitHub: https://github.com/ +.. _Git repository: https://github.com/django/django/ + +Setting up local repository +--------------------------- + +When you have created a GitHub account, with the nick "github_nick", and +forked Django's repository, you should create a local copy of your fork:: + + git clone git@github.com:github_nick/django.git + +This will create a new directory "django" containing a clone of your GitHub +repository. Your GitHub repository will be called "origin" in Git. You should +also setup django/django as an "upstream" remote:: + + git remote add upstream git@github.com:django/django.git + git fetch upstream + +You can add other remotes similarly, for example:: + + git remote add akaariai git@github.com:akaariai/django.git + +Working on a ticket +------------------- + +When working on a ticket you will almost always want to create a new branch +for the work, and base that work on upstream/master:: + + git checkout -b ticket_xxxxx upstream/master + +If you are working for a fix on the 1.4 branch, you would instead do:: + + git checkout -b ticket_xxxxx_1_4 upstream/stable/1.4.x + +Assume the work is carried on ticket_xxxxx branch. Make some changes and +commit them:: + + git commit + +When writing the commit message, you should follow the :ref:`commit message +guidelines ` to ease the work of the committer. If +you're uncomfortable with English, try at least to describe precisely what the +commit does. + +If you need to do additional work on your branch, commit as often as +necessary:: + + git commit -m 'Added two more tests for edge cases' + +Publishing work +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +You can publish your work on GitHub by just using:: + + git push origin ticket_xxxxx + +When you go to your GitHub page you will notice a new branch has been created. +If you are working on a Trac ticket, you should mention in the ticket that +your work is available from branch ticket_xxxxx of your github repo. Include a +link to your branch. + +Note that the above branch is called a "topic branch" in Git parlance. This +means that other people should not base their work on your branch. In +particular this means you are free to rewrite the history of this branch (by +using ``git rebase`` for example). There are also "public branches". These are +branches other people are supposed to fork, and thus their history should +never change. Good examples of public branches are the ``master`` and +``stable/A.B.x`` branches in the django/django repository. + +When you think your work is ready to be pulled into Django, you should create +a pull request at GitHub. A good pull request contains: + +* Commits with one logical change in each, following the + :doc:`coding style `. + +* Well formed messages for each commit: a summary line and then paragraphs + wrapped at 72 characters thereafter. See the :ref:`committing guidelines + ` for more details. + +* Documentation and tests, if needed. Actually tests are always needed, except + for documentation changes. + +* The test suite passes and the documentation builds without warnings. + +Once you have created your pull request, you should add a comment in the +related Trac ticket explaining what you've done. In particular you should tell +in which environment you've run the tests, for instance: "all tests pass under +SQLite and MySQL". + +Your pull request should be ready for merging into Django. Pull requests at +GitHub have only two states: open and closed. The committers who deals with +your pull request has only two options: merge it or close it. For this reason, +it isn't useful to make a pull request until the code is ready for merging -- +or sufficiently close that a committer will finish it himself. + +Rebasing branches +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +In the example above you created two commits, the "Fixed ticket_xxxxx" commit +and "Added two more tests" commit. We do not want to have the "Added two more +tests" commit in the Django's repository as it would just be useless noise. +Instead, we would like to only have one commit. To rework the history of your +branch you can squash the commits into one by using interactive rebase:: + + git rebase -i HEAD~2 + +The HEAD~2 above is shorthand for two latest commits. The above command +will open an editor showing the two commits, prefixed with the word "pick". +You should change the second line to "squash" instead. This will keep the +first commit, and squash the second commit to the first one. Save and quit +the editor. A second editor window should open. Here you can reword the +commit message for the commit. + +You can also use the "edit" option in rebase. This way you can change a single +commit. For example:: + + git rebase -i HEAD~3 + # Choose edit, pick, pick for the commits + # Now you are able to rework the commit (use git add normally to add changes) + # When finished, commit work with "--amend" and continue + git commit --amend + # reword the commit message if needed + git rebase --continue + # The second and third commit should be applied. + +If you need to change an already published topic branch at GitHub, you will +need to force-push the changes:: + + git push -f origin ticket_xxxxx + +Note that this will rewrite history of ticket_xxxxx - if you check the commit +hashes before and after the operation at GitHub you will notice that the +commit hashes do not match any more. This is acceptable, as the branch is topic +branch, and nobody should be basing their work on this branch. + +After upstream has changed +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +When upstream (django/django) has changed, you should rebase your work. To +do this, use:: + + git fetch upstream + git rebase + +The work is automatically rebased using the branch you forked on, in the +example case using upstream/master. + +The rebase command removes all your local commits temporarily, applies the +upstream commits, and then applies your local commits again on the work. If +there are merge conflicts you will need to resolve them and then use ``git +rebase --continue``. At any point you can use ``git rebase --abort`` to return +to the original state. + +Note that you want to rebase on upstream, not merge the upstream. The reason +for this is that by rebasing, your commits will always be on top of the +upstream's work, not mixed with the changes in the upstream. This way your +branch only contains commits related to its topic, and this makes squashing +easier. + +After review +------------ + +It is unusual to get any non-trivial amount of code into core without changes +requested by reviewers. In this case, it is often a good idea to add the +changes as one incremental commit to your work. This allows the reviewer to +easily check what changes you have done:: + + # Do changes required by the reviewer, commit often. + # Before publishing the changes, rebase your work. Assume you added two + # commits to the work. + git rebase -i HEAD~2 + # squash the second commit into the first, write a commit message something + # like this: + Made changes asked in review by the_reviewer + + - Fixed whitespace errors in foo/bar + - Reworded the doc string of the_method() + + # Push your work back to your github repo, there should not be any need + # for force (-f) push, as you didn't touch the public commits in the rebase. + git push origin ticket_xxxxx + # Check your pull request, it should now contain the new commit, too. + +The committer is likely to squash the review commit into the previous commit +when committing the code. + +Summary +------- + +* Work on GitHub if possible. +* Announce your work on the Trac ticket by linking to your GitHub branch. +* When you have something ready, make a pull request. +* Make your pull requests as good as you can. +* When doing fixes to your work, use ``git rebase -i`` to squash the commits. +* When upstream has changed, do ``git fetch upstream; git rebase``. diff --git a/docs/internals/git.txt b/docs/internals/git.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..c6e83df0ad2 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/internals/git.txt @@ -0,0 +1,229 @@ +================================= +The Django source code repository +================================= + +When deploying a Django application into a real production environment, you +will almost always want to use `an official packaged release of Django`_. +However, if you'd like to try out in-development code from an upcoming release +or contribute to the development of Django, you'll need to obtain a clone of +Django's source code repository. This document covers the way the code +repository is laid out and how to work with and find things in it. + +.. _an official packaged release of Django: https://www.djangoproject.com/download/ + +High-level overview +=================== + +The Django source code repository uses `Git`_ to track changes to the code +over time, so you'll need a copy of the Git client (a program called ``git``) +on your computer, and you'll want to familiarize yourself with the basics of +how Git works. Git's web site offers downloads for various operating systems. +The site contains also vast amounts of `documentation`_. + +The Django Git repository is located online at `github.com/django/django +`_. It contains the full source +code for all Django releases, and you can browse it online. + +The Git repository includes several `branches`_: + +* ``master`` contains the main in-development code which will become + the next packaged release of Django. This is where most development + activity is focused. + +* ``stable/A.B.x`` are the maintenance branches. They are used to support + older versions of Django. + +* ``soc20XX/`` branches were used by students who worked on Django + during the 2009 and 2010 Google Summer of Code programs. + +* ``attic/`` branches were used to develop major or experimental new + features without affecting the rest of Django's code. + +The Git repository also contains `tags`_. They identify snapshots of Django's +code at various important points in its history. Mostly these are the exact +revisions from which packaged Django releases were produced. + +The source code for `Djangoproject.com `_ Web +site can be found at `github.com/django/djangoproject.com +`_. + +.. _Git: http://git-scm.com/ +.. _documentation: http://git-scm.com/documentation +.. _branches: https://github.com/django/django/branches +.. _tags: https://github.com/django/django/tags + +Working with Django's master branch +=================================== + +If you'd like to try out the in-development code for the next release of +Django, or if you'd like to contribute to Django by fixing bugs or developing +new features, you'll want to get the code from the master branch. + +Note that this will get *all* of Django: in addition to the top-level +``django`` module containing Python code, you'll also get a copy of Django's +documentation, test suite, packaging scripts and other miscellaneous bits. +Django's code will be present in your clone as a directory named +``django``. + +To try out the in-development code with your own applications, simply place +the directory containing your clone on your Python import path. Then +``import`` statements which look for Django will find the ``django`` module +within your clone. + +If you're going to be working on Django's code (say, to fix a bug or +develop a new feature), you can probably stop reading here and move +over to :doc:`the documentation for contributing to Django +`, which covers things like the preferred +coding style and how to generate and submit a patch. + +Branches +======== + +Django uses branches for two main purposes: + +1. Development of major or experimental features, to keep them from + affecting progress on other work in master. + +2. Security and bug-fix support for older releases of Django, during + their support lifetimes. + +Feature-development branches +---------------------------- + +.. admonition:: Historical information + + Since Django moved to Git in 2012, anyone can clone the repository and + create his own branches, alleviating the need for official branches in the + source code repository. + + The following section is mostly useful if you're exploring the repository's + history, for example if you're trying to understand how some features were + designed. + +Feature-development branches tend by their nature to be temporary. Some +produce successful features which are merged back into Django's master to +become part of an official release, but others do not; in either case there +comes a time when the branch is no longer being actively worked on by any +developer. At this point the branch is considered closed. + +Unfortunately, Django used to be maintained with the Subversion revision +control system, that has no standard way of indicating this. As a workaround, +branches of Django which are closed and no longer maintained were moved into +``attic``. + +For reference, the following are branches whose code eventually became +part of Django itself, and so are no longer separately maintained: + +* ``boulder-oracle-sprint``: Added support for Oracle databases to + Django's object-relational mapper. This has been part of Django + since the 1.0 release. + +* ``gis``: Added support for geographic/spatial queries to Django's + object-relational mapper. This has been part of Django since the 1.0 + release, as the bundled application ``django.contrib.gis``. + +* ``i18n``: Added :doc:`internationalization support ` to + Django. This has been part of Django since the 0.90 release. + +* ``magic-removal``: A major refactoring of both the internals and + public APIs of Django's object-relational mapper. This has been part + of Django since the 0.95 release. + +* ``multi-auth``: A refactoring of :doc:`Django's bundled + authentication framework ` which added support for + :ref:`authentication backends `. This has + been part of Django since the 0.95 release. + +* ``new-admin``: A refactoring of :doc:`Django's bundled + administrative application `. This became part of + Django as of the 0.91 release, but was superseded by another + refactoring (see next listing) prior to the Django 1.0 release. + +* ``newforms-admin``: The second refactoring of Django's bundled + administrative application. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 + release, and is the basis of the current incarnation of + ``django.contrib.admin``. + +* ``queryset-refactor``: A refactoring of the internals of Django's + object-relational mapper. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 + release. + +* ``unicode``: A refactoring of Django's internals to consistently use + Unicode-based strings in most places within Django and Django + applications. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 release. + +When Django moved from SVN to Git, the information about branch merges wasn't +preserved in the source code repository. This means that the ``master`` branch +of Django doesn't contain merge commits for the above branches. However, this +information is `available as a grafts file`_. You can restore it by putting +the following lines in ``.git/info/grafts`` in your local clone:: + + ac64e91a0cadc57f4bc5cd5d66955832320ca7a1 553a20075e6991e7a60baee51ea68c8adc520d9a 0cb8e31823b2e9f05c4ae868c19f5f38e78a5f2e + 79e68c225b926302ebb29c808dda8afa49856f5c d0f57e7c7385a112cb9e19d314352fc5ed5b0747 aa239e3e5405933af6a29dac3cf587b59a099927 + 5cf8f684237ab5addaf3549b2347c3adf107c0a7 cb45fd0ae20597306cd1f877efc99d9bd7cbee98 e27211a0deae2f1d402537f0ebb64ad4ccf6a4da + f69cf70ed813a8cd7e1f963a14ae39103e8d5265 d5dbeaa9be359a4c794885c2e9f1b5a7e5e51fb8 d2fcbcf9d76d5bb8a661ee73dae976c74183098b + aab3a418ac9293bb4abd7670f65d930cb0426d58 4ea7a11659b8a0ab07b0d2e847975f7324664f10 adf4b9311d5d64a2bdd58da50271c121ea22e397 + ff60c5f9de3e8690d1e86f3e9e3f7248a15397c8 7ef212af149540aa2da577a960d0d87029fd1514 45b4288bb66a3cda401b45901e85b645674c3988 + 9dda4abee1225db7a7b195b84c915fdd141a7260 4fe5c9b7ee09dc25921918a6dbb7605edb374bc9 3a7c14b583621272d4ef53061287b619ce3c290d + a19ed8aea395e8e07164ff7d85bd7dff2f24edca dc375fb0f3b7fbae740e8cfcd791b8bccb8a4e66 42ea7a5ce8aece67d16c6610a49560c1493d4653 + 9c52d56f6f8a9cdafb231adf9f4110473099c9b5 c91a30f00fd182faf8ca5c03cd7dbcf8b735b458 4a5c5c78f2ecd4ed8859cd5ac773ff3a01bccf96 + 953badbea5a04159adbfa970f5805c0232b6a401 4c958b15b250866b70ded7d82aa532f1e57f96ae 5664a678b29ab04cad425c15b2792f4519f43928 + 471596fc1afcb9c6258d317c619eaf5fd394e797 4e89105d64bb9e04c409139a41e9c7aac263df4c 3e9035a9625c8a8a5e88361133e87ce455c4fc13 + 9233d0426537615e06b78d28010d17d5a66adf44 6632739e94c6c38b4c5a86cf5c80c48ae50ac49f 18e151bc3f8a85f2766d64262902a9fcad44d937 + +.. _available as a grafts file: https://github.com/ramiro/django-git-grafts + +Additionally, the following branches are closed, but their code was +never merged into Django and the features they aimed to implement +were never finished: + +* ``full-history`` + +* ``generic-auth`` + +* ``multiple-db-support`` + +* ``per-object-permissions`` + +* ``schema-evolution`` + +* ``schema-evolution-ng`` + +* ``search-api`` + +* ``sqlalchemy`` + +All of the above-mentioned branches now reside in ``attic``. + +Finally, the repository contains ``soc2009/xxx`` and ``soc2010/xxx`` feature +branches, used for Google Summer of Code projects. + +Support and bugfix branches +--------------------------- + +In addition to fixing bugs in current master, the Django project provides +official bug-fix support for the most recent released version of Django, and +security support for the two most recently-released versions of Django. This +support is provided via branches in which the necessary bug or security fixes +are applied; the branches are then used as the basis for issuing bugfix or +security releases. + +These branches can be found in the repository as ``stable/A.B.x`` +branches, and new branches will be created there after each new Django +release. For example, shortly after the release of Django 1.0, the branch +``stable/1.0.x`` was created to receive bug fixes, and shortly after the +release of Django 1.1 the branch ``stable/1.1.x`` was created. + +Official support for the above mentioned releases has expired, and so they no +longer receive direct maintenance from the Django project. However, the +branches continue to exist and interested community members have occasionally +used them to provide unofficial support for old Django releases. + +Tags +==== + +Each Django release is tagged and signed by Django's release manage. + +The tags can be found on GitHub's `tags`_ page. + +.. _tags: https://github.com/django/django/tags diff --git a/docs/internals/index.txt b/docs/internals/index.txt index 991236bb3e5..3dba550fed9 100644 --- a/docs/internals/index.txt +++ b/docs/internals/index.txt @@ -20,4 +20,4 @@ the hood". committers release-process deprecation - svn + git diff --git a/docs/internals/release-process.txt b/docs/internals/release-process.txt index 8ead4d7ae72..b998a7d3d5a 100644 --- a/docs/internals/release-process.txt +++ b/docs/internals/release-process.txt @@ -84,6 +84,8 @@ person will be responsible for making sure that bug fixes are applied to both trunk and the maintained micro-release branch. This person will also work with the release manager to decide when to release the micro releases. +.. _backwards-compatibility-policy: + Supported versions ================== diff --git a/docs/internals/svn.txt b/docs/internals/svn.txt deleted file mode 100644 index fe1e1710088..00000000000 --- a/docs/internals/svn.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,254 +0,0 @@ -================================= -The Django source code repository -================================= - - -When deploying a Django application into a real production -environment, you will almost always want to use `an official packaged -release of Django`_. However, if you'd like to try out in-development -code from an upcoming release or contribute to the development of -Django, you'll need to obtain a checkout from Django's source code -repository. This document covers the way the code repository is laid -out and how to work with and find things in it. - - -.. _an official packaged release of Django: https://www.djangoproject.com/download/ - - -High-level overview -=================== - -The Django source code repository uses `Subversion`_ to track changes -to the code over time, so you'll need a copy of the Subversion client -(a program called ``svn``) on your computer, and you'll want to -familiarize yourself with the basics of how Subversion -works. Subversion's Web site offers downloads for various operating -systems, and `a free online book`_ is available to help you get up to -speed with using Subversion. - -The Django Subversion repository is located online at -`code.djangoproject.com/svn `_. `A -friendly Web-based interface for browsing the code`_ is also -available, though when using Subversion you'll always want to use the -repository address instead. At the top level of the repository are two -directories: ``django`` contains the full source code for all Django -releases, while ``djangoproject.com`` contains the source code and -templates for the `djangoproject.com `_ -Web site. For trying out in-development Django code, or contributing -to Django, you'll always want to check out code from some location in -the ``django`` directory. - -Inside the ``django`` directory, Django's source code is organized -into three areas: - -* ``branches`` contains branched copies of Django's code, which are - (or were) maintained for various purposes. Some branches exist to - provide a place to develop major or experimental new features - without affecting the rest of Django's code, while others serve to - provide bug fixes or support for older Django releases. - -* ``tags`` contains snapshots of Django's code at various important - points in its history; mostly these are the exact revisions from - which packaged Django releases were produced. - -* ``trunk`` contains the main in-development code which will become - the next packaged release of Django, and is where most development - activity is focused. - - -.. _Subversion: http://subversion.tigris.org/ -.. _a free online book: http://svnbook.red-bean.com/ -.. _A friendly Web-based interface for browsing the code: https://code.djangoproject.com/browser/ - - -Working with Django's trunk -=========================== - -If you'd like to try out the in-development code for the next release -of Django, or if you'd like to contribute to Django by fixing bugs or -developing new features, you'll want to get the code from trunk. You -can get a complete copy of this code (a "Subversion checkout") by -typing:: - - svn co https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk/ - -Note that this will get *all* of Django: in addition to the top-level -``django`` module containing Python code, you'll also get a copy of -Django's documentation, unit-test suite, packaging scripts and other -miscellaneous bits. Django's code will be present in your checkout as -a directory named ``django``. - -To try out the in-development trunk code with your own applications, -simply place the directory containing your checkout on your Python -import path. Then ``import`` statements which look for Django will find -the ``django`` module within your checkout. - -If you're going to be working on Django's code (say, to fix a bug or -develop a new feature), you can probably stop reading here and move -over to :doc:`the documentation for contributing to Django -`, which covers things like the preferred -coding style and how to generate and submit a patch. - - -Branches -======== - -Django uses branches for two main purposes: - -1. Development of major or experimental features, to keep them from - affecting progress on other work in trunk. - -2. Security and bug-fix support for older releases of Django, during - their support lifetimes. - - -Feature-development branches ----------------------------- - -Feature-development branches tend by their nature to be -temporary. Some produce successful features which are merged back into -Django's trunk to become part of an official release, but others do -not; in either case there comes a time when the branch is no longer -being actively worked on by any developer. At this point the branch is -considered closed. - -Unfortunately, Subversion has no standard way of indicating this. As a -workaround, branches of Django which are closed and no longer -maintained are moved into the directory ``django/branches/attic``. - -For reference, the following are branches whose code eventually became -part of Django itself, and so are no longer separately maintained: - -* ``boulder-oracle-sprint``: Added support for Oracle databases to - Django's object-relational mapper. This has been part of Django - since the 1.0 release. - -* ``gis``: Added support for geographic/spatial queries to Django's - object-relational mapper. This has been part of Django since the 1.0 - release, as the bundled application ``django.contrib.gis``. - -* ``i18n``: Added :doc:`internationalization support ` to - Django. This has been part of Django since the 0.90 release. - -* ``magic-removal``: A major refactoring of both the internals and - public APIs of Django's object-relational mapper. This has been part - of Django since the 0.95 release. - -* ``multi-auth``: A refactoring of :doc:`Django's bundled - authentication framework ` which added support for - :ref:`authentication backends `. This has - been part of Django since the 0.95 release. - -* ``new-admin``: A refactoring of :doc:`Django's bundled - administrative application `. This became part of - Django as of the 0.91 release, but was superseded by another - refactoring (see next listing) prior to the Django 1.0 release. - -* ``newforms-admin``: The second refactoring of Django's bundled - administrative application. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 - release, and is the basis of the current incarnation of - ``django.contrib.admin``. - -* ``queryset-refactor``: A refactoring of the internals of Django's - object-relational mapper. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 - release. - -* ``unicode``: A refactoring of Django's internals to consistently use - Unicode-based strings in most places within Django and Django - applications. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 release. - -Additionally, the following branches are closed, but their code was -never merged into Django and the features they aimed to implement -were never finished: - -* ``full-history`` - -* ``generic-auth`` - -* ``multiple-db-support`` - -* ``per-object-permissions`` - -* ``schema-evolution`` - -* ``schema-evolution-ng`` - -* ``search-api`` - -* ``sqlalchemy`` - -All of the above-mentioned branches now reside in -``django/branches/attic``. - - -Support and bugfix branches ---------------------------- - -In addition to fixing bugs in current trunk, the Django project -provides official bug-fix support for the most recent released version -of Django, and security support for the two most recently-released -versions of Django. This support is provided via branches in which the -necessary bug or security fixes are applied; the branches are then -used as the basis for issuing bugfix or security releases. - -As of the Django 1.0 release, these branches can be found in the -repository in the directory ``django/branches/releases``, and new branches -will be created there approximately one month after each new Django -release. For example, shortly after the release of Django 1.0, the -branch ``django/branches/releases/1.0.X`` was created to receive bug -fixes, and shortly after the release of Django 1.1 the branch -``django/branches/releases/1.1.X`` was created. - -Prior to the Django 1.0 release, these branches were maintained within -the top-level ``django/branches`` directory, and so the following -branches exist there and provided support for older Django releases: - -* ``0.90-bugfixes`` - -* ``0.91-bugfixes`` - -* ``0.95-bugfixes`` - -* ``0.96-bugfixes`` - -Official support for those releases has expired, and so they no longer -receive direct maintenance from the Django project. However, the -branches continue to exist and interested community members have -occasionally used them to provide unofficial support for old Django -releases. - - -Tags -==== - -The directory ``django/tags`` within the repository contains complete -copies of the Django source code as it existed at various points in -its history. These "tagged" copies of Django are *never* changed or -updated; new tags may be added as needed, but once added they are -considered read-only and serve as useful guides to Django's -development history. - -Within ``django/tags/releases`` are copies of the code which formed each -packaged release of Django, and each tag is named with the version -number of the release to which it corresponds. So, for example, -``django/tags/releases/1.1`` is a complete copy of the code which was -packaged as the Django 1.1 release. - -Within ``django/tags/notable_moments`` are copies of the Django code from -points which do not directly correspond to releases, but which are -nonetheless important historical milestones for Django -development. The current "notable moments" marked there are: - -* ``ipo``: Django's code as it existed at the moment Django was first - publicly announced in 2005. - -* ``pre-magic-removal``: The state of Django's code just before the - merging of the ``magic-removal`` branch (described above), which - significantly updated Django's object-relational mapper. - -* ``pre-newforms-admin``: The state of Django's code just before the - merging of the ``newforms-admin`` branch (see above), which - significantly updated Django's bundled administrative application. - -* Tags corresponding to each of the alpha, beta and release-candidate - packages in the run up to the Django 1.0 release.