172 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
172 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
=============
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Branch policy
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=============
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In general, the trunk must be kept stable. People should be able to run
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production sites against the trunk at any time. Additionally, commits to trunk
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ought to be as atomic as possible -- smaller changes are better. Thus, large
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feature changes -- that is, changes too large to be encapsulated in a single
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patch, or changes that need multiple eyes on them -- must happen on dedicated
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branches.
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This means that if you want to work on a large feature -- anything that would
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take more than a single patch, or requires large-scale refactoring -- you need
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to do it on a feature branch. Our development process recognizes two options
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for feature branches:
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1. Feature branches using a distributed revision control system like
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Git_, Mercurial_, Bazaar_, etc.
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If you're familiar with one of these tools, this is probably your best
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option since it doesn't require any support or buy-in from the Django
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core developers.
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However, do keep in mind that Django will continue to use Subversion
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for the foreseeable future, and this will naturally limit the
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recognition of your branch. Further, if your branch becomes eligible
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for merging to trunk you'll need to find a core developer familiar
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with your DVCS of choice who'll actually perform the merge.
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If you do decided to start a distributed branch of Django and choose to
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make it public, please add the branch to the `Django branches`_ wiki
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page.
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2. Feature branches using SVN have a higher bar. If you want a branch
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in SVN itself, you'll need a "mentor" among the :doc:`core committers
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</internals/committers>`. This person is responsible for actually
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creating the branch, monitoring your process (see below), and
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ultimately merging the branch into trunk.
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If you want a feature branch in SVN, you'll need to ask in
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`django-developers`_ for a mentor.
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.. _git: http://git-scm.com/
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.. _mercurial: http://mercurial.selenic.com/
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.. _bazaar: http://bazaar.canonical.com/
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.. _django branches: https://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/DjangoBranches
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Branch rules
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------------
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We've got a few rules for branches born out of experience with what makes a
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successful Django branch.
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DVCS branches are obviously not under central control, so we have no way of
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enforcing these rules. However, if you're using a DVCS, following these rules
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will give you the best chance of having a successful branch (read: merged back
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to trunk).
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Developers with branches in SVN, however, **must** follow these rules. The
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branch mentor will keep on eye on the branch and **will delete it** if these
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rules are broken.
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* Only branch entire copies of the Django tree, even if work is only
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happening on part of that tree. This makes it painless to switch to a
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branch.
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* Merge changes from trunk no less than once a week, and preferably every
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couple-three days.
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In our experience, doing regular trunk merges is often the difference
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between a successful branch and one that fizzles and dies.
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If you're working on an SVN branch, you should be using `svnmerge.py`_
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to track merges from trunk.
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* Keep tests passing and documentation up-to-date. As with patches,
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we'll only merge a branch that comes with tests and documentation.
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.. _svnmerge.py: http://www.orcaware.com/svn/wiki/Svnmerge.py
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Once the branch is stable and ready to be merged into the trunk, alert
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`django-developers`_.
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After a branch has been merged, it should be considered "dead"; write access
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to it will be disabled, and old branches will be periodically "trimmed."
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To keep our SVN wrangling to a minimum, we won't be merging from a given
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branch into the trunk more than once.
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Using branches
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--------------
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To use a branch, you'll need to do two things:
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* Get the branch's code through Subversion.
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* Point your Python ``site-packages`` directory at the branch's version of
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the ``django`` package rather than the version you already have
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installed.
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Getting the code from Subversion
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To get the latest version of a branch's code, check it out using Subversion:
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.. code-block:: bash
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svn co https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches/<branch>/
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...where ``<branch>`` is the branch's name. See the `list of branch names`_.
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Alternatively, you can automatically convert an existing directory of the
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Django source code as long as you've checked it out via Subversion. To do the
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conversion, execute this command from within your ``django`` directory:
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.. code-block:: bash
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svn switch https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches/<branch>/
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The advantage of using ``svn switch`` instead of ``svn co`` is that the
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``switch`` command retains any changes you might have made to your local copy
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of the code. It attempts to merge those changes into the "switched" code. The
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disadvantage is that it may cause conflicts with your local changes if the
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"switched" code has altered the same lines of code.
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(Note that if you use ``svn switch``, you don't need to point Python at the
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new version, as explained in the next section.)
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.. _list of branch names: https://code.djangoproject.com/browser/django/branches
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.. _pointing-python-at-the-new-django-version:
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Pointing Python at the new Django version
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Once you've retrieved the branch's code, you'll need to change your Python
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``site-packages`` directory so that it points to the branch version of the
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``django`` directory. (The ``site-packages`` directory is somewhere such as
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``/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages`` or
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``/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages`` or ``C:\Python\site-packages``.)
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The simplest way to do this is by renaming the old ``django`` directory to
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``django.OLD`` and moving the trunk version of the code into the directory
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and calling it ``django``.
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Alternatively, you can use a symlink called ``django`` that points to the
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location of the branch's ``django`` package. If you want to switch back, just
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change the symlink to point to the old code.
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A third option is to use a path file (``<something>.pth``). This is a feature of
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the :mod:`site` module. First, make sure there are no files, directories or
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symlinks named ``django`` in your ``site-packages`` directory. Then create a
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text file named ``django.pth`` and save it to your ``site-packages`` directory.
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That file should contain a path to your copy of Django on a single line and
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optional comments. Here is an example that points to multiple branches. Just
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uncomment the line for the branch you want to use ('trunk' in this example) and
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make sure all other lines are commented::
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# Trunk is a svn checkout of:
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# https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk/
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#
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/path/to/trunk
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# <branch> is a svn checkout of:
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# https://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches/<branch>/
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#
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#/path/to/<branch>
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# On windows a path may look like this:
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# C:/path/to/<branch>
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.. _django-developers: http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers
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