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<!--{
"Title": "Contribution Guide"
}-->
<p>
The Go project welcomes all contributors. The process of contributing
to the Go project may be different than many projects you are used to.
This document is intended as a guide to help you through the contribution
process. This guide assumes you have a basic understanding of Git and Go.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
In addition to the information here, the Go community maintains a
<a href="https://golang.org/wiki/CodeReview">CodeReview</a> wiki page.
Feel free to contribute to the wiki as you learn the review process.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Note that the <code>gccgo</code> front end lives elsewhere;
see <a href="gccgo_contribute.html">Contributing to gccgo</a>.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h2 id="contributor">Becoming a contributor</h2>
<h3>Overview</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
The first step is registering as a Go contributor and configuring your environment.
Here is a very quick checklist of the required steps, that you will need
to follow:
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<ul>
<li>
<b>Step 0</b>: Decide on a single Google Account you would be using to contribute to Go.
Use that account for all the following steps and make sure that <code>git</code>
is configured to create commits with that account's e-mail address.
</li>
<li>
<b>Step 1</b>: <a href="https://cla.developers.google.com/clas">Sign and submit</a> a
CLA (Contributor License Agreement).
</li>
<li>
<b>Step 2</b>: Configure authentication credentials for our <code>git</code> repository.
Go to <a href="https://go.googlesource.com/">go.googlesource.com</a>, click
on "Generate Password" (top right), and follow the instructions.
</li>
<li>
<b>Step 3</b>: Register to Gerrit, the code review tool used by the Go team, by <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/login/">visiting this page</a>. The CLA and the registration
need to be done only once for your account.
</li>
<li>
<b>Step 4</b>: Install <code>git-codereview</code> by running
<code>go get -u golang.org/x/review/git-codereview</code>
</li>
</ul>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
If you prefer, we have an automated tool that walks through these steps. Just
run:
</p>
<pre>
$ go get -u golang.org/x/tools/cmd/go-contrib-init
$ cd /code/to/edit
$ go-contrib-init
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
The rest of this chapter elaborates on these steps.
If you have completed the steps above (either manually or through the tool), jump to
<a href="#making_a_change">Making a change</a>.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="google_account">Step 0: Select a Google Account</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
A contribution to Go is made through a Google account, with a specific
e-mail address. Make sure to pick one and use it throughout the process and
for all your contributions. You may need to decide whether to
use a personal address or a corporate address. The choice will depend on who
will own the copyright for the code that you will be writing
and submitting. Consider discussing this with your employer.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Google Accounts can either be Gmail email accounts, G-Suite organization accounts, or
accounts associated with an external e-mail address. For instance, if you need to use
an existing corporate e-mail that is not managed through G-Suite, you can create
an account associated
<a href="https://accounts.google.com/SignUpWithoutGmail">with your existing
email address</a>.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
You also need to make sure that <code>git</code> is configured to author commits
using the same e-mail address. You can either configure it globally
(as a default for all projects), or locally (for a single specific project).
You can check the current configuration with this command:
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<pre>
$ git config --global user.email # check current global config
$ git config user.email # check current local config
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>To change the configured address:</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<pre>
$ git config --global user.email name@example.com # change global config
$ git config user.email name@example.com # change local config
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="cla">Step 1: Contributor License Agreement</h3>
<p>
Before sending your first change to the Go project
you must have completed one of the following two CLAs.
Which CLA you should sign depends on who owns the copyright to your work.
<ul>
<li>
If you are the copyright holder, you will need to agree to the
<a href="https://developers.google.com/open-source/cla/individual">individual
contributor license agreement</a>, which can be completed online.
</li>
<li>
If your organization is the copyright holder, the organization
will need to agree to the
<a href="https://developers.google.com/open-source/cla/corporate">corporate
contributor license agreement</a>.<br>
</li>
</ul>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
You can check your currently signed agreements and sign new ones, through
the <a href="https://cla.developers.google.com/clas?pli=1&authuser=1">Google Developers
Contributor License Agreements</a> website.
If the copyright holder for your contribution has already completed the
agreement in connection with another Google open source project,
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
it does not need to be completed again.
</p>
<p>
If the copyright holder for the code you are submitting changes &mdash; for example,
if you start contributing code on behalf of a new company &mdash; please send email
to golang-dev and let us know, so that we can make sure an appropriate agreement is
completed and update the <code>AUTHORS</code> file.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="auth">Step 2: Configure git authentication</h3>
<p>
Go development happens on <a href="go.googlesource.com">go.googlesource.com</a>,
a <code>git</code> server hosted by Google.
Authentication on the web server is made through your Google account, but
you also need to configure <code>git</code> on your computer to access it.
Follow this steps:
</p>
<ol>
<li>
Visit <a href="https://go.googlesource.com">go.googlesource.com</a>
and click on "Generate Password" in the page's top right menu bar.
You will be redirected to accounts.google.com to sign in.
</li>
<li>
After signing in, you are taken to a page with the title "Configure Git".
This page contains a personalized script that when run locally will configure git
to have your unique authentication key.
This key is paired with one generated server side, analogous to how SSH keys work.
</li>
<li>
Copy and run this script locally in your command line terminal, to store your
secret authentication token in a <code>.gitcookies</code> file.
(On a Windows computer using <code>cmd</code> you should instead follow the instructions
in the yellow box to run the command. If you are using <code>git-bash</code> use the same
script as *nix.).
</li>
</ol>
<h3 id="auth">Step 3: Create a Gerrit account </h3>
<p>
Gerrit is an open-source tool used by Go maintainers to discuss and review
code submissions.
</p>
<p>
To register your account, visit <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/login/">
go-review.googlesource.com/login/</a> and sign in once using the same Google Account you used above.
</p>
<h3 id="git-codereview_install">Step 4: Install the git-codereview command</h3>
<p>
Changes to Go must be reviewed before they are accepted, no matter who makes the change.
A custom git command called <code>git-codereview</code>, discussed below,
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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helps to send changes to Gerrit.
</p>
<p>
Install the <code>git-codereview</code> command by running,
</p>
<pre>
$ go get -u golang.org/x/review/git-codereview
</pre>
<p>
Make sure <code>git-codereview</code> is installed in your shell path, so that the
<code>git</code> command can find it. Check that
</p>
<pre>
$ git codereview help
</pre>
<p>
prints help text, not an error.
</p>
<p>
On Windows, when using git-bash you must make sure that
<code>git-codereview.exe</code> is in your git exec-path.
Run <code>git --exec-path</code> to discover the right location then create a
symbolic link or simply copy the executable from $GOPATH/bin to this directory.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h2 id="making_a_contribution">Before contributing code</h2>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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The project welcomes submissions but please let everyone know what
you're working on if you want to change or add to the Go repositories.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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Before undertaking to write something new for the Go project,
please <a href="https://golang.org/issue/new">file an issue</a>
(or claim an <a href="https://golang.org/issues">existing issue</a>).
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h3>Check the issue tracker</h3>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<p>Whether you already know what contribution to make, or you are searching for
an idea, the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues">issue tracker</a> is
always the first place to go. Issues are triaged to categorize them and manage
the workflow.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<p>Most issues will be marked with one of the following workflow labels:
<ul>
<li><b>NeedsInvestigation</b>: The issue is not fully understood well
and requires analysis to understand the root cause. </li>
<li><b>NeedsDecision</b>: the issue is relatively well understood, but the
Go team hasn't yet decided the best way to fix it or implement it among all
possible options. It would be better to wait for a decision before
writing code. If you are interested on working on an issue in this state,
feel free to ping maintainers here if some time has passed without a decision.</li>
<li><b>NeedsFix</b>: the issue is fully understood and code can be written
to fix it.</li>
</ul>
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h3 id="Design">Open an issue for any new problem</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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Excluding very trivial changes, all contributions should be connected
to an existing issue. Feel free to open one and discuss what your
plans are. This process gives everyone a chance to validate the design,
helps prevent duplication of effort,
and ensures that the idea fits inside the goals for the language and tools.
It also checks that the design is sound before code is written;
the code review tool is not the place for high-level discussions.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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When planning work, please note that the Go project follows a <a
href="https://golang.org/wiki/Go-Release-Cycle">six-month development cycle</a>.
The latter half of each cycle is a three-month feature freeze during
which only bug fixes and doc updates are accepted. New contributions can be
sent during a feature freeze but will not be accepted until the freeze thaws.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<p>Significant changes must go through the
<a href="https://golang.org/s/proposal-process">change proposal process</a>
before they can be accepted.</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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Sensitive security-related issues should be reported to <a href="mailto:security@golang.org">security@golang.org</a>.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h2 id="making_a_contribution">Sending a change via GitHub</h2>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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First-time contributors that are already familiar with the
<a href="https://guides.github.com/introduction/flow/">GitHub flow</a>
are encouraged to use the same process for Go contributions. Even though Go
maintainers use Gerrit for code review, a bot has been created to sync
GitHub pull requests to Gerrit.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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Open a pull request as you would normally do. Gopherbot will automatically
sync the code and post a link to Gerrit. When somebody comments on the
change, it will be posted in the pull request, so you will also get a notification.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<p>Some things to keep in mind:
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<ul>
<li>
To update the pull request with new code, just push it to the branch; you can either
add more commits, or rebase and force-push (both styles are accepted).
</li>
<li>
If the request is accepted, all the commits will be squashed, and the final
commit description will be composed by concatenating the pull request's
title and description. The individual commits' descriptions will be discarded.
See <a href="#commit_messages">Writing good commit messages</a> for some
suggestions.
</li>
<li>
Gopherbot is unable to sync line-by-line codereview into GitHub: only the
contents of the overall comment on the request will be synced. Remember you
can always to go Gerrit to see the fine-grained review.
</li>
</ul>
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h2 id="making_a_contribution">Sending a change via Gerrit</h2>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
It is not possible to fully sync Gerrit and GitHub, at least at the moment,
so we recommend learning Gerrit. It's different but powerful and familiarity
with help you understand the flow.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3>Overview</h3>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>This is an overview of the overall process:
<ul>
<li><b>Step 1:</b> Clone the Go source code from GitHub or go.googlesource.com, and make sure it's stable by compiling and testing it once:
<pre>
$ git clone https://github.com/golang/go # or https://go.googlesource.com/go
$ cd go/src
$ ./all.bash # compile and test
</pre>
<li><b>Step 2:</b> Prepare changes in a new branch, created from the master branch.
To commit the changes, use <code>git</code> <code>codereview</code> <code>change</code>, that
will create or amend a single commit in the branch.
<pre>
$ git checkout -b mybranch
$ [edit files...]
$ git add [files...]
$ git codereview change # create commit in the branch
$ [edit again...]
$ git add [files...]
$ git codereview change # amend the existing commit with new changes
$ [etc.]
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<b>Step 3:</b> Test your changes, re-running <code>all.bash</code>.
<pre>
$ ./all.bash # recompile and test
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<b>Step 4:</b> Send the changes for review to Gerrit using <code>git</code>
<code>codereview</code> <code>mail</code> (which doesn't use e-mail, despite the name).
<pre>
$ git codereview mail # send changes to Gerrit
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<b>Step 5:</b> After a review, apply changes to the same single commit, and mail them to Gerrit again:
<pre>
$ [edit files...]
$ git add [files...]
$ git codereview change # update same commit
$ git codereview mail # send to Gerrit again
</li>
</ul>
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>The rest of this chapter describes these steps in more detail.</p>
<h3 id="checkout_go">Step 1: Clone the Go source code</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
In addition to a recent Go installation, you need to have a local copy of the source
checked out from the correct repository. You should check out the Go source repo anywhere
you want as long as it's outside of your <code>GOPATH</code>. Either clone from
<code>go.googlesource.com</code> or GitHub:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git clone https://github.com/golang/go # or https://go.googlesource.com/go
$ cd go
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="checkout_go">Step 2: Prepare changes in a new branch</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Each Go change must be made in a separate branch, created from the master branch. You can use
the normal <code>git</code> commands to create a branch and add changes to the
staging area:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git checkout -b mybranch
$ [edit files...]
$ git add [files...]
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
To commit changes, instead of <code>git commit</code>, use <code>git codereview change</code>.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<pre>
$ git codereview change
(open $EDITOR)
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
You can edit the commit description in your favorite editor as usual.
<code>git</code> <code>codereview</code> <code>change</code> will automatically
add a <code>Change-Id</code> line near the bottom. That line is used by
Gerrit to match successive uploads of the same change. Do not edit or delete it.
This is an example:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
commit fef82cf89a34935a41bd0e3c1e0c2d9d6de29ee2 (HEAD -> test)
Author: Giovanni Bajo <rasky@develer.com>
Date: Tue Feb 13 01:07:15 2018 +0100
cmd/compile: test
Change-Id: I2fbdbffb3aab626c4b6f56348861b7909e3e8990
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<code>git</code> <code>codereview</code> <code>change</code> also checks that you've
run <code>go</code> <code>fmt</code> over the source code, and that
the commit message follows the <a href="#commit_messages">suggested format</a>.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>
If you need to edit the files again, you can stage the new changes and
re-run <code>git</code> <code>codereview</code> <code>change</code>: each subsequent
run will amend the existing commit.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Make sure that you always keep a single commit in each branch. If you add more
commits by mistake, you can use <code>git</code> <code>rebase</code> to
<a href="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31668794/squash-all-your-commits-in-one-before-a-pull-request-in-github">squash them together</a>
into a single one.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="Testing">Step 3: Test changes</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
You've <a href="code.html">written and tested your code</a>, but
before sending code out for review, run all the tests for the whole
tree to make sure the changes don't break other packages or programs:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ cd go/src
$ ./all.bash
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
(To build under Windows use <code>all.bat</code>; this also requires
setting the environment variable <code>GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP</code> to the
bootstrap compiler)
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
After running for a while, the command should print:
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<pre>
"ALL TESTS PASSED".
</pre>
<p>Notice that you can use <code>make.bash</code> instead of <code>all.bash</code>
to just build the compiler without running the testsuite. Once the compiler is
built, you can run it directly from <code>&lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go</code>; see also
the section on <a href="#quicktest">quickly test your changes</a>.</p>
<h3 id="mail">Step 4: Send changes for review</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Once the change is ready, send it for review.
This is done via the <code>mail</code> sub-command which despite its name, doesn't
directly mail anything, it just sends the change to Gerrit:
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<pre>
$ git codereview mail
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Gerrit assigns your change a number and URL, which <code>git</code> <code>codereview</code> <code>mail</code> will print, something like:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
remote: New Changes:
remote: https://go-review.googlesource.com/99999 math: improved Sin, Cos and Tan precision for very large arguments
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
If you get an error instead, check the
<a href="#troubleshooting_mail">Troubleshooting mail errors</a> section.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
If your change relates to an open GitHub issue and you have followed the <a href="#commit_messages">
suggested commit message format</a>, the issue will be updated in a few minutes by a bot,
linking your Gerrit change in it.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="revise">Step 5: Revise changes after a review</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Go maintainers will review your code on Gerrit, and you will get notifications via email.
You can see the review on Gerrit, and comment on them. You can also reply
<a href="https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/intro-user.html#reply-by-email">via email</a>
if you prefer.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>
When you're ready to revise your submitted code, edit the files in correct branch,
add them to the git staging area, and then amend the commit with
<code>git</code> <code>codereview</code> <code>change</code>:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git codereview change # amend current commit
(open $EDITOR)
$ git codereview mail # send new changes to Gerrit
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
If you don't need to change the commit description, just save and exit from the editor.
Remember not to touch the special <code>Change-Id</code> line.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Make sure that you always keep a single commit in each branch. If you add more
commits by mistake, you can use <code>git rebase</code> to
<a href="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31668794/squash-all-your-commits-in-one-before-a-pull-request-in-github">squash them together</a>
into a single one.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h2 id="commit_messages">Writing good commit messages</h2>
<p>Commit messages in Go follow a specific convention. Read this chapter
to learn more about it. This is an example of a good one:
<pre>
math: improve Sin, Cos and Tan precision for very large arguments
The existing implementation has poor numerical properties for
large arguments, so use the McGillicutty algorithm to improve
accuracy above 1e10.
The algorithm is described at http://wikipedia.org/wiki/McGillicutty_Algorithm
Fixes #159
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
</p>
<h3>First line</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
The first line of the change description is conventionally a one-line
summary of the change, prefixed by the primary affected package.</p>
<p>It should be written so to complete the sentence "This change modifies Go to _____."</p>
<h3>Main content</h3>
<p>The rest of the description elaborates and should provide context for the
change and explain what it does.
Write in complete sentences with correct punctuation, just like
for your comments in Go.
If there is a helpful reference, mention it here.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3>Referencing issues</h3>
<p>
The special notation "Fixes #159" associates the change with issue 159 in the
<a href="https://golang.org/issue/159">Go issue tracker</a>.
When this change is eventually applied, the issue
tracker will automatically mark the issue as fixed.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
If the change is a partial step towards the resolution of the issue,
uses the notation "Updates #159". This will leave a comment in the issue
linking back to the change in Gerrit, but it will not close the issue
when the change is applied.
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
If you are sending a change against a subrepository, you must use
the fully-qualified syntax supported by GitHub, to make sure the change is
linked to the issue in the main repository. The correct form is "Fixes golang/go#159".
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h2 id="review">The review process</h2>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
This section explains the review process in details, and how to approach
reviews after a change was submitted.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h3 id="mistakes">Common beginner mistakes</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
When a change is submitted to Gerrit, it is usually triaged in the next few days.
A maintainer will give a look and submit some initial review, that for first-time
contributors usually focus on basic cosmetics and common mistakes. For instance:
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<ul>
<li>
Commit messages might not follow the <a href="#commit_messages">suggested
format</a>.
</li>
<li>
There might not be a linked GitHub issue. The vast majority of changes
require a linked issue that describes the bug or the feature that the change
fixes or implements, and consensus should have been reached on the tracker
to actually proceed with it. Gerrit reviews do not discuss the merit of the change,
just its implementation.
<br>Only very trivial or cosmetic changes will be accepted without a issue.
</li>
<li>
The change might have been submitted during the freeze phase, when the tree
is closed for some specific kind of change (eg: new features). In this case,
a maintainer might review the code with a line such as <code>R=go1.11</code>,
which means that it will be reviewed later when the tree opens for a new
development window. You can add <code>R=go1.XX</code> as a comment yourself
if you know that it's not the correct timeframe for the change and help the
maintainers.
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="trybots">Trybots</h3>
<p>After an initial reading of your patch, maintainers will trigger trybots,
a cluster of servers that will run the full testsuite on several different
architectures. Most trybots run complete in a few minutes, and a link will
be posted in Gerrit where you can see the results.</p>
<p>If the trybot run fails, follow the link and check the full logs of the
platforms on which the tests failed. Try to understand what broke, and
update your patch. Maintainers will trigger a new trybot run to see
if the problem was fixed.</p>
<p>Sometimes, the tree can be broken on some platforms for a few hours; if
the failure in trybot logs doesn't seem related to your patch, go to the
<a href="https://build.golang.org">Build Dashboard</a> and check if the same
failures appears in the recent commits, on the same platform. In this case,
feel free to write a comment in Gerrit to mention that the failure is
unrelated to your change, to help maintainers understanding the situation.</p>
<h3 id="reviews">Reviews</h3>
<p>The Go team values very thorough reviews. Consider
each line comment like a ticket: you are expected to somehow "close" it
by acting on it, either by implementing the suggestion or convincing the
reviewer otherwise.</p>
<p>After you update the change, go through line comments and make sure
to reply on every one. You can click the "Done" button to reply
indicating that you've implemented the reviewer's suggestion; otherwise,
click on "Reply" and explain why you have not.</p>
<p>It is absolutely normal for changes to go through several round of reviews,
in which the reviewer make new comments every time and then wait for an updated
change to be uploaded. This also happens for experienced contributors, so
don't feel discouraged by it.</p>
<h3 id="votes">Voting conventions</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
At some point, reviewers will express a vote on your change. This is the
voting convention:
<ul>
<li><b>+2</b> The change is approved for being merged. Only Go maintainers
can cast a +2.</li>
<li><b>+1</b> The change looks good, but either the reviewer is requesting
more changes before approving it, or they are not a maintainer and cannot
approve it, but would like to encourage an approval.</li>
<li><b>-1</b> The change is not good the way it is. -1 are always casted
with a comment explaining the reason for it.</li>
<li><b>-2</b> The change is blocked by a maintainer and cannot be approved.
There will be a comment explaining the decision.</li>
</ul>
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h3 id="submit">Submitting an approved change</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
After the code has been +2'ed, an approver will
apply it to the master branch using the Gerrit UI. This is
called "submission".
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
The two steps are separate because in some cases maintainers
may want to approve it but not to submit it right away (e.g.
the tree could be temporarily frozen).
</p>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Submission checks the change into the repository.
The change description will include a link to the code review,
and the code review will be updated with a link to the change
in the repository.
Since the method used to integrate the changes is "Cherry Pick",
the commit hashes in the repository will be changed by
the "Submit" operation.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>If your change has been approved for a few days without being
submitted, feel free to write a comment in Gerrit requesting
submission.</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="more_information">More information</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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In addition to the information here, the Go community maintains a <a
href="https://golang.org/wiki/CodeReview">CodeReview</a> wiki page.
Feel free to contribute to this page as you learn the review process.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h2 id="advanced_topics">Advanced topics</h2>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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This section contains more in-depth topics on how to contribute to Go. Read it to
get a better understanding of the contribution process.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
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<h3 id="copyright">Copyright headers</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Files in the Go repository don't list author names, both to avoid clutter
and to avoid having to keep the lists up to date.
Instead, your name will appear in the
<a href="https://golang.org/change">change log</a> and in the <a
href="/CONTRIBUTORS"><code>CONTRIBUTORS</code></a> file and perhaps the <a
href="/AUTHORS"><code>AUTHORS</code></a> file.
These files are automatically generated from the commit logs periodically.
The <a href="/AUTHORS"><code>AUTHORS</code></a> file defines who &ldquo;The Go
Authors&rdquo;&mdash;the copyright holders&mdash;are.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>New files that you contribute should use the standard copyright header:</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
// Copyright 2018 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>
Files in the repository are copyright the year they are added.
Do not update the copyright year on files that you change.
</p>
<h3 id="troubleshooting_mail">Troubleshooting mail errors</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
The most common way that the <code>git</code> <code>codereview</code> <code>mail</code>
command fails is because the email address in the commit does not match the one
that you used during <a href="#google_account">the registration process</a>.
<br>
If you see something like...
</p>
<pre>
remote: Processing changes: refs: 1, done
remote:
remote: ERROR: In commit ab13517fa29487dcf8b0d48916c51639426c5ee9
remote: ERROR: author email address XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
remote: ERROR: does not match your user account.
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
You need to set this repo to use the email address that you registered with.
First, let's change the email address for this repo so this doesn't happen again.
You can change your email address for this repo with the following command:
</p>
<pre>
$ git config user.email email@address.com
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Then change the commit to use this alternative email address.
You can do that with:
</p>
<pre>
$ git commit --amend --author="Author Name &lt;email@address.com&gt;"
</pre>
<p>
Finally try to resend with:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git codereview mail
</pre>
<h3 id="quicktest">Quickly testing your changes</h3>
<p>Running <code>all.bash</code> for every single change to the code tree
is burdensome. Even though it is strongly suggested to run it before
sending a change, during the normal development cycle you may want
to quickly compile and locally test your change.</p>
<ul>
<li>
In general, you can run <code>make.bash</code> instead of <code>all.bash</code>
to only rebuild the Go toolchain without running the whole testsuite. Or you
can run <code>run.bash</code> to only run the whole testsuite without rebuilding
the toolchain. You can think of <code>all.bash</code> as <code>make.bash</code>
followed by <code>run.bash</code>.
</li>
<li>The just-built compiler is in <code>&lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go</code>; you
can run it directly to test whatever you want to test. For instance, if you
have modified the compiler and you want to test how it affects the
testsuite of your own project, just run <code>go</code> <code>test</code>
using it:
<pre>
$ cd &lt;MYPROJECTDIR&gt;
$ &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go test
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
</li>
<li>
If you're changing the standard library, you probably don't need to rebuild
the compiler: you can run the tests on the package you have changed.
You can either do that with whatever Go version you normally develop with, or
using the Go compiler built from your clone (which is
sometimes required because the standard library code you're modifying
might require a newer version than the stable one you have installed).
<pre>
$ cd &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/src/hash/sha1
$ [make changes...]
$ &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go test .
</pre>
</li>
<li>
If you're modyfing the compiler itself, you can just recompile
the <code>compile</code> tool (which is the internal binary invoked
by <code>go</code> <code>build</code> to compile each single package).
After that, you will want to test it by compiling or running something.
<pre>
$ cd &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/src
$ [make changes...]
$ &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go install cmd/compile
$ &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go build [something...] # test the new compiler
$ &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go run [something...] # test the new compiler
$ &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/bin/go test [something...] # test the new compiler
</pre>
The same applies to other internal tools of the Go toolchain,
such as <code>asm</code>, <code>cover</code>, <code>link</code>,
etc. Just recompile and install the tool using <code>go</code>
<code>install</code> <code>cmd/&lt;TOOL&gt;</code> and then use
the built Go binary to test it.
</li>
<li>
In addition to the standard per-package tests, there is a top-level
testsuite in <code>&lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/test</code> that contains
several black-box and regression tests. The testsuite is run
by <code>all.bash</code> but you can also run it manually:
<pre>
$ cd &lt;GOCLONEDIR&gt;/test
$ go run run.go
</pre>
Note that this will use the Go compiler found in <code>PATH</code>.
</ul>
<h3 id="subrepos">Contributing to subrepositories (golang.org/x/...)</h3>
<p>
If you are contributing a change to a subrepository, obtain the
Go package using <code>go get</code>. For example, to contribute
to <code>golang.org/x/oauth2</code>, check out the code by running:
</p>
<pre>
$ go get -d golang.org/x/oauth2/...
</pre>
<p>
Then, change your directory to the package's source directory
(<code>$GOPATH/src/golang.org/x/oauth2</code>), and follow the
normal contribution flow.
</p>
<h3 id="cc">Specifying a reviewer / CCing others</h3>
<p>
Unless explicitly told otherwise, such as in the discussion leading
up to sending in the change, it's better not to specify a reviewer.
All changes are automatically CC'ed to the
<a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-codereviews">golang-codereviews@googlegroups.com</a>
mailing list. If this is your first ever change, there may be a moderation
delay before it appears on the mailing list, to prevent spam.
</p>
<p>
You can specify a reviewer or CC interested parties
using the <code>-r</code> or <code>-cc</code> options.
Both accept a comma-separated list of email addresses:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git codereview mail -r joe@golang.org -cc mabel@example.com,math-nuts@swtch.com
</pre>
<h3 id="sync">Synchronize your client</h3>
<p>
While you were working, others might have submitted changes to the repository.
To update your local branch, run
</p>
<pre>
$ git sync
</pre>
<p>
(In git terms, <code>git</code> <code>sync</code> runs
<code>git</code> <code>pull</code> <code>-r</code>.)
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="download">Reviewing code by others</h3>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
As part of the review process reviewers can propose changes directly (in the
GitHub workflow this would be someone else attaching commits to a pull request).
You can import these changes proposed by someone else into your local Git repository.
On the Gerrit review page, click the "Download ▼" link in the upper right
corner, copy the "Checkout" command and run it from your local Git repo. It
should look something like this:
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git fetch https://go.googlesource.com/review refs/changes/21/1221/1 &amp;&amp; git checkout FETCH_HEAD
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
To revert, change back to the branch you were working in.
</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="git-config">Set up git aliases</h2>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
The <code>git-codereview</code> command can be run directly from the shell
by typing, for instance,
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git codereview sync
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
but it is more convenient to set up aliases for <code>git-codereview</code>'s own
subcommands, so that the above becomes,
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git sync
</pre>
<p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
The <code>git-codereview</code> subcommands have been chosen to be distinct from
Git's own, so it's safe to do so. To install them, copy this text into your
Git configuration file (usually <code>.gitconfig</code> in your home directory):
</p>
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
[alias]
change = codereview change
gofmt = codereview gofmt
mail = codereview mail
pending = codereview pending
submit = codereview submit
sync = codereview sync
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<h3 id="multiple_changes">Sending multiple dependent changes</h3>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>Gerrit allows for changes to be dependent on each other, forming a dependency chain.
This is an indication for maintainers to better review your code, even though each
change will technically need to be approved and submitted separately.</p>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
<p>To submit a group of dependent changes, keep each change as a different commit under
the same branch, and then run:
<pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
$ git codereview mail HEAD
</pre>
doc: first version of new contribute guide I've reorganized the guide and rewritten large sections. The structure is now more clear and logical, and can be understood and navigated using the summary displayed at the top of the page (before, the summary was confusing because the guide contained H1s that were being ignored by the summary). Both the initial onboarding process and the Gerrit change submission process have been reworked to include a concise checklist of steps that can be read and understood in a few seconds, for people that don't want or need to bother with details. More in-depth descriptions have been moved into separate sections, one per each checklist step. This is by far the biggest improvement, as the previous approach of having to read several pages just to understand the requires steps was very scaring for beginners, in addition of being harder to navigate. GitHub pull requests have been integrated as a different way to submit a change, suggested for first time contributors. The review process has been described in more details, documenting the workflow and the used conventions. Most miscellanea have been moved into an "advanced topics" chapter. Paragraphs describing how to use git have been removed to simplify reading. This guide should focus on Go contribution, and not help users getting familiar with git, for which many guides are available. Change-Id: I6f4b76583c9878b230ba1d0225745a1708fad2e8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93495 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
2018-02-12 18:51:23 -07:00
Make sure to explicitly specify <code>HEAD</code>, which is usually not required when sending
single changes.</p>