3c1aafd2a9
Signed-off-by: Eric Engestrom <eric@engestrom.ch> Reviewed-by: Armin Krezović <krezovic.armin@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Bryce Harrington <bryce@osg.samsung.com>
181 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
181 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
= Contributing to Wayland =
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== Sending patches ==
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Patches should be sent to wayland-devel@lists.freedesktop.org, using
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git send-email. See git's documentation for help [1].
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The first line of a commit message should contain a prefix indicating
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what part is affected by the patch followed by one sentence that
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describes the change. For examples:
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protocol: Support scaled outputs and surfaces
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and
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doc: generate server documentation from XML too
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If in doubt what prefix to use, look at other commits that change the
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same file(s) as the patch being sent.
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The body of the commit message should describe what the patch changes
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and why, and also note any particular side effects. This shouldn't be
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empty on most of the cases. It shouldn't take a lot of effort to write
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a commit message for an obvious change, so an empty commit message
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body is only acceptable if the questions "What?" and "Why?" are already
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answered on the one-line summary.
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The lines of the commit message should have at most 76 characters, to
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cope with the way git log presents them.
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See [2] for a recommended reading on writing commit messages.
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Your patches should also include a Signed-off-by line with your name and
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email address. If you're not the patch's original author, you should
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also gather S-o-b's by them (and/or whomever gave the patch to you.) The
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significance of this is that it certifies that you created the patch,
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that it was created under an appropriate open source license, or
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provided to you under those terms. This lets us indicate a chain of
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responsibility for the copyright status of the code.
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We won't reject patches that lack S-o-b, but it is strongly recommended.
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== Tracking patches and following up ==
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Patchwork is used for tracking patches to Wayland and Weston:
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http://patchwork.freedesktop.org/project/wayland/list/
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Xwayland patches are tracked with the Xorg project, not here.
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Libinput patches, even though they use the same mailing list as Wayland, are
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not tracked in the Wayland Patchwork.
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The following applies only to Wayland and Weston.
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If a patch is not found in Patchwork, there is a high possibility for it to be
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forgotten. Patches attached to bug reports or not arriving to the mailing list
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because of e.g. subscription issues will not be in Patchwork because Patchwork
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only collects patches sent to the list.
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When you send a revised version of a patch, it would be very nice to mark your
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old patch as superseded (or rejected, if that is applicable). You can change
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the status of your own patches by registering to Patchwork - ownership is
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identified by email address you use to register. Updating your patch status
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appropriately will help maintainer work.
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The following patch states are found in Patchwork:
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New
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Patches under discussion or not yet processed.
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Under review
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Mostly unused state.
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Accepted
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The patch is merged in the master branch upstream, as is or slightly
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modified.
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Rejected
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The idea or approach is rejected and cannot be fixed by revising
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the patch.
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RFC
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Request for comments, not meant to be merged as is.
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Not applicable
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The email was not actually a patch, or the patch is not for Wayland or
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Weston. Libinput patches are usually automatically ignored by Wayland
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Patchwork, but if they get through, they will be marked as Not
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applicable.
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Changes requested
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Reviewers determined that changes to the patch are needed. The
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submitter is expected to send a revised version. (You should
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not wait for your patch to be set to this state before revising,
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though.)
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Awaiting upstream
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Mostly unused as the patch is waiting for upstream actions but
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is not shown in the default list, which means it is easy to
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overlook.
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Superseded
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A revised version of the patch has been submitted.
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Deferred
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Used mostly during freeze periods before releases, to temporarily
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hide patches that cannot be merged during a freeze.
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Note, that in the default listing, only patches in New or Under review are
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shown.
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There is also a command line interface to Patchwork called 'pwclient', see
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http://patchwork.freedesktop.org/project/wayland/
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for links where to get it and the sample .pwclientrc for Wayland/Weston.
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== Coding style ==
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You should follow the style of the file you're editing. In general, we
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try to follow the rules below.
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- indent with tabs, and a tab is always 8 characters wide
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- opening braces are on the same line as the if statement;
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- no braces in an if-body with just one statement;
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- if one of the branches of an if-else condition has braces, then the
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other branch should also have braces;
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- there is always an empty line between variable declarations and the
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code;
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static int
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my_function(void)
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{
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int a = 0;
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if (a)
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b();
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else
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c();
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if (a) {
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b();
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c();
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} else {
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d();
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}
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}
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- lines should be less than 80 characters wide;
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- when breaking lines with functions calls, the parameters are aligned
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with the opening parentheses;
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- when assigning a variable with the result of a function call, if the
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line would be longer we break it around the equal '=' sign if it makes
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sense;
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long_variable_name =
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function_with_a_really_long_name(parameter1, parameter2,
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parameter3, parameter4);
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x = function_with_a_really_long_name(parameter1, parameter2,
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parameter3, parameter4);
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== Licensing ==
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Wayland is licensed with the intention to be usable anywhere X.org is.
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Originally, X.org was covered under the MIT X11 license, but changed to
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the MIT Expat license. Similarly, Wayland was covered initially as MIT
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X11 licensed, but changed to the MIT Expat license, following in X.org's
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footsteps. Other than wording, the two licenses are substantially the
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same, with the exception of a no-advertising clause in X11 not included
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in Expat.
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New source code files should specify the MIT Expat license in their
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boilerplate, as part of the copyright statement.
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== References ==
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[1] http://git-scm.com/documentation
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[2] http://who-t.blogspot.de/2009/12/on-commit-messages.html
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