Hello Flashrom community,

Recently, we (Anastasia and Felix, your Org Admins) were looking into the
Flashrom Dev Guidelines page
https://www.flashrom.org/Development_Guidelines#Patch_submission  with the
main goal to prepare the page for GSoC. Very soon (7th March) the results
are announced, and in case Flashrom is accepted, we will suddenly have lots
of people (potential contributors) looking into our Dev Guidelines! :)

We have a suggestion on how to improve the guidelines. Specifically, this
is about the “Patch Submission” section (not the whole guidelines). There
are few most important points to address:

   1.

   Update the links, so that they don’t point to instructions from the old
   coreboot wiki (which explains how to clone coreboot repo).
   2.

   State very clearly that we have a strong preference for Gerrit code
   reviews (not mailing list reviews).
   3.

   Explain that we don’t look at pull requests on GitHub.


The updated version of the “Patch Submission” section that we are
suggesting is below. Comments/feedback is welcome, the wording can be
changed/improved, as long as the three main points are addressed.

Unchanged sections are marked as such.



Thank you so much!

-----------------------------------------------------------------
*Patch Submission*
Coding style (unchanged)

Flashrom generally follows Linux kernel style
<https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst>
.

The notable exception is the line length limit. Our guidelines are:

   -

   80-columns soft limit for most code and comments. This is to encourage
   simple design and concise naming.


   -

   112-columns hard limit. Use this to reduce line breaks in cases where
   they harm grep-ability or overall readability, such as print statements and
   function signatures. Don't abuse this for long variable/function names or
   deep nesting.


   -

   Tables are the only exception to the hard limit and may be as long as
   needed for practical purposes.

GitHub

The official Flashrom mirror on GitHub is:
https://github.com/flashrom/flashrom

Importantly, GitHub repo is only a mirror, so all changes must go through
Gerrit on review.coreboot.org in order to be merged, even small patches
such as adding support for a flash chip. For this reason, reviewers do not
look at pull requests. Even if pull requests were automatically transferred
to Gerrit, requirements such as the #Sign-off Procedure
<https://www.flashrom.org/Development_Guidelines#Sign-off_Procedure> still
present a problem.

The quickest and best way to get your patch reviewed and merged is by
sending it to review.coreboot.org. Conveniently, you can use your GitHub,
GitLab or Google account as an OAuth2 login method. Please continue
reading, the instructions are below.
Preparing a patch

Before sending a patch for review, put your Signed-off-by line
<https://www.flashrom.org/Development_Guidelines#Sign-off_Procedure> in the
commit message.

Currently there are two ways to send patches for review:

   1.

   Our strong preference, especially for large patches, is via Gerrit on
   review.coreboot.org <https://review.coreboot.org/#/q/project:flashrom>,
   i.e. git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master
   2.

   For small patches, with the reviewer’s agreement, there is an option to
   send via our mailing list <https://www.flashrom.org/Contact#Mailing_List>.
   When sending a patch via the mailing list, send it in-line instead of as an
   attachment so that reviewers can easily comment on specific parts of it.
   However, eventually the reviewer will need to push patch to gerrit anyway.

Our guidelines borrow heavily from the coreboot development guidelines
<https://doc.coreboot.org/contributing/index.html>, and most of them apply
to flashrom as well. The really important part is about the #Sign-off
Procedure
<https://www.flashrom.org/Development_Guidelines#Sign-off_Procedure>.

We try to reuse as much code as possible and create new files only if
absolutely needed, so if you find a function somewhere in the tree which
already does what you want (even if it is for a totally different chip),
please use it. See also Command set secrets
<https://www.flashrom.org/Random_notes#Command_set_secrets>.

The patch reviews may sound harsh, but please don't get discouraged. We try
to merge simple patches after one or two iterations and complicated ones as
soon as possible, but we have quite high standards regarding code quality.

If you introduce new features (not flash chips, but stuff like partial
programming, support for new external programmers, voltage handling, etc)
please discuss your plans on the mailing list
<https://www.flashrom.org/Contact#Mailing_List> first. That way, we can
avoid duplicated work and know about how flashrom internals need to be
adjusted and you avoid frustration if there is some disagreement about the
design.

For patches that modify convoluted tables like struct flashchip flashchips[]
in flashchips.c it may make sense to increase the lines of context to
include enough information directly in the patch for reviewers (for example
to include the chip names when changing other parameters like .voltage). To
do this with git use git format-patch -U5 where 5 is an example for the
number of lines of context you want.
Commit message (unchanged)

Commit messages shall have the following format:

<component>: Short description (up to 72 characters)

This is a long description. Max width of each line in the description

is 72 characters. It is separated from the summary by a blank line. You

may skip the long description if the short description is sufficient,

for example "flashchips: Add FOO25Q128" to add FOO25Q128 chip support.

You may have multiple paragraphs in the long description, but please

do not write a novel here. For non-trivial changes you must explain

what your patch does, why, and how it was tested.

TEST=tests that you performed

Finally, follow the #Sign-off Procedure
<https://www.flashrom.org/Development_Guidelines#Sign-off_Procedure> to add
your sign-off!

Signed-off-by: Your Name <your@domain>


Sign-off Procedure (unchanged)

We employ a similar sign-off procedure as the Linux kernel developers
<http://web.archive.org/web/20070306195036/http://osdlab.org/newsroom/press_releases/2004/2004_05_24_dco.html>
do. Add a note such as

Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <ran...@developer.example.org>

to your email/patch if you agree with the Developer's Certificate of Origin
1.1 printed below. Read this post on the LKML
<https://lkml.org/lkml/2004/5/23/10> for rationale (spoiler: SCO).

You must use your real name in the Signed-off-by line and in any copyright
notices you add. Patches without an associated real name lack provenance
and cannot be committed!

Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1:

By making a contribution to this project, I certify that:

(a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I have

the right to submit it under the open source license indicated in the file;
or

(b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best of my

knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source license and I have
the

right under that license to submit that work with modifications, whether
created

in whole or in part by me, under the same open source license (unless I am

permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated in the file; or

(c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other person who

certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified it; and

(d) In the case of each of (a), (b), or (c), I understand and agree that

this project and the contribution are public and that a record of the
contribution

(including all personal information I submit with it, including my
sign-off) is

maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with this
project or the

open source license indicated in the file.

Note: The Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1
<http://web.archive.org/web/20070306195036/http://osdlab.org/newsroom/press_releases/2004/2004_05_24_dco.html>
is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
2.5 License <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/>.
Submitting a patch using GerritSetting up a Gerrit accountAll changes have
to go through Gerrit on review.coreboot.org in order to be merged, even
small patches such as adding support for a flash chip. Our Gerrit supports
multiple authentication methods <https://review.coreboot.org/login>
including OAUTH2, e.g. Google, GitHub or GitLab, or also OpenID.

   1.

   Go to https://review.coreboot.org/login and sign in.
   2.

   Edit your settings by clicking on the gear icon in the upper right
   corner.
   3.

   Set your Gerrit username.
   4.

   Add an email address so that you receive notifications when others
   commented or reviewed your patch.
   5.

   Add a SSH public key to your account, or click the button to generate an
   HTTPS password.

Preparing your local repository

Open https://review.coreboot.org/admin/repos/flashrom and choose your
desired method to clone the repository. Supported methods are HTTPS and
SSH. The same method will also be used when you push your changes to Gerrit
later.

Also, make sure to install the Change-Id hook. This generates a unique ID
which is appended to your commit message. It is used by Gerrit to identify
if a patch with the same ID exists, and if so it will add a new version to
it called “patchset”.

If you are just about getting a fresh copy of the flashrom repository, then
you can use the command which you can find under “Clone with commit-msg
hook”. If you have an existing copy of the repository and you need to
install the hook afterwards, then you can run this command within your
flashrom directory


   -

   mkdir -p .git/hooks && curl -Lo `git rev-parse
   --git-dir`/hooks/commit-msg
   https://review.coreboot.org/tools/hooks/commit-msg; chmod +x `git
   rev-parse --git-dir`/hooks/commit-msg)

Pushing your patch to Gerrit

   1.

   Check out a new local branch that tracks origin/master: git checkout -b
   <branch_name> origin/master
   2.

   Do your changes
   3.

   Add your changes using `git add` and create a commit using `git commit
   -s`
   4.

   Push to gerrit: git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master.


   -

   If using HTTPS you will be prompted for the username and password you
   set in the Gerrit UI.


   -

   If successful, the Gerrit URL for your patch will be shown in the output.


-- 
Anastasia.
_______________________________________________
flashrom mailing list -- flashrom@flashrom.org
To unsubscribe send an email to flashrom-le...@flashrom.org

Reply via email to