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1=encoding utf8
2
3=for comment
4Consistent formatting of this file is achieved with:
5 perl ./Porting/podtidy pod/perlgit.pod
6
7=head1 NAME
8
9perlgit - Detailed information about git and the Perl repository
10
11=head1 DESCRIPTION
12
13This document provides details on using git to develop Perl. If you are
14just interested in working on a quick patch, see L<perlhack> first.
15This document is intended for people who are regular contributors to
16Perl, including those with write access to the git repository.
17
18=head1 CLONING THE REPOSITORY
19
20All of Perl's source code is kept centrally in a Git repository at
21I<perl5.git.perl.org>.
22
23You can make a read-only clone of the repository by running:
24
25 % git clone git://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git perl
26
27This uses the git protocol (port 9418).
28
29If you cannot use the git protocol for firewall reasons, you can also
30clone via http, though this is much slower:
31
32 % git clone http://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git perl
33
34=head1 WORKING WITH THE REPOSITORY
35
36Once you have changed into the repository directory, you can inspect
37it. After a clone the repository will contain a single local branch,
38which will be the current branch as well, as indicated by the asterisk.
39
40 % git branch
41 * blead
42
43Using the -a switch to C<branch> will also show the remote tracking
44branches in the repository:
45
46 % git branch -a
47 * blead
48 origin/HEAD
49 origin/blead
50 ...
51
52The branches that begin with "origin" correspond to the "git remote"
53that you cloned from (which is named "origin"). Each branch on the
54remote will be exactly tracked by these branches. You should NEVER do
55work on these remote tracking branches. You only ever do work in a
56local branch. Local branches can be configured to automerge (on pull)
57from a designated remote tracking branch. This is the case with the
58default branch C<blead> which will be configured to merge from the
59remote tracking branch C<origin/blead>.
60
61You can see recent commits:
62
63 % git log
64
65And pull new changes from the repository, and update your local
66repository (must be clean first)
67
68 % git pull
69
70Assuming we are on the branch C<blead> immediately after a pull, this
71command would be more or less equivalent to:
72
73 % git fetch
74 % git merge origin/blead
75
76In fact if you want to update your local repository without touching
77your working directory you do:
78
79 % git fetch
80
81And if you want to update your remote-tracking branches for all defined
82remotes simultaneously you can do
83
84 % git remote update
85
86Neither of these last two commands will update your working directory,
87however both will update the remote-tracking branches in your
88repository.
89
90To make a local branch of a remote branch:
91
92 % git checkout -b maint-5.10 origin/maint-5.10
93
94To switch back to blead:
95
96 % git checkout blead
97
98=head2 Finding out your status
99
100The most common git command you will use will probably be
101
102 % git status
103
104This command will produce as output a description of the current state
105of the repository, including modified files and unignored untracked
106files, and in addition it will show things like what files have been
107staged for the next commit, and usually some useful information about
108how to change things. For instance the following:
109
110 % git status
111 On branch blead
112 Your branch is ahead of 'origin/blead' by 1 commit.
113
114 Changes to be committed:
115 (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
116
117 modified: pod/perlgit.pod
118
119 Changes not staged for commit:
120 (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
121 (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working
122 directory)
123
124 modified: pod/perlgit.pod
125
126 Untracked files:
127 (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
128
129 deliberate.untracked
130
131This shows that there were changes to this document staged for commit,
132and that there were further changes in the working directory not yet
133staged. It also shows that there was an untracked file in the working
134directory, and as you can see shows how to change all of this. It also
135shows that there is one commit on the working branch C<blead> which has
136not been pushed to the C<origin> remote yet. B<NOTE>: This output
137is also what you see as a template if you do not provide a message to
138C<git commit>.
139
140=head2 Patch workflow
141
142First, please read L<perlhack> for details on hacking the Perl core.
143That document covers many details on how to create a good patch.
144
145If you already have a Perl repository, you should ensure that you're on
146the I<blead> branch, and your repository is up to date:
147
148 % git checkout blead
149 % git pull
150
151It's preferable to patch against the latest blead version, since this
152is where new development occurs for all changes other than critical bug
153fixes. Critical bug fix patches should be made against the relevant
154maint branches, or should be submitted with a note indicating all the
155branches where the fix should be applied.
156
157Now that we have everything up to date, we need to create a temporary
158new branch for these changes and switch into it:
159
160 % git checkout -b orange
161
162which is the short form of
163
164 % git branch orange
165 % git checkout orange
166
167Creating a topic branch makes it easier for the maintainers to rebase
168or merge back into the master blead for a more linear history. If you
169don't work on a topic branch the maintainer has to manually cherry pick
170your changes onto blead before they can be applied.
171
172That'll get you scolded on perl5-porters, so don't do that. Be Awesome.
173
174Then make your changes. For example, if Leon Brocard changes his name
175to Orange Brocard, we should change his name in the AUTHORS file:
176
177 % perl -pi -e 's{Leon Brocard}{Orange Brocard}' AUTHORS
178
179You can see what files are changed:
180
181 % git status
182 On branch orange
183 Changes to be committed:
184 (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
185
186 modified: AUTHORS
187
188And you can see the changes:
189
190 % git diff
191 diff --git a/AUTHORS b/AUTHORS
192 index 293dd70..722c93e 100644
193 --- a/AUTHORS
194 +++ b/AUTHORS
195 @@ -541,7 +541,7 @@ Lars Hecking <lhecking@nmrc.ucc.ie>
196 Laszlo Molnar <laszlo.molnar@eth.ericsson.se>
197 Leif Huhn <leif@hale.dkstat.com>
198 Len Johnson <lenjay@ibm.net>
199 -Leon Brocard <acme@astray.com>
200 +Orange Brocard <acme@astray.com>
201 Les Peters <lpeters@aol.net>
202 Lesley Binks <lesley.binks@gmail.com>
203 Lincoln D. Stein <lstein@cshl.org>
204
205Now commit your change locally:
206
207 % git commit -a -m 'Rename Leon Brocard to Orange Brocard'
208 Created commit 6196c1d: Rename Leon Brocard to Orange Brocard
209 1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
210
211The C<-a> option is used to include all files that git tracks that you
212have changed. If at this time, you only want to commit some of the
213files you have worked on, you can omit the C<-a> and use the command
214C<S<git add I<FILE ...>>> before doing the commit. C<S<git add
215--interactive>> allows you to even just commit portions of files
216instead of all the changes in them.
217
218The C<-m> option is used to specify the commit message. If you omit it,
219git will open a text editor for you to compose the message
220interactively. This is useful when the changes are more complex than
221the sample given here, and, depending on the editor, to know that the
222first line of the commit message doesn't exceed the 50 character legal
223maximum.
224
225Once you've finished writing your commit message and exited your
226editor, git will write your change to disk and tell you something like
227this:
228
229 Created commit daf8e63: explain git status and stuff about remotes
230 1 files changed, 83 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
231
232If you re-run C<git status>, you should see something like this:
233
234 % git status
235 On branch orange
236 Untracked files:
237 (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
238
239 deliberate.untracked
240
241 nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to
242 track)
243
244When in doubt, before you do anything else, check your status and read
245it carefully, many questions are answered directly by the git status
246output.
247
248You can examine your last commit with:
249
250 % git show HEAD
251
252and if you are not happy with either the description or the patch
253itself you can fix it up by editing the files once more and then issue:
254
255 % git commit -a --amend
256
257Now you should create a patch file for all your local changes:
258
259 % git format-patch -M blead..
260 0001-Rename-Leon-Brocard-to-Orange-Brocard.patch
261
262Or for a lot of changes, e.g. from a topic branch:
263
264 % git format-patch --stdout -M blead.. > topic-branch-changes.patch
265
266You should now send an email to
267L<perlbug@perl.org|mailto:perlbug@perl.org> with a description of your
268changes, and include this patch file as an attachment. In addition to
269being tracked by RT, mail to perlbug will automatically be forwarded to
270perl5-porters (with manual moderation, so please be patient). You
271should only send patches to
272L<perl5-porters@perl.org|mailto:perl5-porters@perl.org> directly if the
273patch is not ready to be applied, but intended for discussion.
274
275Please do not use git-send-email(1) to send your patch. See L<Sending
276patch emails|/Sending patch emails> for more information.
277
278If you want to delete your temporary branch, you may do so with:
279
280 % git checkout blead
281 % git branch -d orange
282 error: The branch 'orange' is not an ancestor of your current HEAD.
283 If you are sure you want to delete it, run 'git branch -D orange'.
284 % git branch -D orange
285 Deleted branch orange.
286
287=head2 Committing your changes
288
289Assuming that you'd like to commit all the changes you've made as a
290single atomic unit, run this command:
291
292 % git commit -a
293
294(That C<-a> tells git to add every file you've changed to this commit.
295New files aren't automatically added to your commit when you use
296C<commit -a> If you want to add files or to commit some, but not all of
297your changes, have a look at the documentation for C<git add>.)
298
299Git will start up your favorite text editor, so that you can craft a
300commit message for your change. See L<perlhack/Commit message> for more
301information about what makes a good commit message.
302
303Once you've finished writing your commit message and exited your
304editor, git will write your change to disk and tell you something like
305this:
306
307 Created commit daf8e63: explain git status and stuff about remotes
308 1 files changed, 83 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
309
310If you re-run C<git status>, you should see something like this:
311
312 % git status
313 On branch blead
314 Your branch is ahead of 'origin/blead' by 2 commits.
315 (use "git push" to publish your local commits)
316 Untracked files:
317 (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
318
319 deliberate.untracked
320
321 nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to
322 track)
323
324When in doubt, before you do anything else, check your status and read
325it carefully, many questions are answered directly by the git status
326output.
327
328=head2 Sending patch emails
329
330After you've generated your patch you should send it
331to L<perlbug@perl.org|mailto:perlbug@perl.org> (as discussed L<in the
332previous section|/"Patch workflow">) with a normal mail client as an
333attachment, along with a description of the patch.
334
335You B<must not> use git-send-email(1) to send patches generated with
336git-format-patch(1). The RT ticketing system living behind
337L<perlbug@perl.org|mailto:perlbug@perl.org> does not respect the inline
338contents of E-Mails, sending an inline patch to RT guarantees that your
339patch will be destroyed.
340
341Someone may download your patch from RT, which will result in the
342subject (the first line of the commit message) being omitted. See
343L<RT #74192|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=74192> and
344L<commit a4583001|http://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git/commitdiff/a4583001>
345for an example. Alternatively someone may
346apply your patch from RT after it arrived in their mailbox, by which
347time RT will have modified the inline content of the message. See
348L<RT #74532|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=74532> and
349L<commit f9bcfeac|http://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git/commitdiff/f9bcfeac>
350for a bad example of this failure mode.
351
352=head2 A note on derived files
353
354Be aware that many files in the distribution are derivative--avoid
355patching them, because git won't see the changes to them, and the build
356process will overwrite them. Patch the originals instead. Most
357utilities (like perldoc) are in this category, i.e. patch
358F<utils/perldoc.PL> rather than F<utils/perldoc>. Similarly, don't
359create patches for files under F<$src_root/ext> from their copies found
360in F<$install_root/lib>. If you are unsure about the proper location of
361a file that may have gotten copied while building the source
362distribution, consult the F<MANIFEST>.
363
364=head2 Cleaning a working directory
365
366The command C<git clean> can with varying arguments be used as a
367replacement for C<make clean>.
368
369To reset your working directory to a pristine condition you can do:
370
371 % git clean -dxf
372
373However, be aware this will delete ALL untracked content. You can use
374
375 % git clean -Xf
376
377to remove all ignored untracked files, such as build and test
378byproduct, but leave any manually created files alone.
379
380If you only want to cancel some uncommitted edits, you can use C<git
381checkout> and give it a list of files to be reverted, or C<git checkout
382-f> to revert them all.
383
384If you want to cancel one or several commits, you can use C<git reset>.
385
386=head2 Bisecting
387
388C<git> provides a built-in way to determine which commit should be blamed
389for introducing a given bug. C<git bisect> performs a binary search of
390history to locate the first failing commit. It is fast, powerful and
391flexible, but requires some setup and to automate the process an auxiliary
392shell script is needed.
393
394The core provides a wrapper program, F<Porting/bisect.pl>, which attempts to
395simplify as much as possible, making bisecting as simple as running a Perl
396one-liner. For example, if you want to know when this became an error:
397
398 perl -e 'my $a := 2'
399
400you simply run this:
401
402 .../Porting/bisect.pl -e 'my $a := 2;'
403
404Using F<Porting/bisect.pl>, with one command (and no other files) it's easy to
405find out
406
407=over 4
408
409=item *
410
411Which commit caused this example code to break?
412
413=item *
414
415Which commit caused this example code to start working?
416
417=item *
418
419Which commit added the first file to match this regex?
420
421=item *
422
423Which commit removed the last file to match this regex?
424
425=back
426
427usually without needing to know which versions of perl to use as start and
428end revisions, as F<Porting/bisect.pl> automatically searches to find the
429earliest stable version for which the test case passes. Run
430C<Porting/bisect.pl --help> for the full documentation, including how to
431set the C<Configure> and build time options.
432
433If you require more flexibility than F<Porting/bisect.pl> has to offer, you'll
434need to run C<git bisect> yourself. It's most useful to use C<git bisect run>
435to automate the building and testing of perl revisions. For this you'll need
436a shell script for C<git> to call to test a particular revision. An example
437script is F<Porting/bisect-example.sh>, which you should copy B<outside> of
438the repository, as the bisect process will reset the state to a clean checkout
439as it runs. The instructions below assume that you copied it as F<~/run> and
440then edited it as appropriate.
441
442You first enter in bisect mode with:
443
444 % git bisect start
445
446For example, if the bug is present on C<HEAD> but wasn't in 5.10.0,
447C<git> will learn about this when you enter:
448
449 % git bisect bad
450 % git bisect good perl-5.10.0
451 Bisecting: 853 revisions left to test after this
452
453This results in checking out the median commit between C<HEAD> and
454C<perl-5.10.0>. You can then run the bisecting process with:
455
456 % git bisect run ~/run
457
458When the first bad commit is isolated, C<git bisect> will tell you so:
459
460 ca4cfd28534303b82a216cfe83a1c80cbc3b9dc5 is first bad commit
461 commit ca4cfd28534303b82a216cfe83a1c80cbc3b9dc5
462 Author: Dave Mitchell <davem@fdisolutions.com>
463 Date: Sat Feb 9 14:56:23 2008 +0000
464
465 [perl #49472] Attributes + Unknown Error
466 ...
467
468 bisect run success
469
470You can peek into the bisecting process with C<git bisect log> and
471C<git bisect visualize>. C<git bisect reset> will get you out of bisect
472mode.
473
474Please note that the first C<good> state must be an ancestor of the
475first C<bad> state. If you want to search for the commit that I<solved>
476some bug, you have to negate your test case (i.e. exit with C<1> if OK
477and C<0> if not) and still mark the lower bound as C<good> and the
478upper as C<bad>. The "first bad commit" has then to be understood as
479the "first commit where the bug is solved".
480
481C<git help bisect> has much more information on how you can tweak your
482binary searches.
483
484=head2 Topic branches and rewriting history
485
486Individual committers should create topic branches under
487B<yourname>/B<some_descriptive_name>:
488
489 % branch="$yourname/$some_descriptive_name"
490 % git checkout -b $branch
491 ... do local edits, commits etc ...
492 % git push origin -u $branch
493
494Should you be stuck with an ancient version of git (prior to 1.7), then
495C<git push> will not have the C<-u> switch, and you have to replace the
496last step with the following sequence:
497
498 % git push origin $branch:refs/heads/$branch
499 % git config branch.$branch.remote origin
500 % git config branch.$branch.merge refs/heads/$branch
501
502If you want to make changes to someone else's topic branch, you should
503check with its creator before making any change to it.
504
505You
506might sometimes find that the original author has edited the branch's
507history. There are lots of good reasons for this. Sometimes, an author
508might simply be rebasing the branch onto a newer source point.
509Sometimes, an author might have found an error in an early commit which
510they wanted to fix before merging the branch to blead.
511
512Currently the master repository is configured to forbid
513non-fast-forward merges. This means that the branches within can not be
514rebased and pushed as a single step.
515
516The only way you will ever be allowed to rebase or modify the history
517of a pushed branch is to delete it and push it as a new branch under
518the same name. Please think carefully about doing this. It may be
519better to sequentially rename your branches so that it is easier for
520others working with you to cherry-pick their local changes onto the new
521version. (XXX: needs explanation).
522
523If you want to rebase a personal topic branch, you will have to delete
524your existing topic branch and push as a new version of it. You can do
525this via the following formula (see the explanation about C<refspec>'s
526in the git push documentation for details) after you have rebased your
527branch:
528
529 # first rebase
530 % git checkout $user/$topic
531 % git fetch
532 % git rebase origin/blead
533
534 # then "delete-and-push"
535 % git push origin :$user/$topic
536 % git push origin $user/$topic
537
538B<NOTE:> it is forbidden at the repository level to delete any of the
539"primary" branches. That is any branch matching
540C<m!^(blead|maint|perl)!>. Any attempt to do so will result in git
541producing an error like this:
542
543 % git push origin :blead
544 *** It is forbidden to delete blead/maint branches in this repository
545 error: hooks/update exited with error code 1
546 error: hook declined to update refs/heads/blead
547 To ssh://perl5.git.perl.org/perl
548 ! [remote rejected] blead (hook declined)
549 error: failed to push some refs to 'ssh://perl5.git.perl.org/perl'
550
551As a matter of policy we do B<not> edit the history of the blead and
552maint-* branches. If a typo (or worse) sneaks into a commit to blead or
553maint-*, we'll fix it in another commit. The only types of updates
554allowed on these branches are "fast-forwards", where all history is
555preserved.
556
557Annotated tags in the canonical perl.git repository will never be
558deleted or modified. Think long and hard about whether you want to push
559a local tag to perl.git before doing so. (Pushing simple tags is
560not allowed.)
561
562=head2 Grafts
563
564The perl history contains one mistake which was not caught in the
565conversion: a merge was recorded in the history between blead and
566maint-5.10 where no merge actually occurred. Due to the nature of git,
567this is now impossible to fix in the public repository. You can remove
568this mis-merge locally by adding the following line to your
569C<.git/info/grafts> file:
570
571 296f12bbbbaa06de9be9d09d3dcf8f4528898a49 434946e0cb7a32589ed92d18008aaa1d88515930
572
573It is particularly important to have this graft line if any bisecting
574is done in the area of the "merge" in question.
575
576=head1 WRITE ACCESS TO THE GIT REPOSITORY
577
578Once you have write access, you will need to modify the URL for the
579origin remote to enable pushing. Edit F<.git/config> with the
580git-config(1) command:
581
582 % git config remote.origin.url ssh://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git
583
584You can also set up your user name and e-mail address. Most people do
585this once globally in their F<~/.gitconfig> by doing something like:
586
587 % git config --global user.name "Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason"
588 % git config --global user.email avarab@gmail.com
589
590However, if you'd like to override that just for perl,
591execute something like the following in F<perl>:
592
593 % git config user.email avar@cpan.org
594
595It is also possible to keep C<origin> as a git remote, and add a new
596remote for ssh access:
597
598 % git remote add camel perl5.git.perl.org:/perl.git
599
600This allows you to update your local repository by pulling from
601C<origin>, which is faster and doesn't require you to authenticate, and
602to push your changes back with the C<camel> remote:
603
604 % git fetch camel
605 % git push camel
606
607The C<fetch> command just updates the C<camel> refs, as the objects
608themselves should have been fetched when pulling from C<origin>.
609
610=head2 Accepting a patch
611
612If you have received a patch file generated using the above section,
613you should try out the patch.
614
615First we need to create a temporary new branch for these changes and
616switch into it:
617
618 % git checkout -b experimental
619
620Patches that were formatted by C<git format-patch> are applied with
621C<git am>:
622
623 % git am 0001-Rename-Leon-Brocard-to-Orange-Brocard.patch
624 Applying Rename Leon Brocard to Orange Brocard
625
626Note that some UNIX mail systems can mess with text attachments containing
627'From '. This will fix them up:
628
629 % perl -pi -e's/^>From /From /' \
630 0001-Rename-Leon-Brocard-to-Orange-Brocard.patch
631
632If just a raw diff is provided, it is also possible use this two-step
633process:
634
635 % git apply bugfix.diff
636 % git commit -a -m "Some fixing" \
637 --author="That Guy <that.guy@internets.com>"
638
639Now we can inspect the change:
640
641 % git show HEAD
642 commit b1b3dab48344cff6de4087efca3dbd63548ab5e2
643 Author: Leon Brocard <acme@astray.com>
644 Date: Fri Dec 19 17:02:59 2008 +0000
645
646 Rename Leon Brocard to Orange Brocard
647
648 diff --git a/AUTHORS b/AUTHORS
649 index 293dd70..722c93e 100644
650 --- a/AUTHORS
651 +++ b/AUTHORS
652 @@ -541,7 +541,7 @@ Lars Hecking <lhecking@nmrc.ucc.ie>
653 Laszlo Molnar <laszlo.molnar@eth.ericsson.se>
654 Leif Huhn <leif@hale.dkstat.com>
655 Len Johnson <lenjay@ibm.net>
656 -Leon Brocard <acme@astray.com>
657 +Orange Brocard <acme@astray.com>
658 Les Peters <lpeters@aol.net>
659 Lesley Binks <lesley.binks@gmail.com>
660 Lincoln D. Stein <lstein@cshl.org>
661
662If you are a committer to Perl and you think the patch is good, you can
663then merge it into blead then push it out to the main repository:
664
665 % git checkout blead
666 % git merge experimental
667 % git push origin blead
668
669If you want to delete your temporary branch, you may do so with:
670
671 % git checkout blead
672 % git branch -d experimental
673 error: The branch 'experimental' is not an ancestor of your current
674 HEAD. If you are sure you want to delete it, run 'git branch -D
675 experimental'.
676 % git branch -D experimental
677 Deleted branch experimental.
678
679=head2 Committing to blead
680
681The 'blead' branch will become the next production release of Perl.
682
683Before pushing I<any> local change to blead, it's incredibly important
684that you do a few things, lest other committers come after you with
685pitchforks and torches:
686
687=over
688
689=item *
690
691Make sure you have a good commit message. See L<perlhack/Commit
692message> for details.
693
694=item *
695
696Run the test suite. You might not think that one typo fix would break a
697test file. You'd be wrong. Here's an example of where not running the
698suite caused problems. A patch was submitted that added a couple of
699tests to an existing F<.t>. It couldn't possibly affect anything else, so
700no need to test beyond the single affected F<.t>, right? But, the
701submitter's email address had changed since the last of their
702submissions, and this caused other tests to fail. Running the test
703target given in the next item would have caught this problem.
704
705=item *
706
707If you don't run the full test suite, at least C<make test_porting>.
708This will run basic sanity checks. To see which sanity checks, have a
709look in F<t/porting>.
710
711=item *
712
713If you make any changes that affect miniperl or core routines that have
714different code paths for miniperl, be sure to run C<make minitest>.
715This will catch problems that even the full test suite will not catch
716because it runs a subset of tests under miniperl rather than perl.
717
718=back
719
720=head2 On merging and rebasing
721
722Simple, one-off commits pushed to the 'blead' branch should be simple
723commits that apply cleanly. In other words, you should make sure your
724work is committed against the current position of blead, so that you can
725push back to the master repository without merging.
726
727Sometimes, blead will move while you're building or testing your
728changes. When this happens, your push will be rejected with a message
729like this:
730
731 To ssh://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git
732 ! [rejected] blead -> blead (non-fast-forward)
733 error: failed to push some refs to 'ssh://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git'
734 To prevent you from losing history, non-fast-forward updates were
735 rejected Merge the remote changes (e.g. 'git pull') before pushing
736 again. See the 'Note about fast-forwards' section of 'git push --help'
737 for details.
738
739When this happens, you can just I<rebase> your work against the new
740position of blead, like this (assuming your remote for the master
741repository is "p5p"):
742
743 % git fetch p5p
744 % git rebase p5p/blead
745
746You will see your commits being re-applied, and you will then be able to
747push safely. More information about rebasing can be found in the
748documentation for the git-rebase(1) command.
749
750For larger sets of commits that only make sense together, or that would
751benefit from a summary of the set's purpose, you should use a merge
752commit. You should perform your work on a L<topic branch|/Topic
753branches and rewriting history>, which you should regularly rebase
754against blead to ensure that your code is not broken by blead moving.
755When you have finished your work, please perform a final rebase and
756test. Linear history is something that gets lost with every
757commit on blead, but a final rebase makes the history linear
758again, making it easier for future maintainers to see what has
759happened. Rebase as follows (assuming your work was on the
760branch C<< committer/somework >>):
761
762 % git checkout committer/somework
763 % git rebase blead
764
765Then you can merge it into master like this:
766
767 % git checkout blead
768 % git merge --no-ff --no-commit committer/somework
769 % git commit -a
770
771The switches above deserve explanation. C<--no-ff> indicates that even
772if all your work can be applied linearly against blead, a merge commit
773should still be prepared. This ensures that all your work will be shown
774as a side branch, with all its commits merged into the mainstream blead
775by the merge commit.
776
777C<--no-commit> means that the merge commit will be I<prepared> but not
778I<committed>. The commit is then actually performed when you run the
779next command, which will bring up your editor to describe the commit.
780Without C<--no-commit>, the commit would be made with nearly no useful
781message, which would greatly diminish the value of the merge commit as a
782placeholder for the work's description.
783
784When describing the merge commit, explain the purpose of the branch, and
785keep in mind that this description will probably be used by the
786eventual release engineer when reviewing the next perldelta document.
787
788=head2 Committing to maintenance versions
789
790Maintenance versions should only be altered to add critical bug fixes,
791see L<perlpolicy>.
792
793To commit to a maintenance version of perl, you need to create a local
794tracking branch:
795
796 % git checkout --track -b maint-5.005 origin/maint-5.005
797
798This creates a local branch named C<maint-5.005>, which tracks the
799remote branch C<origin/maint-5.005>. Then you can pull, commit, merge
800and push as before.
801
802You can also cherry-pick commits from blead and another branch, by
803using the C<git cherry-pick> command. It is recommended to use the
804B<-x> option to C<git cherry-pick> in order to record the SHA1 of the
805original commit in the new commit message.
806
807Before pushing any change to a maint version, make sure you've
808satisfied the steps in L</Committing to blead> above.
809
810=head2 Merging from a branch via GitHub
811
812While we don't encourage the submission of patches via GitHub, that
813will still happen. Here is a guide to merging patches from a GitHub
814repository.
815
816 % git remote add avar git://github.com/avar/perl.git
817 % git fetch avar
818
819Now you can see the differences between the branch and blead:
820
821 % git diff avar/orange
822
823And you can see the commits:
824
825 % git log avar/orange
826
827If you approve of a specific commit, you can cherry pick it:
828
829 % git cherry-pick 0c24b290ae02b2ab3304f51d5e11e85eb3659eae
830
831Or you could just merge the whole branch if you like it all:
832
833 % git merge avar/orange
834
835And then push back to the repository:
836
837 % git push origin blead
838
839=head2 Using a smoke-me branch to test changes
840
841Sometimes a change affects code paths which you cannot test on the OSes
842which are directly available to you and it would be wise to have users
843on other OSes test the change before you commit it to blead.
844
845Fortunately, there is a way to get your change smoke-tested on various
846OSes: push it to a "smoke-me" branch and wait for certain automated
847smoke-testers to report the results from their OSes.
848
849The procedure for doing this is roughly as follows (using the example of
850of tonyc's smoke-me branch called win32stat):
851
852First, make a local branch and switch to it:
853
854 % git checkout -b win32stat
855
856Make some changes, build perl and test your changes, then commit them to
857your local branch. Then push your local branch to a remote smoke-me
858branch:
859
860 % git push origin win32stat:smoke-me/tonyc/win32stat
861
862Now you can switch back to blead locally:
863
864 % git checkout blead
865
866and continue working on other things while you wait a day or two,
867keeping an eye on the results reported for your smoke-me branch at
868L<http://perl.develop-help.com/?b=smoke-me/tonyc/win32state>.
869
870If all is well then update your blead branch:
871
872 % git pull
873
874then checkout your smoke-me branch once more and rebase it on blead:
875
876 % git rebase blead win32stat
877
878Now switch back to blead and merge your smoke-me branch into it:
879
880 % git checkout blead
881 % git merge win32stat
882
883As described earlier, if there are many changes on your smoke-me branch
884then you should prepare a merge commit in which to give an overview of
885those changes by using the following command instead of the last
886command above:
887
888 % git merge win32stat --no-ff --no-commit
889
890You should now build perl and test your (merged) changes one last time
891(ideally run the whole test suite, but failing that at least run the
892F<t/porting/*.t> tests) before pushing your changes as usual:
893
894 % git push origin blead
895
896Finally, you should then delete the remote smoke-me branch:
897
898 % git push origin :smoke-me/tonyc/win32stat
899
900(which is likely to produce a warning like this, which can be ignored:
901
902 remote: fatal: ambiguous argument
903 'refs/heads/smoke-me/tonyc/win32stat':
904 unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
905 remote: Use '--' to separate paths from revisions
906
907) and then delete your local branch:
908
909 % git branch -d win32stat
910
911=head2 A note on camel and dromedary
912
913The committers have SSH access to the two servers that serve
914C<perl5.git.perl.org>. One is C<perl5.git.perl.org> itself (I<camel>),
915which is the 'master' repository. The second one is
916C<users.perl5.git.perl.org> (I<dromedary>), which can be used for
917general testing and development. Dromedary syncs the git tree from
918camel every few minutes, you should not push there. Both machines also
919have a full CPAN mirror in F</srv/CPAN>, please use this. To share files
920with the general public, dromedary serves your F<~/public_html/> as
921C<http://users.perl5.git.perl.org/~yourlogin/>
922
923These hosts have fairly strict firewalls to the outside. Outgoing, only
924rsync, ssh and git are allowed. For http and ftp, you can use
925http://webproxy:3128 as proxy. Incoming, the firewall tries to detect
926attacks and blocks IP addresses with suspicious activity. This
927sometimes (but very rarely) has false positives and you might get
928blocked. The quickest way to get unblocked is to notify the admins.
929
930These two boxes are owned, hosted, and operated by booking.com. You can
931reach the sysadmins in #p5p on irc.perl.org or via mail to
932L<perl5-porters@perl.org|mailto:perl5-porters@perl.org>.