tests: Add documentation for new testing code
[gem5.git] / CONTRIBUTING.md
1 Authors: Jason Lowe-Power
2 Andreas Sandberg
3 Steve Reinhardt
4
5 If you've made changes to gem5 that might benefit others, we strongly encourage
6 you to contribute those changes to the public gem5 repository. There are
7 several reasons to do this:
8 * Share your work with others, so that they can benefit from new functionality.
9 * Support the scientific principle by enabling others to evaluate your
10 suggestions without having to guess what you did.
11 * Once your changes are part of the main repo, you no longer have to merge
12 them back in every time you update your local repo. This can be a huge time
13 saving!
14 * Once your code is in the main repo, other people have to make their changes
15 work with your code, and not the other way around.
16 * Others may build on your contributions to make them even better, or extend
17 them in ways you did not have time to do.
18 * You will have the satisfaction of contributing back to the community.
19
20 The main method for contributing code to gem5 is via our code review website:
21 https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/. This documents describes the details of
22 how to create code changes, upload your changes, have your changes
23 reviewed, and finally push your changes to gem5. More information can be found
24 from the following sources:
25 * http://gem5.org/Submitting_Contributions
26 * https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/index.html
27 * https://git-scm.com/book
28
29
30 High-level flow for submitting changes
31 ======================================
32
33 +-------------+
34 | Make change |
35 +------+------+
36 |
37 |
38 v
39 +-------------+
40 | Run tests |<--------------+
41 +------+------+ |
42 | |
43 | |
44 v |
45 +------+------+ |
46 | Post review | |
47 +------+------+ |
48 | |
49 v |
50 +--------+---------+ |
51 | Wait for reviews | |
52 +--------+---------+ |
53 | |
54 | |
55 v |
56 +----+----+ No +------+------+
57 |Reviewers+--------->+ Update code |
58 |happy? | +------+------+
59 +----+----+ ^
60 | |
61 | Yes |
62 v |
63 +----+-----+ No |
64 |Maintainer+----------------+
65 |happy? |
66 +----+-----+
67 |
68 | Yes
69 v
70 +------+------+
71 | Submit code |
72 +-------------+
73
74 After creating your change to gem5, you can post a review on our Gerrit
75 code-review site: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com. Before being able to
76 submit your code to the mainline of gem5, the code is reviewed by others in the
77 community. Additionally, the maintainer for that part of the code must sign off
78 on it.
79
80 Cloning the gem5 repo to contribute
81 ===================================
82
83 If you plan on contributing, it is strongly encouraged for you to clone the
84 repository directly from our gerrit instance at
85 https://gem5.googlesource.com/.
86
87 To clone the master gem5 repository:
88 ```
89 git clone https://gem5.googlesource.com/public/gem5
90 ```
91
92 Other gem5 repositories
93 -----------------------
94
95 There are a few repositories other than the main gem5 development repository.
96
97 * public/m5threads: The code for a pthreads implementation that works with
98 gem5's syscall emulation mode.
99
100 Other gem5 branches
101 -------------------
102
103 None right now.
104
105 Making changes to gem5
106 ======================
107
108 It is strongly encouraged to use git branches when making changes to gem5.
109 Additionally, keeping changes small and concise and only have a single logical
110 change per commit.
111
112 Unlike our previous flow with Mercurial and patch queues, when using git, you
113 will be committing changes to your local branch. By using separate branches in
114 git, you will be able to pull in and merge changes from mainline and simply
115 keep up with upstream changes.
116
117 Requirements for change descriptions
118 ------------------------------------
119 To help reviewers and future contributors more easily understand and track
120 changes, we require all change descriptions be strictly formatted.
121
122 A canonical commit message consists of three parts:
123 * A short summary line describing the change. This line starts with one or
124 more keywords (found in the MAINTAINERS file) separated by commas followed
125 by a colon and a description of the change. This line should be no more than
126 65 characters long since version control systems usually add a prefix that
127 causes line-wrapping for longer lines.
128 * (Optional, but highly recommended) A detailed description. This describes
129 what you have done and why. If the change isn't obvious, you might want to
130 motivate why it is needed. Lines need to be wrapped to 75 characters or
131 less.
132 * Tags describing patch metadata. You are highly recommended to use
133 tags to acknowledge reviewers for their work. Gerrit will automatically add
134 most tags.
135
136 Tags are an optional mechanism to store additional metadata about a patch and
137 acknowledge people who reported a bug or reviewed that patch. Tags are
138 generally appended to the end of the commit message in the order they happen.
139 We currently use the following tags:
140 * Signed-off-by: Added by the author and the submitter (if different).
141 This tag is a statement saying that you believe the patch to be correct and
142 have the right to submit the patch according to the license in the affected
143 files. Similarly, if you commit someone else's patch, this tells the rest
144 of the world that you have have the right to forward it to the main
145 repository. If you need to make any changes at all to submit the change,
146 these should be described within hard brackets just before your
147 Signed-off-by tag. By adding this line, the contributor certifies the
148 contribution is made under the terms of the Developer Certificate of Origin
149 (DCO) [https://developercertificate.org/].
150 * Reviewed-by: Used to acknowledge patch reviewers. It's generally considered
151 good form to add these. Added automatically.
152 * Reported-by: Used to acknowledge someone for finding and reporting a bug.
153 * Reviewed-on: Link to the review request corresponding to this patch. Added
154 automatically.
155 * Change-Id: Used by Gerrit to track changes across rebases. Added
156 automatically with a commit hook by git.
157 * Tested-by: Used to acknowledge people who tested a patch. Sometimes added
158 automatically by review systems that integrate with CI systems.
159
160 Other than the "Signed-off-by", "Reported-by", and "Tested-by" tags, you
161 generally don't need to add these manually as they are added automatically by
162 Gerrit.
163
164 It is encouraged for the author of the patch and the submitter to add a
165 Signed-off-by tag to the commit message. By adding this line, the contributor
166 certifies the contribution is made under the terms of the Developer Certificate
167 of Origin (DCO) [https://developercertificate.org/].
168
169 It is imperative that you use your real name and your real email address in
170 both tags and in the author field of the changeset.
171
172 For significant changes, authors are encouraged to add copyright information
173 and their names at the beginning of the file. The main purpose of the author
174 names on the file is to track who is most knowledgeable about the file (e.g.,
175 who has contributed a significant amount of code to the file).
176
177 Note: If you do not follow these guidelines, the gerrit review site will
178 automatically reject your patch.
179 If this happens, update your changeset descriptions to match the required style
180 and resubmit. The following is a useful git command to update the most recent
181 commit (HEAD).
182
183 ```
184 git commit --amend
185 ```
186
187 Running tests
188 =============
189
190 Before posting a change to the code review site, you should always run the
191 quick tests!
192 See TESTING.md for more information.
193
194 Posting a review
195 ================
196
197 If you have not signed up for an account on the Gerrit review site
198 (https://gem5-review.googlesource.com), you first have to create an account.
199
200 Setting up an account
201 ---------------------
202 1. Go to https://gem5.googlesource.com/
203 2. Click "Sign In" in the upper right corner. Note: You will need a Google
204 account to contribute.
205 3. After signing in, click "Generate Password" and follow the instructions.
206
207 Submitting a change
208 -------------------
209
210 In gerrit, to submit a review request, you can simply push your git commits to
211 a special named branch. For more information on git push see
212 https://git-scm.com/docs/git-push.
213
214 There are three ways to push your changes to gerrit.
215
216 Push change to gerrit review
217 ----------------------------
218
219 ```
220 git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master
221 ```
222
223 Assuming origin is https://gem5.googlesource.com/public/gem5 and you want to
224 push the changeset at HEAD, this will create a new review request on top of the
225 master branch. More generally,
226
227 ```
228 git push <gem5 gerrit instance> <changeset>:refs/for/<branch>
229 ```
230
231 See https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/user-upload.html for
232 more information.
233
234 Pushing your first change
235 --------------------------
236 The first time you push a change you may get the following error:
237
238 ```
239 remote: ERROR: [fb1366b] missing Change-Id in commit message footer
240 ...
241 ```
242
243 Within the error message, there is a command line you should run. For every new
244 clone of the git repo, you need to run the following command to automatically
245 insert the change id in the the commit (all on one line).
246
247 ```
248 curl -Lo `git rev-parse --git-dir`/hooks/commit-msg \
249 https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/tools/hooks/commit-msg ; \
250 chmod +x `git rev-parse --git-dir`/hooks/commit-msg
251 ```
252
253 If you receive the above error, simply run this command and then amend your
254 changeset.
255
256 ```
257 git commit --amend
258 ```
259
260 Push change to gerrit as a draft/private
261 ----------------------------------------
262
263 See https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/intro-user.html#private-changes
264 for details on private gerrit changes.
265
266 ```
267 git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master%private
268 ```
269
270 Once you have pushed your change as "private", you can log onto [gerrit]
271 (https://gem5-review.googlesource.com) and once you're happy with the commit
272 click the "unmark private" which may be hidden in the "more options" dropdown
273 in the upper right corner.
274
275 Push change bypassing gerrit
276 -----------------------------
277
278 Only maintainers can bypass gerrit review. This should very rarely be used.
279
280 ```
281 git push origin HEAD:refs/heads/master
282 ```
283
284 Other gerrit push options
285 -------------------------
286
287 There are a number of options you can specify when uploading your changes to
288 gerrit (e.g., reviewers, labels). The gerrit documentation has more
289 information.
290 https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/user-upload.html
291
292
293 Reviewing patches
294 =================
295
296 Reviewing patches is done on our gerrit instance at
297 https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/.
298
299 After logging in with your Google account, you will be able to comment, review,
300 and push your own patches as well as review others' patches. All gem5 users are
301 encouraged to review patches. The only requirement to review patches is to be
302 polite and respectful of others.
303
304 There are multiple labels in Gerrit that can be applied to each review detailed
305 below.
306 * Code-review: This is used by any gem5 user to review patches. When reviewing
307 a patch you can give it a score of -2 to +2 with the following semantics.
308 * -2: This blocks the patch. You believe that this patch should never be
309 committed. This label should be very rarely used.
310 * -1: You would prefer this is not merged as is
311 * 0: No score
312 * +1: This patch seems good, but you aren't 100% confident that it should be
313 pushed.
314 * +2: This is a good patch and should be pushed as is.
315 * Maintainer: Currently only PMC members are maintainers. At least one
316 maintainer must review your patch and give it a +1 before it can be merged.
317 * Verified: This is automatically generated from the continuous integrated
318 (CI) tests. Each patch must receive at least a +1 from the CI tests before
319 the patch can be merged. The patch will receive a +1 if gem5 builds and
320 runs, and it will receive a +2 if the stats match.
321 * Style-Check: This is automatically generated and tests the patch against the
322 gem5 code style (http://www.gem5.org/Coding_Style). The patch must receive a
323 +1 from the style checker to be pushed.
324
325 Note: Whenever the patch creator updates the patch all reviewers must re-review
326 the patch. There is no longer a "Fix it, then Ship It" option.
327
328 Once you have received reviews for your patch, you will likely need to make
329 changes. To do this, you should update the original git changeset. Then, you
330 can simply push the changeset again to the same Gerrit branch to update the
331 review request.
332
333 ```
334 git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master
335 ```
336
337 Note: If you have posted a patch and don't receive any reviews, you may need to
338 prod the reviewers. You can do this by adding a reply to your changeset review
339 on gerrit. It is expected that at least the maintainer will supply a review for
340 your patch.
341
342 Committing changes
343 ==================
344
345 Each patch must meet the following criteria to be merged:
346 * At least one review with +2
347 * At least one maintainer with +1
348 * At least +1 from the CI tests (gem5 must build and run)
349 * At least +1 from the style checker
350
351 Once a patch meets the above criteria, the submitter of the patch will be able
352 to merge the patch by pressing the "Submit" button on Gerrit. When the patch is
353 submitted, it is merged into the public gem5 branch.