Many of these terms have more than one meaning. For the purposes of this document, the following terms refer to specific things.
contributor - A person who makes a change to Puppet and submits a change set in the form of a pull request.
change set - A set of discrete patches which combined together form a contribution. A change set takes the form of Git commits and is submitted to Puppet in the form of a pull request.
committer - A person responsible for reviewing a pull request and then making the decision what base branch to merge the change set into.
base branch - A branch in Git that contains an active history of changes
and will eventually be released using semantic version guidelines. The branch
named main
will always exist as a base branch. The other base branches are
stable
, and security
described below.
main branch - The branch where new functionality that are not bug fixes is merged.
stable branch - The branch where bug fixes against the latest release or release candidate are merged.
This section provides a guide to follow while committing change sets to Puppet base branches.
This section provides a guide to help a committer decide the specific base branch that a change set should be merged into.
The latest minor release of a major release is the only base branch that should
be patched. These patches will be merged into main
if they contain new
functionality. They will be merged into stable
and main
if they fix a
critical bug. Older minor releases in a major release do not get patched.
Before the switch to semantic versions committers did not have to think about the difference between minor and major releases. Committing to the latest minor release of a major release is a policy intended to limit the number of active base branches that must be managed.
Security patches are handled as a special case. Security patches may be
applied to earlier minor releases of a major release, but the patches should
first be merged into the security
branch. Security patches should be merged
by Puppet Labs staff members. Pull requests should not be submitted with the
security branch as the base branch. Please send all security related
information or patches to [email protected] as per our Security
Policy.
The CI systems are configured to run against main
and stable
. Over time,
these branches will refer to different versions, but their name will remain
fixed to avoid having to update CI jobs and tasks as new versions are released.
A change set may apply to multiple branches, for example a bug fix should be
applied to the stable release and the development branch. In this situation
the change set needs to be committed to multiple base branches. This section
provides a guide for how to merge patches into these branches, e.g.
stable
is patched, how should the changes be applied to main
?
First, rebase the change set onto the stable
branch. Next, merge the change
set into the stable
branch using a merge commit. Once merged into stable
,
merge the same change set into main
without doing a rebase as to preserve
the commit identifiers. This merge strategy follows the git
flow model. Both of
these change set merges should have a merge commit which makes it much easier
to track a set of commits as a logical change set through the history of a
branch. Merge commits should be created using the --no-ff --log
git merge
options.
Any merge conflicts should be resolved using the merge commit in order to
preserve the commit identifiers for each individual change. This ensures git branch --contains
will accurately report all of the base branches which
contain a specific patch.
Using this strategy, the stable branch need not be reset. Both master
and
stable
have infinite lifetimes. Patch versions, also known as bug fix
releases, will be tagged and released directly from the stable
branch. Major
and minor versions, also known as feature releases, will be tagged and released
directly from the master
branch. Upon release of a new major or minor
version all of the changes in the master
branch will be merged into the
stable
branch.
This section aims to provide a checklist of things to look for when reviewing a pull request and determining if the change set should be merged into a base branch:
- All tests pass
- Are there any platform gotchas? (Does a change make an assumption about platform specific behavior that is incompatible with other platforms? e.g. Windows paths vs. POSIX paths.)
- Is the change backwards compatible? (It should be)
- Are there YARD docs for API changes?
- Does the change set also require documentation changes? If so is the documentation being kept up to date?
- Does the change set include clean code? (software code that is formatted
correctly and in an organized manner so that another coder can easily read
or modify it.) HINT:
git diff master --check
- Does the change set conform to the contributing guide?
This section aims to provide guidelines for being a good commit citizen by paying attention to our automated build tools.
- Don’t push on a broken build. (A broken build is defined as a failing job in the Puppet FOSS page.)
- Watch the build until your changes have gone through green
- Update the ticket status and target version. The target version field in our issue tracker should be updated to be the next release of Puppet. For example, if the most recent release of Puppet is 3.1.1 and you merge a backwards compatible change set into master, then the target version should be 3.2.0 in the issue tracker.)
- Ensure the pull request is closed (Hint: amend your merge commit to contain
the string
closes #123
where 123 is the pull request number and github will automatically close the pull request when the branch is pushed.)
This section helps a committer rebase a contribution onto an earlier base branch, then merge into the base branch and up through all active base branches.
Suppose a contributor submits a pull request based on master. The change set fixes a bug reported against Puppet 3.1.1 which is the most recently released version of Puppet.
In this example the committer should rebase the change set onto the stable
branch since this is a bug rather than new functionality.
First, the committer pulls down the branch using the hub
gem. This tool
automates the process of adding the remote repository and creating a local
branch to track the remote branch.
$ hub checkout https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppet/pull/1234
Branch jeffmccune-fix_foo_error set up to track remote branch fix_foo_error from jeffmccune.
Switched to a new branch 'jeffmccune-fix_foo_error'
At this point the topic branch is a descendant of master, but we want it to
descend from stable
. The committer rebases the change set onto stable
.
$ git branch bug/stable/fix_foo_error
$ git rebase --onto stable master bug/stable/fix_foo_error
First, rewinding head to replay your work on top of it...
Applying: (#23456) Fix FooError that always bites users in 3.1.1
The git rebase
command may be interpreted as, "First, check out the branch
named bug/stable/fix_foo_error
, then take the changes that were previously
based on master
and re-base them onto stable
.
Now that we have a topic branch containing the change set based on the stable
release branch, the committer merges in:
$ git checkout stable
Switched to branch 'stable'
$ git merge --no-ff --log bug/stable/fix_foo_error
Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy.
foo | 0
1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 foo
Once merged into the first base branch, the committer merges the stable
branch into master
, being careful to preserve the same commit identifiers.
$ git checkout master
Switched to branch 'master'
$ git merge --no-ff --log stable
Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy.
foo | 0
1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 foo
Once the change set has been merged into one base branch, the change set should
not be modified in order to keep the history clean, avoid "double" commits, and
preserve the usefulness of git branch --contains
. If there are any merge
conflicts, they are to be resolved in the merge commit itself and not by
re-writing (rebasing) the patches for one base branch, but not another.
Once the change set has been merged into stable
and into master
, the
committer pushes. Please note, the checklist should be complete at this point.
It's helpful to make sure your local branches are up to date to avoid one of
the branches failing to fast forward while the other succeeds. Both the
stable
and master
branches are being pushed at the same time.
$ git push puppetlabs master:master stable:stable
That's it! The committer then updates the pull request, updates the issue in our issue tracker, and keeps an eye on the build status.