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1 This file contains information on Emacs developer processes.
2
3 For information on contributing to Emacs as a non-developer, see
4 (info "(emacs)Contributing") or
5 http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Contributing.html
6
7 * Information for Emacs Developers.
8
9 An "Emacs Developer" is someone who contributes a lot of code or
10 documentation to the Emacs repository. Generally, they have write
11 access to the Emacs git repository on Savannah
12 https://savannah.gnu.org/git/?group=emacs.
13
14 ** Write access to the Emacs repository.
15
16 Once you become a frequent contributor to Emacs, we can consider
17 giving you write access to the version-control repository. Request
18 access on the emacs-devel@gnu.org mailing list. Also, be sure to
19 subscribe to the emacs-devel@gnu.org mailing list and include the
20 "emacs-announce" topic, so that you get the announcements about
21 feature freeze and other important events.
22
23 ** Using the Emacs repository
24
25 Emacs uses Git for the source code repository.
26
27 See http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/GitQuickStartForEmacsDevs to get
28 started, and http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/GitForEmacsDevs for more
29 advanced information.
30
31 Alternately, see admin/notes/git-workflow.
32
33 If committing changes written by someone else, make the commit in
34 their name, not yours. Git distinguishes between the author
35 and the committer; use the --author option on the commit command to
36 specify the actual author; the committer defaults to you.
37
38 ** Commit messages
39
40 Emacs development no longer stores descriptions of new changes in
41 ChangeLog files. Instead, a single ChangeLog file is generated from
42 the commit messages when a release is prepared. So changes you commit
43 should not touch any of the ChangeLog files in the repository, but
44 instead should contain the log entries in the commit message. Here is
45 an example of a commit message (indented):
46
47 Deactivate shifted region
48
49 Do not silently extend a region that is not highlighted;
50 this can happen after a shift (Bug#19003).
51 * doc/emacs/mark.texi (Shift Selection): Document the change.
52 * lisp/window.el (handle-select-window):
53 * src/frame.c (Fhandle_switch_frame, Fselected_frame):
54 Deactivate the mark.
55
56 Below are some rules and recommendations for formatting commit
57 messages:
58
59 - Start with a single unindented summary line explaining the change;
60 do not end this line with a period. If that line starts with a
61 semi-colon and a space "; ", the log message will be ignored when
62 generating the ChangeLog file. Use this for minor commits that do
63 not need separate ChangeLog entries, such as changes in etc/NEWS.
64
65 - After the summary line, there should be an empty line, then
66 unindented ChangeLog entries.
67
68 - Limit lines in commit messages to 78 characters, unless they consist
69 of a single word of at most 140 characters; this is enforced by a
70 commit hook. It's nicer to limit the summary line to 50 characters;
71 this isn't enforced. If the change can't be summarized so briefly,
72 add a paragraph after the empty line and before the individual file
73 descriptions.
74
75 - If only a single file is changed, the summary line can be the normal
76 file first line (starting with the asterisk). Then there is no
77 individual files section.
78
79 - If the commit has authors other than yourself, the commit message
80 should contain a separate line like the following:
81
82 Co-authored-by: Joe Schmoe <j.schmoe@example.org>
83
84 - If the commit is a tiny change that is exempt from copyright paperwork,
85 the commit message should contain a separate line like the following:
86
87 Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes
88
89 - The commit message should contain "Bug#NNNNN" if it is related to
90 bug number NNNNN in the debbugs database. This string is often
91 parenthesized, as in "(Bug#19003)".
92
93 - Commit messages should contain only printable UTF-8 characters.
94
95 - Commit messages should not contain the "Signed-off-by:" lines that
96 are used in some other projects.
97
98 - Explaining the rationale for a design choice is best done in comments
99 in the source code. However, sometimes it is useful to describe just
100 the rationale for a change; that can be done in the commit message
101 between the summary line and the file entries.
102
103 - Emacs generally follows the GNU coding standards when it comes to
104 ChangeLogs:
105 http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Change-Logs.html or
106 "(info (standards)Change Logs"). One exception is that we still
107 sometimes quote `like-this' (as the standards used to recommend)
108 rather than 'like-this' (as they do now), because `...' is so widely
109 used elsewhere in Emacs.
110
111 - Some of the rules in the GNU coding standards section 5.2
112 "Commenting Your Work" also apply to ChangeLog entries: they must be
113 in English, and be complete sentences starting with a capital and
114 ending with a period (except the summary line should not end in a
115 period).
116
117 They are preserved indefinitely, and have a reasonable chance of
118 being read in the future, so it's better that they have good
119 presentation.
120
121 - Use the present tense; describe "what the change does", not "what
122 the change did".
123
124 - Preferred form for several entries with the same content:
125
126 * lisp/help.el (view-lossage):
127 * lisp/kmacro.el (kmacro-edit-lossage):
128 * lisp/edmacro.el (edit-kbd-macro): Fix docstring, lossage is now 300.
129
130 (Rather than anything involving "ditto" and suchlike.)
131
132 - There is no standard or recommended way to identify revisions in
133 ChangeLog entries. Using Git SHA1 values limits the usability of
134 the references to Git, and will become much less useful if Emacs
135 switches to a different VCS. So we recommend against that.
136
137 One way to identify revisions is by quoting their summary line.
138 Another is with an action stamp - an RFC3339 date followed by !
139 followed by the committer's email - for example,
140 "2014-01-16T05:43:35Z!esr@thyrsus.com". Often, "my previous commit"
141 will suffice.
142
143 - There is no need to mention files such as NEWS, MAINTAINERS, and
144 FOR-RELEASE, or to indicate regeneration of files such as
145 'configure', in the ChangeLog entry. "There is no need" means you
146 don't have to, but you can if you want to.
147
148 ** Generating ChangeLog entries
149
150 - You can use various Emacs functions to ease the process of writing
151 ChangeLog entries; see (info "(emacs)Change Log Commands") or
152 http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Change-Log-Commands.html.
153
154 - If you use Emacs VC, one way to format ChangeLog entries is to create
155 a top-level ChangeLog file manually, and update it with 'C-x 4 a' as
156 usual. Do not register the ChangeLog file under git; instead, use
157 'C-c C-a' to insert its contents into into your *vc-log* buffer.
158 Or if 'log-edit-hook' includes 'log-edit-insert-changelog' (which it
159 does by default), they will be filled in for you automatically.
160
161 - Alternatively, you can use the vc-dwim command to maintain commit
162 messages. When you create a source directory, run the shell command
163 'git-changelog-symlink-init' to create a symbolic link from
164 ChangeLog to .git/c/ChangeLog. Edit this ChangeLog via its symlink
165 with Emacs commands like 'C-x 4 a', and commit the change using the
166 shell command 'vc-dwim --commit'. Type 'vc-dwim --help' for more.
167
168 ** Branches
169
170 Development normally takes places on the trunk.
171 Sometimes specialized features are developed on separate branches
172 before possibly being merged to the trunk.
173
174 Development is discussed on the emacs-devel mailing list.
175
176 Sometime before the release of a new major version of Emacs a "feature
177 freeze" is imposed on the trunk, to prepare for creating a release
178 branch. No new features may be added to the trunk after this point,
179 until the release branch is created. Announcements about the freeze
180 (and other important events) are made on the emacs-devel mailing
181 list under the "emacs-announce" topic, and not anywhere else.
182
183 The trunk branch is named "master" in git; release branches are named
184 "emacs-nn" where "nn" is the major version.
185
186 If you are fixing a bug that exists in the current release, be sure to
187 commit it to the release branch; it will be merged to the master
188 branch later.
189
190 However, if you know that the change will be difficult to merge to the
191 trunk (eg because the trunk code has changed a lot), you can apply the
192 change to both trunk and branch yourself. Indicate in the release
193 branch commit log that there is no need to merge the commit to the
194 trunk; start the commit message with "Backport:". gitmerge.el will
195 then exclude that commit from the merge to trunk.
196
197
198 ** Other process information
199
200 See all the files in admin/notes/* . In particular, see
201 admin/notes/newfile, see admin/notes/repo.
202
203 *** git vs rename
204
205 Git does not explicitly represent a file renaming; it uses a percent
206 changed heuristic to deduce that a file was renamed. So if you are
207 planning to make extensive changes to a file after renaming it (or
208 moving it to another directory), you should:
209
210 - create a feature branch
211
212 - commit the rename without any changes
213
214 - make other changes
215
216 - merge the feature branch to trunk, _not_ squashing the commits into
217 one. The commit message on this merge should summarize the renames
218 and all the changes.
219
220 ** Emacs Mailing lists.
221
222 Discussion about Emacs development takes place on emacs-devel@gnu.org.
223
224 Bug reports and fixes, feature requests and implementations should be
225 sent to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org, the bug/feature list. This is coupled
226 to the tracker at http://debbugs.gnu.org .
227
228 You can subscribe to the mailing lists, or see the list archives,
229 by following links from http://savannah.gnu.org/mail/?group=emacs .
230
231 To email a patch you can use a shell command like 'git format-patch -1'
232 to create a file, and then attach the file to your email. This nicely
233 packages the patch's commit message and changes.
234
235 ** Document your changes.
236
237 Any change that matters to end-users should have an entry in etc/NEWS.
238
239 Doc-strings should be updated together with the code.
240
241 Think about whether your change requires updating the manuals. If you
242 know it does not, mark the NEWS entry with "---". If you know
243 that *all* the necessary documentation updates have been made, mark
244 the entry with "+++". Otherwise do not mark it.
245
246 Please see (info "(elisp)Documentation Tips") or
247 https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Documentation-Tips.html
248 for more specific tips on Emacs's doc style. Use 'checkdoc' to check
249 for documentation errors before submitting a patch.
250
251 ** Test your changes.
252
253 Please test your changes before committing them or sending them to the
254 list.
255
256 Emacs uses ERT, Emacs Lisp Regression Testing, for testing. See (info
257 "(ert)") or https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/ert/
258 for more information on writing and running tests.
259
260 To run tests on the entire Emacs tree, run "make check" from the
261 top-level directory. Most tests are in the directory
262 "test/automated". From the "test/automated" directory, run "make
263 <filename>" to run the tests for <filename>.el(c). See
264 "test/automated/Makefile" for more information.
265
266 ** Understanding Emacs Internals.
267
268 The best way to understand Emacs Internals is to read the code,
269 but the nodes "Tips" and "GNU Emacs Internals" in the Appendix
270 of the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual may also help. Some source files,
271 such as xdisp.c, have large commentaries describing the design and
272 implementation in more detail.
273
274 The file etc/DEBUG describes how to debug Emacs bugs.
275
276
277 \f
278 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
279
280 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
281 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
282 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
283 (at your option) any later version.
284
285 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
286 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
287 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
288 GNU General Public License for more details.
289
290 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
291 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
292 \f
293 Local variables:
294 mode: outline
295 paragraph-separate: "[ \f]*$"
296 end: