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189 lines
8.9 KiB
Markdown
189 lines
8.9 KiB
Markdown
# RIOT Maintainer Guidelines
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This list presents a series of technical and non-technical guidelines for maintainers.
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The list is not exhaustive, it represents a baseline on
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things that should be ensured for contributions.
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Notes:
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- Any of the items in this list can be skipped, if clearly and logically
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articulated reasons are presented.
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- The order of the steps is meant to maximize efficiency and minimize
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overhead, with the philosophy that failing in step n makes steps n+x
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obsolete. However, this efficiency can depend on the quality of the
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submission itself. If the PR (Pull Request) is clearly not in a reviewable
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state (for example, due to poor code cleanliness or overall design), it
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might be more efficient to give the contributor some broader comments for
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improvement before further review.
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- This is a working document: any changes, additions, or other discussions
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are encouraged, via PRs raised against the document. Changes to this
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document should have at least two ACKs, to ensure these guidelines
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are well thought out, and that they reflect community consensus.
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The [list of maintainers] gives information on the current maintainers and the
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areas of RIOT they each maintain.
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## Technical guidelines
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### 1. - Review the fundamentals
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Before spending the time on an in-depth code review, it's important to assess
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the overall validity of the PR.
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1. Does the reasoning for this PR make sense? \
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Are the requirements and design goals clearly thought out and clearly
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expressed? \
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Is the problem that the PR intends to solve clearly stated?
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2. Is the solution presented in the PR as simple as possible to satisfy the
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requirements, but no simpler?
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3. Is the PR a manageable size? It should be confined to a single explainable
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change, and be runnable on its own.
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4. Is the solution well designed on a high level?
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5. Do the concepts used by the PR make sense?
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6. Does the PR break with existing concepts?
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7. Is there a clean commit history in the pulled branch? The commit history
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should group the code differences cleanly.
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8. Are there clear and adequate instructions on how to test the PR? \
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This may or may not include implemented tests as part of the PR.
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9. Does the code compile and run?
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10. Does this PR respect the rights of previous authors, either through
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retaining their commits or by retaining their copyrights in the boilerplate
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headers?
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11. Is the PR a duplicate of another PR?
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### 2. - Review the design of the code
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The following list is not exhaustive, it addresses the coding issues we have
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regularly seen in the past. In particular, check that the [Best Practices]
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are followed. These checks can be aided (but not replaced) by a tool such as
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Coccinelle, using the script found in dist/tools/coccinelle.
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1. Check for code duplication
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2. [Check memory usage][Comparing build sizes]
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3. Check all code paths
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4. Check for API compliance
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5. Check for consistent error handling
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6. Check scope of variables and functions
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7. Check for syntactical, semantical or logical errors
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8. Check for any runtime efficiency improvements that can be made in specific
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lines of code - i.e., without changing the overall design of the code
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9. Check that the code design is as simple as possible to solve the problem,
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but no simpler
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### 3. - Test the PR
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Run tests to verify the correct behavior (see 1.6), both on `native` and on a
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few selected boards, or present clearly and logically articulated reasons for
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skipping some/all tests.
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### 4. - Review the code against the coding conventions
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Check that the code follows the [Coding Conventions]. This can be aided (but not
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replaced) by Uncrustify, using the uncrustify-riot.cfg file found in the base
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directory. Note the difference between personal coding style, which is allowed
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subject to the other guidelines, and the coding conventions, which are absolute
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and must always be followed.
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### 5. - Review the documentation
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The aim of the documentation is to ensure that the code can be picked up as
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easily as possible in the future. Ideally, the documentation is sufficiently
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complete that no input from the original developer or maintainer is required.
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1. Check for sufficient high-level (module-level) documentation
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2. Verify function level documentation
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3. Are critical/hard to understand parts in the code documented?
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4. Check grammar and spelling of documentation
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## Non-technical guidelines
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### Interaction with contributors
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- Be responsive. Even if you are too busy to review the contribution, try to
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add a note fairly soon after the PR is submitted, thanking them for their
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valuable contribution and saying that you will review it in due course. Once
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the contributor has made their changes, ensure you reply to them in a
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reasonable timeframe. Acknowledge their replies to concerns if you're happy
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with their argument.
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- Be helpful. Give precise and correct advice when possible and when it will
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help the contributor. This can include code snippets, links to
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code/issues/wiki entries/web pages, or anything else. Educating contributors
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means we are investing in our community.
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- Be friendly. Respect the original author, bearing in mind that their coding
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style or their design may be just as valid as the way you would have done
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it and of course, always follow the [Code of Conduct].
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- If a contributor has opened a PR, the reviewer should attempt to
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help the author of the contribution to get it to its best shape and
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according to the RIOT Standard™. If there is disagreement, it’s important
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to understand the reasons behind and always give technical arguments,
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pros and cons or snippets.
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### Organisation of reviewing between maintainers
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#### Partial review
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You can review a PR partially. This would involve reviewing all points in one or
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more sections outlined in the [technical guidelines](#technical-guidelines).
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In that case, please do not "approve" the PR to prevent accidental merges.
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Rather, give your verbal ACK and describe what you reviewed. In addition, if you
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processed or reasonably stepped over a whole section, mark the PR with the
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according label from the "Reviewed:" category. If you set a label by stepping
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over a section, please articulate your reasoning for this clearly, as noted in
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the [introduction](#introduction). This will help other maintainers to
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better understand your line of thought. If you disagree with the assessment of
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a previous review, you may remove a certain "Reviewed:" label. Please state your
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reasoning in this case as well.
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When all "Reviewed:" labels are set you may give your approval for the PR.
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As for everything in this document this is a "CAN", not a "MUST": It might help
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other maintainers to track your work, but if the overhead isn't justified, a
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simple approving ACK might suffice.
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#### Github etiquette
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It is good etiquette to describe what you reviewed, even if you gave the PR a
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full review and gave your approval. This way the contributor and other
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maintainers are able to follow your thought process.
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Maintainers should only assign themselves to PRs and shouldn't assign other
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maintainers. You can however request reviews from other maintainers or
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contributors, either by mentioning them in a comment or selecting them in
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GitHub's review sidebar.
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If there are multiple maintainers reviewing a PR, always give the other
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maintainers reasonable time to ACK before dismissing their review.
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### Release, Feature Freeze, and Backports
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Before the official release of a new RIOT version, two feature freeze periods
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are announced on the
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[RIOT development email list](https://lists.riot-os.org/mailman/listinfo/devel):
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The soft feature freeze and the hard feature freeze. During the soft feature
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freeze only PRs with minor impact should be merged into master. The hard feature
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freeze begins when the release manager creates a new release branch. Therefore,
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the restriction on merging PRs into the master branch are lifted at that point.
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Once the release branch is created, no backports of new features will be
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accepted. Instead, backports should consist only of bug fixes or of reverting
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features that were added during the last development period (and not part of any
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release), but didn't reach the required maturity or API stability yet. For
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bigger changes (which explicitly includes any revert), the PR has to be
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announced to the maintainer mailing list and should be merged no sooner than
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48h after the announcement and needs at least two ACKs.
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In case of security relevant backports (both bug fixes and reverts), the
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announcement can be skipped and the fix merged once at least two ACKs are
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there.
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[list of maintainers]: https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT/wiki/Maintainers
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[Best Practices]: https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT/wiki/Best-Practice-for-RIOT-Programming
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[Comparing build sizes]: https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT/wiki/Comparing-build-sizes
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[Coding Conventions]: CODING_CONVENTIONS.md
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[Code of Conduct]: https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
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