| .. _submitting-a-patch: |
| |
| Submitting a Patch |
| ================== |
| |
| QEMU welcomes contributions of code (either fixing bugs or adding new |
| functionality). However, we get a lot of patches, and so we have some |
| guidelines about submitting patches. If you follow these, you'll help |
| make our task of code review easier and your patch is likely to be |
| committed faster. |
| |
| This page seems very long, so if you are only trying to post a quick |
| one-shot fix, the bare minimum we ask is that: |
| |
| - You **must** provide a Signed-off-by: line (this is a hard |
| requirement because it's how you say "I'm legally okay to contribute |
| this and happy for it to go into QEMU", modeled after the `Linux kernel |
| <http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/SubmittingPatches?id=f6f94e2ab1b33f0082ac22d71f66385a60d8157f#n297>`__ |
| policy.) ``git commit -s`` or ``git format-patch -s`` will add one. |
| - All contributions to QEMU must be **sent as patches** to the |
| qemu-devel `mailing list <MailingLists>`__. Patch contributions |
| should not be posted on the bug tracker, posted on forums, or |
| externally hosted and linked to. (We have other mailing lists too, |
| but all patches must go to qemu-devel, possibly with a Cc: to another |
| list.) ``git send-email`` (`step-by-step setup |
| guide <https://git-send-email.io/>`__ and `hints and |
| tips <https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/Documentation/process/email-clients.rst>`__) |
| works best for delivering the patch without mangling it, but |
| attachments can be used as a last resort on a first-time submission. |
| - You must read replies to your message, and be willing to act on them. |
| Note, however, that maintainers are often willing to manually fix up |
| first-time contributions, since there is a learning curve involved in |
| making an ideal patch submission. |
| |
| You do not have to subscribe to post (list policy is to reply-to-all to |
| preserve CCs and keep non-subscribers in the loop on the threads they |
| start), although you may find it easier as a subscriber to pick up good |
| ideas from other posts. If you do subscribe, be prepared for a high |
| volume of email, often over one thousand messages in a week. The list is |
| moderated; first-time posts from an email address (whether or not you |
| subscribed) may be subject to some delay while waiting for a moderator |
| to whitelist your address. |
| |
| The larger your contribution is, or if you plan on becoming a long-term |
| contributor, then the more important the rest of this page becomes. |
| Reading the table of contents below should already give you an idea of |
| the basic requirements. Use the table of contents as a reference, and |
| read the parts that you have doubts about. |
| |
| .. contents:: Table of Contents |
| |
| .. _writing_your_patches: |
| |
| Writing your Patches |
| -------------------- |
| |
| .. _use_the_qemu_coding_style: |
| |
| Use the QEMU coding style |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| You can run run *scripts/checkpatch.pl <patchfile>* before submitting to |
| check that you are in compliance with our coding standards. Be aware |
| that ``checkpatch.pl`` is not infallible, though, especially where C |
| preprocessor macros are involved; use some common sense too. See also: |
| |
| - :ref:`coding-style` |
| - `Automate a checkpatch run on |
| commit <https://blog.vmsplice.net/2011/03/how-to-automatically-run-checkpatchpl.html>`__ |
| |
| .. _base_patches_against_current_git_master: |
| |
| Base patches against current git master |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| There's no point submitting a patch which is based on a released version |
| of QEMU because development will have moved on from then and it probably |
| won't even apply to master. We only apply selected bugfixes to release |
| branches and then only as backports once the code has gone into master. |
| |
| It is also okay to base patches on top of other on-going work that is |
| not yet part of the git master branch. To aid continuous integration |
| tools, such as `patchew <http://patchew.org/QEMU/>`__, you should `add a |
| tag <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2017-08/msg01288.html>`__ |
| line ``Based-on: $MESSAGE_ID`` to your cover letter to make the series |
| dependency obvious. |
| |
| .. _split_up_long_patches: |
| |
| Split up long patches |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Split up longer patches into a patch series of logical code changes. |
| Each change should compile and execute successfully. For instance, don't |
| add a file to the makefile in patch one and then add the file itself in |
| patch two. (This rule is here so that people can later use tools like |
| `git bisect <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-bisect>`__ without hitting |
| points in the commit history where QEMU doesn't work for reasons |
| unrelated to the bug they're chasing.) Put documentation first, not |
| last, so that someone reading the series can do a clean-room evaluation |
| of the documentation, then validate that the code matched the |
| documentation. A commit message that mentions "Also, ..." is often a |
| good candidate for splitting into multiple patches. For more thoughts on |
| properly splitting patches and writing good commit messages, see `this |
| advice from |
| OpenStack <https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/GitCommitMessages>`__. |
| |
| .. _make_code_motion_patches_easy_to_review: |
| |
| Make code motion patches easy to review |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If a series requires large blocks of code motion, there are tricks for |
| making the refactoring easier to review. Split up the series so that |
| semantic changes (or even function renames) are done in a separate patch |
| from the raw code motion. Use a one-time setup of ``git config |
| diff.renames true;`` ``git config diff.algorithm patience`` (refer to |
| `git-config <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-config>`__). The 'diff.renames' |
| property ensures file rename patches will be given in a more compact |
| representation that focuses only on the differences across the file |
| rename, instead of showing the entire old file as a deletion and the new |
| file as an insertion. Meanwhile, the 'diff.algorithm' property ensures |
| that extracting a non-contiguous subset of one file into a new file, but |
| where all extracted parts occur in the same order both before and after |
| the patch, will reduce churn in trying to treat unrelated ``}`` lines in |
| the original file as separating hunks of changes. |
| |
| Ideally, a code motion patch can be reviewed by doing:: |
| |
| git format-patch --stdout -1 > patch; |
| diff -u <(sed -n 's/^-//p' patch) <(sed -n 's/^\+//p' patch) |
| |
| to focus on the few changes that weren't wholesale code motion. |
| |
| .. _dont_include_irrelevant_changes: |
| |
| Don't include irrelevant changes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| In particular, don't include formatting, coding style or whitespace |
| changes to bits of code that would otherwise not be touched by the |
| patch. (It's OK to fix coding style issues in the immediate area (few |
| lines) of the lines you're changing.) If you think a section of code |
| really does need a reindent or other large-scale style fix, submit this |
| as a separate patch which makes no semantic changes; don't put it in the |
| same patch as your bug fix. |
| |
| For smaller patches in less frequently changed areas of QEMU, consider |
| using the :ref:`trivial-patches` process. |
| |
| .. _write_a_meaningful_commit_message: |
| |
| Write a meaningful commit message |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Commit messages should be meaningful and should stand on their own as a |
| historical record of why the changes you applied were necessary or |
| useful. |
| |
| QEMU follows the usual standard for git commit messages: the first line |
| (which becomes the email subject line) is "subsystem: single line |
| summary of change". Whether the "single line summary of change" starts |
| with a capital is a matter of taste, but we prefer that the summary does |
| not end in a dot. Look at ``git shortlog -30`` for an idea of sample |
| subject lines. Then there is a blank line and a more detailed |
| description of the patch, another blank and your Signed-off-by: line. |
| Please do not use lines that are longer than 76 characters in your |
| commit message (so that the text still shows up nicely with "git show" |
| in a 80-columns terminal window). |
| |
| The body of the commit message is a good place to document why your |
| change is important. Don't include comments like "This is a suggestion |
| for fixing this bug" (they can go below the ``---`` line in the email so |
| they don't go into the final commit message). Make sure the body of the |
| commit message can be read in isolation even if the reader's mailer |
| displays the subject line some distance apart (that is, a body that |
| starts with "... so that" as a continuation of the subject line is |
| harder to follow). |
| |
| If your patch fixes a commit that is already in the repository, please |
| add an additional line with "Fixes: <at-least-12-digits-of-SHA-commit-id> |
| ("Fixed commit subject")" below the patch description / before your |
| "Signed-off-by:" line in the commit message. |
| |
| If your patch fixes a bug in the gitlab bug tracker, please add a line |
| with "Resolves: <URL-of-the-bug>" to the commit message, too. Gitlab can |
| close bugs automatically once commits with the "Resolved:" keyword get |
| merged into the master branch of the project. And if your patch addresses |
| a bug in another public bug tracker, you can also use a line with |
| "Buglink: <URL-of-the-bug>" for reference here, too. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| Fixes: 14055ce53c2d ("s390x/tcg: avoid overflows in time2tod/tod2time") |
| Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/42 |
| Buglink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1804323`` |
| |
| Some other tags that are used in commit messages include "Message-Id:" |
| "Tested-by:", "Acked-by:", "Reported-by:", "Suggested-by:". See ``git |
| log`` for these keywords for example usage. |
| |
| .. _test_your_patches: |
| |
| Test your patches |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Although QEMU has `continuous integration |
| services <Testing#Continuous_Integration>`__ that attempt to test |
| patches submitted to the list, it still saves everyone time if you have |
| already tested that your patch compiles and works. Because QEMU is such |
| a large project, it's okay to use configure arguments to limit what is |
| built for faster turnaround during your development time; but it is |
| still wise to also check that your patches work with a full build before |
| submitting a series, especially if your changes might have an unintended |
| effect on other areas of the code you don't normally experiment with. |
| See `Testing <Testing>`__ for more details on what tests are available. |
| Also, it is a wise idea to include a testsuite addition as part of your |
| patches - either to ensure that future changes won't regress your new |
| feature, or to add a test which exposes the bug that the rest of your |
| series fixes. Keeping separate commits for the test and the fix allows |
| reviewers to rebase the test to occur first to prove it catches the |
| problem, then again to place it last in the series so that bisection |
| doesn't land on a known-broken state. |
| |
| .. _submitting_your_patches: |
| |
| Submitting your Patches |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| .. _if_you_cannot_send_patch_emails: |
| |
| If you cannot send patch emails |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| In rare cases it may not be possible to send properly formatted patch |
| emails. You can use `sourcehut <https://sourcehut.org/>`__ to send your |
| patches to the QEMU mailing list by following these steps: |
| |
| #. Register or sign in to your account |
| #. Add your SSH public key in `meta \| |
| keys <https://meta.sr.ht/keys>`__. |
| #. Publish your git branch using **git push git@git.sr.ht:~USERNAME/qemu |
| HEAD** |
| #. Send your patches to the QEMU mailing list using the web-based |
| ``git-send-email`` UI at https://git.sr.ht/~USERNAME/qemu/send-email |
| |
| `This video |
| <https://spacepub.space/videos/watch/ad258d23-0ac6-488c-83fc-2bacf578de3a>`__ |
| shows the web-based ``git-send-email`` workflow. Documentation is |
| available `here |
| <https://man.sr.ht/git.sr.ht/#sending-patches-upstream>`__. |
| |
| .. _cc_the_relevant_maintainer: |
| |
| CC the relevant maintainer |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Send patches both to the mailing list and CC the maintainer(s) of the |
| files you are modifying. look in the MAINTAINERS file to find out who |
| that is. Also try using scripts/get_maintainer.pl from the repository |
| for learning the most common committers for the files you touched. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| ~/src/qemu/scripts/get_maintainer.pl -f hw/ide/core.c |
| |
| In fact, you can automate this, via a one-time setup of ``git config |
| sendemail.cccmd 'scripts/get_maintainer.pl --nogit-fallback'`` (Refer to |
| `git-config <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-config>`__.) |
| |
| .. _do_not_send_as_an_attachment: |
| |
| Do not send as an attachment |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Send patches inline so they are easy to reply to with review comments. |
| Do not put patches in attachments. |
| |
| .. _use_git_format_patch: |
| |
| Use ``git format-patch`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Use the right diff format. |
| `git format-patch <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch>`__ will |
| produce patch emails in the right format (check the documentation to |
| find out how to drive it). You can then edit the cover letter before |
| using ``git send-email`` to mail the files to the mailing list. (We |
| recommend `git send-email <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-send-email>`__ |
| because mail clients often mangle patches by wrapping long lines or |
| messing up whitespace. Some distributions do not include send-email in a |
| default install of git; you may need to download additional packages, |
| such as 'git-email' on Fedora-based systems.) Patch series need a cover |
| letter, with shallow threading (all patches in the series are |
| in-reply-to the cover letter, but not to each other); single unrelated |
| patches do not need a cover letter (but if you do send a cover letter, |
| use ``--numbered`` so the cover and the patch have distinct subject lines). |
| Patches are easier to find if they start a new top-level thread, rather |
| than being buried in-reply-to another existing thread. |
| |
| .. _avoid_posting_large_binary_blob: |
| |
| Avoid posting large binary blob |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If you added binaries to the repository, consider producing the patch |
| emails using ``git format-patch --no-binary`` and include a link to a |
| git repository to fetch the original commit. |
| |
| .. _patch_emails_must_include_a_signed_off_by_line: |
| |
| Patch emails must include a ``Signed-off-by:`` line |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| For more information see `SubmittingPatches 1.12 |
| <http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/SubmittingPatches?id=f6f94e2ab1b33f0082ac22d71f66385a60d8157f#n297>`__. |
| This is vital or we will not be able to apply your patch! Please use |
| your real name to sign a patch (not an alias or acronym). |
| |
| If you wrote the patch, make sure your "From:" and "Signed-off-by:" |
| lines use the same spelling. It's okay if you subscribe or contribute to |
| the list via more than one address, but using multiple addresses in one |
| commit just confuses things. If someone else wrote the patch, git will |
| include a "From:" line in the body of the email (different from your |
| envelope From:) that will give credit to the correct author; but again, |
| that author's Signed-off-by: line is mandatory, with the same spelling. |
| |
| .. _include_a_meaningful_cover_letter: |
| |
| Include a meaningful cover letter |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| This is a requirement for any series with multiple patches (as it aids |
| continuous integration), but optional for an isolated patch. The cover |
| letter explains the overall goal of such a series, and also provides a |
| convenient 0/N email for others to reply to the series as a whole. A |
| one-time setup of ``git config format.coverletter auto`` (refer to |
| `git-config <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-config>`__) will generate the |
| cover letter as needed. |
| |
| When reviewers don't know your goal at the start of their review, they |
| may object to early changes that don't make sense until the end of the |
| series, because they do not have enough context yet at that point of |
| their review. A series where the goal is unclear also risks a higher |
| number of review-fix cycles because the reviewers haven't bought into |
| the idea yet. If the cover letter can explain these points to the |
| reviewer, the process will be smoother patches will get merged faster. |
| Make sure your cover letter includes a diffstat of changes made over the |
| entire series; potential reviewers know what files they are interested |
| in, and they need an easy way determine if your series touches them. |
| |
| .. _use_the_rfc_tag_if_needed: |
| |
| Use the RFC tag if needed |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| For example, "[PATCH RFC v2]". ``git format-patch --subject-prefix=RFC`` |
| can help. |
| |
| "RFC" means "Request For Comments" and is a statement that you don't |
| intend for your patchset to be applied to master, but would like some |
| review on it anyway. Reasons for doing this include: |
| |
| - the patch depends on some pending kernel changes which haven't yet |
| been accepted, so the QEMU patch series is blocked until that |
| dependency has been dealt with, but is worth reviewing anyway |
| - the patch set is not finished yet (perhaps it doesn't cover all use |
| cases or work with all targets) but you want early review of a major |
| API change or design structure before continuing |
| |
| In general, since it's asking other people to do review work on a |
| patchset that the submitter themselves is saying shouldn't be applied, |
| it's best to: |
| |
| - use it sparingly |
| - in the cover letter, be clear about why a patch is an RFC, what areas |
| of the patchset you're looking for review on, and why reviewers |
| should care |
| |
| .. _consider_whether_your_patch_is_applicable_for_stable: |
| |
| Consider whether your patch is applicable for stable |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If your patch fixes a severe issue or a regression, it may be applicable |
| for stable. In that case, consider adding ``Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org`` |
| to your patch to notify the stable maintainers. |
| |
| For more details on how QEMU's stable process works, refer to the |
| :ref:`stable-process` page. |
| |
| .. _participating_in_code_review: |
| |
| Participating in Code Review |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| All patches submitted to the QEMU project go through a code review |
| process before they are accepted. Some areas of code that are well |
| maintained may review patches quickly, lesser-loved areas of code may |
| have a longer delay. |
| |
| .. _stay_around_to_fix_problems_raised_in_code_review: |
| |
| Stay around to fix problems raised in code review |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Not many patches get into QEMU straight away -- it is quite common that |
| developers will identify bugs, or suggest a cleaner approach, or even |
| just point out code style issues or commit message typos. You'll need to |
| respond to these, and then send a second version of your patches with |
| the issues fixed. This takes a little time and effort on your part, but |
| if you don't do it then your changes will never get into QEMU. It's also |
| just polite -- it is quite disheartening for a developer to spend time |
| reviewing your code and suggesting improvements, only to find that |
| you're not going to do anything further and it was all wasted effort. |
| |
| When replying to comments on your patches **reply to all and not just |
| the sender** -- keeping discussion on the mailing list means everybody |
| can follow it. |
| |
| .. _pay_attention_to_review_comments: |
| |
| Pay attention to review comments |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Someone took their time to review your work, and it pays to respect that |
| effort; repeatedly submitting a series without addressing all comments |
| from the previous round tends to alienate reviewers and stall your |
| patch. Reviewers aren't always perfect, so it is okay if you want to |
| argue that your code was correct in the first place instead of blindly |
| doing everything the reviewer asked. On the other hand, if someone |
| pointed out a potential issue during review, then even if your code |
| turns out to be correct, it's probably a sign that you should improve |
| your commit message and/or comments in the code explaining why the code |
| is correct. |
| |
| If you fix issues that are raised during review **resend the entire |
| patch series** not just the one patch that was changed. This allows |
| maintainers to easily apply the fixed series without having to manually |
| identify which patches are relevant. Send the new version as a complete |
| fresh email or series of emails -- don't try to make it a followup to |
| version 1. (This helps automatic patch email handling tools distinguish |
| between v1 and v2 emails.) |
| |
| .. _when_resending_patches_add_a_version_tag: |
| |
| When resending patches add a version tag |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| All patches beyond the first version should include a version tag -- for |
| example, "[PATCH v2]". This means people can easily identify whether |
| they're looking at the most recent version. (The first version of a |
| patch need not say "v1", just [PATCH] is sufficient.) For patch series, |
| the version applies to the whole series -- even if you only change one |
| patch, you resend the entire series and mark it as "v2". Don't try to |
| track versions of different patches in the series separately. `git |
| format-patch <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch>`__ and `git |
| send-email <http://git-scm.com/docs/git-send-email>`__ both understand |
| the ``-v2`` option to make this easier. Send each new revision as a new |
| top-level thread, rather than burying it in-reply-to an earlier |
| revision, as many reviewers are not looking inside deep threads for new |
| patches. |
| |
| .. _include_version_history_in_patchset_revisions: |
| |
| Include version history in patchset revisions |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| For later versions of patches, include a summary of changes from |
| previous versions, but not in the commit message itself. In an email |
| formatted as a git patch, the commit message is the part above the ``---`` |
| line, and this will go into the git changelog when the patch is |
| committed. This part should be a self-contained description of what this |
| version of the patch does, written to make sense to anybody who comes |
| back to look at this commit in git in six months' time. The part below |
| the ``---`` line and above the patch proper (git format-patch puts the |
| diffstat here) is a good place to put remarks for people reading the |
| patch email, and this is where the "changes since previous version" |
| summary belongs. The `git-publish |
| <https://github.com/stefanha/git-publish>`__ script can help with |
| tracking a good summary across versions. Also, the `git-backport-diff |
| <https://github.com/codyprime/git-scripts>`__ script can help focus |
| reviewers on what changed between revisions. |
| |
| .. _tips_and_tricks: |
| |
| Tips and Tricks |
| --------------- |
| |
| .. _proper_use_of_reviewed_by_tags_can_aid_review: |
| |
| Proper use of Reviewed-by: tags can aid review |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| When reviewing a large series, a reviewer can reply to some of the |
| patches with a Reviewed-by tag, stating that they are happy with that |
| patch in isolation (sometimes conditional on minor cleanup, like fixing |
| whitespace, that doesn't affect code content). You should then update |
| those commit messages by hand to include the Reviewed-by tag, so that in |
| the next revision, reviewers can spot which patches were already clean |
| from the previous round. Conversely, if you significantly modify a patch |
| that was previously reviewed, remove the reviewed-by tag out of the |
| commit message, as well as listing the changes from the previous |
| version, to make it easier to focus a reviewer's attention to your |
| changes. |
| |
| .. _if_your_patch_seems_to_have_been_ignored: |
| |
| If your patch seems to have been ignored |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If your patchset has received no replies you should "ping" it after a |
| week or two, by sending an email as a reply-to-all to the patch mail, |
| including the word "ping" and ideally also a link to the page for the |
| patch on `patchew <https://patchew.org/QEMU/>`__ or |
| `lore.kernel.org <https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/>`__. It's worth |
| double-checking for reasons why your patch might have been ignored |
| (forgot to CC the maintainer? annoyed people by failing to respond to |
| review comments on an earlier version?), but often for less-maintained |
| areas of QEMU patches do just slip through the cracks. If your ping is |
| also ignored, ping again after another week or so. As the submitter, you |
| are the person with the most motivation to get your patch applied, so |
| you have to be persistent. |
| |
| .. _is_my_patch_in: |
| |
| Is my patch in? |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| QEMU has some Continuous Integration machines that try to catch patch |
| submission problems as soon as possible. `patchew |
| <http://patchew.org/QEMU/>`__ includes a web interface for tracking the |
| status of various threads that have been posted to the list, and may |
| send you an automated mail if it detected a problem with your patch. |
| |
| Once your patch has had enough review on list, the maintainer for that |
| area of code will send notification to the list that they are including |
| your patch in a particular staging branch. Periodically, the maintainer |
| then takes care of :ref:`submitting-a-pull-request` |
| for aggregating topic branches into mainline QEMU. Generally, you do not |
| need to send a pull request unless you have contributed enough patches |
| to become a maintainer over a particular section of code. Maintainers |
| may further modify your commit, by resolving simple merge conflicts or |
| fixing minor typos pointed out during review, but will always add a |
| Signed-off-by line in addition to yours, indicating that it went through |
| their tree. Occasionally, the maintainer's pull request may hit more |
| difficult merge conflicts, where you may be requested to help rebase and |
| resolve the problems. It may take a couple of weeks between when your |
| patch first had a positive review to when it finally lands in qemu.git; |
| release cycle freezes may extend that time even longer. |
| |
| .. _return_the_favor: |
| |
| Return the favor |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Peer review only works if everyone chips in a bit of review time. If |
| everyone submitted more patches than they reviewed, we would have a |
| patch backlog. A good goal is to try to review at least as many patches |
| from others as what you submit. Don't worry if you don't know the code |
| base as well as a maintainer; it's perfectly fine to admit when your |
| review is weak because you are unfamiliar with the code. |