2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1 |
====================== |
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Bazaar Developer Guide |
|
3 |
====================== |
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974.1.26
by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472 |
4 |
|
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
5 |
This document describes the Bazaar internals and the development process. |
6 |
It's meant for people interested in developing Bazaar, and some parts will |
|
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also be useful to people developing Bazaar plugins. |
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||
9 |
If you have any questions or something seems to be incorrect, unclear or |
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missing, please talk to us in ``irc://irc.freenode.net/#bzr``, or write to |
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the Bazaar mailing list. To propose a correction or addition to this |
|
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document, send a merge request or new text to the mailing list. |
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The current version of this document is available in the file |
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``doc/developers/HACKING.txt`` in the source tree, or at |
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http://doc.bazaar-vcs.org/bzr.dev/en/developer-guide/HACKING.html |
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1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
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.. contents:: |
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2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
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Getting Started |
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############### |
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Exploring the Bazaar Platform |
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============================= |
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Before making changes, it's a good idea to explore the work already |
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done by others. Perhaps the new feature or improvement you're looking |
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for is available in another plug-in already? If you find a bug, |
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perhaps someone else has already fixed it? |
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To answer these questions and more, take a moment to explore the |
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overall Bazaar Platform. Here are some links to browse: |
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* The Plugins page on the Wiki - http://bazaar-vcs.org/BzrPlugins |
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2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
37 |
* The Bazaar product family on Launchpad - https://launchpad.net/bazaar |
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
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* Bug Tracker for the core product - https://bugs.launchpad.net/bzr/ |
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* Blueprint Tracker for the core product - https://blueprints.launchpad.net/bzr/ |
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If nothing else, perhaps you'll find inspiration in how other developers |
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have solved their challenges. |
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Planning and Discussing Changes |
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=============================== |
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There is a very active community around Bazaar. Mostly we meet on IRC |
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(#bzr on irc.freenode.net) and on the mailing list. To join the Bazaar |
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community, see http://bazaar-vcs.org/BzrSupport. |
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If you are planning to make a change, it's a very good idea to mention it |
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on the IRC channel and/or on the mailing list. There are many advantages |
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to involving the community before you spend much time on a change. |
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These include: |
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* you get to build on the wisdom on others, saving time |
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* if others can direct you to similar code, it minimises the work to be done |
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* it assists everyone in coordinating direction, priorities and effort. |
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In summary, maximising the input from others typically minimises the |
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total effort required to get your changes merged. The community is |
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friendly, helpful and always keen to welcome newcomers. |
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Bazaar Development in a Nutshell |
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================================ |
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Looking for a 10 minute introduction to submitting a change? |
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See http://bazaar-vcs.org/BzrGivingBack. |
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TODO: Merge that Wiki page into this document. |
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Understanding the Development Process |
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===================================== |
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The development team follows many best-practices including: |
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* a public roadmap and planning process in which anyone can participate |
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2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
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* time based milestones everyone can work towards and plan around |
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
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* extensive code review and feedback to contributors |
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* complete and rigorous test coverage on any code contributed |
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* automated validation that all tests still pass before code is merged |
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into the main code branch. |
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The key tools we use to enable these practices are: |
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* Launchpad - https://launchpad.net/ |
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* Bazaar - http://bazaar-vcs.org/ |
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* Bundle Buggy - http://bundlebuggy.aaronbentley.com/ |
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* Patch Queue Manager - https://launchpad.net/pqm/ |
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For further information, see http://bazaar-vcs.org/BzrDevelopment. |
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A Closer Look at the Merge & Review Process |
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=========================================== |
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If you'd like to propose a change, please post to the |
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2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
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bazaar@lists.canonical.com list with a bundle, patch, or link to a |
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branch. Put '[PATCH]' or '[MERGE]' in the subject so Bundle Buggy |
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can pick it out, and explain the change in the email message text. |
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Remember to update the NEWS file as part of your change if it makes any |
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changes visible to users or plugin developers. Please include a diff |
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against mainline if you're giving a link to a branch. |
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||
2475.2.4
by Martin Pool
HACKING rest fixes from jam |
119 |
You can generate a bundle like this:: |
2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
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bzr bundle > mybundle.patch |
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A .patch extension is recommended instead of .bundle as many mail clients |
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will send the latter as a binary file. If a bundle would be too long or your |
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mailer mangles whitespace (e.g. implicitly converts Unix newlines to DOS |
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2475.2.4
by Martin Pool
HACKING rest fixes from jam |
126 |
newlines), use the merge-directive command instead like this:: |
2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
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bzr merge-directive http://bazaar-vcs.org http://example.org/my_branch > my_directive.patch |
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See the help for details on the arguments to merge-directive. |
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Please do **NOT** put [PATCH] or [MERGE] in the subject line if you don't |
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want it to be merged. If you want comments from developers rather than |
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to be merged, you can put '[RFC]' in the subject line. |
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2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
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Anyone is welcome to review code. There are broadly three gates for |
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code to get in: |
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* Doesn't reduce test coverage: if it adds new methods or commands, |
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there should be tests for them. There is a good test framework |
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and plenty of examples to crib from, but if you are having trouble |
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working out how to test something feel free to post a draft patch |
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and ask for help. |
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* Doesn't reduce design clarity, such as by entangling objects |
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we're trying to separate. This is mostly something the more |
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experienced reviewers need to help check. |
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* Improves bugs, features, speed, or code simplicity. |
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2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
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Code that goes in should pass all three. The core developers take care |
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to keep the code quality high and understandable while recognising that |
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perfect is sometimes the enemy of good. (It is easy for reviews to make |
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people notice other things which should be fixed but those things should |
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not hold up the original fix being accepted. New things can easily be |
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recorded in the Bug Tracker instead.) |
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Anyone can "vote" on the mailing list. Core developers can also vote using |
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Bundle Buggy. Here are the voting codes and their explanations. |
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2654.1.1
by Aaron Bentley
Revise text about voting to match current system |
161 |
:approve: Reviewer wants this submission merged. |
162 |
:tweak: Reviewer wants this submission merged with small changes. (No |
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re-review required.) |
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:abstain: Reviewer does not intend to vote on this patch. |
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:resubmit: Please make changes and resubmit for review. |
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:reject: Reviewer doesn't want this kind of change merged. |
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:comment: Not really a vote. Reviewer just wants to comment, for now. |
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If a change gets two approvals from core reviewers, and no rejections, |
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then it's OK to come in. Any of the core developers can bring it into the |
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bzr.dev trunk and backport it to maintenance branches if required. The |
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Release Manager will merge the change into the branch for a pending |
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2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
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release, if any. As a guideline, core developers usually merge their own |
174 |
changes and volunteer to merge other contributions if they were the second |
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reviewer to agree to a change. |
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To track the progress of proposed changes, use Bundle Buggy. See |
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http://bundlebuggy.aaronbentley.com/help for a link to all the |
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outstanding merge requests together with an explanation of the columns. |
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Bundle Buggy will also mail you a link to track just your change. |
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2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
181 |
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Preparing a Sandbox for Making Changes to Bazaar |
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================================================ |
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2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
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Bazaar supports many ways of organising your work. See |
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http://bazaar-vcs.org/SharedRepositoryLayouts for a summary of the |
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popular alternatives. |
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2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
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Of course, the best choice for you will depend on numerous factors: |
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the number of changes you may be making, the complexity of the changes, etc. |
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As a starting suggestion though: |
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* create a local copy of the main development branch (bzr.dev) by using |
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2475.2.4
by Martin Pool
HACKING rest fixes from jam |
195 |
this command:: |
196 |
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bzr branch http://bazaar-vcs.org/bzr/bzr.dev/ bzr.dev |
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2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
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* keep your copy of bzr.dev prestine (by not developing in it) and keep |
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it up to date (by using bzr pull) |
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* create a new branch off your local bzr.dev copy for each issue |
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(bug or feature) you are working on. |
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This approach makes it easy to go back and make any required changes |
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after a code review. Resubmitting the change is then simple with no |
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risk of accidentially including edits related to other issues you may |
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be working on. After the changes for an issue are accepted and merged, |
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the associated branch can be deleted or archived as you wish. |
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Navigating the Code Base |
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======================== |
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TODO: List and describe in one line the purpose of each directory |
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inside an installation of bzr. |
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TODO: Refer to a central location holding an up to date copy of the API |
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documentation generated by epydoc, e.g. something like |
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http://starship.python.net/crew/mwh/bzrlibapi/bzrlib.html. |
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2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
223 |
Testing Bazaar |
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############## |
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2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
225 |
|
2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
226 |
The Importance of Testing |
227 |
========================= |
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2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
228 |
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Reliability is a critical success factor for any Version Control System. |
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We want Bazaar to be highly reliable across multiple platforms while |
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evolving over time to meet the needs of its community. |
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In a nutshell, this is want we expect and encourage: |
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* New functionality should have test cases. Preferably write the |
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test before writing the code. |
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In general, you can test at either the command-line level or the |
|
2466.7.2
by Robert Collins
Document the user of TreeBuilder somewhat. |
239 |
internal API level. See Writing tests below for more detail. |
2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
240 |
|
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* Try to practice Test-Driven Development: before fixing a bug, write a |
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test case so that it does not regress. Similarly for adding a new |
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feature: write a test case for a small version of the new feature before |
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starting on the code itself. Check the test fails on the old code, then |
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add the feature or fix and check it passes. |
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By doing these things, the Bazaar team gets increased confidence that |
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changes do what they claim to do, whether provided by the core team or |
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by community members. Equally importantly, we can be surer that changes |
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down the track do not break new features or bug fixes that you are |
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contributing today. |
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As of May 2007, Bazaar ships with a test suite containing over 6000 tests |
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and growing. We are proud of it and want to remain so. As community |
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members, we all benefit from it. Would you trust version control on |
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your project to a product *without* a test suite like Bazaar has? |
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Running the Test Suite |
|
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====================== |
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Currently, bzr selftest is used to invoke tests. |
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You can provide a pattern argument to run a subset. For example, |
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to run just the blackbox tests, run:: |
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./bzr selftest -v blackbox |
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To skip a particular test (or set of tests), use the --exclude option |
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(shorthand -x) like so:: |
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./bzr selftest -v -x blackbox |
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||
2658.3.5
by Daniel Watkins
Added note regarding --strict to HACKING. |
273 |
To ensure that all tests are being run and succeeding, you can use the |
274 |
--strict option which will fail if there are any missing features or known |
|
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failures, like so:: |
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./bzr selftest --strict |
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2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
279 |
To list tests without running them, use the --list-only option like so:: |
280 |
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./bzr selftest --list-only |
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This option can be combined with other selftest options (like -x) and |
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filter patterns to understand their effect. |
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Writing Tests |
|
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============= |
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289 |
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In general tests should be placed in a file named test_FOO.py where |
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FOO is the logical thing under test. That file should be placed in the |
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tests subdirectory under the package being tested. |
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For example, tests for merge3 in bzrlib belong in bzrlib/tests/test_merge3.py. |
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See bzrlib/tests/test_sampler.py for a template test script. |
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Tests can be written for the UI or for individual areas of the library. |
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Choose whichever is appropriate: if adding a new command, or a new command |
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option, then you should be writing a UI test. If you are both adding UI |
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functionality and library functionality, you will want to write tests for |
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both the UI and the core behaviours. We call UI tests 'blackbox' tests |
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and they are found in ``bzrlib/tests/blackbox/*.py``. |
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When writing blackbox tests please honour the following conventions: |
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1. Place the tests for the command 'name' in |
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bzrlib/tests/blackbox/test_name.py. This makes it easy for developers |
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to locate the test script for a faulty command. |
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2. Use the 'self.run_bzr("name")' utility function to invoke the command |
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rather than running bzr in a subprocess or invoking the |
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cmd_object.run() method directly. This is a lot faster than |
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subprocesses and generates the same logging output as running it in a |
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subprocess (which invoking the method directly does not). |
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3. Only test the one command in a single test script. Use the bzrlib |
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library when setting up tests and when evaluating the side-effects of |
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the command. We do this so that the library api has continual pressure |
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on it to be as functional as the command line in a simple manner, and |
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to isolate knock-on effects throughout the blackbox test suite when a |
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command changes its name or signature. Ideally only the tests for a |
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given command are affected when a given command is changed. |
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324 |
4. If you have a test which does actually require running bzr in a |
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subprocess you can use ``run_bzr_subprocess``. By default the spawned |
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process will not load plugins unless ``--allow-plugins`` is supplied. |
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Doctests |
|
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-------- |
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331 |
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332 |
We make selective use of doctests__. In general they should provide |
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*examples* within the API documentation which can incidentally be tested. We |
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334 |
don't try to test every important case using doctests -- regular Python |
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tests are generally a better solution. |
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||
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Most of these are in ``bzrlib/doc/api``. More additions are welcome. |
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__ http://docs.python.org/lib/module-doctest.html |
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341 |
||
2475.2.3
by Martin Pool
Merge ian's HACKING updates |
342 |
Skipping tests and test requirements |
343 |
------------------------------------ |
|
344 |
||
345 |
In our enhancements to unittest we allow for some addition results beyond |
|
346 |
just success or failure. |
|
347 |
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348 |
If a test can't be run, it can say that it's skipped. This is typically |
|
349 |
used in parameterized tests - for example if a transport doesn't support |
|
350 |
setting permissions, we'll skip the tests that relating to that. :: |
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351 |
||
352 |
try: |
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353 |
return self.branch_format.initialize(repo.bzrdir) |
|
354 |
except errors.UninitializableFormat: |
|
355 |
raise tests.TestSkipped('Uninitializable branch format') |
|
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||
357 |
Raising TestSkipped is a good idea when you want to make it clear that the |
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358 |
test was not run, rather than just returning which makes it look as if it |
|
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was run and passed. |
|
360 |
||
2729.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add TestNotApplicable exception and handling of it; document test parameterization |
361 |
Several different cases are distinguished: |
362 |
||
363 |
TestSkipped |
|
364 |
Generic skip; the only type that was present up to bzr 0.18. |
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366 |
TestNotApplicable |
|
367 |
The test doesn't apply to the parameters with which it was run. |
|
368 |
This is typically used when the test is being applied to all |
|
369 |
implementations of an interface, but some aspects of the interface |
|
370 |
are optional and not present in particular concrete |
|
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implementations. (Some tests that should raise this currently |
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372 |
either silently return or raise TestSkipped.) Another option is |
|
373 |
to use more precise parameterization to avoid generating the test |
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at all. |
|
375 |
||
376 |
TestPlatformLimit |
|
377 |
**(Not implemented yet)** |
|
378 |
The test can't be run because of an inherent limitation of the |
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environment, such as not having symlinks or not supporting |
|
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unicode. |
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381 |
||
382 |
UnavailableFeature |
|
383 |
The test can't be run because a dependency (typically a Python |
|
384 |
library) is not available in the test environment. These |
|
385 |
are in general things that the person running the test could fix |
|
386 |
by installing the library. It's OK if some of these occur when |
|
387 |
an end user runs the tests or if we're specifically testing in a |
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limited environment, but a full test should never see them. |
|
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||
390 |
KnownFailure |
|
391 |
The test exists but is known to fail, for example because the |
|
392 |
code to fix it hasn't been run yet. Raising this allows |
|
393 |
you to distinguish these failures from the ones that are not |
|
394 |
expected to fail. This could be conditionally raised if something |
|
395 |
is broken on some platforms but not on others. |
|
396 |
||
397 |
We plan to support three modes for running the test suite to control the |
|
398 |
interpretation of these results. Strict mode is for use in situations |
|
399 |
like merges to the mainline and releases where we want to make sure that |
|
400 |
everything that can be tested has been tested. Lax mode is for use by |
|
401 |
developers who want to temporarily tolerate some known failures. The |
|
402 |
default behaviour is obtained by ``bzr selftest`` with no options, and |
|
403 |
also (if possible) by running under another unittest harness. |
|
404 |
||
405 |
======================= ======= ======= ======== |
|
406 |
result strict default lax |
|
407 |
======================= ======= ======= ======== |
|
408 |
TestSkipped pass pass pass |
|
409 |
TestNotApplicable pass pass pass |
|
410 |
TestPlatformLimit pass pass pass |
|
411 |
TestDependencyMissing fail pass pass |
|
2729.1.6
by Martin Pool
Update docs to say xfail does not cause overall failure in default test runs, which is true at the moment |
412 |
KnownFailure fail pass pass |
2729.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add TestNotApplicable exception and handling of it; document test parameterization |
413 |
======================= ======= ======= ======== |
414 |
||
415 |
||
416 |
Test feature dependencies |
|
417 |
------------------------- |
|
418 |
||
419 |
Rather than manually checking the environment in each test, a test class |
|
420 |
can declare its dependence on some test features. The feature objects are |
|
421 |
checked only once for each run of the whole test suite. |
|
422 |
||
423 |
For historical reasons, as of May 2007 many cases that should depend on |
|
424 |
features currently raise TestSkipped.) |
|
425 |
||
426 |
:: |
|
2475.2.3
by Martin Pool
Merge ian's HACKING updates |
427 |
|
428 |
class TestStrace(TestCaseWithTransport): |
|
429 |
||
430 |
_test_needs_features = [StraceFeature] |
|
431 |
||
2729.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add TestNotApplicable exception and handling of it; document test parameterization |
432 |
This means all tests in this class need the feature. The feature itself |
2475.2.3
by Martin Pool
Merge ian's HACKING updates |
433 |
should provide a ``_probe`` method which is called once to determine if |
434 |
it's available. |
|
435 |
||
2729.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add TestNotApplicable exception and handling of it; document test parameterization |
436 |
These should generally be equivalent to either TestDependencyMissing or |
437 |
sometimes TestPlatformLimit. |
|
438 |
||
2475.2.3
by Martin Pool
Merge ian's HACKING updates |
439 |
|
440 |
Known failures |
|
441 |
-------------- |
|
442 |
||
443 |
Known failures are when a test exists but we know it currently doesn't |
|
444 |
work, allowing the test suite to still pass. These should be used with |
|
445 |
care, we don't want a proliferation of quietly broken tests. It might be |
|
446 |
appropriate to use them if you've committed a test for a bug but not the |
|
447 |
fix for it, or if something works on Unix but not on Windows. |
|
448 |
||
449 |
||
2513.1.9
by Martin Pool
Exception testing review comments |
450 |
Testing exceptions and errors |
451 |
----------------------------- |
|
2513.1.8
by Martin Pool
Doc testing of exceptions |
452 |
|
453 |
It's important to test handling of errors and exceptions. Because this |
|
454 |
code is often not hit in ad-hoc testing it can often have hidden bugs -- |
|
455 |
it's particularly common to get NameError because the exception code |
|
456 |
references a variable that has since been renamed. |
|
457 |
||
458 |
.. TODO: Something about how to provoke errors in the right way? |
|
459 |
||
460 |
In general we want to test errors at two levels: |
|
461 |
||
462 |
1. A test in ``test_errors.py`` checking that when the exception object is |
|
463 |
constructed with known parameters it produces an expected string form. |
|
464 |
This guards against mistakes in writing the format string, or in the |
|
465 |
``str`` representations of its parameters. There should be one for |
|
466 |
each exception class. |
|
467 |
||
468 |
2. Tests that when an api is called in a particular situation, it raises |
|
469 |
an error of the expected class. You should typically use |
|
470 |
``assertRaises``, which in the Bazaar test suite returns the exception |
|
471 |
object to allow you to examine its parameters. |
|
472 |
||
473 |
In some cases blackbox tests will also want to check error reporting. But |
|
474 |
it can be difficult to provoke every error through the commandline |
|
475 |
interface, so those tests are only done as needed -- eg in response to a |
|
2513.1.9
by Martin Pool
Exception testing review comments |
476 |
particular bug or if the error is reported in an unusual way(?) Blackbox |
477 |
tests should mostly be testing how the command-line interface works, so |
|
478 |
should only test errors if there is something particular to the cli in how |
|
479 |
they're displayed or handled. |
|
2513.1.8
by Martin Pool
Doc testing of exceptions |
480 |
|
2475.2.3
by Martin Pool
Merge ian's HACKING updates |
481 |
|
2592.3.242
by Martin Pool
New method TestCase.call_catch_warnings |
482 |
Testing warnings |
483 |
---------------- |
|
484 |
||
485 |
The Python ``warnings`` module is used to indicate a non-fatal code |
|
486 |
problem. Code that's expected to raise a warning can be tested through |
|
487 |
callCatchWarnings. |
|
488 |
||
489 |
The test suite can be run with ``-Werror`` to check no unexpected errors |
|
490 |
occur. |
|
491 |
||
492 |
However, warnings should be used with discretion. It's not an appropriate |
|
493 |
way to give messages to the user, because the warning is normally shown |
|
494 |
only once per source line that causes the problem. You should also think |
|
495 |
about whether the warning is serious enought that it should be visible to |
|
496 |
users who may not be able to fix it. |
|
497 |
||
498 |
||
2729.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add TestNotApplicable exception and handling of it; document test parameterization |
499 |
Interface implementation testing and test scenarios |
500 |
--------------------------------------------------- |
|
501 |
||
502 |
There are several cases in Bazaar of multiple implementations of a common |
|
503 |
conceptual interface. ("Conceptual" because |
|
504 |
it's not necessary for all the implementations to share a base class, |
|
505 |
though they often do.) Examples include transports and the working tree, |
|
506 |
branch and repository classes. |
|
507 |
||
508 |
In these cases we want to make sure that every implementation correctly |
|
509 |
fulfils the interface requirements. For example, every Transport should |
|
510 |
support the ``has()`` and ``get()`` and ``clone()`` methods. We have a |
|
511 |
sub-suite of tests in ``test_transport_implementations``. (Most |
|
512 |
per-implementation tests are in submodules of ``bzrlib.tests``, but not |
|
513 |
the transport tests at the moment.) |
|
514 |
||
515 |
These tests are repeated for each registered Transport, by generating a |
|
516 |
new TestCase instance for the cross product of test methods and transport |
|
517 |
implementations. As each test runs, it has ``transport_class`` and |
|
518 |
``transport_server`` set to the class it should test. Most tests don't |
|
519 |
access these directly, but rather use ``self.get_transport`` which returns |
|
520 |
a transport of the appropriate type. |
|
521 |
||
522 |
The goal is to run per-implementation only tests that relate to that |
|
523 |
particular interface. Sometimes we discover a bug elsewhere that happens |
|
524 |
with only one particular transport. Once it's isolated, we can consider |
|
525 |
whether a test should be added for that particular implementation, |
|
526 |
or for all implementations of the interface. |
|
527 |
||
528 |
The multiplication of tests for different implementations is normally |
|
529 |
accomplished by overriding the ``test_suite`` function used to load |
|
530 |
tests from a module. This function typically loads all the tests, |
|
531 |
then applies a TestProviderAdapter to them, which generates a longer |
|
532 |
suite containing all the test variations. |
|
533 |
||
534 |
||
2729.1.2
by Martin Pool
Add new multiply_tests_from_modules to give a simpler interface to test scenarios |
535 |
Test scenarios |
536 |
-------------- |
|
537 |
||
538 |
Some utilities are provided for generating variations of tests. This can |
|
539 |
be used for per-implementation tests, or other cases where the same test |
|
540 |
code needs to run several times on different scenarios. |
|
541 |
||
542 |
The general approach is to define a class that provides test methods, |
|
543 |
which depend on attributes of the test object being pre-set with the |
|
544 |
values to which the test should be applied. The test suite should then |
|
545 |
also provide a list of scenarios in which to run the tests. |
|
546 |
||
547 |
Typically ``multiply_tests_from_modules`` should be called from the test |
|
548 |
module's ``test_suite`` function. |
|
549 |
||
550 |
||
2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
551 |
Essential Domain Classes |
552 |
######################## |
|
553 |
||
554 |
Introducing the Object Model |
|
555 |
============================ |
|
556 |
||
557 |
The core domain objects within the bazaar model are: |
|
558 |
||
559 |
* Transport |
|
560 |
||
561 |
* Branch |
|
562 |
||
563 |
* Repository |
|
564 |
||
565 |
* WorkingTree |
|
566 |
||
567 |
Transports are explained below. See http://bazaar-vcs.org/Classes/ |
|
568 |
for an introduction to the other key classes. |
|
569 |
||
570 |
Using Transports |
|
571 |
================ |
|
572 |
||
573 |
The ``Transport`` layer handles access to local or remote directories. |
|
574 |
Each Transport object acts like a logical connection to a particular |
|
575 |
directory, and it allows various operations on files within it. You can |
|
576 |
*clone* a transport to get a new Transport connected to a subdirectory or |
|
577 |
parent directory. |
|
578 |
||
579 |
Transports are not used for access to the working tree. At present |
|
580 |
working trees are always local and they are accessed through the regular |
|
581 |
Python file io mechanisms. |
|
582 |
||
583 |
Filenames vs URLs |
|
584 |
----------------- |
|
585 |
||
586 |
Transports work in URLs. Take note that URLs are by definition only |
|
587 |
ASCII - the decision of how to encode a Unicode string into a URL must be |
|
588 |
taken at a higher level, typically in the Store. (Note that Stores also |
|
589 |
escape filenames which cannot be safely stored on all filesystems, but |
|
590 |
this is a different level.) |
|
591 |
||
592 |
The main reason for this is that it's not possible to safely roundtrip a |
|
593 |
URL into Unicode and then back into the same URL. The URL standard |
|
594 |
gives a way to represent non-ASCII bytes in ASCII (as %-escapes), but |
|
595 |
doesn't say how those bytes represent non-ASCII characters. (They're not |
|
596 |
guaranteed to be UTF-8 -- that is common but doesn't happen everywhere.) |
|
597 |
||
598 |
For example if the user enters the url ``http://example/%e0`` there's no |
|
599 |
way to tell whether that character represents "latin small letter a with |
|
600 |
grave" in iso-8859-1, or "latin small letter r with acute" in iso-8859-2 |
|
601 |
or malformed UTF-8. So we can't convert their URL to Unicode reliably. |
|
602 |
||
603 |
Equally problematic if we're given a url-like string containing non-ascii |
|
604 |
characters (such as the accented a) we can't be sure how to convert that |
|
605 |
to the correct URL, because we don't know what encoding the server expects |
|
606 |
for those characters. (Although this is not totally reliable we might still |
|
607 |
accept these and assume they should be put into UTF-8.) |
|
608 |
||
609 |
A similar edge case is that the url ``http://foo/sweet%2Fsour`` contains |
|
610 |
one directory component whose name is "sweet/sour". The escaped slash is |
|
611 |
not a directory separator. If we try to convert URLs to regular Unicode |
|
612 |
paths this information will be lost. |
|
613 |
||
614 |
This implies that Transports must natively deal with URLs; for simplicity |
|
615 |
they *only* deal with URLs and conversion of other strings to URLs is done |
|
616 |
elsewhere. Information they return, such as from ``list_dir``, is also in |
|
617 |
the form of URL components. |
|
618 |
||
619 |
||
620 |
Core Topics |
|
621 |
########### |
|
622 |
||
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
623 |
Evolving Interfaces |
624 |
=================== |
|
1393.1.54
by Martin Pool
- more hacking notes on evolving interfaces |
625 |
|
1534.2.4
by Robert Collins
Update NEWS and HACKING for the symbol_versioning module. |
626 |
We have a commitment to 6 months API stability - any supported symbol in a |
627 |
release of bzr MUST NOT be altered in any way that would result in |
|
628 |
breaking existing code that uses it. That means that method names, |
|
629 |
parameter ordering, parameter names, variable and attribute names etc must |
|
630 |
not be changed without leaving a 'deprecated forwarder' behind. This even |
|
631 |
applies to modules and classes. |
|
632 |
||
633 |
If you wish to change the behaviour of a supported API in an incompatible |
|
2063.3.1
by wang
fix typos |
634 |
way, you need to change its name as well. For instance, if I add an optional keyword |
1534.2.4
by Robert Collins
Update NEWS and HACKING for the symbol_versioning module. |
635 |
parameter to branch.commit - that's fine. On the other hand, if I add a |
636 |
keyword parameter to branch.commit which is a *required* transaction |
|
637 |
object, I should rename the API - i.e. to 'branch.commit_transaction'. |
|
638 |
||
639 |
When renaming such supported API's, be sure to leave a deprecated_method (or |
|
640 |
_function or ...) behind which forwards to the new API. See the |
|
641 |
bzrlib.symbol_versioning module for decorators that take care of the |
|
642 |
details for you - such as updating the docstring, and issuing a warning |
|
643 |
when the old api is used. |
|
644 |
||
2063.3.1
by wang
fix typos |
645 |
For unsupported API's, it does not hurt to follow this discipline, but it's |
1534.2.4
by Robert Collins
Update NEWS and HACKING for the symbol_versioning module. |
646 |
not required. Minimally though, please try to rename things so that |
647 |
callers will at least get an AttributeError rather than weird results. |
|
648 |
||
1393.1.54
by Martin Pool
- more hacking notes on evolving interfaces |
649 |
|
2825.3.1
by Martin Pool
Developer docs about deprecation |
650 |
Deprecation decorators |
651 |
---------------------- |
|
652 |
||
653 |
``bzrlib.symbol_versioning`` provides decorators that can be attached to |
|
654 |
methods, functions, and other interfaces to indicate that they should no |
|
655 |
longer be used. |
|
656 |
||
2825.3.4
by Martin Pool
Better explanation of deprecation |
657 |
To deprecate a static method you must call ``deprecated_function`` |
658 |
(**not** method), after the staticmethod call:: |
|
2825.3.1
by Martin Pool
Developer docs about deprecation |
659 |
|
660 |
@staticmethod |
|
661 |
@deprecated_function(zero_ninetyone) |
|
662 |
def create_repository(base, shared=False, format=None): |
|
663 |
||
664 |
When you deprecate an API, you should not just delete its tests, because |
|
665 |
then we might introduce bugs in them. If the API is still present at all, |
|
666 |
it should still work. The basic approach is to use |
|
667 |
``TestCase.applyDeprecated`` which in one step checks that the API gives |
|
668 |
the expected deprecation message, and also returns the real result from |
|
669 |
the method, so that tests can keep running. |
|
670 |
||
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
671 |
Coding Style Guidelines |
672 |
======================= |
|
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
673 |
|
2974.1.1
by Martin Pool
HACKING: say not to use hasattr() |
674 |
General Python rules |
675 |
-------------------- |
|
676 |
||
677 |
``hasattr`` should not be used because it swallows exceptions including |
|
678 |
``KeyboardInterrupt``. Instead, say something like :: |
|
679 |
||
680 |
if getattr(thing, 'name', None) is None |
|
681 |
||
682 |
||
2795.1.1
by Martin Pool
Document code layout stuff |
683 |
Code layout |
684 |
----------- |
|
685 |
||
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
686 |
Please write PEP-8__ compliant code. |
687 |
||
2795.1.1
by Martin Pool
Document code layout stuff |
688 |
__ http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0008.html |
689 |
||
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
690 |
One often-missed requirement is that the first line of docstrings |
691 |
should be a self-contained one-sentence summary. |
|
692 |
||
2795.1.1
by Martin Pool
Document code layout stuff |
693 |
We use 4 space indents for blocks, and never use tab characters. (In vim, |
694 |
``set expandtab``.) |
|
695 |
||
696 |
Lines should be no more than 79 characters if at all possible. |
|
697 |
Lines that continue a long statement may be indented in either of |
|
698 |
two ways: |
|
699 |
||
700 |
within the parenthesis or other character that opens the block, e.g.:: |
|
701 |
||
702 |
my_long_method(arg1, |
|
703 |
arg2, |
|
704 |
arg3) |
|
705 |
||
706 |
or indented by four spaces:: |
|
707 |
||
708 |
my_long_method(arg1, |
|
709 |
arg2, |
|
710 |
arg3) |
|
711 |
||
712 |
The first is considered clearer by some people; however it can be a bit |
|
713 |
harder to maintain (e.g. when the method name changes), and it does not |
|
714 |
work well if the relevant parenthesis is already far to the right. Avoid |
|
715 |
this:: |
|
716 |
||
717 |
self.legbone.kneebone.shinbone.toebone.shake_it(one, |
|
718 |
two, |
|
719 |
three) |
|
720 |
||
721 |
but rather :: |
|
722 |
||
723 |
self.legbone.kneebone.shinbone.toebone.shake_it(one, |
|
724 |
two, |
|
725 |
three) |
|
726 |
||
727 |
or :: |
|
728 |
||
729 |
self.legbone.kneebone.shinbone.toebone.shake_it( |
|
730 |
one, two, three) |
|
731 |
||
732 |
For long lists, we like to add a trailing comma and put the closing |
|
733 |
character on the following line. This makes it easier to add new items in |
|
734 |
future:: |
|
735 |
||
736 |
from bzrlib.goo import ( |
|
737 |
jam, |
|
738 |
jelly, |
|
739 |
marmalade, |
|
740 |
) |
|
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
741 |
|
2795.1.3
by Martin Pool
clarify spacing for function parameters |
742 |
There should be spaces between function paramaters, but not between the |
743 |
keyword name and the value:: |
|
744 |
||
745 |
call(1, 3, cheese=quark) |
|
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
746 |
|
2795.1.2
by Martin Pool
emacs indent additions from vila |
747 |
In emacs:: |
748 |
||
749 |
;(defface my-invalid-face |
|
750 |
; '((t (:background "Red" :underline t))) |
|
751 |
; "Face used to highlight invalid constructs or other uglyties" |
|
752 |
; ) |
|
753 |
||
754 |
(defun my-python-mode-hook () |
|
755 |
;; setup preferred indentation style. |
|
756 |
(setq fill-column 79) |
|
757 |
(setq indent-tabs-mode nil) ; no tabs, never, I will not repeat |
|
758 |
; (font-lock-add-keywords 'python-mode |
|
759 |
; '(("^\\s *\t" . 'my-invalid-face) ; Leading tabs |
|
760 |
; ("[ \t]+$" . 'my-invalid-face) ; Trailing spaces |
|
761 |
; ("^[ \t]+$" . 'my-invalid-face)); Spaces only |
|
762 |
; ) |
|
763 |
) |
|
764 |
||
765 |
(add-hook 'python-mode-hook 'my-python-mode-hook) |
|
766 |
||
767 |
The lines beginning with ';' are comments. They can be activated |
|
768 |
if one want to have a strong notice of some tab/space usage |
|
769 |
violations. |
|
770 |
||
771 |
||
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
772 |
Module Imports |
773 |
-------------- |
|
774 |
||
775 |
* Imports should be done at the top-level of the file, unless there is |
|
776 |
a strong reason to have them lazily loaded when a particular |
|
777 |
function runs. Import statements have a cost, so try to make sure |
|
778 |
they don't run inside hot functions. |
|
779 |
||
780 |
* Module names should always be given fully-qualified, |
|
781 |
i.e. ``bzrlib.hashcache`` not just ``hashcache``. |
|
782 |
||
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
783 |
|
784 |
Naming |
|
785 |
------ |
|
786 |
||
2625.3.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Clarify the use of underscore in the naming convention |
787 |
Functions, methods or members that are "private" to bzrlib are given |
788 |
a leading underscore prefix. Names without a leading underscore are |
|
789 |
public not just across modules but to programmers using bzrlib as an |
|
790 |
API. As a consequence, a leading underscore is appropriate for names |
|
791 |
exposed across modules but that are not to be exposed to bzrlib API |
|
792 |
programmers. |
|
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
793 |
|
794 |
We prefer class names to be concatenated capital words (``TestCase``) |
|
795 |
and variables, methods and functions to be lowercase words joined by |
|
796 |
underscores (``revision_id``, ``get_revision``). |
|
797 |
||
798 |
For the purposes of naming some names are treated as single compound |
|
799 |
words: "filename", "revno". |
|
800 |
||
801 |
Consider naming classes as nouns and functions/methods as verbs. |
|
802 |
||
2221.4.7
by Aaron Bentley
Add suggestion to HACKING |
803 |
Try to avoid using abbreviations in names, because there can be |
804 |
inconsistency if other people use the full name. |
|
805 |
||
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
806 |
|
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
807 |
Standard Names |
1393.1.53
by Martin Pool
- notes from coding-convention discussion |
808 |
-------------- |
809 |
||
810 |
``revision_id`` not ``rev_id`` or ``revid`` |
|
811 |
||
812 |
Functions that transform one thing to another should be named ``x_to_y`` |
|
813 |
(not ``x2y`` as occurs in some old code.) |
|
814 |
||
1098
by Martin Pool
- notes on how output is written |
815 |
|
1185.16.85
by mbp at sourcefrog
- rules for using destructors |
816 |
Destructors |
817 |
----------- |
|
818 |
||
1185.16.150
by Martin Pool
Improved description of python exception policies |
819 |
Python destructors (``__del__``) work differently to those of other |
820 |
languages. In particular, bear in mind that destructors may be called |
|
821 |
immediately when the object apparently becomes unreferenced, or at some |
|
822 |
later time, or possibly never at all. Therefore we have restrictions on |
|
823 |
what can be done inside them. |
|
1185.16.85
by mbp at sourcefrog
- rules for using destructors |
824 |
|
825 |
0. Never use a __del__ method without asking Martin/Robert first. |
|
826 |
||
827 |
1. Never rely on a ``__del__`` method running. If there is code that |
|
828 |
must run, do it from a ``finally`` block instead. |
|
829 |
||
830 |
2. Never ``import`` from inside a ``__del__`` method, or you may crash the |
|
831 |
interpreter!! |
|
832 |
||
833 |
3. In some places we raise a warning from the destructor if the object |
|
834 |
has not been cleaned up or closed. This is considered OK: the warning |
|
835 |
may not catch every case but it's still useful sometimes. |
|
836 |
||
837 |
||
1740.2.5
by Aaron Bentley
Merge from bzr.dev |
838 |
Factories |
839 |
--------- |
|
840 |
||
841 |
In some places we have variables which point to callables that construct |
|
842 |
new instances. That is to say, they can be used a lot like class objects, |
|
843 |
but they shouldn't be *named* like classes: |
|
844 |
||
845 |
> I think that things named FooBar should create instances of FooBar when |
|
846 |
> called. Its plain confusing for them to do otherwise. When we have |
|
847 |
> something that is going to be used as a class - that is, checked for via |
|
848 |
> isinstance or other such idioms, them I would call it foo_class, so that |
|
849 |
> it is clear that a callable is not sufficient. If it is only used as a |
|
850 |
> factory, then yes, foo_factory is what I would use. |
|
851 |
||
852 |
||
1911.4.15
by John Arbash Meinel
Updated HACKING and docstrings per Martin's suggestions |
853 |
Registries |
854 |
---------- |
|
855 |
||
856 |
Several places in Bazaar use (or will use) a registry, which is a |
|
857 |
mapping from names to objects or classes. The registry allows for |
|
858 |
loading in registered code only when it's needed, and keeping |
|
859 |
associated information such as a help string or description. |
|
860 |
||
861 |
||
1996.1.20
by John Arbash Meinel
HACKING and NEWS |
862 |
Lazy Imports |
863 |
------------ |
|
864 |
||
865 |
To make startup time faster, we use the ``bzrlib.lazy_import`` module to |
|
866 |
delay importing modules until they are actually used. ``lazy_import`` uses |
|
867 |
the same syntax as regular python imports. So to import a few modules in a |
|
868 |
lazy fashion do:: |
|
869 |
||
870 |
from bzrlib.lazy_import import lazy_import |
|
871 |
lazy_import(globals(), """ |
|
872 |
import os |
|
873 |
import subprocess |
|
874 |
import sys |
|
875 |
import time |
|
876 |
||
877 |
from bzrlib import ( |
|
878 |
errors, |
|
879 |
transport, |
|
1996.3.37
by John Arbash Meinel
Update HACKING and TODO |
880 |
revision as _mod_revision, |
1996.1.20
by John Arbash Meinel
HACKING and NEWS |
881 |
) |
882 |
import bzrlib.transport |
|
883 |
import bzrlib.xml5 |
|
884 |
""") |
|
885 |
||
886 |
At this point, all of these exist as a ``ImportReplacer`` object, ready to |
|
1996.3.37
by John Arbash Meinel
Update HACKING and TODO |
887 |
be imported once a member is accessed. Also, when importing a module into |
888 |
the local namespace, which is likely to clash with variable names, it is |
|
2370.1.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Minor corrections to HACKING |
889 |
recommended to prefix it as ``_mod_<module>``. This makes it clearer that |
1996.3.37
by John Arbash Meinel
Update HACKING and TODO |
890 |
the variable is a module, and these object should be hidden anyway, since |
891 |
they shouldn't be imported into other namespaces. |
|
1996.1.20
by John Arbash Meinel
HACKING and NEWS |
892 |
|
893 |
||
894 |
Modules versus Members |
|
895 |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
896 |
||
897 |
While it is possible for ``lazy_import()`` to import members of a module |
|
2063.3.1
by wang
fix typos |
898 |
when using the ``from module import member`` syntax, it is recommended to |
1996.1.20
by John Arbash Meinel
HACKING and NEWS |
899 |
only use that syntax to load sub modules ``from module import submodule``. |
900 |
This is because variables and classes can frequently be used without |
|
901 |
needing a sub-member for example:: |
|
902 |
||
903 |
lazy_import(globals(), """ |
|
904 |
from module import MyClass |
|
905 |
""") |
|
906 |
||
907 |
def test(x): |
|
908 |
return isinstance(x, MyClass) |
|
909 |
||
910 |
This will incorrectly fail, because ``MyClass`` is a ``ImportReplacer`` |
|
911 |
object, rather than the real class. |
|
912 |
||
913 |
||
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
914 |
Passing to Other Variables |
1996.1.20
by John Arbash Meinel
HACKING and NEWS |
915 |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
916 |
||
1996.1.26
by John Arbash Meinel
Update HACKING and docstrings |
917 |
It also is incorrect to assign ``ImportReplacer`` objects to other variables. |
1996.1.20
by John Arbash Meinel
HACKING and NEWS |
918 |
Because the replacer only knows about the original name, it is unable to |
919 |
replace other variables. The ``ImportReplacer`` class will raise an |
|
1996.1.26
by John Arbash Meinel
Update HACKING and docstrings |
920 |
``IllegalUseOfScopeReplacer`` exception if it can figure out that this |
921 |
happened. But it requires accessing a member more than once from the new |
|
922 |
variable, so some bugs are not detected right away. |
|
1996.1.20
by John Arbash Meinel
HACKING and NEWS |
923 |
|
924 |
||
2598.5.9
by Aaron Bentley
Update NEWS and HACKING |
925 |
The Null revision |
926 |
----------------- |
|
927 |
||
928 |
The null revision is the ancestor of all revisions. Its revno is 0, its |
|
929 |
revision-id is ``null:``, and its tree is the empty tree. When referring |
|
930 |
to the null revision, please use ``bzrlib.revision.NULL_REVISION``. Old |
|
931 |
code sometimes uses ``None`` for the null revision, but this practice is |
|
932 |
being phased out. |
|
933 |
||
934 |
||
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
935 |
Getting Input |
936 |
============= |
|
937 |
||
938 |
Processing Command Lines |
|
939 |
------------------------ |
|
940 |
||
941 |
bzrlib has a standard framework for parsing command lines and calling |
|
942 |
processing routines associated with various commands. See builtins.py |
|
2466.6.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from LarstiQ |
943 |
for numerous examples. |
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
944 |
|
945 |
||
946 |
Standard Parameter Types |
|
947 |
------------------------ |
|
948 |
||
949 |
There are some common requirements in the library: some parameters need to be |
|
950 |
unicode safe, some need byte strings, and so on. At the moment we have |
|
951 |
only codified one specific pattern: Parameters that need to be unicode |
|
952 |
should be checked via ``bzrlib.osutils.safe_unicode``. This will coerce the |
|
953 |
input into unicode in a consistent fashion, allowing trivial strings to be |
|
954 |
used for programmer convenience, but not performing unpredictably in the |
|
955 |
presence of different locales. |
|
956 |
||
957 |
||
958 |
Writing Output |
|
1098
by Martin Pool
- notes on how output is written |
959 |
============== |
960 |
||
961 |
(The strategy described here is what we want to get to, but it's not |
|
962 |
consistently followed in the code at the moment.) |
|
963 |
||
964 |
bzrlib is intended to be a generically reusable library. It shouldn't |
|
965 |
write messages to stdout or stderr, because some programs that use it |
|
966 |
might want to display that information through a GUI or some other |
|
967 |
mechanism. |
|
968 |
||
969 |
We can distinguish two types of output from the library: |
|
970 |
||
971 |
1. Structured data representing the progress or result of an |
|
972 |
operation. For example, for a commit command this will be a list |
|
973 |
of the modified files and the finally committed revision number |
|
974 |
and id. |
|
975 |
||
976 |
These should be exposed either through the return code or by calls |
|
977 |
to a callback parameter. |
|
978 |
||
979 |
A special case of this is progress indicators for long-lived |
|
980 |
operations, where the caller should pass a ProgressBar object. |
|
981 |
||
982 |
2. Unstructured log/debug messages, mostly for the benefit of the |
|
983 |
developers or users trying to debug problems. This should always |
|
984 |
be sent through ``bzrlib.trace`` and Python ``logging``, so that |
|
985 |
it can be redirected by the client. |
|
986 |
||
987 |
The distinction between the two is a bit subjective, but in general if |
|
988 |
there is any chance that a library would want to see something as |
|
989 |
structured data, we should make it so. |
|
990 |
||
991 |
The policy about how output is presented in the text-mode client |
|
992 |
should be only in the command-line tool. |
|
1092.1.22
by Robert Collins
update hacking with some test foo |
993 |
|
1418
by Robert Collins
merge martins latest |
994 |
|
2598.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add test for and documentation of option style, fix up existing options to comply |
995 |
|
996 |
Displaying help |
|
997 |
=============== |
|
998 |
||
999 |
Bazaar has online help for various topics through ``bzr help COMMAND`` or |
|
1000 |
equivalently ``bzr command -h``. We also have help on command options, |
|
1001 |
and on other help topics. (See ``help_topics.py``.) |
|
1002 |
||
1003 |
As for python docstrings, the first paragraph should be a single-sentence |
|
1004 |
synopsis of the command. |
|
1005 |
||
1006 |
The help for options should be one or more proper sentences, starting with |
|
1007 |
a capital letter and finishing with a full stop (period). |
|
1008 |
||
1009 |
All help messages and documentation should have two spaces between |
|
1010 |
sentences. |
|
1011 |
||
1012 |
||
1092.1.22
by Robert Collins
update hacking with some test foo |
1013 |
Writing tests |
1014 |
============= |
|
2067.2.2
by John Arbash Meinel
Review comments from Robert |
1015 |
|
1638.1.1
by Robert Collins
Update HACKING to reflect current test writing policy. |
1016 |
In general tests should be placed in a file named test_FOO.py where |
1092.1.22
by Robert Collins
update hacking with some test foo |
1017 |
FOO is the logical thing under test. That file should be placed in the |
1018 |
tests subdirectory under the package being tested. |
|
1019 |
||
1638.1.1
by Robert Collins
Update HACKING to reflect current test writing policy. |
1020 |
For example, tests for merge3 in bzrlib belong in bzrlib/tests/test_merge3.py. |
2370.1.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Minor corrections to HACKING |
1021 |
See bzrlib/tests/test_sampler.py for a template test script. |
1638.1.1
by Robert Collins
Update HACKING to reflect current test writing policy. |
1022 |
|
1023 |
Tests can be written for the UI or for individual areas of the library. |
|
1024 |
Choose whichever is appropriate: if adding a new command, or a new command |
|
1025 |
option, then you should be writing a UI test. If you are both adding UI |
|
1026 |
functionality and library functionality, you will want to write tests for |
|
1027 |
both the UI and the core behaviours. We call UI tests 'blackbox' tests |
|
1711.2.94
by John Arbash Meinel
Update HACKING to be rst compliant |
1028 |
and they are found in ``bzrlib/tests/blackbox/*.py``. |
1638.1.1
by Robert Collins
Update HACKING to reflect current test writing policy. |
1029 |
|
1030 |
When writing blackbox tests please honour the following conventions: |
|
1031 |
||
1032 |
1. Place the tests for the command 'name' in |
|
1033 |
bzrlib/tests/blackbox/test_name.py. This makes it easy for developers |
|
1034 |
to locate the test script for a faulty command. |
|
1035 |
||
1036 |
2. Use the 'self.run_bzr("name")' utility function to invoke the command |
|
1037 |
rather than running bzr in a subprocess or invoking the |
|
1038 |
cmd_object.run() method directly. This is a lot faster than |
|
1039 |
subprocesses and generates the same logging output as running it in a |
|
1040 |
subprocess (which invoking the method directly does not). |
|
1041 |
||
1042 |
3. Only test the one command in a single test script. Use the bzrlib |
|
1043 |
library when setting up tests and when evaluating the side-effects of |
|
1044 |
the command. We do this so that the library api has continual pressure |
|
1045 |
on it to be as functional as the command line in a simple manner, and |
|
1046 |
to isolate knock-on effects throughout the blackbox test suite when a |
|
2063.3.1
by wang
fix typos |
1047 |
command changes its name or signature. Ideally only the tests for a |
1638.1.1
by Robert Collins
Update HACKING to reflect current test writing policy. |
1048 |
given command are affected when a given command is changed. |
1393.1.61
by Martin Pool
doc |
1049 |
|
2067.2.2
by John Arbash Meinel
Review comments from Robert |
1050 |
4. If you have a test which does actually require running bzr in a |
1051 |
subprocess you can use ``run_bzr_subprocess``. By default the spawned |
|
1052 |
process will not load plugins unless ``--allow-plugins`` is supplied. |
|
1053 |
||
1054 |
||
2466.7.2
by Robert Collins
Document the user of TreeBuilder somewhat. |
1055 |
Test support |
1056 |
------------ |
|
1057 |
||
1058 |
We have a rich collection of tools to support writing tests. Please use |
|
1059 |
them in preference to ad-hoc solutions as they provide portability and |
|
1060 |
performance benefits. |
|
1061 |
||
1062 |
TreeBuilder |
|
1063 |
~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
1064 |
||
1065 |
The ``TreeBuilder`` interface allows the construction of arbitrary trees |
|
1066 |
with a declarative interface. A sample session might look like:: |
|
1067 |
||
1068 |
tree = self.make_branch_and_tree('path') |
|
1069 |
builder = TreeBuilder() |
|
1070 |
builder.start_tree(tree) |
|
1071 |
builder.build(['foo', "bar/", "bar/file"]) |
|
1072 |
tree.commit('commit the tree') |
|
1073 |
builder.finish_tree() |
|
1074 |
||
1075 |
Please see bzrlib.treebuilder for more details. |
|
1076 |
||
2466.7.7
by Robert Collins
Document basic usage. |
1077 |
BranchBuilder |
1078 |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
1079 |
||
1080 |
The ``BranchBuilder`` interface allows the creation of test branches in a |
|
1081 |
quick and easy manner. A sample session:: |
|
1082 |
||
1083 |
builder = BranchBuilder(self.get_transport().clone('relpath')) |
|
1084 |
builder.build_commit() |
|
1085 |
builder.build_commit() |
|
1086 |
builder.build_commit() |
|
1087 |
branch = builder.get_branch() |
|
1088 |
||
1089 |
Please see bzrlib.branchbuilder for more details. |
|
2466.7.2
by Robert Collins
Document the user of TreeBuilder somewhat. |
1090 |
|
1740.6.1
by Martin Pool
Remove Scratch objects used by doctests |
1091 |
Doctests |
1092 |
-------- |
|
1093 |
||
1094 |
We make selective use of doctests__. In general they should provide |
|
1095 |
*examples* within the API documentation which can incidentally be tested. We |
|
1096 |
don't try to test every important case using doctests -- regular Python |
|
1097 |
tests are generally a better solution. |
|
1098 |
||
1099 |
Most of these are in ``bzrlib/doc/api``. More additions are welcome. |
|
1100 |
||
1101 |
__ http://docs.python.org/lib/module-doctest.html |
|
1102 |
||
1103 |
||
1092.1.22
by Robert Collins
update hacking with some test foo |
1104 |
Running tests |
1105 |
============= |
|
1106 |
Currently, bzr selftest is used to invoke tests. |
|
1107 |
You can provide a pattern argument to run a subset. For example, |
|
1638.1.1
by Robert Collins
Update HACKING to reflect current test writing policy. |
1108 |
to run just the blackbox tests, run:: |
1393.1.61
by Martin Pool
doc |
1109 |
|
1638.1.1
by Robert Collins
Update HACKING to reflect current test writing policy. |
1110 |
./bzr selftest -v blackbox |
1393.1.61
by Martin Pool
doc |
1111 |
|
2394.2.6
by Ian Clatworthy
completed blackbox tests |
1112 |
To skip a particular test (or set of tests), use the --exclude option |
1113 |
(shorthand -x) like so:: |
|
1114 |
||
1115 |
./bzr selftest -v -x blackbox |
|
1116 |
||
1117 |
To list tests without running them, use the --list-only option like so:: |
|
1118 |
||
1119 |
./bzr selftest --list-only |
|
1120 |
||
1121 |
This option can be combined with other selftest options (like -x) and |
|
1122 |
filter patterns to understand their effect. |
|
1551.6.41
by Aaron Bentley
Add advice on skipping tests to HACKING |
1123 |
|
1393.1.61
by Martin Pool
doc |
1124 |
|
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1125 |
Handling Errors and Exceptions |
1126 |
============================== |
|
1127 |
||
1128 |
Commands should return non-zero when they encounter circumstances that |
|
1129 |
the user should really pay attention to - which includes trivial shell |
|
1130 |
pipelines. |
|
1131 |
||
1132 |
Recommended values are: |
|
1133 |
||
1134 |
0. OK. |
|
1135 |
1. Conflicts in merge-like operations, or changes are present in |
|
2475.2.4
by Martin Pool
HACKING rest fixes from jam |
1136 |
diff-like operations. |
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1137 |
2. Unrepresentable diff changes (i.e. binary files that we cannot show |
2475.2.4
by Martin Pool
HACKING rest fixes from jam |
1138 |
a diff of). |
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1139 |
3. An error or exception has occurred. |
2713.2.2
by Martin Pool
Add mention of exitcode 4 for internal errors |
1140 |
4. An internal error occurred (one that shows a traceback.) |
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1141 |
|
1142 |
Errors are handled through Python exceptions. Exceptions should be defined |
|
1143 |
inside bzrlib.errors, so that we can see the whole tree at a glance. |
|
1144 |
||
1145 |
We broadly classify errors as either being either internal or not, |
|
2475.2.4
by Martin Pool
HACKING rest fixes from jam |
1146 |
depending on whether ``internal_error`` is set or not. If we think it's our |
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1147 |
fault, we show a backtrace, an invitation to report the bug, and possibly |
1148 |
other details. This is the default for errors that aren't specifically |
|
1149 |
recognized as being caused by a user error. Otherwise we show a briefer |
|
1150 |
message, unless -Derror was given. |
|
1151 |
||
1152 |
Many errors originate as "environmental errors" which are raised by Python |
|
1153 |
or builtin libraries -- for example IOError. These are treated as being |
|
1154 |
our fault, unless they're caught in a particular tight scope where we know |
|
1155 |
that they indicate a user errors. For example if the repository format |
|
1156 |
is not found, the user probably gave the wrong path or URL. But if one of |
|
1157 |
the files inside the repository is not found, then it's our fault -- |
|
1158 |
either there's a bug in bzr, or something complicated has gone wrong in |
|
1159 |
the environment that means one internal file was deleted. |
|
1160 |
||
1161 |
Many errors are defined in ``bzrlib/errors.py`` but it's OK for new errors |
|
1162 |
to be added near the place where they are used. |
|
1163 |
||
1164 |
Exceptions are formatted for the user by conversion to a string |
|
1165 |
(eventually calling their ``__str__`` method.) As a convenience the |
|
1166 |
``._fmt`` member can be used as a template which will be mapped to the |
|
1167 |
error's instance dict. |
|
1168 |
||
1169 |
New exception classes should be defined when callers might want to catch |
|
1170 |
that exception specifically, or when it needs a substantially different |
|
1171 |
format string. |
|
1172 |
||
1173 |
Exception strings should start with a capital letter and should not have a |
|
1174 |
final fullstop. If long, they may contain newlines to break the text. |
|
1175 |
||
1176 |
||
1177 |
Documenting Changes |
|
1178 |
=================== |
|
1179 |
||
1180 |
When you change bzrlib, please update the relevant documentation for the |
|
1181 |
change you made: Changes to commands should update their help, and |
|
1182 |
possibly end user tutorials; changes to the core library should be |
|
1183 |
reflected in API documentation. |
|
1184 |
||
1185 |
NEWS File |
|
1186 |
--------- |
|
1187 |
||
1188 |
If you make a user-visible change, please add a note to the NEWS file. |
|
1189 |
The description should be written to make sense to someone who's just |
|
1190 |
a user of bzr, not a developer: new functions or classes shouldn't be |
|
1191 |
mentioned, but new commands, changes in behaviour or fixed nontrivial |
|
1192 |
bugs should be listed. See the existing entries for an idea of what |
|
1193 |
should be done. |
|
1194 |
||
1195 |
Within each release, entries in the news file should have the most |
|
1196 |
user-visible changes first. So the order should be approximately: |
|
1197 |
||
1198 |
* changes to existing behaviour - the highest priority because the |
|
1199 |
user's existing knowledge is incorrect |
|
1200 |
* new features - should be brought to their attention |
|
1201 |
* bug fixes - may be of interest if the bug was affecting them, and |
|
1202 |
should include the bug number if any |
|
1203 |
* major documentation changes |
|
1204 |
* changes to internal interfaces |
|
1205 |
||
1206 |
People who made significant contributions to each change are listed in |
|
1207 |
parenthesis. This can include reporting bugs (particularly with good |
|
1208 |
details or reproduction recipes), submitting patches, etc. |
|
1209 |
||
1210 |
Commands |
|
1211 |
-------- |
|
1212 |
||
1213 |
The docstring of a command is used by ``bzr help`` to generate help output |
|
1214 |
for the command. The list 'takes_options' attribute on a command is used by |
|
1215 |
``bzr help`` to document the options for the command - the command |
|
1216 |
docstring does not need to document them. Finally, the '_see_also' |
|
1217 |
attribute on a command can be used to reference other related help topics. |
|
1218 |
||
1219 |
API Documentation |
|
1220 |
----------------- |
|
1221 |
||
1222 |
Functions, methods, classes and modules should have docstrings |
|
1223 |
describing how they are used. |
|
1224 |
||
1225 |
The first line of the docstring should be a self-contained sentence. |
|
1226 |
||
1227 |
For the special case of Command classes, this acts as the user-visible |
|
1228 |
documentation shown by the help command. |
|
1229 |
||
1230 |
The docstrings should be formatted as reStructuredText_ (like this |
|
1231 |
document), suitable for processing using the epydoc_ tool into HTML |
|
1232 |
documentation. |
|
1233 |
||
1234 |
.. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html |
|
1235 |
.. _epydoc: http://epydoc.sourceforge.net/ |
|
1236 |
||
1237 |
||
1238 |
General Guidelines |
|
1239 |
================== |
|
1240 |
||
1241 |
Copyright |
|
1242 |
--------- |
|
1243 |
||
1244 |
The copyright policy for bzr was recently made clear in this email (edited |
|
1245 |
for grammatical correctness):: |
|
1246 |
||
1247 |
The attached patch cleans up the copyright and license statements in |
|
1248 |
the bzr source. It also adds tests to help us remember to add them |
|
1249 |
with the correct text. |
|
1250 |
||
1251 |
We had the problem that lots of our files were "Copyright Canonical |
|
1252 |
Development Ltd" which is not a real company, and some other variations |
|
1253 |
on this theme. Also, some files were missing the GPL statements. |
|
1254 |
||
1255 |
I want to be clear about the intent of this patch, since copyright can |
|
1256 |
be a little controversial. |
|
1257 |
||
1258 |
1) The big motivation for this is not to shut out the community, but |
|
1259 |
just to clean up all of the invalid copyright statements. |
|
1260 |
||
1261 |
2) It has been the general policy for bzr that we want a single |
|
1262 |
copyright holder for all of the core code. This is following the model |
|
1263 |
set by the FSF, which makes it easier to update the code to a new |
|
1264 |
license in case problems are encountered. (For example, if we want to |
|
1265 |
upgrade the project universally to GPL v3 it is much simpler if there is |
|
1266 |
a single copyright holder). It also makes it clearer if copyright is |
|
1267 |
ever debated, there is a single holder, which makes it easier to defend |
|
1268 |
in court, etc. (I think the FSF position is that if you assign them |
|
1269 |
copyright, they can defend it in court rather than you needing to, and |
|
1270 |
I'm sure Canonical would do the same). |
|
1271 |
As such, Canonical has requested copyright assignments from all of the |
|
1272 |
major contributers. |
|
1273 |
||
1274 |
3) If someone wants to add code and not attribute it to Canonical, there |
|
1275 |
is a specific list of files that are excluded from this check. And the |
|
1276 |
test failure indicates where that is, and how to update it. |
|
1277 |
||
1278 |
4) If anyone feels that I changed a copyright statement incorrectly, just |
|
1279 |
let me know, and I'll be happy to correct it. Whenever you have large |
|
1280 |
mechanical changes like this, it is possible to make some mistakes. |
|
1281 |
||
1282 |
Just to reiterate, this is a community project, and it is meant to stay |
|
1283 |
that way. Core bzr code is copyright Canonical for legal reasons, and |
|
1284 |
the tests are just there to help us maintain that. |
|
1285 |
||
1286 |
||
1287 |
Miscellaneous Topics |
|
1288 |
#################### |
|
1289 |
||
1290 |
Debugging |
|
1291 |
========= |
|
1292 |
||
1293 |
Bazaar has a few facilities to help debug problems by going into pdb_, the |
|
1294 |
Python debugger. |
|
1295 |
||
1296 |
.. _pdb: http://docs.python.org/lib/debugger-commands.html |
|
1297 |
||
1298 |
If the ``BZR_PDB`` environment variable is set |
|
1299 |
then bzr will go into pdb post-mortem mode when an unhandled exception |
|
1300 |
occurs. |
|
1301 |
||
2466.6.3
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate feedback from Aaron B. & Alex B. |
1302 |
If you send a SIGQUIT signal to bzr, which can be done by pressing |
1303 |
Ctrl-\\ on Unix, bzr will go into the debugger immediately. You can |
|
1304 |
continue execution by typing ``c``. This can be disabled if necessary |
|
1305 |
by setting the environment variable ``BZR_SIGQUIT_PDB=0``. |
|
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1306 |
|
1307 |
||
1308 |
Jargon |
|
1309 |
====== |
|
1310 |
||
1311 |
revno |
|
1312 |
Integer identifier for a revision on the main line of a branch. |
|
1313 |
Revision 0 is always the null revision; others are 1-based |
|
1314 |
indexes into the branch's revision history. |
|
1315 |
||
1316 |
||
1711.2.95
by John Arbash Meinel
Add HACKING note for the self.outf parameter. |
1317 |
Unicode and Encoding Support |
1318 |
============================ |
|
1319 |
||
1320 |
This section discusses various techniques that Bazaar uses to handle |
|
1321 |
characters that are outside the ASCII set. |
|
1322 |
||
1323 |
``Command.outf`` |
|
1324 |
---------------- |
|
1325 |
||
1326 |
When a ``Command`` object is created, it is given a member variable |
|
1327 |
accessible by ``self.outf``. This is a file-like object, which is bound to |
|
1328 |
``sys.stdout``, and should be used to write information to the screen, |
|
1329 |
rather than directly writing to ``sys.stdout`` or calling ``print``. |
|
1330 |
This file has the ability to translate Unicode objects into the correct |
|
1711.2.96
by John Arbash Meinel
cleanup from suggestions by Robert and Martin |
1331 |
representation, based on the console encoding. Also, the class attribute |
1332 |
``encoding_type`` will effect how unprintable characters will be |
|
1711.2.95
by John Arbash Meinel
Add HACKING note for the self.outf parameter. |
1333 |
handled. This parameter can take one of 3 values: |
1334 |
||
1335 |
replace |
|
1711.2.96
by John Arbash Meinel
cleanup from suggestions by Robert and Martin |
1336 |
Unprintable characters will be represented with a suitable replacement |
1337 |
marker (typically '?'), and no exception will be raised. This is for |
|
1338 |
any command which generates text for the user to review, rather than |
|
1339 |
for automated processing. |
|
1711.2.95
by John Arbash Meinel
Add HACKING note for the self.outf parameter. |
1340 |
For example: ``bzr log`` should not fail if one of the entries has text |
1341 |
that cannot be displayed. |
|
1342 |
||
1343 |
strict |
|
2063.3.1
by wang
fix typos |
1344 |
Attempting to print an unprintable character will cause a UnicodeError. |
1711.2.95
by John Arbash Meinel
Add HACKING note for the self.outf parameter. |
1345 |
This is for commands that are intended more as scripting support, rather |
1346 |
than plain user review. |
|
1347 |
For exampl: ``bzr ls`` is designed to be used with shell scripting. One |
|
1348 |
use would be ``bzr ls --null --unknows | xargs -0 rm``. If ``bzr`` |
|
1349 |
printed a filename with a '?', the wrong file could be deleted. (At the |
|
1350 |
very least, the correct file would not be deleted). An error is used to |
|
1351 |
indicate that the requested action could not be performed. |
|
1352 |
||
1353 |
exact |
|
1354 |
Do not attempt to automatically convert Unicode strings. This is used |
|
1355 |
for commands that must handle conversion themselves. |
|
1356 |
For example: ``bzr diff`` needs to translate Unicode paths, but should |
|
1357 |
not change the exact text of the contents of the files. |
|
1358 |
||
1359 |
||
1360 |
``bzrlib.urlutils.unescape_for_display`` |
|
1361 |
---------------------------------------- |
|
1362 |
||
1363 |
Because Transports work in URLs (as defined earlier), printing the raw URL |
|
1364 |
to the user is usually less than optimal. Characters outside the standard |
|
1365 |
set are printed as escapes, rather than the real character, and local |
|
1366 |
paths would be printed as ``file://`` urls. The function |
|
1367 |
``unescape_for_display`` attempts to unescape a URL, such that anything |
|
1368 |
that cannot be printed in the current encoding stays an escaped URL, but |
|
1369 |
valid characters are generated where possible. |
|
1370 |
||
1371 |
||
2405.2.2
by Andrew Bennetts
Add a brief section on portability to HACKING. |
1372 |
Portability Tips |
1373 |
================ |
|
1374 |
||
1375 |
The ``bzrlib.osutils`` module has many useful helper functions, including |
|
1376 |
some more portable variants of functions in the standard library. |
|
1377 |
||
1378 |
In particular, don't use ``shutil.rmtree`` unless it's acceptable for it |
|
1379 |
to fail on Windows if some files are readonly or still open elsewhere. |
|
1380 |
Use ``bzrlib.osutils.rmtree`` instead. |
|
1381 |
||
1382 |
||
1739.1.2
by Robert Collins
More pyrex finesse, documentation. |
1383 |
C Extension Modules |
1384 |
=================== |
|
1385 |
||
1386 |
We write some extensions in C using pyrex. We design these to work in |
|
1387 |
three scenarios: |
|
2449.1.1
by Alexander Belchenko
fix RSTX wrong formatting in HACKING |
1388 |
|
1739.1.2
by Robert Collins
More pyrex finesse, documentation. |
1389 |
* User with no C compiler |
1390 |
* User with C compiler |
|
1391 |
* Developers |
|
1392 |
||
1393 |
The recommended way to install bzr is to have a C compiler so that the |
|
1394 |
extensions can be built, but if no C compiler is present, the pure python |
|
1395 |
versions we supply will work, though more slowly. |
|
1396 |
||
1397 |
For developers we recommend that pyrex be installed, so that the C |
|
1398 |
extensions can be changed if needed. |
|
1399 |
||
1400 |
For the C extensions, the extension module should always match the |
|
1401 |
original python one in all respects (modulo speed). This should be |
|
1402 |
maintained over time. |
|
1403 |
||
1404 |
To create an extension, add rules to setup.py for building it with pyrex, |
|
1405 |
and with distutils. Now start with an empty .pyx file. At the top add |
|
1406 |
"include 'yourmodule.py'". This will import the contents of foo.py into this |
|
1407 |
file at build time - remember that only one module will be loaded at |
|
1408 |
runtime. Now you can subclass classes, or replace functions, and only your |
|
1409 |
changes need to be present in the .pyx file. |
|
1410 |
||
1411 |
Note that pyrex does not support all 2.4 programming idioms, so some |
|
1412 |
syntax changes may be required. I.e. |
|
2449.1.1
by Alexander Belchenko
fix RSTX wrong formatting in HACKING |
1413 |
|
1739.1.2
by Robert Collins
More pyrex finesse, documentation. |
1414 |
- 'from foo import (bar, gam)' needs to change to not use the brackets. |
1415 |
- 'import foo.bar as bar' needs to be 'import foo.bar; bar = foo.bar' |
|
2449.1.1
by Alexander Belchenko
fix RSTX wrong formatting in HACKING |
1416 |
|
1739.1.2
by Robert Collins
More pyrex finesse, documentation. |
1417 |
If the changes are too dramatic, consider |
1418 |
maintaining the python code twice - once in the .pyx, and once in the .py, |
|
1419 |
and no longer including the .py file. |
|
1420 |
||
2466.6.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Expand HACKING into Bazaar Developer Guide |
1421 |
|
1422 |
Making Installers for OS Windows |
|
1861.2.19
by Alexander Belchenko
HACKING: mention where to get instructions for building windows installers |
1423 |
================================ |
1861.2.20
by Alexander Belchenko
English |
1424 |
To build a win32 installer, see the instructions on the wiki page: |
1861.2.19
by Alexander Belchenko
HACKING: mention where to get instructions for building windows installers |
1425 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/BzrWin32Installer |
1426 |
||
1427 |
||
2797.1.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Merge Core Developer Hanbook into HACKING |
1428 |
Core Developer Tasks |
1429 |
#################### |
|
1430 |
||
1431 |
Overview |
|
1432 |
======== |
|
1433 |
||
1434 |
What is a Core Developer? |
|
1435 |
------------------------- |
|
1436 |
||
1437 |
While everyone in the Bazaar community is welcome and encouraged to |
|
1438 |
propose and submit changes, a smaller team is reponsible for pulling those |
|
1439 |
changes together into a cohesive whole. In addition to the general developer |
|
1440 |
stuff covered above, "core" developers have responsibility for: |
|
1441 |
||
1442 |
* reviewing changes |
|
1443 |
* reviewing blueprints |
|
1444 |
* planning releases |
|
1445 |
* managing releases. |
|
1446 |
||
1447 |
.. note:: |
|
1448 |
Removing barriers to community participation is a key reason for adopting |
|
1449 |
distributed VCS technology. While DVCS removes many technical barriers, |
|
1450 |
a small number of social barriers are often necessary instead. |
|
1451 |
By documenting how the above things are done, we hope to |
|
1452 |
encourage more people to participate in these activities, keeping the |
|
1453 |
differences between core and non-core contributors to a minimum. |
|
1454 |
||
1455 |
||
1456 |
The Development Lifecycle |
|
1457 |
------------------------- |
|
1458 |
||
1459 |
As a rule, Bazaar development follows a 4 week cycle: |
|
1460 |
||
1461 |
* 2 weeks - general changes |
|
1462 |
* 1 week - feature freeze |
|
1463 |
* 1 week+ - Release Candidate stabilization |
|
1464 |
||
1465 |
During the FeatureFreeze week, the trunk (bzr.dev) is open in a limited |
|
1466 |
way: only low risk changes, critical and high priority fixes are accepted |
|
1467 |
during this time. At the end of FeatureFreeze, a branch is created for the |
|
1468 |
first Release Candidate and the trunk is reopened for general development |
|
1469 |
on the *next* release. A week or so later, the final release is packaged |
|
1470 |
assuming no serious problems were encountered with the one or more Release |
|
1471 |
Candidates. |
|
1472 |
||
1473 |
.. note:: |
|
1474 |
There is a one week overlap between the start of one release and |
|
1475 |
the end of the previous one. |
|
1476 |
||
1477 |
||
1478 |
Communicating and Coordinating |
|
1479 |
------------------------------ |
|
1480 |
||
1481 |
While it has many advantages, one of the challenges of distributed |
|
1482 |
development is keeping everyone else aware of what you're working on. |
|
1483 |
There are numerous ways to do this: |
|
1484 |
||
1485 |
#. Assign bugs to yourself in Launchpad |
|
1486 |
#. Mention it on the mailing list |
|
1487 |
#. Mention it on IRC |
|
1488 |
||
1489 |
As well as the email notifcations that occur when merge requests are sent |
|
1490 |
and reviewed, you can keep others informed of where you're spending your |
|
1491 |
energy by emailing the **bazaar-commits** list implicitly. To do this, |
|
1492 |
install and configure the Email plugin. One way to do this is add these |
|
1493 |
configuration settings to your central configuration file (e.g. |
|
1494 |
``~/.bazaar/bazaar.conf`` on Linux):: |
|
1495 |
||
1496 |
[DEFAULT] |
|
1497 |
email = Joe Smith <joe.smith@internode.on.net> |
|
1498 |
smtp_server = mail.internode.on.net:25 |
|
1499 |
||
1500 |
Then add these lines for the relevant branches in ``locations.conf``:: |
|
1501 |
||
1502 |
post_commit_to = bazaar-commits@lists.canonical.com |
|
1503 |
post_commit_mailer = smtplib |
|
1504 |
||
1505 |
While attending a sprint, RobertCollins' Dbus plugin is useful for the |
|
1506 |
same reason. See the documentation within the plugin for information on |
|
1507 |
how to set it up and configure it. |
|
1508 |
||
1509 |
||
1510 |
Reviewing Changes |
|
1511 |
================= |
|
1512 |
||
1513 |
Setting Up Your Workspace for Reviews |
|
1514 |
------------------------------------- |
|
1515 |
||
1516 |
TODO: Incorporate John Arbash Meinel's detailed email to Ian C on the |
|
1517 |
numerous ways of setting up integration branches. |
|
1518 |
||
1519 |
||
1520 |
The Review Checklist |
|
1521 |
-------------------- |
|
1522 |
||
2797.1.2
by Ian Clatworthy
Incorporate review feedback from poolie |
1523 |
See `A Closer Look at the Merge & Review Process`_ |
1524 |
for information on the gates used to decide whether code can be merged |
|
1525 |
or not and details on how review results are recorded and communicated. |
|
1526 |
||
1527 |
||
1528 |
The Importance of Timely Reviews |
|
1529 |
-------------------------------- |
|
2797.1.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Merge Core Developer Hanbook into HACKING |
1530 |
|
1531 |
Good reviews do take time. They also regularly require a solid |
|
1532 |
understanding of the overall code base. In practice, this means a small |
|
1533 |
number of people often have a large review burden - with knowledge comes |
|
1534 |
responsibility. No one like their merge requests sitting in a queue going |
|
1535 |
nowhere, so reviewing sooner rather than later is strongly encouraged. |
|
1536 |
||
1537 |
||
1538 |
Submitting Changes |
|
1539 |
================== |
|
1540 |
||
1541 |
An Overview of PQM |
|
1542 |
------------------ |
|
1543 |
||
1544 |
Of the many workflows supported by Bazaar, the one adopted for Bazaar |
|
1545 |
development itself is known as "Decentralized with automatic gatekeeper". |
|
1546 |
To repeat the explanation of this given on |
|
1547 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/Workflows: |
|
1548 |
||
1549 |
.. pull-quote:: |
|
1550 |
In this workflow, each developer has their own branch or |
|
1551 |
branches, plus read-only access to the mainline. A software gatekeeper |
|
1552 |
(e.g. PQM) has commit rights to the main branch. When a developer wants |
|
1553 |
their work merged, they request the gatekeeper to merge it. The gatekeeper |
|
1554 |
does a merge, a compile, and runs the test suite. If the code passes, it |
|
1555 |
is merged into the mainline. |
|
1556 |
||
1557 |
In a nutshell, here's the overall submission process: |
|
1558 |
||
1559 |
#. get your work ready (including review except for trivial changes) |
|
1560 |
#. push to a public location |
|
1561 |
#. ask PQM to merge from that location |
|
1562 |
||
1563 |
.. note:: |
|
1564 |
At present, PQM always takes the changes to merge from a branch |
|
1565 |
at a URL that can be read by it. For Bazaar, that means a public, |
|
1566 |
typically http, URL. |
|
1567 |
||
1568 |
As a result, the following things are needed to use PQM for submissions: |
|
1569 |
||
1570 |
#. A publicly available web server |
|
1571 |
#. Your OpenPGP key registered with PQM (contact RobertCollins for this) |
|
1572 |
#. The PQM plugin installed and configured (not strictly required but |
|
1573 |
highly recommended). |
|
1574 |
||
1575 |
||
1576 |
Selecting a Public Branch Location |
|
1577 |
---------------------------------- |
|
1578 |
||
1579 |
If you don't have your own web server running, branches can always be |
|
1580 |
pushed to Launchpad. Here's the process for doing that: |
|
1581 |
||
1582 |
Depending on your location throughout the world and the size of your |
|
1583 |
repository though, it is often quicker to use an alternative public |
|
1584 |
location to Launchpad, particularly if you can set up your own repo and |
|
1585 |
push into that. By using an existing repo, push only needs to send the |
|
1586 |
changes, instead of the complete repository every time. Note that it is |
|
1587 |
easy to register branches in other locations with Launchpad so no benefits |
|
1588 |
are lost by going this way. |
|
1589 |
||
1590 |
.. note:: |
|
1591 |
For Canonical staff, http://people.ubuntu.com/~<user>/ is one |
|
1592 |
suggestion for public http branches. Contact your manager for information |
|
1593 |
on accessing this system if required. |
|
1594 |
||
1595 |
It should also be noted that best practice in this area is subject to |
|
1596 |
change as things evolve. For example, once the Bazaar smart server on |
|
1597 |
Launchpad supports server-side branching, the performance situation will |
|
1598 |
be very different to what it is now (Jun 2007). |
|
1599 |
||
1600 |
||
1601 |
Configuring the PQM Plug-In |
|
1602 |
--------------------------- |
|
1603 |
||
1604 |
While not strictly required, the PQM plugin automates a few things and |
|
1605 |
reduces the chance of error. Before looking at the plugin, it helps to |
|
1606 |
understand a little more how PQM operates. Basically, PQM requires an |
|
1607 |
email indicating what you want it to do. The email typically looks like |
|
1608 |
this:: |
|
1609 |
||
1610 |
star-merge source-branch target-branch |
|
1611 |
||
1612 |
For example:: |
|
1613 |
||
1614 |
star-merge http://bzr.arbash-meinel.com/branches/bzr/jam-integration http://bazaar-vcs.org/bzr/bzr.dev |
|
1615 |
||
1616 |
Note that the command needs to be on one line. The subject of the email |
|
1617 |
will be used for the commit message. The email also needs to be ``gpg`` |
|
1618 |
signed with a key that PQM accepts. |
|
1619 |
||
1620 |
The advantages of using the PQM plugin are: |
|
1621 |
||
1622 |
#. You can use the config policies to make it easy to set up public |
|
1623 |
branches, so you don't have to ever type the full paths you want to merge |
|
1624 |
from or into. |
|
1625 |
||
1626 |
#. It checks to make sure the public branch last revision matches the |
|
1627 |
local last revision so you are submitting what you think you are. |
|
1628 |
||
1629 |
#. It uses the same public_branch and smtp sending settings as bzr-email, |
|
1630 |
so if you have one set up, you have the other mostly set up. |
|
1631 |
||
1632 |
#. Thunderbird refuses to not wrap lines, and request lines are usually |
|
1633 |
pretty long (you have 2 long URLs in there). |
|
1634 |
||
1635 |
Here are sample configuration settings for the PQM plugin. Here are the |
|
1636 |
lines in bazaar.conf:: |
|
1637 |
||
1638 |
[DEFAULT] |
|
1639 |
email = Joe Smith <joe.smith@internode.on.net> |
|
1640 |
smtp_server=mail.internode.on.net:25 |
|
1641 |
||
1642 |
And here are the lines in ``locations.conf`` (or ``branch.conf`` for |
|
1643 |
dirstate-tags branches):: |
|
1644 |
||
1645 |
[/home/joe/bzr/my-integration] |
|
1646 |
push_location = sftp://joe-smith@bazaar.launchpad.net/%7Ejoe-smith/bzr/my-integration/ |
|
1647 |
push_location:policy = norecurse |
|
1648 |
public_branch = http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~joe-smith/bzr/my-integration/ |
|
1649 |
public_branch:policy = appendpath |
|
1650 |
pqm_email = Bazaar PQM <pqm@bazaar-vcs.org> |
|
1651 |
pqm_branch = http://bazaar-vcs.org/bzr/bzr.dev |
|
1652 |
||
1653 |
Note that the push settings will be added by the first ``push`` on |
|
1654 |
a branch. Indeed the preferred way to generate the lines above is to use |
|
1655 |
``push`` with an argument, then copy-and-paste the other lines into |
|
1656 |
the relevant file. |
|
1657 |
||
1658 |
||
1659 |
Submitting a Change |
|
1660 |
------------------- |
|
1661 |
||
1662 |
Here is one possible recipe once the above environment is set up: |
|
1663 |
||
1664 |
#. pull bzr.dev => my-integration |
|
1665 |
#. merge patch => my-integration |
|
1666 |
#. fix up any final merge conflicts (NEWS being the big killer here). |
|
1667 |
#. commit |
|
1668 |
#. push |
|
1669 |
#. pqm-submit |
|
1670 |
||
1671 |
.. note:: |
|
1672 |
The ``push`` step is not required if ``my-integration`` is a checkout of |
|
1673 |
a public branch. |
|
1674 |
||
1675 |
Because of defaults, you can type a single message into commit and |
|
1676 |
pqm-commit will reuse that. |
|
1677 |
||
1678 |
||
1679 |
Tracking Change Acceptance |
|
1680 |
-------------------------- |
|
1681 |
||
1682 |
The web interface to PQM is https://pqm.bazaar-vcs.org/. After submitting |
|
1683 |
a change, you can visit this URL to confirm it was received and placed in |
|
1684 |
PQM's queue. |
|
1685 |
||
1686 |
When PQM completes processing a change, an email is sent to you with the |
|
1687 |
results. |
|
1688 |
||
1689 |
||
1690 |
Reviewing Blueprints |
|
1691 |
==================== |
|
1692 |
||
1693 |
Blueprint Tracking Using Launchpad |
|
1694 |
---------------------------------- |
|
1695 |
||
1696 |
New features typically require a fair amount of discussion, design and |
|
1697 |
debate. For Bazaar, that information is often captured in a so-called |
|
1698 |
"blueprint" on our Wiki. Overall tracking of blueprints and their status |
|
1699 |
is done using Launchpad's relevant tracker, |
|
1700 |
https://blueprints.launchpad.net/bzr/. Once a blueprint for ready for |
|
1701 |
review, please announce it on the mailing list. |
|
1702 |
||
1703 |
Alternatively, send an email begining with [RFC] with the proposal to the |
|
1704 |
list. In some cases, you may wish to attach proposed code or a proposed |
|
1705 |
developer document if that best communicates the idea. Debate can then |
|
1706 |
proceed using the normal merge review processes. |
|
1707 |
||
1708 |
||
1709 |
Recording Blueprint Review Feedback |
|
1710 |
----------------------------------- |
|
1711 |
||
1712 |
Unlike its Bug Tracker, Launchpad's Blueprint Tracker doesn't currently |
|
1713 |
(Jun 2007) support a chronological list of comment responses. Review |
|
1714 |
feedback can either be recorded on the Wiki hosting the blueprints or by |
|
1715 |
using Launchpad's whiteboard feature. |
|
1716 |
||
1717 |
||
1718 |
Planning Releases |
|
1719 |
================= |
|
1720 |
||
1721 |
Roadmaps |
|
1722 |
-------- |
|
1723 |
||
1724 |
As the two senior developers, Martin Pool and Robert Collins coordinate |
|
1725 |
the overall Bazaar product development roadmap. Core developers provide |
|
1726 |
input and review into this, particularly during sprints. It's totally |
|
1727 |
expected that community members ought to be working on things that |
|
1728 |
interest them the most. The roadmap is valuable though because it provides |
|
1729 |
context for understanding where the product is going as a whole and why. |
|
1730 |
||
1731 |
||
1732 |
Using Releases and Milestones in Launchpad |
|
1733 |
------------------------------------------ |
|
1734 |
||
1735 |
TODO ... (Exact policies still under discussion) |
|
1736 |
||
1737 |
||
1738 |
Bug Triage |
|
1739 |
---------- |
|
1740 |
||
1741 |
Keeping on top of bugs reported is an important part of ongoing release |
|
1742 |
planning. Everyone in the community is welcome and encouraged to raise |
|
1743 |
bugs, confirm bugs raised by others, and nominate a priority. Practically |
|
1744 |
though, a good percentage of bug triage is often done by the core |
|
1745 |
developers, partially because of their depth of product knowledge. |
|
1746 |
||
1747 |
With respect to bug triage, core developers are encouraged to play an |
|
1748 |
active role with particular attention to the following tasks: |
|
1749 |
||
1750 |
* keeping the number of unconfirmed bugs low |
|
1751 |
* ensuring the priorities are generally right (everything as critical - or |
|
1752 |
medium - is meaningless) |
|
1753 |
* looking out for regressions and turning those around sooner rather than later. |
|
1754 |
||
1755 |
.. note:: |
|
1756 |
As well as prioritizing bugs and nominating them against a |
|
1757 |
target milestone, Launchpad lets core developers offer to mentor others in |
|
1758 |
fixing them. Nice. |
|
1759 |
||
1760 |
||
1761 |
Managing a Release |
|
1762 |
================== |
|
1763 |
||
1764 |
Starting a Release |
|
1765 |
------------------ |
|
1766 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1767 |
To start a new release cycle: |
1768 |
||
1769 |
#. Send mail to the list with the key dates, who will be the release |
|
1770 |
manager, and the main themes or targetted bugs. Ask people to nominate |
|
1771 |
objectives, or point out an high-risk things that are best done early, |
|
1772 |
or that interact with other changes. |
|
1773 |
||
1774 |
#. Add a new "series" in Launchpad at <https://launchpad.net/bzr/+addseries>. There is one |
|
1775 |
series for every *x.y* release. |
|
2797.1.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Merge Core Developer Hanbook into HACKING |
1776 |
|
1777 |
Weekly Status Updates |
|
1778 |
--------------------- |
|
1779 |
||
1780 |
TODO: Things to cover: |
|
1781 |
||
1782 |
* Early communication to downstream teams (e.g. Launchpad) about changes in dependencies. |
|
1783 |
* Reminder re lifecycle and where we're up to right now |
|
1784 |
* Summary of recent successes and pending work |
|
1785 |
* Reminder re release objectives |
|
1786 |
* Reminder re things needing attention, e.g. bug triage, reviews, testing of certain things, etc. |
|
1787 |
||
1788 |
||
1789 |
Feature Freeze |
|
1790 |
-------------- |
|
1791 |
||
1792 |
TODO: Get material from http://bazaar-vcs.org/FeatureFreeze. |
|
1793 |
||
1794 |
||
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1795 |
|
1796 |
Making a Release or Release Candidate |
|
1797 |
------------------------------------- |
|
1798 |
||
1799 |
.. Was previously at http://bazaar-vcs.org/ReleaseChecklist |
|
1800 |
||
1801 |
.. TODO: Still needs more clarity on what's in a RC versus a final |
|
1802 |
.. release? |
|
1803 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1804 |
.. TODO: Too much of this is manual but could be automated... |
1805 |
||
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1806 |
This is the procedure for making a new bzr release: |
1807 |
||
1808 |
#. If the release is the first candidate, make a new branch in PQM. (Contact RobertCollins for this step). |
|
1809 |
||
1810 |
Register the branch at https://launchpad.net/products/bzr/+addbranch |
|
1811 |
||
1812 |
#. Run the automatic test suite and any non-automated tests. (For example, try a download over http; these should eventually be scripted though not automatically run.). Try to have all optional dependencies installed so that there are no tests skipped. Also make sure that you have the c extensions compiled (``make`` or ``python setup.py build_ext -i``). |
|
1813 |
||
1814 |
#. In the release branch, update ``version_info`` in ``./bzrlib/__init__.py`` |
|
1815 |
||
1816 |
#. Add the date and release number to ``./NEWS``. |
|
1817 |
||
1818 |
#. Update the release number in the README. (It's not there as of 0.15, but please check). |
|
1819 |
||
1820 |
#. Commit these changes to the release branch, using a command like:: |
|
1821 |
||
1822 |
bzr commit -m "(jam) Release 0.12rc1." |
|
1823 |
||
1824 |
The diff before you commit will be something like:: |
|
1825 |
||
1826 |
=== modified file 'NEWS' |
|
1827 |
--- NEWS 2006-10-23 13:11:17 +0000 |
|
1828 |
+++ NEWS 2006-10-23 22:50:50 +0000 |
|
1829 |
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ |
|
1830 |
-IN DEVELOPMENT |
|
1831 |
+bzr 0.12rc1 2006-10-23 |
|
1832 |
||
1833 |
IMPROVEMENTS: |
|
1834 |
||
1835 |
||
1836 |
=== modified file 'bzrlib/__init__.py' |
|
1837 |
--- bzrlib/__init__.py 2006-10-16 01:47:43 +0000 |
|
1838 |
+++ bzrlib/__init__.py 2006-10-23 22:49:46 +0000 |
|
1839 |
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ |
|
1840 |
# Python version 2.0 is (2, 0, 0, 'final', 0)." Additionally we use a |
|
1841 |
# releaselevel of 'dev' for unreleased under-development code. |
|
1842 |
||
1843 |
-version_info = (0, 12, 0, 'dev', 0) |
|
1844 |
+version_info = (0, 12, 0, 'candidate', 1) |
|
1845 |
||
1846 |
if version_info[3] == 'final': |
|
1847 |
version_string = '%d.%d.%d' % version_info[:3] |
|
1848 |
||
1849 |
#. Send the changes to PQM, to update the official master branch. |
|
1850 |
||
1851 |
#. When PQM succeeds, pull down the master release branch. |
|
1852 |
||
1853 |
#. Merge the release branch back into the trunk. Check that changes in NEWS were merged into the right sections. If it's not already done, advance the version number in bzr and bzrlib/__init__.py Submit this back into pqm for bzr.dev. |
|
1854 |
||
1855 |
#. Make a distribution directory by running e.g. ``bzr export /tmp/bzr-<version>/`` in the working directory. |
|
1856 |
||
1857 |
#. Run make in /tmp/bzr-<version>. This creates the extensions from the pyrex source. |
|
1858 |
||
1859 |
#. Run the test suite in the distribution directory |
|
1860 |
||
1861 |
#. Run ``setup.py install`` --root=prefix to do a test install into your system directory, home directory, or some other prefix. Check the install worked and that the installed version is usable. (run the bzr script from the installed path with PYTHONPATH set to the site-packages directory it created). i.e. :: |
|
1862 |
||
1863 |
python setup.py install --root=installed |
|
1864 |
PYTHONPATH=installed/usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages installed/usr/bin/bzr |
|
1865 |
||
1866 |
#. Clean the tree to get rid of .pyc files etc: make clean && rm -rf build && rm bzrlib/_*.c bzrlib/_*.so |
|
1867 |
||
1868 |
#. Generate the reference documentation in text format: make doc/en/user-reference/bzr_man.txt. |
|
1869 |
||
1870 |
#. Change back to your original branch and then run: make clean && make to create the compiled pyrex extensions. You then need to copy the .c files over to the exported directory. |
|
1871 |
||
1872 |
``find . -name "*.c"`` will tell you which files you need. |
|
1873 |
||
1874 |
#. Create the release tarball:: |
|
1875 |
||
1876 |
cd /tmp && tar czf bzr-<version>.tar.gz bzr-<version> |
|
1877 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1878 |
#. Sign the tarball with e.g. ``gpg --detach-sign -a bzr-0.10rc1.tar.gz`` |
1879 |
||
1880 |
||
1881 |
Publishing the release |
|
1882 |
---------------------- |
|
1883 |
||
1884 |
Now you have the releasable product. The next step is making it |
|
1885 |
available to the world. |
|
1886 |
||
1887 |
#. In <https://launchpad.net/bzr/> click the "Release series" for this |
|
1888 |
series, to take you to e.g. <https://launchpad.net/bzr/1.1>. Then |
|
1889 |
click "Register a release", and add information about this release. |
|
1890 |
||
1891 |
#. Within that release, upload the source tarball and the GPG signature. |
|
1892 |
||
1893 |
(These used to also be uploaded to |
|
1894 |
<sftp://escudero.ubuntu.com/srv/bazaar.canonical.com/www/releases/src> |
|
1895 |
but that's not accessible to all developers, and gets some mime types |
|
1896 |
wrong...) |
|
1897 |
||
1898 |
#. Link from http://bazaar-vcs.org/Download to the tarball and signature. |
|
1899 |
||
1900 |
#. Update http://doc.bazaar-vcs.org/ to have a directory of documentation |
|
1901 |
for this release. (Controlled by the ``update-bzr-docs`` script on |
|
1902 |
escudero, and also update the ``latest`` symlink in |
|
1903 |
``/srv/bazaar.canonical.com/doc/``.) |
|
1904 |
||
1905 |
#. Announce on the `Bazaar home page`__ |
|
1906 |
||
1907 |
__ http://bazaar-vcs.org/ |
|
1908 |
||
1909 |
||
1910 |
Announcing the release |
|
1911 |
---------------------- |
|
1912 |
||
1913 |
Now that the release is publicly available, tell people about it. |
|
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1914 |
|
1915 |
#. Announce to ``bazaar-announce`` and ``bazaar`` mailing lists. |
|
1916 |
The announce mail will look something like this: |
|
1917 |
||
1918 |
| Subject: bzr 0.11 release candidate 1 |
|
1919 |
| |
|
1920 |
| INTRO HERE. Mention the release number and date, and why the release. (i.e. release candidate for testing, final release of a version, backport/bugfix etc). |
|
1921 |
| |
|
1922 |
| Tarballs: |
|
1923 |
| http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/src/bzr-VERSION.tar.gz |
|
1924 |
| and GPG signature: |
|
1925 |
| http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/src/bzr-VERSION.tar.gz.sig |
|
1926 |
| |
|
1927 |
| DESCRIBE-CHANGES-IN-OVERVIEW-HERE |
|
1928 |
| |
|
1929 |
| DESCRIBE-when the next release will be (if there is another - i.e. this is a release candidate) |
|
1930 |
| |
|
1931 |
| Many thanks to all the contributors to this release! I've included the |
|
1932 |
| contents of NEWS for VERSION below: |
|
1933 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1934 |
To generate the data from NEWS, just copy and paste the relevant news section and clean it up as appropriate. The main clean-up task is to confirm that all major changes are indeed covered. This can be done by running ``bzr log`` back to the point when the branch was opened and cross checking the changes against the NEWS entries. |
1935 |
||
1936 |
(RC announcements should remind plugin maintainers to update their plugins.) |
|
1937 |
||
1938 |
* For point releases (i.e. a release candidate, or an incremental fix to a released version) take everything in the relevant NEWS secion : for 0.11rc2 take everything in NEWS from the bzr 0.11rc2 line to the bzr 0.11rc1 line further down. |
|
1939 |
||
1940 |
* For major releases (i.e. 0.11, 0.12 etc), take all the combined NEWS sections from within that version: for 0.11 take all of the 0.11 specific section, plus 0.11rc2, plus 0.11rc1 etc. |
|
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1941 |
|
1942 |
#. Update the `news side menu`__ -- this currently requires downloading the file, editing it, deleting it, and uploading a replacement. |
|
1943 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1944 |
__ http://bazaar-vcs.org/site/menu?action=AttachFile&do=view&target=news.html |
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1945 |
|
1946 |
#. Update the IRC channel topic. Use the ``/topic`` command to do this, ensuring the new topic text keeps the project name, web site link, etc. |
|
1947 |
||
1948 |
#. Announce on http://freshmeat.net/projects/bzr/ |
|
1949 |
||
1950 |
This should be done for both release candidates and final releases. If you do not have a Freshmeat account yet, ask one of the existing admins. |
|
1951 |
||
1952 |
#. Update http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bzr -- this should be done for final releases but not Release Candidates. |
|
1953 |
||
1954 |
#. Package maintainers should update packages when they see the |
|
1955 |
announcement. |
|
1956 |
||
1957 |
#. Blog about it. |
|
1958 |
||
1959 |
#. Post to http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-announce-list for major releases |
|
1960 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1961 |
#. Update the python package index: <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/bzr> - best |
1962 |
done by running :: |
|
1963 |
||
1964 |
python setup.py register |
|
1965 |
||
1966 |
Remember to check the results afterwards. |
|
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1967 |
|
1968 |
||
1969 |
Making Win32 installers |
|
1970 |
----------------------- |
|
1971 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1972 |
**XXX:** This information is now probably obsolete, as Alexander uploads |
1973 |
direct to Launchpad. --mbp 20080116 |
|
1974 |
||
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1975 |
Alexander Belchenko has been very good about getting packaged installers compiled (see Win32ReleaseChecklist for details). He generally e-mails John Arbash Meinel when they are ready. This is just a brief checklist of what needs to be done. |
1976 |
||
1977 |
#. Download and verify the sha1 sums and gpg signatures. Frequently the sha1 files are in dos mode, and need to be converted to unix mode (strip off the trailing ``\r``) before they veryify correctly. |
|
1978 |
||
3092.4.5
by Martin Pool
Improved and reformatted developer documentation on the Bazaar release process. |
1979 |
#. Upload to the Launchpad page for this release. |
1980 |
||
3092.4.4
by Martin Pool
Move ReleaseChecklist into the developer guide |
1981 |
#. Upload to escudero (to the b.c.c/www/releases/win32 directory) using sftp, lftp or rsync |
1982 |
||
1983 |
#. Cat the contents of the .sha1 files into the SHA1SUM. |
|
1984 |
||
1985 |
#. Update the SHA1SUM and MD5SUM files using something like ``md5sum bzr-0.14.0.win32.exe >> MD5SUM``. Make sure you use append (>>) rather than overwrite (>). |
|
1986 |
||
1987 |
#. Verify once again that everything is correct with ``sha1sum -c SHA1SUM`` and ``md5sum -c MD5SUM``. |
|
1988 |
||
1989 |
#. Update ``.htaccess`` so that the 'bzr-latest.win32.exe' links point to the latest release. This is not done for candidate releases, only for final releases. (example: bzr-0.14.0, but not bzr-0.14.0rc1). |
|
1990 |
||
1991 |
#. Make sure these urls work as expected: |
|
1992 |
||
1993 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/win32/bzr-latest.win32-py2.5.exe |
|
1994 |
||
1995 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/win32/bzr-latest.win32-py2.5.exe.asc |
|
1996 |
||
1997 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/win32/bzr-latest.win32-py2.4.exe |
|
1998 |
||
1999 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/win32/bzr-latest.win32-py2.4.exe.asc |
|
2000 |
||
2001 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/win32/bzr-setup-latest.exe |
|
2002 |
||
2003 |
http://bazaar-vcs.org/releases/win32/bzr-setup-latest.exe.asc |
|
2004 |
||
2005 |
They should all try to download a file with the correct version number. |
|
2006 |
||
2007 |
#. Update http://bazaar-vcs.org/Download to indicate the newly available versions. |
|
2008 |
||
2009 |
#. Update http://bazaar-vcs.org/WindowsDownloads to have the correct version number as well as the correct sha1sum displayed. |
|
2010 |
||
2797.1.1
by Ian Clatworthy
Merge Core Developer Hanbook into HACKING |
2011 |
|
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
2012 |
The Bazaar PPA archive |
2013 |
---------------------- |
|
2014 |
||
2015 |
We build Ubuntu ``.deb`` packages for Bazaar as an important part of the release |
|
2016 |
process. These packages are hosted in a `Personal Package Archive (PPA)`__ on |
|
2017 |
Launchpad, at <https://launchpad.net/~bzr/+archive>. |
|
2018 |
||
2019 |
__ https://help.launchpad.net/PPAQuickStart |
|
2020 |
||
2021 |
We build packages for every supported Ubuntu release |
|
2022 |
<https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases>. Packages need no longer be updated |
|
2023 |
when the release passes end-of-life because all users should have then |
|
2024 |
update. |
|
2025 |
||
2026 |
The ``debian/`` directory containing the packaging information is kept in |
|
2027 |
branches on Launchpad, named like |
|
2028 |
<https://code.launchpad.net/~bzr/bzrtools/packaging-dapper> |
|
2029 |
||
2030 |
Updating the PPA for a new release |
|
2031 |
---------------------------------- |
|
2032 |
||
2033 |
Preconditions for building these packages: |
|
2034 |
||
2035 |
* You must have a Launchpad account and be a member of the `~bzr`__ team |
|
2036 |
||
2037 |
__ https://edge.launchpad.net/~bzr/+members> |
|
2038 |
||
2039 |
* You must have a GPG key registered to your Launchpad account. |
|
2040 |
||
2041 |
* Configure ``dput`` to upload to our PPA with this section in your |
|
2042 |
``~/.dput.cf``:: |
|
2043 |
||
2044 |
[bzr-ppa] |
|
2045 |
fqdn = ppa.launchpad.net |
|
2046 |
method = ftp |
|
2047 |
incoming = ~bzr/ubuntu |
|
2048 |
login = anonymous |
|
2049 |
allow_unsigned_uploads = 0 |
|
2050 |
||
2051 |
* You need a Ubuntu (or probably Debian) machine, and :: |
|
2052 |
||
2053 |
sudo apt-get install build-essential devscripts dput |
|
2054 |
||
2055 |
Here is the process; there are some steps which should be automated in |
|
2056 |
future: |
|
2057 |
||
2058 |
#. You will need a working directory for each supported release, such as |
|
2059 |
``~/bzr/Packaging/dapper`` |
|
2060 |
||
2061 |
#. Download the official tarball of the release to e.g. ``~/bzr/Releases`` |
|
2062 |
||
2063 |
#. Copy the original tarball into your per-disto directory, then untar it |
|
2064 |
and if necessary rename it:: |
|
2065 |
||
2066 |
cp -l ~/bzr/Releases/bzrtools-1.3.0.tar.gz bzrtools_1.3.0.orig.tar.gz |
|
2067 |
tar xfvz bzrtools_1.3.0.orig.tar.gz |
|
2068 |
mv bzrtools bzrtools-1.3.0 |
|
2069 |
||
2070 |
#. Change into that directory and check out the packaging branch:: |
|
2071 |
||
2072 |
cd bzrtools |
|
2073 |
bzr checkout \ |
|
2074 |
bzr+ssh://bazaar.launchpad.net/~bzr/bzrtools/packaging-dapper \ |
|
2075 |
debian |
|
2076 |
||
2077 |
#. For Bazaar plugins, change the ``debian/control`` file to express a |
|
2078 |
dependency on the correct version of ``bzr``. |
|
2079 |
||
2080 |
For bzrtools this is typically:: |
|
2081 |
||
2082 |
Build-Depends-Indep: bzr (>= 1.3~), rsync |
|
2083 |
Depends: ${python:Depends}, bzr (>= 1.3~), bzr (<< 1.4~), patch |
|
2084 |
||
2085 |
#. Make a new ``debian/changelog`` entry for the new release, |
|
2086 |
either by using ``dch`` or just editing the file:: |
|
2087 |
||
3314.1.2
by Martin Pool
Minor corrections to PPA build process (dato) |
2088 |
dch -v '1.3.0-1~bazaar1~dapper1' -D dapper |
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
2089 |
|
3314.1.2
by Martin Pool
Minor corrections to PPA build process (dato) |
2090 |
dch will default to the distro you're working in and this isn't checked |
2091 |
against the version number (which is just our conversion). So make |
|
2092 |
sure to specify it. |
|
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
2093 |
|
2094 |
Make sure you have the correct email address for yourself, version |
|
3360.1.1
by Martin Pool
Fix ReST syntax |
2095 |
number, and distribution. It should look something like this:: |
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
2096 |
|
2097 |
> bzrtools (1.3.0-1~bazaar1~dapper1) dapper; urgency=low |
|
2098 |
> |
|
2099 |
> * New upstream release. |
|
2100 |
> |
|
3360.1.1
by Martin Pool
Fix ReST syntax |
2101 |
> -- John Sample <sample@example.com> Mon, 31 Mar 2008 12:36:27 +1100 |
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
2102 |
|
2103 |
If you need to upload the package again to fix a problem, normally you |
|
2104 |
should increment the last number in the version number, following the |
|
2105 |
distro name. Make sure not to omit the initial ``-1``, and make sure |
|
2106 |
that the distro name in the version is consistent with the target name |
|
2107 |
outside the parenthesis. |
|
2108 |
||
2109 |
#. Commit these changes into the packaging branch:: |
|
2110 |
||
2111 |
bzr ci -m '1.3.0-1~bazaar1~dapper1: New upstream release.' debian |
|
2112 |
||
2113 |
#. Build a source package:: |
|
2114 |
||
3314.1.2
by Martin Pool
Minor corrections to PPA build process (dato) |
2115 |
debuild -S -sa -i |
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
2116 |
|
3314.1.2
by Martin Pool
Minor corrections to PPA build process (dato) |
2117 |
This will create a ``.changes`` file in the per-distro directory, |
2118 |
and should invoke gpg to sign it with your key. |
|
3314.1.1
by Martin Pool
Add Developer's Guide text about PPA builds |
2119 |
Check that file is reasonable: it should be uploading to the intended |
2120 |
distribution, have a .orig file included, and the right version number. |
|
2121 |
||
2122 |
#. Upload into the PPA:: |
|
2123 |
||
2124 |
dput bzr-ppa ../bzrtools__1.3.0-1\~bazaar1\~dapper1_source.changes |
|
2125 |
||
2126 |
Don't forget the ``bzr-ppa`` component or dput will try to upload into |
|
2127 |
the main archive by default. You can disable this by adding this |
|
2128 |
section to your ``.dput.cf``:: |
|
2129 |
||
2130 |
[ubuntu] |
|
2131 |
fqdn = SPECIFY.A.PPA.NAME |
|
2132 |
||
2133 |
#. You should soon get an "upload accepted" mail from Launchpad, which |
|
2134 |
means that your package is waiting to be built. You can then track its |
|
2135 |
progress in <https://launchpad.net/~bzr/+archive> and |
|
2136 |
<https://launchpad.net/~bzr/+archive/+builds>. |
|
2137 |
||
2138 |
||
2475.2.4
by Martin Pool
HACKING rest fixes from jam |
2139 |
.. |
2140 |
vim: ft=rst tw=74 ai |