// This file is part of the Doxygen Developer Manual
/** @page patchguide Patch Guidelines
-@b NB! If you're behind a corporate wall with http only access to the
-world, you can still use these instructions!
-
-@b NB2! You can't send patches to the mailing list anymore at all. Nowadays
+\attention You can't send patches to the mailing list anymore at all. Nowadays
you are expected to send patches to the OpenOCD Gerrit GIT server for a
review.
+\attention If you already have a Gerrit account and want to try a
+different sign in method, please first sign in as usually, press your
+name in the upper-right corner, go to @a Settings, select @a
+Identities pane, press <em>Link Another Identity</em> button. In case
+you already have duplicated accounts, ask administrators for manual
+merging.
+
+\attention If you're behind a corporate wall with http only access to the
+world, you can still use these instructions!
+
@section gerrit Submitting patches to the OpenOCD Gerrit server
OpenOCD is to some extent a "self service" open source project, so to
- correct the patch and re-send it according to review feedback
Your patch (or commit) should be a "good patch": focus it on a single
-issue, and make it be easily reviewable. Don't make
+issue, and make it easily reviewable. Don't make
it so large that it's hard to review; split large
-patches into smaller ones. (That can also help
-track down bugs later on.) All patches should
+patches into smaller ones (this will also help
+to track down bugs later). All patches should
be "clean", which includes preserving the existing
-coding style and updating documentation as needed.
+coding style and updating documentation as needed. When adding a new
+command, the corresponding documentation should be added to
+@c doc/openocd.texi in the same commit. OpenOCD runs on both Little
+Endian and Big Endian hosts so the code can't count on specific byte
+ordering (in other words, must be endian-clean).
+
+There are several additional methods of improving the quality of your
+patch:
+
+- Runtime testing with Valgrind Memcheck
+
+ This helps to spot memory leaks, undefined behaviour due to
+ uninitialized data or wrong indexing, memory corruption, etc.
+
+- Clang Static Analyzer
+
+ Using this tool uncovers many different kinds of bugs in C code,
+ with problematic execution paths fully explained. It is a part of
+ standard Clang installation.
+
+ To generate a report, run this in the OpenOCD source directory:
+ @code
+ mkdir build-scanbuild; cd build-scanbuild
+ scan-build ../configure
+ scan-build make CFLAGS="-std=gnu99 -I. -I../../jimtcl"
+ @endcode
+
+- Runtime testing with sanitizers
+
+ Both GCC and LLVM/Clang include advanced instrumentation options to
+ detect undefined behaviour and many kinds of memory
+ errors. Available with @c -fsanitize=* command arguments.
+
+ Example usage:
+ @code
+ mkdir build-sanitizers; cd build-sanitizers
+ ../configure CC=clang CFLAGS="-fno-omit-frame-pointer \
+ -fsanitize=address -fsanitize=undefined -ggdb3"
+ make
+ export ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_stack_use_after_return=1
+ src/openocd -s ../tcl -f /path/to/openocd.cfg
+ @endcode
+
+Please consider performing these additional checks where appropriate
+(especially Clang Static Analyzer for big portions of new code) and
+mention the results (e.g. "Valgrind-clean, no new Clang analyzer
+warnings") in the commit message.
Say in the commit message if it's a bugfix (describe the bug) or a new
feature. Don't expect patches to merge immediately
@section stepbystep Step by step procedure
--# Create a Gerrit account at: http://openocd.zylin.com
+-# Create a Gerrit account at: https://review.openocd.org
- On subsequent sign ins, use the full URL prefaced with 'http://'
For example: http://user_identifier.open_id_provider.com
-# Add a username to your profile.
add a username of your choice.
Your username will be required in step 3 and substituted wherever
the string 'USERNAME' is found.
- -# Add an SSH public key following the directions on github:
- https://help.github.com/articles/generating-ssh-keys
+ -# Create an SSH public key following the directions on github:
+ https://help.github.com/articles/generating-ssh-keys . You can skip step 3
+ (adding key to Github account) and 4 (testing) - these are useful only if
+ you actually use Github or want to test whether the new key works fine.
+ -# Add this new SSH key to your Gerrit account:
+ go to 'Settings' > 'SSH Public Keys', paste the contents of
+ ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub into the text field (if it's not visible click on
+ 'Add Key ...' button) and confirm by clicking 'Add' button.
-# Clone the git repository, rather than just download the source:
@code
git clone git://git.code.sf.net/p/openocd/code openocd
to instruct git locally how to send off the changes.
-# Add a new remote to git using Gerrit username:
@code
-git remote add review ssh://USERNAME@openocd.zylin.com:29418/openocd.git
-git config remote.review.push HEAD:refs/publish/master
+git remote add review ssh://USERNAME@review.openocd.org:29418/openocd.git
+git config remote.review.push HEAD:refs/for/master
@endcode
Or with http only:
@code
-git remote add review http://openocd.zylin.com/p/openocd.git
-git config remote.review.push HEAD:refs/publish/master
+git remote add review https://USERNAME@review.openocd.org/p/openocd.git
+git config remote.review.push HEAD:refs/for/master
@endcode
+ The http password is configured from your gerrit settings - https://review.openocd.org/#/settings/http-password.
+ \note If you want to simplify http access you can also add your http password to the url as follows:
+@code
+git remote add review https://USERNAME:PASSWORD@review.openocd.org/p/openocd.git
+@endcode
+ \note All contributions should be pushed to @c refs/for/master on the
+Gerrit server, even if you plan to use several local branches for different
+topics. It is possible because @c for/master is not a traditional Git
+branch.
-# You will need to install this hook, we will look into a better solution:
@code
-scp -p -P 29418 USERNAME@openocd.zylin.com:hooks/commit-msg .git/hooks/
+scp -p -P 29418 USERNAME@review.openocd.org:hooks/commit-msg .git/hooks/
@endcode
Or with http only:
@code
-wget http://openocd.zylin.com/tools/hooks/commit-msg
+wget https://review.openocd.org/tools/hooks/commit-msg
mv commit-msg .git/hooks
chmod +x .git/hooks/commit-msg
@endcode
-@b NOTE A script exists to simplify the two items above. execute:
+ \note A script exists to simplify the two items above. Execute:
@code
tools/initial.sh <username>
@endcode
@endcode
-# Work on your patches. Split the work into
multiple small patches that can be reviewed and
- applied seperately and safely to the OpenOCD
+ applied separately and safely to the OpenOCD
repository.
@code
while(!done) {
run tools/checkpatch.sh to verify your patch style is ok.
}
@endcode
- @b TIP! use "git add ." before commit to add new files.
-@code
---- example comment, notice the short first line w/topic ---
-topic: short comment
+ \note use "git add ." before commit to add new files.
+
+ Commit message template, notice the short first line.
+ The field '<c>specify touched area</c>'
+ should identify the main part or subsystem the patch touches.
+@code{.unparsed}
+specify touched area: short comment
<blank line>
-longer comments over several
-lines...
+Longer comments over several lines, explaining (where applicable) the
+reason for the patch and the general idea the solution is based on,
+any major design decisions, etc...
<blank line>
Signed-off-by: ...
------
@endcode
+ Examples:
+@code{.unparsed}
+flash/nor/atsame5: add SAME59 support
+
+Add new device ID
+@endcode
+@code{.unparsed}
+flash/nor: flash driver for XYZ123
+
+Add new flash driver for internal flash of ...
+@endcode
+@code{.unparsed}
+target/cortex_m: fix segmentation fault in cmd 'soft_reset_halt'
+
+soft_reset_halt command failed reproducibly under following conditions: ...
+Test for NULL pointer and return error ...
+
+Reported-by: John Reporter <rep9876@gmail.com>
+Fixes: 123456789abc ("target: the commit where the problem started")
+BugLink: https://sourceforge.net/p/openocd/tickets/999/
+@endcode
+@code{.unparsed}
+doc: fix typos
+@endcode
+ See "git log" for more examples.
+
-# Next you need to make sure that your patches
are on top of the latest stuff on the server and
that there are no conflicts:
The code review is intended to take as long as a week or two to allow
maintainers and contributors who work on OpenOCD only in their spare
-time oportunity to perform a review and raise objections.
+time opportunity to perform a review and raise objections.
With Gerrit much of the urgency of getting things committed has been
removed as the work in progress is safely stored in Gerrit and
If a contributor pushes a patch, it is considered good form if another
contributor actually approves and submits that patch.
+It should be noted that a negative review in Gerrit ("-1" or "-2") may (but does
+not have to) be disregarded if all conditions listed below are met:
+
+- the concerns raised in the review have been addressed (or explained),
+- reviewer does not re-examine the change in a month,
+- reviewer does not answer e-mails for another month.
+
@section browsing Browsing Patches
-All OpenOCD patches can be reviewed <a href="http://openocd.zylin.com/">here</a>.
+All OpenOCD patches can be reviewed <a href="https://review.openocd.org/">here</a>.
+
+@section reviewing Reviewing Patches
+From the main <a href="https://review.openocd.org/#/q/status:open,n,z">Review
+page</a> select the patch you want to review and click on that patch. On the
+appearing page select the download method (top right). Apply the
+patch. After building and testing you can leave a note with the "Reply"
+button and mark the patch with -1, 0 and +1.
*/
/** @file
This file contains the @ref patchguide page.