[lldb-dev] [llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] GitHub anyone?

Bruce Hoult via lldb-dev lldb-dev at lists.llvm.org
Mon Jun 6 12:51:58 PDT 2016


I'd suggest a workflow like the following:

- developer commits locally to a feature/bug dev branch. You can commit
work in progress, experiments, have bad commit messages etc

- developer commits locally to a feature/bug release branch. Tidy up into a
small number of logical commits, nice messages etc. I'd suggest it's good
to have at least two commits: 1) a commit adding a test that fails, and is
marked as expected to fail, demonstrating the bug or lack of feature. 2) a
commit that fixes the bug or adds the feature, and marks the test as
expected to pass.

- developer rebases to master and tests

- developer pushes their feature/bug release branch to their github fork of
llvm, issues a pull request

- the appropriate maintainer (or or automatic system) causes build and
tests to be run on the proposed bug fix.

- if the tests work, then do a "git merge --no-ff" to master

There's room to discuss the last part. That gives a master history with
exactly one commit per feature or bug fix. The details of how it was done
are on a different branch that merges back.

You might prefer merge --ff-only. This means that the merge can only happen
if the new feature has been rebased to the head of master. The commits in
the new feature each become a commit in master. In this case you should
make very sure that every commit works -- which is defined as no crashes;
tests expected to work, work; tests expected to fail, fail.


On Mon, Jun 6, 2016 at 8:07 PM, James Y Knight via llvm-dev <
llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:

> +1 to that. I would strongly suggest that we continue to commit to master
> first, like we've always done in llvm.
>
> On Jun 6, 2016 11:44 AM, "Joerg Sonnenberger via cfe-dev" <
> cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Jun 06, 2016 at 10:32:45AM -0500, via llvm-dev wrote:
>> > My only hesitation with this is that this requires use of cherry-pick,
>> > which is not idea.  The way most git repositories work is to put
>> > everything that should go into a release branch in the release branch
>> > *first* and then merge the release branch to master, ensuring that
>> > everything going out in a release will make it into the next release.
>> > This is how the gitflow workflow works, for example.
>>
>> The model of "commit to oldest first" is IMO one of the most stupid
>> concepts I have ever seen in git "workflows". It is contrary to the way
>> software development works and essentially just a bad workaround for
>> broken cherry picks. I've seen more than one project starting to use
>> this model due to advocacy after deciding to use git, stumble around
>> with it for a release or two and then going back to a normal release
>> management approach. Even the argument you have presented here does not
>> make sense to me. Just because a change has been committed to a release
>> branch, doesn't mean it won't get replaced later.
>>
>> Joerg
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>
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