[lldb-dev] [cfe-dev] [llvm-dev] [Github] RFC: linear history vs merge commits

via lldb-dev lldb-dev at lists.llvm.org
Fri Feb 1 15:07:38 PST 2019



> -----Original Message-----
> From: cfe-dev [mailto:cfe-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org] On Behalf Of Peter
> Wu via cfe-dev
> Sent: Friday, February 01, 2019 5:49 PM
> To: Arthur O'Dwyer
> Cc: llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org; cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org; openmp-
> dev at lists.llvm.org; lldb-dev at lists.llvm.org
> Subject: Re: [cfe-dev] [llvm-dev] [Github] RFC: linear history vs merge
> commits
> 
> On Fri, Feb 01, 2019 at 12:41:05PM -0500, Arthur O'Dwyer via cfe-dev
> wrote:
> > I know GitHub can be configured to reject force-pushes to {any, a
> > specific} branch.  I strongly suspect that if *the maintainers of
> > LLVM* asked nicely, GitHub would also be able to reject
> > merges to {any, a specific} branch.
> 
> Anyone with admin permissions in a repo can add "branch protection
> rules" that prevent force pushes, there is no need to contact Github
> support for that.
> 
> > - GitHub PRs have Travis integration so the reviewer can see if a
> > particular patch is actually compileable at all, before spending time
> > looking at it. I wish Phab had this feature (or maybe it exists and LLVM
> > doesn't use it?).
> 
> This kind of pre-merge testing is very valuable, it could potentially
> prevent some unnecessary reverts by catching issues early.
> 
> On caveat is that the test coverage would be limited or else the build
> times would be very long. There are quite some builders for various
> projects (llvm, cfe, compiler-rt, etc.) on a lot of different platforms
> and targets (Linux, macOS, Windows, Android, etc.).

Some platforms/projects are more prone to breakage than others.  This
has been a particular pain point for my team lately, our auto-merge
hasn't been very auto for quite a while now due to frequent build breaks.

> 
> With limited resources, Arthur's suggestion seems workable to me:
> - Enable pre-commit testing of few configurations (in parallel).

So, I've seen that Phabricator has something in the build-it-for-you
vein, which somebody explained not too long ago but I've forgotten the
details and a quick look doesn't turn up anything in my archive.

If that can be made to work generally, and especially if it could run
one each of Linux, Windows, and Mac, that would go a *long* way toward
addressing build breaks (for patches that go through Phab, anyway).
--paulr

> - Encourage developers to wait for tests to pass before pushing changes.
> - Do not block hard to avoid a situation where unrelated changes
>   (commits or build environment) cause failures.
> 
> I would also be in favor of linear history for reasons mentioned before
> (easier bisection, more readable logs). Though whatever choice happens
> (cherry-pick vs merge), I think it is important to keep the link between
> a change and the review. I have seen various strategies:
> 
> - Phabricator: manually include a "Differential revision" link in the
>   commit message.
> - Github (merge via web interface): automatically includes a reference
>   to the "Pull Request".
> - Github (cherry-pick / rebase and merge with no merge commit):
>   unfortunately loses the review information.
> - Gerrit: developers cannot merge directly, instead they use the web
>   interface to submit a change. This will add a "Reviewed-on" link that
>   references the review. (Used by Wireshark, Qt, boringssl, etc.)
> 
> Projects that are use mailing lists to review patches (like Linux and
> QEMU) commonly include a Message-Id tag in the commit message that
> references the original mailing list discussion.
> 
> The curl project also uses Github for reviews, but encourages developers
> with push permissions to manually fetch the commit, edit the commit
> message to reference the review and then push to the master branch (with
> no merge commits). Again, this is a manual process and new developers
> who are not familiar with this process accidentally create a merge
> commit anyway (or forget to reference the review).
> 
> Ideally changes go through a single gatekeeper, a tool that recognizes
> comments to a merge request and subsequently tries to add extra info to
> a commit message (link to a review) and enforce a linear history (by
> cherry-picking changes or rebase + merge commits). This tool could be
> triggered by posting comments like "@name-of-the-bot merge this".
> (If necessary this could be combined with requiring tests to pass.)
> 
> Such an extra indirection with a single gatekeeper could be a quite
> drastic change from the current development model though. It could
> reduce the number of broken builds and improve the quality of commit
> messages though.
> 
> Just my two cents, hope it helps :)
> --
> Kind regards,
> Peter Wu
> https://lekensteyn.nl
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