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authorAndrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>2024-07-09 02:37:23 +0100
committerAndrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>2024-08-07 02:16:15 +0100
commit202242790764bf38aa4f4598f787175b9cc7e4ef (patch)
treefc1463889806968b609c135dd347f78b2fcb71d5 /CONTRIBUTING.md
parent0f313e2b4d6737f15bd69e3d9c7761360bd43f76 (diff)
downloadunit-202242790764bf38aa4f4598f787175b9cc7e4ef.tar.gz
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CONTRIBUTING.md: Update the 'Git Style Guide' section
This makes it reflect current reality. NOTE: This removes the bit about updating the changes.xml file. For me that has been a constant source of problems. Especially when it hasn't been done as a separate commit (makes reverting changes harder due to this file being constantly re-worked). This file is also usually re-worked at release time, with the re-wording and re-ordering of items. In my experience it is much better to leave the updating of this file to release time when you can use 'git shortlog -e <prev release>..' as the source for adding entries to the changelog. Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
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diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.md b/CONTRIBUTING.md
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@@ -63,29 +63,32 @@ request issue first to start a discussion about the feature.
## Git Style Guide
-- Keep a clean, concise and meaningful `git commit` history on your branch,
- rebasing locally and squashing before submitting a PR
+- Create atomic commits. A commit should do just one thing, i.e. you
+ shouldn't mix refactoring with functional code changes. Do the
+ refactoring in one or more commits first.
-- For any user-visible changes, updates, and bugfixes, add a note to
- `docs/changes.xml` under the section for the upcoming release, using
- `<change type="feature">` for new functionality, `<change type="change">`
- for changed behavior, and `<change type="bugfix">` for bug fixes.
+ Ideally you should rebase locally and force push new commits up.
-- In the subject line, use the past tense ("Added feature", not "Add
- feature"); also, use past tense to describe past scenarios, and present
- tense for current behavior
+- In the subject line, use the imperative mood. I.e. write the subject like
+ you're giving git a command, e.g. "Free memory before exiting". Do not
+ terminate the subject with a `.`
-- Limit the subject line to 67 characters, and the rest of the commit message
- to 80 characters
+- Try to limit the subject line to around 50 characters, but try not to
+ exceed 72.
-- Use subject line prefixes for commits that affect a specific portion of the
- code; examples include "Tests:", "Packages:", or "Docker:", and also
- individual languages such as "Java:" or "Ruby:"
+- Wrap the body of the commit message after 72 characters.
-- Reference issues and PRs liberally after the subject line; if the commit
- remedies a GitHub issue, [name
- it](https://docs.github.com/en/issues/tracking-your-work-with-issues/linking-a-pull-request-to-an-issue)
- accordingly
+- Use lowercase subject line prefixes for commits that affect a specific
+ portion of the code; examples include "tests:", "ci:", or "http:", and
+ also individual languages such as "python:" or "php:". If multiple areas
+ are affected you can specify multiple prefixes, e.g. "auto, perl:"
-- Don't rely on command-line commit messages with `-m`; use the editor instead
+- If the commit fixes an open issue then you can use the "Closes:"
+ tag/trailer to reference it and have GitHub automatically close it once
+ it's been merged. E.g.:
+
+ `Closes: https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/9999`
+
+ That should go at the end of the commit message, separated by a blank line,
+ along with any other tags.