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django/docs/internals/contributing/committing-code.txt

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===============
Committing code
===============
This section is addressed to the :doc:`/internals/committers` and to anyone
interested in knowing how code gets committed into Django core.
Commit access
-------------
Django has two types of committers:
Core committers
These are people who have a long history of contributions to Django's
codebase, a solid track record of being polite and helpful on the
mailing lists, and a proven desire to dedicate serious time to Django's
development. The bar is high for full commit access.
Partial committers
These are people who are "domain experts." They have direct check-in
access to the subsystems that fall under their jurisdiction, and they're
given a formal vote in questions that involve their subsystems. This type
of access is likely to be given to someone who contributes a large
subframework to Django and wants to continue to maintain it.
Partial commit access is granted by the same process as full
committers. However, the bar is set lower; proven expertise in the area
in question is likely to be sufficient.
Decisions on new committers will follow the process explained in
:ref:`how-we-make-decisions`.
To request commit access, please contact an existing committer privately.
Public requests for commit access are potential flame-war starters, and
will be ignored.
Committing guidelines
---------------------
Please follow these guidelines when committing code to Django's Subversion
repository:
* For any medium-to-big changes, where "medium-to-big" is according to
your judgment, please bring things up on the `django-developers`_
mailing list before making the change.
If you bring something up on `django-developers`_ and nobody responds,
please don't take that to mean your idea is great and should be
implemented immediately because nobody contested it. Django's lead
developers don't have a lot of time to read mailing-list discussions
immediately, so you may have to wait a couple of days before getting a
response.
* Write detailed commit messages in the past tense, not present tense.
* Good: "Fixed Unicode bug in RSS API."
* Bad: "Fixes Unicode bug in RSS API."
* Bad: "Fixing Unicode bug in RSS API."
* For commits to a branch, prefix the commit message with the branch name.
For example: "magic-removal: Added support for mind reading."
* Limit commits to the most granular change that makes sense. This means,
use frequent small commits rather than infrequent large commits. For
example, if implementing feature X requires a small change to library Y,
first commit the change to library Y, then commit feature X in a
separate commit. This goes a *long way* in helping all core Django
developers follow your changes.
* Separate bug fixes from feature changes.
Bug fixes need to be added to the current bugfix branch (e.g. the
``1.0.X`` branch) as well as the current trunk.
* If your commit closes a ticket in the Django `ticket tracker`_, begin
your commit message with the text "Fixed #abc", where "abc" is the
number of the ticket your commit fixes. Example: "Fixed #123 -- Adde
support for foo". We've rigged Subversion and Trac so that any commit
message in that format will automatically close the referenced ticket
and post a comment to it with the full commit message.
If your commit closes a ticket and is in a branch, use the branch name
first, then the "Fixed #abc." For example:
"magic-removal: Fixed #123 -- Added whizbang feature."
For the curious: We're using a `Trac post-commit hook`_ for this.
.. _Trac post-commit hook: http://trac.edgewall.org/browser/trunk/contrib/trac-post-commit-hook
* If your commit references a ticket in the Django `ticket tracker`_ but
does *not* close the ticket, include the phrase "Refs #abc", where "abc"
is the number of the ticket your commit references. We've rigged
Subversion and Trac so that any commit message in that format will
automatically post a comment to the appropriate ticket.
Reverting commits
-----------------
Nobody's perfect; mistakes will be committed. When a mistaken commit is
discovered, please follow these guidelines:
* Try very hard to ensure that mistakes don't happen. Just because we
have a reversion policy doesn't relax your responsibility to aim for
the highest quality possible. Really: double-check your work before
you commit it in the first place!
* If possible, have the original author revert his/her own commit.
* Don't revert another author's changes without permission from the
original author.
* If the original author can't be reached (within a reasonable amount
of time -- a day or so) and the problem is severe -- crashing bug,
major test failures, etc -- then ask for objections on django-dev
then revert if there are none.
* If the problem is small (a feature commit after feature freeze,
say), wait it out.
* If there's a disagreement between the committer and the
reverter-to-be then try to work it out on the `django-developers`_
mailing list. If an agreement can't be reached then it should
be put to a vote.
* If the commit introduced a confirmed, disclosed security
vulnerability then the commit may be reverted immediately without
permission from anyone.
* The release branch maintainer may back out commits to the release
branch without permission if the commit breaks the release branch.
.. _django-developers: http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers
.. _ticket tracker: http://code.djangoproject.com/newticket