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83d290c5 | 1 | # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
0d24de9d | 2 | # Copyright (c) 2011 The Chromium OS Authors. |
0d24de9d SG |
3 | |
4 | What is this? | |
5 | ============= | |
6 | ||
7 | This tool is a Python script which: | |
8 | - Creates patch directly from your branch | |
9 | - Cleans them up by removing unwanted tags | |
10 | - Inserts a cover letter with change lists | |
11 | - Runs the patches through checkpatch.pl and its own checks | |
12 | - Optionally emails them out to selected people | |
13 | ||
8f9ba3ab SG |
14 | It also has some Patchwork features: |
15 | - shows review tags from Patchwork so you can update your local patches | |
16 | - pulls these down into a new branch on request | |
dc4b2a97 | 17 | - lists comments received on a series |
dc6df972 | 18 | |
0d24de9d SG |
19 | It is intended to automate patch creation and make it a less |
20 | error-prone process. It is useful for U-Boot and Linux work so far, | |
8f9ba3ab | 21 | since they use the checkpatch.pl script. |
0d24de9d SG |
22 | |
23 | It is configured almost entirely by tags it finds in your commits. | |
24 | This means that you can work on a number of different branches at | |
25 | once, and keep the settings with each branch rather than having to | |
26 | git format-patch, git send-email, etc. with the correct parameters | |
27 | each time. So for example if you put: | |
28 | ||
29 | Series-to: [email protected] | |
30 | ||
31 | in one of your commits, the series will be sent there. | |
32 | ||
983a2749 SG |
33 | In Linux and U-Boot this will also call get_maintainer.pl on each of your |
34 | patches automatically (unless you use -m to disable this). | |
21a19d70 | 35 | |
0d24de9d SG |
36 | |
37 | How to use this tool | |
38 | ==================== | |
39 | ||
40 | This tool requires a certain way of working: | |
41 | ||
42 | - Maintain a number of branches, one for each patch series you are | |
43 | working on | |
44 | - Add tags into the commits within each branch to indicate where the | |
45 | series should be sent, cover letter, version, etc. Most of these are | |
46 | normally in the top commit so it is easy to change them with 'git | |
47 | commit --amend' | |
48 | - Each branch tracks the upstream branch, so that this script can | |
49 | automatically determine the number of commits in it (optional) | |
50 | - Check out a branch, and run this script to create and send out your | |
51 | patches. Weeks later, change the patches and repeat, knowing that you | |
52 | will get a consistent result each time. | |
53 | ||
54 | ||
55 | How to configure it | |
56 | =================== | |
57 | ||
3d4de986 SG |
58 | For most cases of using patman for U-Boot development, patman can use the |
59 | file 'doc/git-mailrc' in your U-Boot directory to supply the email aliases | |
60 | you need. To make this work, tell git where to find the file by typing | |
61 | this once: | |
21a19d70 | 62 | |
3d4de986 SG |
63 | git config sendemail.aliasesfile doc/git-mailrc |
64 | ||
65 | For both Linux and U-Boot the 'scripts/get_maintainer.pl' handles figuring | |
66 | out where to send patches pretty well. | |
0d24de9d | 67 | |
87d65558 VN |
68 | During the first run patman creates a config file for you by taking the default |
69 | user name and email address from the global .gitconfig file. | |
70 | ||
2b36c75d | 71 | To add your own, create a file ~/.patman like this: |
0d24de9d SG |
72 | |
73 | >>>> | |
74 | # patman alias file | |
75 | ||
76 | [alias] | |
77 | me: Simon Glass <[email protected]> | |
78 | ||
79 | u-boot: U-Boot Mailing List <[email protected]> | |
80 | wolfgang: Wolfgang Denk <[email protected]> | |
81 | others: Mike Frysinger <[email protected]>, Fred Bloggs <[email protected]> | |
82 | ||
83 | <<<< | |
84 | ||
85 | Aliases are recursive. | |
86 | ||
87 | The checkpatch.pl in the U-Boot tools/ subdirectory will be located and | |
88 | used. Failing that you can put it into your path or ~/bin/checkpatch.pl | |
89 | ||
e11aa602 CP |
90 | If you want to avoid sending patches to email addresses that are picked up |
91 | by patman but are known to bounce you can add a [bounces] section to your | |
92 | .patman file. Unlike the [alias] section these are simple key: value pairs | |
93 | that are not recursive. | |
94 | ||
95 | >>> | |
96 | ||
97 | [bounces] | |
98 | gonefishing: Fred Bloggs <[email protected]> | |
99 | ||
100 | <<< | |
101 | ||
0d24de9d | 102 | |
8568baed DA |
103 | If you want to change the defaults for patman's command-line arguments, |
104 | you can add a [settings] section to your .patman file. This can be used | |
105 | for any command line option by referring to the "dest" for the option in | |
106 | patman.py. For reference, the useful ones (at the moment) shown below | |
107 | (all with the non-default setting): | |
108 | ||
109 | >>> | |
110 | ||
111 | [settings] | |
112 | ignore_errors: True | |
113 | process_tags: False | |
114 | verbose: True | |
a60aedfd | 115 | smtp_server: /path/to/sendmail |
a55be354 | 116 | patchwork_server: https://patchwork.ozlabs.org |
8568baed DA |
117 | |
118 | <<< | |
119 | ||
120 | ||
a1dcee84 DA |
121 | If you want to adjust settings (or aliases) that affect just a single |
122 | project you can add a section that looks like [project_settings] or | |
123 | [project_alias]. If you want to use tags for your linux work, you could | |
124 | do: | |
125 | ||
126 | >>> | |
127 | ||
128 | [linux_settings] | |
129 | process_tags: True | |
130 | ||
131 | <<< | |
132 | ||
133 | ||
0d24de9d SG |
134 | How to run it |
135 | ============= | |
136 | ||
137 | First do a dry run: | |
138 | ||
c7e42cab | 139 | $ ./tools/patman/patman send -n |
0d24de9d SG |
140 | |
141 | If it can't detect the upstream branch, try telling it how many patches | |
142 | there are in your series: | |
143 | ||
c7e42cab | 144 | $ ./tools/patman/patman -c5 send -n |
0d24de9d SG |
145 | |
146 | This will create patch files in your current directory and tell you who | |
147 | it is thinking of sending them to. Take a look at the patch files. | |
148 | ||
c7e42cab | 149 | $ ./tools/patman/patman -c5 -s1 send -n |
0d24de9d SG |
150 | |
151 | Similar to the above, but skip the first commit and take the next 5. This | |
152 | is useful if your top commit is for setting up testing. | |
153 | ||
154 | ||
488d19cb CP |
155 | How to install it |
156 | ================= | |
157 | ||
a187559e | 158 | The most up to date version of patman can be found in the U-Boot sources. |
488d19cb CP |
159 | However to use it on other projects it may be more convenient to install it as |
160 | a standalone application. A distutils installer is included, this can be used | |
161 | to install patman: | |
162 | ||
163 | $ cd tools/patman && python setup.py install | |
164 | ||
165 | ||
0d24de9d SG |
166 | How to add tags |
167 | =============== | |
168 | ||
169 | To make this script useful you must add tags like the following into any | |
170 | commit. Most can only appear once in the whole series. | |
171 | ||
172 | Series-to: email / alias | |
2790bf69 WD |
173 | Email address / alias to send patch series to (you can add this |
174 | multiple times) | |
0d24de9d SG |
175 | |
176 | Series-cc: email / alias, ... | |
2790bf69 WD |
177 | Email address / alias to Cc patch series to (you can add this |
178 | multiple times) | |
0d24de9d SG |
179 | |
180 | Series-version: n | |
2790bf69 | 181 | Sets the version number of this patch series |
0d24de9d SG |
182 | |
183 | Series-prefix: prefix | |
2790bf69 | 184 | Sets the subject prefix. Normally empty but it can be RFC for |
3871cd85 WJ |
185 | RFC patches, or RESEND if you are being ignored. The patch subject |
186 | is like [RFC PATCH] or [RESEND PATCH]. | |
187 | In the meantime, git format.subjectprefix option will be added as | |
188 | well. If your format.subjectprefix is set to InternalProject, then | |
189 | the patch shows like: [InternalProject][RFC/RESEND PATCH] | |
0d24de9d | 190 | |
ef0e9de8 SG |
191 | Series-name: name |
192 | Sets the name of the series. You don't need to have a name, and | |
193 | patman does not yet use it, but it is convenient to put the branch | |
194 | name here to help you keep track of multiple upstreaming efforts. | |
195 | ||
f9e42848 SG |
196 | Series-links: [id | version:id]... |
197 | Set the ID of the series in patchwork. You can set this after you send | |
198 | out the series and look in patchwork for the resulting series. The | |
199 | URL you want is the one for the series itself, not any particular patch. | |
200 | E.g. for http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/list/?series=187331 | |
201 | the series ID is 187331. This property can have a list of series IDs, | |
202 | one for each version of the series, e.g. | |
203 | ||
204 | Series-links: 1:187331 2:188434 189372 | |
205 | ||
206 | Patman always uses the one without a version, since it assumes this is | |
207 | the latest one. When this tag is provided, patman can compare your local | |
208 | branch against patchwork to see what new reviews your series has | |
209 | collected ('patman status'). | |
210 | ||
fcbec650 SG |
211 | Series-patchwork-url: url |
212 | This allows specifying the Patchwork URL for a branch. This overrides | |
213 | both the setting files and the command-line argument. The URL should | |
214 | include the protocol and web site, with no trailing slash, for example | |
215 | 'https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project' | |
216 | ||
0d24de9d SG |
217 | Cover-letter: |
218 | This is the patch set title | |
219 | blah blah | |
220 | more blah blah | |
221 | END | |
2790bf69 WD |
222 | Sets the cover letter contents for the series. The first line |
223 | will become the subject of the cover letter | |
0d24de9d | 224 | |
fe2f8d9e SG |
225 | Cover-letter-cc: email / alias |
226 | Additional email addresses / aliases to send cover letter to (you | |
227 | can add this multiple times) | |
228 | ||
0d24de9d SG |
229 | Series-notes: |
230 | blah blah | |
231 | blah blah | |
232 | more blah blah | |
233 | END | |
2790bf69 WD |
234 | Sets some notes for the patch series, which you don't want in |
235 | the commit messages, but do want to send, The notes are joined | |
236 | together and put after the cover letter. Can appear multiple | |
237 | times. | |
0d24de9d | 238 | |
5c8fdd91 AA |
239 | Commit-notes: |
240 | blah blah | |
241 | blah blah | |
242 | more blah blah | |
243 | END | |
244 | Similar, but for a single commit (patch). These notes will appear | |
245 | immediately below the --- cut in the patch file. | |
246 | ||
0d24de9d | 247 | Signed-off-by: Their Name <email> |
2790bf69 WD |
248 | A sign-off is added automatically to your patches (this is |
249 | probably a bug). If you put this tag in your patches, it will | |
250 | override the default signoff that patman automatically adds. | |
102061bd | 251 | Multiple duplicate signoffs will be removed. |
0d24de9d SG |
252 | |
253 | Tested-by: Their Name <email> | |
28b3594e | 254 | Reviewed-by: Their Name <email> |
0d24de9d | 255 | Acked-by: Their Name <email> |
28b3594e | 256 | These indicate that someone has tested/reviewed/acked your patch. |
2790bf69 WD |
257 | When you get this reply on the mailing list, you can add this |
258 | tag to the relevant commit and the script will include it when | |
259 | you send out the next version. If 'Tested-by:' is set to | |
260 | yourself, it will be removed. No one will believe you. | |
0d24de9d SG |
261 | |
262 | Series-changes: n | |
263 | - Guinea pig moved into its cage | |
264 | - Other changes ending with a blank line | |
265 | <blank line> | |
2790bf69 WD |
266 | This can appear in any commit. It lists the changes for a |
267 | particular version n of that commit. The change list is | |
268 | created based on this information. Each commit gets its own | |
269 | change list and also the whole thing is repeated in the cover | |
270 | letter (where duplicate change lines are merged). | |
0d24de9d | 271 | |
2790bf69 WD |
272 | By adding your change lists into your commits it is easier to |
273 | keep track of what happened. When you amend a commit, remember | |
274 | to update the log there and then, knowing that the script will | |
275 | do the rest. | |
0d24de9d | 276 | |
6949f70c SA |
277 | Commit-changes: n |
278 | - This line will not appear in the cover-letter changelog | |
279 | <blank line> | |
280 | This tag is like Series-changes, except changes in this changelog will | |
281 | only appear in the changelog of the commit this tag is in. This is | |
282 | useful when you want to add notes which may not make sense in the cover | |
283 | letter. For example, you can have short changes such as "New" or | |
284 | "Lint". | |
285 | ||
286 | Cover-changes: n | |
287 | - This line will only appear in the cover letter | |
288 | <blank line> | |
289 | This tag is like Series-changes, except changes in this changelog will | |
290 | only appear in the cover-letter changelog. This is useful to summarize | |
291 | changes made with Commit-changes, or to add additional context to | |
292 | changes. | |
293 | ||
659c89da SG |
294 | Patch-cc: Their Name <email> |
295 | This copies a single patch to another email address. Note that the | |
296 | Cc: used by git send-email is ignored by patman, but will be | |
297 | interpreted by git send-email if you use it. | |
0d24de9d | 298 | |
645b271a | 299 | Series-process-log: sort, uniq |
0411fff3 SA |
300 | This tells patman to sort and/or uniq the change logs. Changes may be |
301 | multiple lines long, as long as each subsequent line of a change begins | |
302 | with a whitespace character. For example, | |
303 | ||
304 | - This change | |
305 | continues onto the next line | |
306 | - But this change is separate | |
307 | ||
645b271a SG |
308 | Use 'sort' to sort the entries, and 'uniq' to include only |
309 | unique entries. If omitted, no change log processing is done. | |
310 | Separate each tag with a comma. | |
311 | ||
833e4192 DA |
312 | Change-Id: |
313 | This tag is stripped out but is used to generate the Message-Id | |
314 | of the emails that will be sent. When you keep the Change-Id the | |
315 | same you are asserting that this is a slightly different version | |
316 | (but logically the same patch) as other patches that have been | |
317 | sent out with the same Change-Id. | |
318 | ||
0d24de9d SG |
319 | Various other tags are silently removed, like these Chrome OS and |
320 | Gerrit tags: | |
321 | ||
322 | BUG=... | |
323 | TEST=... | |
0d24de9d SG |
324 | Review URL: |
325 | Reviewed-on: | |
5c8fdd91 | 326 | Commit-xxxx: (except Commit-notes) |
0d24de9d SG |
327 | |
328 | Exercise for the reader: Try adding some tags to one of your current | |
329 | patch series and see how the patches turn out. | |
330 | ||
331 | ||
332 | Where Patches Are Sent | |
333 | ====================== | |
334 | ||
1713247f | 335 | Once the patches are created, patman sends them using git send-email. The |
0d24de9d | 336 | whole series is sent to the recipients in Series-to: and Series-cc. |
659c89da SG |
337 | You can Cc individual patches to other people with the Patch-cc: tag. Tags |
338 | in the subject are also picked up to Cc patches. For example, a commit like | |
339 | this: | |
0d24de9d SG |
340 | |
341 | >>>> | |
342 | commit 10212537b85ff9b6e09c82045127522c0f0db981 | |
343 | Author: Mike Frysinger <[email protected]> | |
2790bf69 | 344 | Date: Mon Nov 7 23:18:44 2011 -0500 |
0d24de9d SG |
345 | |
346 | x86: arm: add a git mailrc file for maintainers | |
347 | ||
348 | This should make sending out e-mails to the right people easier. | |
349 | ||
659c89da SG |
350 | Patch-cc: sandbox, mikef, ag |
351 | Patch-cc: afleming | |
0d24de9d SG |
352 | <<<< |
353 | ||
354 | will create a patch which is copied to x86, arm, sandbox, mikef, ag and | |
355 | afleming. | |
356 | ||
659c89da SG |
357 | If you have a cover letter it will get sent to the union of the Patch-cc |
358 | lists of all of the other patches. If you want to sent it to additional | |
359 | people you can add a tag: | |
fe2f8d9e SG |
360 | |
361 | Cover-letter-cc: <list of addresses> | |
362 | ||
363 | These people will get the cover letter even if they are not on the To/Cc | |
364 | list for any of the patches. | |
31187255 | 365 | |
0d24de9d | 366 | |
dc6df972 SG |
367 | Patchwork Integration |
368 | ===================== | |
369 | ||
370 | Patman has a very basic integration with Patchwork. If you point patman to | |
371 | your series on patchwork it can show you what new reviews have appears since | |
372 | you sent your series. | |
373 | ||
374 | To set this up, add a Series-link tag to one of the commits in your series | |
375 | (see above). | |
376 | ||
377 | Then you can type | |
378 | ||
379 | patman status | |
380 | ||
381 | and patman will show you each patch and what review tags have been collected, | |
382 | for example: | |
383 | ||
384 | ... | |
385 | 21 x86: mtrr: Update the command to use the new mtrr | |
386 | Reviewed-by: Wolfgang Wallner <[email protected]> | |
387 | + Reviewed-by: Bin Meng <[email protected]> | |
388 | 22 x86: mtrr: Restructure so command execution is in | |
389 | Reviewed-by: Wolfgang Wallner <[email protected]> | |
390 | + Reviewed-by: Bin Meng <[email protected]> | |
391 | ... | |
392 | ||
393 | This shows that patch 21 and 22 were sent out with one review but have since | |
394 | attracted another review each. If the series needs changes, you can update | |
395 | these commits with the new review tag before sending the next version of the | |
396 | series. | |
397 | ||
8f9ba3ab SG |
398 | To automatically pull into these tags into a new branch, use the -d option: |
399 | ||
400 | patman status -d mtrr4 | |
401 | ||
402 | This will create a new 'mtrr4' branch which is the same as your current branch | |
403 | but has the new review tags in it. The tags are added in alphabetic order and | |
404 | are placed immediately after any existing ack/review/test/fixes tags, or at the | |
405 | end. You can check that this worked with: | |
406 | ||
407 | patman -b mtrr4 status | |
408 | ||
409 | which should show that there are no new responses compared to this new branch. | |
410 | ||
dc4b2a97 SG |
411 | There is also a -C option to list the comments received for each patch. |
412 | ||
dc6df972 | 413 | |
0d24de9d SG |
414 | Example Work Flow |
415 | ================= | |
416 | ||
417 | The basic workflow is to create your commits, add some tags to the top | |
418 | commit, and type 'patman' to check and send them. | |
419 | ||
420 | Here is an example workflow for a series of 4 patches. Let's say you have | |
421 | these rather contrived patches in the following order in branch us-cmd in | |
422 | your tree where 'us' means your upstreaming activity (newest to oldest as | |
423 | output by git log --oneline): | |
424 | ||
425 | 7c7909c wip | |
426 | 89234f5 Don't include standard parser if hush is used | |
427 | 8d640a7 mmc: sparc: Stop using builtin_run_command() | |
428 | 0c859a9 Rename run_command2() to run_command() | |
429 | a74443f sandbox: Rename run_command() to builtin_run_command() | |
430 | ||
431 | The first patch is some test things that enable your code to be compiled, | |
432 | but that you don't want to submit because there is an existing patch for it | |
433 | on the list. So you can tell patman to create and check some patches | |
434 | (skipping the first patch) with: | |
435 | ||
c7e42cab | 436 | patman -s1 send -n |
0d24de9d SG |
437 | |
438 | If you want to do all of them including the work-in-progress one, then | |
439 | (if you are tracking an upstream branch): | |
440 | ||
c7e42cab | 441 | patman send -n |
0d24de9d SG |
442 | |
443 | Let's say that patman reports an error in the second patch. Then: | |
444 | ||
445 | git rebase -i HEAD~6 | |
446 | <change 'pick' to 'edit' in 89234f5> | |
447 | <use editor to make code changes> | |
448 | git add -u | |
449 | git rebase --continue | |
450 | ||
451 | Now you have an updated patch series. To check it: | |
452 | ||
c7e42cab | 453 | patman -s1 send -n |
0d24de9d SG |
454 | |
455 | Let's say it is now clean and you want to send it. Now you need to set up | |
456 | the destination. So amend the top commit with: | |
457 | ||
458 | git commit --amend | |
459 | ||
460 | Use your editor to add some tags, so that the whole commit message is: | |
461 | ||
462 | The current run_command() is really only one of the options, with | |
463 | hush providing the other. It really shouldn't be called directly | |
464 | in case the hush parser is bring used, so rename this function to | |
465 | better explain its purpose. | |
466 | ||
467 | Series-to: u-boot | |
468 | Series-cc: bfin, marex | |
469 | Series-prefix: RFC | |
470 | Cover-letter: | |
471 | Unified command execution in one place | |
472 | ||
473 | At present two parsers have similar code to execute commands. Also | |
474 | cmd_usage() is called all over the place. This series adds a single | |
475 | function which processes commands called cmd_process(). | |
476 | END | |
477 | ||
478 | Change-Id: Ica71a14c1f0ecb5650f771a32fecb8d2eb9d8a17 | |
479 | ||
480 | ||
481 | You want this to be an RFC and Cc the whole series to the bfin alias and | |
482 | to Marek. Two of the patches have tags (those are the bits at the front of | |
483 | the subject that say mmc: sparc: and sandbox:), so 8d640a7 will be Cc'd to | |
484 | mmc and sparc, and the last one to sandbox. | |
485 | ||
486 | Now to send the patches, take off the -n flag: | |
487 | ||
c7e42cab | 488 | patman -s1 send |
0d24de9d SG |
489 | |
490 | The patches will be created, shown in your editor, and then sent along with | |
491 | the cover letter. Note that patman's tags are automatically removed so that | |
492 | people on the list don't see your secret info. | |
493 | ||
494 | Of course patches often attract comments and you need to make some updates. | |
495 | Let's say one person sent comments and you get an Acked-by: on one patch. | |
496 | Also, the patch on the list that you were waiting for has been merged, | |
dc4b2a97 SG |
497 | so you can drop your wip commit. |
498 | ||
499 | Take a look on patchwork and find out the URL of the series. This will be | |
500 | something like http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/list/?series=187331 | |
501 | Add this to a tag in your top commit: | |
502 | ||
503 | Series-link: http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/list/?series=187331 | |
504 | ||
505 | You can use then patman to collect the Acked-by tag to the correct commit, | |
506 | creating a new 'version 2' branch for us-cmd: | |
507 | ||
508 | patman status -d us-cmd2 | |
509 | git checkout us-cmd2 | |
510 | ||
511 | You can look at the comments in Patchwork or with: | |
512 | ||
513 | patman status -C | |
514 | ||
515 | Then you can resync with upstream: | |
0d24de9d | 516 | |
2790bf69 | 517 | git fetch origin (or whatever upstream is called) |
0d24de9d SG |
518 | git rebase origin/master |
519 | ||
dc4b2a97 | 520 | and use git rebase -i to edit the commits, dropping the wip one. |
0d24de9d | 521 | |
dc4b2a97 SG |
522 | Then update the Series-cc: in the top commit to add the person who reviewed |
523 | the v1 series: | |
0d24de9d SG |
524 | |
525 | Series-cc: bfin, marex, Heiko Schocher <[email protected]> | |
526 | ||
527 | and remove the Series-prefix: tag since it it isn't an RFC any more. The | |
528 | series is now version two, so the series info in the top commit looks like | |
529 | this: | |
530 | ||
531 | Series-to: u-boot | |
532 | Series-cc: bfin, marex, Heiko Schocher <[email protected]> | |
533 | Series-version: 2 | |
534 | Cover-letter: | |
535 | ... | |
536 | ||
537 | Finally, you need to add a change log to the two commits you changed. You | |
538 | add change logs to each individual commit where the changes happened, like | |
539 | this: | |
540 | ||
541 | Series-changes: 2 | |
542 | - Updated the command decoder to reduce code size | |
543 | - Wound the torque propounder up a little more | |
544 | ||
545 | (note the blank line at the end of the list) | |
546 | ||
547 | When you run patman it will collect all the change logs from the different | |
548 | commits and combine them into the cover letter, if you have one. So finally | |
549 | you have a new series of commits: | |
550 | ||
551 | faeb973 Don't include standard parser if hush is used | |
552 | 1b2f2fe mmc: sparc: Stop using builtin_run_command() | |
553 | cfbe330 Rename run_command2() to run_command() | |
554 | 0682677 sandbox: Rename run_command() to builtin_run_command() | |
555 | ||
556 | so to send them: | |
557 | ||
558 | patman | |
559 | ||
560 | and it will create and send the version 2 series. | |
561 | ||
dc4b2a97 SG |
562 | |
563 | General points | |
564 | ============== | |
0d24de9d SG |
565 | |
566 | 1. When you change back to the us-cmd branch days or weeks later all your | |
567 | information is still there, safely stored in the commits. You don't need | |
568 | to remember what version you are up to, who you sent the last lot of patches | |
569 | to, or anything about the change logs. | |
570 | ||
571 | 2. If you put tags in the subject, patman will Cc the maintainers | |
572 | automatically in many cases. | |
573 | ||
574 | 3. If you want to keep the commits from each series you sent so that you can | |
575 | compare change and see what you did, you can either create a new branch for | |
576 | each version, or just tag the branch before you start changing it: | |
577 | ||
578 | git tag sent/us-cmd-rfc | |
579 | ...later... | |
580 | git tag sent/us-cmd-v2 | |
581 | ||
582 | 4. If you want to modify the patches a little before sending, you can do | |
583 | this in your editor, but be careful! | |
584 | ||
585 | 5. If you want to run git send-email yourself, use the -n flag which will | |
586 | print out the command line patman would have used. | |
587 | ||
588 | 6. It is a good idea to add the change log info as you change the commit, | |
589 | not later when you can't remember which patch you changed. You can always | |
590 | go back and change or remove logs from commits. | |
591 | ||
14aa35ad BM |
592 | 7. Some mailing lists have size limits and when we add binary contents to |
593 | our patches it's easy to exceed the size limits. Use "--no-binary" to | |
594 | generate patches without any binary contents. You are supposed to include | |
595 | a link to a git repository in your "Commit-notes", "Series-notes" or | |
596 | "Cover-letter" for maintainers to fetch the original commit. | |
0d24de9d | 597 | |
b0436b94 SA |
598 | 8. Patches will have no changelog entries for revisions where they did not |
599 | change. For clarity, if there are no changes for this patch in the most | |
600 | recent revision of the series, a note will be added. For example, a patch | |
601 | with the following tags in the commit | |
602 | ||
603 | Series-version: 5 | |
604 | Series-changes: 2 | |
605 | - Some change | |
606 | ||
607 | Series-changes: 4 | |
608 | - Another change | |
609 | ||
610 | would have a changelog of | |
611 | ||
612 | (no changes since v4) | |
613 | ||
614 | Changes in v4: | |
615 | - Another change | |
616 | ||
617 | Changes in v2: | |
618 | - Some change | |
619 | ||
0d24de9d SG |
620 | Other thoughts |
621 | ============== | |
622 | ||
623 | This script has been split into sensible files but still needs work. | |
624 | Most of these are indicated by a TODO in the code. | |
625 | ||
626 | It would be nice if this could handle the In-reply-to side of things. | |
627 | ||
e21c5158 SG |
628 | The tests are incomplete, as is customary. Use the 'test' subcommand to run |
629 | them: | |
0d24de9d | 630 | |
e21c5158 | 631 | $ tools/patman/patman test |
0d24de9d SG |
632 | |
633 | Error handling doesn't always produce friendly error messages - e.g. | |
634 | putting an incorrect tag in a commit may provide a confusing message. | |
635 | ||
636 | There might be a few other features not mentioned in this README. They | |
637 | might be bugs. In particular, tags are case sensitive which is probably | |
638 | a bad thing. | |
639 | ||
640 | ||
641 | Simon Glass <[email protected]> | |
642 | v1, v2, 19-Oct-11 | |
643 | revised v3 24-Nov-11 | |
dc4b2a97 | 644 | revised v4 Independence Day 2020, with Patchwork integration |