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ReStructuredText
632 lines
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ReStructuredText
Contribution Guidelines
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#######################
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As an open-source project, we welcome and encourage the community to submit
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patches directly to the project. In our collaborative open source environment,
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standards and methods for submitting changes help reduce the chaos that can result
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from an active development community.
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This document explains how to participate in project conversations, log bugs
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and enhancement requests, and submit patches to the project so your patch will
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be accepted quickly in the codebase.
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Licensing
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*********
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Licensing is very important to open source projects. It helps ensure the
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software continues to be available under the terms that the author desired.
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.. _Apache 2.0 license:
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https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/blob/master/LICENSE
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.. _GitHub repo: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr
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Zephyr uses the `Apache 2.0 license`_ (as found in the LICENSE file in
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the project's `GitHub repo`_) to strike a balance between open
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contribution and allowing you to use the software however you would like
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to. The Apache 2.0 license is a permissive open source license that
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allows you to freely use, modify, distribute and sell your own products
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that include Apache 2.0 licensed software. (For more information about
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this, check out articles such as `Why choose Apache 2.0 licensing`_ and
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`Top 10 Apache License Questions Answered`_).
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.. _Why choose Apache 2.0 licensing:
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https://www.zephyrproject.org/about/#faq
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.. _Top 10 Apache License Questions Answered:
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https://www.whitesourcesoftware.com/whitesource-blog/top-10-apache-license-questions-answered/
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A license tells you what rights you have as a developer, as provided by the
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copyright holder. It is important that the contributor fully understands the
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licensing rights and agrees to them. Sometimes the copyright holder isn't the
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contributor, such as when the contributor is doing work on behalf of a
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company.
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Components using other Licenses
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===============================
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There are some imported or reused components of the Zephyr project that
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use other licensing, as described in `Zephyr Licensing`_.
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.. _Zephyr Licensing:
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https://www.zephyrproject.org/doc/LICENSING.html
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Importing code into the Zephyr OS from other projects that use a license
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other than the Apache 2.0 license needs to be fully understood in
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context and approved by the Zephyr governing board.
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By carefully reviewing potential contributions and also enforcing a
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:ref:`DCO` for contributed code, we can ensure that
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the Zephyr community can develop products with the Zephyr Project
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without concerns over patent or copyright issues.
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See `Contributing non-Apache 2.0 components`_ for more information about
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this contributing and review process for imported components.
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.. _Contributing non-Apache 2.0 components:
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https://www.zephyrproject.org/doc/contribute/contribute_non-apache.html
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.. _DCO:
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Developer Certification of Origin (DCO)
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***************************************
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To make a good faith effort to ensure licensing criteria are met, the Zephyr
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project requires the Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) process to be
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followed.
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The DCO is an attestation attached to every contribution made by every
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developer. In the commit message of the contribution, (described more fully
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later in this document), the developer simply adds a ``Signed-off-by``
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statement and thereby agrees to the DCO.
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When a developer submits a patch, it is a commitment that the contributor has
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the right to submit the patch per the license. The DCO agreement is shown
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below and at http://developercertificate.org/.
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.. code-block:: none
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Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1
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By making a contribution to this project, I certify that:
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(a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I
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have the right to submit it under the open source license
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indicated in the file; or
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(b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the
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best of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open
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source license and I have the right under that license to
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submit that work with modifications, whether created in whole
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or in part by me, under the same open source license (unless
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I am permitted to submit under a different license), as
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Indicated in the file; or
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(c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other
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person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified
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it.
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(d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution
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are public and that a record of the contribution (including
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all personal information I submit with it, including my
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sign-off) is maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed
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consistent with this project or the open source license(s)
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involved.
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DCO Sign-Off Methods
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====================
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The DCO requires a sign-off message in the following format appear on each
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commit in the pull request::
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Signed-off-by: Zephyrus Zephyr <zephyrus@zephyrproject.org>
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The DCO text can either be manually added to your commit body, or you can add
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either ``-s`` or ``--signoff`` to your usual Git commit commands. If you forget
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to add the sign-off you can also amend a previous commit with the sign-off by
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running ``git commit --amend -s``. If you've pushed your changes to GitHub
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already you'll need to force push your branch after this with ``git push -f``.
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Prerequisites
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*************
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.. _Zephyr Project website: https://zephyrproject.org
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As a contributor, you'll want to be familiar with the Zephyr project, how to
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configure, install, and use it as explained in the `Zephyr Project website`_
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and how to set up your development environment as introduced in the Zephyr
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`Getting Started Guide`_.
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.. _Getting Started Guide:
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https://www.zephyrproject.org/doc/getting_started/getting_started.html
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You should be familiar with common developer tools such as Git and CMake, and
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platforms such as GitHub.
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If you haven't already done so, you'll need to create a (free) GitHub account
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on http://github.com and have Git tools available on your development system.
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.. note::
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The Zephyr development workflow supports all 3 major operating systems
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(Linux, macOS, and Windows) but some of the tools used in the sections below
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are only available on Linux and macOS. On Windows, instead of running these
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tools yourself, you will need to rely on the Continuous Integration (CI)
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service ``shippable``, which runs automatically on GitHub when you submit
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your Pull Request (PR). You can see any failure results in the Shippable
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details link near the end of the PR conversation list. See
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`Continuous Integration`_ for more information
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Repository layout
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*****************
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To clone the main Zephyr Project repository use::
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git clone https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr
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The Zephyr project directory structure is described in `Source Tree Structure`_
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documentation. In addition to the Zephyr kernel itself, you'll also find the
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sources for technical documentation, sample code, supported board
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configurations, and a collection of subsystem tests. All of these are
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available for developers to contribute to and enhance.
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.. _Source Tree Structure:
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https://www.zephyrproject.org/doc/kernel/overview/source_tree.html
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Pull Requests and Issues
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************************
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.. _Zephyr Project Issues: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/issues
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.. _open pull requests: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/pulls
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.. _Zephyr-devel mailing list:
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https://lists.zephyrproject.org/mailman/listinfo/zephyr-devel
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Before starting on a patch, first check in our issues `Zephyr Project Issues`_
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system to see what's been reported on the issue you'd like to address. Have a
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conversation on the `Zephyr-devel mailing list`_ (or the #zephyrproject IRC
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channel on freenode.net) to see what others think of your issue (and proposed
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solution). You may find others that have encountered the issue you're
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finding, or that have similar ideas for changes or additions. Send a message
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to the `Zephyr-devel mailing list`_ to introduce and discuss your idea with
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the development community.
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Please note that it's common practice on IRC to be away from the
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channel, but still have a client logged in to receive traffic. If you
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ask a question to a particular person and they don't answer, **try
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to stay signed in to the channel** if you can, so they have time to
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respond to you. This is especially important given the many different
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timezones Zephyr developers live in. If you don't get a timely
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response on IRC, try sending a message to the mailing list instead.
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It's always a good practice to search for existing or related issues before
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submitting your own. When you submit an issue (bug or feature request), the
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triage team will review and comment on the submission, typically within a few
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business days.
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You can find all `open pull requests`_ on GitHub and open `Zephyr Project
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Issues`_ in Github issues.
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.. _Continuous Integration:
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Continuous Integration (CI)
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***************************
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The Zephyr Project operates a Continuous Integration (CI) system that runs on
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every Pull Request (PR) in order to verify several aspects of the PR:
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* Git commit formatting
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* Coding Style
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* Sanity Check builds for multiple architectures and boards
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* Documentation build to verify any doc changes
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CI is run on the ``shippable`` cloud service and it uses the same tools
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described in the `Contribution Tools`_ section.
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The CI results must be green indicating "All checks have passed" before
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the Pull Request can be merged. CI is run when the PR is created, and
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again every time the PR is modified with a commit. You can also force
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the CI system to recheck a PR by adding a comment to the PR saying
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simply ``retest`` in the message (helpful if the CI system fails unexpectedly).
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The current status of the CI run can always be found at the bottom of the
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GitHub PR page, below the review status. Depending on the success or failure
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of the run you will see:
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* "All checks have passed"
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* "All checks have failed"
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In case of failure you can click on the "Details" link presented below the
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failure message in order to navigate to ``shippable`` and inspect the results.
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Once you click on the link you will be taken to the ``shippable`` summary
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results page where a table with all the different builds will be shown. To see
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what build or test failed click on the row that contains the failed (i.e.
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non-green) build and then click on the "Tests" tab to see the console output
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messages indicating the failure.
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.. _Contribution Tools:
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Contribution Tools and Git Setup
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********************************
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Signed-off-by
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=============
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The name in the commit message ``Signed-off-by:`` line and your email must
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match the change authorship information. Make sure your :file:`.gitconfig`
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is set up correctly:
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.. code-block:: console
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git config --global user.name "David Developer"
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git config --global user.email "david.developer@company.com"
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gitlint
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=======
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When you submit a pull request to the project, a series of checks are
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performed to verify your commit messages meet the requirements. The same step
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done during the CI process can be performed locally using the the `gitlint`
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command.
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Run `gitlint` locally in your tree and branch where your patches have been
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committed:
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.. code-block:: console
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gitlint
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Note, gitlint only checks HEAD (the most recent commit), so you should run it
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after each commit, or use the ``--commits`` option to specify a commit range
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covering all the development patches to be submitted.
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sanitycheck
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===========
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.. note::
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sanitycheck does not currently run on Windows.
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To verify that your changes did not break any tests or samples, please run the
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``sanitycheck`` script locally before submitting your pull request to GitHub. To
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run the same tests the CI system runs, follow these steps from within your
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local Zephyr source working directory:
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.. code-block:: console
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source zephyr-env.sh
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./scripts/sanitycheck
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The above will execute the basic sanitycheck script, which will run various
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kernel tests using the QEMU emulator. It will also do some build tests on
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various samples with advanced features that can't run in QEMU.
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We highly recommend you run these tests locally to avoid any CI
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failures.
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uncrustify
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==========
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The `uncrustify tool <https://sourceforge.net/projects/uncrustify>`_ can
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be helpful to quickly reformat your source code to our `Coding Style`_
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standards together with a configuration file we've provided:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# On Linux/macOS
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uncrustify --replace --no-backup -l C -c $ZEPHYR_BASE/scripts/uncrustify.cfg my_source_file.c
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# On Windows
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uncrustify --replace --no-backup -l C -c %ZEPHYR_BASE%\scripts\uncrustify.cfg my_source_file.c
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On Linux systems, you can install uncrustify with
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo apt install uncrustify
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For Windows installation instructions see the `sourceforge listing for
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uncrustify <https://sourceforge.net/projects/uncrustify>`_.
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Coding Style
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************
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Use these coding guidelines to ensure that your development complies with the
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project's style and naming conventions.
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.. _Linux kernel coding style:
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https://kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html
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In general, follow the `Linux kernel coding style`_, with the
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following exceptions:
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* Add braces to every ``if`` and ``else`` body, even for single-line code
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blocks. Use the ``--ignore BRACES`` flag to make *checkpatch* stop
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complaining.
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* Use spaces instead of tabs to align comments after declarations, as needed.
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* Use C89-style single line comments, ``/* */``. The C99-style single line
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comment, ``//``, is not allowed.
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* Use ``/** */`` for doxygen comments that need to appear in the documentation.
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The Linux kernel GPL-licensed tool ``checkpatch`` is used to check
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coding style conformity.
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.. note::
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checkpatch does not currently run on Windows.
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Checkpatch is available in the scripts directory. To invoke it when committing
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code, make the file *$ZEPHYR_BASE/.git/hooks/pre-commit* executable and edit
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it to contain:
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.. code-block:: bash
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#!/bin/sh
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set -e exec
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exec git diff --cached | ${ZEPHYR_BASE}/scripts/checkpatch.pl -
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.. _Contribution workflow:
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Contribution Workflow
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*********************
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One general practice we encourage, is to make small,
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controlled changes. This practice simplifies review, makes merging and
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rebasing easier, and keeps the change history clear and clean.
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When contributing to the Zephyr Project, it is also important you provide as much
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information as you can about your change, update appropriate documentation,
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and test your changes thoroughly before submitting.
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The general GitHub workflow used by Zephyr developers uses a combination of
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command line Git commands and browser interaction with GitHub. As it is with
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Git, there are multiple ways of getting a task done. We'll describe a typical
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workflow here:
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.. _Create a Fork of Zephyr:
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https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr#fork-destination-box
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#. `Create a Fork of Zephyr`_
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to your personal account on GitHub. (Click on the fork button in the top
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right corner of the Zephyr project repo page in GitHub.)
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#. On your development computer, clone the fork you just made::
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git clone https://github.com/<your github id>/zephyr
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This would be a good time to let Git know about the upstream repo too::
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git remote add upstream https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr.git
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and verify the remote repos::
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git remote -v
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#. Create a topic branch (off of master) for your work (if you're addressing
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an issue, we suggest including the issue number in the branch name)::
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git checkout master
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git checkout -b fix_comment_typo
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Some Zephyr subsystems do development work on a separate branch from
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master so you may need to indicate this in your checkout::
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git checkout -b fix_out_of_date_patch origin/net
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#. Make changes, test locally, change, test, test again, ... (Check out the
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prior chapter on `sanitycheck`_ as well).
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#. When things look good, start the pull request process by adding your changed
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files::
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git add [file(s) that changed, add -p if you want to be more specific]
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You can see files that are not yet staged using::
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git status
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#. Verify changes to be committed look as you expected::
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git diff --cached
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#. Commit your changes to your local repo::
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git commit -s
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The ``-s`` option automatically adds your ``Signed-off-by:`` to your commit
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message. Your commit will be rejected without this line that indicates your
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agreement with the `DCO`_. See the `Commit Guidelines`_ section for
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specific guidelines for writing your commit messages.
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#. Push your topic branch with your changes to your fork in your personal
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GitHub account::
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git push origin fix_comment_typo
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#. In your web browser, go to your forked repo and click on the
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``Compare & pull request`` button for the branch you just worked on and
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you want to open a pull request with.
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#. Review the pull request changes, and verify that you are opening a
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pull request for the appropriate branch. The title and message from your
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commit message should appear as well.
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#. If you're working on a subsystem branch that's not ``master``,
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you may need to change the intended branch for the pull request
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here, for example, by changing the base branch from ``master`` to ``net``.
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#. GitHub will assign one or more suggested reviewers (based on the
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CODEOWNERS file in the repo). If you are a project member, you can
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select additional reviewers now too.
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#. Click on the submit button and your pull request is sent and awaits
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review. Email will be sent as review comments are made, or you can check
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on your pull request at https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/pulls.
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#. While you're waiting for your pull request to be accepted and merged, you
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can create another branch to work on another issue. (Be sure to make your
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new branch off of master and not the previous branch.)::
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git checkout master
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git checkout -b fix_another_issue
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and use the same process described above to work on this new topic branch.
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#. If reviewers do request changes to your patch, you can interactively rebase
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commit(s) to fix review issues. In your development repo::
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git fetch --all
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git rebase --ignore-whitespace upstream/master
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The ``--ignore-whitespace`` option stops ``git apply`` (called by rebase)
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from changing any whitespace. Continuing::
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git rebase -i <offending-commit-id>^
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In the interactive rebase editor, replace ``pick`` with ``edit`` to select
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a specific commit (if there's more than one in your pull request), or
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remove the line to delete a commit entirely. Then edit files to fix the
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issues in the review.
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As before, inspect and test your changes. When ready, continue the
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patch submission::
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git add [file(s)]
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git rebase --continue
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Update commit comment if needed, and continue::
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git push --force origin fix_comment_typo
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By force pushing your update, your original pull request will be updated
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with your changes so you won't need to resubmit the pull request.
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#. If the CI run fails, you will need to make changes to your code in order
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to fix the issues and amend your commits by rebasing as described above.
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Additional information about the CI system can be found in
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`Continuous Integration`_.
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Commit Guidelines
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*****************
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Changes are submitted as Git commits. Each commit message must contain:
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* A short and descriptive subject line that is less than 72 characters,
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followed by a blank line. The subject line must include a prefix that
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identifies the subsystem being changed, followed by a colon, and a short
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title, for example: ``doc: update wiki references to new site``.
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(If you're updating an existing file, you can use
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``git log <filename>`` to see what developers used as the prefix for
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previous patches of this file.)
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* A change description with your logic or reasoning for the changes, followed
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by a blank line.
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* A Signed-off-by line, ``Signed-off-by: <name> <email>`` typically added
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automatically by using ``git commit -s``
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* If the change addresses an issue, include a line of the form::
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Fixes #<issue number>.
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All changes and topics sent to GitHub must be well-formed, as described above.
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Commit Message Body
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===================
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When editing the commit message, please briefly explain what your change
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does and why it's needed. A change summary of ``"Fixes stuff"`` will be rejected.
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.. warning::
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An empty change summary body is not permitted. Even for trivial changes, please
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include a summary body in the commmit message.
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|
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The description body of the commit message must include:
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|
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* **what** the change does,
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* **why** you chose that approach,
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* **what** assumptions were made, and
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* **how** you know it works -- for example, which tests you ran.
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|
For examples of accepted commit messages, you can refer to the Zephyr GitHub
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`changelog <https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/commits/master>`__.
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Other Commit Expectations
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|
=========================
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* Commits must build cleanly when applied on top of each other, thus avoiding
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breaking bisectability.
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* Commits must pass all CI checks (see `Continuous Integration`_ for more
|
|
information)
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* Each commit must address a single identifiable issue and must be
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logically self-contained. Unrelated changes should be submitted as
|
|
separate commits.
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|
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|
* You may submit pull request RFCs (requests for comments) to send work
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proposals, progress snapshots of your work, or to get early feedback on
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features or changes that will affect multiple areas in the code base.
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|
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* When major new functionality is added, tests for the new functionality MUST be
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added to the automated test suite. All new APIs MUST be documented and tested
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and tests MUST cover at least 80% of the added functionality using the code
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coverage tool and reporting provided by the project.
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|
|
Submitting Proposals
|
|
====================
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|
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|
You can request a new feature or submit a proposal by submitting an issue to
|
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our GitHub Repository.
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If you would like to implement a new feature, please submit an issue with a
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|
proposal (RFC) for your work first, to be sure that we can use it. Please
|
|
consider what kind of change it is:
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|
|
|
* For a Major Feature, first open an issue and outline your proposal so that it
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|
can be discussed. This will also allow us to better coordinate our efforts,
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|
prevent duplication of work, and help you to craft the change so that it is
|
|
successfully accepted into the project. Providing the following information
|
|
will increase the chances of your issue being dealt with quickly:
|
|
|
|
* Overview of the Proposal
|
|
* Motivation for or Use Case
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|
* Design Details
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|
* Alternatives
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* Test Strategy
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|
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|
* Small Features can be crafted and directly submitted as a Pull Request.
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|
|
|
Identifying Contribution Origin
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|
===============================
|
|
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|
When adding a new file to the tree, it is important to detail the source of
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|
origin on the file, provide attributions, and detail the intended usage. In
|
|
cases where the file is an original to Zephyr, the commit message should
|
|
include the following ("Original" is the assumption if no Origin tag is
|
|
present)::
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|
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|
Origin: Original
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|
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|
In cases where the file is imported from an external project, the commit
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|
message shall contain details regarding the original project, the location of
|
|
the project, the SHA-id of the origin commit for the file, the intended
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|
purpose, and if the file will be maintained by the Zephyr project,
|
|
(whether or not the Zephyr project will contain a localized branch or if
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|
it is a downstream copy).
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|
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|
For example, a copy of a locally maintained import::
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|
|
|
Origin: Contiki OS
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|
License: BSD 3-Clause
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|
URL: http://www.contiki-os.org/
|
|
commit: 853207acfdc6549b10eb3e44504b1a75ae1ad63a
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|
Purpose: Introduction of networking stack.
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|
Maintained-by: Zephyr
|
|
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|
For example, a copy of an externally maintained import::
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|
|
|
Origin: Tiny Crypt
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|
License: BSD 3-Clause
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|
URL: https://github.com/01org/tinycrypt
|
|
commit: 08ded7f21529c39e5133688ffb93a9d0c94e5c6e
|
|
Purpose: Introduction of TinyCrypt
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|
Maintained-by: External
|