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- .. _pullrequests:
- Creating Pull Requests
- ======================
- This chapter describes how maintainers can create and submit pull requests
- to other maintainers. This is useful for transferring changes from one
- maintainers tree to another maintainers tree.
- This document was written by Tobin C. Harding (who at that time, was not an
- experienced maintainer) primarily from comments made by Greg Kroah-Hartman
- and Linus Torvalds on LKML. Suggestions and fixes by Jonathan Corbet and
- Mauro Carvalho Chehab. Misrepresentation was unintentional but inevitable,
- please direct abuse to Tobin C. Harding <[email protected]>.
- Original email thread::
- https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
- Create Branch
- -------------
- To start with you will need to have all the changes you wish to include in
- the pull request on a separate branch. Typically you will base this branch
- off of a branch in the developers tree whom you intend to send the pull
- request to.
- In order to create the pull request you must first tag the branch that you
- have just created. It is recommended that you choose a meaningful tag name,
- in a way that you and others can understand, even after some time. A good
- practice is to include in the name an indicator of the subsystem of origin
- and the target kernel version.
- Greg offers the following. A pull request with miscellaneous stuff for
- drivers/char, to be applied at the Kernel version 4.15-rc1 could be named
- as ``char-misc-4.15-rc1``. If such tag would be produced from a branch
- named ``char-misc-next``, you would be using the following command::
- git tag -s char-misc-4.15-rc1 char-misc-next
- that will create a signed tag called ``char-misc-4.15-rc1`` based on the
- last commit in the ``char-misc-next`` branch, and sign it with your gpg key
- (see :ref:`Documentation/maintainer/configure-git.rst <configuregit>`).
- Linus will only accept pull requests based on a signed tag. Other
- maintainers may differ.
- When you run the above command ``git`` will drop you into an editor and ask
- you to describe the tag. In this case, you are describing a pull request,
- so outline what is contained here, why it should be merged, and what, if
- any, testing has been done. All of this information will end up in the tag
- itself, and then in the merge commit that the maintainer makes if/when they
- merge the pull request. So write it up well, as it will be in the kernel
- tree for forever.
- As said by Linus::
- Anyway, at least to me, the important part is the *message*. I want
- to understand what I'm pulling, and why I should pull it. I also
- want to use that message as the message for the merge, so it should
- not just make sense to me, but make sense as a historical record
- too.
- Note that if there is something odd about the pull request, that
- should very much be in the explanation. If you're touching files
- that you don't maintain, explain _why_. I will see it in the
- diffstat anyway, and if you didn't mention it, I'll just be extra
- suspicious. And when you send me new stuff after the merge window
- (or even bug-fixes, but ones that look scary), explain not just
- what they do and why they do it, but explain the _timing_. What
- happened that this didn't go through the merge window..
- I will take both what you write in the email pull request _and_ in
- the signed tag, so depending on your workflow, you can either
- describe your work in the signed tag (which will also automatically
- make it into the pull request email), or you can make the signed
- tag just a placeholder with nothing interesting in it, and describe
- the work later when you actually send me the pull request.
- And yes, I will edit the message. Partly because I tend to do just
- trivial formatting (the whole indentation and quoting etc), but
- partly because part of the message may make sense for me at pull
- time (describing the conflicts and your personal issues for sending
- it right now), but may not make sense in the context of a merge
- commit message, so I will try to make it all make sense. I will
- also fix any speeling mistaeks and bad grammar I notice,
- particularly for non-native speakers (but also for native ones
- ;^). But I may miss some, or even add some.
- Linus
- Greg gives, as an example pull request::
- Char/Misc patches for 4.15-rc1
- Here is the big char/misc patch set for the 4.15-rc1 merge window.
- Contained in here is the normal set of new functions added to all
- of these crazy drivers, as well as the following brand new
- subsystems:
- - time_travel_controller: Finally a set of drivers for the
- latest time travel bus architecture that provides i/o to
- the CPU before it asked for it, allowing uninterrupted
- processing
- - relativity_shifters: due to the affect that the
- time_travel_controllers have on the overall system, there
- was a need for a new set of relativity shifter drivers to
- accommodate the newly formed black holes that would
- threaten to suck CPUs into them. This subsystem handles
- this in a way to successfully neutralize the problems.
- There is a Kconfig option to force these to be enabled
- when needed, so problems should not occur.
- All of these patches have been successfully tested in the latest
- linux-next releases, and the original problems that it found have
- all been resolved (apologies to anyone living near Canberra for the
- lack of the Kconfig options in the earlier versions of the
- linux-next tree creations.)
- Signed-off-by: Your-name-here <your_email@domain>
- The tag message format is just like a git commit id. One line at the top
- for a "summary subject" and be sure to sign-off at the bottom.
- Now that you have a local signed tag, you need to push it up to where it
- can be retrieved::
- git push origin char-misc-4.15-rc1
- Create Pull Request
- -------------------
- The last thing to do is create the pull request message. ``git`` handily
- will do this for you with the ``git request-pull`` command, but it needs a
- bit of help determining what you want to pull, and on what to base the pull
- against (to show the correct changes to be pulled and the diffstat). The
- following command(s) will generate a pull request::
- git request-pull master git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc.git/ char-misc-4.15-rc1
- Quoting Greg::
- This is asking git to compare the difference from the
- 'char-misc-4.15-rc1' tag location, to the head of the 'master'
- branch (which in my case points to the last location in Linus's
- tree that I diverged from, usually a -rc release) and to use the
- git:// protocol to pull from. If you wish to use https://, that
- can be used here instead as well (but note that some people behind
- firewalls will have problems with https git pulls).
- If the char-misc-4.15-rc1 tag is not present in the repo that I am
- asking to be pulled from, git will complain saying it is not there,
- a handy way to remember to actually push it to a public location.
- The output of 'git request-pull' will contain the location of the
- git tree and specific tag to pull from, and the full text
- description of that tag (which is why you need to provide good
- information in that tag). It will also create a diffstat of the
- pull request, and a shortlog of the individual commits that the
- pull request will provide.
- Linus responded that he tends to prefer the ``git://`` protocol. Other
- maintainers may have different preferences. Also, note that if you are
- creating pull requests without a signed tag then ``https://`` may be a
- better choice. Please see the original thread for the full discussion.
- Submit Pull Request
- -------------------
- A pull request is submitted in the same way as an ordinary patch. Send as
- inline email to the maintainer and CC LKML and any sub-system specific
- lists if required. Pull requests to Linus typically have a subject line
- something like::
- [GIT PULL] <subsystem> changes for v4.15-rc1
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