| ============================================================================ |
| = This file |
| |
| * This file attempts to describe the rules to use when hacking |
| automake. |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Administrivia |
| |
| * The correct response to most actual bugs is to write a new test case |
| which demonstrates the bug. Then fix the bug, re-run the test suite, |
| and check everything in. |
| |
| * If you incorporate a change from somebody on the net: |
| - First, if it is a large change, you must make sure they have |
| signed the appropriate paperwork. |
| - Second, be sure to add their name and email address to THANKS. |
| |
| * If a change fixes a test, mention the test in the commit message. |
| If a change fixes a bug registered in the Automake debbugs tracker, |
| mention the bug number in the commit message. |
| |
| * If somebody reports a new bug, mention his name in the commit message |
| that fixes or exposes the bug, and put him into THANKS. |
| |
| * When documenting a non-trivial idiom or example in the manual, be |
| sure to add a test case for it, and to reference such test case from |
| a proper Texinfo comment. |
| |
| * Some files in the automake package are not owned by automake; these |
| files are listed in the $(FETCHFILES) variable in Makefile.am. They |
| should never be edited here. Almost all of them can be updated from |
| respective upstreams with "make fetch" (this should be done especially |
| before releases). The only exception is the 'lib/COPYING' (from FSF), |
| which should be updated by hand whenever the GPL gets updated (which |
| shouldn't happen that often anyway :-) |
| |
| * Changes other than *trivial* bug fixes must be mentioned in NEWS. |
| |
| * Changes which are potentially controversial, require a non-trivial |
| plan, or must be implemented gradually with a roadmap spanning several |
| releases (either minor or major) should be discussed on the list, |
| and have a proper entry in the PLANS directory. This entry should be |
| always committed in the "maint" branch, even if the change it deals |
| with is only for the master branch, or a topic branch. Usually, in |
| addition to this, it is useful to open a "wishlist" report on the |
| Automake debbugs tracker, to keep the idea more visible, and have the |
| discussions surrounding it easily archived in a central place. |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Naming |
| |
| * We've adopted the convention that internal AC_SUBSTs and make variables |
| should be named with a leading 'am__', and internally generated targets |
| should be named with a leading 'am--'. This convention, although in |
| place from at least February 2001, isn't yet universally used. |
| But all new code should use it. |
| |
| We used to use '_am_' as the prefix for an internal AC_SUBSTs. |
| However, it turns out that NEWS-OS 4.2R complains if a Makefile |
| variable begins with the underscore character. Yay for them. |
| I changed the target naming convention just to be safe. |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Editing '.am' files |
| |
| * Always use $(...) and not ${...} |
| |
| * Prefer ':' over 'true', mostly for consistency with existing code. |
| |
| * Use '##' comments liberally. Comment anything even remotely unusual. |
| |
| * Never use basename or dirname. Instead, use sed. |
| |
| * Do not use 'cd' within back-quotes, use '$(am__cd)' instead. |
| Otherwise the directory name may be printed, depending on CDPATH. |
| More generally, do not ever use plain 'cd' together with a relative |
| directory that does not start with a dot, or you might end up in one |
| computed with CDPATH. |
| |
| * For install and uninstall rules, if a loop is required, it should be |
| silent. Then the body of the loop itself should print each "important" |
| command it runs. The printed commands should be preceded by a single |
| space. |
| |
| * Ensure install rules do not create any installation directory where |
| nothing is to be actually installed. See automake bug#11030. |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Editing automake.in and aclocal.in |
| |
| * Indent using GNU style. For historical reasons, the perl code |
| contains portions indented using Larry Wall's style (perl-mode's |
| default), and other portions using the GNU style (cperl-mode's |
| default). Write new code using GNU style. |
| |
| * Don't use & for function calls, unless really required. |
| The use of & prevents prototypes from being checked. |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Automake versioning and compatibility scheme |
| |
| * There are three kinds of automake releases: |
| |
| - new major releases (e.g., 2.0, 5.0) |
| - new minor releases (e.g., 1.14, 2.1) |
| - micro a.k.a. "bug-fixing" releases (e.g., 1.13.2, 2.0.1, 3.5.17). |
| |
| A new major release should have the major version number bumped, and |
| the minor and micro version numbers reset to zero. A new minor release |
| should have the major version number unchanged, the minor version number |
| bumped, and the micro version number reset to zero. Finally, a new |
| micro version should have the major and minor version numbers unchanged, |
| and the micro version number bumped by one. |
| |
| For example, the first minor version after 1.13.2 will be 1.14; the |
| first bug-fixing version after 1.14 that will be 1.14.1; the first |
| new major version after all such releases will be 2.0; the first |
| bug-fixing version after 2.0 will be 2.0.1; and a further bug-fixing |
| version after 2.0.1 will be 2.0.2. |
| |
| * Micro releases should be just bug-fixing releases; no new features |
| should be added, and ideally, only trivial bugs, recent regressions, |
| or documentation issues should be addressed by them. On the other |
| hand, it's OK to include testsuite work and even testsuite refactoring |
| in a micro version, since a regression there is not going to annoy or |
| inconvenience Automake users, but only the Automake developers. |
| |
| * Minor releases can introduce new "safe" features, do non-trivial but |
| mostly safe code clean-ups, and even add new runtime warnings (rigorously |
| non-fatal). But they shouldn't include any backward incompatible change, |
| nor contain any potentially destabilizing refactoring or sweeping change, |
| nor introduce new features whose implementation might be liable to cause |
| bugs or regressions in existing code. However, it might be acceptable to |
| introduce very limited and localized backward-incompatibilities, *only* |
| if that is necessary to fix non-trivial bugs, address serious performance |
| issues, or greatly enhance usability. But please, do this sparsely and |
| rarely! |
| |
| * Major releases can introduce backward-incompatibilities (albeit such |
| incompatibilities should be announced well in advance, and a smooth |
| transition plan prepared for them), and try more risking and daring |
| refactorings and code cleanups. |
| |
| * For more information, refer to the extensive discussion associated |
| with automake bug#13578. |
| |
| =========================================================================== |
| = Setting the development environment |
| |
| * The required and optional dependencies used by Automake and its test suite |
| can be automatically fetched using the GNU Guix package manager with the |
| following command: |
| |
| $ guix environment automake --ad-hoc \ |
| gettext help2man texinfo libtool flex bison dejagnu zip icedtea \ |
| python gcc-toolchain gfortran pkg-config vala |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Working with git |
| |
| * To regenerate dependent files created by aclocal and automake, |
| use the 'bootstrap' script. It uses the code from the source |
| tree, so the resulting files (aclocal.m4 and Makefile.in) should |
| be the same as you would get if you install this version of |
| automake and use it to generate those files. Be sure to have the |
| latest stable version of Autoconf installed and available early |
| in your PATH. |
| |
| * The Automake git tree currently carries three basic branches: 'master', |
| 'next' and 'maint'. |
| |
| * The 'master' branch is where the development of the next release |
| takes place. It should be kept in a stable, almost-releasable state, |
| to simplify testing and deploying of new minor version. Note that |
| this is not a hard rule, and such "stability" is not expected to be |
| absolute (emergency releases are cut from the 'maint' branch anyway). |
| |
| * When planning a release a dedicated branch should be created and after |
| the release is done, the release branch is to be merged both into the |
| 'master' branch and the 'maint' branch. |
| |
| * Besides merges from release branches, the 'maint' branch can contain |
| fixes for regressions, trivial bugs, or documentation issues, that |
| will be part of an emergency regression-fixing or security releases. |
| As a consequence it should always be kept in a releasable state and no |
| "active" development should be done whatsoever. |
| |
| * The 'next' branch is reserved for the development of the next major |
| release. Experimenting a little is OK here, but don't let the branch |
| grow too unstable; if you need to do exploratory programming or |
| over-arching change, you should use a dedicated topic branch, and |
| only merge that back once it is reasonably stable. |
| |
| * The 'master' branch should be kept regularly merged into the 'next' |
| branch. It is advisable to merge only after a set of related |
| commits have been applied, to avoid introducing too much noise in |
| the history. |
| |
| * There may be a number of longer-lived feature branches for new |
| developments. They should be based off of a common ancestor of all |
| active branches to which the feature should or might be merged later. |
| |
| * When merging, prefer 'git merge --log' over plain 'git merge', so that |
| a later 'git log' gives an indication of which actual patches were |
| merged even when they don't appear early in the list. |
| |
| * The 'master', 'maint' and 'next' branches should not be rewound, |
| i.e., should always fast-forward, except maybe for privacy issues. |
| For feature branches, the announcement for the branch should |
| document the rewinding policy. |
| If a topic branch is expected to be rewound, it is good practice to put |
| it in the 'experimental/*' namespace; for example, a rewindable branch |
| dealing with Vala support could be named like "experimental/vala-work". |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Writing a good commit message |
| |
| * Here is the general format that Automake's commit messages are expected |
| to follow. See the further points below for clarifications and minor |
| corrections. |
| |
| topic: brief description (this is the "summary line") |
| |
| <reference to relevant bugs, if any> |
| |
| Here goes a more detailed explanation of why the commit is needed, |
| and a general overview of what it does, and how. This section |
| should almost always be provided, possibly only with the expection |
| of obvious fixes or very trivial changes. |
| |
| And if the detailed explanation is quite long or detailed, you can |
| want to break it in more paragraphs. |
| |
| Then you can add references to relevant mailing list discussions |
| (if any), with proper links. But don't take this as an excuse for |
| writing incomplete commit messages! The "distilled" conclusions |
| reached in such discussions should have been placed in the |
| paragraphs above. |
| |
| Finally, here you can thank people that motivated or helped the |
| change. So, thanks to John Doe for bringing up the issue, and to |
| J. Random Hacker for providing suggestions and testing the patch. |
| |
| <detailed list of touched files> |
| |
| * The <detailed list of touched files> should usually be provided (but |
| for short or trivial changes), and should follow the GNU guidelines |
| for ChangeLog entries (described explicitly in the GNU Coding |
| Standards); it might be something of this sort: |
| |
| * some/file (func1): Improved frobnication. |
| (func2): Adjusted accordingly. |
| * another/file (foo, bar): Likewise. |
| * tests/foo.tap: New test. |
| * tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it. |
| |
| * If your commit fixes an automake bug registered in the tracker (say |
| numbered 1234), you should put the following line after the summary |
| line: |
| |
| This change fixes automake bug#1234. |
| |
| * If your commit is just related to the given bug report, but does not |
| fix it, you might want to add a line like this instead: |
| |
| This change is related to automake bug#1234. |
| |
| * When referring to older commits, use 'git describe' output as pointer. |
| But also try to identify the given commit by date and/or summary line |
| if possible. Examples: |
| |
| Since yesterday's commit, v1.11-2019-g4d2bf42, ... |
| |
| ... removed in commit 'v1.11-1674-g02e9072' of 01-01-2012, |
| "dist: ditch support for lzma"... |
| |
| * If the commit is a tiny change that is exempt from copyright paperwork, the |
| commit message should contain a separate line after the detailed list of |
| touched files like the following: |
| |
| Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Test suite |
| |
| * Use "make check" and "make maintainer-check" liberally. |
| |
| * Export the 'keep_testdirs' environment variable to "yes" to keep |
| test directories for successful tests also. |
| |
| * Use perl coverage information to ensure your new code is thoroughly |
| tested by your new tests. |
| |
| * See file 't/README' for more information. |
| |
| ============================================================================ |
| = Release procedure |
| |
| * The steps outlined here are meant to be followed for alpha and stable |
| releases as well. Where differences are expected, they will be |
| explicitly described. |
| |
| * Fetch new versions of the files that are maintained by the FSF by |
| running "make fetch". In case any file in the automake repository |
| has been updated, commit and re-run the testsuite. |
| |
| * Ensure that the copyright notices of the distributed files is up to |
| date. The maintainer-only target "update-copyright" can help with |
| this. |
| |
| * Check NEWS; in particular, ensure that all the relevant differences |
| with the last release are actually reported. |
| |
| * Update the version number in configure.ac. |
| (The idea is that every other alpha number will be a net release. |
| The repository will always have its own "odd" number so we can easily |
| distinguish net and repo versions.) |
| |
| * Run these commands, in this order: |
| |
| make bootstrap |
| make check keep_testdirs=yes |
| make maintainer-check |
| make distcheck |
| make check-no-trailing-backslash-in-recipes |
| make check-cc-no-c-o |
| |
| It is also advised to run "git clean -fdx" before invoking the |
| bootstrap, to ensure a really clean rebuild. However, it must |
| be done carefully, because that command will remove *all* the |
| files that are not tracked by git! |
| |
| * Run "make git-tag-release". |
| This will run the maintainer checks, verify that the local git |
| repository and working tree are clean and up-to-date, and create |
| a proper signed git tag for the release (based on the contents |
| of $(VERSION)). |
| |
| * Run "make git-upload-release". |
| This will first verify that you are releasing from a tagged version |
| and that the local git repository and working tree are clean and |
| up-to-date, and will then run "make dist" to create the tarballs, |
| and invoke the 'gnupload' script sign and upload them to the correct |
| locations. In case you need to sign with a non-default key, you can |
| use "make GNUPLOADFLAGS='--user KEY' git-upload-release". |
| |
| * For stable releases you'll have to update the manuals at www.gnu.org. |
| |
| - Generate manuals (with the help of the standard gendocs.sh script): |
| |
| make web-manual |
| |
| The ready-to-be-uploaded manuals (in several formats) will be left |
| in the 'doc/web-manuals' directory. |
| |
| - Commit the updated manuals to web CVS: |
| |
| make web-manual-update |
| |
| If your local username is different from your username at Savannah, |
| you'll have to override the 'CVS_USER' make variable accordingly; |
| for example: |
| |
| make web-manual-update CVS_USER=slattarini |
| |
| - Check for link errors, fix them, recheck until convergence: |
| <http://validator.w3.org/checklink> |
| |
| * Create an announcement message with "make announcement". Edit the |
| generated 'announcement' file appropriately, in particularly filling |
| in by hand any "TODO" left in there. |
| |
| * Update version number in configure.ac to next alpha number. |
| Re-run ./bootstrap and commit. |
| |
| * Don't forget to "git push" your changes so they appear in the public |
| git tree. |
| |
| * Send the announcement generated in the earlier steps at least to |
| <autotools-announce@gnu.org> and <automake@gnu.org>. If the release |
| is a stable one, the announcement must also go to <info-gnu@gnu.org>; |
| if it is an alpha or beta release, announcement should be sent also |
| to <platform-testers@gnu.org>, to maximize the possibility of early |
| testing on exotic or proprietary systems. Finally, copy an abridged |
| version of the announcement into the NEWS feed at: |
| <https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/automake>. |
| Be sure to link a version to the complete announcement (from |
| the version you sent to the automake list, as get archived on |
| <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/automake/>). |
| |
| ----- |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2003-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) |
| any later version. |
| |
| This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| GNU General Public License for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |
| |
| Local Variables: |
| mode: text |
| End: |