FEA-Bench / testbed /django__django /docs /internals /contributing /writing-code /working-with-git.txt
| =========================== | |
| Working with Git and GitHub | |
| =========================== | |
| This section explains how the community can contribute code to Django via pull | |
| requests. If you're interested in how :ref:`mergers <mergers-team>` handle | |
| them, see :doc:`../committing-code`. | |
| Below, we are going to show how to create a GitHub pull request containing the | |
| changes for Trac ticket #xxxxx. By creating a fully-ready pull request, you | |
| will make the reviewer's job easier, meaning that your work is more likely to | |
| be merged into Django. | |
| You could also upload a traditional patch to Trac, but it's less practical for | |
| reviews. | |
| Installing Git | |
| ============== | |
| Django uses `Git`_ for its source control. You can `download | |
| <https://git-scm.com/download>`_ Git, but it's often easier to install with | |
| your operating system's package manager. | |
| Django's `Git repository`_ is hosted on `GitHub`_, and it is recommended | |
| that you also work using GitHub. | |
| After installing Git, the first thing you should do is set up your name and | |
| email: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| $ git config --global user.name "Your Real Name" | |
| $ git config --global user.email "you@email.com" | |
| Note that ``user.name`` should be your real name, not your GitHub nick. GitHub | |
| should know the email you use in the ``user.email`` field, as this will be | |
| used to associate your commits with your GitHub account. | |
| .. _Git: https://git-scm.com/ | |
| .. _Git repository: https://github.com/django/django/ | |
| .. _GitHub: https://github.com/ | |
| Setting up local repository | |
| =========================== | |
| When you have created your GitHub account, with the nick "GitHub_nick", and | |
| `forked Django's repository <https://github.com/django/django/fork>`__, | |
| create a local copy of your fork: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git clone https://github.com/GitHub_nick/django.git | |
| This will create a new directory "django", containing a clone of your GitHub | |
| repository. The rest of the git commands on this page need to be run within the | |
| cloned directory, so switch to it now: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| cd django | |
| Your GitHub repository will be called "origin" in Git. | |
| You should also set up ``django/django`` as an "upstream" remote (that is, tell | |
| git that the reference Django repository was the source of your fork of it): | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git remote add upstream https://github.com/django/django.git | |
| git fetch upstream | |
| You can add other remotes similarly, for example: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git remote add akaariai https://github.com/akaariai/django.git | |
| Working on a ticket | |
| =================== | |
| When working on a ticket, create a new branch for the work, and base that work | |
| on ``upstream/main``: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git checkout -b ticket_xxxxx upstream/main | |
| The -b flag creates a new branch for you locally. Don't hesitate to create new | |
| branches even for the smallest things - that's what they are there for. | |
| If instead you were working for a fix on the 1.4 branch, you would do: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git checkout -b ticket_xxxxx_1_4 upstream/stable/1.4.x | |
| Assume the work is carried on the ticket_xxxxx branch. Make some changes and | |
| commit them: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git commit | |
| When writing the commit message, follow the :ref:`commit message | |
| guidelines <committing-guidelines>` to ease the work of the merger. If you're | |
| uncomfortable with English, try at least to describe precisely what the commit | |
| does. | |
| If you need to do additional work on your branch, commit as often as | |
| necessary: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git commit -m 'Added two more tests for edge cases' | |
| Publishing work | |
| --------------- | |
| You can publish your work on GitHub by running: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git push origin ticket_xxxxx | |
| When you go to your GitHub page, you will notice a new branch has been created. | |
| If you are working on a Trac ticket, you should mention in the ticket that | |
| your work is available from branch ticket_xxxxx of your GitHub repo. Include a | |
| link to your branch. | |
| Note that the above branch is called a "topic branch" in Git parlance. You are | |
| free to rewrite the history of this branch, by using ``git rebase`` for | |
| example. Other people shouldn't base their work on such a branch, because | |
| their clone would become corrupt when you edit commits. | |
| There are also "public branches". These are branches other people are supposed | |
| to fork, so the history of these branches should never change. Good examples | |
| of public branches are the ``main`` and ``stable/A.B.x`` branches in the | |
| ``django/django`` repository. | |
| When you think your work is ready to be pulled into Django, you should create | |
| a pull request at GitHub. A good pull request means: | |
| * commits with one logical change in each, following the | |
| :doc:`coding style <coding-style>`, | |
| * well-formed messages for each commit: a summary line and then paragraphs | |
| wrapped at 72 characters thereafter -- see the :ref:`committing guidelines | |
| <committing-guidelines>` for more details, | |
| * documentation and tests, if needed -- actually tests are always needed, | |
| except for documentation changes. | |
| The test suite must pass and the documentation must build without warnings. | |
| Once you have created your pull request, you should add a comment in the | |
| related Trac ticket explaining what you've done. In particular, you should note | |
| the environment in which you ran the tests, for instance: "all tests pass | |
| under SQLite and MySQL". | |
| Pull requests at GitHub have only two states: open and closed. The merger who | |
| will deal with your pull request has only two options: merge it or close it. | |
| For this reason, it isn't useful to make a pull request until the code is ready | |
| for merging -- or sufficiently close that a merger will finish it themselves. | |
| Rebasing branches | |
| ----------------- | |
| In the example above, you created two commits, the "Fixed ticket_xxxxx" commit | |
| and "Added two more tests" commit. | |
| We do not want to have the entire history of your working process in your | |
| repository. Your commit "Added two more tests" would be unhelpful noise. | |
| Instead, we would rather only have one commit containing all your work. | |
| To rework the history of your branch you can squash the commits into one by | |
| using interactive rebase: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git rebase -i HEAD~2 | |
| The HEAD~2 above is shorthand for two latest commits. The above command | |
| will open an editor showing the two commits, prefixed with the word "pick". | |
| Change "pick" on the second line to "squash" instead. This will keep the | |
| first commit, and squash the second commit into the first one. Save and quit | |
| the editor. A second editor window should open, so you can reword the | |
| commit message for the commit now that it includes both your steps. | |
| You can also use the "edit" option in rebase. This way you can change a single | |
| commit, for example to fix a typo in a docstring: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git rebase -i HEAD~3 | |
| # Choose edit, pick, pick for the commits | |
| # Now you are able to rework the commit (use git add normally to add changes) | |
| # When finished, commit work with "--amend" and continue | |
| git commit --amend | |
| # Reword the commit message if needed | |
| git rebase --continue | |
| # The second and third commits should be applied. | |
| If your topic branch is already published at GitHub, for example if you're | |
| making minor changes to take into account a review, you will need to force-push | |
| the changes: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git push -f origin ticket_xxxxx | |
| Note that this will rewrite history of ticket_xxxxx - if you check the commit | |
| hashes before and after the operation at GitHub you will notice that the commit | |
| hashes do not match anymore. This is acceptable, as the branch is a topic | |
| branch, and nobody should be basing their work on it. | |
| After upstream has changed | |
| -------------------------- | |
| When upstream (``django/django``) has changed, you should rebase your work. To | |
| do this, use: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git fetch upstream | |
| git rebase upstream/main | |
| The work is automatically rebased using the branch you forked on, in the | |
| example case using ``upstream/main``. | |
| The rebase command removes all your local commits temporarily, applies the | |
| upstream commits, and then applies your local commits again on the work. | |
| If there are merge conflicts, you will need to resolve them and then use ``git | |
| rebase --continue``. At any point you can use ``git rebase --abort`` to return | |
| to the original state. | |
| Note that you want to *rebase* on upstream, not *merge* the upstream. | |
| The reason for this is that by rebasing, your commits will always be *on | |
| top of* the upstream's work, not *mixed in with* the changes in the upstream. | |
| This way your branch will contain only commits related to its topic, which | |
| makes squashing easier. | |
| After review | |
| ------------ | |
| It is unusual to get any non-trivial amount of code into core without changes | |
| requested by reviewers. In this case, it is often a good idea to add the | |
| changes as one incremental commit to your work. This allows the reviewer to | |
| easily check what changes you have done. | |
| In this case, do the changes required by the reviewer. Commit as often as | |
| necessary. Before publishing the changes, rebase your work. If you added two | |
| commits, you would run: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git rebase -i HEAD~2 | |
| Squash the second commit into the first. Write a commit message along the lines | |
| of: | |
| .. code-block:: text | |
| Made changes asked in review by <reviewer> | |
| - Fixed whitespace errors in foobar | |
| - Reworded the docstring of bar() | |
| Finally, push your work back to your GitHub repository. Since you didn't touch | |
| the public commits during the rebase, you should not need to force-push: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git push origin ticket_xxxxx | |
| Your pull request should now contain the new commit too. | |
| Note that the merger is likely to squash the review commit into the previous | |
| commit when committing the code. | |
| Working on a patch | |
| ================== | |
| One of the ways that developers can contribute to Django is by reviewing | |
| patches. Those patches will typically exist as pull requests on GitHub and | |
| can be easily integrated into your local repository: | |
| .. code-block:: shell | |
| git checkout -b pull_xxxxx upstream/main | |
| curl -L https://github.com/django/django/pull/xxxxx.patch | git am | |
| This will create a new branch and then apply the changes from the pull request | |
| to it. At this point you can run the tests or do anything else you need to | |
| do to investigate the quality of the patch. | |
| For more detail on working with pull requests see the | |
| :ref:`guidelines for mergers <handling-pull-requests>`. | |
| Summary | |
| ======= | |
| * Work on GitHub if you can. | |
| * Announce your work on the Trac ticket by linking to your GitHub branch. | |
| * When you have something ready, make a pull request. | |
| * Make your pull requests as good as you can. | |
| * When doing fixes to your work, use ``git rebase -i`` to squash the commits. | |
| * When upstream has changed, do ``git fetch upstream; git rebase``. | |