Project

General

Profile

Gerrit » History » Version 42

neels, 07/12/2016 01:13 PM

1 1 zecke
h1. Contributing using Gerrit
2
3 11 laforge
{{>toc}}
4
5 10 laforge
At [[OpenBSC:OsmoDevCon2016]] we discussed problems with our past contribution / patch submission process using mails on the mailing list as well as patchwork.  The result is that we want to give Gerrit a try for some time and see if it helps us to have a better process
6 1 zecke
7 10 laforge
Gerrit is a review tool that integrates nicely with git and ssh. You can find general information about Gerrit at https://www.gerritcodereview.com/
8 1 zecke
9 10 laforge
The advantages of Gerrit are:
10
* patch submission status is automatically tracked, also with several revisions for a patch set.
11
* patches are build-tested (and possibly even further tested) by jenkins before they are applied
12
* developers + maintainers can formally vote on a patch (developer: -1/0/+1, maintainer: -2/0/+2)
13
* once a patch has +2 score, it can be (automatically) merged into master
14
* patch sumissions not via git send-email but direcly from git
15
16
h2. Osmocom Subprojects using Gerrit
17
18 1 zecke
The following projects use Gerrit to contribute changes:
19
20
* libosmocore.git
21
* libosmo-abis.git
22
* libosmo-netif.git
23
* libosmo-sccp.git
24
* libsmpp34.git
25
* openbsc.git
26
* osmo-bts.git
27
* osmo-iuh.git
28
* osmo-pcu.git
29 5 zecke
* cellmgr-ng.git
30 1 zecke
* osmo-sip-connector.git
31 30 neels
32 1 zecke
h2. Configuring Gerrit/Account
33
34 10 laforge
You will need to sign-up at https://gerrit.osmocom.org/login/. If you have an Osmocom Redmine account you can use https://osmocom.org/openid as OpenID provider. If you have no Osmocom redmine account, you can simply create one online at the "Register" link in the upper right corner.
35
36
Even without an existing or new redmine account, you should also be able to use any other OpenID provider to authenticate against gerrit (untested).
37
38
After the initial sign-up you will need to:
39 1 zecke
40
* Pick a username (can not be changed)
41
* Add your public ssh key(s)
42
* Add email addresses you intend to use as author/comitter
43 30 neels
44
If you would like to push private branches to the Gerrit repository, you also need to be added to the "known users" group.
45
Please send a short requesting email to openbsc@lists.osmocom.org.
46 1 zecke
47
h2. Setting up Gerrit for commits and pushing
48
49 33 neels
*Note:* it is easiest to work with gerrit when gerrit is the only remote in your git clone.
50
When you clone from git.osmocom.org and add the gerrit remote, git will have two remotes,
51 36 neels
so when you first checkout a branch you have to supply the remote explicitly (cumbersome).
52 34 neels
The gerrit repositories and git.osmocom.org are constantly synced, so it is sufficient
53
to clone from gerrit only.
54 33 neels
55
h3. Simplest: new clone
56
57 35 neels
* Create a new clone from gerrit
58
* Fetch the commit hook that adds Change-Id to each commit to uniquely identify a commit
59 42 neels
60 33 neels
<pre>
61
git clone ssh://$USERNAME@gerrit.osmocom.org:29418/$PROJECT.git
62
scp -P 29418 $USERNAME@gerrit.osmocom.org:hooks/commit-msg $PROJECT/.git/hooks/
63
</pre>
64
65
h3. SSH config
66
67
In '~/.ssh/config', add these lines:
68
<pre>
69
Host foo
70
Hostname gerrit.osmocom.org
71
Port 29418
72
User $USERNAME
73
</pre>
74
(replace 'foo' with your favorite shortcut name,
75
replace '$USERNAME' with your user name as used on the gerrit website)
76
77
Then you can shorten above commands to
78 1 zecke
<pre>
79 33 neels
git clone ssh://foo/$PROJECT.git
80 35 neels
scp foo:hooks/commit-msg $PROJECT/.git/hooks/
81 33 neels
</pre>
82
83
h3. Add gerrit to an existing clone
84
85 7 neels
* Add the remote to be able to fetch and push to gerrit
86
* Fetch the commit hook that adds Change-Id to each commit to uniquely identify a commit
87
88
<pre>
89
USERNAME=gerrit_user_name
90
PROJECT=$(basename $PWD)
91
git remote add gerrit ssh://$USERNAME@gerrit.osmocom.org:29418/$PROJECT.git
92
scp -P 29418 $USERNAME@gerrit.osmocom.org:hooks/commit-msg .git/hooks/
93
</pre>
94
95 33 neels
h2. Push for review
96 1 zecke
97 38 neels
Checkout the revision or branch that you want to submit for review, then
98
99 31 neels
<pre>
100 40 neels
git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master
101 1 zecke
</pre>
102 38 neels
103 1 zecke
You can optionally add a topic name with
104 40 neels
105
<pre>
106
git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master/my_topic
107
</pre>
108
109
If you've added gerrit as a remote named 'gerrit', instead use:
110 38 neels
111
<pre>
112
git push gerrit HEAD:refs/for/master/my_topic
113
</pre>
114
115 33 neels
h2. Push a "private" user branch
116
117
*Note* that you must be a member of the "known users" group, see above.
118 1 zecke
119 33 neels
If gerrit is your only remote, and if your local branch name is of the
120 41 neels
form 'your_name/topic', you can just
121 1 zecke
<pre>
122
git push
123 33 neels
</pre>
124 41 neels
and git will tell you what to do.
125 1 zecke
126 41 neels
To push from a "nonstandard" local branch name, do
127 33 neels
<pre>
128 41 neels
git push origin HEAD:refs/heads/$USERNAME/branch_name
129 31 neels
</pre>
130 7 neels
131 41 neels
If you've added gerrit as a secondary remote named 'gerrit', instead do
132 33 neels
<pre>
133 41 neels
git push gerrit
134 33 neels
</pre>
135 41 neels
136 33 neels
137
h2. List changesets in gerrit
138 39 neels
139
If gerrit is your only remote:
140
141
<pre>
142
git ls-remote origin changes/*
143
</pre>
144
145
or, if you've added gerrit as a second remote:
146
147 7 neels
<pre>
148
git ls-remote gerrit changes/*
149 2 zecke
</pre>
150 12 msuraev
151 17 neels
h1. Tips and Tricks
152 1 zecke
153 17 neels
h2. Throw-away branch
154
155
If you need to adjust and re-submit patches, it may be handy to create a throw-away branch ("R D" in magit-gerrit in emacs for example),
156
make your changes/amendments and than send patch(es) back to gerrit while removing temporary branch automatically with "git review -f".
157 13 neels
158 25 neels
h2. Re-submit a Branch with Amended Commits
159 13 neels
160 1 zecke
On a feature branch, one typically has numerous commits that depend on their preceding commits.
161 29 neels
Often, some of the branch commits need to be amended for fixes. But, Gerrit will refuse your branch
162
re-submission if the first branch commit is unchanged.
163 1 zecke
164 16 neels
To re-submit a branch, make sure to cosmetically tweak the branch's first commit log message
165 22 neels
before each re-submission (keep the Change-Id, really make just a cosmetic change).
166 13 neels
167 16 neels
<pre>
168
git rebase -i master
169
# replace the first line's 'pick' with 'r' (or 'reword'), exit editor
170
# git presents you with commit log message, make any tiny modification.
171 1 zecke
</pre>
172
173 29 neels
The cause: Gerrit refuses to accept a commit with a Change-Id that it already knows and
174
where the commit hash is identical.
175 1 zecke
176 29 neels
If you just cosmetically tweak the first commit's log message, the commit hash
177
is changed. Since the following commits contain their predecessor's commit hash, now
178
all of the branch's commit hashes are modified, and gerrit happily accepts them as a 
179
new patch set. It will still pick up the Change-Ids (which you shouldn't edit) and 
180
notice if commits have remained identical (keeping the votes). But with the minor
181
commit log tweak, it will no longer thwart your re-submission with an error message.
182
183
Note: you could modify all the Change-Ids, but now your branch submission would
184
open entirely new review entries and you would have to abandon your previous submission.
185
Comments on the first submission are lost and you cannot diff between patch sets.
186
187
188 26 neels
h2. Re-submit Previously Abandoned Changes
189 16 neels
190
You have to edit the Change-Ids, on a branch that would be every single commit log message.
191
192 13 neels
<pre>
193 1 zecke
cd openbsc
194
git co my-branch
195
git rebase -i master
196
# replace all 'pick' with 'r' (or 'reword'), exit your editor
197 13 neels
# git presents each commit log message for editing
198
</pre>
199
200 27 neels
h2. Submit a "private" branch for master
201 21 neels
202
If you've pushed a branch to refs/heads/* somewhere, gerrit will already know the Change-Ids on it.
203 24 neels
Make sure the option [[Gerrit#Private-Branches-Create-a-new-change-for-every-commit|Create a new change for every commit not in the target branch]] is _TRUE_ for your project,
204 21 neels
or gerrit will refuse to accept your submission.
205
206 16 neels
h1. Reasons for Particular Configuration
207 13 neels
208 16 neels
h2. Rebase if necessary
209
210
There are different merge strategies that Gerrit performs to accept patches.
211 13 neels
Each project can be configured to a specific merge strategy, but unfortunately you can't
212
decide on a strategy per patch submission.
213
214
It seems that the "Merge if Necessary" strategy is best supported, but it creates non-linear
215
history with numerous merge commits that are usually not at all necessary.
216
217
Instead, the "Cherry Pick" strategy puts each patch onto current master's HEAD to create
218
linear history. However, this will cause merge failures as soon as one patch depends on
219
another submitted patch, as typical for a feature branch submission.
220
221 1 zecke
So we prefer the "Rebase if Necessary" strategy, which always tries to apply your patches to
222 13 neels
the current master HEAD, in sequence with the previous patches on the same branch.
223
However, some problems still remain, including some bugs in "Rebase if Necessary".
224 1 zecke
225 13 neels
There's a problem with "Rebase if Necessary": If your branch sits at master's HEAD, Gerrit
226
refuses to accept the submission, because it thinks that no new changes are submitted.
227
This is a bug in Gerrit, which holger has fixed manually in our Gerrit installation:
228 1 zecke
229
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/gerrit/issues/detail?id=4158
230
231
232 16 neels
h2. Private Branches: Create a new change for every commit...
233 1 zecke
234 13 neels
Say you have an extensive feature in development, and you want to keep it on the
235
upstream git repository to a) keep it safe and b) collaborate with other devs on it.
236 16 neels
So, of course, you have regularly pushed to refs/heads/yoyodyne/feature.
237 13 neels
238
Since you have the gerrit commit hook installed, your feature branch already has
239
Change-Id tags in all commit log messages.
240
241
Now your feature is complete and you would like to submit it to master.
242
Alas, Gerrit refuses to accept your patch submission for master, because it
243
knows the Change-Ids are also on a different branch.
244
245 16 neels
Gerrit by default enforces that a Change-Id must be unique across all branches,
246
so that each submission for review is separate for each branch. Instead, we
247
want to handle Change-Ids per-branch, so that you can have the same change
248
submitted to different branches, as separate patch submissions, without having
249
to cosmetically adjust the Change-Id.
250 13 neels
251 16 neels
Solution: set the option 
252
_Create a new change for every commit not in the target branch_ to _TRUE_
253 13 neels
254 20 neels
h2. Allow content merges
255 14 neels
256
By default, gerrit compares patches only by the files' paths. If two paths are the same,
257
it immediately shows them as conflicts (path conflicts).
258
259
In software development, a conflict usually means an actual content conflict, so if the
260
edits are in two entirely separate places in the file, we don't consider this a conflict.
261
262 23 neels
By setting _Allow content merges_ to _TRUE_ in the git project config, we tell Gerrit to
263 14 neels
perform text merges of the submitted patches and only complain about actual content
264
conflicts, in the usual software engineering sense.
265 32 neels
266
h1. Admin
267
268
h2. Adding users to groups
269
270
Normally, the gerrit UI auto-completes a user name in the edit field. It has happened
271
though that an existing user is not auto-completed, as if it didn't exist. In that case,
272
find out the user ID (seven digit number like 1000123) and just enter that.
273
274
The user ID can be found on the user's "Settings" page, or in the database (s.b.).
275
276
h2. Querying the database directly
277
278
If your user has permission to access the database, you can place SQL queries using the
279
'gerrit gsql' commands over ssh:
280
281
<pre>
282
ssh -p 29418 $USERNAME@gerrit.osmocom.org 'gerrit gsql --format PRETTY -c "show tables"'
283
ssh -p 29418 $USERNAME@gerrit.osmocom.org 'gerrit gsql --format PRETTY -c "select full_name,account_id from accounts"'
284
</pre>
285
286
This seems to be the MySQL dialect.
Add picture from clipboard (Maximum size: 48.8 MB)