2015-07-07 15:46:59 -04:00
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Pull request reviewing process
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# Labels
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Labels are carefully picked to optimize for:
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- Readability: maintainers must immediately know the state of a PR
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- Filtering simplicity: different labels represent many different aspects of
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the reviewing work, and can even be targeted at different maintainers groups.
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2015-07-07 15:46:59 -04:00
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A pull request should only be attributed labels documented in this section: other labels that may
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exist on the repository should apply to issues.
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## DCO labels
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* `dco/no`: automatically set by a bot when one of the commits lacks proper signature
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## Status labels
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* `status/0-triage`
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* `status/1-design-review`
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* `status/2-code-review`
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* `status/3-docs-review`
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* `status/4-ready-to-merge`
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Special status labels:
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2016-03-01 17:51:15 -05:00
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* `status/failing-ci`: indicates that the PR in its current state fails the test suite
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* `status/needs-attention`: calls for a collective discussion during a review session
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## Specialty group labels
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Those labels are used to raise awareness of a particular specialty group, either because we need
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help in reviewing the PR, or because of the potential impact of the PR on their work:
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* `group/distribution`
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* `group/networking`
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* `group/security`
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* `group/windows`
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## Impact labels (apply to merged pull requests)
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* `impact/api`
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* `impact/changelog`
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* `impact/cli`
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* `impact/deprecation`
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* `impact/distribution`
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* `impact/dockerfile`
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# Workflow
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An opened pull request can be in 1 of 5 distinct states, for each of which there is a corresponding
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label that needs to be applied.
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## Triage - `status/0-triage`
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Maintainers are expected to triage new incoming pull requests by removing the `status/0-triage`
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label and adding the correct labels (e.g. `status/1-design-review`) before any other interaction
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with the PR. The starting label may potentially skip some steps depending on the kind of pull
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request: use your best judgement.
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Maintainers should perform an initial, high-level, overview of the pull request before moving it to
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the next appropriate stage:
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- Has DCO
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- Contains sufficient justification (e.g., usecases) for the proposed change
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- References the Github issue it fixes (if any) in the commit or the first Github comment
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Possible transitions from this state:
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* Close: e.g., unresponsive contributor without DCO
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* `status/1-design-review`: general case
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* `status/2-code-review`: e.g. trivial bugfix
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* `status/3-docs-review`: non-proposal documentation-only change
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## Design review - `status/1-design-review`
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Maintainers are expected to comment on the design of the pull request. Review of documentation is
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expected only in the context of design validation, not for stylistic changes.
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Ideally, documentation should reflect the expected behavior of the code. No code review should
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take place in this step.
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There are no strict rules on the way a design is validated: we usually aim for a consensus,
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although a single maintainer approval is often sufficient for obviously reasonable changes. In
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general, strong disagreement expressed by any of the maintainers should not be taken lightly.
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Once design is approved, a maintainer should make sure to remove this label and add the next one.
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Possible transitions from this state:
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* Close: design rejected
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* `status/2-code-review`: general case
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* `status/3-docs-review`: proposals with only documentation changes
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## Code review - `status/2-code-review`
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Maintainers are expected to review the code and ensure that it is good quality and in accordance
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with the documentation in the PR.
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New testcases are expected to be added. Ideally, those testcases should fail when the new code is
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absent, and pass when present. The testcases should strive to test as many variants, code paths, as
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possible to ensure maximum coverage.
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Changes to code must be reviewed and approved (LGTM'd) by a minimum of two code maintainers. When
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the author of a PR is a maintainer, he still needs the approval of two other maintainers.
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Once code is approved according to the rules of the subsystem, a maintainer should make sure to
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remove this label and add the next one. If documentation is absent but expected, maintainers should
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ask for documentation and move to status `status/3-docs-review` for docs maintainer to follow.
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Possible transitions from this state:
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* Close
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* `status/1-design-review`: new design concerns are raised
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* `status/3-docs-review`: general case
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* `status/4-ready-to-merge`: change not impacting documentation
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## Docs review - `status/3-docs-review`
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Maintainers are expected to review the documentation in its bigger context, ensuring consistency,
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completeness, validity, and breadth of coverage across all existing and new documentation.
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They should ask for any editorial change that makes the documentation more consistent and easier to
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understand.
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Changes and additions to docs must be reviewed and approved (LGTM'd) by a minimum of two docs
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sub-project maintainers. If the docs change originates with a docs maintainer, only one additional
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LGTM is required (since we assume a docs maintainer approves of their own PR).
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Once documentation is approved (see below), a maintainer should make sure to remove this label and
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add the next one.
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Possible transitions from this state:
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* Close
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* `status/1-design-review`: new design concerns are raised
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* `status/2-code-review`: requires more code changes
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* `status/4-ready-to-merge`: general case
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## Merge - `status/4-ready-to-merge`
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Maintainers are expected to merge this pull request as soon as possible. They can ask for a rebase
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or carry the pull request themselves.
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Possible transitions from this state:
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* Merge: general case
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* Close: carry PR
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After merging a pull request, the maintainer should consider applying one or multiple impact labels
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to ease future classification:
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* `impact/api` signifies the patch impacted the remote API
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* `impact/changelog` signifies the change is significant enough to make it in the changelog
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* `impact/cli` signifies the patch impacted a CLI command
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* `impact/dockerfile` signifies the patch impacted the Dockerfile syntax
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* `impact/deprecation` signifies the patch participates in deprecating an existing feature
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## Close
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If a pull request is closed it is expected that sufficient justification will be provided. In
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particular, if there are alternative ways of achieving the same net result then those needs to be
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spelled out. If the pull request is trying to solve a use case that is not one that we (as a
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community) want to support then a justification for why should be provided.
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The number of maintainers it takes to decide and close a PR is deliberately left unspecified. We
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assume that the group of maintainers is bound by mutual trust and respect, and that opposition from
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any single maintainer should be taken into consideration. Similarly, we expect maintainers to
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justify their reasoning and to accept debating.
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# Escalation process
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Despite the previously described reviewing process, some PR might not show any progress for various
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reasons:
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- No strong opinion for or against the proposed patch
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- Debates about the proper way to solve the problem at hand
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- Lack of consensus
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- ...
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All these will eventually lead to stalled PR, where no apparent progress is made across several
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weeks, or even months.
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Maintainers should use their best judgement and apply the `status/needs-attention` label. It must
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be used sparingly, as each PR with such label will be discussed by a group of maintainers during a
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review session. The goal of that session is to agree on one of the following outcomes for the PR:
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* Close, explaining the rationale for not pursuing further
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* Continue, either by pushing the PR further in the workflow, or by deciding to carry the patch
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(ideally, a maintainer should be immediately assigned to make sure that the PR keeps continued
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attention)
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* Escalate to Solomon by formulating a few specific questions on which his answers will allow
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maintainers to decide.
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