| // Copyright 2014 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style |
| // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| /* |
| Git-codereview manages the code review process for Git changes using a Gerrit |
| server. |
| |
| The git-codereview tool manages ``change branches'' in the local git repository. |
| Each such branch tracks a single commit, or ``pending change'', |
| that is reviewed using a Gerrit server; the Gerrit remote must be |
| named ``origin'' in the local git repo. |
| |
| Modifications to the pending change are applied by amending the commit. |
| This process implements the ``single-commit feature branch'' model. |
| Creating multiple-commit feature branches, for example to break a large |
| change into a reviewable sequence, is also supported; see the discussion below. |
| |
| Once installed as git-codereview, the tool's commands are available through git |
| either by running |
| |
| git codereview <command> |
| |
| or, if aliases are installed, as |
| |
| git <command> |
| |
| The review tool's command names do not conflict with any extant git commands. |
| This document uses the first form for clarity but most users install these |
| aliases in their .gitconfig file: |
| |
| [alias] |
| change = codereview change |
| gofmt = codereview gofmt |
| mail = codereview mail |
| pending = codereview pending |
| rebase-work = codereview rebase-work |
| submit = codereview submit |
| sync = codereview sync |
| |
| Single-Commit Work Branches |
| |
| For simple, unrelated changes, the typical usage of the git-codereview tool |
| is to place each pending change in its own Git branch. |
| In this workflow, the work branch contains |
| either no pending change beyond origin/master (when there's no local work) |
| or exactly one pending change beyond origin/master (the change being developed). |
| |
| When there is no pending change on the work branch, |
| ``git codereview change'' creates one by running ``git commit''. |
| Otherwise, when there is already a pending change, |
| ``git codereview change'' revises it by running ``git commit --amend''. |
| |
| The ``git codereview mail'' and ``git codereview submit'' commands |
| implicitly operate on the lone pending change. |
| |
| Multiple-Commit Work Branches |
| |
| Of course, it is not always feasible to put each pending change in a separate branch. |
| A sequence of changes that build on one another is more easily |
| managed as multiple commits on a single branch, and the git-codereview tool |
| supports this workflow as well. |
| To add a new pending change, invoke ``git commit'' directly, |
| instead of ``git codereview change''. |
| The git-codereview tool adjusts its behavior when there are |
| multiple pending changes. |
| |
| The ``git codereview change'' command amends the top commit in the stack (HEAD). |
| To amend a commit further down the stack, use Git's rebase support, |
| for example by using ``git commit --fixup'' followed by ``git codereview rebase-work''. |
| |
| The ``git codereview mail'' command requires an explicit revision argument, |
| but note that since ``git codereview mail'' is implemented as a ``git push'', |
| any commits earlier in the stack are necessarily also mailed. |
| |
| The ``git codereview submit'' command also requires an explicit revision argument, |
| and while earlier commits are necessarily still uploaded and mailed, |
| only the named revision or revisions are submitted (merged into origin/master). |
| In a single-commit work branch, a successful ``git codereview submit'' |
| effectively runs ``git codereview sync'' automatically. |
| In a multiple-commit work branch, it does not, because |
| the implied ``git rebase'' may conflict with the remaining pending commits. |
| Instead it is necessary to run ``git codereview sync'' explicitly |
| (when ready) after ``git codereview submit''. |
| |
| Reusing Work Branches |
| |
| Although one common practice is to create a new branch for each pending change, |
| running ``git codereview submit'' (and possibly ``git codereview sync'') |
| leaves the current branch ready for reuse with a future change. |
| Some developers find it helpful to create a single work branch |
| (``git change work'') and then do all work in that branch, |
| possibly in the multiple-commit mode, never changing between branches. |
| |
| Command Details |
| |
| All commands accept these global flags: |
| |
| The -v flag prints all commands that make changes. Multiple occurrences |
| trigger more verbosity in some commands, including sync. |
| |
| The -n flag prints all commands that would be run, but does not run them. |
| |
| Descriptions of each command follow. |
| |
| Branchpoint |
| |
| The branchpoint command prints the commit hash of the most recent commit |
| on the current branch that is shared with the Gerrit server. |
| |
| git codereview branchpoint |
| |
| This commit is the point where local work branched from the published tree. |
| The command is intended mainly for use in scripts. For example, |
| ``git diff $(git codereview branchpoint)'' or |
| ``git log $(git codereview branchpoint)..HEAD''. |
| |
| Change |
| |
| The change command creates and moves between Git branches and maintains the |
| pending changes on work branches. |
| |
| git codereview change [-a] [-q] [-m <message>] [branchname] |
| |
| Given a branch name as an argument, the change command switches to the named |
| branch, creating it if necessary. If the branch is created and there are staged |
| changes, it will commit the changes to the branch, creating a new pending |
| change. |
| |
| With no argument, the change command creates a new pending change from the |
| staged changes in the current branch or, if there is already a pending change, |
| amends that change. |
| |
| The -q option skips the editing of an extant pending change's commit message. |
| If -m is present, -q is ignored. |
| |
| The -a option automatically adds any unstaged edits in tracked files during |
| commit; it is equivalent to the 'git commit' -a option. |
| |
| The -m option specifies a commit message and skips the editor prompt. This |
| option is only useful when creating commits (e.g. if there are unstaged |
| changes). If a commit already exists, it is overwritten. If -q is also |
| present, -q will be ignored. |
| |
| Gofmt |
| |
| The gofmt command applies the gofmt program to all files modified in the |
| current work branch, both in the staging area (index) and the working tree |
| (local directory). |
| |
| git codereview gofmt [-l] |
| |
| The -l option causes the command to list the files that need reformatting but |
| not reformat them. Otherwise, the gofmt command reformats modified files in |
| place. That is, files in the staging area are reformatted in the staging area, |
| and files in the working tree are reformatted in the working tree. |
| |
| Help |
| |
| The help command displays basic usage instructions. |
| |
| git codereview help |
| |
| Hooks |
| |
| The hooks command installs the Git hooks to enforce code review conventions. |
| |
| git codereview hooks |
| |
| The pre-commit hook checks that all Go code is formatted with gofmt and that |
| the commit is not being made directly to the master branch. |
| |
| The commit-msg hook adds the Gerrit ``Change-Id'' line to the commit message if |
| not present. It also checks that the message uses the convention established by |
| the Go project that the first line has the form, pkg/path: summary. |
| |
| The hooks command will not overwrite an existing hook. |
| If it is not installing hooks, use ``git codereview hooks -v'' for details. |
| This hook installation is also done at startup by all other git codereview |
| commands, except ``git codereview help''. |
| |
| Hook-Invoke |
| |
| The hook-invoke command is an internal command that invokes the named Git hook. |
| |
| git codereview hook-invoke <hook> [args] |
| |
| It is run by the shell scripts installed by the ``git codereview hooks'' command. |
| |
| Mail |
| |
| The mail command starts the code review process for the pending change. |
| |
| git codereview mail [-f] [-r email] [-cc email] [-trybot] [revision] |
| |
| It pushes the pending change commit in the current branch to the Gerrit code |
| review server and prints the URL for the change on the server. |
| If the change already exists on the server, the mail command updates that |
| change with a new changeset. |
| |
| The -r and -cc flags identify the email addresses of people to do the code |
| review and to be CC'ed about the code review. |
| Multiple addresses are given as a comma-separated list. |
| |
| An email address passed to -r or -cc can be shortened from name@domain to name. |
| The mail command resolves such shortenings by reading the list of past reviewers |
| from the git repository log to find email addresses of the form name@somedomain |
| and then, in case of ambiguity, using the reviewer who appears most often. |
| |
| The -trybot flag runs the trybots on all new or updated changes. It is |
| equivalent to setting the Run-Trybot+1 label from Gerrit. |
| |
| The mail command fails if there are staged edits that are not committed. |
| The -f flag overrides this behavior. |
| |
| The mail command updates the tag <branchname>.mailed to refer to the |
| commit that was most recently mailed, so running ``git diff <branchname>.mailed'' |
| shows diffs between what is on the Gerrit server and the current directory. |
| |
| If there are multiple pending commits, the revision argument is mandatory. |
| If no revision is specified, the mail command prints a short summary of |
| the pending commits for use in deciding which to mail. |
| |
| If any commit that would be pushed to the server contains the text |
| "DO NOT MAIL" (case insensitive) in its commit message, the mail command |
| will refuse to send the commit to the server. |
| |
| Pending |
| |
| The pending command prints to standard output the status of all pending changes |
| and staged, unstaged, and untracked files in the local repository. |
| |
| git codereview pending [-c] [-l] [-s] |
| |
| The -c flag causes the command to show pending changes only on the current branch. |
| |
| The -l flag causes the command to use only locally available information. |
| By default, it fetches recent commits and code review information from the |
| Gerrit server. |
| |
| The -s flag causes the command to print abbreviated (short) output. |
| |
| Common shorter aliases include ``git p'' for ``git pending'' |
| and ``git pl'' for ``git pending -l'' (notably faster but without Gerrit information). |
| |
| Rebase-work |
| |
| The rebase-work command runs git rebase in interactive mode over pending changes. |
| It is shorthand for ``git rebase -i $(git codereview branchpoint)''. |
| It differs from plain ``git rebase -i'' in that the latter will try to incorporate |
| new commits from the origin branch during the rebase; |
| ``git codereview rebase-work'' does not. |
| |
| In multiple-commit workflows, rebase-work is used so often |
| that it can be helpful to alias it to ``git rw''. |
| |
| Submit |
| |
| The submit command pushes the pending change to the Gerrit server and tells |
| Gerrit to submit it to the master branch. |
| |
| git codereview submit [-i | revision...] |
| |
| The command fails if there are modified files (staged or unstaged) that are not |
| part of the pending change. |
| |
| The -i option causes the submit command to open a list of commits to submit |
| in the configured text editor, similar to ``git rebase -i''. |
| |
| If multiple revisions are specified, the submit command submits each one in turn, |
| stopping at the first failure. |
| |
| When run in a multiple-commit work branch, |
| either the -i option or the revision argument is mandatory. |
| If both are omitted, the submit command prints a short summary of |
| the pending commits for use in deciding which to submit. |
| |
| After submitting the pending changes, the submit command tries to synchronize the |
| current branch to the submitted commit, if it can do so cleanly. |
| If not, it will prompt the user to run ``git codereview sync'' manually. |
| |
| After a successful sync, the branch can be used to prepare a new change. |
| |
| Sync |
| |
| The sync command updates the local repository. |
| |
| git codereview sync |
| |
| It fetches commits from the remote repository and merges them from the |
| upstream branch to the current branch, rebasing any pending changes. |
| |
| Configuration |
| |
| If a file named codereview.cfg is present in the repository root, |
| git-codereview will use it for configuration. It should contain lines |
| of this format: |
| |
| key: value |
| |
| The ``gerrit'' key sets the Gerrit URL for this project. Git-codereview |
| automatically derives the Gerrit URL from repositories hosted in |
| *.googlesource.com. If not set or derived, the repository is assumed to |
| not have Gerrit, and certain features won't work. |
| |
| The ``issuerepo'' key specifies the GitHub repository to use for issues, if |
| different from the source repository. If set to ``golang/go'', for example, |
| lines such as ``Fixes #123'' in a commit message will be rewritten to ``Fixes |
| golang/go#123''. |
| |
| */ |
| package main |