How we handle patches (mmoved)

Before creating a patch series:

 * 1) Add unit tests with your functionality changes or additions.
 * 2) Use docstrings and comments where appropriate. Spell-check your additions. Try to apply pep8 standards.
 * 3) Test your changes on a local instance of the website. Prove to yourself that your changes address the issue they are supposed to address.
 * 4) Run the test suite, and make sure your unit tests pass and all tests that passed before your changes still pass.
 * 5) Use a tool like PyChecker to check for bugs.

While creating a patch series:

 * 1) Before creating the patch, update the master branch of your local repository checkout, and make sure your commits apply cleanly on top of master. In git, you can achieve this by developing on a branch and rebasing your branch commits on top of master with  . You can also use   for an interactive rebase, in which you can reorder and edit commits. We prefer rebasing to merging because rebasing preserves a linear commit history, which can be easier to keep track of and reason about.
 * 2) Generate the patch set for your changes. Our preferred patch submission form is a patch series generated with "git format-patch". Read about How to generate patches with git format-patch. Add on a line of its own, at the bottom of the commit, what the patch fixes. For example: "Closes: http://openhatch.org/bugs/issue398"
 * 3) General git workflow on OpenHatch Openhatch git workflow

Permit us to share your work:

 * 1) Join our Devel email list by entering your email address into the form at http://lists.openhatch.org/mailman/listinfo/devel
 * 2) Send an email to devel@lists.openhatch.org with a message like:
 * 3) * The work I contribute to OpenHatch is work I have permission to share. I permit anyone to re-use it under the terms of the Affero GPL, version 3 or later.

Submitting your patch series for review:

 * 1) Attach your patches to the issue ticket at https://openhatch.org/bugs.
 * 2) Change the issue status to "in-review".
 * 3) Join IRC and say that you have an issue ready for review.

If the reviewer says it's ready to go, your patch set will get deployed in short order. If the reviewer has feedback he/she wants addressed, make the necessary revisions and start back at the "Before creating a patch series" section.

Apply the patch to your local repository

 * 1) Find the URL of the patch, e.g. http://git.jackgrigg.com/openhatch/patch/?id=5645afd46de0f0b7ba3a3c7035ff0711b5db9202
 * 2) Import the patch into your local repository. For example:
 * 3) * wget -O- http://git.jackgrigg.com/openhatch/patch/?id=5645afd46de0f0b7ba3a3c7035ff0711b5db9202 | git am --3way
 * 4) * It's important that you pass the --3way argument to "git am".

Review the patch for correctness and cleanliness
Things to think about:


 * 1) Does the patch make sense? Does it look readable?
 * 2) * git log -p
 * 3) If the author hasn't already done this: tell the author "Please email devel@lists.openhatch.org saying that you're okay with your work being under the Affero GPL, version 3. If you're willing, it is preferable that you say 'the Affero GPL, version 3 or later, at your option'."
 * 4) If you have revisions you'd like to see made, change the issue status to "in-progress", re-assign the issue to the patch submitter if it isn't already, and leave your review feedback on the ticket.

Push and deploy
You might need to rope someone else in for this. Anyone in the Login team can do a push as well as deploy access. Asheesh Laroia (paulproteus) is the traditional person to do this, but it's good to ask someone else so they get practice!

Things to know:

cd mysite ./scripts/deploy
 * If you push to origin/master, Hudson will test it.
 * Once you're happy, you can run the deploy script, but note that will push the current HEAD to origin/master.
 * When you deploy, check a page or two to make sure things are okay.

For more details on how we use Hudson and how to force a Hudson build, see Continuous integration with Hudson.