doc: Add some guidelines for reviewing.

* doc/contributing.texi (Contributing) [Reviewing the Work of Others]: New
section.
(Debbugs Usertags): Expound with Emacs Debbugs information and document the
'reviewed-looks-good' usertag.
* etc/git/gitconfig [b4]: New section.

Change-Id: I56630b15ec4fbc5c67e5420dbf2838556a005d6b
Reviewed-by: Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>
This commit is contained in:
Maxim Cournoyer 2023-10-10 08:49:05 -04:00
parent fd20e0d5f4
commit 889a6204f8
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2 changed files with 114 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -29,6 +29,7 @@ choice.
* Submitting Patches:: Share your work.
* Tracking Bugs and Changes:: Keeping it all organized.
* Commit Access:: Pushing to the official repository.
* Reviewing the Work of Others:: Some guidelines for sharing reviews.
* Updating the Guix Package:: Updating the Guix package definition.
* Writing Documentation:: Improving documentation in GNU Guix.
* Translating Guix:: Make Guix speak your native language.
@ -1981,7 +1982,12 @@ Debbugs provides a feature called @dfn{usertags} that allows any user to
tag any bug with an arbitrary label. Bugs can be searched by usertag,
so this is a handy way to organize bugs@footnote{The list of usertags is
public information, and anyone can modify any user's list of usertags,
so keep that in mind if you choose to use this feature.}.
so keep that in mind if you choose to use this feature.}. If you use
Emacs Debbugs, the entry-point to consult existing usertags is the
@samp{C-u M-x debbugs-gnu-usertags} procedure. To set a usertag, press
@samp{C} while consulting a bug within the *Guix-Patches* buffer opened
with @samp{C-u M-x debbugs-gnu-bugs} buffer, then select @code{usertag}
and follow the instructions.
For example, to view all the bug reports (or patches, in the case of
@code{guix-patches}) tagged with the usertag @code{powerpc64le-linux}
@ -1994,9 +2000,9 @@ documentation for Debbugs or the documentation for whatever tool you use
to interact with Debbugs.
In Guix, we are experimenting with usertags to keep track of
architecture-specific issues. To facilitate collaboration, all our
usertags are associated with the single user @code{guix}. The following
usertags currently exist for that user:
architecture-specific issues, as well as reviewed ones. To facilitate
collaboration, all our usertags are associated with the single user
@code{guix}. The following usertags currently exist for that user:
@table @code
@ -2014,6 +2020,9 @@ For issues related to reproducibility. For example, it would be
appropriate to assign this usertag to a bug report for a package that
fails to build reproducibly.
@item reviewed-looks-good
You have reviewed the series and it looks good to you (LGTM).
@end table
If you're a committer and you want to add a usertag, just start using it
@ -2283,6 +2292,100 @@ only push their own awesome changes, but also offer some of their time
you're welcome to use your expertise and commit rights to help other
contributors, too!
@node Reviewing the Work of Others
@section Reviewing the Work of Others
Perhaps the biggest action you can do to help GNU Guix grow as a project
is to review the work contributed by others. You do not need to be a
committer to do so; applying, reading the source, building, linting and
running other people's series and sharing your comments about your
experience will give some confidence to committers. Basically, you gmust
ensure the check list found in the @ref{Submitting Patches} section has
been correctly followed. A reviewed patch series should give the best
chances for the proposed change to be merged faster, so if a change you
would like to see merged hasn't yet been reviewed, this is the most
appropriate thing to do!
@cindex reviewing, guidelines
Review comments should be unambiguous; be as clear and explicit as you
can about what you think should be changed, ensuring the author can take
action on it. Please try to keep the following guidelines in mind
during review:
@enumerate
@item
@emph{Be clear and explicit about changes you are suggesting}, ensuring
the author can take action on it. In particular, it is a good idea to
explicitly ask for new revisions when you want it.
@item
@emph{Remain focused: do not change the scope of the work being
reviewed.} For example, if the contribution touches code that follows a
pattern deemed unwieldy, it would be unfair to ask the submitter to fix
all occurrences of that pattern in the code; to put it simply, if a
problem unrelated to the patch at hand was already there, do not ask the
submitter to fix it.
@item
@emph{Ensure progress.} As they respond to review, submitters may
submit new revisions of their changes; avoid requesting changes that you
did not request in the previous round of comments. Overall, the
submitter should get a clear sense of progress; the number of items open
for discussion should clearly decrease over time.
@item
@emph{Aim for finalization.} Reviewing code is time-consuming. Your
goal as a reviewer is to put the process on a clear path towards
integration, possibly with agreed-upon changes, or rejection, with a
clear and mutually-understood reasoning. Avoid leaving the review
process in a lingering state with no clear way out.
@item
@emph{Review is a discussion.} The submitter's and reviewer's views on
how to achieve a particular change may not always be aligned. To lead
the discussion, remain focused, ensure progress and aim for
finalization, spending time proportional to the stakes@footnote{The
tendency to discuss minute details at length is often referred to as
``bikeshedding'', where much time is spent discussing each one's
preference for the color of the shed at the expense of progress made on
the project to keep bikes dry.}. As a reviewer, try hard to explain the
rationale for suggestions you make, and to understand and take into
account the submitter's motivation for doing things in a certain way.
@end enumerate
@cindex LGTM, Looks Good To Me
@cindex review tags
@cindex Reviewed-by, git trailer
When you deem the proposed change adequate and ready for inclusion
within Guix, the following well understood/codified
@samp{Reviewed-by:@tie{}Your@tie{}Name<your-email@@example.com>}
@footnote{The @samp{Reviewed-by} Git trailer is used by other projects
such as Linux, and is understood by third-party tools such as the
@samp{b4 am} sub-command, which is able to retrieve the complete
submission email thread from a public-inbox instance and add the Git
trailers found in replies to the commit patches.} line should be used to
sign off as a reviewer, meaning you have reviewed the change and that it
looks good to you:
@itemize
@item
If the @emph{whole} series (containing multiple commits) looks good to
you, reply with @samp{Reviewed-by:@tie{}Your@tie{}Name<your-email@@example.com>}
to the cover page if it has one, or to the last patch of the series
otherwise, adding another @samp{(for the whole series)} comment on the
line below to explicit this fact.
@item
If you instead want to mark a @emph{single commit} as reviewed (but not
the whole series), simply reply with
@samp{Reviewed-by:@tie{}Your@tie{}Name<your-email@@example.com>} to that
commit message.
@end itemize
If you are not a committer, you can help others find a @emph{series} you
have reviewed more easily by adding a @code{reviewed-looks-good} usertag
for the @code{guix} user (@pxref{Debbugs Usertags}).
@node Updating the Guix Package
@section Updating the Guix Package

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@ -16,3 +16,10 @@
to = guix-patches@gnu.org
headerCmd = etc/teams.scm cc-members-header-cmd
thread = no
[b4]
attestation-check-dkim = off
attestation-policy = off
linkmask = https://yhetil.org/guix/%s
linktrailermask = https://yhetil.org/guix/%s
midmask = https://yhetil.org/guix/%s