From 656c30e11ddb9af6b72d40665c8e65e99dbc5264 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Evan Lucas Date: Wed, 1 Feb 2017 05:56:41 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] doc: add guide for backporting prs This guide should help answer questions for contributors that are not familiar with the backport process. PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/11099 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen Reviewed-By: Sam Roberts Reviewed-By: Gibson Fahnestock Reviewed-By: Myles Borins Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson --- COLLABORATOR_GUIDE.md | 5 +- doc/guides/backporting-to-release-lines.md | 92 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 96 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) create mode 100644 doc/guides/backporting-to-release-lines.md diff --git a/COLLABORATOR_GUIDE.md b/COLLABORATOR_GUIDE.md index 33aae6a06e3457..8e29503117b88b 100644 --- a/COLLABORATOR_GUIDE.md +++ b/COLLABORATOR_GUIDE.md @@ -540,7 +540,8 @@ LTS release. When you send your pull request, consider including information about whether your change is breaking. If you think your patch can be backported, -please feel free to include that information in the PR thread. +please feel free to include that information in the PR thread. For more +information on backporting, please see the [backporting guide][]. Several LTS related issue and PR labels have been provided: @@ -567,3 +568,5 @@ When the LTS working group determines that a new LTS release is required, selected commits will be picked from the staging branch to be included in the release. This process of making a release will be a collaboration between the LTS working group and the Release team. + +[backporting guide]: doc/guides/backporting-to-release-lines.md diff --git a/doc/guides/backporting-to-release-lines.md b/doc/guides/backporting-to-release-lines.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000000..e7e51eb32ff488 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/guides/backporting-to-release-lines.md @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@ +# How to Backport a Pull Request to a Release Line + +## Staging branches + +Each release line has a staging branch that the releaser will use as a scratch +pad while preparing a release. The branch name is formatted as follows: +`vN.x-staging` where `N` is the major release number. + +### Active staging branches + +| Release Line | Staging Branch | +| ------------ | -------------- | +| `v7.x` | `v7.x-staging` | +| `v6.x` | `v6.x-staging` | +| `v4.x` | `v4.x-staging` | + +## What needs to be backported? + +If a cherry-pick from master does not land cleanly on a staging branch, the +releaser will mark the pull request with a particular label for that release +line, specifying to our tooling that this pull request should not be included. +The releaser will then add a comment that a backport is needed. + +## What can be backported? + +The "Current" release line is much more lenient than the LTS release lines in +what can be landed. Our LTS release lines (v4.x and v6.x as of March 2017) +require that commits mature in a Current release for at least 2 weeks before +they can be landed on staging. If the commit can not be cherry-picked from +master a manual backport will need to be submitted. Please see the [LTS Plan][] +for more information. After that time, if the commit can be cherry-picked +cleanly from master, then nothing needs to be done. If not, a backport pull +request will need to be submitted. + +## How to submit a backport pull request + +For these steps, let's assume that a backport is needed for the v7.x release +line. All commands will use the v7.x-staging branch as the target branch. +In order to submit a backport pull request to another branch, simply replace +that with the staging branch for the targeted release line. + +* Checkout the staging branch for the targeted release line +* Make sure that the local staging branch is up to date with the remote +* Create a new branch off of the staging branch + +```shell +# Assuming your fork of Node.js is checked out in $NODE_DIR, +# the origin remote points to your fork, and the upstream remote points +# to git://github.com/nodejs/node +cd $NODE_DIR +# Fails if you already have a v7.x-staging +git branch v7.x-staging upstream/v7.x-staging +git checkout v7.x-staging +git reset --hard upstream/v7.x-staging +# We want to backport pr #10157 +git checkout -b backport-10157-to-v7.x +``` + +* After creating the branch, apply the changes to the branch. The cherry-pick + will likely fail due to conflicts. In that case, you will see something this: + +```shell +# Say the $SHA is 773cdc31ef +$ git cherry-pick $SHA # Use your commit hash +error: could not apply 773cdc3... +hint: after resolving the conflicts, mark the corrected paths +hint: with 'git add ' or 'git rm ' +hint: and commit the result with 'git commit' +``` + +* Make the required changes to remove the conflicts, add the files to the index + using `git add`, and then commit the changes. That can be done with + `git cherry-pick --continue`. +* Leave the commit message as is. If you think it should be modified, comment + in the Pull Request. +* Make sure `make -j4 test` passes +* Push the changes to your fork and open a pull request. +* Be sure to target the `v7.x-staging` branch in the pull request. + +### Helpful Hints + +* Please include the backport target in the pull request title in the following + format: `(v7.x backport) ` + * Ex. `(v4.x backport) process: improve performance of nextTick` +* Please check the checkbox labelled "Allow edits from maintainers". + This is the easiest way to to avoid constant rebases. + +In the event the backport pull request is different than the original, +the backport pull request should be reviewed the same way a new pull request +is reviewed. + +[LTS Plan]: https://github.com/nodejs/LTS#lts-plan