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Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +00001# Copyright (c) 2011 The Chromium OS Authors.
2#
3# See file CREDITS for list of people who contributed to this
4# project.
5#
6# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
7# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
8# published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
9# the License, or (at your option) any later version.
10#
11# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +020013# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +000014# GNU General Public License for more details.
15#
16# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
18# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston,
19# MA 02111-1307 USA
20#
21
22What is this?
23=============
24
25This tool is a Python script which:
26- Creates patch directly from your branch
27- Cleans them up by removing unwanted tags
28- Inserts a cover letter with change lists
29- Runs the patches through checkpatch.pl and its own checks
30- Optionally emails them out to selected people
31
32It is intended to automate patch creation and make it a less
33error-prone process. It is useful for U-Boot and Linux work so far,
34since it uses the checkpatch.pl script.
35
36It is configured almost entirely by tags it finds in your commits.
37This means that you can work on a number of different branches at
38once, and keep the settings with each branch rather than having to
39git format-patch, git send-email, etc. with the correct parameters
40each time. So for example if you put:
41
42Series-to: fred.blogs@napier.co.nz
43
44in one of your commits, the series will be sent there.
45
Doug Andersonc2c84bc2012-12-03 14:43:16 +000046In Linux this will also call get_maintainer.pl on each of your
47patches automatically.
48
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +000049
50How to use this tool
51====================
52
53This tool requires a certain way of working:
54
55- Maintain a number of branches, one for each patch series you are
56working on
57- Add tags into the commits within each branch to indicate where the
58series should be sent, cover letter, version, etc. Most of these are
59normally in the top commit so it is easy to change them with 'git
60commit --amend'
61- Each branch tracks the upstream branch, so that this script can
62automatically determine the number of commits in it (optional)
63- Check out a branch, and run this script to create and send out your
64patches. Weeks later, change the patches and repeat, knowing that you
65will get a consistent result each time.
66
67
68How to configure it
69===================
70
Simon Glass33bdd9e2013-03-26 13:09:45 +000071For most cases of using patman for U-Boot development, patman will
Doug Andersonc2c84bc2012-12-03 14:43:16 +000072locate and use the file 'doc/git-mailrc' in your U-Boot directory.
73This contains most of the aliases you will need.
74
75For Linux the 'scripts/get_maintainer.pl' handles figuring out where
76to send patches pretty well.
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +000077
Vikram Narayanan12fb29a2012-05-23 09:01:06 +000078During the first run patman creates a config file for you by taking the default
79user name and email address from the global .gitconfig file.
80
Vikram Narayananc387d36d2012-05-23 08:58:58 +000081To add your own, create a file ~/.patman like this:
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +000082
83>>>>
84# patman alias file
85
86[alias]
87me: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
88
89u-boot: U-Boot Mailing List <u-boot@lists.denx.de>
90wolfgang: Wolfgang Denk <wd@denx.de>
91others: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>, Fred Bloggs <f.bloggs@napier.net>
92
93<<<<
94
95Aliases are recursive.
96
97The checkpatch.pl in the U-Boot tools/ subdirectory will be located and
98used. Failing that you can put it into your path or ~/bin/checkpatch.pl
99
100
Doug Anderson3d3077c2012-12-03 14:43:17 +0000101If you want to change the defaults for patman's command-line arguments,
102you can add a [settings] section to your .patman file. This can be used
103for any command line option by referring to the "dest" for the option in
104patman.py. For reference, the useful ones (at the moment) shown below
105(all with the non-default setting):
106
107>>>
108
109[settings]
110ignore_errors: True
111process_tags: False
112verbose: True
113
114<<<
115
116
Doug Anderson31ffd7f2012-12-03 14:43:18 +0000117If you want to adjust settings (or aliases) that affect just a single
118project you can add a section that looks like [project_settings] or
119[project_alias]. If you want to use tags for your linux work, you could
120do:
121
122>>>
123
124[linux_settings]
125process_tags: True
126
127<<<
128
129
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000130How to run it
131=============
132
133First do a dry run:
134
Vikram Narayanane95ea8c2012-04-27 06:39:31 +0000135$ ./tools/patman/patman -n
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000136
137If it can't detect the upstream branch, try telling it how many patches
138there are in your series:
139
Vikram Narayanane95ea8c2012-04-27 06:39:31 +0000140$ ./tools/patman/patman -n -c5
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000141
142This will create patch files in your current directory and tell you who
143it is thinking of sending them to. Take a look at the patch files.
144
Vikram Narayanane95ea8c2012-04-27 06:39:31 +0000145$ ./tools/patman/patman -n -c5 -s1
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000146
147Similar to the above, but skip the first commit and take the next 5. This
148is useful if your top commit is for setting up testing.
149
150
151How to add tags
152===============
153
154To make this script useful you must add tags like the following into any
155commit. Most can only appear once in the whole series.
156
157Series-to: email / alias
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200158 Email address / alias to send patch series to (you can add this
159 multiple times)
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000160
161Series-cc: email / alias, ...
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200162 Email address / alias to Cc patch series to (you can add this
163 multiple times)
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000164
165Series-version: n
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200166 Sets the version number of this patch series
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000167
168Series-prefix: prefix
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200169 Sets the subject prefix. Normally empty but it can be RFC for
170 RFC patches, or RESEND if you are being ignored.
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000171
Simon Glasse7ecd3f2012-09-27 15:06:02 +0000172Series-name: name
173 Sets the name of the series. You don't need to have a name, and
174 patman does not yet use it, but it is convenient to put the branch
175 name here to help you keep track of multiple upstreaming efforts.
176
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000177Cover-letter:
178This is the patch set title
179blah blah
180more blah blah
181END
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200182 Sets the cover letter contents for the series. The first line
183 will become the subject of the cover letter
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000184
Simon Glassc72f3da2013-03-20 16:43:00 +0000185Cover-letter-cc: email / alias
186 Additional email addresses / aliases to send cover letter to (you
187 can add this multiple times)
188
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000189Series-notes:
190blah blah
191blah blah
192more blah blah
193END
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200194 Sets some notes for the patch series, which you don't want in
195 the commit messages, but do want to send, The notes are joined
196 together and put after the cover letter. Can appear multiple
197 times.
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000198
199 Signed-off-by: Their Name <email>
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200200 A sign-off is added automatically to your patches (this is
201 probably a bug). If you put this tag in your patches, it will
202 override the default signoff that patman automatically adds.
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000203
204 Tested-by: Their Name <email>
Doug Anderson80113ff2013-03-15 13:24:05 +0000205 Reviewed-by: Their Name <email>
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000206 Acked-by: Their Name <email>
Doug Anderson80113ff2013-03-15 13:24:05 +0000207 These indicate that someone has tested/reviewed/acked your patch.
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200208 When you get this reply on the mailing list, you can add this
209 tag to the relevant commit and the script will include it when
210 you send out the next version. If 'Tested-by:' is set to
211 yourself, it will be removed. No one will believe you.
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000212
213Series-changes: n
214- Guinea pig moved into its cage
215- Other changes ending with a blank line
216<blank line>
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200217 This can appear in any commit. It lists the changes for a
218 particular version n of that commit. The change list is
219 created based on this information. Each commit gets its own
220 change list and also the whole thing is repeated in the cover
221 letter (where duplicate change lines are merged).
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000222
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200223 By adding your change lists into your commits it is easier to
224 keep track of what happened. When you amend a commit, remember
225 to update the log there and then, knowing that the script will
226 do the rest.
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000227
228Cc: Their Name <email>
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200229 This copies a single patch to another email address.
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000230
231Various other tags are silently removed, like these Chrome OS and
232Gerrit tags:
233
234BUG=...
235TEST=...
236Change-Id:
237Review URL:
238Reviewed-on:
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000239
240
241Exercise for the reader: Try adding some tags to one of your current
242patch series and see how the patches turn out.
243
244
245Where Patches Are Sent
246======================
247
Vikram Narayanan867ad2a2012-04-25 05:45:05 +0000248Once the patches are created, patman sends them using git send-email. The
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000249whole series is sent to the recipients in Series-to: and Series-cc.
250You can Cc individual patches to other people with the Cc: tag. Tags in the
251subject are also picked up to Cc patches. For example, a commit like this:
252
253>>>>
254commit 10212537b85ff9b6e09c82045127522c0f0db981
255Author: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200256Date: Mon Nov 7 23:18:44 2011 -0500
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000257
258 x86: arm: add a git mailrc file for maintainers
259
260 This should make sending out e-mails to the right people easier.
261
262 Cc: sandbox, mikef, ag
263 Cc: afleming
264<<<<
265
266will create a patch which is copied to x86, arm, sandbox, mikef, ag and
267afleming.
268
Doug Anderson05416af2012-12-03 14:40:43 +0000269If you have a cover letter it will get sent to the union of the CC lists of
Simon Glassc72f3da2013-03-20 16:43:00 +0000270all of the other patches. If you want to sent it to additional people you
271can add a tag:
272
273Cover-letter-cc: <list of addresses>
274
275These people will get the cover letter even if they are not on the To/Cc
276list for any of the patches.
Doug Anderson05416af2012-12-03 14:40:43 +0000277
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000278
279Example Work Flow
280=================
281
282The basic workflow is to create your commits, add some tags to the top
283commit, and type 'patman' to check and send them.
284
285Here is an example workflow for a series of 4 patches. Let's say you have
286these rather contrived patches in the following order in branch us-cmd in
287your tree where 'us' means your upstreaming activity (newest to oldest as
288output by git log --oneline):
289
290 7c7909c wip
291 89234f5 Don't include standard parser if hush is used
292 8d640a7 mmc: sparc: Stop using builtin_run_command()
293 0c859a9 Rename run_command2() to run_command()
294 a74443f sandbox: Rename run_command() to builtin_run_command()
295
296The first patch is some test things that enable your code to be compiled,
297but that you don't want to submit because there is an existing patch for it
298on the list. So you can tell patman to create and check some patches
299(skipping the first patch) with:
300
301 patman -s1 -n
302
303If you want to do all of them including the work-in-progress one, then
304(if you are tracking an upstream branch):
305
306 patman -n
307
308Let's say that patman reports an error in the second patch. Then:
309
310 git rebase -i HEAD~6
311 <change 'pick' to 'edit' in 89234f5>
312 <use editor to make code changes>
313 git add -u
314 git rebase --continue
315
316Now you have an updated patch series. To check it:
317
318 patman -s1 -n
319
320Let's say it is now clean and you want to send it. Now you need to set up
321the destination. So amend the top commit with:
322
323 git commit --amend
324
325Use your editor to add some tags, so that the whole commit message is:
326
327 The current run_command() is really only one of the options, with
328 hush providing the other. It really shouldn't be called directly
329 in case the hush parser is bring used, so rename this function to
330 better explain its purpose.
331
332 Series-to: u-boot
333 Series-cc: bfin, marex
334 Series-prefix: RFC
335 Cover-letter:
336 Unified command execution in one place
337
338 At present two parsers have similar code to execute commands. Also
339 cmd_usage() is called all over the place. This series adds a single
340 function which processes commands called cmd_process().
341 END
342
343 Change-Id: Ica71a14c1f0ecb5650f771a32fecb8d2eb9d8a17
344
345
346You want this to be an RFC and Cc the whole series to the bfin alias and
347to Marek. Two of the patches have tags (those are the bits at the front of
348the subject that say mmc: sparc: and sandbox:), so 8d640a7 will be Cc'd to
349mmc and sparc, and the last one to sandbox.
350
351Now to send the patches, take off the -n flag:
352
353 patman -s1
354
355The patches will be created, shown in your editor, and then sent along with
356the cover letter. Note that patman's tags are automatically removed so that
357people on the list don't see your secret info.
358
359Of course patches often attract comments and you need to make some updates.
360Let's say one person sent comments and you get an Acked-by: on one patch.
361Also, the patch on the list that you were waiting for has been merged,
362so you can drop your wip commit. So you resync with upstream:
363
Wolfgang Denk302007e2012-04-21 18:55:26 +0200364 git fetch origin (or whatever upstream is called)
Simon Glass26132882012-01-14 15:12:45 +0000365 git rebase origin/master
366
367and use git rebase -i to edit the commits, dropping the wip one. You add
368the ack tag to one commit:
369
370 Acked-by: Heiko Schocher <hs@denx.de>
371
372update the Series-cc: in the top commit:
373
374 Series-cc: bfin, marex, Heiko Schocher <hs@denx.de>
375
376and remove the Series-prefix: tag since it it isn't an RFC any more. The
377series is now version two, so the series info in the top commit looks like
378this:
379
380 Series-to: u-boot
381 Series-cc: bfin, marex, Heiko Schocher <hs@denx.de>
382 Series-version: 2
383 Cover-letter:
384 ...
385
386Finally, you need to add a change log to the two commits you changed. You
387add change logs to each individual commit where the changes happened, like
388this:
389
390 Series-changes: 2
391 - Updated the command decoder to reduce code size
392 - Wound the torque propounder up a little more
393
394(note the blank line at the end of the list)
395
396When you run patman it will collect all the change logs from the different
397commits and combine them into the cover letter, if you have one. So finally
398you have a new series of commits:
399
400 faeb973 Don't include standard parser if hush is used
401 1b2f2fe mmc: sparc: Stop using builtin_run_command()
402 cfbe330 Rename run_command2() to run_command()
403 0682677 sandbox: Rename run_command() to builtin_run_command()
404
405so to send them:
406
407 patman
408
409and it will create and send the version 2 series.
410
411General points:
412
4131. When you change back to the us-cmd branch days or weeks later all your
414information is still there, safely stored in the commits. You don't need
415to remember what version you are up to, who you sent the last lot of patches
416to, or anything about the change logs.
417
4182. If you put tags in the subject, patman will Cc the maintainers
419automatically in many cases.
420
4213. If you want to keep the commits from each series you sent so that you can
422compare change and see what you did, you can either create a new branch for
423each version, or just tag the branch before you start changing it:
424
425 git tag sent/us-cmd-rfc
426 ...later...
427 git tag sent/us-cmd-v2
428
4294. If you want to modify the patches a little before sending, you can do
430this in your editor, but be careful!
431
4325. If you want to run git send-email yourself, use the -n flag which will
433print out the command line patman would have used.
434
4356. It is a good idea to add the change log info as you change the commit,
436not later when you can't remember which patch you changed. You can always
437go back and change or remove logs from commits.
438
439
440Other thoughts
441==============
442
443This script has been split into sensible files but still needs work.
444Most of these are indicated by a TODO in the code.
445
446It would be nice if this could handle the In-reply-to side of things.
447
448The tests are incomplete, as is customary. Use the -t flag to run them,
449and make sure you are in the tools/scripts/patman directory first:
450
451 $ cd /path/to/u-boot
452 $ cd tools/scripts/patman
453 $ patman -t
454
455Error handling doesn't always produce friendly error messages - e.g.
456putting an incorrect tag in a commit may provide a confusing message.
457
458There might be a few other features not mentioned in this README. They
459might be bugs. In particular, tags are case sensitive which is probably
460a bad thing.
461
462
463Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
464v1, v2, 19-Oct-11
465revised v3 24-Nov-11