NOTES ON COMMITTING TO EMACS'S REPOSITORY -*- outline -*- ** elpa This branch does not contain a copy of Emacs, but of the Emacs Lisp package archive (elpa.gnu.org). See admin/notes/elpa for further explanation, and the README file in the branch for usage instructions. * Install changes only on one branch, let them get merged elsewhere if needed. In particular, install bug-fixes only on the release branch (if there is one) and let them get synced to the trunk; do not install them by hand on the trunk as well. E.g. if there is an active "emacs-24" branch and you have a bug-fix appropriate for the next emacs-24.x release, install it only on the emacs-24 branch, not on the trunk as well. Installing things manually into more than one branch makes merges more difficult. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-03/msg01124.html The exception is, if you know that the change will be difficult to merge to the trunk (eg because the trunk code has changed a lot). In that case, it's helpful if you can apply the change to both trunk and branch yourself (when committing the branch change, indicate in the commit log that it should not be merged to the trunk, by including the phrase "Not to be merged to master", or any other phrase that matches "merge"). * Installing changes from your personal branches. If your branch has only a single commit, or many different real commits, it is fine to do a merge. If your branch has only a very small number of "real" commits, but several "merge from trunks", it is preferred that you take your branch's diff, apply it to the trunk, and commit directly, not merge. This keeps the history cleaner. In general, when working on some feature in a separate branch, it is preferable not to merge from trunk until you are done with the feature. Unless you really need some change that was done on the trunk while you were developing on the branch, you don't really need those merges; just merge once, when you are done with the feature, and Bazaar will take care of the rest. Bazaar is much better in this than CVS, so interim merges are unnecessary. Or use shelves; or rebase; or do something else. See the thread for yet another fun excursion into the exciting world of version control. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-04/msg00086.html * Installing changes from gnulib Some of the files in Emacs are copied from gnulib. To synchronize these files from the version of gnulib that you have checked out into a sibling directory of your branch, type "admin/merge-gnulib"; this will check out the latest version of gnulib if there is no sibling directory already. It is a good idea to run "git status" afterwards, so that if a gnulib module added a file, you can record the new file using "git add". After synchronizing from gnulib, do a "make" in the usual way. To change the set of gnulib modules, change the GNULIB_MODULES variable in admin/merge-gnulib before running it. If you remove a gnulib module, or if a gnulib module removes a file, then remove the corresponding files by hand. * How to merge changes from emacs-24 to trunk [The section on git merge procedure has not yet been written] Inspect the change log entries (e.g. in case too many entries have been included or whitespace between entries needs fixing). If someone made multiple change log entries on different days in the branch, you may wish to collapse them all to a single entry for that author in the trunk (because in the trunk they all appear under the same date). Obviously, if there are multiple changes to the same file by different authors, don't break the logical ordering in doing this. You may see conflicts in autoload md5sums in comments. Strictly speaking, the right thing to do is merge everything else, resolve the conflict by choosing either the trunk or branch version, then run `make -C lisp autoloads' to update the md5sums to the correct trunk value before committing. * Re-adding a file that has been removed from the repository Let's suppose you've done: git rm file; git commit -a You can just restore a copy of the file and then re-add it; git does not have per-file history so this will not harm anything. Alternatively, you can do git revert XXXXX where XXXXX is the hash of the commit in which file was removed. This backs out the entire changeset the deletion was part of, which is often more appropriate. * Undoing a commit (uncommitting) If you have not pushed the commit, you may be able to use `git reset --hard' with a hash argument to revert the your local repo copy to the pre-commit state. If you have pushed commit, resetting will be ineffective because it will only vanish the commit in your local copy. Instead, use `git revert', giving it the commit ID as argument. This will create a new commit that backs out the change. Then push that. Note that git will generate a log message for the revert that includes a git hash. Please edit this to refer to the commit by the first line of its log comment, or by committer and date, or by something else that is not the hash. As noted previously, it is best to avoid hashes in comments in case we someday have to change version-control systems again. * Bisecting This is a semi-automated way to find the revision that introduced a bug. Browse `git help bisect' for technical instructions.