| Index: depot_tools/README.git-cl.codereview
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| ===================================================================
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| --- depot_tools/README.git-cl.codereview (revision 0)
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| +++ depot_tools/README.git-cl.codereview (revision 0)
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| +The git-cl README describes the git-cl command set. This document
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| +describes how code review and git work together in general, intended
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| +for people familiar with git but unfamiliar with the code review
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| +process supported by Rietveld.
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| +
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| +== Concepts and terms
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| +A Rietveld review is for discussion of a single change or patch. You
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| +upload a proposed change, the reviewer comments on your change, and
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| +then you can upload a revised version of your change. Rietveld stores
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| +the history of uploaded patches as well as the comments, and can
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| +compute diffs in between these patches. The history of a patch is
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| +very much like a small branch in git, but since Rietveld is
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| +VCS-agnostic the concepts don't map perfectly. The identifier for a
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| +single review+patches+comments in Rietveld is called an "issue".
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| +
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| +Rietveld provides a basic uploader that understands git. This program
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| +is used by git-cl, and is included in the git-cl repo as upload.py.
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| +
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| +== Basic interaction with git
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| +The fundamental problem you encounter when you try to mix git and code
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| +review is that with git it's nice to commit code locally, while during
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| +a code review you're often requested to change something about your
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| +code. There are a few different ways you can handle this workflow
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| +with git:
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| +
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| +1) Rewriting a single commit. Say the origin commit is O, and you
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| + commit your initial work in a commit A, making your history like
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| + O--A. After review comments, you commit --amend, effectively
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| + erasing A and making a new commit A', so history is now O--A'.
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| + (Equivalently, you can use git reset --soft or git rebase -i.)
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| +
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| +2) Writing follow-up commits. Initial work is again in A, and after
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| + review comments, you write a new commit B so your history looks
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| + like O--A--B. When you upload the revised patch, you upload the
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| + diff of O..B, not A..B; you always upload the full diff of what
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| + you're proposing to change.
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| +
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| +The Rietveld patch uploader just takes arguments to "git diff", so
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| +either of the above workflows work fine. If all you want to do is
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| +upload a patch, you can use the upload.py provided by Rietveld with
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| +arguments like this:
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| +
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| + upload.py --server server.com <args to "git diff">
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| +
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| +The first time you upload, it creates a new issue; for follow-ups on
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| +the same issue, you need to provide the issue number:
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| +
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| + upload.py --server server.com --issue 1234 <args to "git diff">
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| +
|
| +== git-cl to the rescue
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| +git-cl simplifies the above in the following ways:
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| +
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| +1) "git cl config" puts a persistent --server setting in your .git/config.
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| +
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| +2) The first time you upload an issue, the issue number is associated with
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| + the current *branch*. If you upload again, it will upload on the same
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| + issue. (Note that this association is tied to a branch, not a commit,
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| + which means you need a separate branch per review.)
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| +
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| +3) If your branch is "tracking" (in the "git checkout --track" sense)
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| + another one (like origin/master), calls to "git cl upload" will
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| + diff against that branch by default. (You can still pass arguments
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| + to "git diff" on the command line, if necessary.)
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| +
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| +In the common case, this means that calling simply "git cl upload"
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| +will always upload the correct diff to the correct place.
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| +
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| +== Patch series
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| +The above is all you need to know for working on a single patch.
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| +
|
| +Things get much more complicated when you have a series of commits
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| +that you want to get reviewed. Say your history looks like
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| +O--A--B--C. If you want to upload that as a single review, everything
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| +works just as above.
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| +
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| +But what if you upload each of A, B, and C as separate reviews?
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| +What if you then need to change A?
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| +
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| +1) One option is rewriting history: write a new commit A', then use
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| + git rebase -i to insert that diff in as O--A--A'--B--C as well as
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| + squash it. This is sometimes not possible if B and C have touched
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| + some lines affected by A'.
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| +
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| +2) Another option, and the one espoused by software like topgit, is for
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| + you to have separate branches for A, B, and C, and after writing A'
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| + you merge it into each of those branches. (topgit automates this
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| + merging process.) This is also what is recommended by git-cl, which
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| + likes having different branch identifiers to hang the issue number
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| + off of. Your history ends up looking like:
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| +
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| + O---A---B---C
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| + \ \ \
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| + A'--B'--C'
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| +
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| + Which is ugly, but it accurately tracks the real history of your work, can
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| + be thrown away at the end by committing A+A' as a single "squash" commit.
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| +
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| +In practice, this comes up pretty rarely. Suggestions for better workflows
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| +are welcome.
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